SV printing center

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The SV-Druckzentrum is the printing house of the Süddeutscher Verlag . In addition to the Süddeutsche Zeitung with its various editions (remote edition for Germany and abroad, Bavaria edition, Munich city edition), partial editions of other newspapers such as B. the world and the picture as well as local advertising papers printed.

location

The printing center is located in the Steinhausen district of Munich in the 13 Bogenhausen district in the industrial park between the federal motorway 94 and the tracks of the Munich – Mühldorf railway line . The site is on Zamdorfer Strasse and stretches to the east as far as Hultschiner Strasse, on the other side of the street in the Zamdorf district of the publishing house, which was built in 2006-2008 .

history

When Süddeutsche Verlag wanted to switch its printing operations from letterpress to offset printing , it had to look for a new location for the printing company, as the new process required larger machines and there was not enough space at the previous location on Sendlinger Strasse in Munich's old town .

In 1981 the Süddeutsche Verlag acquired a site in Steinhausen from the city. It was located near a motorway entrance, had a siding for transporting the heavy rolls of paper and was easily accessible for the employees via public transport. The Gollwitz open-air swimming pool located on this site was closed in 1983.

A modern printing center was built on the newly acquired site in 1985 according to plans by the architects Peter von Seidlein , Horst Fischer , Claus Winkler and Edwin Effinger , who received several awards for this, including: a. the German Architecture Prize 1985.

description

The printer building takes up an area of ​​about 200 × 80 m. The centerpiece is the 18 m high printing hall in which the rotary printing presses are located. It has a footprint of 185 × 20 m.

The facade contains large glass surfaces that let in plenty of light and open up a view of the greenery.

The digitally created newspaper pages are exposed directly onto the printing plates without an intermediate exposure on film (computer-to-plate process). This saves reprofilm and chemicals. Ink residues are recycled on site.

Around 650,000 printing plates are produced here every year, with one plate capable of printing up to 200,000 newspapers. Around 50,000 tons of paper are printed every year.

literature

  • Willibald Karl (Ed.): Villages on the brick land . Daglfing-Denning-Englschalking-Johanneskirchen-Zamdorf. Buchendorfer, Munich 2002, ISBN 978-3-934036-90-1 .

Web links

Coordinates: 48 ° 8 ′ 15.1 ″  N , 11 ° 37 ′ 57.2 ″  E