Hans-Busso from Busse
Hans-Busso (Arthur Rudolf) von Busse (born May 7, 1930 in Opole , Upper Silesia ; † November 7, 2009 in Munich ) was a German architect and university professor .
family
Hans-Busso von Busse came from a family from Mittenwalde (17th century) and later from the Neisse district (Upper Silesia), from which the royal Prussian lieutenant colonel Eduard Busse was elevated to the Prussian nobility in 1859 , and was the son of the Ministerialrat Dr. Hans Joachim von Busse (1896–1946) and Luise von Oppell (* 1908). A distant relative was the Prussian Lieutenant General Johannes von Busse .
Life
After an apprenticeship as a carpenter (1948–1950), he studied architecture at the TH Munich . In 1952 he was accepted into the German National Academic Foundation. In 1954/1955 he made his master's degree as part of the Fulbright program at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge , USA . At the same time he worked in the office of Minoru Yamasaki. In 1956 he finally founded his own architectural office in Munich, and later also in Düsseldorf .
During his studies he became a member of the Student Singers Association (SSV) Gotia Munich in the special houses association .
Buses married on August 30, 1957 in Neheim the crafts import clerk Waltraud Kaiser (* 4 May 1933, Ne), the daughter of Heinz Kaiser and Martha Brückmann .
In 1976, von Busse was appointed professor of design and building construction at the University of Dortmund ; from 1981 to 1985 he was Dean of the Faculty of Construction. Since 1994 he has been a member of the Academy of the Arts in Berlin , since 1995 a full member of the Bavarian Academy of Fine Arts . From 1971 to 1976, Hans-Busso von Busse was President of the Association of German Architects BDA in Germany, of which he was an honorary member. During this time, he passed a declaration of principle, which made the architects aware of a special social responsibility for the environment they built.
His well-known works include church buildings, the renovation of the Lichtenfels city palace and the expansion of the Munich city archive . Buses received the highest recognition as the architect of the new Munich Airport “Franz-Josef-Strauss” when he designed the central area of passenger handling with Terminal 1, the central building, tower and parking garages. He was interested in the close interweaving of the passenger handling facilities with the landscape, with the appearance of the Erdinger Moos. By using white building materials and playing with the different lighting moods throughout the day and year, he tried to create a friendly ambience in the light-flooded terminal. His credo was "the architecture of moderation and consideration, in an architecture that knows how to combine the appropriate with the beautiful".
Hans-Busso von Busse died on November 7th, 2009 at the age of 79 after a brief serious illness in Munich.
Awards and honors
- 1965: Prize for Architecture from the City of Munich
- 1969, 1973, 1979, 1986: BDA Prize Bavaria
- 1992, 1998: BDA Prize North Rhine-Westphalia
- 1993: Fritz Schumacher Prize
- 1997: Lower Saxony BDA Prize
- 1997: Grand Prix Rhénan d'Architecture
- 2002: Cross of Merit 1st Class of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany
- 2003: Bavarian Maximilian Order for Science and Art
Works
buildings
- 1957: Dr. Riedmayer on Lake Starnberg with Hans Peter Buddeberg
- 1957: Evangelical Church, Griesheim with Hans Peter Buddeberg (within the Otto Bartning Foundation)
- 1958: Administration building, Obermenzing with Hans Peter Buddeberg
- before 1961: house on Tegernsee
- 1961–1966: Holy Spirit Church in Schaftlach
- 1962: Congress center in Coburg
- 1963: Church of the Redeemer (Erding)
- 1969–1972: Community academy of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Franconia in Rummelsberg
- 1970: Indoor swimming pool in Rheine / Westphalia
- 1970-1972: residential tower in Munich- Schwabing , which as a structural unit with the neighboring restaurant Tantris is a listed building
- 1987–1992: Passenger handling area at Munich Airport “Franz Josef Strauss”, Munich
- 1990: Extension for the Munich City Archives
- 1990: Gnadenkirche, Würzburg- Sanderau
- 1991: Vocational training center for the blind and visually impaired, Soest
- 1992: City Palace Event Center, Lichtenfels
- 1995: Cultural Center, Witten
- 1996: Chapel in Frenswegen Monastery
Fonts
- Perceptions. Viewpoints on architecture. Karl Krämer, Stuttgart / Zurich 1990, ISBN 3-7828-1606-4 .
- Thoughts on space, ways to form. Karl Krämer, Stuttgart / Zurich 1997, ISBN 3-7828-1611-0 .
- (together with Nils V. Waubke and Rudolf Grimme): Atlas Flache Dächer. Usable areas. Birkhauser Verlag, Basel et al. 2000, ISBN 3-7643-6304-5 .
- Architecture ad maiorem Dei gloriam. Celebration room, art, liturgy. In: Helmut Braun, Hans-Peter Hübner (eds.): Protestant church building in Bavaria since 1945. Deutscher Kunstverlag, Berlin / Munich 2010, ISBN 978-3-422-06953-4 , pp. 70–81.
- Eva-Maria Barkhofen (Ed.): Hans Busso from Busse. Architecture, lived standpoints. ( Anthology ) Akademie der Künste, Berlin 2011, ISBN 978-3-88331-170-8 .
Individual evidence
- ^ Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels , Adelslexikon Volume II, Volume 58 of the complete series, CA Starke Verlag, Limburg (Lahn) 1974, ISSN 0435-2408
- ↑ a b c d e https://www.spiegel.de/spiegel/print/d-67768155.html
- ^ Association of Alter SVer: Address book and Vademecum. Ludwigshafen am Rhein 1959, p. 31.
- ^ Genealogical handbook of the nobility , noble houses B Volume XVI, page 130, volume 86 of the complete series, CA Starke Verlag, Limburg (Lahn) 1985, ISSN 0435-2408
- ↑ Hans Busso von Busse, Heinz Blees, Roland Büch, Nils Kampmann: The human measure. Idea and concept of the Munich airport - central area of passenger handling in Hildebrand, Wallbaum [ed.]: The Munich airport. A work of the century. Munich: Leo-Verlag 1992, Volume 1: Concept.
- ↑ German construction newspaper
- ↑ mediaTUM - media and publication server. Retrieved August 25, 2020 .
- ↑ mediaTUM - media and publication server. Retrieved August 25, 2020 .
- ↑ Building + Living . Issue 15/1961 ( digitized version )
- ↑ Building + Living . Issue 27/1973 ( digitized version )
- ↑ Building + Living . Issue 25/1971 ( digitized version )
- ↑ Futuristic Concrete. In: www.sueddeutsche.de. February 1, 2019, accessed March 30, 2019 .
Web links
- Literature by and about Hans-Busso von Busse in the catalog of the German National Library
- Hans-Busso from Busse. In: arch INFORM .
- Biography in the artist database
- "Maximilian Order for the architect Hans-Busso von Busse"
- Hans Busso from the Busse archive in the archive of the Academy of Arts, Berlin
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Busse, Hans-Busso from |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Busse, Hans-Busso Arthur Rudolf von |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German architect and university professor |
DATE OF BIRTH | May 7, 1930 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Opole |
DATE OF DEATH | November 7, 2009 |
Place of death | Munich |