Ferdinand Ludolf

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Ferdinand Ludolf (born November 26, 1846 in Hanover ; † April 14, 1906 there ; full name: Ferdinand Friedrich Heinrich Ludolf ) was a German architect . The spelling of his last name varies in publications between Ludolf , Ludolff and Ludolph .

Life

Ferdinand Ludolf was born in Hanover in 1846. He studied from 1862 to 1865 and - after the annexation of the Kingdom of Hanover by Prussia - again from 1869 under the matriculation number 3783 at the Hanover Polytechnic as a student of Conrad Wilhelm Hase .

Ludolf later worked independently in Hanover, often together with the architect Georg Heussner . The company was then sometimes referred to as Ludolf & Heussner , more rarely Ludolph & Haussner or even Ludolff and Heussner .

Works

Former “ Decorations Magazine for the Royal Court Theater ” in the southern part of Hanover
  • 1874: Multi-storey car park near Herrenhausen , Nienburger Strasse / Militärstrasse (Appelstrasse) (together with Franz Heussner)
  • around 1876: House for Karl Heinrich Brandes in Hanover, Tiergartenstrasse 27 (today Hindenburgstrasse 27) (together with Heussner; preserved)
  • around 1877: Double house in Hanover, Gneisenaustraße 2/4 (original house numbers 15 and 14) (together with Heussner and Rudolf Vogel ; preserved)
  • 1878: House for Christian Gottfried Brandes in Hanover, Tiergartenstraße 26 (today Hindenburgstraße 26) / Gneisenaustraße (together with Heussner; preserved)
  • 1879: Buildings of the Berlin trade exhibition (together with Heussner)
  • around 1890: Lower Saxony Bank office building in Hanover, Theaterstrasse 12 (partially preserved)
  • 1892: House for the merchant Emil Hirschfeld in Hanover, Tiergartenstraße 28 (today Hindenburgstraße 28) (later modernized and connected to the house at Hindenburgstraße 29)
  • 1894–1895: Set magazine for the royal court theater in Hanover ( Südstadt ), Kestnerstraße 18 (preserved; today the venue of the Klecks-Theater )

Fonts

  • Ferdinand Ludolf, Franz Heussner: The Berlin Trade Exhibition 1879. (with a sketch of the exhibition grounds and several illustrations) In: Baugewerks-Zeitung , 11th year 1879, issue 11, p. 126 f.

literature

  • Traugott Krahn: The Berlin trade exhibition in 1879, designed and executed by the builders Ludolff and Heissner in Hanover. In: JA Romberg's magazine for practical architecture , 39th year 1879, columns 105–110 as well as panels 16–19.

Archival material

Archives by and about Ferdinand Ludolff can be found, for example

Remarks

  1. Compare also the address book, city and business manual of the royal residence city of Hanover and the city of Linden for the year 1877, section I: Alphabetical directory of authorities and institutions, residents and trading companies , p. 401 , in the “Heussner, Georg , Architect, ass. D. F .: Ludolff & Heussner , Gneisenaustr. 13 p “is called. In an earlier version of this Wikipedia article, Franz Heussner was inadvertently named as an Associé (partner).

Individual evidence

  1. a b parking garage. In: Architects and Engineers Association Hanover (Ed.), Theodor Unger (Red.): Hanover. Guide through the city and its buildings. Commemorative publication for the fifth general assembly of the Association of German Architects and Engineers . Klindworth, Hannover 1882, p. 11. ( reprint : Vincentz, Hannover 1978, ISBN 3-87870-154-3 / reprint: Europäische Hochschulverlag, Bremen 2011, ISBN 978-3-86741-493-7 - limited preview at Google books )
  2. a b c d e f g h i j k Reinhard Glaß: Ludolff, Ferdinand Friedrich Heinrich in the database architects and artists with direct reference to Conrad Wilhelm Hase (1818–1902) , last accessed on July 4, 2017
  3. a b Deutsche Bauzeitung , Volume 10, 1876, No. 49 (from June 17, 1876), p. 245. ( Preview on Google Books )
  4. ^ A b Thomas Großbölting : "In the realm of work." The representation of social order in the German industrial and trade exhibitions 1790-1914 (= Ordnungssysteme , Vol. 21.) (also habilitation thesis, Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster, 2004) Oldenbourg, Munich 2008, ISBN 978-3-486-58128-7 , p. 264. ( Preview on Google Books )
  5. Kurt Morawietz (ed.), Hanns Jatzlau (drawings): Brilliant Herrenhausen. History of a Guelph residence and its gardens. Hannover: Steinbock-Verlag, 1981, p. 157. ( Preview on Google Books )
  6. ^ Helmut Zimmermann : The street names of the state capital Hanover. Verlag Hahnsche Buchhandlung, Hannover 1992, ISBN 3-7752-6120-6 , p. 140.