Zeitpyramide - Wikipedia
Jump to content
Search
Search
Donate
Create account
Log in
Personal tools
Donate
Create account
Log in
Zeitpyramide
19 languages
Azərbaycanca<br>Català<br>Deutsch<br>Ελληνικά<br>Español<br>Suomi<br>Français<br>עברית<br>Հայերեն<br>Bahasa Indonesia<br>한국어<br>Bahasa Melayu<br>Nederlands<br>Português<br>Română<br>Русский<br>ไทย<br>Українська<br>中文
Edit links
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Work of public art by Manfred Laber
"},"caption":{"wt":"Sunset at the four-block Zeitpyramide, 2023. Around 434,600 sunsets are to take place at the site between the laying of the first and last block.\n"},"coordinates":{"wt":"{{coord\n| 48 | 53 | 03 | N\n| 10 | 43 | 17 | E\n| region:DE-BY_type:landmark\n| display = inline }}"},"date":{"wt":"Began {{start date and age|1993|10|23|df=y}}Finishes {{start date and age|3183|df=y}})"},"height":{"wt":"{{convert|9.2|m|ft|0}} (''when done'')"},"image":{"wt":"file:Wemdinger Zeitpyramide September 2023.jpg"},"image_size":{"wt":"255"},"material":{"wt":"[[brick#Concrete bricks|Concrete]]"},"name":{"wt":"{{lang|de|Zeitpyramide}}"},"owner":{"wt":""},"slope":{"wt":"43°"},"type":{"wt":"[[Step pyramid]](currently {{percentage | 4 | 120 | 0 }} complete)"},"volume":{"wt":"{{convert|311|m3|cuyd cuft|0}} (''when done'')"}},"i":0}}]}'>ZeitpyramideSunset at the four-block Zeitpyramide, 2023. Around 434,600 sunsets are to take place at the site between the laying of the first and last block.<br>Interactive map of Zeitpyramide<br>48°53′03″N 10°43′17″E / 48.88417°N 10.72139°E / 48.88417; 10.72139ArchitectManfred Laber (1932–2018)ConstructedBegan 23 October 1993; 32 years ago (1993-10-23)<br>Finishes 3183; 1157 years' time (3183))TypeStep pyramid<br>(currently 3% complete)MaterialConcreteHeight9.2 metres (30 ft) (when done)Base15 metres (49 ft) (concrete pad)Volume311 cubic metres (407 cu yd; 10,983 cu ft) (when done)Slope43°
The Zeitpyramide (literal translation"}]],"parts":[{"template":{"target":{"wt":"literal translation","href":"./Template:Literal_translation"},"params":{"1":{"wt":"time pyramid"},"lk":{"wt":"yes"}},"i":0}}]}'>lit. 'time pyramid') is a work of public art by Manfred Laber under construction in Wemding, Germany. The pyramid began in 1993, the year of the town's 1,200th anniversary. With a new block added every ten years, the structure is planned to consist of 120 blocks when complete after 1,190 years, in the year 3183.[1]
Concept<br>[edit]
The town of Wemding dates back to the year AD 793 (during the reign of Charlemagne as King of the Franks) and celebrated its 1,200th anniversary in 1993. The Zeitpyramide was conceived by Manfred Laber (a local artist) in June 1993 to mark this 1,200-year period and to give people a sense of what the span of 1,200 years really means.[1]
One block is scheduled to be placed every ten years, taking 1,190 years. This time includes the initial block placed at the beginning of the project, which explains the apparent off-by-one error of ten years.[2] So far, the blocks have all been concrete, but the material of future blocks may be altered in future generations depending on availability of materials.[3]
The artwork is intended to take its own path without the artist, directed by the community, and will "make time itself more concrete, more tangible".[4]
Artist<br>[edit]
Manfred Laber was born in Wemding on 5 May 1932 and studied painting at the Hochschule für Bildende Künste in Berlin in the 1950s. He has other artwork on permanent display in Mormoiron, France, San Antonio Island, and Alcanar, Spain, his part-time residence.[5] He died in Wemding on 17 August 2018, aged 86.
Construction<br>[edit]
Trimetric projection of the design
The time pyramid is located on a concrete pad on a rounded hilltop, the Robertshöhe, on the northern edge of Wemding.[6] The first block was placed in October 1993.[1] The 6.5-tonne (6.4-long-ton; 7.2-short-ton) fourth and most recent block was placed at 15:06 on 9 September 2023.[7] Following the construction schedule, the fifth block will be placed in 2033.[8][9]
The project's initial financing was mostly achieved through donations by local companies, which, for example, supplied the materials for the concrete slab for free. The project is administered by a foundation based in Wemding.[10]<br>Profile (side view) of the completed design<br>A model of the final artwork is exhibited at Wemding, at the Haus des Gastes.[1] If the time pyramid project proceeds according to plan, it will fall into four stages based on tier layer:
The base layer, measuring 13.8 by 13.8 m (45 by 45 ft), will consist of 64 blocks arranged in 8 rows and 8 columns and has a stage completion date of 2623.
The second layer will consist of 36 blocks, in a 6-by-6 format with a stage completion date of 2983. This is the first layer that requires a block to be placed atop another block, which would require a crane or some form of scaffolding such as an earthen ramp used as an incline, although, by at least 2023, placement was already using a crane.[2]
The third layer will...