Alfred Schulze (architect)

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House for Max Zühl, Bad Malente

Alfred August Schulze (born July 22, 1886 in Beuthen , † June 7, 1967 in Malente-Gremsmühlen ) was a German architect .

Life

After attending school until 1904 in the Bunzlau grammar school, Alfred Schulze attended the city's arts and crafts school in Charlottenburg and the state building trade school in Breslau until 1906. In 1910 he settled in Worpswede in the house of his brother Walter Schulze , where he worked as a draftsman and later worked as an architect. Alfred Schulze worked several times with Heinrich Vogeler . His older brother Walter had also been active in Worpswede in a similar way since 1906. From 1915 to 1917 Alfred Schulze taught at the State School of Applied Arts in Bremen . In 1918 he married Frieda Margareta Dorothea geb. Plass. After the birth of their son Stephan, who also became an architect, the family moved to Malente-Gremsmühlen, where he ran the office until his death, most recently together with his son.

Alfred Schulze's estate is in the Schleswig-Holstein Archive for Architecture and Civil Engineering in Schleswig (holdings 1 "Alfred Schulze").

buildings

literature

  • Karl-Robert Schütze: Refuge after an unsteady life. Research on the house of Clara Rilke-Westhoff in Fischerhude. In: Between Elbe and Weser , 23 (2004), No. 1, pp. 4–8.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Certificate of departure March 1904 (in the Schleswig-Holstein Archive for Architecture and Civil Engineering, inventory 1 "Alfred Schulze", file 206)
  2. ^ Certificate of departure February 1906 (in the Schleswig-Holstein Archive for Architecture and Civil Engineering, inventory 1 "Alfred Schulze", file 206)
  3. ^ Letter from the Berlin Association for German Applied Arts from November 18, 1910 (in the Schleswig-Holstein Archive for Architecture and Civil Engineering, inventory 1 "Alfred Schulze", file 206)
  4. ^ Heinrich Vogeler: Becoming. Verlag Atelier im Bauernhaus, Fischerhude 1989, pp. 143–144 and p. 511. (Confusion between Alfred and Walter Schulze can often be found in various secondary literature.)