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Amalienburg Palace at Nymphenburg — Fotopedia
I visited Nymphenburg Palace outside of Munich on a very wet day in October 2009. The palace is pretty cool - it was the summer home for the Wittelsbach family - not a bad summer home. The museum is loaded with paintings, has lovely gardens, fountains, outbuildings, and a very quirky carriage house.
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Amalienburg

The Amalienburg is an elaborate hunting lodge in the grounds of Nymphenburg Palace, Munich, southern Germany. It was constructed in 1734-1739 by François de Cuvilliés, in Rococo style, for the Holy Roman Emperor Charles VII and his wife, Maria Amalia of Austria.

Most of the ground floor is given over to the round Hall of Mirrors in the center of the building which was designed by Johann Baptist Zimmermann and Joachim Dietrich (1690–1753). It creates an ethereal atmosphere in the Bavarian national colors of silver and blue.

The Blue Cabinet was the bedroom of the Electress and the pavilion also accommodates a kennel room for the hunting dogs. The kitchen is decorated with precious tiles from Delft which when being laid were mixed up by workers in the wrong order. The Castrol stove (1735) built for the kitchen is a masonry construction with several fireholes covered by perforated iron plates. It is also known as a stew stove and was the first design that completely enclosed the fire.


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Amalienburg Triangle