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Architects:LRO GmbH & Co. KG Freie Architekten BDA
Area:6420m²
Year:2017
Photographs:Roland Halbe
Manufacturers:Bamberger Natursteinwerk Hermann Graser GmbH,Theis-Böger
Structural Engineer:Lenz Weber Ingenieure
Mechanical Engineers:ZWP Ingenieur
Electrical Engineer:Steinigeweg Planungs
Building physics:Bobran Ingenieure Akustik + Bauphysik
Project Lead Lp 1 4:David Fornol
Project Lead Lp 5 8:Daniel Steinhübl
Architect:Eva Caspar, Hamze Jalloul, Anna Schönhoff, Marc Kager, Stefanie Günter, Hannah Thibault, Urban Kreuz
Client:Stadt Frankfurt am Main Dezernat VII – Kultur und Wissenschaft vertreten durch das Hochbauamt der Stadt Frankfurt am Main
Program / Use / Building Function:Museum
Project Control:Hochbauamt der Stadt
Fire Engineer:Halfkann + Kirchner
City:Frankfurt am Main
Country:Germany
Text description provided by the architects. The Historical Museum in Frankfurt is one of the oldest institutions of its kind. It is located directly in the centre of the city, at the Römerberg and near the river Main. Until the 2010s, it was housed in an ensemble of historic buildings and in an annex building from the 1970s made of reinforced concrete. This more recent building had become unsuitable for further use due to technical problems concerning fire protection, escape routes, and contamination by harmful substances.
For this reason, the city held a competition for a new building with two primary goals: to make spatial improvements to the overall urban situation and to fulfil the specified museum requirements. After completion, the new exhibition building and the existing historic buildings will constitute a single entity.
As a first step, the old buildings were renovated by the office of Diezinger and Kramer, in order to accommodate the operations of the museum until completion of the supplemental new building.
The extension creates an urban plaza between the existing buildings and the additional exhibition spaces, delimited on its short sides by the so-called Stauferbau and, at the other end, by one of the few half-timbered buildings, the “Haus Wertheym”, that has been spared from wartime destruction. Below this plaza is the circulation level, a lower lobby, which gives access to the exhibition levels on four floors. A special feature of the building is its roofscape, which is composed of two contiguous gable roofs joined lengthwise. The façade is clad with red sandstone, a common historic building material of the region.
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Project location
Address:Saalhof 1, 60311 Frankfurt am Main, Germany
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