Friedrich Voggenberger

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Friedrich Voggenberger , also Fritz Voggenberger , (born November 18, 1884 in Aulendorf ; † September 3, 1924 in Frankfurt am Main ) was a German architect and interior designer .

"Voggenberger was one of the first German architects to attach particular importance to color in architecture."

- Heike Risse 1984

Buildings and designs

  • 1911–1914: New building of the Jewish hospital with nurses' house in Frankfurt am Main, Gagernstrasse 36 (together with Franz Roeckle )
  • 1913: International Building Exhibition Leipzig 1913
    • Design of the reception room of the hall for hygienic building equipment designed by Karl Poser (not preserved)
    • Building of the special exhibition for hospital construction (hospital exhibition) (not preserved)
  • 1919: Werkbund measuring house in Frankfurt am Main (not preserved)
  • 1920/1921: Extension of the Feist sparkling wine cellar in Frankfurt am Main, Sachsenhausen, Hainer Weg 37/53.
  • around 1920/1921: Pollatschek house in Frankfurt am Main (-Sachsenhausen), Forsthausstraße 61, today Kennedyallee (preserved changed)
  • around 1920/1921: Residence for the stud owner Wilhelm Paderstein on the Häusel farm near Eppstein (Taunus) -Vockenhausen
  • 1922: Kertess house in Frankfurt am Main (-Sachsenhausen), Eschenbachstraße 25 (under monument protection)
  • 1922–1923: Factory and office building of the Fritz Vogel & Co. clothing factory in Frankfurt am Main, at the corner of Bismarck- and Moltkeallee (today Theodor-Heuss-Allee and Hamburger Allee), (only 1st construction phase (without planned high-rise building) , not received)
  • 1923: Unterer Markt office building in Neunkirchen (Saar) (1938 addition by Stockhausen; under monument protection )
  • 1924: Residential building at Brunnenstrasse 86 in Neunkirchen (Saar) (1933 remodeling by Richard Müller; under monument protection)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b Personal data set on Voggenberger at www.juedische-pflegegeschichte.de , accessed on August 24, 2012
  2. a b Heike Risse: Early Modernism in Frankfurt am Main 1920–1933. Frankfurt am Main 1984, ISBN 3-7973-0422-6 , p. 66.
  3. International building trade exhibition with side exhibitions in Leipzig 1913 (overview of buildings) ( Memento of the original from April 28, 2009 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link has been inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , last accessed on August 24, 2012  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.kmkbuecholdt.de
  4. ^ A prevented classic of architecture in FAZ from April 18, 2017, page 35
  5. ^ A b c Heike Risse: Early Modernism in Frankfurt am Main 1920–1933. Frankfurt am Main 1984, ISBN 3-7973-0422-6 , p. 216.
  6. The Paderstein family and their way abroad. - on the website of the Historischen Gesellschaft Eschborn eV , accessed on August 24, 2012
  7. Heike Risse: Early Modernism in Frankfurt am Main 1920–1933. Frankfurt am Main 1984, ISBN 3-7973-0422-6 , p. 61 f.

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