Albert Dunkel

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Albert Diedrich Dunkel (born December 23, 1856 in Bremen , † October 1, 1905 in Bremen) was a German architect .

biography

The architect's villa Dunkel , Parkallee 101

Albert D. (Friedrich) Dunkel came from a family that had already produced several master builders . After attending school and completing practical training, he attended the Rheinisch-Westfälische Technische Hochschule Aachen . He was a master builder from Bremen in the historicist style and preferred designs in the neo-renaissance style . He participated with the "old Bremen street" at the North German trade and industry exhibition in Bremen. The Essighaus from the Renaissance in the Long Street ( Old Town ) was rebuilt in 1897 according to his plans. The "Neue Sparkasse" building he planned , at Markt 14, was built from 1895 to 1898, was taken over by the Neelmeyer bank and destroyed in the 1944 war. He also planned the renovation of the Bremer Kunsthalle (1902) and, together with Diedrich Tölken, the buildings for the Bremer Bank , Am Domshof 8/9 (1905) and for the commercial association "Union" on the corner of Wachtstrasse / Tiefer (1903; destroyed 1944 ).

family

Dunkel was the father of Dr. Manfred Dunkel, the long-time owner of E. Leybold's successor in Cologne, chairman of the AGV M + E in Cologne (1964–1966) and founder of the Gaede Prize of the German Vacuum Society. A nephew of Dunkel was the businessman and politician Richard Dunkel , a member of the German Democratic Party (DDP) and from 1919 to 1930 president of the Bremen citizenship .

Works

Villa Oesselmann , Bremen 1888
Bremer Lebensversicherungs -anstalt, Domshof 17-18, 1891
House Oelrichs at Kohlhökerstraße 34, 1894
Office building of the business association "Union", Wachtstrasse / corner of Tiefer, 1903
  • 1871: Residential and commercial building Ostertorsteinweg 74–75 , Bremen
  • 1885: Manor house for consul August Wilhelm Brauer, Osterholzer Heerstrasse / Hans-Bredow-Strasse (Kriete estate), Bremen
  • 1886: Heinrich Ludewig office building, Obernstrasse 2, corner of Sögestrasse, Bremen
  • 1887–1888: Villa Oesselmann , Waltjenstrasse 140, Bremen
  • 1890: Eduard Wätjen house, Contrescarpe 74/75, Bremen (with Eduard Gildemeister)
  • 1891: Bremer Lebensversicherungsanstalt, Domshof 17-18
  • 1892: Christian Heinrich "Emil" Wätjen house, Am Dobben 112, Bremen
  • 1893: Eduard Wätjen office building, Domshof 10 (demolished for the new Bremer Bank building)
  • 1894: House at Kohlhökerstraße 20 (House Banck)
  • 1894: House at Kohlhökerstraße 34 (House Oelrichs)
  • 1895: Neue Sparkasse, Am Markt 14, Bremen
  • 1896: Park keeper's house (Wätjenhaus) in the Bremer Bürgerpark
  • 1897: Villa Dauelsberg, Schwachhauser Heerstraße 61, Bremen
  • 1897: Villa Dunkel , Parkallee 101, Bremen
  • 1897: House at Schwachhauser Heerstraße 55, Julius Banck house, Bremen
  • 1897: House at Schwachhauser Heerstraße 57 , Eduard Michaelsen house (Consul of Spain)
  • 1897: Dining room and hall in Essighaus , Bremen
  • 1898: Semi-detached house Parkallee 83–85
  • 1898: Extension and internal extension of the Carl Schünemann house, Contrescarpe 60/61
  • 1898: Reconstruction of the Wätjen residential building, Osterdeich, Bleicherstraße 35, Bremen
  • 1898–1899: Reconstruction of Aline von Kapff's residential building, Schwachhauser Chaussee
  • 1899: Group of houses on the Contrescarpe, Ansgariithor, Bremen
  • 1899: Lodge "Zum Ölzweig", Philosophenweg
  • 1899–1900: Th. Gräser office building, corner of Sögestraße and Pelzstraße, Bremen
  • 1899–1900: Villa Buchholz, Hollerallee 6, Bremen; Interior design by Heinrich Bremer
  • 1900: Renovation of the Gust residential building. Lahusen, Breitenweg 7
  • 1900: Renovation of the Kunsthalle Bremen (with Eduard Gildemeister )
  • 1902–1904: Bremer Bank , Domshof 8–9, Bremen (with Diedrich Tölken)
  • 1903: "Union" commercial association, Wachtstrasse 9–13 / corner of Tiefer, Bremen (with Diedrich Tölken)

See also

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Monument topography Osterholz, 1982, p. 39
  2. Osterholz 1860-1945, Bremen 2001, pp. 52–54
  3. Bremen and its buildings 1900, Fig. 393
  4. Monument topography Gröpelingen, 1982, p. 76
  5. Bremen and its buildings 1900, Fig. 495
  6. Bremen and its buildings 1900, Fig. 377
  7. Bremen houses tell history, Vol. 2, 2001, pp. 79–85
  8. Bremen and its buildings 1900, p. 461, Fig. 528
  9. Bremen and its buildings 1900, p. 461
  10. ^ Mühlberg, Robert (ed.): Small architectures and details. A collection of small villas and apartment buildings, Berlin undated [1895], Series I, sheet no. 92, plan on page R
  11. Bremen and its buildings 1900, p. 389, Fig. 389–391
  12. Bremen and its buildings 1900, p. 580, Fig. 478
  13. Meydenau, Julius von Newer Bremer architecture, in: German Bauhütte 5 (1901), p 32
  14. Bremen and its buildings 1900, p. 453
  15. Bremen and its buildings 1900, Fig. 506–509
  16. Bremen and its buildings 1900, Fig. 315-316
  17. Bremen and its buildings 1900, Fig. 535-536
  18. Bremen and its buildings 1900, Fig. 534
  19. Meydenau, Julius von Newer Bremer architecture, in: German Bauhütte 5 (1901), p 32
  20. Bremen and its buildings 1900, fig. 440–443, 498–499
  21. Bremen and its buildings 1900, Fig. 459
  22. Bremen and its buildings 1900, Fig. 221
  23. Bremen and its buildings 1900, Fig. 303–305
  24. Bremen and its buildings 1900, Fig. 411–412
  25. Bremen and its buildings 1900, Fig. 510-516, Fig. 451 (p. 473)
  26. Süddeutsche Bauzeitung 10 (1900), p. 324, Fig. 9 (reception room)
  27. Bremen and its buildings 1900, Fig. 445–448 (pp. 470–471)
  28. Bremen and its buildings 1900, Fig. 276–277
  29. Bremen and its buildings 1900-1951, Chapter XI: Hochbauten, e) Museums, pp. 325–326
  30. Bremen and its buildings 1900-1951, Fig. XI g 3