Dieter Zander

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Dieter Zander (born April 5, 1937 in Schwerin ) is a German architect and monument conservator . He was the state curator of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania .

biography

Zander graduated from the Goethe High School I in Schwerin from 1953 to 1957 . After graduating from high school and completing an apprenticeship as a mason, he studied architecture at the Technical University of Dresden from 1959 to 1965 . After that, until 1990 he was conservator for the Schwerin district at the Institute for Monument Preservation , which was responsible for the three northern districts of the GDR . In 1984 he and Axel Höhn were the architects for the modern gabled houses on the east side ( Schlachtermarkt ) to the old town hall .

From 1990 to 2002 he worked as state curator and head of the State Office for Monument Preservation (since 2006 State Office for Culture and Monument Preservation Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania ). In 1991 he was appointed by Federal Building Minister Irmgard Adam-Schwaetzer to the expert group on urban monument protection of the federal and state governments, which advised the federal government and the new states. He was a member of various juries, including a. 1994 in the evaluation committee for the national competition preservation of the historical urban space in the new federal states . From 1996 to 2002 he was chairman of the working group for technical questions on monument preservation in the German National Committee for Monument Protection .
In 2018, as a former state curator of the art and cultural property collection of the Mecklenburg Foundation, Zander gave one hundred architectural drawings of the color scheme of buildings in Mecklenburg from the 18th and 19th centuries as part of an exhibition.

Zander lives in Schwerin.

Publications

  • [with Horst Ende :] Three cities - three castles. Urban integration and social development of the castles in Güstrow, Ludwigslust and Schwerin . In: Monuments in Mecklenburg . Writings on the preservation of monuments in the German Democratic Republic, p. 359, Weimar, Böhlau 1976.
  • The Schwerin Schelfstadt. On the urban development of the baroque new town. Schwerin series. Schweriner Volkszeitung printing house, Schwerin 1984.
  • Castles and manor houses in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania. In: Castles, palaces, manor houses in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania , Theiss, Stuttgart 1993, ISBN 3806210845 .
  • Urban monument protection in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania. In: Old Cities - New Opportunities . Ed .: Federal Ministry for Regional Planning, Building and Urban Development and German Foundation for Monument Protection. Monumente-Verlag, Bonn 1996. ISBN 3-9804890-0-0 .
  • Paul Ehmig's archive building in Schwerin. Lecture at a building conference. Schwerin 2010. ( full text , PDF).
  • Dargun monastery and palace complex. History, inventory protection, use of monument protection and monument preservation in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania. In: Series of publications by the Friends of the District Home Museum Demmin. Volume 2, 1999/2000.
  • The designs for the markets in Boizenburg and in the shelf town of Schwerin by Jacob Reutz . In: Urban development and building in Boizenburg , Boizenburger Museumfreunde. Association for the promotion of the local history museum, Boizenburg 2004.
  • Dieter Zander, Architectural colors on houses from the late 18th and early 19th centuries in Mecklenburg , brochure for the exhibition, "Alles Fassa?", P. 20, 2019

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Horst Ende : Preserving the traces of history. State Conservator Dipl.-Ing. Dieter Zander is retiring . In: Monument Protection and Preservation in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania Issue 9, 2002.
  2. Information service for the protection of urban monuments, issue 11: IRS: Documentation of the Erfurt Urban Development Congress 17. – 19. May 1994.
  3. ^ State capital Schwerin: Everything is a facade. 2019, accessed in 2020 .
  4. ^ Dieter Zander: Architectural colors on houses of the late 18th and early 19th centuries in Mecklenburg. In: Brochure for the exhibition “Everything Facade?” September 15, 2019, accessed in 2020 .