Bruno Möhring (11 December 1863 – 25/26 March 1929) was a German architect, urban planner, designer and a professor in Berlin.
After completing the gymnasium in Königsberg, Möhring spent a year training as an apprentice to a builder.
[3] Möhring, who was more interested in practical than theoretical aspects of architectural design, started his career as a staff architect with the Berlin Offices for Civil Engineering.
[1][3] He then launched his own business and specialized initially in architectural decoration of iron structures, particularly bridges.
Bruno and his associate Rudolph Eberstadt submitted a proposal for an imperial forum in which the Ministry of War building was proposed opposite to the Reichstag, which was symbolic "of the army and the people, the true bearers of German greatness and power unified in the monuments of architecture".
[3] After World War I, he began publishing and editing articles in the urban planning journal Stadtbaukunst, of which he was co-editor from 1920.
[7] A Möhring building from the 1902 Düsseldorf Industry and Trade Exposition was brought to Mexico City and now houses the Chopo University Museum of contemporary art.