Gustav plum

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Gustav Pflaume (* before 1880; † 1930 in Leipzig ; full name: Johann Gustav Pflaume ) was a German architect .

Act

Pflaume's activity in Leipzig can be traced back to the construction work carried out between 1899 and 1928. He was a member of the Association of German Architects and, originally coming from historicism , increasingly turned to Art Nouveau and craftsmanship in his buildings . Pflaume lived in the house at Waldstrasse 56 until his death.

buildings

First, later modified design for the Zeppelin House, Leipzig (1910)
  • 1899: Gym of the general gymnastics club Volksmarsdorf in Leipzig, Torgauer Straße 15
  • 1899: House Gustav-Adolf-Straße 19a in Leipzig
  • around 1900: Group of apartment buildings in the Waldstrasse district in Leipzig, Feuerbachstrasse 11, Waldstrasse 52 and Waldstrasse 56
In a very similar design, Pflaume designed two houses opposite each other at the confluence of the street and a house adjoining it in Feuerbachstraße. He had his office or residence in the house at Waldstrasse 56.
  • 1904: Conversion of the manor house to the Uebigau manor
  • 1910: Gardener's house in the park of the manor house in Uebigau
  • 1911/1912: Zeppelin House in Leipzig, Nikolaistraße 27/29
  • 1912/1914: Construction management for the new construction of the Althoff department store (later: Karstadt ) in Leipzig, Petersstrasse 25/31, Neumarkt 30/36, Preußergäßchen 2/14 (design by Philipp Schaefer )
  • 1915/1916: Remodeling of the royal house in Leipzig, Markt 17
  • 1915/1916: "Drei Könige" exhibition center in Leipzig, Petersstrasse 32/34 (together with Julius Nebel and H. Stöcklein)
  • 1919: Conversion of the Ledig-Passage to the Messepalast in Leipzig, Peterstraße 38 / Schloßgasse 16-20 (destroyed in the Second World War)
  • 1922: Ez-Chaim-Synagoge in Leipzig, Otto-Schill-Straße 6–8 (formerly Apels Garten 4; destroyed in World War II)
  • 1925: Extension of the Ring Exhibition Center in Leipzig
  • 1928: Eitingon Hospital in Leipzig, Eitingonstrasse 12

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Leipzig Lexicon
  2. ^ Peter Guth, Bernd Sikora: Art Nouveau & Werkkunst. Architecture around 1900 in Leipzig. Edition Leipzig, 2005, p. 35.
  3. Detailed photo of the facade of the “Drei Könige” exhibition center by Sylvia Dorn at www.uni-leipzig.de ( Memento of the original from January 12, 2005 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , last accessed January 19, 2011 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.uni-leipzig.de
  4. Brief history of the Eitingon Hospital at www.juden-in-sachsen.de  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , last accessed January 19, 2011@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.juden-in-sachsen.de