Julius-Ambrosius-Hülße-Gymnasium
Julius-Ambrosius-Hülße-Gymnasium | |
---|---|
type of school | high school |
founding | 1929 |
address |
Hülßestrasse 16 |
place | Dresden |
country | Saxony |
Country | Germany |
Coordinates | 51 ° 0 '45 " N , 13 ° 47' 29" E |
carrier | City of Dresden |
student | 907 |
management | Cornelia Hiller |
Website | http://www.huelsse-gym.de |
The Julius-Ambrosius-Hülße-Gymnasium is a grammar school in Dresden . The school building, built in 1929, is located at Hülßestrasse 16 in the Prohlis district on the border with Reick .
The school was named in 1994 after the mathematician, technician and reform pedagogue Julius Ambrosius Hülße , who in 1850 was the second director of the Königlich-Technische Bildungsanstalt Sachsen , the forerunner of the TU Dresden , and who gave the name to Hülßestrasse. The school has existed - initially as a Dresden-Reick grammar school - since 1992.
The school's motto is: “JAH - we learn here!”. The headmistress is Cornelia Hiller.
A scientific, a linguistic and an artistic profile are offered. French, Russian or Spanish are offered as a second foreign language, and Latin is offered as a third foreign language.
building
The building designed by Paul Wolf , opened in 1929 as the most modern school building in Europe and now a listed building at Hülßestrasse 16, was built on a U-shaped floor plan open to the north, with Paul Wolf representing a "very sober style oriented towards the New Objectivity of the Bauhaus “Was true. The building is considered an example of the architecture of New Building and the “Triumph of New Objectivity ”. The building has three floors and consists of three buildings, a central and two side buildings. The central building is perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of the residential buildings along Tornaer Straße . This is flanked by two side buildings. In the western side building, the former gymnasiums, one above the other, were converted after the new three-field sports hall was completed parallel to Tornaer Strasse. Analogous to the floors, new storeys were moved into the gymnasiums and converted into classrooms. In addition, a passenger elevator with an audio-active system for the hearing impaired was set up. In addition, the dining room located in the base was expanded, to which the own cafeteria is attached. Horizontal ribbon windows structure the facade, while the staircase and the main entrance are structured by vertical ribbon windows. Sports fields and green spaces define the area around the school building.
The corners of the building at the rear were designed like towers with open loggias. The structural implementation of the "then revolutionary city theories of the light-air-sun principle" was clearly visible on the building of the Dresden grammar school, similar to the children's clinic in Dresden-Johannstadt . In each of these towers there were three loggias, one on top of the other, which served as “open-air classrooms”.
Profiles
From the 8th grade it is possible to choose between the profiles Natural Science Profile (NaWi), Artistic Profile (KüPro) or the 3rd foreign language Latin.
literature
- Gilbert Lupfer, Bernhard Sterra and Martin Wörner (eds.): Architecture guide Dresden . Dietrich Reimer Verlag, Berlin 1997, ISBN 3-496-01179-3 .
- Holger Gantz: 100 buildings in Dresden: A guide to buildings of historical and architectural importance . Schnell and Steiner, Regensburg 1997, ISBN 3-7954-1111-4 .
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ Julius-Ambrosius-Hülße-Gymnasium. (PDF; 6.2 MB) In: Update school network planning of the state capital Dresden - Part 2: Tables and overviews. State capital Dresden, August 8, 2017, p. 112 , accessed on September 16, 2017 .
- ↑ a b http://www.sn.schule.de/~huelsse/data/Schulprogramm%20Stand%20Feb%202018.pdf School program as of February 2018. Accessed on May 12, 2018.
- ↑ School flyer for the open day on February 4, 2015
- ↑ Cultural monument: Building Hülßestrasse 16 , Dresden themed city map
- ↑ Gantz, p. 79 No. 82 (Julius-Ambrosius-Hülße-Gymnasium, Hülßestraße 16, architect: Paul Wolff, 1929)
- ↑ Lupfer et al., Object no. 266 (Julius-Ambrosius-Hülße-Gymnasium, Hülßestraße 16, 1929, Paul Wolf)
- ↑ Thomas Kunchev: Julius Ambrosius-Hülße High School in Dresden Reick - New Objectivity and new content. In: das-neue-dresden.de. Retrieved March 18, 2018 .
- ↑ Thomas Kantschew: Medical Academy (extensions) - departure into modernity. In: das-neue-dresden.de. Retrieved March 18, 2018 .