Mira (shopping center)

The Mira is a district and shopping center that opened in 2008 in the Munich district Nordhaide at Schleißheimer Straße which borders the municipalities of Milbertshofen-Am Hart and Feldmoching-Hasenbergl.

Mira
AddressSchleißheimer Str. 506, 80933 Munich, Germany
Opening date13 March 2008
ManagementKOPRIAN iQ MANAGEMENT GmbH[1]
OwnerGEPRO Wohn- und Gewerbebau GmbH & Co. Zwanzigste Immobilien KG[1]
ArchitectChapman Taylor; Léon-Wohlhage-Wernik
No. of stores and services66
Total retail floor area25.500 m2
Parking750
Public transit accessU1
Websitewww.mira-einkaufszentrum.de

General Information

On 25,500 square meters, spread over three stories, there are 66 retail stores. The three stories above were built into a parking garage with 750 parking spaces. The shopping center, located on Schleißheimer Str. 506, can be reached via the A9, A99, as well as through a direct connection at the U-Bahn station Dülferstraße.

Architecture

Project developer of the 120 million Euro project was FONDARA – Gesellschaft für Immobilienentwicklung und Projektmanagement mbH. Planning for the shopping center was done by Chapman Taylor, and the responsible project architect was Ruprecht Melder. The office of Léon-Wohlhage-Wernik-Architekten was responsible for the design of the façade. Construction began in 2005.[2]

The West, North, and northern half of the Eastern facades, with a total coverage of 5,800 square meters, was made of colored lacquered metal panels which were placed on the walls to form prisms. Since the sides of the prisms have different colors, the façade appears from the southwest and northwest in different colors. In between, a gradual transition takes place, so that the building changes dynamically as one passes by. In addition to the colored panels, the façade also contains panels made of polished aluminum, which reflect the sky and surrounding buildings. The façade construction began in 2007.[3]

Mira received the “DGNB Gold award for sustainable buildings” from the German Society for Sustainable Buildings in 2009.[4][5] Mira is home to the largest thermal groundwater system installation for room cooling of all shopping centers in Europe. On top of that, 80 percent of the interior air energy from the fresh air exchanger, is recirculated into the buildings heat exchangers. Through this, 50 percent of the required heat output can be saved during the heating season. Overall, MIRA saves 40 percent of the final energy when compared to a conventionally built modern shopping center. In this way, emissions of around 1000 tonnes of carbon dioxide can be avoided. Within the scope of nationwide research projects, the environmental technology is to be continuously optimized even after the buildings opening.[6]

Fountain installations

In the so-called "North Forum" of the shopping center there is the fountain "Goldener Brunnen" with a floor area of over 50 square meters, in which the water area covers about 20 square meters. The fountain reaches a height of 15 meters. The fountain "Ab durch die Mitte" of the Nordhaideplatz in front of the southern entrance of the shopping center was designed by Alexander Laner and commissioned in 2009.[7][8]

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gollark: <@319753218592866315> You muted HelloBoi. This is NOT acceptable.
gollark: I've never used it, I just hear complaints about 1 based arrays.

References

  1. "Das MIRA" (in German). MIRA Einkaufszentrum. Archived from the original on 27 September 2015. Retrieved 25 February 2017.
  2. "MIRA München Nordheide" (in German). Competitionline. 9 April 2015. Retrieved 25 February 2017.
  3. "mira Fassade, München" (PDF) (in German). léonwohlhage Gesellschaft von Architekten. Retrieved 25 February 2017.
  4. "Germany receives DGNB Gold Award for sustainable buildings". Chapman Taylor. 16 October 2009. Archived from the original on 26 September 2015. Retrieved 25 February 2017.
  5. "DGNB Gold für Fondara Projekt MIRA" (in German). Fondara. 6 October 2009. Retrieved 25 February 2017.
  6. "Der Norden hat eine neue Mitte!" (PDF) (in German). Fondara. 8 March 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 September 2015. Retrieved 25 February 2017.
  7. "München und seine Springbrunnen" (in German). Josef Greber. Retrieved 25 February 2017.
  8. "Ab durch die Mitte" (PDF) (in German). Alexander Laner. Retrieved 25 February 2017.

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