The Gasometers were built from 1896 to 1899 in the
Simmering district of
Vienna near the
Gaswerk Simmering gas works of the district. The containers were used to help supply Vienna with
town gas, facilities which had previously been provided by the English firm Inter Continental Gas Association (ICGA). Once the contracts with the ICGA expired, the city decided to construct facilities to handle its own gas needs. The Gasometers were retired in 1985 because Vienna transitioned from town gas and coal gas to natural gas. The Vienna Gasometer was featured in the 1987
James Bond film
The Living Daylights.
Residential redevelopment Vienna undertook a remodelling and revitalization of the protected monuments and in 1995 called for ideas for the new use of the structures. The chosen designs by the architects
Jean Nouvel (Gasometer A),
Coop Himmelblau (Gasometer B),
Manfred Wehdorn (Gasometer C) and
Wilhelm Holzbauer (Gasometer D) were completed between 1999 and 2001. Each gasometer was divided into several zones for living (apartments in the top), working (offices in the middle floors) and entertainment and shopping (shopping malls in the ground floors). The shopping mall levels in each gasometer are connected to the others by skybridges. The historic exterior wall was conserved. One of the ideas rejected for the project was the plan by architect Manfred Wehdorn to use the Gasometers for hotels and facilities for the planned
World Expo in Vienna and Budapest. On 30 October 2001 the mayor of Vienna attended the official grand opening of the Gasometers, although people had begun moving in as early as May 2001. Gasometer-a-by viennaphoto at.jpg|Gasometer A, inside Gasometer-b-by viennaphoto at.jpg|Gasometer B, outside Gasometer c-inside-by viennaphoto at.jpg|Gasometer C, inside Gasometer-d-by viennaphoto at.jpg|Gasometer D, inside ==Technical details==