Emil Pohle

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Emil Pohle (born August 27, 1885 in Hedersleben ; † March 30, 1962 in Kassel ) was a German architect .

Life

After an apprenticeship as a carpenter , Pohle attended the Düsseldorf School of Applied Arts , where he learned from Wilhelm Kreis , Emil Fahrenkamp and Alfred Fischer . Before the First World War he worked in the office of the architect Karl Wach and as an assistant to Edmund Körner at the Darmstadt artists' colony . After 1918, Pohle lived and worked in Dortmund ; according to some contradicting statements, he was temporarily the office manager of the architects D. & K. Schulze , but also worked independently at an early age and sometimes in partnership with the architect Adolf Ott and his younger brother Bruno Pohle . Up until the Second World War , Pohle was one of Dortmund's most successful architects, and his designs were often awarded prizes in national competitions. In 1940 he closed his office in Dortmund, which was later destroyed in an air raid. From 1944 to 1960 he lived in Kassel , where he was also successful.

Emil Pohle was a member of the Deutscher Werkbund (DWB) and the Association of German Architects (BDA).

Buildings (selection)

Lueg House (1924–1925)
Villa Moritz Klönne (1922–1923)
  • 1915: Grave of the Schrader family (heirs of Heynes) in Hedersleben
  • 1921: Facade design of the Schröder & Baum wallpaper shop in Dortmund (not preserved)
  • 1922: Dr. Elias in Dortmund (changed)
  • 1922–1923: Villa Klönne in Dortmund, Prinz-Friedrich-Karl-Straße 36 (under monument protection)
  • 1923/1924: Administration building of the Märkische Seifen-Industrie company in Witten (heavily modified)
  • 1924: Kälz house in Bochum-Ehrenfeld (preserved)
  • 1924–1925: Office and commercial building of the vehicle works Lueg in Bochum , today Friedrich-Lueg-Haus (changed)
  • 1925: Villa for the brewery director Mauritz in Dortmund (not preserved)
  • 1925: Villa Stallmeyer in Witten (preserved)
  • 1925–1926: Tilmann House in Arnsberg
  • before 1926: Dr. F. in Dortmund
  • 1926–1927: Beuing house, called "Villa Diana", in Bochum, Gudrunstraße 21 (listed)
  • 1927: Bastheim residential building in Dortmund, Rosa-Luxemburg-Strasse 18 (changed)
  • around 1928: Villa Cords in Rostock -Gehlsdorf
  • 1929: Villa Schlenkhoff in Dortmund, Rote-Becker-Straße 29 (southern garden city) (preserved)
  • 1929: Office and commercial building of Gebr. Schürmann AG , so-called "Reinoldi-Haus", in Dortmund (not preserved)
  • around 1930: own house in Dortmund-Reichsmark (changed)
  • 1931: Villa Sendker in Freckenhorst , Warendorfer Strasse 86
  • 1932: Hogrefe house in Dortmund
  • 1934: Villa Lübbert in Dortmund (changed)
  • around 1938: Villa Dr. Wolff in Dortmund
  • 1952: Hipped roof bungalow in the residential area of ​​Mulang Steinhöferstraße 12 Kassel, modernized by the architect Theo Bode (cultural monument)
  • 1954: Villa for Major Beichhold in Kassel

literature

  • Hugo Busch: Buildings and rooms by Emil Pohle, Dortmund. Düsseldorf 1927.
  • Folckert Lüken-Isberner: Great plans for Kassel 1919-1949. Urban development and urban planning projects. Schüren Verlag, Marburg 2017.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Interior decoration 9/1926 , Verlag Alexander Koch, Darmstadt
  2. ^ Villa Diana at www.architektur-ruhr.de ( Memento from May 16, 2010 in the Internet Archive ), accessed on August 28, 2010
  3. Thomas Wiegand: City of Kassel, Volume 2: Vorderer Westen, Südstadt, Auefeld, Wehlheiden. (= Monument topography of the Federal Republic of Germany , cultural monuments in Hessen , Volume 38.) Konrad Theiss Verlag, Stuttgart 2005, ISBN 3-8062-1989-3 , S. #.