The steel escape staircases are located at the ends of the towers.
The connecting element between the Ten Towers buildings: the Skylounge event bridge.
View into Dingolfinger Strasse
Ten Towers
For many years, the view from the S-Bahn between Ostbahnhof and Berg am Laim revealed a large brownfield site. An office complex was built on this site, which served as the headquarters of Deutsche Telekom AG for Bavaria from 2005 to 2022. Since then, the so-called Ten Towers have been abandoned. The owner of the site wants to expand the options for repurposing the vacant office towers in 2026. They are to be converted into a mixed-use quarter with offices, a hotel and accommodation for students and trainees.
The five twin towers of the Ten Towers line up like a string of pearls along the railway line. A round building complements the ensemble and is clearly visible from Leuchtenbergring. The complex originally housed 2,500 Telekom workplaces and won the award for Munich's best commercial property in 2006. The most recent plan was to market the Ten Towers and the adjacent Five Rings and Das Leuchtenberg buildings under the name ‘Leuchtenbergpark’ from 2025 onwards and to create public communal areas with sports and meeting facilities on the site.