Workers' colony for the Builders' Union in Luckenwalde (1919–1920)
Garden pavilion of the Herrmann family, Luckenwalde (1920)
Work hall of the Herrmann hat factory, Luckenwalde (1919–1920)
Conversion of the administration building of the Hausleben insurance company, Berlin (1920)
Einsteinturm (Observatory on the Telegraphenberg) in Potsdam, 1917 or 1920–1921 (building), 1921–1924 (technical equipment). The building, its expressionistic form giving the impression of concrete as a building material, was mostly built in brick and then covered with plaster. Mendelsohn explained this was because of delivery problems; however, it is presumed that the real reason for the choice of building materials was problems with constructing the casing.
Double villa on Karolingerplatz, Berlin (1921–1922)
Steinberg hat factory, Herrmann & Co, Luckenwalde (1921–1923) with a strict, angular form
Mossehaus, conversion of the offices and press of Rudolf Mosse, Berlin (1921–1923)
Schocken department store, Stuttgart (1926–1928). The department store, together with the Tagblatt-Turm (1924–1928) of Ernst-Otto Oßwald across the way, constituted an impressive ensemble of modern architecture, and was damaged only lightly in World War II. In 1960, the city Stuttgart demolished both, despite international protest. In its place today stands Egon Eiermann's unremarkable department store building (Galeria Kaufhof, previously Horten).
Exhibition pavilion for the publishing house Rudolf Mosse at the "Pressa" in Cologne (1928)
Schocken department store, Chemnitz 1927–1930, known for its curved front with horizontal strip windows.
His own home, Am Rupenhorn, Berlin (1928–1930)
House of the German Metal Workers' Union, Berlin-Kreuzberg (1928–1930)
Columbus-Haus, Potsdamer Platz, Berlin (1928–1932), a 10 storey office building characterised by long strip windows, one of the boldest examples of New Objectivity in Germany. Damaged WW2, burned out in 1953, demolished soon after (not to be confused with the "Columbia-Haus" in Berlin-Tempelhof).
Built around the same time: a cluster of three buildings on the Weizmann Institute campus, presently housing high-resolution NMR, biological MRI, and the Kimmel Center for Archeology, respectively