Carl Nordmann

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Carl Nordmann (born August 30, 1849 in Kassel , † December 24, 1922 in Essen ) was a German architect who is particularly known for his church buildings.

Live and act

Carl Nordmann played a decisive role in shaping Protestant church building in Essen and other cities in the Ruhr area and was chairman of the Essen local group of the Association of German Architects (BDA) for many years . He worked for a long time in an office or partnership with Julius Flügge and later with Paul Knobbe . The architects' office Nordmann und Knobbe was located in the house at Huyssenallee 65 in Essen, the home of Carl Nordmann. From 1910, Nordmann settled in the Haumannhofviertel in Rüttenscheid along with a few other architects . The partnership with Paul Knobbe ended - probably due to the war - in 1915.

buildings

Protestation Memorial Church in Speyer
Saalbau Essen
  • 1887–1888: Gasthaus and hostel zur Heimat, today Hotel Essener Hof in Essen-Mitte (together with Julius Flügge; preserved with changes)
  • 1887–1890: Evangelical Church in (Essen-) Altenessen (together with Julius Flügge; preserved)
  • 1893–1904: Protestation Memorial Church in Speyer (preserved)
  • 1897–1898: Extension of the Overdyck rescue facility in ( Bochum -) Hamme (preserved)
  • 1898 : Evangelical Church in (Bochum-) Hamme (not preserved)00000
  • 1899–1902: Reformation Church in Essen- Rüttenscheid (not preserved)
  • 1900–1901: Evangelical Church Katernberg in (Essen-) Katernberg (preserved)
  • 1901–1903: Christ Church in Essen-Altendorf (reconstruction changed significantly after the war, completely changed inside)
  • 1902–1904: Saalbau Essen (together with Skjøld Neckelmann ; rebuilt significantly changed after war damage)
  • 1905–1906: Evangelical Church Am Brandenbusch in (Essen-) Bredeney (preserved)
  • 1909–1910: Community building extension to the Am Brandenbusch church in (Essen-) Bredeney (together with Paul Knobbe; preserved)
  • 1907–1908: Immanuel Church in (Essen-) Schonnebeck (preserved)
  • 1910–1911: Wichernhaus, church service and multi-purpose building in the Alfredshof settlement in Essen (not preserved)
  • 1911–1912: House B of the Augusta-Kranken-Anstalt Bochum (integrated into more recent new buildings)

literature

  • Architect Carl Nordmann † . In: Deutsche Bauzeitung . 57th volume no. 19 (of March 7, 1923), 1923, pp. 90-92 .
  • Robert Welzel: building contractors as housing manufacturers. The Essen house kings and their contribution to urban development 1850–1929. In: City of Essen, historical association for the city and monastery of Essen (ed.): Essener contributions . tape 124 . Essen 2011, p. 51 ff .
  • Hartmut Spenner: Protestant profiles in the Ruhr area. Five hundred life pictures from five centuries. Ed .: Michael Basse , Traugott Jähnichen , Harald Schroeter-Wittke . Kamen 2009, ISBN 978-3-89991-092-6 , pp. 268 f .
  • Erwin Dickhoff: Essen heads. Ed .: City of Essen, Historical Association for the City and Abbey of Essen. Klartext, Essen 2015, ISBN 978-3-8375-1231-1 , p. 263 f .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Address book Essen 1909
  2. Entry on the settlement on Brandenbusch in Bredeney in the database " KuLaDig " of the Rhineland Regional Association , accessed on July 27, 2017.6