Parliament Building, Windhoek

The Parliament Building, Windhoek, also known as the Tintenpalast (German for Ink Palace), is the seat of both houses of the Parliament of Namibia (the National Council and the National Assembly). It is located in the Namibian capital of Windhoek.

Parliament Building
Logo of Parliament
Front façade viewed from the south-west
Former namesTintenpalast
Alternative namesLegislative Assembly Building
General information
TypeParliament House
Architectural styleNeoclassical
Address14A Love Street, Windhoek Central Business District
Town or cityWindhoek
CountryNamibia
Coordinates22.5666°S 17.0893°E / -22.5666; 17.0893
Construction started1912
Construction stopped1913
Inaugurated12 April 1913
Renovated7 December 2009 – 7 May 2012
Cost
ClientBruno von Schuckmann (1910)
Owner German South West Africa (1913–15)
 South West Africa (1915–90)
 Namibia (since 1990)
Design and construction
Architect(s)Gottlieb Redecker
Architecture firmSander & Kock
Website
www.parliament.na

The Tintenpalast, which is located just north of Robert Mugabe Avenue, was designed by German architect Gottlieb Redecker with a Neoclassical front façade and built by the company Sander & Kock between 1912 and 1913 from regional materials as an administration building for the German government, which colonised Namibia at the time. The building project used forced labour by Herero and Nama people who, having survived the Herero and Namaqua genocide, had been placed in concentration camps.

The building was opened on 12 April 1913. As an allusion to the extensive usage of ink by the workers in the building, it was named "Tintenpalast" or "Ink Palace". When Namibia achieved its independence in 1990, the Tintenpalast became the seat of the National Assembly.

Due to a change to the Constitution in 2014, the number of parliamentarians increased significantly. As a result, there have been calls for a bigger parliament building, since many parliamentarians and support staff are not able to be housed in the Tintenpalast. Moses Ndjarakana argues that the "structure and shape of the Chamber is not conducive to a House of the People" and that the "current state of affairs with regard to office space" is "miserable and undesirable as it contributes to an ineffective service delivery system."

The Tintenpalast is surrounded by the Parliament Gardens, which is very popular among the inhabitants of Windhoek.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.