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201:; which also meant an increase in the number of professionals and increased requirement of space. Within the framework of a competition for the development of the urban plot between Blumenstraße and Unterer Anger, which was launched in 1919, the idea arose to concentrate all technical departments in one building. Throughout the course of this competition an intensive discussion about a high-rise building in the center of Munich began. This discussion was concluded by the decision of the City Council on 1 February 1921, which permitted the construction of
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Within the framework of the competition of 1919, Hermann
Leitenstorfer received first prize for his design of the Technical Town Hall. Leitenstorfer increased its design for the municipal administration building from four to twelve stories. The building, which was now to be classified as a high-rise
245:. The upper floors are divided by flat buttresses, the edges are trimmed and have historicizing design elements. The attic, with its very prominent console stones incorporates the building structure visibly. In this way, the buildings completely clad covered bricks correspond with the Frauenkirche.
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The stone trim in
Nagelfluh, works well because of the art that it is formed, and how it simultaneously searches for a connection with the polygonal ends of the upper story of the building. This reminds Hermann Leitenstorfer of the Angertor, which was demolished in 1869, on the grounds which the
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In 1928, the foundation bricks were laid, and as early as 1929 the high-rise building could be handed over for its purpose. Together with the neighboring building, which begun in 1924, the Old
Technical Town Hall created an organizational and structural, but not architectural, unit.
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in the year 2000 are all the technical services combined into one building complex. Since then, the building previously named "Städtisches
Hochhaus", has been called the "Old Technical Town Hall" in the public consciousness and in the semi-official use.
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Soon, however, the technical departments of the city administration needed more rooms, therefore additional offices were erected outside the Old
Technical Town Hall. Only with the opening of the Technical Town Hall in
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Stylistically, the Old
Technical Town Hall is assigned as a New Construction and is regarded as the most important example of Munich's options for New Constructions.
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building, was permitted by the prize court to be executed in 1928, as they believed it would create a "welcome dominant focal point in the townscape".
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The Old
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The eight main floors are simply designed. The frameless window ribbons give the impression of a perforated
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The technical departments of the city administration Munich gained in importance, especially after
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The Old
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Steffen Krämer: Technisches
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and headquarters of the section for the planning and building regulations of
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