• Login / Join
  • About
  • •
  • Contact
  • •
  • Advertising
bustler logo
bustler logo
  • News
  • Competitions
  • Events
  • Bustler is powered by Archinect
  • Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

  • Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • Search

    Search in

  • Submit

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event
  • Login / Join
  • News|Competitions|Events
  • Search
    | Submit
    | Follow
  • Search in

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event

    Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • About|Contact|Advertising
  • Login / Join
Tagged: paulaner

A historic brewery once operated by monks has been given a modern extension as the new Paulaner headquarters

By Mackenzie Goldberg|

Wednesday, Aug 30, 2017

Photos by Edzard Probst

Back in 2013, Munich-based firm Hierl Architekten won a competition to transform a historic Brauhaus into a new headquarters for the German beer company, Paulaner. The popular brewer had been originally using the site as their brewery but decided to move production to the outskirts of the city, and keep only the main administration at this historic location. Beer has been brewed on the site since 1627 and was originally operated by Paulaner monks who would drink the beer during Lent season because the liquid bread offered sustenance and nutrients without violating fasting rules. 

Photos by Edzard Probst

The now snow-white headquarters are a radical transformation of the former decaying site. The design for the building block's new square footage is based on the courtyard typology, consisting of an old and newer court that brings daylight into the office floor plans while offering attractive event space and an internal beer garden. A third floor has also been added with a modern sleek flat roof. 

Photos by Edzard Probst
Photos by Edzard Probst
Photos by Edzard Probst

While some miss the big brick roof of the original structure, the listed ruins—restored and partially reconstructed with the original features—have been woven into the modern extension offering flexible office landscapes. The still existent substance of the original Zacherl brewery includes the exterior façades (up until the central buttress), the gate hall, and the center vaults. 

Photos by Edzard Probst
Photos by Edzard Probst

Color and material choices integrate the old building with the new. Whitewashed walls and black floors integrate the whole of the interior. An 1822 staircase designed by the neoclassical architect Leo von Klenze has been given the addition of black steel and door and wall claddings are made of oak, all of which, bring a freshness to the building and help create a cool working atmosphere.

Photos by Edzard Probst

Upon picking Hierl Architekten's design, the Commercial Director at Paulaner expressed that "it's back to the roots for us while at the same time, constructing a state-of-the-art headquarters. The draft integrates the Zacherl building without denying its past as a ruin." The Mayor of Munich—a city famous for its historic architecture—echoed the sentiment stating that "this draft distinctly reflects the history of the brewery."

Related

munich ● germany ● beer ● brewery ● paulaner ● headquarters ● office building ● adaptive reuse ● competition ● europe

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

A historic brewery once operated by monks has been given a modern extension as the new Paulaner headquarters

Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

Next page » Loading

A historic brewery once operated by monks has been given a modern extension as the new Paulaner headquarters

By Mackenzie Goldberg|

Wednesday, Aug 30, 2017

Share

Photos by Edzard Probst

Related

munich ● germany ● beer ● brewery ● paulaner ● headquarters ● office building ● adaptive reuse ● competition ● europe

Back in 2013, Munich-based firm Hierl Architekten won a competition to transform a historic Brauhaus into a new headquarters for the German beer company, Paulaner. The popular brewer had been originally using the site as their brewery but decided to move production to the outskirts of the city, and keep only the main administration at this historic location. Beer has been brewed on the site since 1627 and was originally operated by Paulaner monks who would drink the beer during Lent season because the liquid bread offered sustenance and nutrients without violating fasting rules. 

Photos by Edzard Probst

The now snow-white headquarters are a radical transformation of the former decaying site. The design for the building block's new square footage is based on the courtyard typology, consisting of an old and newer court that brings daylight into the office floor plans while offering attractive event space and an internal beer garden. A third floor has also been added with a modern sleek flat roof. 

Photos by Edzard Probst
Photos by Edzard Probst
Photos by Edzard Probst

While some miss the big brick roof of the original structure, the listed ruins—restored and partially reconstructed with the original features—have been woven into the modern extension offering flexible office landscapes. The still existent substance of the original Zacherl brewery includes the exterior façades (up until the central buttress), the gate hall, and the center vaults. 

Photos by Edzard Probst
Photos by Edzard Probst

Color and material choices integrate the old building with the new. Whitewashed walls and black floors integrate the whole of the interior. An 1822 staircase designed by the neoclassical architect Leo von Klenze has been given the addition of black steel and door and wall claddings are made of oak, all of which, bring a freshness to the building and help create a cool working atmosphere.

Photos by Edzard Probst

Upon picking Hierl Architekten's design, the Commercial Director at Paulaner expressed that "it's back to the roots for us while at the same time, constructing a state-of-the-art headquarters. The draft integrates the Zacherl building without denying its past as a ruin." The Mayor of Munich—a city famous for its historic architecture—echoed the sentiment stating that "this draft distinctly reflects the history of the brewery."

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

Archinect JobsArchinect Jobs

The Archinect Job Board attracts the world's top architectural design talents.

VIEW ALL JOBS POST A JOB

Senior Interior Architect/ Designer

Silverstone Group

Senior Interior Architect/ Designer

Washington, DC, US

Project Architect at High End Boutique Townhouse Firm in BK

Steering House Design and Development

Project Architect at High End Boutique Townhouse Firm in BK

Brooklyn, NY, US

Architectural Designer

Equal Equal

Architectural Designer

Brooklyn, NY, US

Intermediate Architect

NDKazalas Architecture PC

Intermediate Architect

New York, NY, US

Project Architect/Interior Designer

IMC Architecture

Project Architect/Interior Designer

Brooklyn, NY, US

Architectural Designer

jones | haydu

Architectural Designer

San Francisco, CA, US

Interior Project Manager

HLW International LLP

Interior Project Manager

New York, NY, US

Project Designer / Job Captain

Solutions Architecture Corp

Project Designer / Job Captain

Verona, NJ, US

Designer

HATCH ARCHITECTURE

Designer

Los Angeles, CA, US

Project Architect / Senior Designer

Touloukian Touloukian Inc.

Project Architect / Senior Designer

Boston, MA, US

Next page » Loading