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Mercedes Benz Museum Stuttgart, Germany, Design, Award, Project, Photo
Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart : Information
German building by UNStudio Architects
Opening new Mercedes-Benz Museum, Stuttgart
19 May 2006
Four years after UN Studio won the design competition, the new Mercedes-Benz
Museum opens in Stuttgart on Friday the 19th of May 2006.
A new museum for a legendary car
The new Mercedes-Benz Museum is located next to highway B14 at the
entrance of Stuttgart. The museum covers 16,500 m2 of exhibition space
for the historical collection of Mercedes-Benz, which consists of
160 cars. In addition to the exhibition space the museum houses a
museum shop, a restaurant, offices and a sky lobby. As well as a new
museum building the design also includes the development of the surrounding
landscape. With 450,000 visitors a year the existing Mercedes-Benz
Museum is one of the most visited museums in Stuttgart.
Ben van Berkel: The Mercedes-Benz Museum binds together several
radical spatial principles, and generates a wholly new typology as
a result. It does this partly in response to its museum function,
partly in response to its peripheral situation, and partly in response
to questions and concerns that belong to the discipline of architecture
itself.
Design model
The visitor proceeds through the museum from top to bottom; during
the ride up the atrium in one of the three elevators, visitors are
shown a multimedia Preshow presentation. The elevators are like capsules
with only a large slit at eye-level through which the visitor sees
images of the history of Mercedes-Benz projected on the walls of the
atrium.
From the starting point at the top, the +eight level, the visitor
may take one of the two spiralling ramps down; the first chain-linking
the connecting Legend rooms, which are the secondary displays related
to the history of Mercedes-Benz, and the second the collection of
cars and trucks. The two trajectories cross each other continuously,
mimicking the interweaving strands of a DNA helix, and making it possible
for the visitor to change trajectories.
Ben van Berkel: The structure of the Mercedes-Benz Museum is
based on a trefoil. The clover-leaf structure mathematically consists
of three overlapping circles, of which the centre becomes a void forming
a triangular atrium The semi-circular floors rotate around the central
atrium forming horizontal plateaus which alternate between double
and single heights. It is spatially complex; you can not see the trefoil
from the museum. By using the strong design model we were able to
organise ideas of infrastructure, exhibition spaces, programme and
even structure. We looked at ideas of how, by moving through the chronologically
ordered exhibition spaces from top to bottom, visitors follow the
edge line of the building like a time machine. The line you follow
becomes a wall then a ceiling and then a space, blurring the distinction
between line, surface and volume.
Endless exhibition
The two types of museum spaces have diametrically opposed characters.
The Legend rooms are sheltered and artificially lit like theatrical
spaces. Entering them is like entering a stage. The Collection rooms
are exposed and day-lit, surrounded by huge, panoramic windows. The
two aspects of the collection, the cars and the trucks are organized
thematically starting with the two oldest cars at the top floor in
the display dedicated to the invention of the car. The Legends are
arranged in a chronological way. But this chronology is not rigid;
the visitor is free to cross time zones. The structure enables the
individual, dreamlike wandering that to our mind is part of the attraction
and inspiration of the museum visit, but at the same time encourages
the visitor to interact more consciously and dynamically with the
displays by showing the items from unusual angles, perspectives and
backgrounds. In the Mercedes-Benz Museum, wayfinding and orientation
are intuitive and individual; the organisation offers a rational framework,
which the visitor is free to follow or to deviate from when attracted
by a specific display or program feature.
Ben van Berkel: The building twists and turns around you like
a sculpture full of contrapposto; now you see things and people, now
you dont. It would take you six hours to see every car, every
display of the winding exhibition without ends. It will certainly
take you several visits to figure out the building. At any point,
it is difficult to know where you are precisely. You can be in the
right space in the wrong place, or you can be in the right place in
the wrong space. The building keeps unfolding, keeps surprising you.
But you can not loose your way.
Collaborative effort
Since the complex innovative character of the museum and the limited
timeframe for designing, planning and realizing the project, various
forms of expert knowledge have been combined and interwoven. This
initiated an intense collaboration with the client DaimlerChrysler
Immobilien (DCI) GmbH, engineers, climate experts, interior architects,
landscape architects and exhibition concept designers.
Ben van Berkel: The building is complex, the deadline was tight;
the only solution was to control the geometry of the building as completely
as possible using the latest computer technology. Digitally controlling
the geometry made it possible to incorporate any kind of change quickly
and efficiently, immediately knowing the effects of that change on
all other aspects of the building.
Mercedes-Benz Museum Architects : UN Studio
Founded in 1988 by Ben van Berkel and Caroline Bos UN Studio is a
Dutch architectural design studio specialising in architecture, urban
development and infrastructural projects. As a network practice, UN
Studio approaches projects with a non-hierarchical, complex, generative
and integral design process, organized in a contemporary way, and
using technologies that allow for maximum exchange.
Although based in Amsterdam, the office has worked internationally
since its beginning and has produced a wide range of work from public
buildings, infrastructure, offices, living and products to urban masterplans.
UN Studio directors Ben van Berkel and Caroline Bos together with
partners Tobias Wallisser and Harm Wassink and associate Gerard Loozekoot
form the management team of the office.
Pivotal UN Studio projects within these fields include; the new Mercedes-Benz
Museum in Stuttgart (2001-2006), the Erasmus Bridge in Rotterdam (1990-1996),
the Office complex La Defense in Almere (1999-2004), the Möbius
House in Het Gooi (1993-1998) and Arnhem Central Station (1996-2008).
Ben van Berkel (Utrecht, the Netherlands, 1957)
architect and UN Studio director
Ben van Berkel studied Architecture at the Rietveld Academy in Amsterdam
and the Architectural Association in London, receiving the AA Diploma
(Hons) in 1987. In 1988 he co-founded Van Berkel & Bos Architectuurbureau
in Amsterdam with the art historian Caroline Bos. The designing and
building of the offices initial projects, including the Erasmus
Bridge in Rotterdam (1996), profoundly affected his understanding
of the role of the architect today and constituted the foundation
of his collaborative approach to practicing, leading to the foundation
of UN Studio.
Ben van Berkel has been guest professor at Princeton University and
has taught at New Yorks Columbia University, at the Rotterdam
Berlage Institute, at the AA in London and at the UCLA. He is currently
full professor and head of the architecture faculty at the Städelschule
in Frankfurt.
Caroline Bos (Rotterdam, the Netherlands, 1959)
art historian and UN Studio director
Caroline Bos studied History of Art at Birkbeck College of the University
of London, receiving her BA (Hons) in 1991. In 1988 she co-founded
Van Berkel & Bos Architectuurbureau in Amsterdam, now UN Studio,
with architect Ben van Berkel. Caroline Bos is involved in all UN
Studio projects and publications bringing her analytical, theoretical
and observational skills to the offices work. Caroline Bos has
taught as a guest lecturer at the Academy of Architecture in Arnhem,
the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna and the Berlage Institute in Rotterdam
and as a visiting lecturer at Princeton University. Major UN Studio
publications include Move, 1999 (Goose Press, Amsterdam), UNFold,
2002 (NAi Publishers, Rotterdam), Design Model,s 2006 (Thames &
Hudson, London) and the Mercedes-Benz Museum book, 2006, (Actar, Barcelona).
Tobias Wallisser (Freiburg, Germany, 1970)
architect and UN Studio partner
Tobias Wallisser is a German architect with a Master degree in Architecture
from the Technical University of Stuttgart and a Postgraduate Master
of Science in Advanced Architectural Design from Columbia University
in New York. He joined UN Studio in 1997 and since 2005 has become
a partner of the firm. In addition he has taught as a guest lecturer
at the Stuttgart University of Applied Sciences.
New Mercedes-Benz Museum
Quotes
The Mercedes-Benz Museum has taken its place in the landscape
of Stuttgart as an iconic emblem that sums up not only what the company
that built it stands for, but what architecture can be in a time of
fluidity not only of space and from, but also of the notion of what
a building is and could do.
Aaron Betsky (Director Netherlands Architecture Institute, Rotterdam),
March 2006
Van Berkels Museum is a matter of Computer Baroque, and
in combining opposites: A Mercedes, with its leather seats and wooden
inlay, offers the promise of living-room comfort on the motorway.
Ben van Berkel tries to do the opposite with his museum, he tries
to set the static in motion: The building twists and turns, as if
it has swallowed a turbo motor, the ceiling mutates seamlessly with
the walls, blending with the floor, energetically blurring the dividing
lines between walls, floor and ceiling, as if it wants to prove that
architecture is still alive.
Niklas Maak, Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung, 22 January 2006
With the Mercedes-Benz Museum Ben van Berkel (1957, the Netherlands)
establishes himself as one of the most important contemporary architects.
Niklas Maak, Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung, 22 January 2006
The most extraordinary aspect of this museum is that, despite
of its formlessness, it belongs to the greatest buildings in recent
times.
Hanno Rauterberg, Die Zeit, 3 November 2005
And though the exhibits are static, building geometry and internal
space contrive to express a sense of fluidity and movement, of visitors
barreling down the Mercedes highway of history with the wind in their
hair.
Catherine Slessor, The Architectural Review, June 2005
The projects fundamental concept is the staging of an
infinite spatial experience, which interprets motion in
all its possible expressions and acts as a multiplier and accelerator
of different, unpredictable situations and in whose content, container
and user are identified until they dissolve in a network of flows
through which the completed work reverberates with a system of material
marks.
Nicola Marzot, Frank Heinlein, Rassegna, February 2004
Mercedes-Benz Museum - Facts & Figures
Stuttgart, Germany
Timeline
2001 Architectural competition
January 2002 First prize in the architectural competition awarded
to
UN Studio van Berkel & Bos
17 September 2003 Foundation laying ceremony for the new Mercedes-Benz
Museum
3 March 2004 Topping-out ceremony for the new Mercedes-Benz Museum
19 May 2006 Inauguration
Museum
Architect UN Studio van Berkel & Bos, Amsterdam
Museum design Prof. H.G. Merz, Stuttgart
Builder/owner DaimlerChrysler Immobilien (DCI) GmbH
Height of the building 47.5 meters
Total area Approx. 53,000 sq. meters
Floor space 4,800 sq. meters
Exhibition space 16,500 sq. meters
Interior space 210,000 cubic meters
Levels 9
Number of vehicles exhibited 175
Contracts with companies and
engineering firms 246
Plans 35,000
Cables in concrete 630,000 meters
Concrete 120,000 tons
Building foundations 850 reinforced concrete piles
Polyethylene pipes 100 kilometers
Lights 12,000
Glass frontage 14,000 sq. meters
Site factors
Geographic position Latitude 48.76° north
Longitude 9.18° east
Levation above sea level 359 meters
Local temperature conditions Min. temperature 15.4 °C
Max. temperature 33.2 °C
Mercedes-Benz Museum Stuttgart - Credits
Client: DCI (Daimler Chrysler Immobolien)
Design:
UN Studio: Ben van Berkel, Tobias Wallisser and Caroline Bos
with Marco Hemmerling, Hannes Pfau and Wouter de Jonge, Arjan Dingsté,
Götz Peter Feldmann, Björn Rimner, Sebastian Schaeffer,
Andreas Bogenschuetz, Uli Horner, Ivonne Schickler, Dennis Ruarus,
Erwin Horstmanshof, Derrick Diporedjo, Nanang Santoso, Robert Brixner,
Alexander Jung, Matthew Johnston, Rombout Loman, Arjan van der Bliek,
Fabian Evers, Nuno Almeida, Ger Gijzen, Tjago Nunes, Boudewijn Rosman,
Ergian Alberg, Gregor Kahlau, Mike Herud, Thomas Klein, Simon Streit,
Taehoon Oh, Jenny Weiss, Philipp Dury, Carin Lamm, Anna Carlquist,
Jan Debelius, Daniel Kalani, Evert Klinkenberg
Realisation
UN Studio with Wenzel + Wenzel, Stuttgart
Matias Wenzel with Markus Schwarz, Clemens Schulte-Mattler, Ina Karbon
Team: Nicola Kühnle, Florian Erhard, Michael Fischinger,
Christoph Friedrich, Peter Holzer, Christopf Krinn, Stefan Linder, Simon
Schneider, Walter Ulrich, Gabriele Völker, Katrin Widmann, Christina
Brecher, Stefanie Hertwerck, Ingolf Gössel, Ulla Ittensohn,
Volker Hilpert, Thomas Koch, Ulrike Kolb, Bendix Pallesen- Mustikay,
Marc Schwesinger and Thuy Duong Du, Kathrin Steimle, Florian
Goscheff, Thomas Hertlein, Yvonne Galdys, Deniz Hocaoglu, Katerina
Karapanceva, Anka Volk, Patrick Yong
Exhibition Concept and Design: HG Merz, Stuttgart
Christine Kappei (Projektleitung)
Markus Betz, Hannes Bierkämper, Tufan Cenberoglu, Annette Clavier,
Svetlana Curcic, Michael Fragstein, Marc Guntow, Eva Hübner,
Sebastian Koch, Felix Krönert, Boris Meiners, Joachim Munzig,
Andreas v. Normann, Björn Plohmann, Kay Prühs, Kristina
Schimanski, Anja Söder, Thomas Thiemeyer, Daniel Utz, Cornelia
Wehle
Interior Architecture: UN Studio with Concrete Architectural Associates,
Amsterdam
Special Elements: Inside outside - Petra Blaisse, Amsterdam
Advisors
Structure: Werner Sobek Ingenieure, Stuttgart
Geometry: Arnold Walz, Stuttgart
Climate engineering: Transsolar Energietechnik, Stuttgart
Cost estimation: Nanna Fütterer, Stuttgart/Berlin
Infrastructure: David Johnston, Arup, London
Mercedes-Benz Museum Stuttgart
: Main page
German Buildings
Stuttgart Architecture
PRESS RELEASE UNSTUDIO Dec 2007
Award for Mercedes-Benz Museum

photos © Wolfgang Günzel
Award - Deutscher Architekturpreis 2007
The Mercedes-Benz Museum in Stuttgart, designed by Ben van Berkel
of UNStudio, has been awarded a prize by the jury of the German Architecture
Prize 2007.
The award ceremony of the German Architecture Prize will take place
on Dec 4th 2007 in München. Certificates and the prize money
will be handed over from the Federal Minister of Germany for Traffic,
Construction and Town Development, Wolfgang Tiefensee and Dr. Burckhard
Bergmann, chairman of the board of directors of E.ON Ruhrgas AG and
member of the board of directors of E.ON AG.
Exhibition - 'Ben van Berkel & the Theatre if Immanence' at Portikus,
Frankfurt
The group exhibition 'Ben van Berkel & the Theatre of immanence'
is currently taking place at Portikus, in Frankfurt am Main and will
run until Jan 13th 2008. The installation titled 'The Thing' consists
of an advanced, site specific structure designed by Ben van Berkel,
together with Prof. Johan Bettum and Luis Etchegorry and houses a
series of works by artists and architects who have participated in
the one-year long experimental project, entitled 'The Space of Communication',
a project by the Städelschule Architecture Class. The exhibition
aims to present the artistic and architectural results of this project
to the public. Common to all the projects is that they address the
social and inter-relational aspects of communication or spaces of
communication. The built structure inside the Portikus is illuminated
by multiple, precisely matched digital projections that both enhance
and obscure the physical objects, adding information and disinformation,
atmosphere and detail, playing on topics of presence, absence, body,
and volume.
Ben van Berkel, The Thing
MESO Digital Interiors, On Things Off Things On
Portikus, 2007
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Mercedes-Benz Museum
Stuttgart architect : Ben van Berkel of UNStudio
Porsche Museum Stuttgart
Stuttgart Car Museum : more details re
Porsche Project
Stuttgart Museum : Neue Staatsgalerie
Key Building Design by UNStudio
Music Theatre Graz

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Comments / photos for this Mercedes-Benz Museum Stuttgart page welcome:
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Mercedes Museum Stuttgart : page - adrian
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