Eduard Klingler

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Eduard Klingler (born February 18, 1861 in Vienna , † April 30, 1916 in Innsbruck ) was an Austrian architect.

Life

Wilten secondary school for girls
East cemetery

Klingler studied at the Technical University of Vienna and joined the Tyrolean state construction service in 1883. From 1889 he was employed in the building department of the city of Innsbruck, which he headed from 1902 as city building director. He planned numerous schools, hospital buildings and other public buildings, especially in the newly incorporated districts of Wilten and Pradl as well as in Saggen , and had a decisive influence on the cityscape at the turn of the century. His buildings follow the historicism customary at the time and are mostly in the neo-renaissance style, later he tried to tie in with the local forms of Gothic and Baroque .

Works

  • Girls high school Sillgasse , 1895 (rebuilt in 1972, demolished in 2019)
  • Dermatological Clinic, 1895
  • Train barracks, 1899–1901
  • Villa Hebenstreit, 1900 (attributed)
  • Kindergarten Wilten-Ost, 1904 (with Karl Plank)
  • Handelsakademie Innsbruck , 1904–1905 (together with A. Ringler; 1971–1977 rebuilt and increased by Ekkehard Hörmann )
  • Girls' secondary school Wilten, 1907–1908 (with Karl Plank)
  • East wing of the Ferdinandeum , 1909–1910
  • Musikverein building , 1910–1912
  • Cemetery complex, funeral hall, chapel and administrative buildings, East Cemetery , 1912

literature

Web links

Commons : Eduard Klingler  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Weirather, Wiesauer: Bundesgymnasium and Bundesrealgymnasium Sillgasse, Gymnasium Sillgasse. In: Tyrolean art register . Retrieved December 16, 2015 .
  2. ↑ State Hospital Innsbruck, Dermatological Clinic. In: Tyrolean art register . Retrieved April 28, 2016 .
  3. ^ Wiesauer: Residential building, former train barracks. In: Tyrolean art register . Retrieved February 11, 2016 .
  4. Felmayer, Wiesauer: Villa Hebenstreit, former monastery of the Don Bosco sisters. In: Tyrolean art register . Retrieved May 4, 2020 .
  5. ^ Municipal kindergarten, Wilten-Ost kindergarten. In: Tyrolean art register . Retrieved April 28, 2016 .
  6. ^ Art University Linz (ed.): Friedrich Achleitner's view of Austria's architecture after 1945: Linz lectures. Birkhäuser, Basel 2015, pp. 310–311
  7. ^ Wilten girls' high school. In: Tyrolean art register . Retrieved April 28, 2016 .
  8. ^ Felmayer, Wiesauer: Tiroler Landesmuseum Ferdinandeum, Landesmuseum. In: Tyrolean art register . Retrieved December 16, 2015 .