Renovation of the southern and south-west construction of the GNM.
The award procedure shall cover project management services in accordance with AHO, Issue 9 of Project Levels 1 to 5.
The Germanisches Nationalmuseum, founded in 1852, consists of a series of buildings and components from four epochs, starting with the medieval Carthusian monastery with church, refectory, cloister, and the monk's houses, to the historicist museum buildings until 1920, of which, after war destruction, only the gallery building with lapidary and the Hall of Honor and the South-West Building are preserved and the buildings of the reconstruction of the 1950s to 1970s by Sep Ruf, up to the extension completed in 1993.
In recent years, several parts of the building have undergone a refurbishment. The construction of a new low depot and the renovation and new furnishing of the Medieval Hall, which is scheduled to be completed in 2022, is currently taking place.
The next major section of the renovation includes the south-west and south-west buildings, which are connected by the south staircase. The new establishment of a permanent exhibition area for the 19th century and individual specialist collections is planned here.
The buildings to be renovated, like the entire collection of the Germanisches Nationalmuseum, are listed as historic monuments and are listed as individual monuments in the list of monuments of the city of Nuremberg.
All necessary interventions in the building structure must be agreed with the Bavarian State Office for the Preservation of Monuments (blFD) and the lower monument protection authority of the city of Nuremberg.
The southern stairwell building was built in the course of the post-war reconstruction of the museum in 1963-67 by architect Sep Ruf as a pioneering four-storey museum building.
It consists of a reinforced concrete structure with a spacious glass façade to the north and largely closed solid wall to the south and east. Top 3 floors jump
Continuing back, like display case dares, symbolizing the purpose of the house. The south-west building was opened as a historicizing three-storey solid building in 1899 and was partially rebuilt after war damage.
The structure of the southern and south-west buildings has substantial deficiencies in the building envelope and building technology. The aim of the renovation measures in terms of structural engineering is the preservation of the listed building fabric on the one hand and the production of contemporary museum rooms with corresponding energetic and structural properties on the other.
In view of the next renovation phase, the possibility of connecting to the east building on the upper floors will be investigated as part of the design plan in order to establish a connection between the east and south buildings and thus a tour that is not currently available. Part of the planning task is also questions of the connection to the adjacent museum buildings and the development of visitors.
The exhibition area of the building parts to be renovated comprises approx. 5,550 m
The contract is awarded to the project management services in accordance with AHO, Issue 9.