Carl Franz Noack

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Carl Franz Noack (also Franz Noack ; born April 18, 1855 on the Spree near Trebatsch ; † January 24, 1945 in Oldenburg ) was a German architect , construction officer , civil engineer and town planner who promoted the brick style of Conrad Wilhelm Hase .

Life

Carl Franz Noack was born on the ship of the skipper, owner and trader Friedrich Wilhelm Noack (1820–1871) and Johanna Rahel née Zschuppe (1827–1871). After attending the elementary, middle and high school in Fürstenwalde, he did a year-long apprenticeship in the locksmith's shop H. Tietz and attended the technical center in Frankenberg from 1871 to 1875, which was made possible by a small inheritance after both parents briefly in 1871 died one after the other. In Frankenberg, Noack trained as a water, road and rail technician.

He made his first practical experience as an engineer assistant in Bohemia resident Zbirower Gewerk track to see about his military service from 1876 to 1877 in Berlin his next job at the operating railway engineering contractors Krause in Küllstedt , from 1877 into the civil service of the Royal Railway Directorate Frankfurt , on to enter the same place. At the same time, he acquired the university entrance qualification and studied from 1878 to 1879 at the Technical University in Karlsruhe .

Employment at the limited partnership Philipp Holzmann & Cie. Involved in the construction of the Kraichgautalbahn . This was followed by further studies from 1878/79 to 1882 at the Technical University of Hanover and immediately afterwards work as a civil engineer at the building authority of the city of Chemnitz until 1885.

On January 13, 1885, Noack was appointed city architect in Oldenburg. A short time later, he was already a member of the panel of judges for the new town hall building and was in charge of the tender for the architectural competition. Following the award-winning design by the Berlin architects Holst & Zaar , he also managed the building project, which he influenced in numerous details. As a design architect, he managed several school buildings as well as the second section of the houses of the Klävemann Foundation in Nadorst . Architecturally and technically, the reconstruction of the theater , which burned down in November 1891, was Noack's main work in the years 1891 to 1893, with the architect Paul Moritz Zimmer, who was hired from Chemnitz, as construction manager.

Carl Franz Noack's activities as city architect in Oldenburg are still connected, among other things, with the establishment of a modern waste disposal facility, sewage system with sewage treatment plant, slaughterhouse and water pipes. Further groundbreaking measures were the connection of the city port and the lower Hunte to the Weser regulation carried out by Ludwig Franzius in 1895 and the idea of ​​an outer port, which was developed at the end of the 20th century by the "Osthafen", and the design of the Dobbenviertel.

The 1904 election of the municipal councilor for life by the city administration was followed in 1912 by Friedrich August von Oldenburg's appointment as city planning officer and in 1929 the street was named “Noackstraße”. Noack retired on April 1, 1924, but was still in charge of urban civil engineering until 1929 and smaller municipal facilities until the end of 1939.

family

On December 28, 1887, in Chemnitz, he married the daughter of the stocking manufacturer Ernst Theodor Uhlig (1819–1897), Anna Pauline Uhlig (1861–1938), who came from Einsiedel near Chemnitz.

plant

  • 1885–1886: Stadtmädchenschule A, at Brüderstraße 23 in Oldenburg and converted into a residential building in 2007/8
  • 1886–1888: Construction of the new town hall at Markt 1 in Oldenburg according to the plans of the architects Carl Zaar and Johann Mathias von Holst
  • 1887–1903: "Klävemann-Siedlung" of the Klävemann Foundation in Oldenburg
    • 1887: first construction phase on Unterstraße in Oldenburg
    • 1881–1892: second construction phase on Nardoster Strasse and the crossroads in Oldenburg
    • 1896: third construction phase on Stiftsweg in Oldenburg
    • fourth construction phase on Donnerschweer Straße in Oldenburg
  • 1888–1889: New building of the "Volksknabenschule" (renamed "Heiligengeisttorschule" in 1925) at Ebnerstraße 8 in Oldenburg (with the architect Hermann Ramien)
  • 1889–1890: City Girls School B on the Milky Way in Oldenburg
  • 1892–1893: Reconstruction of the Grand Ducal Theater at Theaterwall 28 in Oldenburg (with the architect Paul Moritz Zimmer)
  • 1895–1896: Schlachthof am Stau in Oldenburg which ceased operations in 1983 and was laid down
  • 1896: Draft for the barracks on Kortlangstrasse that was not carried out
  • 1898–1899: City boys' school B at Gertrudenstraße 25 in Oldenburg and renamed "Grundschule Röwekamp" (with Heinrich Weber)
  • 1901–1902: Gym at Ehnernstrasse 6 in Oldenburg and is an associated after-school care center of the "Heiligengeisttorschule" (with city building manager Heinrich Weber)
  • 1906: "Municipal river bathing establishment for men" on the Hunte in Oldenburg (with city construction manager Heinrich Weber)
  • 1913: "Municipal river bathing establishment for women" on the Hunte in Oldenburg (with city construction manager Heinrich Weber)
  • 1915: Arched bridge over the Dobbenteiche on Ratsherr-Schulze-Strasse in Oldenburg. The restoration took place from 1982 to 1983.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Portrait photo and curriculum vitae (PDF; 3.3 MB), pp. 527 and 528, accessed on February 10, 2013
  2. three historical photos , accessed on February 10, 2013