Böhmer & Petrich

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Bohemian & Petrich were an architect close Community by Franz Böhmer (1907-1943) and Georg Petrich in Berlin . In the 1930s, they were able to realize a variety of buildings for private individuals as well as for politicians and companies, and they carried out extensive renovations on various buildings. The work of the office ended with the end of the Second World War and the fall of its main client, the National Socialists .

history

Böhmer first studied at the TH Karlsruhe . He moved to the Technical University of Charlottenburg as a student of Hans Poelzig and completed his diploma thesis in 1933. He then took up his apartment in Berlin-Charlottenburg , Kantstrasse 47, but soon after moved to Schöneberg , Innsbrucker Strasse 7.Böhmer had founded a joint architecture office around 1936 with Georg Petrich, who was also trained at the Charlottenburg University of Applied Sciences and who at that time lived in the same building . They made their career in the 1930s and 1940s and soon ran a branch in Posen (address Schloss Freiheit 13). Around 1940 Franz Böhmer had moved again to Goethestrasse 10 in Charlottenburg, where he had completely renovated the architecture office with the help of his partner. Petrich had now embarked on an academic career, because he had the title of doctor in 1943 and owned a house in Berlin-Westend , Stallupöner Allee 22. After the end of the Second World War, the community no longer existed. Böhmer and Petrich had completed their architecture studies with the title Dipl. Mgr . After successfully completing their studies, they appeared together as Büro Böhmer & Petrich .

Buildings and planning

- chronological -

  • 1925–1933 (Böhmer only): Reconstruction and renewal of the water art built in 1907 in Merseburg
  • 1934 (Böhmer only): Staff building of the Standard-Lack-Werke , Berlin-Plötzensee , located on the north bank 24/25
  • 1935: Community house for the training of young people in line with National Socialism in Mehrow (planned)
  • 1935–1937 (Böhmer only): Residence Ministerialrat Dr. Walter Blümich , Berlin-Zehlendorf , Rappoltsweiler Strasse 13
  • 1936/1937: Walter Brendel applied arts workshops , Berlin
  • 1936/1937: Walther Darré's house , Berlin-Dahlem . Reconstruction of the house with interior fittings (with the Anton Pössenbacher Werkstätten für Innenausbau, Munich) and - with the help of the landscape architect N. Hinz - redesign of the garden
  • 1937: Reconstruction of the house of the 109th SS Standard in Posen , Robert-Koch-Strasse
  • around 1937: New building of the house of the Reich Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels , Berlin-Mitte
  • 1938: Reconstruction of Joachim von Ribbentrop's villa in Berlin-Dahlem
  • 1938–1941: Remodeling of Ribbentrop's official apartment in Berlin-Mitte , Dorotheenstadt ; located between Wilhelmstrasse and [then] Hermann-Göring-Strasse, including a large reception room, dining room and dance hall; an adjutant house, a garden wing, a swimming pool and tennis house and a children's playground. The United Workshops for Art in Crafts from Munich, as well as the marble industry Kiefer, Oberalm, were involved in some of the equipment planning.
  • 1939: Runow celebration site with a cemetery chapel and bell tower
    This plan was obviously a kind of hero cemetery for deceased Nazi greats in the Runow district of the Bülow community (near Crivitz) in Mecklenburg , as can be seen from the sketches and detailed drawings. It is not known whether this project was carried out.
  • 1939–1941: Foreign Office , Berlin-Mitte. Reconstruction 1939–1941. Here, too, work by the United Workshops for Art in Crafts from Munich and the marble industry Kiefer, Oberalm, were also planned.
  • 1940/1941: Renovation and refurbishment of Franz Böhmer's construction office at Goethestrasse 10, Berlin-Charlottenburg
  • 1941: Redesign of the entrance area with gate and hall to the house of the Reich Minister of the Interior Wilhelm Frick , Berlin-Mitte

Web links

Individual evidence