Carl Krahn

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Carl Krahn (born February 21, 1881 in Bremen ; † February 24, 1956 in Bremen) was a German architect .

biography

Krahn was the son of a Bremen building contractor. He studied at the Technical University (Berlin-) Charlottenburg and after a legal clerkship and passing the 2nd state examination in 1908 was appointed government architect ( assessor in the public building administration). He apparently did not pursue the civil service career any further and later worked as a freelance architect in Bremen .

He was a confidante of the Bremen merchant Friedrich Missler and built for him emigration halls, civil servants' houses and a residential building.
He was buried in the Riensberg cemetery .

plant

  • 1907: Commercial building and hotel in Bremen, Walsroder Straße 3/5/7 (not preserved)
  • 1907: Residential and commercial building in Bremen, Walsroder Straße 8
  • 1907: Residential and commercial building in Bremen, Walsroder Straße 6
  • 1907: House with bakery in Bremen, Walsroder Straße 10
  • 1907: Group of buildings in Bremen, Osterstrasse 48–50, Friedrich-Ebert-Strasse 11–13, Rückertstrasse 2
  • 1909: Official houses in the Bremen emigration hall
  • 1910–1911: Missler country house on Achterberg, Lüneburg Heath
  • 1911: Landhaus Wertgen Harpstedt, Dötlingen
  • 1911: Competition design for a water tower
  • 1911: Kattenesch garden shed
  • 1911: Missler house, except for the grinding mill 59/61
  • 1912: House in Bremen, Lüder-von-Bentheim-Strasse 49
  • 1912: Wertgen weekend house in Dötlingen
  • 1913–1914: Krahn house in Bremen, Lüder-von-Bentheim-Strasse 51
  • 1914: Landhaus Jacobs in Bremen-Farge (not preserved)
  • 1914: Landhaus Fichtenhof in Bremen, Schönebecker Kirchweg 33
  • 1914: Hofmeierhaus Fichtenhof in Bremen, Schönebecker Kirchweg 31
  • 1915: Tomb for Carl Heinrich Gustav Krahn in Bremen
  • 1916: Apartment buildings in Bremen, Walsroder Straße
  • 1916: Rhotlage residential and commercial building in Bremen
  • 1920–1922: Bremer Logenhaus in Bremen, Kurfürstenallee 15
  • 1922: Tomb for Friedrich Missler in Bremen
  • 1923: House in Bremen, Straßburger Strasse 41/43
  • 1923: House in Bremen, Brahmsstrasse 13–21
  • 1924: House in Bremen, Georg-Gröning-Strasse 39, 67
  • 1924–1925: Stammer house in Bremen, Parkallee 155
  • 1924–1926: Ensemble Gravelottestrasse (called Bremer Sanssouci ) in Bremen-Schwachhausen
  • 1925–1926: Group of houses in Bremen, Busestraße 65/67/69/71
  • 1925–1926: Double house in Bremen, Verdunstraße 23/25
  • 1926–1927: Pape House in Bremen, Hartwigstrasse 37
  • 1927–1928: Meyer House in Bremen, Unter den Eichen 12
  • 1929: House in Bremen, Wachmannstrasse 1 / 1A
  • 1930: House in Bremen, Gabriel-Seidl-Straße 2/4

literature

  • Residential buildings. Architect, government builder a. D. Carl Krahn - Bremen. Barmen 1929.

Individual evidence

  1. Zentralblatt der Bauverwaltung , Volume 28, 1908, No. 43, p. 293.
  2. a b c Apartment houses in Walsroder Strasse in Bremen. In: Baugewerks-Zeitung , 48th year 1916, pp. 156–173.
  3. Neudeutsche Bauzeitung , 3rd year 1907, pp. 10–15. (Georg Rehberg, Ernst Berger, Carl Krahn, Fritsche, H. Wagner)
  4. Modern designs , 8th year 1909, p. 173.
  5. Haenel-Tscharmann, The single house of the modern age. Second volume, Leipzig 1910, pp. 158–161.
  6. a b c d e f g h i residential buildings. Architect, government builder a. D. Carl Krahn - Bremen. Barmen 1929.
  7. Architectural Review , Volume 27, 1911, Issue 2, p. 13.
  8. Architektonische Rundschau , Volume 27, 1911, Book 3, Supplement P. V, panels 23 and 24.
  9. in: Plate 109, supplement pp. 2613-262B (???)
  10. Review of the exhibition of Lower Saxony arts and crafts in Stade in 1911. In: Bau-Rundschau , year 1911, issue 2, p. 618, p. 620.
  11. Baugewerks-Zeitung , 48th year 1916, p. 156, pp. 162–164.
  12. Der Profanbau , 12th year 1916, No. 7/8, p. 93.