Heinrich Herrling

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Heinrich Herrling (born September 4, 1883 in Erfurt ; † April 25, 1956 there ) was a German architect .

Act

At the end of the 1920s, Heinrich Herrling set important architectural accents in the spirit of New Building with several buildings in Erfurt .

The Nottrodt community of heirs had the office building Am Anger 81 built by Herrling in 1928/1929. The seven-story building is characterized by an elongated bay window with ribbon windows that extends over three floors and ends in a round bay window at the intersection. The building was effectively staged in the dark with a blue glowing light architecture .

The textile retailer Hermann Schellhorn commissioned Herrling to build a new commercial building at Neuwerkstrasse 2 and Hirschlachufer 76. The Schellhorn building is characterized by the rounded edge of the building facing Schafgasse with the horizontal ribbon windows.

Herrling was a member of the German Free Architecture Association (DFA) , which merged with the Association of German Architects (BDA) in 1920 .

Buildings and designs

  • 1928–1929: Office building, so-called DHV house in Erfurt, Anger 81
  • 1929–1930: Schellhorn office building in Erfurt, Neuwerkstrasse 2 and Hirschlachufer 76
  • 1932: Conversion of the Reibstein department store in Erfurt, Schlösserstraße 23-27 (destroyed in the war)

literature

  • Mark Escherich: Urban Self-Image and Structural Representation. Architecture and urban development in Erfurt 1918–1933. (= Erfurt Studies on Art and Building History , Volume 5.) Lukas Verlag, Berlin 2010, ISBN 978-3-86732-062-7 .

Individual evidence

  1. Mark Escherich: The Erfurt DHV house from Heinrich Herrling. In: Der Architekt , year 1999, issue 5 (from May 1999), p. 18.
  2. ^ Mark Escherich: Aspects of the architecture of the 1920s in Erfurt. Erfurt 1999, ISBN 3-00-005101-5 , p. 41 f.
  3. Jörg Behrens, Michael Mann, Birgitt Zimmermann (eds.): Architecture in Erfurt. From the 20s to the present. Publishing house Thuringia, Erfurt 1999, ISBN 3-89683-130-5 , p. 28 f.
  4. ^ Mark Escherich: Aspects of the architecture of the 1920s in Erfurt. Erfurt 1999, ISBN 3-00-005101-5 , pp. 42-47.
  5. Jörg Behrens, Michael Mann, Birgitt Zimmermann (eds.): Architecture in Erfurt. From the 20s to the present. Publishing house Thuringia, Erfurt 1999, ISBN 3-89683-130-5 , p. 18 f.
  6. ^ Mark Escherich: Aspects of the architecture of the 1920s in Erfurt. Erfurt 1999, ISBN 3-00-005101-5 , pp. 47-52.