More is more: GIMA
German brick manufacturer GIMA has been providing architects with the building blocks they need for bringing designs to life since 1903, and, today, offer not only a wide range of brick and paving possibilities, but innovative, bespoke, customer-oriented solutions too.
January 19, 2021 | 11:00 pm CUT

To achieve the sculptural effect of the extension building for the Jewish Museum in Führt, the consortium Gatz, Kuntz + Manz relied on the GIMA clinker Elva FK. Photo: © Alexander Bernhard

The GIMA clinker bricks used for the irregular, muddy facade of the extension building are sand-coloured and blend in perfectly with the overall appearance of Fürth's old town. Photo: © Alexander Bernhard
For over 100 years, a love of experimentation and know-how have guaranteed the company’s high levels of quality


With GIMA facade bricks, the architectural firm Herzog & de Meuron succeeds in achieving continuity across different epochs in the masonry of the Küppersmühle in Duisburg. Photos: © Jörg Seiler
To find the perfect solution for each individual project, GIMA is there for architects, planners and builders – from first idea to final delivery, whether for floor or facade


For the facade of the new Werk 17 hotel in Munich, Hild & K Architekten opted for a combination of concrete and brick from GIMA. Photos: © Alexander Bernhard


The architects Herzog & de Meuron designed the twisted, truncated pyramid of the Tate Modern in London with a perforated clinker cladding that, at night, provides unusual illumination. Photos: © Anke Müllerklein


With GIMA’s high-quality, durable paving bricks, summer colours can be brought to terraces and paths at home: a total of ten colours are available in four formats each. Photos: shutterstock.com/437626960/Dariusz Jarzabek (top), ©Alexander Bernhard (above)


The slender rectangular formats of the CERPIANO+ ceramic terrace system are solid-coloured, colour-stable, made of 100% natural raw materials and are available in carmine red, chestnut brown, titanium grey and volcanic grey. Photos: ©Alexander Bernhard
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