Jutierhalle

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The Jutierhalle at Dachauer Straße 110 on Munich's Oberwiesenfeld is a formerly commercially used hall that is a listed building. The name comes from the original use of the building, in which water pipes were wrapped in jute . The building is owned by the City of Munich.

history

The hall was in 1926 simultaneously with the adjacent 2,500 square meter than flat-ton trained Tonnenhalle or tonnage Hall by the then Bauamtmann Ernst Henle in reducing style built. Initially, pipes were wrapped in jute here for the Munich waterworks. In 1952 there was an expansion to the southeast. From 2000 to 2003 the hall was used as an interim venue for the Münchner Kammerspiele . In the Bavarian Monument List , the building is registered as an industrial monument together with the barrel hall last used as a high-bay warehouse (file no. D-1-62-000-7824). A cultural re-use together with the barrel hall was examined after the city council resolution of July 28, 2010.

Construction and plant

The Jutierhalle is a reinforced concrete structure with a roof in an open framework with skylights . The floor area is around 2,500 m², the length 92 m, the width approx. 27 m. The hall is up to 17.4 m high. The building is structured by wall pillars.

Web links

Coordinates: 48 ° 9 '28.8 "  N , 11 ° 33' 3.6"  E