Friedrich Schramm (architect)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Friedrich Schramm (* before 1800; † around 1850 in Berlin) was a German architect and teacher at the Berlin Building Academy .

Friedrich Schramm trained with Karl Friedrich Schinkel and was employed as a conductor at the Oberbaudeputation . From 1817 to 1820 the parish church in Joachimsthal was built according to his plans, which were revised by Schinkel . In 1818/19 he was the site manager for the foundations of the monument on the Kreuzberg and worked on the overall design. Around 1818 he became a building inspector. In 1820/21 he provided the designs for the buildings of the Botanical Garden in Schöneberg and participated in the renovation of the cathedral . From 1821 to 1823 he led the conversion of a wing of the Academy of the Arts into a museum. From 1824 to 1831 he taught at the Berlin Building Academy in the subjects of architectural drawing , economic architecture and machine drawing . In 1830 he converted the Goercksche house at Dorotheenstrasse 5 into the Charité maternity clinic . He worked on Schinkel's designs for the observatory in Lindenstrasse and was in charge of construction from 1832 to 1835.

literature

Uwe Kieling: Berlin building officials and state architects in the 19th century . Kulturbund der DDR, Berlin 1986, p. 80, 81 .