Munich: KUNSTLABOR 2 Entry Ticket

Contemporary art gets practical at KUNSTLABOR 2. It’s 4,000 m² of installations inside a former healthcare building, spread across 60 rooms where you can wander floor to floor and catch artists working. KUNSTLABOR 2 also leans on a cross-genre idea, so the experience doesn’t feel like one-style art on repeat.

I especially like the sheer variety of spaces—you’re not just looking at one exhibition, you’re moving through lots of separate installation moments. And if you’re going for SETH’S SPIEL(T)RÄUME, the ticket includes it, which helps you see what this place is doing on its own terms.

One thing to keep in mind: some installations rely on working lights/sound/switches, and a few rooms may be off or underperforming if the tech isn’t functioning that day, which can change the impact.

Key highlights I’d plan around

  • 4,000 m² across 60 rooms in a repurposed healthcare building
  • Cross-genre approach aimed at diversity and new ideas
  • Artists working on site, so you can catch process, not just final art
  • SETH’S SPIEL(T)RÄUME included with your entry ticket
  • Pick a Fri–Sun slot because that’s when it’s open (10:00–18:00)

KUNSTLABOR 2: A former hospital turned into art labs

Munich: KUNSTLABOR 2 Entry Ticket - KUNSTLABOR 2: A former hospital turned into art labs
KUNSTLABOR 2 is built around a simple idea: take a real building with real rooms and repurpose it for contemporary art. The site is a former healthcare building, and that matters. Healthcare spaces tend to be efficient, compartmental, and room-to-room connected—exactly the kind of structure that supports lots of separate installations rather than one big hall.

The project celebrates its official opening in 2021 as Munich’s largest interim cultural use project. It also follows the success of a predecessor in the city’s Tengelmann complex. In other words, this isn’t a random pop-up. It’s a repeatable format the city has supported, which gives you confidence that the place will feel intentionally made for art installations.

You’ll be walking through a building that’s essentially broken into smaller worlds. Expect the vibe of a working cultural venue more than a museum temple: lots of rooms, lots of different atmospheres, and often a sense that things are in progress. That’s where the experience becomes fun instead of intimidating.

You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Munich

The 60-room layout: how to get value from your 1-day visit

Munich: KUNSTLABOR 2 Entry Ticket - The 60-room layout: how to get value from your 1-day visit
Your ticket is valid for one day, and the key to enjoying KUNSTLABOR 2 is accepting that it’s not one slow, single-route museum experience. You’re dealing with 60 individual rooms over about 4,000 m², which means you’ll get more out of it with a light plan than with a strict checklist.

Here’s what I’d do if you want the best mix of discovery and satisfaction:

  • Start with the rooms that match your curiosity, not the order you enter. The highlight is the variety, so jumping to a favorite area early can anchor your day.
  • Leave room for wandering. Because each room is its own installation, you don’t want to rush past the surprises while you’re trying to “finish.”
  • Give your ears and eyes a break. Sound-based or light-based works can stack up quickly in a compact building. If you feel overstimulated, stepping out to reset is part of the rhythm.

The building’s compartment-style layout naturally creates mini-journeys. One room might be concept-heavy. Another might feel playful or more direct. That’s a big part of why people walk out thinking it was interesting, inspiring, and creative—the day doesn’t hinge on one perfect moment.

SETH’S SPIEL(T)RÄUME: what to expect from the included experience

Munich: KUNSTLABOR 2 Entry Ticket - SETHS SPIEL(T)RÄUME: what to expect from the included experience
Your entry ticket includes SETH’S SPIEL(T)RÄUME. That’s a real advantage because it means you’re not buying a general ticket and then hoping the specific show you care about lines up with your visit.

That said, it helps to manage expectations. If you’re expecting a huge, easy-to-familar, solo-style exhibition, you might feel like the experience is more “one element in a wider art-world conversation” than a full destination show. The good news is that even if a single room doesn’t fully click for you, the ticket still earns its value through the rest of what the building offers.

My practical advice: treat SETH’S SPIEL(T)RÄUME as your “anchor,” then let the surrounding rooms negotiate the rest of your day. That way, you don’t end up disappointed if one installation doesn’t hit the way you hoped.

Cross-genre contemporary art: why the format matters

Munich: KUNSTLABOR 2 Entry Ticket - Cross-genre contemporary art: why the format matters
KUNSTLABOR 2 isn’t trying to be one lane. The project uses a cross-genre approach, and the goal is to bring diversity and a wealth of ideas into the space. For you as a visitor, that means your day is more likely to feel like a sequence of different creative languages rather than a single visual style repeated over and over.

This kind of format is valuable because contemporary art can be hit-or-miss when it’s presented in a rigid way—like everything must fit one mood. Here, the rooms give you permission to shift your mindset. One installation might push you to think. Another might make you smile. Another might feel experimental in how it uses the room itself.

That variety is also tied to the “interim” nature of the project. Interim cultural projects often move faster, take more risks, and invite more voices. When that works, you feel it in the creativity and the sense that ideas are being tested, not polished into something sterile.

Meeting artists while they work: the human factor

One of the strongest reasons this place feels different is that you can meet artists while they’re working. That’s a big deal. It changes your relationship to the art. Instead of being only an observer in front of a finished object, you may get a glimpse of process—how an installation is being shaped, adjusted, or interpreted in real time.

Even if you don’t have long conversations, the atmosphere of active making tends to make installations more understandable. It turns the visit into a kind of studio-view experience, not just a gallery walk.

You’ll likely feel the effect most in the rooms that are in motion—sound pieces, light-driven works, or installations that depend on interaction. When artists are present, those elements often come alive more fully than when the room is simply “on display.”

Price and value: is $14 fair for this kind of art day?

Munich: KUNSTLABOR 2 Entry Ticket - Price and value: is $14 fair for this kind of art day?
At $14 per person for a one-day entry ticket, this is priced like a bargain compared to many museum visits. But value isn’t just the cost—it’s what you get for that cost.

You’re paying for:

  • a huge building area (4,000 m²),
  • a high room count (60 individual rooms),
  • and an included featured component (SETH’S SPIEL(T)RÄUME).

If you normally pay more for art you see once in a single room, the structure here is what justifies the price. The ticket buys you time spent moving through lots of separate installation ideas, which makes it easier to find at least a few rooms you genuinely like.

The only “value risk” is the operational one: if a few installations are not functioning as intended on the day you go, you might feel the impact drop in those rooms. Still, because the experience is spread across many rooms, it usually won’t ruin the whole visit unless your taste is extremely narrow.

Getting there from Munich: easy transit, simple planning

Location matters, and KUNSTLABOR 2 is straightforward to reach. It’s at Dachauer Straße 90. If you’re using public transit:

  • The Sandstraße tram station is across the road.
  • Stiglmaierplatz underground station is a 2-minute walk away.

That’s ideal for a contemporary-art stop because you don’t want your day eaten by complicated navigation. You can also pair it with other central Munich wandering, since it’s close enough to feel like part of your normal city route rather than a remote detour.

In terms of timing, it’s open Friday to Sunday from 10:00 to 18:00. Since your ticket is valid for one day, you’ll want to pick the best day you can. If you’re going on a tight schedule, a mid-morning start tends to give you a calmer pace. If you go later, you may feel rushed between rooms, which is the opposite of what these installations want.

Day-of pacing: how to avoid art overload

Because you’re moving through many rooms, the biggest mistake is trying to “do it all” in one sprint. Installations often need a moment or two to reveal their structure, and the room itself can be part of the meaning.

A simple pacing strategy works well:

  • give each room a fair try (don’t over-invest early),
  • then spend more time in the ones that immediately grab you,
  • and keep moving even if a room is confusing, because the next one might click.

Also watch for your energy level. Light, sound, and interactive elements can stack quickly in a multi-room building. If you feel mentally tired, that’s not a sign you picked the wrong destination—it’s your brain asking for breaks. Take them. The place is made of breaks.

Who will love KUNSTLABOR 2 (and who should think twice)?

This ticket fits best if you like contemporary art that doesn’t demand one specific interpretation method. You’ll likely enjoy it if you’re curious about:

  • installation art,
  • artists working in real time,
  • and a building turned into many small creative environments.

You might think twice if:

  • you want a traditional single exhibition you can read from start to finish without wandering,
  • you only care about one specific room and are uncomfortable when an included component feels more like part of a larger network than a standalone “main show,”
  • or you strongly prefer perfectly functioning tech-heavy installations every time. The possibility of non-working elements is a real consideration, based on reported experiences.

Should you book the KUNSTLABOR 2 entry ticket?

Munich: KUNSTLABOR 2 Entry Ticket - Should you book the KUNSTLABOR 2 entry ticket?
I’d book it if you want a low-cost art day that rewards walking, curiosity, and openness to different styles. The price is fair for what’s included—especially with SETH’S SPIEL(T)RÄUME on board—and the building’s 60-room setup makes it easy to find your favorites even if a few rooms don’t fully work for you.

If you’re the type who hates uncertainty, plan for a couple of rooms to underdeliver if their sound/light/interaction systems aren’t performing. But because the experience is spread out across so many installation spaces, the overall visit still has a strong chance of landing.

Bottom line: for most people who like contemporary art and city wandering, this is one of Munich’s more practical “creative afternoons.”

FAQ

Where is KUNSTLABOR 2 located?

KUNSTLABOR 2 is at Dachauer Straße 90 in Munich. The Sandstraße tram station is across the road, and Stiglmaierplatz underground station is about a 2-minute walk away.

When is KUNSTLABOR 2 open?

It’s open Friday to Sunday from 10:00 AM to 6:00 PM.

How long is the ticket valid?

The ticket is valid for 1 day. You’ll check availability to see starting times.

What’s included with the entry ticket?

The ticket includes KUNSTLABOR 2 entry plus SETH’S SPIEL(T)RÄUME.

Is KUNSTLABOR 2 wheelchair accessible?

Yes, it is wheelchair accessible.

Are pets allowed?

Pets are not allowed, but assistance dogs are allowed.

Not for you? Here's more nearby things to do in Munich we have reviewed

Scroll to Top