Two of five houses originally designed by Walter Gropius for professors at the Bauhaus art school in Dessau, Germany, have been rebuilt. The Bauhaus moved to Dassau in 1925 after the Nasis took control of Wiemar and the houses were built as accommodation for school's professors – including Gropius, László Moholy-Nagy and Wassily Kandinsky.
During World War II the Gropius house, and half of the Moholy-Nagy house were destroyed during an air-raid. The remaining houses were used as a hospital and factory.
The reconstruction of the two houses sees the end to a restoration project that began in 1992 with the renovation of the surviving houses to their original states.
These are interpretations of the original buildings rather than reconstructions. The architects Bruno Fioretti Marquez used the proportions of the original structures but further reduce the already minimal design.
I couldn't locate the photographer of the top photo. The bottom photo is by Lena Böhnlein.