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weinzierl · 2 months ago
Sad to hear.

Berlin is a modern typography hub, the influence Spiekermann has in the DACH region and maybe even beyond is hard to overestimate.

Apart from that if you come to Berlin and you are the kind of person that would have liked the Buchstabenmuseum you should try to get an opportunity to visit the crashed space station.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/C-base

hnhg · 2 months ago
The Museum Der Dinge is also worth a visit: https://museumderdinge.org/
schoen · 2 months ago
Is there also a Museum der Tatsachen somewhere?

https://people.umass.edu/klement/tlp/tlp.html

tethys · 2 months ago
As for why they are closing:

> Fixed costs and a lack of financial support are forcing us to take this step. In addition, the general cultural situation in Berlin is very precarious. It was a very difficult decision for us.

Via Deepl, original here: https://www.instagram.com/p/DLuAW5DIANV/

vishnugupta · 2 months ago
> cultural situation in Berlin is very precarious

Can someone please elaborate this for someone who is absolutely clueless about Berlin?

ohthehugemanate · 2 months ago
Speaking as someone with a company in the arts based in berlin:

Sister comments get excited about population growth, gentrification, rising rent prices, and everyone's favorite c-word. Those are all real things that are happening in berlin, that are favorite bogeymen to complain about at parties. None of them apply here.

Rising rents are much more of a residential problem. Prime commercial rents are also rising, but at 1.1%/yr... and non-prime/specialty commercial like the subway arches in Hansaviertel are generally stable or declining since COVID.

The museum cites loss of premises as a factor. The Deutsche bahn leases the subway arches typically on 5 or 10 year terms. Since they moved in 2016 it sounds like DB is declining to renew the contract and they are facing another move.

But the really big elephant in the room is a lack of funding. The museum has always been proudly privately funded and volunteer operated. But that still exposes them to indirect effects from public funding cuts, and berlin cut 13% of its culture funding in 2024. Private donations are down 6% year over year, and what there is has seen significant diversion to political and Ukraine support efforts. Similar impacts happen in volunteer time, but we're all waiting on the 5-yearly survey from 2024 to be released to get real data.

Fixed costs are often the killer for museums, and the buchstaben museum blamed these in particular. Heating and electricity, and general climate maintenance in nonstandard spaces like the subway arches is always expensive, and museums are relatively energy intensive to begin with. Wholesale electricity costs jumped 5-7x in 2021-22. They've since come back down to a more modest 30-40% increase, but that's still a huge problem for a small, privately funded institution like this. Especially coupled with public funding loss, reduced private donations, and staring down a move.

Bear in mind, German non profits can't create endowments like American ones can. Most categories can't even roll budget from one year to the next!

Hope this helps you understand why so many privately funded cultural institutions are dying in Germany and Berlin right now.

worldsayshi · 2 months ago
Partial explanation: Gentrification + increased costs because of inflation is my understanding.

Berlin has been relatively underpopulated ever since WW2 which seems to have contributed to a de-gentrified situation which allowed an unique culture to grow. But time's are changing.

Look at this pop graph: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berlin_population_statistics Still hasn't caught up with the peak in the 1930:s.

tchalla · 2 months ago
ido · 2 months ago
Municipal/state government cutting budgets.
cyberax · 2 months ago
Berlin, like other large cities, suffers from cancerous population density growth. It's sucking the life away from nearby cities, while the cost of living keeps skyrocketing.
ajkjk · 2 months ago
What cultural situation are they referring to?
trenchpilgrim · 2 months ago
I believe they mean "funding for culture," i.e. public grants for museums.

Deleted Comment

pluc · 2 months ago
Berlin is an open air museum for typography
MomsAVoxell · 2 months ago
As is Vienna. Definitely a typographers dream.
croisillon · 2 months ago
hentrep · 2 months ago
This is a bummer - headed to Berlin for the first time in a few weeks and hoped to visit. Any recommendations for similarly geek-oriented side trips in Berlin?
bhaak · 2 months ago
The Computerspielemuseum is worth a visit. https://www.computerspielemuseum.de/
ghosty141 · 2 months ago
100%, you can play a lot of retro arcades for free after u paid the 5€ entry fee. 10/10 experience
kamma4434 · 2 months ago
Totally! Dont miss it.
nanoxide · 2 months ago
Technikmuseum [0] has many different technology-related exhibitions. And the Spectrum (separate building) has a lot of physics- and science experiments you can actively try out. Loved it as a kid.

[0] https://technikmuseum.berlin/en/

askl · 2 months ago
Not sure if it counts as geek-oriented but take a look at the guided tours by Berliner Unterwelten [1]. They are really good. (Tours in English are available)

[1] https://www.berliner-unterwelten.de/en/index.html

mgirkins · 2 months ago
Thank you for posting this! I just spent a very enjoyable hour there and I’m sad others won’t be able to do the same in future.

They appear to work with many institutions in a consultancy capacity so I hope that this will still continue in future even though the museum itself has to close.

Symbiote · 2 months ago
In a similar vein there's the Neon Museum in Warsaw.

https://www.neonmuzeum.org/english

mnot · 2 months ago
Oh no! We were just there a couple of months ago. I hope they find a good home for their collection.
not--felix · 2 months ago
It's sad. I did not know this exists, where do people find locations like this?