40 years of the BMW Tower and Museum.
Contents
1...Introduction............................................................................................. 2
2...BMW Tower: the
“Four-Cylinder”........................................................... 4
3.. BMW
Museum...................................................................................... 12
4...Dossier: facts &
figures...................................................................... 16
40 years of the BMW Tower and Museum.
1. Introduction.
“The biggest four-cylinder in the world – a landmark for the city of
Munich alongside the Olympic Park. Ergonomically compact inside and
clearly contoured outside, it is a boldly conceived experiment and a
milestone in the history of architecture. BMW has created space for
its expanding business with an administrative centre of the New
Class.” (Internal memo, 1973)
Since its official opening on 18 May 1973, the BMW Group Headquarters
has become an indisputable icon of architectural history and a
permanent feature both of Munich’s skyline and of the company’s
corporate image. In spring 2013, 40 years after its completion, a
committee of experts voted the building complex designed by architect
Professor Karl Schwanzer one of the 15 most spectacular corporate head
offices. Alongside the office block nicknamed the “Four-Cylinder”,
only one other company headquarters from Germany made it onto the
shortlist drawn up by the EMPORIS web portal for building data and
construction projects.
The BMW Tower and adjoining museum complex not only mark the high
point of Karl Schwanzer’s architectural career, they also set new
benchmarks in the field of modern office architecture in the early
1970s. The Viennese architect’s design combined an impressive façade
with an innovative and flexible spatial concept, and in so doing laid
the foundations for a new and enduring architectural philosophy at
BMW. In accordance with the “built for communication” concept,
Munich’s Four-Cylinder uniquely combines the pragmatic benefits of its
administrative function with the aesthetics of architecture.
Schwanzer’s tower furthermore epitomises West German architectural
design of the 1970s – innovative civil engineering projects which
would have lasting stylistic influence. Given its identity as an
engineering structure, the tower is one of the outstanding
architectural achievements of its period and continues to fascinate
and intrigue admirers to this day.
The BMW Headquarters and Museum complex was awarded listed building
status in 1999 and for many years it has been considered a landmark of
the city of Munich. And with BMW Welt, designed in 2007 by the
internationally renowned architect Prof. Wolf D. Prix, the BMW Group
created another must-see example of urban development for visitors to
the Bavarian capital with an interest in architecture, technology,
design and innovation.
40 years of the BMW Tower and Museum.
2. BMW Tower: the “Four-Cylinder”.
Background
During the 1960s, BMW went through a period of unprecedented
expansion. Spiralling production figures necessitated extra space for
administrative functions in addition to more production facilities.
While the manufacturing side was expanded through the acquisition of
Glas Automobilwerke in Dingolfing and Landshut in 1966, in Munich
there was a shortage of office space for administrative staff.
Although the existing office buildings at Plant 1 in
Munich/Milbertshofen were added to and more space was created
immediately adjacent to the factory, there simply was not enough scope
for the requisite expansion. As a result many administrative
departments had to be relocated off the plant premises. Office
buildings in and around Munich were rented to accommodate staff, which
meant that administration was dispersed across the city. This
situation ultimately forced the company to recognise the need for a
dedicated office building on plant premises in order to recentralise
and expand administrative organisation.
Tender and competition
Wilhelm Hermann Gieschen
– board member for production from 1961 to 1971 – presented the first
plans for a new administration building in Dostlerstrasse to a meeting
of the Board of Management on 14 June 1966. Gieschen was therefore the
initiator of its construction and from that point on became the board
member responsible for all arrangements associated with the new building.
A site for the new administration building was identified to the
south of the BMW plant. It had an area of 28,210 m² and was located on
Dostlerstrasse and therefore adjacent to the main entrance to the BMW
plant. The site earmarked for this new office block was undeveloped at
the time of planning and used as a car park for the workforce at the
BMW plant until 1970.
The BMW executive management launched a competition with a view to
choosing a design for the new head office and invited eight architects
with a proven track record in similar projects. The tender document
issued in April 1968 specified that the new complex of buildings
should include – in addition to the office block – a separate pavilion
for an electronic computer centre and a multistorey car park. The
architecture of the administration centre, computer centre and
multistorey car park was to be closely integrated, in addition to
creating an architectural synthesis with the existing administration
Buildings 71 and 80 on the periphery of the plant site and outside it.
Spatial planning for the new office building also had to take account
of technological advances in administration and production and the
continual changes these brought to workflows. So BMW was looking for a
design in which usable space could be reconfigured and adapted at any
time to meet current requirements. In addition to stipulating
conditions for the spatial design of the new BMW building, the
executive management was equally concerned that it should have
architectural merit. In particular, the promotional appeal of the
building was dependent on a generous and visually impressive façade.
Moreover, access to the Headquarters, featuring a forecourt, was to be
similarly imposing in its layout. The jury appointed to judge the
entries was united in the view that the new administrative complex
required dimensions and a design that would not only reflect the
importance of the company, but also blend in with other architecture
around the BMW plant. This consisted of residential buildings, the BMW
plant, major traffic junctions and the future Olympic facilities.
Following the presentation of the designs on 10 October 1968, the
competition shortlist of two comprised a rather conventional
“seven-storey high-rise slab block”, submitted by the engineering and
planning company Aktiengesellschaft für Industrieplanung, and an
almost 100-metre-high, futuristic “suspended structure” with four
cylindrical main elements, designed by the Viennese architect
Professor Karl Schwanzer. In the jury’s view, both designs had
advantages and drawbacks, but BMW sales director Paul Hahnemann
recognised in Karl Schwanzer’s technically bold design the potential
for it to become an architectural landmark for BMW and for Munich, and
he championed its implementation internally. In order to convince the
BMW Board of Management, Supervisory Board and major shareholders of
the merits of Schwanzer’s design, Hahnemann had a functional model of
one complete cloverleaf storey with open-plan office erected on a 1:1
scale at the Bavaria film studios. His efforts were rewarded: in
December 1968, BMW management awarded the commission to build a new
Group head office to the Viennese architect Professor Karl Schwanzer.
BMW Tower: architecture and design
Karl Schwanzer’s design drafts for the BMW Headquarters reveal the
influence of his teacher, the architect Oscar Niemeyer, who in the
1950s had been responsible for urban planning for Brasília, the new
capital of Brazil. The BMW Tower site benefited from Niemeyer’s
architectural landscape and it reveals the extent to which Schwanzer
borrowed from the architectural concept of his mentor – the sculptural
element of both the BMW Tower and Museum Bowl would have been
inconceivable without Niemeyer’s spectacular ensemble in South America.
The tower has a cloverleaf floor plan and forms both the high point
and centre of the ensemble of new buildings. Its height of 99.5 metres
was within the maximum stipulated by Munich’s inner city planning
regulations in 1968. This restriction was based on the height of the
towers of Munich’s Frauenkirche, which rise to 98.6 m. The height of a
building could not exceed 100 m. Its 22 storeys were divided into 18
office floors, including two for the Board of Management, four
technical floors, the ground floor and a basement.
Instead of resting on foundations, the BMW Tower’s four cylinders
were designed to be suspended from a cruciform steel beam construction
on the roof. There were only a handful of examples of this type of
“suspended building” worldwide, and none had ever been built to the
height of Schwanzer’s design for BMW. In construction terms this meant
that rather than being built conventionally from the bottom upwards,
first the upper floors of the almost 100-metre-high building were
completed. The four cylindrical elements were initially constructed at
ground level, before being raised hydraulically and completed in
several segments. Each cylinder comprising 19 floors – including a
technical floor (to provide visual segmentation) – was suspended from
four giant “crane arms” positioned in the shape of a cross at the
building’s central core, a tower shaft made of reinforced concrete and
resting on very solid foundations. The huge tensile and compression
forces were absorbed by lattice girders made of reinforced concrete on
a mezzanine level in the top third of the building and by vertical
ties and compression columns running along the exterior façades –
lending the entire design stability. This approach to design and
construction gave the BMW Tower a light and distinctive silhouette,
despite its impressive height and a suspended weight of 16,800 tonnes.
Moreover, in urban planning terms the cloverleaf tower was very much
in keeping with its surroundings and at the same time proved an
extremely effective way of promoting the company. Thanks in particular
to its distinctive shape, Schwanzer’s tower was to become a memorable
landmark and important focal point for BMW. The architect himself
described it as a modern and unique office tower with a characteristic
access road and closed forecourt. The design made use of clearly
defined forms that conveyed precision, technical perfection and
aesthetically appealing contours. As such, it perfectly represented
the successful image and high aspirations of the BMW automotive company.
But the building was not all about the appeal of its spectacular
exterior: in terms of interior design, Schwanzer accorded a high
priority to the issue of functionality. What the directors initially
regarded as too futuristic, too far removed from practical
applications and too experimental, was ultimately considered the best
solution: a circular floor plan of four office segments on each level,
created by the four individual suspended columns of the tower. These
four circular segments form the cloverleaf shape of the external floor
plan of the administration building. The architect himself based his
reasoning for the shape of the building exclusively on the compelling
logical rationality and functionality of a circular floor plan for the
modern organisational approach to office work. One of the determining
factors for Karl Schwanzer was to optimise communication flows within
a team. In his view the cloverleaf floor plan resulted in the
following characteristics for modern office design: short routes to
optimise lines of communication and office organisation between the
individual departments, and maximum flexibility in configuring
available space. Even today the four circular segments of each
cloverleaf floor are mainly used for open-plan offices. At the core of
each floor are two intersecting corridors which link the individual
team offices. This architecture fosters close cooperation through
short lines of communication. And this approach to office planning in
the tower reflects the BMW principle of a flat hierarchical structure.
Virtually every member of the department, from trainees to head of
department, sits in a team office – individual offices are few and far between.
BMW Tower: the construction process
The period of construction for the new Group Head Office and outside
areas was scheduled for 26 months. Since 70 per cent of the site was
affected by the building work, construction had to be carried out in
stages. Excavation work on the site of the former car park for the BMW
plant began on 16 July 1970. The official groundbreaking ceremony
followed on 28 July 1970. Two and a half months after the start of
construction, the foundations of the tower and two floor levels above
the basement were in place. Four months after the start of
construction, the core of the tower had been raised to the full height
of almost 100 m using the Simcrete slipform process. Next came the
mighty load-bearing cross at the top of the tower. Even while this
work was in progress, the seven uppermost floors and adjoining
technical floor were being prepared at ground level. Then these floors
were suspended from the load-bearing cross using prestressing steel
tendons and raised by a hydraulic press at a rate of four metres per
week. In the space vacated beneath these now suspended floors, a new
floor could then be prepared each week and hoisted up to the completed
ones above, with glazing and façade work progressing at the same time.
In this way the four cylindrical segments of the building rose
uniformly from the ground at the same pace.
Already protected from the elements, the completed floors were now
ready for interior work to begin without delay. Installations were
fitted, followed by floor, wall and ceiling linings in a meticulously
preplanned rhythm, unimpeded by skeleton construction work at ground
level. Thanks to prefabrication, the tower’s architecture went up with
enormous speed – as an approach to construction it was elegant,
efficient and quick. After 16 months, lifting operations on the floor
segments came to an end. The shell of the administration tower, the
façade and the glazing were complete and work on the interior was
already well under way.
The topping-out ceremony to celebrate completion of construction was
held on 7 December 1971. By July 1972, just two years after the start
of the building programme, the outer profile of the entire complex of
buildings, the outside areas and the landscaping were complete. When
Munich played host to the world at the 1972 Olympic Games, the BMW
Tower was finished and could be seen in its full glory for the first
time. The end of the contractual construction period was 30 September
1972. However, before the move into the building could begin on 22
January 1973, additional work had to be carried out and the interior
design needed to be completed. An open day was held in mid-December
1972 to enable staff to see what their future workplace would look
like. The official opening ceremony for the new complex of buildings
with a price tag of DM 109 million was held on 18 May 1973.
How the logo found its way onto the roof of the tower
Schwanzer’s concept proposed the installation of corporate emblems on
the load-bearing cross on the roof of the tower. However, the Munich
city planning authority considered the impact would be too striking in
nature. Effectively, the city planners were saying they were against
the installation of a company logo – and a legal dispute ensued.
Despite this, to mark the start of the Olympic Games, Eberhard von
Kuenheim, chairman of the Board of Management at the time, had BMW
emblems printed on canvas screens and displayed at a height of nearly
100 m on the east and west sides of the roof superstructure for “trial
purposes”. Mounting the logo on the west side was particularly
important for promotional reasons, since the emblem was visible from
the Olympic Stadium – the intention being to attract the attention of
visitors to the Games. By displaying the company logo in breach of
city regulations in this way, BMW incurred a fine of over DM 110,000.
But after lengthy negotiations with the city authorities, the Board of
Management was finally granted permission in autumn 1973 to display
BMW logos permanently on all four sides of the superstructure.
BMW Tower: renovation and modernisation 2004-2006
After over 30 years of service, by the turn of the millennium the BMW
Tower was in need of thorough renovation and modernisation. The
contract was awarded to Hamburg-based architect Peter P. Schweger and
work on structural and technical aspects of the building began in
2004. However, the building’s external appearance remained unchanged
throughout the renovation: the cleaning of all façade elements, the
new insulation and soundproofing, and the replacement of 2,304 windows
were only noticeable on closer inspection. The colossal load-bearing
construction on the roof was encased in a well-ventilated housing to
prevent damp penetration. And the roof itself was sealed with welded
plates of stainless steel. Great thought was given to the updated fire
protection system, which used pressure ventilation of the stairwells
with airlocks situated at the entrances, and included a specially
integrated fire service lift.
Furthermore, conditions for those working in the BMW Tower were
improved. The fresh air supply was optimised and complemented by a
system to control window opening. Natural daylight in the workplace
was improved thanks to a redesigned louvre system and supported by the
use of daylight-controlled circular luminaires. Following the removal
of the Tower canteen in the adjoining low-rise building to the west, a
replacement was built in the adjoining building to the east, which
featured a large cafeteria in high-quality contemporary design. The
Four-Cylinder’s entire lift system also underwent renovation. Instead
of the original eight cars in eight lift shafts, now two cars
travelled one above the other in four of the shafts, with a single car
in two of the other shafts and a fire service lift.
The BMW Tower today
The BMW Tower was state-of-the-art in 1973, a symbol of cutting-edge
architecture and a test site for new, pioneering ideas geared to
in-house cooperation. After 30 years of service, the building needed
to be adapted to the changing technical and architectural requirements
of a global company. Today the Four-Cylinder is virtually unchanged in
terms of its external appearance and on the inside remains as
spectacular and futuristic as it was 40 years ago. The renovation work
preserved its character as a building of innovative, forward-looking
technical design and further developed and refined the basic principle
of transparency, which had been an aspiration from the outset. Thanks
not least to the development of an energy and resource management
system, the overhaul also achieved a reduction in operating costs of
50 per cent. In 2013 the BMW Tower provides a unique working
environment for 1,500 employees of the BMW Group.
BMW’s architectural philosophy: “
Built for communication”
With his innovative exterior and interior design for the
Four-Cylinder, Professor Karl Schwanzer laid the foundations of an
architectural philosophy at BMW that began in the late 1960s and is
still regularly applied today. In line with the “built for
communication” principle, this philosophy influences internal
workflows and helps to convey the public image of the company.
Since then, outstanding architecture with a high degree of
functionality has been a trademark of the company. The Research and
Innovation Centre (FIZ), built between 1984 and 1990, is a spacious
ideas factory, whose interlinking segments were specifically designed
to put into practice the guiding principle of team- and
communication-based work. All specialist units involved in vehicle
development and pre-production are based here. Developed by HENN
Architekten of Munich, the project building is integrated into the
processes of vehicle production. Here, too, communication between the
employees and teams involved in the various projects has been a
priority since 2004.
Zaha Hadid Architects of London designed the central building of the
BMW Leipzig plant, which opened in 2005. The structure features a
unique open spatial concept, designed to support communication and
human interaction. It interlinks the key production areas using the
shortest possible routes. The design was awarded the 2005 German Prize
for Architecture.
The spectacular, award-winning architecture of BMW Welt, designed by
the Viennese team of architects Coop Himmelb(l)au and opened in 2007,
is now Bavaria’s most popular attraction and draws millions of
visitors each year. As the brand’s “shop window” it surprises visitors
both inside and out with its unconventional design aesthetic and functionality.
40 years of the BMW Tower and Museum.
3. BMW Museum.
Background
The first museum-type display space for historic BMW products was
developed at the BMW Munich plant in the mid-1920s, where from 1925
onwards the company exhibited its products in a purpose-built room on
plant premises. Although the focus was on historic exhibits,
occasional current products were also displayed. To mark the company’s
50th anniversary in 1966, this original exhibition room was given an
extensive makeover. The now enlarged BMW plant museum was officially
opened on 20 January 1967. For the first time the museum was
advertised to the general public and its doors opened to any visitor
with an interest in BMW history. Nevertheless, the availability of
space and the number of historic exhibits remained modest and the
museum’s location within the plant premises deterred many potential visitors.
It was not until the early 1970s, with the construction of the new
BMW Group Headquarters, that the museum attracted wider public
attention for its independent, representative architecture outside the
plant premises. Although the jury for the architectural competition of
1968 had not specified the design of an automotive museum, Viennese
architect Professor Karl Schwanzer included in his proposal an
external and independent building for the display of vehicles, which
also featured a circular floor plan. In the view of the jury, the
proposal to build a BMW Museum at the intersection of Petuelring and
Lerchenauer Strasse in Schwanzer’s idiosyncratic design was a
felicitous idea, since the form – also based on circular segments –
fitted well into the overall ensemble of buildings. The “Museum Bowl”
was in perfect harmony with other cylindrical or circular structures
in the immediate vicinity – including the television tower, several
gasometers and a traffic island. So at a meeting of the Supervisory
Board in Bad Homburg on 2 December 1968, Schwanzer was commissioned
not only to build the BMW Tower, but also to integrate retrospectively
into the building contract his concept for an independent museum.
The BMW Museum and the Summer Olympics
Work began on the BMW Museum in spring 1971, nine months after the
start of construction of the BMW Tower. Located in the immediate
vicinity of the Olympic Stadium with its light and airy roof
structure, the BMW Museum was designed as a crowd-pulling flagship for
the BMW brand during the Summer Olympic Games. The summer of 1972 was
an opportunity for the young Federal Republic of Germany to endear
itself to the world – and the BMW Museum was one element in this new,
forward-looking, international orientation. Although its silvery,
shimmering form assumed a compact and closed exterior, its interior
was designed to welcome in the general public. The shell of the BMW
Museum was completed at the same time as Munich’s Olympic Stadium,
right on schedule for the start of the 1972 Summer Olympic Games.
BMW Museum: architecture and design
Alongside the Tower, the bowl-shaped museum was a second
architectural highlight in the complex of buildings designed for BMW
by Professor Karl Schwanzer. The architect developed an interior
framework of circular columns, space-filling ramps and platforms
apparently suspended in mid-air. The outer shell of relatively thin
concrete was designed in line with the automotive principle of the
self-supporting body. Its roof measured 40 metres in diameter. The
interior structure, on the other hand, rested on six solid columns
rising to varying heights within the space created by the bowl.
Schwanzer’s museum building enabled him to integrate the car’s
“natural habitat” – roads, bridges and car parks – within a relatively
restricted space. His basic concept was to bring the road environment
into the converted exhibition space; on no account was he going to
give BMW a conventional, static museum in the form of a repository for
exhibits. The goal was to achieve spatial breadth combined with
dynamics and movement as a design counterpart to the actual site of
the building at a major traffic intersection.
At the same time, in combination with the education centre situated
in the adjacent low building, the museum was to become a main focus of
BMW’s public relations programme. The building’s bowl shape –
seemingly impenetrable from the outside – was enough to provoke
interest, and only its glazed pedestal at the entrance area permitted
the occasional glimpse inside. The museum was to form the spiritual
lynchpin between plant, product and public, and through specially
organised events become a permanent institution in the cultural life
of the city of Munich.
Once inside the museum, the visitor followed a route from top to
bottom. Before reaching the uppermost platform via an unusually long,
yellow escalator, the visitor was afforded surprising glimpses of
elements of the exhibition. Images projected onto the inside wall of
the bowl served to create an initial illusion of movement. Thereafter,
a spiralling ramp guided the visitor downwards from platform to
platform, past cars, motorcycles, racing vehicles and engines, all
representative of the diverse range of products that make up the BMW
heritage. More detailed technical exhibits were presented in
apparently floating, spherical Plexiglas containers – highly
innovative at the time – which enabled visitors to look at all aspects
of an engine, for example, by walking around it. Accompanying texts
explained the historical relevance and technical details. Cars and
motorcycles were not only displayed on all five circular platforms,
they were also fixed to the wall of the bowl at ever-steeper angles to
represent cornering. Narrow window slits in the lower part of the
outer wall provided a link to the world outside.
The museum’s colour scheme of silver, white and dark blue served not
only to convey elegance and quality, it also subtly represented the
world-famous colours of the BMW logo, which additionally appeared as
monumental 40-metre-diameter graphic element on the museum’s roof –
visible only from above.
BMW Museum: exhibition concept
At the time of its official opening in 1973, the BMW Museum was a
unique design. It combined outstanding architecture with an entirely
new concept of knowledge transfer, making the BMW Museum a model for
countless other museums all over the world. Since its opening, the BMW
Museum has regarded itself as a place which not only reflects the
history of the BMW brand but also places the past in the context of
the present and future. When it opened its doors in 1973, the BMW
Museum’s objective was not to impress visitors with an endless
collection of historic exhibits, but rather to enthral them through
lively confrontation with themes linked to mobility, communication and
structural changes in society.
Redesign and expansion of the BMW Museum
Along with the renovations to the adjoining administration building
on Petuelring, the technical systems and concept of the BMW Museum
underwent a complete overhaul at the start of the new millennium. The
relocation to other areas of the Tower canteen and event rooms of the
western low building created an opportunity for generous expansion of
the now severely cramped facilities of the BMW Museum. From 2002, the
Stuttgart firm of architects and exhibition designers Atelier Brückner
and the Berlin-based media agency ART & COM worked with the
relevant specialist departments at BMW to create a new exhibition
concept which reflected and developed further the original principles
of the museum.
The floor area of the BMW Museum was increased fivefold to 5,000 m2
by the addition of the adjacent low-rise building. This structure, two
thirds of which is underground, was completely gutted and its interior
converted into seven partially transparent “houses” on three floors,
linked by a series of bridges, roads and squares. Each of these houses
is dedicated to a key aspect of BMW corporate and product history,
with a large central plaza available as a flexible events venue. The
additional low-rise building now accommodates the permanent exhibition
of the BMW Museum in its various houses and rooms covering 4,000 m²,
while the Museum Bowl displays temporary exhibitions on specific themes.
The fascination of the BMW brand remains at the heart of the museum
concept since its reopening on 21 June 2008. At the same time, the new
museum positions itself as the authentic reflection of the brand,
conveying to visitors through a variety of approaches its spirit of
innovation, power and dynamism. Particular attention has been paid to
new presentation techniques, which turn the spotlight on the 130
original exhibits while at the same time highlighting the building’s
new architecture. A central museum route in the form of a road
establishes an urban setting, guides visitors on a thematic journey
through time and space, and offers a wide range of displays, themed
presentations and individual facets of the BMW brand.
With over 500,000 visitors per year, the new BMW Museum is the second
most visited museum in the cultural city of Munich – and as such one
of the most popular museums in Germany.
40 years of the BMW Tower and Museum.
4. Dossier: facts & figures.
Chronology
14 June 1966 Presentation of plans
for the construction of a new administration building at a Board of
Management meeting
14 May 1968 – Nov. 1968 Tender and competition
December 1968 Contract
awarded to Prof. Karl Schwanzer
December 1968 – July 1970 Adaptation of the
design and detailed planning
16 July 1970 Laying
of foundation stone and start of excavation work in Dostlerstrasse
28 July 1970 Official
groundbreaking ceremony
April 1971 Start
of construction of the museum
7 Dec. 1971
Topping-out ceremony
July 1972
Building shell and park areas completed
August 1972 For the
Olympic Games: canvas logos appear on the east and west façades
30 Sep. 1972 End of
contractual construction period
Oct. 1972 – Jan. 1973 Interior design
Dec. 1972 Open
day for employees
22 Jan. 1973 Start of
occupation of the building
18 May 1973 Official
opening ceremony for Tower and Museum
November 1973 Installation
of company logo
from 29 Oct. 1999 Tower
awarded listed building status
April 2004 Start
of renovation work on the BMW Museum and Tower
August 2006
Reoccupation of the Tower following renovation
21 June 2008 Opening of
the new BMW Museum following renovation and expansion
April 2013
BMW Headquarters voted one of the world’s most
impressive corporate head offices
Facts & figures
BMW Tower
Built (exterior completed): 1970 – 1972
Topping-out ceremony: 7 December 1971
Official opening: 18 May 1973
Architect: Prof. Karl Schwanzer
Architect of renovation: Peter P. Schweger
Cost: approx.
DM 100 million
Height: 99.5 m =
approx. height of Munich’s Frauenkirche
Floors: 22 (18
office floors in Tower)
Aluminium façade window elements: 2,304
Weight (Tower): 16,800 t
Building plot: 14,730 m²
Useful area: approx.
53,000 m²
Jobs: approx. 1,500
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BMW Museum
Built (exterior completed): 1971/1972
Opening: 18 May 1973
Architect: Prof. Karl Schwanzer
Architect of renovation: Atelier Brückner
Design of museum
expansion: ART & COM
Diameter of Museum Bowl: 40 m
Area of Museum Bowl: 1,000 m²
Area of low building: 4,000 m²
Total exhibition space: 5,000 m²
Net total area: 10,000 m²
Gross floor area: 12,200 m²
Number of floors: 3 in the
permanent exhibition area,
5 in
the Museum Bowl
Total number of rooms: 25
Length of tour: approx. 1 km
Number of exhibits: approx. 130
Annual visitor numbers: over 500,000
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