The Pilatushaus in Nuremberg is being renovated

Building design
The Pilatushaus (left) at the Tiergärtnertor in Nuremberg. The stately town house from the late Gothic period has stood empty for years. It is now being renovated by the Altstadtfreunde e. V. Wikimedia Commons / Gryffindor

The Pilatushaus (left) at the Tiergärtnertor in Nuremberg. The stately town house from the late Gothic period has stood empty for years. It is now being renovated by the Altstadtfreunde e. V. Wikimedia Commons / Gryffindor

The Pilatushaus is an integral part of the historical backdrop around Tiergärtnertorplatz below the castle in Nuremberg: the stately town house from the late Gothic period has stood empty for years. The Pilatushaus in Nuremberg is one of the few surviving town houses from the late Gothic period and is one of the most important architectural monuments […].

The Pilatushaus is an integral part of the historical backdrop around Tiergärtnertorplatz below the castle in Nuremberg: the stately town house from the late Gothic period has stood empty for years. Now the Altstadtfreunde e. V. are renovating it.

The Pilatushaus in Nuremberg is one of the few surviving late Gothic town houses and is one of the most important architectural monuments in the Old Town. As an outstanding half-timbered house and a stop on the Nuremberg Historical Mile, it is one of the most photographed motifs in the Old Town.

Now the Altstadtfreunde Nürnberg e.V. association wants to fill the empty building with life again. The late Gothic residential building was built in 1489 and once belonged to Plattner, the harness maker Hans Grünwald. In 1507, the sculptor Veit Wirsberger bought the house, after which it changed hands frequently. The name Pilatushaus has been in use since the 17th century, when the building was regarded as the starting point for Adam Kraft’s Stations of the Cross to St. John’s Cemetery in Nuremberg. It was also known as the “House of the Armored Man”. Hans von und zu Aufseß, the founder of the Germanisches Nationalmuseum, lived in the building from 1852 to 1857; the family coat of arms above the entrance dates from 1853.

The Pilatushaus is to be filled with life

The building has been owned by the city since 1931. It has seven storeys with a sandstone base storey and three house storeys and three attic storeys made of half-timbering. At the top of the gable is a characteristic octagonal gable bay with a concave pointed roof. A corner figure shows St. George slaying a dragon, the patron saint of the Plattner people. The Pilatus House is now to be filled with life again. The city of Nuremberg has announced that it will be given to the Altstadtfreunde Nürnberg e.V. association “by way of a heritable building right for 60 years”.

Complete renovation for almost four million euros

The Altstadtfreunde will completely renovate the building over the next five years and then be allowed to use it. Nuremberg’s Lord Mayor Marcus König commented: “The association has a wealth of experience in renovating historic buildings and putting them to good use.” If everything goes according to plan, a restaurant will be set up on the first floor of the building, with three apartments and offices on the floors above. The top floor, i.e. the attic, can be used by the Friends of the Old Town for themselves. The Pilatushaus was badly damaged during the Second World War. Although it was repaired in 2011, this caused structural problems that are now to be rectified in the complete renovation, which will cost almost four million euros.

Gutted backdrop

“Our building departments have been more than busy in recent years with the construction of schools, kindergartens and apartments,” emphasizes Michael Fraas, the city’s economic and scientific officer. In addition, the city has had to keep an eye on its finances and make do with the scarce money available for housing construction. According to Fraas, uses for culture or tourism were not reported “despite several inquiries” from the city administration. As a result, the property has increasingly fallen into a kind of slumber and degenerated into a gutted backdrop.

The Friends of the Old Town Association is dependent on support

In order to get started soon, the Friends of the Old Town Association is dependent on support. Two large donations of 100,000 euros each have already been received in the newly established donation account. In its almost 50-year history, the association has already restored over 20 old town houses. It has turned a craftsman’s house in Kühnertsgasse into a museum, and the association now runs one of the oldest barns in Zirkelschmiedsgasse as a cultural hall. In the past, the members have not shied away from major projects such as the reconstruction of the magnificent inner courtyard in the Pellerhaus on Egidienberg. Mayor König is impressed by so much commitment: “The Friends of the Old Town are unique for Nuremberg and have done a lot for our cityscape.”

Unique citizens’ initiative in Germany

In October 1973, Dr. Erich Mulzer took over the chairmanship of the “Association of Friends of the Old Town of Nuremberg”. Under the new name “Altstadtfreunde Nürnberg e.V.”, he developed the citizens’ initiative into the largest of its kind in Germany with more than 5,700 members. Since then, around 250 measures have been implemented. These include many small items such as sundials, house signs, coats of arms, cantilevers, chimney hoods, gable men, tiled stoves, memorial plaques, bell pulls, lanterns and doors.you can find out more about the Verein der Altbaufreunde here. House statues, fountains, roof oriels and chörlein have also been restored or brought back into the townscape. The Friends of the Old Town are particularly proud of the 18 houses they have renovated themselves and thus saved. They also enrich cultural life in Nuremberg with events in the Kulturscheune, which they restored, and run the I22I20I18I Kühnertsgasse Museum.

You can see a virtual journey through the history of Nuremberg here:

POTREBBE INTERESSARTI ANCHE

The splendor of antique metal vessels

Building design
around 400 BC.

around 400 BC.

The new special exhibition “Shimmering Jars of Ore” by the State Collections of Antiquities and Glyptothek Munich, in cooperation with the Bavarian Palace Administration, shows ancient vessels made of bronze and silver in the Pompejanum in Aschaffenburg. Hagen Schaaff, metal conservator at the Staatliche Antikensammlungen und Glyptothek München, gives an insight into his work before the exhibition opens On May 30, the annual special exhibition […]

The new special exhibition “Shimmering Jars of Ore” at the State Collections of Antiquities and Glyptothek in Munich, in cooperation with the Bavarian Palace Administration, is showing ancient vessels made of bronze and silver in the Pompejanum in Aschaffenburg. Hagen Schaaff, metal conservator at the Staatliche Antikensammlungen und Glyptothek München, gives an insight into his work before the exhibition begins


Bronzeklylix, um 400 v. Chr., griechisch: Für die Sonderausstellung wurden die antiken Oberflächen der einzelnen Bestandteile der Schale freigelegt sowie die beiden gegossenen Henkel und der gegossene Ringfuß wieder angesetzt. Foto: Staatliche Antikensammlungen und Glyptothek München
Bronze klylix, around 400 BC, Greek: For the special exhibition, the ancient surfaces of the individual components of the bowl were uncovered and the two cast handles and the cast ring base were reattached. Photo: State Collections of Antiquities and Glyptothek Munich

On May 30, the annual special exhibition of the Staatliche Antikensammlung und Glyptothek München opened at the Pompejanum in Aschaffenburg. The show was originally scheduled to be presented at the end of March. So we are all the more delighted that visitors can now visit the “Shimmering Jars of Ore” exhibition. Until the end of October, the special exhibition shows the different functions, the diversity and the timeless design of ancient bronze vessels from the Greco-Roman, Achaemenid and Etruscan cultures from the 8th century B.C. to the 3rd century A.D. It also illustrates how magnificently these ancient metal vessels were designed and the technical mastery with which they were crafted.

When we think of ancient utilitarian vessels, but also the table luxury of the Greeks, Etruscans and Romans, our thoughts first wander to painted clay vases. However, the wealthy society of the time used “shimmering jugs of ore” for religious occasions, elegant banquets and also for fetching water. These often bore figurative decoration, carved or in relief. As early as the late Neolithic period, the early toreuts – craftsmen specializing in metal – worked metal vessels from natural deposits of solid gold, silver or copper. With the invention of bronze, an alloy of copper and tin, a rapid technological development began in the 4th millennium BC: The melting point of the material decreased considerably, but the end product was harder than the two starting materials. The development of bronze as a material probably began in the Near East. In ancient times, gleaming metal vessels made of gold-colored bronze were a sign of prosperity that anyone could achieve. Luxury vessels made of bronze and gold, on the other hand, could only be afforded by a very small elite group. Over time, bronze vessels became coveted prestige objects that were traded over long distances. Greek and Etruscan toreuts supplied the entire Mediterranean region with their products. When the Romans conquered and plundered Greece, ancient Greek bronze vessels were so coveted that even the tombs of the great necropolises were ransacked to meet demand. While the ancient bronzes are covered in a green or brown patina after centuries or millennia of storage in the ground, the ancient toreutens aimed for a fresh, metallic sheen. Accordingly, the pieces were regularly cleaned and freed from signs of ageing during their period of use. The shimmering sheen was an essential part of the effect of such valuable objects.

Today, the antique bronze objects exhibit very different surface conditions. “However, almost all of the vessels on display are currently in a good condition in terms of conservation and restoration, so that only a few measures had to be carried out in the course of preparing for the exhibition, apart from the plinths,” explains Hagen Schaaff, metal conservator at the Staatliche Antikensammlungen und Glyptothek Munich. The reason for the different surface condition is the naturally altered state of preservation of the bronzes due to corrosion. The color images and states of preservation are based on the different copper compounds that have formed after the reaction of the metal with the ambient atmosphere of the respective place of discovery. A distinction is made here between marine finds, soil finds and freely weathered bronzes. The surface appearance of the vessels is also influenced by historical and current restoration and conservation measures. Many of the objects on display in the Pompejanum were cleaned electrolytically and chemically in the 1970s. This process usually results in a bright, scarred metallic surface. However, wet-chemical processes and reduction processes destroy the patina and are almost completely ruled out today due to their uncontrollable use. The annealing of bronzes, which was practiced until the beginning of the 20th century, is also no longer used, as this also destroys surfaces. “Today,” says Hagen Schaaff, “restoration work is generally only carried out mechanically. Not only scalpels and scraping tools are used for this, but also special equipment from dental technology and precision mechanics such as ultrasonic devices and ultra-fine pressure blasting equipment.”

For the special exhibition in the Pompejanum, for example, the antique surface of the individual components of the Greek brozeklylix from around 400 BC was uncovered and the two cast handles and the cast ring base were reattached. Following restoration, the embossed bronze bowl now has a blue-green patina. In antiquity, the body of the bowl was decorated with concentric circles inside and out on the lathe. Ornaments such as a central rosette, tongue patterns and palmettes were engraved by hand on the inside. The unrestored condition of the surface of the Greek statuette of a cow from the end of the 6th century BC is very good. After the restoration for the special exhibition, the surface of the front now appears reddish dark brown. Three handles of a bronze hydria, 2nd half of the 6th century BC, from the collection of James Loeb show a special feature, with attachments in the form of ivy leaves. Mineralized fabric remains are preserved on two of the attachments. These are traces of the fabric in which the water vessel was wrapped for protection. It was probably used as a secondary cinerary urn in a grave.

The special exhibition “Shimmering Jars of Ore” can be seen at the Pompejanum in Aschaffenburg until the end of October.

Read more in the current issue of RESTAURO 6/20.

Right down to the last corner

Building design

with which you can also get into hard-to-reach places. Photo:© Arbortech Europa GmbH

When renovating a bathroom, there are often those awkward places that are difficult to reach and work on. Tiles in corners or tight spaces under the washbasin, for example. Arbotech aims to counteract this problem with the development of the Mini Grinder Trade angle grinder: Advertorial Article Parallax Article

When renovating a bathroom, there are often those awkward places that are difficult to reach and work on. Tiles in corners or tight spaces under the washbasin, for example. With the development of the Mini Grinder Trade angle grinder, Arbotech aims to counteract this problem : (more…)