Conrad Friedrich Wilhelm title

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Conrad Friedrich Wilhelm title , also Conrad Wilhelm title , Friedrich Wilhelm Conrad title , Friedrich Wilhelm Konrad title , Wilhelm Konrad title or Friedrich Wilhelm title , (* 1754 in Potsdam , † January 10, 1840 in Berlin ) was a German architect and Prussian construction clerk .

Life

Conrad Friedrich Wilhelm Titel was the son of a royal stable master in Potsdam. He was trained there by Heinrich Ludwig Manger . After studying in Paris, he worked as a construction manager with Carl von Gontard, first in Potsdam and from 1774 in Berlin, where he became a city architect in 1788 and a chief architect in 1790. He belonged to the most important master builders of his time in Berlin, the building advisors Michael Philipp Boumann , Georg Christian Unger , Friedrich Becherer , Andreas Ludwig Krüger and others. a., that of Friedrich Wilhelm II . Donated and headed by Carl Gotthard Langhans Oberhofbauamt. As a member of the Immediatbaukommission he was involved in several Immediatbauten in Berlin.

buildings

  • 1776: House of the glass cutter Johann Christoph Brockes in Potsdam, Yorkstrasse 18-20 (based on a design by Carl von Gontard)
  • 1780: House of court banker Isaak Daniel Itzig in Berlin, Oranienburger Strasse 75 and house of a valet at Weidendammer Bridge, Berlin (both no longer exist)
  • 1788: Widow's Fund in Berlin, Behrenstrasse 41 (destroyed in World War II)
  • 1792–1793: Palais Massow (later General Staff Building, Military Cabinet ) in Berlin, Behrenstrasse 66 (destroyed in World War II)
  • 1792–1794: Residence for secret secretary Schmidt in Berlin, Unter den Linden (conversion of the former Memhardt house with the participation of Friedrich Gilly, later the commandant's house )
  • 1793: Residence for the regimental quartermaster Rimpler in Berlin, Behrenstrasse 53 (not preserved)

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Heinrich Ludewig Manger: Building History of Potsdam , Berlin Stettin 1790, 3rd vol., P. 635
  2. George Troescher: German art and artists in the French and Dutch art. Verlag für Kunst und Wissenschaft, 1953, p. 206.
  3. ^ Vroni Heinrich, Dieter Radicke: History and care. Gebrüder Mann Verlag, Berlin 1991, p. 86.
  4. ^ Uwe Kieling: Berlin. Builders and Buildings. From Gothic to Historicism. Berlin 2003, p. 180.
  5. ^ Residence of the court banker Isaak Daniel Itzig in the Architekturmuseum TU Berlin
  6. ^ House of a valet in the Architecture Museum TU Berlin
  7. ^ Witwenkassenhaus in the Architekturmuseum TU Berlin
  8. ^ Residence Regimentsquartiermeister Rimpler in the Architecture Museum TU Berlin