Friedrich Wilhelm Rauschenberg

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Friedrich Wilhelm Rauschenberg (born December 1, 1853 in Bremen ; † September 28, 1935 in Bremen) was a German architect .

biography

Rauschenberg was the son of a builder . He graduated from the old grammar school in Bremen and studied architecture from 1872.

In 1882 he opened an office in Bremen at the Rutenhof. He planned many, often lavish, residential and commercial buildings in the neo-Renaissance style . In 1881 he planned the weather pillar with a lot of ornamentation , which was installed in 1882 near the Bishop's Gate on Rembertistraße in Bremen and was demolished in 1958. The Bremer Gewerbebank was built in what was then Kaiserstraße according to his plans . He designed the Rickmers Bridge and the Niemann Bridge for the Bremer Bürgerpark . He built the parking garage designed by Johann Georg Poppe in 1889/1890 (destroyed by fire in 1907).

From 1893 he worked in Munich and then in Karlsruhe . In 1903 he returned to Bremen and was a partner in an architects' office with Andreas Heinrich Wilhelm Müller. The office planned and built residential, rental and country houses, etc. a. from 1905 to 1907 in the Art Nouveau , the Vienna Ensemble Hof , Weberstraße 7-21. During this time he was also active in urban planning and had started to take an inventory of architectural monuments. He also held the title of Government Builder (retired) .

Works

  • Weather pillar Bischofstor (1881/82)
  • Commercial bank in the Kaiserstraße; today Mayor-Smidt-Strasse
  • Rickmers Bridge and the Niemann Bridge in the Bürgerpark
  • Car park construction in Bürgerpark (1889/90)
  • Dreikaiserhaus on the corner of Langenstrasse and Kaiserstrasse (historicism, 1890)
  • Construction work at Deutsche Bank am Domshof (eclecticism / neoclassicism, 1891, preserved)
  • Ensemble Wiener Hof, Weberstrasse, with Müller (Art Nouveau, 1905/07, preserved)

proof

  1. ^ Hans Christoph Hoffmann: The monument protection in the Bremen state. In: Bremisches Jahrbuch 55, 1977, p. 273.
  2. Bremisches Jahrbuch 1928, p. XI.

literature

Web links