TUM to Receive Building by Star Architects Prof. Francis Kéré and Prof. Hermann Kaufmann
The daycare center will be called “Ingeborg Pohl Kinderoase an der TUM”, named after the generous building owner. From the end of 2025, up to 60 children will be looked after there. They will then have around 700 square meters at their disposal. On the roof of the five-story building, there will be an outdoor play area called “Himmelswiese”. The ground-breaking ceremony took place on Thursday on a vacant site at Gabelsbergerstr. 41, directly between the TUM main campus and the canteen.Patron Ingeborg Pohl said: “This building will serve several great purposes: First and foremost, it will help the mothers working at TUM by ensuring that the children are well looked after there during the day. In the company of their peers, they will be encouraged in their development, play, romping, and discovery. The unique building by Prof. Francis Kéré with its extraordinary façade will also complement the museum quarter as a new architectural highlight.”
Architect Francis Kéré emphasized: “I work as an architect all over the world, but I feel a special connection to my university, TUM. I am, therefore, delighted to be able to realize this project here, on the main campus in Munich. This house will, of course, be a house for children, but it is also a gift to the entire urban society, a signal for sustainability and the belief in a good future.
TUM President Prof. Thomas F. Hofmann said: “Something really great is being built here. And three extraordinary people are primarily responsible for it. I want to thank the Honorary Senator of TUM, Ingeborg Pohl, for her generosity, financial drive, and her open ear for the concerns of our university, its employees, and students. And I am proud that Prof. Francis Kéré, one of the world’s best architects of our time, and Prof. Herrmann Kaufmann have agreed to realize this incomparable building.”
The architect and TUM professor Herrmann Kaufmann, former holder of the Chair of Design and Timber Construction and winner of the 2017 German Architecture Prize, is significantly involved in the project. He is responsible for the implementation planning of the children’s oasis, a purely timber construction. The Munich Student Union will take over the operation of the daycare center after completion.