Gasteig
The Philharmonie of the Gasteig Gasteig Philharmonie 14.jpg
General information
TypeCultural centre
LocationMunich
AddressRosenheimer Str. 5
CountryGermany
Coordinates48°07′53″N 11°35′29″E / 48.13139°N 11.59139°E / 48.13139; 11.59139
Groundbreaking1978
Completed1984
Opened10 November 1985
Website
www.gasteig.de

The Gasteig is a cultural center in Munich, opened in 1985, which hosts the Munich Philharmonic Orchestra. The Richard Strauss Conservatory, the Volkshochschule, and the municipal library are all located in the Gasteig. Most of the events of the Filmfest München, and many of the events of the Munich Biennale take place here.

The Gasteig is planned to be restored until 2027. A provisional house for many of its functions is Gasteig HP8.

Halls and seats

  • Philharmonie, 2,387 seats, with a Klais Organ
  • Carl-Orff-Saal, 528–598 seats
  • Black Box, 120–225 seats
  • Kleiner Konzertsaal (small concert hall), 191 seats

The Philharmonic Hall, opening like a great wood-panelled seashell, has an intimate atmosphere but poor acoustic qualities.[1] The smaller hall "Kleiner Konzertsaal" offers slightly better acoustics for chamber music. The Gasteig comprises the Carl Orff Hall with a stage for drama, the Richard Strauss Conservatory, the Black Box studio theatre, the Münchner Volkshochschule (Adult Education Centre) for further education, various cafés and shops, e.g. the 'Pappnase' (cardboard nose) offering a selection of dramatic requisites, and the central branch of the Municipal Library with its extensive stock of books and periodicals.

When famed conductor Leonard Bernstein was asked on his opinion of the hall, he remarked, "Burn it."[2]

History of the site

The estate behind the Gasteig was until its demolition in 1979 the location of the Bürgerbräukeller, stage for the 1923 Beer Hall Putsch and the 1939 Hitler assassination attempt by Georg Elser.

A memorial plaque for Elser is located outside the GEMA building. An illuminated information board in the passage next to the Glashalle describes the historical context for the memorial plaque.

References

  1. Munich's Music Lovers Wrestle Over a Controversial New Hall
  2. Controversy over Munich's new planned hall
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.