Albert Bauder

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House Bechhofener Strasse 1 in Dinkelsbühl

Albert Bauder (* 1853 in Reutlingen , † 1930 in Stuttgart ) was a German drawing teacher and architect . He designed many town houses and villas. Bauder held the title of professor.

life and work

Albert Bauder was mainly active in Ludwigsburg at the time of the end of historicism . His main works there from the late 19th century include the music hall , which he designed together with Johann Schmohl , as well as the renovation of Villa Franck , which he carried out between 1886 and 1897, as well as Villa Feyerabend , Villa Kallenberg and the renovation of the house at Leonberger Strasse 17 . In 1887 he designed the lodge house at Asperger Strasse 37 for the Masonic lodge Johannes for the rebuilt temple , which the lodge brothers built partly on their own.

In 1898 Bauder moved to Stuttgart and also relocated his office there; later he made an appearance primarily in Freudenstadt . There he created buildings that were not only adapted to the style of the native Black Forest houses, but were also shaped by the Heimat- und Jugendstil . In Freudenstadt, for example, the Murgtäler Hof, built in 1902, testifies to Bauder's work. Bauder planned a total of at least 24 buildings in Freudenstadt, including the Grand Hotel Rappen.

The festival hall in Singen , which Bauder designed in 1906, was demolished in 1918 due to its dilapidation.

His son Max Bauder became an architect and worked mainly in Berlin.

Curiosity

During a renovation of the house at Leonberger Strasse 17 in Ludwigsburg, wall paintings came to light in the hallway on the upper floor, showing Cologne Cathedral and Ulm Minster and dating back to 1889. It is believed that these paintings were made by Bauder.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Entry "Albert Bauder" in the historical register of architects "archthek" , section Bauch - Bayer , last accessed on August 16, 2015
  2. ^ Villa Kallenberg on architekturmuseum.ub.tu-berlin.de
  3. ^ Wolf Deiseroth et al.: City of Ludwigsburg. (= Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany , Baden-Württemberg, Volume I.8.1.) Konrad Theiss Verlag, Stuttgart 2004, ISBN 3-8062-1938-9 , p. 91.
  4. Siegfried Schmidt: Art Nouveau can now smile. on www.neckar-chronik.de
  5. Buildings from the health resort's heyday. In: Schwarzwälder Bote from June 25, 2015. ( online )
  6. The halls. on www.singen-kulturpur.de
  7. ^ Karsten Preßler: The Ulm Minster in Ludwigsburg. In: Monument Preservation in Baden-Württemberg , 2015 year, no. 1, pp. 18-25. ( online as PDF)