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| Client | Stadt Thun |
| Commission | study commission on invitation 2009 |
| Planning | 2009–2013 |
| Construction | 2013–2014 |
| Architects | Graber & Steiger Architekten, Project Architect: Urs Schmid |
| Consultants | Construction manager: Gassner & Leuenberger, Structural engineer: Dr. Schwartz Consulting, Façade engineering: Metallprojekt GmbH, Building physicist: RSP AG |
| Photographer | D.M. Wehrli |
The oldest still existent panorama painting in the world, the Thun Panorama, painted by Marquard Wocher between 1809 and 1814, was comprehensively renovated in 2014. The rotunda designed by the Thun City Architect Karl Keller in 1959, which has housed the panorama painting since the early 1960s, has also been renovated and enhanced by an annexe building. During this transformation, existing aspects of content, architecture and landscape were picked up on, reinterpreted and atmospherically condensed. The pavilion-like, transparent extension building, which transfers the circular geometry of the existing structures to gentle curves in the rectangular exhibition space, is like the antithesis of the introverted rotunda. Thanks to structurally similar characteristics, it enters into a quasi-symbiotic relationship with it, as old and new merge into an inextricable ensemble.

On March 16, the exhibition "Typically Lucerne?" opens at the Swiss Trasport Museum Lucerne. The exhibition features works related to our hometown in central Switzerland and we are pleased that the Pilatus Kulm Panorama Gallery is represented in the exhibition. The show is organized by the Architekturgalerie Luzern, which celebrates its 40th anniversary this year. On the subject of the exhibition, a selection of our projects has been published in the current issue of ARC MAG, embedded in an interview conducted by Jørg Himmelreich. At the lecture evening 'Collage City Luzern' we will present our project 'Conversion and Extension of Denkmalstasse 21' on 23.3.2023 in the context of the exhibition.
'Typisch Luzern?' 16-30 March 2023
16 March, 6 p.m.
Swiss Transport Museum Lucerne