model : the Polar Bear that lived at the
Berlin Zoo The collection history 19th century to 1945 When the
Friedrich Wilhelm University of Berlin, now the
Humboldt University of Berlin, opened in 1810, the existing scientific and medical collections were combined and made accessible to the public for the first time. Therefore the Geological-Paleontological Museum, the Mineralogical-Petrographic Museum and the Zoological Museum were founded and were open to anyone interested to visit. Around 1880, the constantly growing collections based on donations, purchases and expedition finds took up around two thirds of the space in the main building,
Unter den Linden, and "formed an oppressive burden". The royal state government therefore decided in 1874 to build new buildings for the agricultural college and the collection of the Museum of Natural History on the site of the already closed Royal Iron Foundry on Invalidenstrasse. The architectural competition that was announced contained the requirements to enable all collection elements to be arranged as uniformly as possible. The winner of the competition was the architect
August Tiede, who initially suggested storing the exhibits separately, but then had to give up. As a result, a multi-wing building was built at
Invalidenstrasse 43 between 1875 and 1880 under the senior construction management of
Friedrich Kleinwächter and the construction management of the government architect Hein. The opening was celebrated on 2 December 1889. Contrary to initial plans, the Natural History Museum only made part of its holdings accessible to the public as a display collection, while the main collection was reserved for interdisciplinary research work. This practice, which is common today, was considered revolutionary at the time. The first building extension was built between 1914 and 1917. In the 1910s and 1920s, the facility on
Invalidenstrasse was called the Museum of Natural History and Zoological Institute. It was divided into the Geological-Paleontological Institute and Museum, the Mineralogical-Petrographic Institute and Museum, the Zoological Institute and Museum and had several employees such as
university lecturers,
taxidermists, castellans, stokers, machine masters, servants, caretakers, library servants. During
World War II, the east wing of the museum building was heavily damaged in a daytime raid by the
United States Army Air Forces on 3 February 1945. While large parts of the building collapsed, several people died in the air raid shelter. Large whale skeletons from the collection were buried and the exhibition rooms for insects and mammals were destroyed. About 75 percent of the collection was brought to safety.
The building history Overview As a result of the continuously growing natural science collections, a complex new exhibition building was planned on the site of the former Royal Iron Foundry on
Invalidenstrasse, in which the three museums mentioned above would be combined. The new building ensemble was given the name Museum für Naturkunde during the planning phase, consisting of the corresponding central collection and the parts of the
Prussian Geological State Institute with the Mining Academy (Geological State Institute and Mining Academy) and the
Agricultural University of Berlin. The university management, together with the Berlin magistrate, announced an architectural competition, which August Tiede won with his multi-wing project proposal. All construction costs including the interior furnishings amounted to around 3.2 million
marks. Among other things, the exhibition area was increased from 5,000 to 25,000 square meters and the digital development of the collection was promoted. The latter can be observed live in one of the exhibition halls (due to the
corona pandemic, the exhibitions were closed from March 2020 to the end of 2022). == See also ==