Georg Stahl (architect)

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Georg Stahl (born June 28, 1880 in Cannstatt ; † October 17, 1974 in Stuttgart ) was a German architect who lived and worked in Stuttgart. At times he was associated with the architect Arthur Bossert (1879–1945).

Life

In the winter semester 1900/1901 Georg Stahl studied architecture at the Technical University of Stuttgart and had his residence at Fabrikstrasse 16a in Cannstatt. Georg Stahl was married to the factory owner's daughter Gertrud Lutz and had three children with her: Gisela, Lisette and Jörg (killed in World War II). The Stahl family lived in Stuttgart-Nord, Parlerstrasse 13. Georg Stahl was active in the Vitruvia Academic Association in 1898/99 .

Buildings and designs

Stuttgart

  • 1899/1900: residential and commercial buildings Lerchenstrasse 83, 85 (with Arthur Bossert; preserved)
  • 1899/1900: residential and commercial buildings at Schwabstrasse 102, 104 (with Arthur Bossert; preserved)
  • 1907: Building Lessingstrasse 6 (with Arthur Bossert)
  • 1907: Building Lessingstrasse 8 (with Arthur Bossert; preserved)
  • 1908: Single-family house (also known as "family house") at the Württemberg building exhibition in 1908
  • 1908: Building Lenzhalde 42 (with Arthur Bossert; preserved)
  • 1909: Eduard-Pfeiffer-Straße 8 building (with Arthur Bossert; preserved)
  • 1909: House for Arthur Bossert, Eduard-Pfeiffer-Straße 12 (with Arthur Bossert)
  • 1910/1911: residential and commercial building at Hölderlinplatz 4 (with Arthur Bossert)
  • 1911: Villa for Leo von Vetter (1842–1923), Rohrackerstraße 170 (with Arthur Bossert; preserved)
  • 1912: Hauptmannsreute 21 building (with Arthur Bossert)
  • 1913: Villa Goebel, Bopserwaldstraße 39 (with Arthur Bossert; preserved)
  • 1922: Residential houses Diemershaldenstraße 11 / 11a (7/9) (with Arthur Bossert; only Villa Felix - house number 9 - preserved)
  • 1922: House at Am Bismarck Tower 6 (together with Arthur Bossert and Paul Darius (1893–1962); preserved)
  • 1926/1928: urban planning for the Raitelsbergsiedlung (together with Eugen Steigleder ; execution in cooperation with Alfred Daiber and other architects)

Bad Urach

  • around 1914: "Villa Irene", Hirschseeweg, the factory owner Erwin Groß (also Erwin Gross) (with Arthur Bossert)

Schwäbisch Hall

literature

  • Christine Breig: The construction of villas and country houses in Stuttgart 1830–1930. Hohenheim Verlag, Stuttgart / Leipzig 2000, ISBN 3-89850-964-8 , p. 538.

Individual evidence

  1. Entry “Arthur Bossert” in: “archthek” - Historical Register of Architects, Section Borchard - Bozung , accessed on September 13, 2012
  2. Auf der Schied 15 and 15a , accessed on September 13, 2012
  3. ^ Directory of students at the Royal Technical University of Stuttgart , accessed on January 27, 2013
  4. ^ Fridolin Rimmele: Württemberg building exhibition in 1908 in Stuttgart. In: Zentralblatt der Bauverwaltung , Volume 28, 1908, No. 43 (from May 30, 1908) (online) , p. 299 f.
  5. ^ Illustration of a historical postcard ( Memento from May 14, 2014 in the Internet Archive ), accessed on September 15, 2012
  6. List of cultural monuments, status April 2008 (PDF; 501 kB), accessed on November 29, 2012
  7. ^ Raitelsbergsiedlung , accessed on April 15, 2012
  8. Weimar Republic - Between Tradition and Modernity 1922–1935 (number 9) , accessed on April 15, 2012
  9. ^ Walter Röhm: Bad Urach in old views. Volume 2. Second edition, 1992, ISBN 978-90-288-3408-8 , p. 41 ( excerpts , accessed April 14, 2020).
  10. ^ The factories of the Gross Brothers , accessed on September 14, 2012