Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Klais Orgelbau

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Products
  
Pipe organs

Headquarters
  
Bonn, Germany

Number of employees
  
64 (2006)

Website
  
Orgelbau Klais

Founded
  
1882


Industry
  
Pipe organ design and building. Pipe organ restoration

Key people
  
Hans Gerd Klais, Philipp Klais

Type
  
Kommanditgesellschaft, Gesellschaft mit beschränkter Haftung

Orgelbau Klais is a German firm that designs, builds and restores pipe organs. It is a family run company, founded in 1882 by Johannes Klais senior and is now run by his great-grandson Philipp Klais. The firm is based in Bonn, Germany, and has completed many large-scale building and restoration projects around the globe in more than a century of organ building.

Contents

History of the company

Johannes Klais studied organ building in Alsace, Switzerland and Southern Germany. He founded his own organ building workshop in Bonn in 1882. His way of building organs was closely bound up with traditional construction methods using slider windchests. But as early as before the turn of the century he built high pressure stops with two mouths on pneumatic cone valve chests. In 1906, together with his son Hans, he introduced electric action. Hans Klais took over in 1925. In his time facade design began to come under the influence of the modern age, ergonomic console designs were also being developed. Hans Gerd Klais, the founder's grandson, took charge in 1965. Philipp Klais, the great-grandson of the founder, studied organ building in Alsace, France; in Germany; and overseas. He now runs the company.

Klais instruments around the world

Here is a short list naming a few of the Klais instruments around the world:

  • The Athens Concert Hall, in Athens, Greece with 6080 pipes
  • The cathedral in Aachen, Germany.
  • The cathedral in Cologne, Germany: der Kölner Dom. The main instrument was finished in 1998 and although enormous, it is almost dwarfed inside the colossal gothic church as it clings to the balconies. Klais also restored other organs in the cathedral and added a detached console that operates all of them at once.
  • St. Peter's church in Munich, Germany
  • The Cathedral in Trier, Germany, 5602 pipes
  • The Concert Hall of the Kraków Philharmonic, in Kraków, Poland
  • The Concert Hall of the Queensland Performing Arts Centre, in Brisbane, Australia, 6566 pipes
  • The Cathedral in Leeds, UK
  • The Abbey in Bath, UK.
  • St. John's, Smith Square, Westminster, UK, a redundant but still consecrated church which commissioned its organ when the building became a concert hall.
  • Symphony Hall, Birmingham, UK. Finished in 2001, the 6000 pipes symphony organ is now the largest mechanical action organ in the UK.
  • Hallgrímskirkja in Reykjavík, Iceland, 5275 pipes.
  • Overture Hall in Madison, Wisconsin, United States.
  • Esplanade Concert Hall in Singapore.
  • Petronas Philharmonic Concert Hall in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
  • National Centre for the Performing Arts in Beijing, China. Finished in 2007, the 6500 pipes symphony organ with 94 stops is now the largest organ in China.
  • St. Peter's Lutheran Church in New York City, United States. 1978, 2 manuals, 43 ranks.
  • The University of Iowa Voxman Music Building Concert Hall in Iowa City, IA, United States, completed in 2016, 3,883 pipes.
  • Elbphilharmonie, Hamburg: 4 manuals, 65 registers, 4,765 pipes, completed December 2017.
  • References

    Klais Orgelbau Wikipedia