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- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand abstract "The Palais Ludwig Ferdinand (also called the Alfons Palais and the Siemens Palais) is an early 19th-century palace in Munich, Germany, designed by Leo von Klenze. It is located on the Wittelsbacherplatz (at number 4) but forms part of an ensemble with the buildings on the west side of the Odeonsplatz. It was Klenze's own residence, then belonged to Princes Alfons and Ludwig Ferdinand of Bavaria. It is now the headquarters of Siemens.The palace was built in 1825–26 for Karl Anton Vogel, a manufacturer of gold and silver thread, to a plan by Franz Xaver Widmann and with façades by Leo von Klenze, who lived on the piano nobile for 25 years. Klenze had originally intended the site for the first Protestant church in Munich, but that was later built elsewhere by Johann Nepomuk Pertsch. The east front of the palace is at the head of a short unnamed street which branches off the Odeonsplatz, between the Odeon and the Palais Leuchtenberg, which Klenze had previously designed with identical exteriors, so that on that side the three form an ensemble. This was originally the main façade of the building, designed by Klenze with a projecting central bay and a balcony above the main entrance, and with details echoing his Bazar building directly across the Odeonsplatz. Around 1850, the building was extended to the west.From 1878 the building belonged to Princes Alfons and Ludwig Ferdinand of Bavaria, from whom its older names are derived. Ludwig Ferdinand had it remodelled, and around 1900 the façade on Wittelsbacherplatz was embellished with arched doorways and a balcony.The building was badly damaged in World War II. After reconstruction, it was rented in 1949 to Siemens & Halske, a predecessor of Siemens AG, who initially used it for their motor pool and casino business. After Prince Ludwig Ferdinand died in 1949, the cousins Hermann von Siemens and Ernst von Siemens, then chairman and CEO of their company, decided to buy it for the company's headquarters, as official seat of the management board and the supervisory board, and in 1957 finalized the sales contract with the prince's heirs. Those leading institutions of Siemens still today reside in this house. A staircase was added on the Wittelsbacherplatz side in 1968. The building and vast adjacent new wings, occupying the whole block between Finken Str., Kardinal Doepfner Str. and Oskar-von-Miller Ring, including the SiemensForum München, underwent thorough renovation until 2016.".
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand thumbnail Siemens_Palais.JPG?width=300.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageID "38707075".
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageLength "5346".
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageOutDegree "24".
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageRevisionID "698996112".
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageWikiLink Casino.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageWikiLink Category:Buildings_and_structures_in_Munich.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageWikiLink Category:Leo_von_Klenze_buildings.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageWikiLink Category:Palaces_in_Bavaria.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageWikiLink Category:Siemens.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageWikiLink Ernst_von_Siemens.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageWikiLink Germany.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageWikiLink Hermann_von_Siemens.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageWikiLink Johann_Nepomuk_Pertsch.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageWikiLink Leo_von_Klenze.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageWikiLink Munich.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageWikiLink Odeon_(Munich).
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageWikiLink Odeonsplatz.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageWikiLink Palace.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageWikiLink Palais_Leuchtenberg.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageWikiLink Piano_nobile.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageWikiLink Prince_Alfons_of_Bavaria.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageWikiLink Prince_Ludwig_Ferdinand_of_Bavaria.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageWikiLink Siemens.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageWikiLink SiemensForum_München.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageWikiLink Siemens_&_Halske.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageWikiLink World_War_II.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageWikiLink File:Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand_Muenchen-2.jpg.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageWikiLink File:Siemens_Palais.JPG.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageWikiLinkText "Palais Ludwig Ferdinand".
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Commonscat-inline.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Coord.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand subject Category:Buildings_and_structures_in_Munich.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand subject Category:Leo_von_Klenze_buildings.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand subject Category:Palaces_in_Bavaria.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand subject Category:Siemens.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand hypernym Palace.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand point "48.14388888888889 11.57638888888889".
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand type Building.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand type Company.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand type Attraction.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand type Company.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand type SpatialThing.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand comment "The Palais Ludwig Ferdinand (also called the Alfons Palais and the Siemens Palais) is an early 19th-century palace in Munich, Germany, designed by Leo von Klenze. It is located on the Wittelsbacherplatz (at number 4) but forms part of an ensemble with the buildings on the west side of the Odeonsplatz. It was Klenze's own residence, then belonged to Princes Alfons and Ludwig Ferdinand of Bavaria.".
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand label "Palais Ludwig Ferdinand".
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand sameAs Q110552.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand sameAs Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand sameAs m.0rfcdsw.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand sameAs Палац_Людвіга_Фердинанда_(Мюнхен).
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand sameAs Q110552.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand lat "48.14388888888889".
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand long "11.57638888888889".
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand wasDerivedFrom Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand?oldid=698996112.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand depiction Siemens_Palais.JPG.
- Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand isPrimaryTopicOf Palais_Ludwig_Ferdinand.