Landesgewerbeanstalt Bayern

The LGA Landesgewerbeanstalt Bavaria is a public corporation with headquarters in Nuremberg. It has 8 inspection offices for stability with a total of 18 locations throughout Bavaria. The inspection of structural engineering calculations, the core task of the LGA. Such independent, specialized building inspections follow the four-eyes principle, which has proven to not only the guaranteed technical stability, to minimize the risk of damage and cost containment. The basic rules are contained in the building codes of the countries.

Further inspection, testing and certification areas has outsourced in the years 1995 to 2004 into independent companies the LGA. The majority of these companies has 2004 bundled into an intermediate holding company and sold with the company's premises at the Tilly road in Nuremberg at the TÜV Rheinland Holding AG. Since then, the TÜV Rheinland used the mark " LGA " in the areas of product testing. The LGA in Nuremberg location has been expanded to successful regional center for the entire South TÜV Rheinland Group.

The LGA is subject to a public corporation of the legal supervision of the Free State of Bavaria.

The LGA is still a co-partner of:

  • LGA Institute of Environmental Geology and Contaminated Sites GmbH
  • LGA immission and Safety GmbH

History

The LGA was founded in 1869 as the Bavarian Crafts Museum and Others by Lothar von Faber, Theodor von Cramer -Klett and Otto Stromer von Reichenbach, renamed in 1909 in Bavarian State Trade Agency, 1916 public corporation and carries since 1969 the name Landesgewerbeanstalt Bavaria. Through the establishment of this institution, the concept of Johann Caspar Beeg was implemented.

1866 moved to the upper rooms of the meat market, the precursor of the Bavarian Trade Museum, the Arts and Crafts Museum and was closed after the death of J. C. Beeg about 1872 to find his first home as a Bavarian industrial museum in the butcher house. After moving in 1874 in the King's Road and the exhibition facility in 1897 was relocated to the new building. To finance the new building was the Bavarian Crafts Museum from 1872 shares in guilders and until at least 1894 in Mark from.

The new building was 1892-1897 according to the plans of the architect Theodor von Kramer on Gewerbemuseumsplatz in Nuremberg.

1901 were initiated by Theodor von Kramer and, inter alia, with Peter Behrens, Richard Riemerschmid and Paul Haustein the establishment of master classes from 1902.

Mid- 1903, the Bavarian Gewerbemuseum expert opinion for the operation and management of the network Electricitätswerke and engineering company Redwitz adR in Redwitz at the Unterrodach and the first quarter of 1904 is one of issues of human and technical resources. Last but not least on the basis of these opinions, the closure was ordered on March 11, 1904, but canceled after six weeks

Master classes ( instructor )

Publications

  • 1867 Arts and Crafts. Weekly to promote German art industry. Published by the Bavarian Trade Museum in Nuremberg.
  • From 1904-1919 Bavarian Brewers Journal
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