Emil Schreiterer

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Emil Schreiterer (full name Wilhelm Emil Schreiterer ; born January 26, 1852 in Reichenbach in Vogtland , † October 27, 1923 in Cologne ) was a German architect and co-founder of the Association of German Architects (BDA).

Life

The former Provinzial-Ständehaus in Hanover , here in 2014 as the seat of the Lower Saxony Ministry of Finance

Wilhelm Emil Schreiterer studied in Stuttgart at the Technical University , where he won the later Hanoverian sculptor, architect and museum director Hermann Narten as a college friend.

In the early days of the German Empire , Schreiterer worked together with the building contractor and architect Ferdinand Wallbrecht in Hanover on the construction of the Villa Caspar in Parkstrasse 2 (later the location Wilhelm-Busch-Strasse 8 ). The villa built next to the Villa Wedel on behalf of the Hanover Construction Company was built until 1874 for the banker Bernhard Caspar , who at the time worked at Schillerstraße 35 .

In 1873 Schreiterer worked again with Hermann Narten on the interior design of the Rosenthal manor (near Peine ).

In 1878, Schreiterer and Ferdinand Wallbrecht created the corner building at Kanalstrasse 11 at the corner of Nordmannstrasse in Hanover , in which the Meine & Liebig baking and pudding powder factory then moved into its business premises.

Also in Hanover in the years 1879 to 1881 in Hanover - again with Ferdinand Wallbrecht - the Provincial Ständehaus was built on Schiffgraben , which later served the self-government of the Prussian Province of Hanover before it was converted into the seat of the Lower Saxony Ministry of Finance . Schreiterer's friend Hermann Narten contributed the sculptures for the building erected in Hanover.

Schreiterer had also stayed in Italy for a long time before he settled in Cologne in 1882. Shortly thereafter, he associated himself with the architect Louis Schreiber to form the Schreiterer & Schreiber company . In 1887, Schreiterer's former college friend Hermann Narten worked for Schreiterer in Cologne.

After the birth of his son Gottfried Schreiterer , Emil Schreiterer became one of the founding members of the Association of Cologne Private Architects in 1891 . In the same year he joined Bernhard Below to form the architecture firm Schreiterer & Below .

At the beginning of the 20th century, Emil Schreiter was a co-founder of the Association of German Architects (BDA) in 1903.

Wilhelm Emil Schreiterer died during the Weimar Republic in the year of the height of the German hyperinflation on October 27, 1923 in Cologne at the age of 71. His company Schreiterer & Below was continued posthumously by Bernhard Below, Schreiterer's son Gottfried Schreiterer and Albert Passauer .

Works (selection)

  • 1872 - 1874 with Ferdinand Wallbrecht: Villa Caspar, Parkstrasse 2 (later location: Wilhelm-Busch-Strasse 8 ), Hanover, not preserved
  • 1873, with Hermann Narten: Interior of the Rosenthal manor near Peine.
  • 1877, with Ferdinand Wallbrecht: Hanover, Königliches Medizinal-Kollegium für Anatomie, Lavesstrasse 20 (later location at Berliner Allee 49 at the corner of Walter-Gieseking-Strasse); not received
  • 1878, with Ferdinand Wallbrecht: Kanalstrasse 11 at the corner of Nordmannstrasse in Hanover (later location at Georgstrasse 19 at the corner of Kanalstrasse); not received
  • 1879, with Ferdinand Wallbrecht: Hanover, Nordmannstrasse 20 at the corner of Georgstrasse (later the street area of ​​the widened Georgstrasse); not received
  • 1879–1881: Provincial Ständehaus , later Lower Saxony Ministry of Finance, Hanover

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f Wolfram Hagspiel : Cologne: Marienburg. Buildings and architects of a villa suburb - including the villa areas of Bayenthal (= traces of the city - monuments in Cologne , vol. 8), with historical photographs and new recordings by Dorothea Heiermann, 1st edition, vol. 1, Cologne: Bachem, 1996, ISBN 978- 3-7616-1147-0 and ISBN 3-7616-1147-1 (each for vol. 1 and 2), p. 939 and others; limited preview in Google Book search
  2. a b c Helmut Knocke : Narten, (3) Georg Hermann Carl. In: Dirk Böttcher, Klaus Mlynek, Waldemar R. Röhrbein, Hugo Thielen: Hannoversches Biographisches Lexikon . From the beginning to the present. Schlütersche, Hannover 2002, ISBN 3-87706-706-9 , p. 268; limited preview in Google Book search
  3. a b c d e f Reinhard Glaß: Wallbrecht, Friedrich Ferdinand Carl in the database architects and artists with direct reference to Conrad Wilhelm Hase (1818–1902) by Günther Kokkelink , Monika Lemke-Kokkelink and Reinhard Glaß on the page glass-portal .privat.t-online.de [ undated ], last accessed on March 11, 2018
  4. ^ Kurt Morawietz (ed.): Brilliant Herrenhausen. History of a welfen residence and its gardens , Hanover: Steinbock-Verlag, 1981, p. 157; limited preview in Google Book search
  5. a b Compare the information in the address book, city and business manual of the royal residence city of Hanover and the city of Linden from 1874, p. 200
  6. a b Helmut Knocke: Narten, (3) Georg Hermann Carl. In: Klaus Mlynek, Waldemar R. Röhrbein (eds.) U. a .: City Lexicon Hanover . From the beginning to the present. Schlütersche, Hannover 2009, ISBN 978-3-89993-662-9 , pp. 460f .; limited preview in Google Book search
  7. a b Theodor Unger : 171. Eckhaus ... , in ders .: Hanover. Guide through the city and its buildings. Festschrift for the fifth general assembly of the Association of German Architects and Engineers' Associations. Ed .: Architects and Engineers Association of Hanover, Curt R. Vincentz Verlag, Hanover 1882, p. 30 (6th reprint edition 1991, Edition libri rari published by Th. Schäfer, Hanover, Th. Schäfer Druckerei, 1991, ISBN 3 -88746-050-2 )
  8. ^ Paul Siedentopf (main editor): Meine & Liebig, Hanover, Im Moore 37 a / Germany's oldest baking and pudding powder factory. In other words : The book of the old companies of the city of Hanover in 1927 (DBdaF 1927), with the assistance of Karl Friedrich Leonhardt (compilation of the image material), Jubilee-Verlag Walter Gerlach, Leipzig 1927, p. 89
  9. a b Helmut Knocke , Hugo Thielen : Schiffgraben 10 , in Dirk Böttcher , Klaus Mlynek (ed.): Hannover. Kunst- und Kultur-Lexikon (HKuKL), new edition, 4th, updated and expanded edition, zu Klampen, Springe 2007, ISBN 978-3-934920-53-8 , pp. 192f.