Ambros Madlener

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ambros Madlener (born January 12, 1869 in Memmingen ; † October 24, 1956 in Kempten (Allgäu) ) was an architect whose main place of work was Kempten.

Life

Ambros Rupert Madlener was the son of the builder Johann Madlener and Anna Madlener, née Lerner. After attending secondary school, he completed his training in structural engineering at the Technical University of Munich and then began his professional career as an architect in Mannheim . In 1894 he returned to Kempten, where he added his architecture office to his father's construction business. On June 27, 1895, he married his native wife in Mannheim. Both moved to Kempten about a year later. They had two children together, on the one hand Charlotte Anna Katharina, who married the building contractor Fridolin Betz, and the well-known surgeon Max Madlener .

From June 15, 1919 to December 31, 1924 Madlen was a city councilor in Kempten (Allgäu) . In 1955 he was able to celebrate the diamond wedding. His partner died in January of the following year.

Ambros Madler died early in the morning on October 24, 1956 in his apartment at the age of 88. He was buried in the Catholic cemetery in Kempten.

Works

The architect Ambros Madlener had orders in Regensburg , Sonthofen and Immenstadt in the Allgäu .

In 1902 he built the Villa Denzler for the Denzler AG twisting mill. He built the Villa Schnetzer in 1924 and the Hunters' Monument in Kempten in 1930 . In addition, he also presented plans for a facade redesign of what would later become the Künstlerhaus .

He redesigned the Zum Stift brewery restaurant in 1906, and in 1903 he built the villa on Mozartstrasse (Masonic lodge "Zum Hohen Licht").

In 1901, the director's villa of the paper mill in Hegge was rebuilt according to Madlener's plans . Madlener built a parsonage in Sulzberg in 1911. Under Madlener's planning, an inn in Marktoberdorf was changed in 1928.

Individual evidence

  1. Ambros Madlener died very old. In: The Allgäu. Kempter Tagblatt. No. 249, October 26, 1956.
  2. Death Register Ambros Madlener, Kempten, October 24, 1956th
  3. ^ Bernard Kühling: Allgäuer Künstlerlexikon. Kempten 2012, p. 223.