Hanebeck (construction company)

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The construction company Hanebeck mbH was a German construction company . It went back to a construction business founded in 1874 and existed until 1995. The company's headquarters were in Dortmund , with branches temporarily in Braunschweig and Frankfurt am Main . As a specialty were industrial, water and bridge construction , pile driving and securing of historic buildings.

history

The master carpenter Karl Hanebeck started his own business in Dortmund in September 1874. The company soon specialized in industrial, hydraulic and bridge construction as well as pile driving; it was instrumental in the construction of the Dortmund harbor in the 1890s . When Karl Hanebeck died in 1910 at the age of 59, his three sons, civil engineer August Hanebeck , graduate engineer Wilhelm Hanebeck and graduate businessman Hugo Hanebeck , continued the company. In addition to the technically demanding construction tasks in the field of civil engineering and structural engineering, the company , which continues to be run under the Karl Hanebeck company, also maintained the original areas of activity in the carpentry trade and woodworking.

By the end of World War II , around 60% of the equipment fleet was destroyed or lost, but the company soon recovered from these losses during the period of reconstruction and the economic miracle . Since the 1950s, one of the areas of activity of the company, now trading as Baugesellschaft Hanebeck mbH , has also included securing and renovating historic buildings. Under the management of Bernhard von Glisczynski , the company expanded rapidly, including with branches in Braunschweig and Frankfurt am Main. After the death of Hugo and August Hanebeck in 1956, Carl August Hanebeck , the son of August Hanebeck, joined the company. When Wilhelm Hanebeck died in 1966, Carl August Hanebeck became the sole owner of the company, which existed until 1995.

Buildings

Industrial buildings
bridges
  • around 1927: Road bridge over the Weser near Vlotho
  • 1954: Uentrop road bridge
  • 1957–1958, 1961–1962: Motorway bridge over the Volme and the federal road 54 in Hagen
  • 1972–1976: Canal bridge in Hamm- Schmehausen
  • 1960: Warendorfer Strasse bridge over the Dortmund-Ems Canal in Münster
  • 1977–1984: Altendorfer Straße bridge in Marl
  • 1978–1979: Railway bridge over the Ruhr in Neheim
  • 1983–1989: Bridge in Duisburg-Wedau
Hydraulic engineering and pile driving
  • 1920–1921: Westhofen hydropower plant (Ruhr)
  • 1951: Ruhrwehr Dahlhausen
  • 1953: Ground water tank in Soest
  • 1955–1956: Port of the Haus Aden colliery in Bergkamen
  • 1955–1956: Lippewehr Heessen
  • 1955–1956: Emswehr Hanekenfähr near Lingen
  • 1957-1958: New for the power plant joint venture of Hattingen the VEW
  • 1958–1960: Relocation of the Volme
  • 1958–1964: Herringen pumping station
  • 1960: new Henrichenburg ship lift
  • 1963–1979: Extension buildings for the port of Dortmund
  • 1963–1964: Westfaliastraße drainage channel in Dortmund
  • 1964–1967, 1987–1988: Wickede weir system (Ruhr)
  • 1970–1973: Wickede pumping station (Ruhr)
  • 1971–1972: Emswehr Warendorf
  • 1972: New construction of the Oelbachtal sewage treatment plant in Querenburg
  • 1975–1981: Pump stations in Gelsenkirchen
  • 1985–1988: Schwitten Ruhr weir
  • 1989–1992: Hamm pumping station
Buildings
Securing historical buildings
  • Churches in Bochold, Brockhagen, Bünde, Cappel, Cappenberg, Dortmund (Eichlinghofen, Kirchderne, Kirchlinde), Freckenhorst, Georgsmarienhütte, Gütersloh, Helpup, Herten-Westerholt, Höxter, Langenhorst, Lemgo, Lette, Lünern, Marienfeld, Meggen, Mesum, Münster , Neubeckum, Neuenkirchen, Niederwenigern, Oberaden, Opherdicke, Recklinghausen, Rheine, Vreden, Warendorf, Wattenscheid, Wöbbel and others (in the years 1958–1986)
  • Castles in Bodelschwingh, Herten, Lenhausen, Moyland, Oberwerries, Ravensberg, Tatenhausen (in the years 1959–1988)
  • Other structures: Torhaus Brünninghausen (1957–1959), Wenge House (1966–1969), Lüdinghausen Castle (1969–1972), Martfeld House in Schwelm (1971–1980), chimney of the Nachtigall colliery in Bommern (1976–1980), house Langendreer (1977–1980)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Dortmund address book for the year 1894. Dortmund 1894, p. 127. (with job details carpenter and first name spelling Karl )
  2. cf. various advertisements in Dortmund address books from the 1920s