Heinrich Hauberrisser

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Heinrich Hauberrisser (born June 27, 1872 in Munich ; † July 7, 1945 in Regensburg ) was a German architect .

Life

Heinrich Hauberrisser was born on June 27, 1872 in Munich as the third child of the renowned architect Georg von Hauberrisser and his wife Maria, nee. Wessely born. In his youth he was strongly influenced by his father's architectural work. In 1890 he took up an apprenticeship at the building trade school in Munich , which he completed with the “ability to independently practice the building trade”. He continued his training in his father's construction office until 1900, shaped by his father's neo-Gothic architecture. In 1900 he took part in the architecture office of his former classmate Joseph Koch founded there in Regensburg in 1897 . In April 1904 there was a falling out between the two partners and from then on they appeared as competing applicants for construction projects. On July 1, 1904, Hauberrisser opened his own architectural office in Regensburg in the house at Krebsgasse 2, which he owned from 1904 to 1920. In 1905 he was given the right to live in Regensburg. In 1913 he was awarded the Knight's Cross of the Papal Order of the Holy Grave in recognition of his services to church building . The First World War meant a serious turning point in his life and work. It was not until 1920 that he could resume his work as an architect with the construction of the St.

Württembergstrasse 10 Regensburg

His house, which he lived in together with his wife Eleonore († 1930) and his daughter, the actress Eleonore Hauberrisser, between 1930 and 1940, he was only able to complete in 1920. Heinrich Hauberrisser fell seriously ill in 1928. Compared to the time before 1914, assignments to him became less frequent. Hauberrisser's house on Württembergstrasse was confiscated by American soldiers of the occupying forces after the war . As a result, numerous of the meticulously kept records, as well as many of his father's heirlooms, which he kept in his villa, were irretrievably lost. Heinrich Hauberrisser died of a heart attack on July 7, 1945 and was buried in a grave of honor in the north-west corner of the Upper Catholic Cemetery in Regensburg.

His daughter, Eleonore (or Leonore) Hauberrisser was a member of the actors' ensemble of the Regensburg City Theater before the Second World War , before she became a freelance artist. She appeared repeatedly in the post-war period as a writer of religiously oriented plays and as a director for Catholic amateur theater groups. She died of suicide on December 30, 1951 and was buried in the family grave on January 2, 1952.

plant

His field of work is mainly found in Regensburg and the Upper Palatinate . He created numerous sacred buildings in the neo-Gothic style as well as in neo- baroque and art nouveau forms . He created his last church building in a neo-objective design language. While his first works were largely stylistically pure, artistic freedom can soon be recognized. Hauberrisser saw this as his own creative achievement and, as a " second generation historian ", set himself apart from the strict style imitators. Despite the formal examination of historical architectural styles, modern construction technology with new technical possibilities was used without restriction at Hauberrisser. Examples include stamped concrete bases , iron roof structures, metal reinforcements and the Rabitz technology popular around the turn of the century . This enabled him to fulfill the ideal of church building at the time, namely to build a very spacious nave. It always paid special attention to the shape of the windows, altars and spiers.

Buildings (selection)

  • 1901–1902: monastery building in Pleystein (in collaboration with Joseph Koch)
  • 1901–1904: Catholic parish church St. Sigismund in Pleystein (in collaboration with Joseph Koch)
  • 1902: Stobäusplatz 3 double dwelling in Regensburg (in collaboration with Joseph Koch; with rich Art Nouveau decor)
  • 1903–1904: Catholic parish church St. Laurentius in Ramspau (in collaboration with Joseph Koch)
  • 1904–1905: Catholic parish church St. Nikolaus in Altenthann
  • 1904–1905: Catholic parish church of St. Nicholas in Mindelstetten
  • 1905: Catholic parish church St. Nikolaus in (Abensberg-) Pullach
  • 1905: Catholic parish church St. Margaretha Hofdorf
  • 1905: Cemetery chapel and funeral hall at the Upper Catholic Cemetery in Regensburg
  • 1906–1908: Catholic parish church St. Josef in Regensburg- Reinhausen , Donaustaufer Straße 29a
  • 1908–1909: Catholic parish church St. Anton in Hausham
  • 1909–1911: Evangelical Holy Cross Church in Röthenbach an der Pegnitz
  • 1909–1911: St. Margaret's Catholic parish church in (Landshut-) Achdorf
  • 1909: Restoration building at the Upper Palatinate District Exhibition in Regensburg.
  • 1910: Residential and commercial building at Residenzstrasse 2 in Regensburg (with rich Art Nouveau decor)
  • 1910: Catholic parish church Sankt Vitus in Schnaittenbach
  • 1910–1912: Catholic parish church of St. Mariä Himmelfahrt in ( Pentling -) Hohengebraching
  • 1911: Catholic parish church St. Erhard in Roggenstein
  • 1911–1913: Redesign and expansion of the parish church of St. Laurentius in Wolnzach
  • 1911–1913: Tower and extension of the Catholic parish church St. Johannes Baptist in Altmühlmünster ( Riedenburg )
  • 1912: Catholic parish church of St. Ursula in Ursulapoppenricht / Hahnbach
  • 1913–1914: Catholic parish church Beata Maria Virgo in Walting ( Weiding parish )
  • 1914: Catholic benefit church Pauli Conversion in Hailing
  • 1915: Own house in Regensburg, Württembergstrasse 10 (formerly Württembergstrasse 4), built in 1920
  • 1920–1921: St. Fidelis Monastery in Regensburg
  • 1920–1924: Parish church of St. Andrew in Parsberg
  • 1926: House chapel Herz-Jesu of the Institute of the English Misses in Regensburg, Helenenstraße 4
  • 1927–1929: Maria Immaculata in Vohenstrauß
  • 1938–1939: Catholic parish church of the Holy Cross in Kelheim- Affecking

literature

  • Oberpfälzer Kulturbund (Ed.), Frank Ebel (Red.): The church builder Heinrich Hauberrisser. Architecture between historicism and modernity. (= Series of publications of the Upper Palatinate Cultural Association. Volume 4.) Dr. Peter Morsbach Verlag, Regensburg 2014, ISBN 978-3-937527-73-4 .
  • Monuments in Bavaria BD 3/37 City of Regensburg MZ Buchverlag, Regensburg 1977, ISBN 3-927529-92-3 .

Web links

Commons : Heinrich Hauberrisser  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Brigitte Huber: The New Town Hall in Munich. Ebenhausen near Munich 2006, ISBN 3-937904-24-7 , p. 223.
  2. Report in the Mittelbayerische Zeitung : Am Grabe von Eleonore Hauberrisser from January 3rd, vol. 8, no. 1, p. 10.
  3. Eleonore Hauberrisser as the author , accessed on May 19, 2017
  4. a b Obituary in the Mittelbayerische Zeitung of January 5th, vol. 8, no. 2, p. 8.
  5. ^ Circumstances of death of Eleonore Hauberrisser , accessed on May 23, 2017
  6. ^ Astrid Wild: Stone pit, hospital, burial place and place of entertainment. The city park area of ​​Regensburg . In: Peter Germann Bauer / Helmut Groschwitz (eds.): Catalog for the 2010 exhibition Tradition and Awakening 1910 . Museums of the City of Regensburg 2010, Regensburg 2010, ISBN 978-3-935052-83-2 , p. 65 .