Alfred Daiber

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Alfred Daiber (born June 9, 1886 in Böblingen ; † June 27, 1961 in Stuttgart ) was a German architect who initially worked as a freelance worker in Stuttgart, from 1936 to 1942 as a construction clerk in Hamburg, and after 1945 again worked independently.

Life

During his activity as building director in Hamburg with Carl-Friedrich Fischer from 1937 onwards, Alfred Daiber developed the idea of ​​crossing the Elbe by a high bridge, which Konstanty Gutschow later pursued.

Although Karl Ahrens previously announced the participation of all German architects as part of the planning drafts for the Gau Forum , only Werner March , Konstanty Gutschow, Hans Großmann , Erich zu Putlitz and, most recently, Alfred Daiber were asked to submit designs for the Gauhochhaus related to this.

In the 1950s Daiber was based in Reichenbach near Oberstdorf and worked independently.

His older brother was the architect and painter Hans Daiber (1880–1969).

Buildings and designs

  • 1926–1928: urban planning for the Raitelsberg housing estate in East Stuttgart
  • 1927: Competition design for the Protestant parish hall on Altenburger Steige in Stuttgart (not executed)
  • 1927/1928: Competition draft for a swimming pool and bathing establishment in Reutlingen (purchase, not executed)
  • 1928: Competition design for an administration building for the Stuttgart Local Health Insurance Association (awarded 1st prize)
  • 1928–1929: Raitelsberg School in Stuttgart, Röntgenstrasse
  • 1929: Competition design for the Neckarufer development in Stuttgart (together with Max Jacobshagen; awarded a 2nd prize)
    As part of the rebuilding of the Cannstatter Wasen , the Villa Berg and the associated park were also to be integrated.
  • 1932: Cemetery chapel in Winnenden
  • 1932–1933: Protestant Brenzkirche in Stuttgart-Weißenhof, Am Cookinghof 7 ( a pitched roof was added by Rudolf Lempp in 1939 ; rebuilt by Lempp after war damage in 1947; listed)
  • 1952: Memorial for the fallen and missing of both world wars on the northwest side of the parish church of St. Michael in Oberstdorf- Schöllang

literature

  • Helmut Richter (ed.): Country houses, gardens, weekend houses. Wendt & Matthes, Berlin around 1935, p. #.
  • Ralf Lange : From the office to the open-plan office. Office and business district in Hamburg 1945–1970. Verlag Langewiesche , Königstein (Taunus) 1999, ISBN 3-78454611-0 , S. #.
  • Jan Lubitz: Daiber, Alfred . In: Franklin Kopitzsch, Dirk Brietzke (Hrsg.): Hamburgische Biographie . tape 7 . Wallstein, Göttingen 2020, ISBN 978-3-8353-3579-0 , p. 58-59 .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Norbert Baues: Portrait of CF Fischer. ( Memento of May 28, 2008 in the Internet Archive ) on the website of the Hamburg Architecture Archive , accessed on July 14, 2013
  2. Claudia Ingrid Turtenwald: Fritz Höger (1877-1949). Architect between stone and steel, glass and concrete. Dissertation, Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität , Münster 2003, p. 196 ff.
  3. a b Oberstdorf-Schöllang Memorial Site at www.denkmalprojekt.org , accessed on July 22, 2013
  4. Der Baumeister , 56th year 1959, p. 126 (Mention of "Architect BDA Baudirektor ret. Alfred Daiber, Reichenbach / Allg." As a specialist judge in a competition)
  5. http://www.archimedium.de/wohnorte/wohnorte/strukturdaten2.htm (number 9: Raitelsberg), accessed on July 22, 2013
  6. Laying of the foundation stone of the parish hall at www.steig-kirchengemein.de , accessed on July 14, 2013
  7. Zentralblatt der Bauverwaltung , Volume 48, 1928, No. 8 (from February 22, 1928) ( online ), p. 125.
  8. Zentralblatt der Bauverwaltung , Volume 48, 1928, No. 39 (from September 26, 1928) ( online ), p. 638.
  9. Zeitschrift für Bauwesen , Volume 79, 1929, Issue 6 (from June 1929) ( online as PDF; 5.1 MB), p. 151.
  10. ^ Adolf Schahl: The art monuments of the Rems-Murr-Kreis. Munich / Berlin 1983, p. 1499.
  11. Evangelische Brenzkirche at www.kirchbau.de , accessed on July 22, 2013