Eugene Michel

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Eugen Michel (born February 22, 1873 in Frankenthal (Palatinate) ; † October 6, 1946 in Hanover ) was a German architect , room acoustician and university professor .

Live and act

During his studies he became a member of the Corps Pomerania-Silesia Berlin . After passing the 2nd state examination in building construction in 1899, Michel was appointed government master builder ( assessor in the public building administration). From 1903 he entered the service of the district association of the administrative district of Wiesbaden. In the same year he received his doctorate in Hanover. In 1905 he was city planning inspector in Kiel before he was appointed professor for structural engineering at the Technical University of Hanover in 1907 , where he also taught room acoustics from 1921. Since 1928 he and Friedrich Fischer headed a research center for church art and room acoustics. In 1927 he designed the acoustics for the Rudolf-Oetker-Halle in Bielefeld . In 1929 he planned the large broadcasting hall in the new broadcasting house of the Nordischer Rundfunks AG (NORAG) in Hamburg. On May 1, 1933, he joined the NSDAP and in November 1933 signed the confession of the German professors to Adolf Hitler .

Fonts

  • About ceramic veneering materials , Halle aS: Knapp 1903 (Diss. Hannover 1903).
  • The artistic design of iron structures. (with Hermann Jordan) Royal Academy of Civil Engineering in Berlin, 1913.
  • Audibility of large rooms. Braunschweig 1921.
  • (as co-author): Handbuch der Physik , Vol. 8, Acoustics. (Ed. by Ferdinand Trendelenburg ) 1927.
  • Acoustics and noise protection in building construction. Berlin / Leipzig 1938.
  • History of bridge building. Architecture. Reprint , Zurich 2009.

literature

  • Michael Jung: "Our hearts beat to the Führer with great enthusiasm". The Technical University of Hanover and its professors under National Socialism. Norderstedt 2013.
  • TH Hannover (ed.): Catalogus Professorum. The teaching staff of the Technical University of Hanover 1831–1956 , Hanover: Technical University of Applied Sciences 1956, p. 97.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Address list of the Weinheimer SC. Darmstadt 1928, p. 34.

Web links