Overview
- The Deutsches Museum, Germany's largest science and technology museum, marks its 100th anniversary with free admission events and record attendance.
- President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, Bavarian Prime Minister Markus Söder, and Munich Mayor Dieter Reiter are attending the celebrations on May 5.
- Renovations covering half of the 45,000 square meters of exhibition space have faced delays and cost overruns, with the budget rising from €445 million to €750 million.
- A full reopening of the museum is planned for 2028, coinciding with its 125th founding anniversary.
- The museum reflects a complex history, including its Nazi-era appropriation and the deportation of co-founder Arthur Schönberg, who died in the Theresienstadt ghetto in 1943.