Heinle, Wischer and Partner

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Heinle, Wischer and Partner
Freie Architekten GbR

logo
legal form GbR
founding 1962
Seat
management Till Behnke
Hanno Chef-Hendriks
Alexander Gyalokay
Thomas Heinle
Markus Kill
Jens Krauße
Christian Pelzeter
Edzard Schultz
Number of employees More than 300
Branch architecture
Website heinlewischerpartner.de
Status: February 2020

Heinle, Wischer und Partner Freie Architekten , also known as HWP for short , is an international architecture firm founded in 1962 by Erwin Heinle and Robert Wischer . Eight partners and more than 300 employees work at six locations in Germany and Poland (as of 2020). The most famous works include the Olympic Village in Munich and the new building of the Topography of Terror Foundation in Berlin .

History and organization

Erwin Heinle and Robert Wischer met while studying at the Technical University of Stuttgart . They worked together in the planning of the first college building at this university, both as employees in the office of Professors Rolf Gutbier (1903–1992), Curt Siegel (1911–2004) and Günter Wilhelm (1908–2004). In 1962 they worked together to plan the German Cancer Research Center in Heidelberg . Erwin Heinle brought his experience from the Stuttgart TV tower and from the Baden-Württemberg state parliament , Robert Wischer his experience in hospital construction.

In 1962 the partnership of the independent architects Heinle and Wischer was established, which developed into a larger partnership from 1969 onwards.

In 1967, the office came third in the national architectural competition for the XX. 1972 Olympic Games . In 1968 it received the planning contract for the Olympic Village in Munich. After criticizing the lack of another public competition for the Olympic village, Heinle and Wischer carried out an internal office competition in the form of a multi-stage optimization , which was used for the first time in architecture on this scale.

In addition to the founding office in Stuttgart, since the late 1980s other locations have been established in Berlin (1989), Cologne (1991), Dresden (1993), Breslau (2008) and Erlangen (2018).

The office is organized as a society under civil law . Till Behnke, Hanno Chef-Hendriks, Alexander Gyalokay, Thomas Heinle, Markus Kill, Jens Krauße, Christian Pelzeter and Edzard Schultz are personally liable partners . Subsidiaries are Heinle, Wischer Gesellschaft für Generalplanung mbH (founded in 1999, seat : Stuttgart) and Heinle, Wischer und Partner Architekci Sp. Z oo in Poland (founded in 2008).

Fields of work

The company has been active in a wide range of areas since it was founded. This includes the planning and implementation of buildings for education and research, culture, health, industry , administration and living, as well as building in existing buildings and target and development planning . The planning work, for example for the Federal Ministry of Education and Research or the Center for Operative Medicine II at the Düsseldorf University Hospital, was carried out integrally ; those for example at the Görlitz customs office or in a new building for Viega BIM-supported . The architecture office also implements general planning projects at home and abroad. Here it can fall back on Heinle, Wischer Gesellschaft für Generalplanung mbH . As of 2020, the law firm is included in national and international rankings ( Baunetz , Sector Review ).

Awards (selection)

The architecture firm has received a number of prizes, awards and recognitions. This includes:

  • 2019, Simulation Center of the Medical University of Wroclaw : Architecture Prize Piękny Wrocław - Beautiful Wroclaw
  • 2017, Claudius-Höfe, Bochum : NRW State Prize 2017 for architecture, housing and urban development
  • 2017, Landhaus Am Rupenhorn in Berlin: Federal Prize for Crafts in Monument Preservation
  • 2016, Claudius-Höfe, Bochum: German builder award
  • 2015, Federal Ministry of Education and Research , Berlin: Innovation Prize Public Private Partnership PPP 2012, administrative building category
  • 2011, German Cancer Research Center Heidelberg, new conception and refurbishment of high-rise buildings and documentation: Hugo Häring award
  • 2010, giraffe and zebra enclosure in the Dresden Zoological Garden : BDA Prize Saxony 2010
  • 2008, Dresden Zoological Garden, new building forage and hay barn : Erlweinpreis
  • 2008, Center for Dentistry, Oral and Maxillofacial Medicine at the Ernst-Moritz-Arndt University of Greifswald : Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania State Building Prize
  • 2006, German Medical Association Berlin, new office building in the KPM district Berlin-Charlottenburg : Hypo Real Estate architecture prize for exemplary commercial buildings
  • 2004, Bildungswerk der Sächsischen Wirtschaft, Dresden, construction of a new office and service center: German facade prize
  • 2004 and 2003, dvg 2000, Finanz Informatik , Hanover , new administration building: Lower Saxony State Prize for Architecture and Architecture and Technology Award ( European Prize for Architecture and Technology )
  • 2003, Dresden- Laubegast housing estate : German builder award
  • 2002, Bosch -Areal Stuttgart: Award for good buildings by the BDA regional association Baden-Württemberg
  • 2001, city center Senftenberg , town hall, head office of the Sparkasse Niederlausitz , residential and commercial building: State building price Brandenburg
  • 2000, Landhaus Am Rupenhorn, Berlin: Ferdinand von Quast Medal
  • 1999, city center Senftenberg, town hall, headquarters of the Sparkasse Niederlausitz, residential and commercial building: Brandenburg Architecture Prize
  • 1991, Robert Bosch GmbH factory in Reutlingen - Kusterdingen , BDA Prize Industry in the Landscape
  • 1979, new building of the Bundeswehr Hospital Ulm : European Steel Prize
  • 1975, Langenau waterworks : BDA Prize for Industry in the Landscape
  • 1968, ICI nylon fiber factories, Östringen : BDA Prize Industry in the Landscape

Architectural monuments

Some buildings are now monuments :

Fonts

  • New construction of the MAIN research center. Materials, Architecture and Integration of Nanomembranes . Chemnitz University of Technology. Heinle, Wischer und Partner Freie Architekten GbR, Dresden 2019, ISBN 978-3-00-062330-1 .
  • Erwin Heinle Best of. Between high mountains and the Mediterranean. An exhibition by the architectural office Heinle, Wischer und Partner Freie Architekten in the State Academy of Fine Arts Stuttgart from September 8 to 16, 2017 . Heinle, Wischer and Partner Freie Architekten GbR, Berlin 2018.
  • Rethink the laboratory. Redesign of the German Cancer Research Center Heidelberg . Heinle, Wischer and Partner Freie Architekten GbR, Berlin 2013. ISBN 978-3-00-044499-9 .
  • 50 years unmistakable , Heinle, Wischer und Partner Freie Architekten GbR, Berlin 2012, ISBN 978-3-00-040270-8 .
  • Zoos, building for animals. Zoos, building for animals . Heinle, Wischer and Partner Freie Architekten GbR, Berlin 2009. ISBN 978-3-00-028259-1 .
  • Robert Wischer: From unique to urban building block. Thoughts on the development of the hospital . Heinle, Wischer and Partner Freie Architekten GbR, Berlin 2008, ISBN 978-3-00-024338-7 .
  • India Healthcare. International competition. Six all India institutes of medical sciences like Apex Health Care Institutes . Heinle, Wischer and Partner Freie Architekten GbR, Berlin 2007. ISBN 978-3-00-023570-2 .
  • OR of the future. Brandenburg Municipal Hospital . Heinle, Wischer and Partner Freie Architekten GbR, Berlin 2007, ISBN 978-3-00-023569-6 .
  • Robert Wischer, Hans-Ulrich Riethmüller: Hospital open to the future. A dialogue between medicine and architecture. Facts, guidelines, building blocks. Springer, Vienna 2007, ISBN 978-3-211-25894-1 .
  • Erwin Heinle, Thomas Heinle: Building for Research and Teaching. Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt, Stuttgart 2001, ISBN 3-421-03296-3 .
  • Erwin Heinle, Jörg Schlaich : Domes of all times - of all cultures. Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt, Stuttgart 1996, ISBN 3-421-03062-6 .
  • Erwin Heinle, Fritz Leonhard: Towers of all times - of all cultures. Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt, Stuttgart 1988, ISBN 3-421-02931-8 .
  • Robert Wischer, Hille Rau: The Friesen concept for the hospital and for the healthcare of tomorrow . Karl Krämer Verlag, Stuttgart 1988, ISBN 3-7828-4001-1 .
  • Robert Wischer, Wolfram Fuchs (Ed.): H VEN LC. Le Corbusier's hospital project for Venice . Dietrich Reimer, Berlin 1985, ISBN 3-496-01027-4 .
  • Robert Wischer, Hille Rau: Single or multiple bed rooms in an acute hospital. Analyzes of their suitability. Karl Krämer Verlag, Stuttgart 1984, ISBN 3-7828-1483-5 .
  • Heinle, Wischer and Partner Free Architects (ed.): A city to live. The Olympic Village of Munich. With an insert and booklet in English: A Town for Living in The Olympic Village Munich . With contributions by Erwin Heinle, Gert A. Teuffel, Manfred Sack , Willi Daume . Heinrich Müller Verlag, Freudenstadt 1980, p. 26 f, ISBN 3-88366-040-X .
  • Erwin Heinle, Max Bächer : Building in exposed concrete. Shown on 80 buildings at home and abroad. With information for planning and execution . J. Hoffmann. Stuttgart 1966.

Web links

Commons : Heinle, Wischer und Partner  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Imprint of the office website (accessed on February 4, 2020).
  2. Information according to the office website (accessed September 24, 2019).
  3. See the project database of the office , there the category "City". Retrieved March 7, 2020.
  4. a b Heinle, Wischer und Partner Freie Architekten: For the 50th anniversary 1962–2012 , Berlin 2012, p. 7, ISBN 978-3-00-040270-8 .
  5. See the biographical information in Robert Wischer: Foreword . In: Architecture competitions (aw). International quarterly. 72 Building for sick, handicapped and old people. Building for Sick, Handicapped and Old People . With contributions by Wolfgang Brudes, Folker Frank, Roland Lagally, Herbert Philipp Schmitz, Martin Wagner, Robert Wischer (December 1972). Karl Krämer Verlag, Stuttgart 1972, pp. II – III.
  6. For the architect and university professor G. Wilhelm, see the information in the Southwest German Archive for Architecture and Civil Engineering , accessed on February 4, 2020. Furthermore, Ingeborg flag : Architect portrait Günter Wilhelm. In: The Architect (9/1986). Retrieved February 4, 2020 .
  7. a b Company information compact (Crefonummer 7330150008) on the company, accessed in the Creditreform database on July 10, 2019.
  8. a b Heinle, Wischer und Partner Freie Architekten: For the 50th anniversary 1962–2012 , Berlin 2012, p. 111, ISBN 978-3-00-040270-8 .
  9. ^ Olympic landscape conceived together. Visiting the winners - competitions as daily bread . In: Stuttgarter Nachrichten , October 16, 1967.
  10. Christiane Thalgott : The Olympic Village Munich ... model city for the future . In: Natalie Heger: The Olympic Village Munich. Planning experiment and model city of modernity . Reimer, Berlin 2014, pp. 7–9, here p. 7, ISBN 978-3-496-01483-6 .
  11. State capital Munich. Department for Urban Planning and Building Regulations: Development Planning Olympiapark 2018. Collection of materials and basic workshop , p. 8, accessed on March 23, 2020.
  12. a b Manfred Sack: The paint is off . In: Heinle, Wischer and Partner Free Architects (ed.): A city to live. The Olympic Village of Munich . With an insert and booklet in English: A Town for Living in The Olympic Village Munich . With contributions by Erwin Heinle, Gert A. Teuffel, Manfred Sack, Willi Daume. Heinrich Müller Verlag, Freudenstadt 1980, p. 26 f, ISBN 3-88366-040-X .
  13. Comprehensive on this Natalie Heger: The Olympic Village Munich. Planning experiment and model city of modernity . Reimer, Berlin 2014, especially pp. 113-124, ISBN 978-3-496-01483-6 . See also Erwin Heinle, Murray Church, Hilmar Lohss, Hans Dehlinger : The Olympic Village in Munich . In: architecture competitions , Volume S Buildings of the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich. Buildings for the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich , January 1969.
  14. Simone Egger: "Munich is becoming more modern". City and atmosphere in the long 1960s . Transcript, Bielefeld 2013, p. 378, ISBN 978-3-8376-2282-9 .
  15. Heinle, Wischer und Partner Freie Architekten: For the 50th anniversary 1962–2012 , Berlin 2012, p. 79, ISBN 978-3-00-040270-8 .
  16. Information about the company in the North Data database , accessed February 4, 2020.
  17. See the information in the National Court Register of Poland, accessed on February 4, 2020.
  18. See the project database on the company website. Retrieved February 4, 2020.
  19. Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation, Building and Nuclear Safety : Gold. Sustainable building (Ministry's document), accessed on March 28, 2020.
  20. ^ Robert Mehl: Intersection-free hospital ZOM II, Düsseldorf. In: Deutsche Bauzeitung , 07-2017. Retrieved February 4, 2020 .
  21. Digital radio and border protection: order for the new building of the Görlitz customs office. In: heinlewischerpartner.de. November 21, 2019, accessed on February 4, 2020 (press release from the architectural office).
  22. Matthias Funk: BIM - We are making progress! A report from the seminar center Viega, Attendorn. In: 2820184 Landschaftsarchitekten (4-2018). Retrieved March 28, 2020 .
  23. For general planning during construction see Wolfgang Rösel , Antonius Busch: AVA-Handbuch. Tendering - awarding - accounting . 5th, completely revised edition. Vieweg, Wiesbaden 2003, p. 84 , ISBN 978-3-528-11693-4 .
  24. See for example “This is actually a good building” . In: Immobilien Zeitung , November 22, 2012. Also the archive of the project database , search for "General planning".
  25. Top100 list from baunetz.de . Retrieved February 4, 2020.
  26. ^ The top 50 european architectural groups . In: Sector Review , December 2018 , p. 67. Retrieved February 4, 2020.
  27. a b See the corresponding list on the website german-architects.com , accessed on February 4, 2020.
  28. ^ Special price renovation for the simulation center of the Medical University of Wroclaw. In: bba-online.de. July 16, 2019, accessed February 4, 2020 .
  29. ^ Claudius-Höfe awarded with architecture prize. In: Westdeutsche Allgemeine Zeitung . October 13, 2017, accessed February 4, 2020 .
  30. Award ceremony 2017. In: berlin.de. Retrieved February 4, 2020 .
  31. ^ Judgment of the BDA jury on this integrative multi-generation housing project , accessed on March 28, 2020.
  32. BAM Germany : Federal Ministry for Education and Research. In: bam-projekte.de. Retrieved March 30, 2020 .
  33. Marc Nagel: New conception and renovation of the German Cancer Research Center in Heidelberg . In: bba Bau - Beratung - Architektur , 2011, issue 9.
  34. As of today, all contributions to the BDA Architecture Prize Saxony can be seen in the Picture Museum . In: Leipziger Volkszeitung , March 19, 2010.
  35. Erlwein Prize 2008. Jury praises MS residential complex and zoo building . In: Leipziger Volkszeitung , September 5, 2008.
  36. State building price for a new dentistry center . In: Nordkurier , September 5, 2008.
  37. ^ Hypo Real Estate Foundation: Hypo Real Estate Architecture Prize 2006 for exemplary commercial buildings. In: Deutsche Pfandbriefbank (website). Retrieved March 28, 2020 .
  38. German Facade Prize 2004 . In: bba Bau - Beratung - Architektur , 2004, issue 5.
  39. Lower Saxony Ministry for Social Affairs, Women, Family and Health (Ed.): Lower Saxony State Prize for Architecture 2004. Commercial architecture - investment for urban development and corporate success. In: studylibde.com. January 2005, accessed March 28, 2020 .
  40. Winner of the Architecture & Technology Award chosen. In: baulinks.de. March 29, 2003, accessed March 28, 2020 .
  41. ^ Bernd Hempelmann: Building prices: Awards for Dresden architects . In: Dresdner Latest News , October 13, 2003.
  42. Baden-Württemberg Chamber of Architects : Bosch-Areal - Breitscheid- / Seiden- / Forststraße. In: akbw.de. Retrieved March 28, 2020 .
  43. ^ Ralf Krüger: The steepest roof in the GDR. City history. An expedition leads behind closed doors and up the towers of Senftenberg . In: Sächsische Zeitung , August 7, 2006.
  44. ^ Rainer Stache: Ferdinand von Quast medals worthy of commitment. Privately committed to the monument . In: Berliner Morgenpost , November 30, 2000.
  45. ^ Jury: Ensemble successful. Brandenburg Architecture Prize 1999 for the new town hall / savings bank building . In: Lausitzer Rundschau , June 29, 1999.
  46. Thomas Heinle, Thomas Heinle: Building for Research and Teaching. Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt, Stuttgart 2001, pp. 206 f, ISBN 3-421-03296-3 .
  47. ^ Karlheinz Schmiedel: Construction and shape. A quarter of a century of steel construction architecture , Ernst & Sohn Verlag, Berlin 1994, p. 33, ISBN 978-3-433-02461-4 .
  48. a b Heinle, Erwin . In: Who is who? The German Who's Who, Federal Republic of Germany . Vol. XL (2001/02), Schmidt-Römhild, Lübeck 2001, p. 551, ISBN 3-7950-2032-8 .
  49. Sustainable architecture: University of the Federal Armed Forces included in the Hamburg monument list. In: heinlewischerpartner.de. November 6, 2017, accessed on September 26, 2019 (press release from the architects' office).
  50. ^ Authority for Culture and Media of the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg : List of monuments according to § 6 Paragraph 1 Hamburg Monument Protection Act of April 5, 2013 , (HmbGVBl p. 142) As of July 8, 2019, p. 2285.
  51. See the project description on the website of the architectural office, accessed on September 30, 2019.
  52. ^ Letter of motivation from the Stuttgart Regional Council (2010).
  53. ^ A b Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation : Munich. Architectural monuments. Retrieved on March 28, 2020 (extract from the list of architectural monuments, as of March 28, 2020).
  54. ^ State capital Munich: Monument protection. In: muenchen.de. Retrieved March 28, 2020 .
  55. Thomas Heinle, Thomas Heinle: Building for Research and Teaching. Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt, Stuttgart 2001, p. 111, ISBN 3-421-03296-3 .
  56. ^ A b State capital Stuttgart: List of cultural monuments. Immovable architectural and art monuments. April 25, 2008, accessed March 28, 2020 .
  57. Awards. In: fernsehturm-stuttgart.de. Retrieved March 28, 2020 .
  58. State Parliament of Baden-Württemberg: State Parliament Mirror , 32nd volume (2018) , p. 18.