Ferdinand Möller (architect)

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Ferdinand Möller (* 1878 ; † 1955 ) was a German architect , homeland friend and building officer .

Life

Property - inscription with the year 1920 in front of the building Kapellenbrink 8 in Groß-Buchholz

Ferdinand Möller, together with the future city architect Oskar Barnstorf , was one of the co-founders of the Hearth Evening , which was founded on January 8, 1908 with the aim of cultivating Lower Saxon customs .

During the Weimar Republic , Möller acquired the Ebeling property, which was used agriculturally until 1918 , in the street Kapellenbrink in the old village of the (today's) Hanoverian district of Groß-Buchholz , today Kapellenbrink 6 to 10 and Groß-Buchholzer Kirchweg 66 . He rebuilt the two-column house from 1711 that was in 2015 and was still standing in the courtyard . The former Möllerschen plant also includes a drive-through barn from 1764, a small half-timbered annex and another small half-timbered house, probably an old-age division house , at today's address Groß-Buchholzer Kirchweg 66 .

In 1974, Ulrich Fließ wrote in the exhibition guide of the Historisches Museum am Hohen Ufer Old Farmhouses in Hanover about the main and auxiliary buildings:

Main building of the former Ebelingschen Hof, two-tier house, built in 1711, used for agriculture until 1918, then acquired and rebuilt by architect F. Möller, further restorations by descendants. Example of an old building rescued through redesign and adaptation. With its scaffolding, underframe timbering with a rafter sill, and the wooden architecture of the front gable, the house is a remarkable example of the old carpentry in the northern outskirts of Hanover. Bucket extensions, the installation of rooms in the front part of the house as well as the extension of the top floor blind floor belong to a later period. Barn building in the old courtyard with a closed longitudinal passage, built in 1764, in a ridge-parallel position to the main house with equally elaborate gable architecture; small courtyard building, presumably a former retirement home, further away.

Möller ran his office in the 1930s at Ubbenstrasse 24.

During World War II developed Ferdinand Möller, named after him, "Möller aperture ", specially shaped concrete ties with the kingdom utility model -number 1502831 that the bombing should prevent the penetration of splinters in basements.

In 1951 Möller published an appeal in the journal Heimatland of the Heimatbund Lower Saxony : Get old house inscriptions! in which he campaigned for the inscriptions in half-timbered houses and the refreshment of their colors.

As an architect, Möller left several listed buildings in the cityscape of Hanover .

Works (selection)

  • 1907–1909 approx .: Brick arched bridge of the freight bypass railway on Liebrechtstrasse in what is now the Waldheim district , listed as a historical monument
  • 1908/1909: Apartment building in Hanover, Heidornstrasse / Spielhagenstrasse for the savings and construction association Hanover
  • 1909/1910: Railway bridge over the Vinnhorster Weg in Leinhausen
  • 1909/1910 apartment building in Hanover, Lister Kirchweg 17–27 for the savings and construction association Hanover
  • 1911: Cooperative residential building for the Spar- und Bauverein Hannover at Charlottenstrasse 89 and 91 and Stroußbergstrasse 9 in the Hanover district of Linden-Süd
  • 1913: Facade of the former Werner & Ehlers factory (today: FAUST ) along Wilhelm-Blum-Straße 12 in the Linden-Nord district
  • On the site of the Leinau wallpaper factory founded in 1845 (later: Brakebusch soap factory , no longer available), Möller built it on the southern section of the property at Gummistrasse (today: Wilhelm-Blum-Strasse ) as a " cooperative architect" for the savings and construction association Residential buildings block in the Karree Wilhelm-Blum-Straße with the house numbers 20, 22, 24, 26 , Berdingstraße 1, 3, 4, 5 and 7 , Leinaustraße 17, 19, 21 and 23 as well as Brakebuschstraße 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5
  • In Groß-Buchholz he was the architect of 100 “inexpensive homes with gardens” - according to an advertising sign back then - that were built in the mid-1930s in the newly designated triangular building area between Groß-Buchholzer Kirchweg, Hesemannstraße and Meersmannufer, in the western planning area sponsored by Spar - and building association.

Web links

Commons : Ferdinand Möller  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b Dirk Böttcher : Herd evening. In: Klaus Mlynek, Waldemar R. Röhrbein (eds.) U. a .: City Lexicon Hanover . From the beginning to the present. Schlütersche, Hannover 2009, ISBN 978-3-89993-662-9 , p. 287; online through google books
  2. a b c d e f Hans-Herbert Möller : Editor: Architects and Artists Register In: Landeskonservator Hans-Herbert Möller ; Lower Saxony State Administration Office - Institute for Monument Preservation (Hrsg.): City of Hanover (=  monument topography Federal Republic of Germany , architectural monuments in Lower Saxony . Volume 10.2 ). Part 2. Friedr. Vieweg & Sohn, Braunschweig / Wiesbaden 1985, ISBN 3-528-06208-8 , pp. 122 ff u.ö. .
  3. a b c Ulrich Fließ: Old farmhouses in Hanover - image documents and architectural drawings, exhibition guide of the Historisches Museum am Hohen Ufer , Hanover 1974, p. 28
  4. a b Pinkenburger Kreis and Friedrich-Wilhelm Busse (eds.): Groß-Buchholz - Pictures and Stories from Bygone Days , Geiger-Verlag, Horb am Neckar 1992, p. 47
  5. Wilfried Maehler, Michael Ide: Luftschutz in Bochum: Luftschutz und Luftschutzbauten in Bochum , Bochum study group for bunkers, tunnels, cover ditches and underground manufacturing plants, Bochum 2004, p. 25
  6. Ferdinand Möller: Get old house inscriptions !. In: Heimatland, magazine of the Heimatbund Niedersachsen , issue 10/12 of the year 1951, p. 273
  7. Gerd Weiß : Waldheim. In: Monument topography of the Federal Republic of Germany , architectural monuments in Lower Saxony, City of Hanover (DTBD), part 1, volume 10.1, ed. by Hans-Herbert Möller , Lower Saxony State Administration Office - Institute for Monument Preservation , Friedr. Vieweg & Sohn Verlagsgesellschaft mbH, Braunschweig 1983, ISBN 3-528-06203-7 , pp. 138f .; as well as Waldheim in the addendum to part 2, volume 10.2: List of architectural monuments acc. § 4 ( NDSchG ) (except for architectural monuments of the archaeological monument preservation ), status: July 1, 1985, City of Hanover , Lower Saxony State Administration Office - publications of the Institute for Monument Preservation, p. 9
  8. Hermann Boockhoff and Jürgen Knotz: Architecture in Hanover since 1900 , Callwey-Verlag, Munich 1981, ISBN 3-7667-0599-7 , S. M 2
  9. Hermann Boockhoff and Jürgen Knotz: Architecture in Hanover since 1900 , Callwey-Verlag, Munich 1981, ISBN 3-7667-0599-7 , S. M 3