RE: Porsche to build new museum
RE: Porsche to build new museum
Tuesday 8th February 2005

Porsche to build new museum

Opening in 2007, it will cost €50 million


From 2007, Porsche owners and enthusiasts will be able to visit an outstanding new Museum dedicated to the marque. It will be built alongside the company’s production facility in Zuffenhausen, Stuttgart, Germany.

The design for the new Porsche Museum was chosen following an open competition, and the architectural firm of Delugan Meissl from Vienna, Austria, won the contest. A total of 170 European architect offices had made a bid for this project, and Porsche invited ten renowned architects from Germany, Austria and Switzerland to take part. The new museum will be built on Porscheplatz, and construction will commence later this year. The museum will cost about €50 million.

"The new Porsche Museum will create a space that will lend architectural expression to the company’s self-confident stance and high standards and will at the same time take account of Porsche’s vitality," said Delugan Meissl. "Knowledge, credibility and purposefulness are as much a part of the philosophy as courage, enthusiasm, power and independence. Every idea is perceived as a chance to actively set oneself new challenges, sound out new frontiers and nevertheless remain true to oneself. All of this is to be reflected in this museum."

The selection committee, led by the architect Professor Fritz Auer (Stuttgart/Munich), comprised 13 judges and included Porsche boss Dr. Wendelin Quoting from the selection committee’s decision, Wiedeking said, "Delugan Meissl’s proposal is impressive due to its attempt to redefine the Porscheplatz area. This is achieved in an urban sense by a sculptural gesture on a grand scale, and internally by the museum’s expressive setting. The exhibition space, which is terraced by long flights of steps, is recessed, and its circular design lends itself to beneficial flexible use."

"This design is innovative, modern and challenging," said Dr. Wiedeking. "It is sure to be provocative too, but that was also one of the aims. With this new development we will create an architectural highlight at our parent plant in Zuffenhausen, which will shine out well beyond the borders of Stuttgart."

Around 80,000 people visit the current Porsche Museum per year, but Wiedeking anticipates numbers arriving to review the new displays will rise significantly to over 200,000.

Stuttgart's mayor Wolfgang Schuster said, "Following the Haus der Geschichte, the new art museum on Kleiner Schlossplatz and the Mercedes-Benz-Museum in Untertürkheim, we are now getting a fourth museum in the space of only a few years. The design from Delugan Meissl represents an attractive portal not only for Porsche, but for Stuttgart as a whole."

Porsche's description continues: From 2007 on, the new Porsche Museum will be perceived as a detached and dynamically formed monolithic body, which appears to hover above the ground and the first-floor level. This body will contain the exhibition area of approximately 5,000 sq. metres and create space for "Experiencing the Porsche Cosmos". The first floor contains the entrance area, which not only acts as a foyer and starting point for guided tours, but also allows interesting insights into the workshop for historic vehicles and the archive.

The foyer of the exhibition area contains the history of the firm up to 1948. From there, the visitor can move straight on to the main exhibition area – represented by the chronologically arranged post-1948 product history as well as the respective ‘theme islands’ (including, among other things, Targa Florio, Prototypes, The 917 Era, Le Mans and Evolution 911). Whereas some 20 historic vehicles can be displayed currently, the new Porsche Museum will allow the public to feast their eyes on around 80 vehicles.

The new Porsche Museum will also contain a shop, visitors’ restaurant, coffee bar and an exclusive restaurant with a large roof terrace. More than 300 parking spaces will be available in the underground garage. The building can also be used for large events, such as vehicle presentations, customer events or press conferences.

Author
Discussion

Gooby

Original Poster:

9,269 posts

255 months

Tuesday 8th February 2005
quotequote all
Come on Lotus, do the same! Come on McLaren, do the same. Come on Jaguar, do the same. I bet you guys have loads of stuff to display.

alaws

77 posts

275 months

Tuesday 8th February 2005
quotequote all
Jaguar already have a purpose-built museum at Browns Lane, run by the the Jaguar Daimler Heritage Trust. See:
www.jdht.com

Andrew L.

will ferrari

114 posts

258 months

Thursday 10th February 2005
quotequote all
Good, I was inter-railiing in 1999 and was around that area. I wanted to go to the Mercedes museum but thats closed on a Monday (when I was there) so I ended up going to the Porsche factory museum which was, how do I say this, small.

Glass doors, a small shop and around 30 cars, all very well presented but no interaction and I felt underwhelmed by my 4 hrs each way trek to get there in the rain.

This new one looks perfect, what I would have expected from the 2nd best car company in the world.

johnny senna

4,073 posts

293 months

Thursday 10th February 2005
quotequote all
will ferrari said:

This new one looks perfect, what I would have expected from the 2nd best car company in the world.





Oh come on Will, there is no way Lamborghini are a better company than Porsche.

will ferrari

114 posts

258 months

Thursday 10th February 2005
quotequote all
Lamborghini who?

I know your trying to wind me up! I have just seen the new pics of the yellow 430 spider. me in luuurve

will_t

821 posts

263 months

Thursday 10th February 2005
quotequote all
will ferrari said:
Lamborghini who?

I know your trying to wind me up! I have just seen the new pics of the yellow 430 spider. me in luuurve



It (430 spider) looks like a plastic boat IMHO

Will