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The Alte Rathaus is a Palladian building in the Old Market Square in Potsdam. It was built for Frederick the Great between 1753 and 1755 to designs by Johann Boumann and Carl Ludwig Hildebrandt. It was modelled on the Palazzo Angarano in Vicenza, designed by Andrea Palladio but never built. It was damaged by the 1945 air raid on Potsdam and rebuilt between 1961 and 1966. It has housed the Potsdam Museum.
Since the Middle Ages Potsdam's Alte Markt has had a town hall, probably standing in the centre of the Markt, which then extended further east. However, its position is comparable to that of the current Altes Rathaus. Its structure was completely rebuilt several times, both due to damage and to increase the city's prestige. The first town hall dated to 1524 but was burned down completely on 24 June 1536 during one of the worst fires in the city's history. Another town hall was built on the same site.
In 1720-1722, under Frederick William I of Prussia, the third town hall was built on the same site as the second to designs by Peter de Gayette. This was a timber-framed building with a solid facade and a wooden tower. Two east-facing wings housed stalls rented to merchants and the scales for checking goods arriving in the city before they could be offered for sale in the Alte Markt. It proved too small right from the outset and - though renovations in 1736 and at other times slightly alleviated this - damage to the building's structure became apparent over time. It was then demolished under Frederick the Great to build the fourth town hall.
As with other buildings in Potsdam, it was modelled on Italian Baroque architecture. Frederick the Great wanted to upgrade the Alte Markt into an ancient Roman forum as part of his transformation of the city into a prestigious royal residence. Following the completion of the renovation of Potsdam City Palace and the start of the work on the new gateway facade for the Nikolaikirche, the new town hall was commissioned on the same stie as the other three by Frederick the Great in 1753. Frederick also provided ideas, though the actual plans by Johann Boumann and Christian Ludwig Hildebrandt. Boumann had played a significant part in designing Potsdam's Dutch Quarter and later became head of all building projects in Berlin and Potsdam.