Heinrich Flügel (architect)

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Heinrich Flügel (born February 27, 1849 in Flensburg , † December 8, 1930 in Bremen ) was a German architect and Bremen construction officer .

biography

After studying architecture in 1874, Flügel became a building inspector in the building construction department (later building inspection) of the building deputation in Bremen. During this time he was involved in the planning of a large number of designs, of good quality and mostly in the neo-Gothic style .

The buildings include the school on Langemarckstraße in Neustadt , the school on Lessingstraße , the former Elisabethschule in Walle (now a residential building) from 1896 and the school on Hamburger Straße and the Pröven (a residential unit) on Rembertistraße, the old one Surgery from the Bremen-Mitte Clinic on Sankt-Jürgen-Strasse in the eastern suburb , the St. Joseph Stift on Schwachhauser Heerstrasse (1878–1881) and the old slaughterhouse. At the end of the 1880s he was appointed building officer. Together with senior building director Ludwig Franzius and Beermann, he planned and built the Übersee-Museum in Bremen, which is located directly at the main train station, in the historicist style from 1893 to 1896 .

In 1899 he was dismissed from the civil service on the charge that he had caused irregularities in the accounting of the buildings by using other building budgets in the event of budget overruns. Wing now worked as an independent, freelance architect and built churches in the Grand Duchy of Oldenburg and in Bremerhaven , among other things . The St. Viktor Church in Damme in the district of Vechta - a hall church in neo-Gothic style - was built according to his plans between 1904 and 1906. The three-aisled neo - Gothic Church of the Sacred Heart of Jesus in Bremerhaven- Geestemünde was built from 1910 to 1911 according to his plans.

His son Heinrich Flügel (1891–1940) was the managing director of the Weserbund .

Works

Municipal museum for natural, ethnological and commercial studies, today overseas museum
Teachers' seminar on Hamburger Strasse, today grammar school on Hamburger Strasse
Elementary school and technical center on Kleine Allee (today Langemarckstraße)
St. Joseph Hospital Bremerhaven
  • 1875–1877: School on Lessingstrasse
  • 1876–1878: St.-Remberti-Stift and Pröven
  • 1878–1879: Elementary school on the Doventhorsdeich
  • 1879–1882: slaughterhouse and cattle market at the main train station
  • 1880: St. Joseph-Stift , Bremen
  • 1880–1881: School, Mittelbüren 34-34A, Bremen
  • 1882–1883: Elementary school (cathedral school) on Marktstrasse (destroyed)
  • 1883–1885: Elementary school on Calvinstrasse (destroyed)
  • 1884–1885: Free School on the Black Sea
  • 1884–1886: St. Martini primary school (destroyed)
  • 1886: Expansion of the parish school St. Remberti, Bremen
  • 1887–1888: Free school on Grossenstrasse, rear annex
  • 1888–1889: Girls' elementary school on Talstrasse (destroyed)
  • 1888–1889: Elementary school on Thalstrasse
  • 1888–1890: Surgical Hospital St.-Jürgen-Straße , Bremen
  • 1891–1896: City Museum for Natural, Ethnic and Commercial Studies Bremen (with Ludwig Beermann)
  • 1891: Contagion house for infectious diseases
  • 1891: Oslebshausen prison , preacher's house and penal institution
  • 1891–1892: Catholic parish church of St. Gertrud in Lohne, extension of the choir
  • 1891–1894: Elementary school on Kleine Allee and the technical center in the south wing ( school on Langemarckstraße ), Bremen
  • 1892: Free school on Kantstrasse
  • 1895–1896: School and Free School, Elisabethstrasse 135, Bremen
  • 1896–1897: Hamburger Straße teacher training college , Bremen
  • 1896–1897: Extension of Kahrweg Asylum, Nordstrasse (destroyed)
  • 1897: Reconstruction of the commercial bank on Kaiserstrasse (built by Friedrich Wilhelm Rauschenberg ) for the commercial museum (together with Ludwig Beermann)
  • 1897: Conversion of the premises of the city library in the former Katharinenkloster for the secondary school
  • 1898–1900: Catholic Church of St. Mary's Sorrowful Mother , Flensburg
  • 1901–1904: St. Joseph's Catholic Hospital, Wiener Straße 1 in Bremerhaven
  • 1901–1902: Catholic parish church St. Peter in Wildeshausen, erection of the west tower
  • 1901–1903: St. Marien Catholic parish church in Delmenhorst, destroyed in 1943, rebuilt in 1944–1949
  • 1904: Catholic parish church of St. Marien in Bevern
  • 1904–1906: Catholic parish church St. Viktor in Damme
  • 1908–1910: Catholic parish church St. Gorgonius in Goldenstedt (Vechta district)
  • 1908–1910: Catholic parish church St. Marien in Friesoythe
  • 1911: Catholic Herz-Jesu-Kirche , Buchstrasse 54 in Bremerhaven-Geestemünde
  • 1913: Catholic branch church St. Heinrich in Goldenstedt-Ellenstedt
  • 1913: Catholic parish church St. Bonifatius in Neuenkirchen, erection of the high altar

literature

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Gramatzki, Rolf: Heinrich Flügel and the state building construction in Bremen in the last quarter of the 19th century . In: Bremisches Jahrbuch . tape 85 , 2006, pp. 176-207 .
  2. Bremen and its buildings 1900, p. 258
  3. Stein, Rudolf: Das St. Rembertistift Stein, Rudolf: Classicism and Romanticism in the Architecture of Bremen I, 1964, 122–126
  4. Bremen and its buildings 1900, p. 258
  5. Bremen and its buildings 1900, pp. 564–567, fig. 458–464
  6. Bremen and its buildings 1900, pp. 340–341, Fig. 337
  7. ^ Hägermann, Johann: Heimatbuch des Bremen Werderlandes, Bremen 1951, 163 f.
  8. Bremen and its buildings 1900, p. 258
  9. Bremen and its buildings 1900, p. 259, Fig. 242
  10. Bremen and its buildings 1900, p. 259
  11. Bremen and its buildings 1900, p. 259
  12. Gramatzki, Rolf: Bauen und Bildung, 2002, p. 157
  13. Bremen and its buildings 1900, p. 258
  14. Bremen and its buildings 1900, p. 257
  15. Bremen and its buildings 1900, p. 259
  16. Bremen and its buildings 1900, Fig. 329–332, 334–336,338
  17. Bremen and its buildings 1900, pp. 300–304, fig. 281–286
  18. Bremen and its buildings 1900, p. 338
  19. Bremen and its buildings 1900, p. 260, Fig. 244–245
  20. Bremen and its buildings 1900, p. 259
  21. Bremen and its buildings 1900, p. 260, Fig. 243
  22. ^ Aschenbeck, Nils: Neo-Gothic in Bremen. The school building on Hamburger Strasse, 1998
  23. Bremen and its buildings 1900, pp. 260–261, Figs. 246–247
  24. Bremen and its buildings 1900, p. 341
  25. Bremen and its buildings 1900, pp. 297–299
  26. Bremen and its buildings 1900, p. 254
  27. Golden Jubilee St. Josephs Hospital, Provinzial-Zeitung No. 116, May 19, 1925
  28. Esders, Johannes, Das St. Josephs-Hospital, in: Nordwestdeutsche Zeitung 33 (1927) 100, p. 18 (anniversary edition)
  29. Wessels, Bernhard: The Catholic Mission Bremerhaven. History of the Catholic Church on the Unterweser 1850 to 1911, Bremerhaven 2007