Walter A. Gropius was the founder and first director of the Bauhaus in Weimar, Germany, which lasted until the Nazi takeover in 1933. It had a revival in Chicago as the New Bauhaus, which became the Chicago Institute of Design. Early in his career, 1911, Gropius won the competition to build the Fagus Shoe Last Factory at Alfeld an der Leine in collaboration with Adolf Meyer. This was to be the first glass-walled building with internal framing, which was to become today's international style.