Ferrari school

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Higher Federal College for Business Professions (HBLA)
Ferrarischule
Ferrari school
Ferrari Palace
type of school Higher federal college
( HLM , HLW )
School number 701439
founding 1921
address

Weinhartstrasse 4

place innsbruck
state Tyrol
Country Austria
Coordinates 47 ° 16'5 "  N , 11 ° 24'15"  E Coordinates: 47 ° 16'5 "  N , 11 ° 24'15"  E
carrier Republic of Austria
management Kurt-Manfred Jordan
Website www.ferrarischule.at

The Higher Federal College for Business Professions - HBLA ( Ferrarischule ) is a vocational high school for business and fashion in Innsbruck .

History of the Palais Ferrari

The listed palace is the namesake for today's school. In 1686 Hieronymus Bernhard Graf Ferrari von d'Occhieppo (also Girolamo Bernardo Ferrari d'Occhieppo ) decided to build a palace in Innsbruck according to the plans of Johann Martin Gumpp (the elder), which was completed six years later.

The Ferrari family owned the palace for eight generations. It became impoverished in the 19th century and the city of Innsbruck acquired the now neglected building.

The school was founded in 1921 as a teaching institution for domestic and commercial women’s occupations, the accommodation of the students was partly the Sieberer'sche orphanage (now Daniel Sailer School) and a wing of the Kaiser Franz-Joseph Jubiläums-Greisenasyls (now Saggen residence ) .

On February 28, 1922, the federal government took over the administration of the school.

After the horticultural school was added as a school type in 1925, the school moved to the Palais Ferrari, which has now been renovated.

In 1962, the college for economic women’s professions was granted a university qualification due to the School Organization Act.

On September 23, 1971, the new extension was moved into after a 3-year construction period.

The existing school building was renovated and increased in 2018, the usable area being expanded by around 1,200 m².

Training focus

The Ferrarischule offers five training courses: human ecology , creative, international communication in business, communication and media design and fashion design. These five training focuses are completed after five years with the maturity and diploma examination ( Matura ). There is also an advanced course with a focus on prevention , health and fitness, which ends with the Matura after three years.

There is also the possibility of completing the 3-year technical college for business professions with a focus on health and social affairs.

particularities

In addition to the matriculation and diploma examination, the five-year Ferrari school has to pass the preliminary examination for the matriculation and diploma examination, which is taken at the end of the fourth school year. This examination consists of two parts, namely an examination in the "Cooking" area and an examination in the "Service" area, which is considered to be the conclusion of the compulsory cooking lessons taught in the Ferrari School from the first grade. Without these exams, there is no entitlement to take the Reife- und Diplomprüfung.

management

  • 1920–1933 Adolfine Sieberer
  • 1933–1937 Marianne Zeller
  • 1938–1939 Marianne Povondra
  • 1939–1945 Anna Fritz
  • 1945–1964 Hermine Czerny
  • 1964–1975 Helga Heinricher
  • 1975–1987 Ferdinand Kätzler
  • 1987–2003 Barbara Reiterer
  • since 2003 Kurt-Manfred Jordan

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Hieronymus Bernhard Graf Ferrari von d'Occhieppo in the catalog of the German National Library
  2. Martin Huber: Hieronymus Bernhard Graf Ferrari d'Occhieppo, born around 1600 in Biella (Piedmont). The family tree of the Huber, Stockert, Röck, Kosak families, among others In: Stammbaum.med-huber.at. May 20, 2015, accessed February 15, 2020 .
  3. ^ Anton Prock: Master builder family Gumpp. Johann Martin Gumpp the Elder. In: innsbruck.antonprock.at. 2010, accessed February 15, 2020 .
  4. Christoph Hölz: Architecture Guide Innsbruck . Ed .: Christoph Hölz, Klaus Tragbar, Veronika Weiss. Haymon Verlag , Innsbruck 2017, ISBN 978-3-7099-7204-5 ( Innsbruck architecture guide: Former Palais Ferrari in the Google book search).
  5. ^ Sieberer orphanage and asylum for old people. In: tirolensien.at. Retrieved February 15, 2020 .
  6. a b Barbara Reiterer, Kurt-Manfred Jordan: Chronicle Ferrarischule. (PDF; 7.9 MB) Ferrari school on a journey through time 1920–2010. In: ferrarischule.at. May 9, 2011, p. 8 .;
  7. 14 million for Ferrari school renovation | Tyrolean daily newspaper online. In: Tyrolean daily newspaper . October 26, 2018, accessed February 15, 2020 .
  8. Ferrarischule Innsbruck. Renovation and expansion. In: Federal Real Estate Company. Retrieved February 15, 2020 .
  9. Locations - schools for fashion: vocational schools. Higher federal college for business professions and fashion. In: berufsbildendeschulen.at. Retrieved February 15, 2020 .