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Postfuhramt
Postfuhramt (English: Mail Delivery Office), formally known as Kaiserliche Postfuhramt (English: Imperial Mail Delivery Office) is a historic building built in 1881 and located on Oranienburger Straße (English: Oranienburger Street) at the corner of Tucholskystraße (English: Tucholsky Street), in the Spandauer Vorstadt area of Mitte, Berlin. Since 1975, it has been a listed as a protected building (via Denkmalschutz).
At the Postfuhramt Ottomar Anschütz held the first showing of life sized pictures in motion on 25 November 1894. From 2006 until 2012, the space hosted an art gallery and exhibitions. In 2012, the building was sold to Biotronik, a medical manufacturing company specializing in medical technology.
Starting in 1713, the property had historically been used by the Postilion, a long haul mail service and a forerunner to postal mail. After 1766, a post office was located on the property with living quarters for the German royal postman and two multi-story horse stable wings.
In March 1874, many horses died due to hygiene issue with old stables. Additionally around this same time there was an increased demand for postal service as population and traffic grew in the area and as a result it was incorporated into the Reichspost and became part of the newly established Postfuhramt, under state management.
Postfuhramt was built between 1875 and 1881. The architect of the building was Carl Schwatlo, with assistance of Wilhelm Tuckermann, and the iron dome was designed by Johann Wilhelm Schwedler. It was created under the leadership of the postmaster general Heinrich Stephan. The building was designed in an Italian Renaissance Revival style (specifically Northern Italian-Lombard early Renaissance) with yellow clinker brick and highlighting tile in turquoise blue and terracotta red, and its dome was designed with a Byzantine influence. The three domes on the Postfuhramt building were created to reflect on the architecture one block away, at the New Synagogue.
The exterior of the building is decorated with 26 terracotta bust of people associated with the postal service and communications sector and they are presented in chronological order.
In 1925, all of the horse stables were removed in the process of modernization. The Postfuhramt housed a pneumatic tube mail system (German: Rohrpost), which was active in the ca. 1940s until 1976.
During World War II, the Postfuhramt suffered considerable damages. Air strikes hit the building and the side of the building facing Oranienburger Straße was burned down to the first floor. The building was threatened for demolition in the 1960s and 1970s. In 1973, a major renovation and restoration started on the structure. The building was used for postal service purposes until 1995.
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Postfuhramt AI simulator
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Postfuhramt
Postfuhramt (English: Mail Delivery Office), formally known as Kaiserliche Postfuhramt (English: Imperial Mail Delivery Office) is a historic building built in 1881 and located on Oranienburger Straße (English: Oranienburger Street) at the corner of Tucholskystraße (English: Tucholsky Street), in the Spandauer Vorstadt area of Mitte, Berlin. Since 1975, it has been a listed as a protected building (via Denkmalschutz).
At the Postfuhramt Ottomar Anschütz held the first showing of life sized pictures in motion on 25 November 1894. From 2006 until 2012, the space hosted an art gallery and exhibitions. In 2012, the building was sold to Biotronik, a medical manufacturing company specializing in medical technology.
Starting in 1713, the property had historically been used by the Postilion, a long haul mail service and a forerunner to postal mail. After 1766, a post office was located on the property with living quarters for the German royal postman and two multi-story horse stable wings.
In March 1874, many horses died due to hygiene issue with old stables. Additionally around this same time there was an increased demand for postal service as population and traffic grew in the area and as a result it was incorporated into the Reichspost and became part of the newly established Postfuhramt, under state management.
Postfuhramt was built between 1875 and 1881. The architect of the building was Carl Schwatlo, with assistance of Wilhelm Tuckermann, and the iron dome was designed by Johann Wilhelm Schwedler. It was created under the leadership of the postmaster general Heinrich Stephan. The building was designed in an Italian Renaissance Revival style (specifically Northern Italian-Lombard early Renaissance) with yellow clinker brick and highlighting tile in turquoise blue and terracotta red, and its dome was designed with a Byzantine influence. The three domes on the Postfuhramt building were created to reflect on the architecture one block away, at the New Synagogue.
The exterior of the building is decorated with 26 terracotta bust of people associated with the postal service and communications sector and they are presented in chronological order.
In 1925, all of the horse stables were removed in the process of modernization. The Postfuhramt housed a pneumatic tube mail system (German: Rohrpost), which was active in the ca. 1940s until 1976.
During World War II, the Postfuhramt suffered considerable damages. Air strikes hit the building and the side of the building facing Oranienburger Straße was burned down to the first floor. The building was threatened for demolition in the 1960s and 1970s. In 1973, a major renovation and restoration started on the structure. The building was used for postal service purposes until 1995.