German Romanticism Museum in Frankfurt

Architekten
Mäckler Architekten
Innenarchitekten
Mäckler Architekten
Bauleitung
Schneider+Schumacher
Tragwerksplaner
Bollinger + Grohmann
Bauphysik
EGS-plan
Akustikplanung
EGS-plan
Landschaftsarchitektur
greentoo landscape design
Brandschutzplanung
Hagen Ingenieure
Beleuchtung
atelier deLuxe
Generalunternehmen
Ed. Züblin
Fenster
Schüco
Türen und Tore
Schüco
© Roman Gerike
© Eckhart Matthäus
© Roman Gerike
© Eckhart Matthäus
© Freies Deutsches Hochstift/Alexander Paul Englert/freies-deutsches-hochstift.de
© Freies Deutsches Hochstift/Alexander Paul Englert/freies-deutsches-hochstift.de
© Eckhart Matthäus
© Freies Deutsches Hochstift/Alexander Paul Englert/freies-deutsches-hochstift.de
© Eckhart Matthäus
© Eckhart Matthäus
“The art of making an object unknown, and yet known and attractive, therein lies the poetics of romanticism.” Thus wrote Novalis, himself renowned poet of German romanticism, in his Fragments and Studies. The statement could have very well been the inspiration for the design of the German Romanticism Museum in Frankfurt. A most curious ensemble was created here by Mäckler
Architekten, next door to the house on the street named Großer Hirschgraben, where Johann Wolfgang von Goethe was born: Three townhouses with eclectically structured rendered facades rise above a plinth of reddish mottled sandstone.