Günther Hafemann

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Günther Hafemann (born April 13, 1902 in Berlin ; † January 27, 1960 in Bremen ) was a German architect .

biography

The grain plant in Bremen

Hafemann was the son of a tool manufacturer. He studied architecture at the Technical University of Berlin . In 1932 he founded his own office in Berlin with his college friend Max Säum . After the Second World War , the two of them founded an architectural association in Bremen in 1948. After a few industrial buildings, Speicher I (1948/50) and the restoration of the war-damaged grain plant in the port of Bremen, the office was able to achieve a broader range of tasks through competitive successes. In an urban development competition to redesign the western suburbs , they received first prize and were able to participate in the implementation. They planned and implemented residential complexes in Neuenland (Neustadt) (1955–56) and in the Neuen Vahr (1957–61) and the listed apartment buildings as the Kohlmannstrasse residential complex (1954/56) in Bremen Horn .

plant

Together with Max Säum
  • 1926–1931: Worked in Hermann Jansen's office
  • 1926: Development plan for the city expansion for Wittlich, Rhineland-Palatinate (seams)
  • 1926: Partial development plan for the city expansion Goslar, Am Köppelsbleek (Hafemann)
  • 1927: Zoning plan for the city expansion Brotterode, Thuringia (Säum)
  • 1928: Land use and traffic plan for Ankara (seams)
  • 1929: Partial development plan Buckow, Brandenburg (seams)
  • 1930: Development plan for Schlossplatz / Hindenburgplatz, Münster (hems)
  • from 1932: Säum & Hafemann joint office in Berlin
    • a) Development plan for Neuruppin (1934/35)
    • b) 200 individual plans for small towns and communities in the Mark Brandenburg
    • c) Participation in competitions in Stockholm and Zagreb, among others
  • 1939: Trebbin Town Hall
  • 1947–1950: Reconstruction of the grain transport facility , timber and factory harbor, Bremen
  • 1948: Successful competition in Wilhelmshaven
  • 1948–1949: Single-family house (Senator for Finance Nolting-Hauff), Marcusallee 26, Bremen
  • 1949: Successful competition in Bremerhaven
  • 1948–1950: Speicher I in the Europahafen, today's Bremen Überseestadt
  • 1950: 1st prize competition for the redesign of the western suburb
  • 1951–1954: Reconstruction of the Paula-Becker-Modersohn house and the Atlantis house in Böttcherstrasse
  • 1951–1954: Reconstruction of the former Rathscafé , Am Markt 1 (conversion of the interior as "Deutsches Haus")
  • 1953–1955: Reconstruction of the western suburb, in Walle
  • 1954–1956: Kohlmannstrasse residential complex and residential building of the two architects with a studio in Bremen Horn
  • 1954–1957: Gartenstadt-Süd (Gartenstadt Neuenlande) in Bremer Neustadt
  • 1954–1957: Up Willmannsland settlement in Bremen-Lesum
  • 1955–1956: Garden City Vahr (northern part) in the Garden City Vahr ; Development plan together with Ernst May
    • a) Heideplatz residential high-rise
    • b) shopping center and cinema
    • c) Youth home, day-care center and counseling for mothers
    • d) basic u. Hauptschule, In der Vahr 75 (II. Construction phase 1958; III. Construction phase 1962)
    • e) four-storey residential buildings with rental apartments
  • 1956–1962: Neue Vahr; Development plan together with Ernst May and Hans Bernhard Reichow
    • a) "Schlangenbau", Kurt-Schumacher-Allee (Bremen) 73/97
    • b) two fourteen-story houses on the eastern edge of the Vahr (Dietrich-Bonhoeffer-Strasse 37; Geschwister-Scholl-Strasse 8
    • c) 1959-1960: Grund- u. Secondary school in the Neue Vahr, Carl-Goerdeler-Str. 27 (Max Säum) (II. Construction phase 1961; III. Construction phase 1962)
    • d) Fourteen-story high-rise residential building (9/11) with a row of shops (13/21), Kurt-Schumacher-Allee
    • e) Center of the Neue Vahr, restaurant (Max Säum) (demolition)
  • 1957: Motor vehicle registration office (Road Traffic Directorate) Georg-Bitter-Straße 7 (demolition)
  • 1957: 1st prize competition Stadthalle Bremen , Roland Rainer, Vienna with Max Säum and Günther Hafemann
  • 1958: House of Citizenship Competition , Max Säum is one of seven judges
  • 1959–1960: high-rise harbor at Überseehafen

Honors

The Günther-Hafemann Street in Bremen- Blockdiek was named after him.

See also

literature

Web links