Ernst Hake

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Ernst Maximilian Hake (born June 22, 1844 in Preußisch Stargard ; † February 24, 1925 in Vlotho ) was a German architect and post office building officer .

Life

After attending school in Prussian Stargard, Ernst Hake graduated from the secondary school in Elbing in 1865 and then worked as a construction engineer for the district builder in Neustettin . This was followed by studies at the Berlin Bauakademie , which he completed with the master builder examination in early 1875. In 1875, the Reich Post Office set up its own construction management under the direction of the architect and construction officer August Kind (1824–1904), where he initially worked for Carl Schwatlo in Berlin for construction management and in Bremen and later in Hamburg , first as a postal construction inspector and then as a post office building officer (from 1883, possibly even before 1878). In 1890 he came to the Reich Post Office in Berlin, and in August 1891 he became a secret post construction advisor and lecturer in the management of the building administration in the Reich Post Office. On November 2, 1891, he became a member of the Prussian Academy of Building , before 1896 a secret senior post office building officer and in 1906 a real secret building building officer. After his retirement in 1911, he moved to Vlotho.

buildings

  • 1875–1878: Post and telegraph office with Oberpostdirektion in Bremen , Domsheide 15 (site management; draft from Reichspostamt Berlin, Carl Schwatlo and August Kind ; preserved)
  • 1877–1881: Post and telegraph office in Flensburg , Rathausstrasse 2 (design and site management; execution by architect Hildebrandt; used commercially today)
  • 1878: Post office in Thorn (preliminary draft by Moering)
  • 1882–1884: Post and telegraph office in Lübeck, Markt (construction management: Ferdinand Münzenberger; not preserved)
  • 1883–1887: Post and Telegraph Office with Oberpostdirektion in Hamburg , Dammtorwall 8 (construction management; draft by the Reich Post Office in Berlin, August Kind and Julius Carl Raschdorff ; construction management by government building supervisor Friedrich Ruppel )
  • 1885–1886: Post and telegraph office in Neumünster (design and site management; site management by government building supervisor Siecke; preserved, since 1989 as Alte Post-Passage )
  • 1892–1893: Post and telegraph office in Greifswald (draft in collaboration with Post Building Officer Carl Hindorf, OPD Stettin , largely preserved, since 2014 use by the city administration as a town house )
  • 1892–1895: Post and telegraph office in Dortmund (design in collaboration with architect Karl Doflein and construction management; construction management by government master builder Karl Buddeberg)
  • 1892–1897: Schwerin Post and Telegraph Office , Mecklenburgstraße 4/6 (draft in collaboration with architect Daegert and construction management; preserved)
  • 1893–1895: Post office in Berlin, Dessauer Strasse / Königgrätzer Strasse 20 (construction management by Heinrich Techow; not preserved)
  • 1893–1898: Expansion of the Reich Post Office in Berlin, Leipziger Strasse 14–18 and Mauerstrasse 69–75 (design; construction management by Heinrich Techow and Franz Ahrens ; preserved, 1989–2000 restoration, today Museum for Communication )
  • 1894–1895: Post and telegraph office in Uelzen , Bahnhofstrasse 14 (preserved)
  • 1894–1900: Main post office ( Neue Post ) in Potsdam , Am Kanal 16–18 (preserved)
  • 1895–1899: Post and telegraph office in Magdeburg , Breiter Weg 203–206 (preserved, converted into a justice center in 2005–2006)
  • 1896–1899: Oberpostdirektion in Strasbourg , Kaiser-Wilhelm-Straße (today Avenue de la Liberté) (design together with Ewald Freiherr von Rechenberg; construction management by Post Building Officer Ludwig Bettcher and Post Building Inspector Karl Buddeberg; today Poste Centrale )
  • 1899–1902: Post and telegraph office in Frankfurt an der Oder , Wilhelmplatz 3–5 / Logenstrasse 1–4 (today Zehmeplatz) (design together with Anton Freiherr von Rechenberg; preserved)
  • 1901–1902: Post and telegraph office in Oldenburg , Poststrasse 1 (design together with Ewald Freiherr von Rechenberg; today privatized, office and residential complex)
  • 1902–1904: Oberpostdirektion Chemnitz in Chemnitz-Kaßberg , Stephanplatz (design; construction management by government architect Wilhelm Deetz; preserved)

literature

  • Uwe Kieling: Berlin building officials and state architects in the 19th century. Berlin 1986, p. 37.

Web links

  • Record on Ernst Hake in the database of architects and artists with direct reference to Conrad Wilhelm Hase (1818–1902) , last accessed on March 2, 2019