Ferdinand Ludolf
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
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/8/85/House_Kestnerstrasse_18_Suedstadt_Hannover_Germany.jpg/220px-House_Kestnerstrasse_18_Suedstadt_Hannover_Germany.jpg)
- 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
- in the city archive of Hanover
- held by the registry office in Hanover 1, death register no. 1195/1906: Ludolff, Ferdinand Friedrich Heinrich
- in the card magazine , compartment 85: magazine for the royal court theater ; Provenance ; Building Department of the City of Hanover
Remarks
- ↑ 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
- ↑ 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 )
- ↑ 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
- ↑ a b Deutsche Bauzeitung , Volume 10, 1876, No. 49 (from June 17, 1876), p. 245. ( Preview on Google Books )
- ^ 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 )
- ↑ 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 )
- ^ Helmut Zimmermann : The street names of the state capital Hanover. Verlag Hahnsche Buchhandlung, Hannover 1992, ISBN 3-7752-6120-6 , p. 140.
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Ludolf, Ferdinand |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Ludolf, Ferdinand Friedrich Heinrich (full name); Ludolff, Ferdinand; Ludolph, Ferdinand |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German architect |
DATE OF BIRTH | November 26, 1846 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Hanover |
DATE OF DEATH | April 14, 1906 |
Place of death | Hanover |