Angerhof

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Airborne (2008) by Christopher Klein Christopher Klein Airborne Muenchen-25.jpg
Airborne (2008) by Christopher Klein

The Angerhof is a building in Munich that serves as a residential building, office building, hotel with restaurant, service location and parking garage. [1]

Contents

Location

The location of the property is the street Oberanger near the Marienplatz and the Viktualienmarkt , between Munich's oldest monastery St. Anna and the new Jewish center on St-Jakobs-Platz. The nearest stops of the U-/S-Bahn are the Munich Marienplatz station and the subway station Sendlinger Tor.

Architecture

The Angerhof combines, in its horizontal construction, the classic uses of traditional European townhouses for living, working and going out. On the ground floor there are retail stores and restaurants, in the floors above it are offices and in the fifth and sixth levels, on a total of 4,000 square meters, condominiums were created – with three-meter-high ceilings and roof terraces of up to 100 square meters. The interior architecture is reflected in its technically elaborate facade. Behind the sand-colored terracotta façade, light artist Ingo Maurer installed digitally programmed "façade glow" made up of energy-optimized LED lights. The Angerhof created a 1,000-square-meter inner courtyard for the public that opens directly onto the newly created pedestrian zone on the lower Anger. [2]

Construction and dates

Construction began in 2005 according to the plans of architects Otto Steidle and Johann Spengler. The topping out ceremony took place in 2007 and the completion of the approx. 38,000 square meter floor spaced property was in 2009. The total construction costs amounted to approx. 150 million Euros. [3]

The place where the Angerhof stands today, was known for a long time in the post-war period as an "urban lumber pile". A post-war car park made of raw concrete with a gas station blocked the development plans of city construction advocate Christiane Thalgott for a long time. Lord Mayor Christian Ude (SPD) had not expected an urban construction before 2037, since that was how long the leasehold guaranteed of the parking garage existed. A solution was found when the Wöhr + Bauer GmbH managing director Wolfgang Roeck made the suggestion at the turn of the millennium to place the parking garage at the same place in an underground car park. [1] [4] Following the architectural competition for the Angerhof, the planning for the "Boulangerie Oberanger" followed from July to December 2003 - together by the construction department, planning department, district committee (BA) and the builder of the Angerhof, Wöhr + Bauer. On 17 February 2004, the BA, headed by Wolfgang Püschel, decided on the design from "real green" landscape architects. In May 2005, the city council approved the overall concept.

Particularities

Architecture Prize

Angerhof Munich was nominated for the "MIPIM-Award" 2009 in the category "Business Center" on 12 March 2009, at the international real estate fair MIPIM in Cannes as one of only three buildings.

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References

  1. 1 2 "Parkflächen „Der Angerhof", München" (PDF) (in German). Sika. Retrieved 4 June 2019.
  2. "Angerhof in München" (in German). Süddeutsche Zeitung. 6 November 2006. Retrieved 4 June 2019.
  3. "Die größten Immobilienkäufe in München 2012" (in German). immobilienreport münchen. 9 April 2013. Retrieved 4 June 2019.
  4. "Leidenschaft für das Besondere" (in German). Wöhr + Bauer. Retrieved 4 June 2019.
  5. "Das Glanzstück Der Angerhof" (in German). Währ + Bauer. Retrieved 4 June 2019.
  6. "Int'l Symposium on Precision Approach and Performance Based Navigation (ISPA 2017)". Inside GNSS. 14 June 2017. Retrieved 4 June 2019.

Coordinates: 48°08′03″N11°34′15″E / 48.1343°N 11.5708°E / 48.1343; 11.5708