Media Center of the Diocese of Münster

Built between 1963-1965 as St Bonifatius Church by architects Michael Kleffner and Christa Kleffner-Dirxen. Renovated 2005-2006 by agn Niederberghaus & Partner. Repurposed 2015 as Media House of the Diocese of Münster, preserving its architectural features.

About this building

The former St. Bonifatius Church in Münster, built from 1963 to 1965 by architects Michael Kleffner and Christa Kleffner-Dirxen, underwent a significant transformation. In 2005-2006, it was renovated by agn Niederberghaus & Partner GmbH and converted into the publishing house "Dialogverlag."

The architectural features of the church include a flat roof and a parabolic-shaped floor plan with an elliptical apse in the north. The main entrance is located in the south under a steeply converging roof. The west facade is divided by two side apses and a one-story round tower with a polygonal spire at the choir level. The church's brick facade is adorned with vertical and horizontal window bands. In 2015, the building was repurposed and became the Media House of the Diocese of Münster, known as the Dialog-Medien and Emmaus-Reisen GmbH. The interior underwent renovations, including the removal of the altar and church furnishings to accommodate new office spaces, galleries, and exhibition areas, while maintaining the original architectural integrity.

Key Features

  • Architecture

Visitors information

  • Bus stop within 100m
  • Level access throughout
  • Parking within 250m
  • Accessible toilets in the building
  • Café within 500m
  • Wifi

Other nearby buildings

Dietmar Rabich / Wikimedia Commons / “Münster, St.-Paulus-Dom -- 2014 -- 0265” / CC BY-SA 4.0

Münster Cathedral

St. Paul's Cathedral was built between 1225 and 1264, a period of transition in the history of architecture between Romanesque and Gothic art. The cathedral was largely destroyed during the Second World War. The astronomical clock, as well as the series of apostles, epitaphs, altars and choir chapels miraculously escaped destruction. After the war, the cathedral was rebuilt identically.

Wikimedia Commons/Mbdortmund

Saint Lambert's Church

The construction of the present church of Saint-Lambert took 150 years, from 1375 to 1525. It is a late Gothic building inspired by Cologne Cathedral and St. Vitus Cathedral in Prague. The building was restored in the second half of the 19th century and after the Second World War due to war damage. After the Anabaptist riots in the 1530s, the Anabaptist leaders of Münster were tortured and executed, their bodies hung in three iron baskets on the church tower. The baskets were removed in 1881 during the renovation and reattached in 1898. In 1927 they were restored.

Dominican Church

The current church was part of a Dominican monastery complex, of which only a wall remains. The church was built during the 18th century and served as the conventional church of the Dominicans until the monastery was abolished in 1811.