Erik Schott

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Erik Schott (* 1906 in Reval ; † 1975 in Bremen ) was a German architect .

biography

After attending school in Augsburg and Reval, he studied at the Technical University of Stuttgart . In 1935 he became deputy regional planner in East Prussia. As he was badly wounded in the war, he came to Bremen as a refugee in 1945. In the following years he tried to build up a living with his family in Fischerhude . He became a member of the group of colleagues of the "Aufbaugemeinschaft Bremen", which was founded around 1945. In 1947 he took over the Tiefer section in the old town as an area architect . This is where the house of the Robert Oscar Meier company and the Martens banking house were built.

Schott took over as the successor to WH Koenenkamp of the chairman of the association “Lüder v. Bentheim ”. His last job was to preserve the decayed house of the Bremen sculptor Frese , which he wanted to transform into a restaurant. His office was at Sögestrasse 72.

Works

  • 1950: House Konsul-Mosle-Weg (with W. Wortmann)
  • 1951: Kontorhaus, Altenwall
  • 1951–1955: Reconstruction of the Essighaus (today: Deutsche Factoring Bank), Langenstrasse 15/21 (with W. Wortmann)
  • 1951–1962: Kontorhaus and Hafenspeicher Auf der Muggenburg ; 2013 under monument protection.
  • 1951–1955: Seefahrt house , Seefahrtstrasse 25, Bremen
  • 1952–1954: A wine cellar was added to Shed 2
  • 1950–1951: Hagendorff & Grote office building, Obernstrasse (with W. Wortmann)
  • 1951–1952, 1954–1955: House Seefahrt, Seefahrtstrasse 25 (with W. Wortmann)
  • 1952: Single-family house, except for Schleifmühle 76, Bremen (reconstruction after destruction)
  • 1954–1955: Fruchthof Bremen , Breitenweg (with W. Wortmann)
  • 1955: Regina-Filmtheater, Landwehrstraße 38
  • 1957: Mayor Smidt School, Contrescarpe 26, Bremen
  • 1959: Expansion of the Weserburg on the Teerhof , Bremen
  • 1961/62: Bremen Tobacco Exchange , Speicherhof 1, Bremen
  • 1968–1969: "Seefahrtshöhe", apartments and single-family houses of the Haus Seefahrt Foundation

See also

literature

  • Carl Thalenhorst : Bremen and its buildings 1900–1951. Bremen 1952.
  • Wilhelm Wortmann: Bremen builder of the 19th and 20th centuries. Bremen 1988, ISBN 3-88808-056-8 .

Individual evidence

  1. Bremen and its buildings 1900–1951, Fig. XII a 51
  2. Bremen and its buildings 1900–1951, fig. XI h 40
  3. Bremen and its buildings 1900–1951, 1952, pp. 339, 341
  4. ^ Monument database of the LfD
  5. ^ Höhmann, Rolf: Monuments in the ports of Bremen city (industrial archaeological documentation), Darmstadt / Bremen 2004
  6. Bremen and its buildings 1900–1951, 1952, p. 292, fig. XI c 29–30
  7. Bremen and its buildings 1900–1951, Fig. XI h 31
  8. Bremen and its buildings 1900–1951, Fig. XII a 64
  9. Flugdächer and Weserziegel, Bremen, 1990, pp. 190–191
  10. Gramatzki, Rolf: Bauen und Bildung, 2002, pp. 247–248
  11. Dette, Christoph u. a .: Der Teerhof in Bremen, Bremen 1995, pp. 161–163, fig. Fig. 62, 80–83, 86, 131, 163–165, 188, 197, 238, 240, 259, 267, 275
  12. Bremer Tabakbörse opened, Weserlotse 15 (1962) 6, pp. 13-16