Rainer Schell

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Rainer Schell (born July 11, 1917 in Bautzen ; † 2000 ) was a German architect who designed public buildings in Bonn , Göttingen , Soest and Mainz . He was a typical representative of modern architecture .

Place of work

Rainer Schell had his architecture office in Wiesbaden.

plant

Göttingen city hall
  • 1960 Planning for the new building of the Göttingen town hall with a striking tile facade
  • 1961–1962 Overall planning for the Wilhelm Morgner House . Flat concrete skeleton structure , the facade of which is clad alternately with strips of bricks and field stones. As a typical structure of the early 1960s, the building is one of the youngest architectural monuments in the city of Soest.
  • 1962–1963 Extension of the Gutenberg Museum in Mainz for the “2000 year” city anniversary
  • 1964 Evangelical St. Thomas Church (Wiesbaden) modern sacral architecture
  • 1964 Transformation of the Göttingen weather station into a weather station.
  • 1965 Medical research institute, Gottingen; Architect: Rainer Schell.
  • In 1967 the founding building of the Rheinisches Landesmuseum Bonn , which was destroyed in World War II, was replaced by a pioneering new building by Rainer Schell.

Web links

Commons : Rainer Schell  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

literature

  • Ingeborg flag : A portrait: Rainer Schell. the architect ; No. 1, 1984 Jan, pp. 43-49
  • Rainer Schell: 30 years as an architect in Wiesbaden: a cross-section of letters, lectures, writings and speeches ; Rainer Schell, self-published, 1980, 338 pages

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Entry "Rainer Schell" in: archthek - Historisches Architektenregister, section Scheben - Schittenhelm, http://www.kmkbuecholdt.de/historisches/haben/architekten_sche.htm ; (As of September 5, 2018)
  2. Göttingen City Archives
  3. ^ Museum Wilhelm Morgner , accessed on March 25, 2018.
  4. ^ Andres Herzog: Markant insert , accessed on March 25, 2018.
  5. Andrew MacNeille: Between Tradition and Innovation - Historic Places in the Federal Republic of Germany after 1945. Dissertation, University of Cologne, 2004, p. 238
  6. Thomaskirche , accessed on March 25, 2018.
  7. Chronicle of Göttingen for the year 1964 , accessed on March 25, 2018.
  8. Bauwelt , 1965, No. 41, pages 1133–1135
  9. ^ Andreas Denk , Ingeborg Flagge : Architekturführer Bonn . Dietrich Reimer Verlag, Berlin 1997, ISBN 3-496-01150-5 , p. 34.