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Essential
Architecture- Berlin
Neues Museum |
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architect
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August Stüler |
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location
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Museumsinsel, Berlin |
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date
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1859 The Neues Museum was bombed and left in
ruins during the DDR. It is currently being rebuilt. |
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style
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Greek Revival |
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construction
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stone |
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type
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Museum |
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Neues Museum in 1850, View from Friedrichsbrücke |
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Ruins of the Neues Museum 1984, View of
the room of the south cupola |
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The famous bust of Nefertiti |
Neues Museum
The Egyptian courtyard, from Friedrich August Stüler, Das Neue
Museum in Berlin, Riedel 1862The Neues Museum, located north of (behind)
the Altes Museum on Berlin's Museum Island (a World Heritage Site), was
built between 1843 and 1855 according to plans by Friedrich August
Stüler, a student of Karl Friedrich Schinkel. The museum was partly
destroyed in World War II (in some areas, only the outer walls remained)
and is currently being rebuilt. The reconstruction is scheduled to be
completed in 2009, after which the museum will exhibit the Egyptian and
Pre- and Early History Collections, as it did before the war. Among the
treasures shown will be the famous bust of the Egyptian queen Nefertiti.
Both as a part of the Museum Island complex, and as an individual
building, the museum testifies to the neoclassical architecture of
museums in the 19th century. With its new industrialized building
procedures and its use of iron construction, the museum plays an
important role in the history of technology.
Since the classical and ornate interiors of the Glyptothek and of
the Alte Pinakothek in Munich were destroyed in World War II, the partly
destroyed interior of the Neues Museum ranks among the last remaining
examples of interior museum layout of this period in Germany.
Overview
East Facade of the Neues Museum with connection to the Altes
Museum and the Colonnade, from Friedrich August Stüler, Das Neue Museum
in Berlin, Riedel 1862The Neues Museum (literally New Museum) was the
second museum on the Museum Island and was built as an extension to
house the collections which could not be accommodated in the Altes
Museum (literally Old Museum). These were the collections of plaster
casts, the Egyptian museum, the prehistoric and early historic
collections (Museum der vaterländischen Altertümer), the ethnographic
collection, and the collection of etchings and engravings (Kupferstichkabinett).
It is thus the "original source" of the collections in the Egyptian
Museum of Berlin and the Ethnological Museum of Berlin. Although
originally conceived as a general museum with a permanent collection,
the "outsourcing" of individual collections, such as the ethnography
collection, into separate museums illustrates the historical change from
a general museum to a specialized one. This is a general development of
most museums in the course of the 19th century.
Moreover, the Neues Museum is an important monument in the
history of construction and technology. With its various iron
constructions, it is the first monumental building of Prussia to
consistently apply new techniques made possible by industrialization. As
a further innovation, a steam engine was used for the first time in
construction in Berlin. Among other things, it was used to ram pilings
into the building ground. The soft, spongy soil around the River Spree
requires buildings in the central area of Berlin to be anchored deep.
History
Construction
Construction of the Neues Museum began on 19 June 1841, under the
auspices of a committee established by Frederick William IV, which
included the curator of the Royal Museums, Ignaz von Wolfers, as well as
Friedrich August Stüler. The king, with his cabinet, had already ordered
that the construction project be assigned to Stüler on 8 March 1841. The
poor quality of the ground at the building site became apparent quickly,
when the workers discovered deposits of diatomaceous earth just below
the surface. Therefore a pile structure was necessary under the whole
building, consisting of 2344 wooden foundation piles between 6.9 and
18.2 meters long. To ram the piles in, a five-horsepower (3.7 kW) steam
engine was used, whose power could be increased if necessary to 10 HP
(7.5 kW). It drove the pumps that drained of the building site, the
elevators, and the mortar mixing machines. The newsletter of the Berlin
Architecture Association reported on the building site and the new
technical devices.
On April 6, 1843, when the ceremony of laying the cornerstone
took place, the foundations, including the cellars, were already built.
Construction of the walls was completed at the end of 1843, so that by
1844, the cornice and roof of the museum were completed. In 1845, iron
constructions, the construction of flat vaulted ceilings and
brick-lining of the connecting gallery to the Altes Museum were
completed. An auxiliary railway transported building materials from the
street just west across the River Spree, Am Kupfergraben, to the steam
engine-driven elevator. On the individual floors of the museum, rails
were also used to transport construction materials. In 1846, the workers
began work on the building's facade, apart from the sculptures in the
pediments, and also started cleaning the interiors, building the marble
stairway steps and began work on the flooring . These work had
progressed well in 1847 and the costly interior fittings could begun.
The March revolution of 1848 led to delays in the construction work,
which was however not completely interrupted at any time. As soon as the
respective areas were completed, the installation of the collection
began, until the museum was finally opened in 1855 to the public,
although work on parts of the interior decoration, in particular the
wall frescos in the stairway, continued until 1866.
From the opening to World War II
When the Neues Museum opened, there were the Egyptian, patriotic
and ethnographic collections in the ground floor, while the collections
of the plaster casts of Greek and Roman sculptures from antiquity and
Byzantine, Romanesque, Gothic, Renaissance and Classic art works
occupied the first floor. The collection of etchings and engravings and
the so-called art chamber (Kunstkammer), a collection of architectural
models, furniture, clay, pottery and glass containers, and church
articles shared the second floor, along with smaller works of art from
the Middle Ages and modern times. The Ethnology Museum (Völkerkundemuseum),
founded in 1873, moved to its own building in 1886 on Königgrätzer
Strasse (Street) (today Stresemannstrasse, this building was destroyed
in World War II). Connected with this were the removal of the
Ethnographic collection, the collection the patriotic antiquities, and
part of the 'art chamber' collection. The newly founded Museum of Arts
and Crafts (Kunstgewerbemuseum) took possession of the remaining nearly
7000 objects of the 'art chamber' in 1875, and also moved to its own
building, the Martin-Gropius-Bau, in 1881. The areas thus freed in the
ground floor housed the Egyptian collection again, while the areas in
the second floor were occupied by the collection of etchings and
engravings.
From 1883 to 1887, an additional mezzanine level, which is not
visible from the exterior, was added to the Neues Museum. The collection
of plaster casts, a centerpiece of collections at the time of the
construction, grew during the course of the 19th century to become one
of the most extensive and most comprehensive cast collections. However,
due to a change in public taste, it was handed over between 1916 and
1920 - with the exception of the largest statues - to the Berlin
University, where it was destroyed to a large extent during World War
II. In the halls of the first floor the vase collection of the antique
museum as well as the papyrus collection of the Egyptian museum were
installed. Changes in the ground floor, from 1919 to 1923, led for the
first time to substantial changes in the original building. In the Greek
courtyard, the apse was removed, the courtyard covered with a glass
roof, and a new floor at the same height as the ground floor was added.
Thus several rooms and cabinets for the display of the Amarna collection
were created. In the adjacent areas of the ground floor, suspended
ceilings were added to produce modern, neutral display rooms by covering
the original decorations. The destruction in World War II followed these
internal destructions of the original museum layout. In the bombardments
on November 23, 1943, the central stairway and its frescos was burned,
along with other great treasures of human history. In February 1945,
bombs destroyed the northwest wing as well as the connection to the
Altes Museum and damaged the southwest wing as well as the south-east
facade (risalit).
After World War II and today
In the post-war period, the ruin of the Neues Museum sank into a
slumber like that of Sleeping Beauty. Other museums of the Museum Island
used the least damaged areas of the building for storage. Reconstruction
work only started in earnest in 1986, but these efforts were aborted
(both avoidably and unavoidably) several times, and in the process
historical parts of the building were lost. For instance, the last
remnants of the Egyptian courtyard were eliminated. For the intended
reconstruction, numerous sections and fragments of the building were
taken out and put in storage. After the consolidation of the foundations
and walls, the building is currently being reconstructed with a planned
completion date of 2008. This work is being done within the framework of
the Masterplan for Berlin's Museum Island, with a cost of approximately
€295 million. The northwest wing and the south-east facade, which were
completely destroyed in the war, are being reconstructed according to
plans of the English architect David Chipperfield, in a manner quite
close to their original layout in the museum building. After the planned
reopening in 2009, the museum will house the Egyptian museum and papyrus
collection with its famous bust of the queen Nefertiti and other works
of art from the time of the king Akhenaten. Portions of another major
collection, artifacts from the Stone Age and later prehistoric eras from
the Museum of Pre- and Early History, will also be on display. Thus the
collections of two Berlin museums will return to their place of origin.
The Building
General map: see above
Ground Floor (Erdgeschoss)
1) Greek Courtyard 2) Egyptian Courtyard 3) Main Vestibule 4)
Patriotic Room5) South Vestibule 6) Vaulted Room 7) Ethnographic Room 8)
Room behind the stairs 9) Historical Room 10) Hypostyle 11) Egyptian
Tombs Room 12) Mythological Room
Upper Floor (1. Stockwerk):'
13) Main Stairs 14 ) Bacchus Room 15) Roman Room 16) South Cupola
Room 17) Connection to Altes Museum 18) Room of the Middle Ages 19)
Bernward Room 20) Modern Room 21) Greek Room 22) Cabinet of Laocoön 23)
Apollo Room 24) North Cupola Room 25) Nubian Room
As originally built (see map), the Neues Museum was nearly
rectangular, with the long axis of the building (344 feet or 105 meters)
oriented north to south, parallel to Am Kupfergraben (the street to the
west, across the River Spree), and a width of 131 ft (40 m). The
building is nearly perpendicular to the Altes Museum, with Bodestrasse
between them. The bridge connecting the two museums (destroyed during
the war) was 23 ft (6.9 m) wide, 80 ft (24.5 m) long, and supported by
three arches. The main stairway was located in the center of the
building, which was the highest section (102 ft or 31 m tall).
The three main wings surround two interior courtyards, the Greek
courtyard and the Egyptian courtyard. The northern Egyptian courtyard
was covered with a glass ceiling from the beginning, but the southern
Greek courtyard was first covered with a glass ceiling between 1919 and
1923.
Reopening in 2009
It is likely to contain information of a speculative nature and
the content may change as the building approaches completion.
Architect David Chipperfield has been entrusted with the work on
the Neues Museum, in the framework of the Museum Island Master Plan. In
January 2006, Chipperfield handed over his completed Modern (German)
Literature Museum (Literaturmuseum der Moderne) to the German Literature
Archives in Marbach am Neckar (Deutsches Literaturarchiv Marbach).
Currently (2006), the architect sees the completion schedule for the
Neues Museum as endangered. The city of Berlin anticipates about 4
million annual visitors (at present there are 1.5 million) after
completion of the buildings on the Museum Island. A new reception
building for these visitors, the "Cube", is also planned to be completed
in 2009. The "Cube", which will cost about 60 million euros, is
currently under a planning freeze, which Chipperfield sees as also
endangering progress on the Neues Museum (according to ZDF, the Second
German Television channel). In view of the total cost of the Museum
Island master plan (estimated to cost €1.5 billion, of which €295
million are for the Neues Museum), the controversy over the €60 million
for the "Cube" appears disproportionate not only to the architect. A
March 11, 2006 report on ZDF commented "if the planning freeze is not
lifted by the end of the year, the entrance building (the "Cube") cannot
be completed in time. The idea that the portable toilets and ticket
containers which now stand in its place will still be there, is less
than flattering for a world cultural heritage site."
Still, on June 24, 2003 the Federal Government Commissioner for
Cultural and Media Affairs Christina Weiss, said on the occasion of the
ceremony for the commencement of reconstruction of the Neues Museum,
that the master plan has "nearly squared the circle: to emphasize the
buildings as a historical inheritance, to logically direct the flow of
the host of visitors, and to make ready... a modern infrastructure."
If the ministry overseeing reconstruction is able to square the
circle and all goes according to plan, in 2009 the Neues Museum will
also become part of the archaeological promenade. The archaeological
promenade will be an underground passageway connecting all the buildings
on the Museum Island, with the exception of the Alte Nationalgalerie. It
will integrate the Neues Museum as an important part of the historical
architectural context of the Museum Island. The Neues Museum's restored,
expanded, and new galleries will then again offer, as they did before
their destruction, a worthy framework for the collections of the
Egyptian Museum and the Museum for Pre- and Early History. Finally, the
building will at last represent a lasting monument in stone for its
first architect, Friedrich August Stüler, who wished that "the whole
building should form a center for the highest mental interests of the
people, the likes of which no other capital would likely be able to
exhibit."
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links
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www.essential-architecture.com
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