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Francis Kéré Just Built Germany's First Purpose-Built Cultural Home — In Senegal
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Francis Kéré Just Built Germany's First Purpose-Built Cultural Home — In Senegal

Francis Kéré Just Built Germany's First Purpose-Built Cultural Home — In Senegal

The Goethe-Institut has operated for more than 75 years without ever commissioning a building of its own. It chose Dakar, and a Burkinabè architect, to break that streak.

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Goethe-Institut Dakar. Photo by Iwan Baan.
Goethe-Institut Dakar. Photo by Iwan Baan.

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The Goethe-Institut opened the doors of its new Dakar headquarters on April 16, marking the first time in the institution's 75-year history that it has commissioned a building from concept to completion. The architect is Diébédo Francis Kéré, the Berlin-based, Burkina Faso–born designer who in 2022 became the first African laureate of the Pritzker Prize.

Goethe-Institut Dakar. Photo by Iwan Baan.

Kéré's firm delivered roughly 1,800 square meters on Dakar's Corniche Ouest, in the Senegalese capital's museum quarter, near the Léopold Sédar Senghor Museum. The building wraps a courtyard organized around a mature baobab tree that predates the construction — the architects built around it rather than through it. Load-bearing walls, interior partitions, and a perforated outer screen are made from locally sourced compacted-earth blocks, cooled largely by passive cross-ventilation rather than mechanical systems. The project ran from 2018 to 2026, cost roughly 4 million euros, and involved the Dakar-based firm Worofila alongside German engineers and local artisans and contractors.

Kéré was born in Gando, Burkina Faso, and left for Germany on a carpentry scholarship before training as an architect. His first completed building, the Gando Primary School of 2001, was built with labor and material contributed by the village itself, using local clay bricks and an overhanging roof designed to shed heat rather than trap it. The same logic — local material, passive climate control, construction as a collective act — carries through to Dakar, more than two decades and a Pritzker Prize later.

Kéré has described his early education work as inseparable from the idea of gathering, noting that spaces built for learning tend to become spaces where communities meet. The Goethe-Institut's Dakar building takes that instinct and gives it scale: an auditorium, a library centered on African knowledge, classrooms, a rooftop terrace, and a program of talks, film screenings, and concerts, all housed under a canopy shaped to echo the tree cover the site once held.

Goethe-Institut Dakar. Photo by Iwan Baan.

For decades, the story of German and European cultural institutes on the continent has been one of imported form: buildings designed elsewhere, shipped in as models of what culture should look like, regardless of climate, material, or local labor. Dakar reverses the direction of that transmission. The institution built to project German culture abroad is, for the first time in its history, standing inside a structure designed by an African architect, built from African earth, by African hands.

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The definitive media, intelligence, and commerce platform for the African art market and its global diaspora.

© 2026 Art Report Africa. All Rights Reserved.

The definitive media, intelligence, and commerce platform for the African art market and its global diaspora.

© 2026 Art Report Africa. All Rights Reserved.