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Essential
Architecture- Berlin
Museumsinsel |
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Museum Island (or, in German, Museumsinsel) in Berlin, Germany, is the
name of the northern half of the Spreeinsel, an island in the Spree
river, in the center of the city. (The southern half of the island is
called Fischerinsel "Fishers' Island".)
The island received its name for several internationally renowned
museums that are now occupying all of the island's northern half
(originally a residential area dedicated to "art and science" by King
Frederick William IV of Prussia in 1841). Constructed under several
Prussian kings, their collections of art and archeology were turned into
a public foundation after 1918, the Stiftung Preußischer Kulturbesitz,
which maintains the collections and museums today.
The Prussian collections became separated during the Cold War
with the entire city, but were finally reunited after German
reunification.
Presently, the Museumsinsel and the collections are in the
process of being reorganized. Since several buildings were destroyed in
World War II and some of the exhibition space is in the process of being
reconstructed, the information below is in a state of flux.

Altes Museum
Old Museum (June 2003)The Old Museum (Altes Museum)
is the oldest of the museums, finished in 1830 according to the plans by
Prussian architect Karl Friedrich Schinkel. It was erected opposite of
the (no longer existing) Berliner Stadtschloss
(Berlin Castle). The oldest museum building in Berlin, it was here where
Frederick William III first made the Antikensammlung, the Prussian
collection of antiques, available to the public. This collection is now
in part exhibited in the Old Museum again.
The New Museum (Neues Museum), located
behind the Old Museum, was completed in 1859 according to plans by
August Stüler, a student of Schinkel. It was nearly destroyed in World
War II (only some of the outer walls remained) and is presently being
reerected. According to plan, after the completion in 2009, it shall --
as before the war -- expose the collections of Egyptian and pre-history.

The Old National Gallery (Alte Nationalgalerie)
was completed in 1876, also according to designs by August Stüler, to
host a collection of 19th century art donated by banker Joachim H. W.
Wagener. The collection was greatly expanded and is today one of the
largest collections 19th century sculptures and paintings in Germany.
The building was badly damaged in World War II and only completely
restored and reopened in 2001; today, it hosts the paintings of the
collections (while the sculptures are located off the island in the
Friedrichswerdersche Kirche, a former church).

Bodemuseum (under reconstruction)
with northern tip of Museum Island (June 2003)
In 1904 the Kaiser-Friedrich-Museum, today called Bode Museum,
was opened. At the northern tip of the island, it too is presently
closed for reconstruction. It is planned to be reopened in October 2006
to host the collections of sculptures and late antique and Byzantine
art.

Pergamon Museum
The last of the museums is the Pergamon Museum,
completed in 1930, which hosts original-size, reconstructed monumental
buildings such as the Pergamon Altar and the market gate of Miletus,
consisting of parts taken from the original excavation sites.
The collections that were united on Museum Island for the first
time allowed a unified look at European art from the Antiques up to the
19th century, presented in buildings that display the history of museums
in themselves over a course of a hundred years, which is why the entire
ensemble was added to the UNESCO list of World Heritage Sites in 1999.

Berliner Dom
In addition to the museums, the Berliner
Dom is located on the island next to the Lustgarten
(Pleasure Garden) that formerly belonged to the Berliner Stadtschloss.

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links
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www.essential-architecture.com
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