Müllersches Volksbad
A public swimming bath built like a cathedral — the biggest in the world when it opened, and a gift to the people who could least afford one.
At a glance
The Müllersches Volksbad stands on the bank of the Isar in Munich, beside the Ludwig Bridge and close to the Deutsches Museum. Designed by the architect Carl Hocheder and completed in 1901, it was the largest and most modern public swimming bath in the world at the time, and it remains one of the most beautiful bath houses in Europe. Its Jugendstil interiors, vaulted halls and clock tower make a civic monument out of an everyday function. It is still in use today, run by the Munich municipal utilities.
Key facts
- Architect: Carl Hocheder
- Completed: 1901
- Style: Jugendstil (German Art Nouveau)
- Donor: the engineer Karl Müller, who funded it for the “unmoneyed” public
- Setting: on the Isar, by the Ludwig Bridge
- Status: in use; run by Stadtwerke München
History
The bath was made possible by a donation from the Munich engineer Karl Müller, given on the condition that the city build a bath for ordinary people who could not afford private bathing. The commission went to Carl Hocheder.
Completed in 1901, the building was a sensation: the largest and most advanced indoor swimming bath anywhere, planned with the era’s strict separation of the sexes, which is why it was built with two pools.
More than a century later it still functions as a public bath, a rare survival of a grand turn-of-the-century civic interior in continuous use.
What you see
From the river the building presents a long Jugendstil front crowned by a tall clock tower, which doubles as a water tower: tanks inside it kept the water pressure constant. The top of the tower was designed to offer a view over the city and the Isar valley.
Inside, the main pool hall is a vaulted, church-like space, its galleries, tilework and curving Jugendstil detail turning a swim into something ceremonial. A second, smaller pool served the separate provision for men and women.
Practical information
- The Volksbad is a working public bath and sauna; entry follows pool opening hours and tickets.
- Bring swimwear if you want to use it; otherwise admire the exterior and lobby.
- Time needed: 30 minutes to look, longer to swim.
Getting there
The bath sits at the start of the Rosenheimer Straße on the right bank of the Isar, a short walk from the Isartor and the Deutsches Museum in central Munich.
Nearby
- The Deutsches Museum on its island in the Isar.
- The Isartor and the old town gates.
- The riverside paths along the Isar.
Sources
- Wikipedia (DE), “Müllersches Volksbad”.
- Stadtwerke München (operator information).
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