Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. The rebuilt Neues Museum is a physical record of its complex past, providing a holistic understanding of the historic and contemporary structure and its original and current purposes – a new building that, while made of fragments of the old, once again aspires to a completeness.

  2. 28 de abr. de 2011 · In 1997, David Chipperfield Architects won the international competition for the rebuilding of the Neues Museum in collaboration with Julian Harrap. The design focused on repairing and restoring...

  3. El Neues Museum, concebido en un principio como extensión del vecino Altes Museum, obra del maestro de Stüler, Karl Friedrich Schinkel, fue considerado en su momento, gracias a su imponente construcción y rica decoración interior, el edificio prusiano más representativo de su época.

  4. In 1997 David Chipperfield Architects won an international competition for the restoration of Friedrich August Stüler’s Neues Museum, originally built between 1841 and 1859. Located on Museum Island in the heart of the former East Berlin, the building was initially constructed to extend the space of the Altes Museum, built immediately to the ...

  5. El Museo Neues en la Isla de los Museos de Berlín fue diseñado por Friedrich August Stüler y construido entre 1841 y 1859. Los bombardeos extensivos durante la Segunda Guerra Mundial dejaron el edificio en ruinas, con secciones enteras desaparecidas por completo y otras gravemente dañadas.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Neues_MuseumNeues Museum - Wikipedia

    The Neues Museum (New Museum) is a listed building on the Museum Island in the historic centre of Berlin, Germany. Built from 1843 to 1855 by order of King Frederick William IV of Prussia in Neoclassical and Renaissance Revival styles, it is considered as the major work of Friedrich August Stüler.

  7. www.museumsinsel-berlin.de › en › buildingsNeues Museum

    In 2009, the Neues Museum was the third museum on the Museum Island to be reopened. This means that all five exhibition locations are now open to the public again for the first time since 1939. David Chipperfield Architects restored the museum, which had been damaged and partly destroyed during World War II.