A new eight-storey office building in Bremen by architect Max Dudler is located on a busy thoroughfare halfway between the train station and the historic center. After three years of work, the corner building at the prestigious address Bahnhofstraße 1 was completed in early August, featuring double the volume of the previous structure. The generously designed ground floor serves as a bank branch, while the remaining seven upper floors are occupied by offices. The receding façade with stone cladding is characterized by a monotonous grid of deeply recessed window openings. The repeating façade pattern creates a "fault" at the corner, to which the authors attribute a reference to North German expressionism of the 1920s. The result, however, is a modern administrative building that could stand in any German-speaking city (e.g., Zurich or Berlin, where Max Dudler operates his offices).