Heinrich and Franz Glaser

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H. & F. Glaser
legal form unknown
founding 1886
resolution after 1919
Seat Vienna - Dornbach
management Heinrich Glaser, Franz Glaser jun.
Number of employees 2
Branch Construction company , architectural office

The company Heinrich and Franz Glaser (short: H. & F. Glaser ) was a construction company and architecture office in Vienna - Dornbach , which was founded by the architect brothers Franz Glaser jun. and Heinrich Glaser was founded in 1886.

The founders and company owners

"To the golden woodcock" (construction work); Design: Dominik Avanzo and Paul Lange
Elementary school Knollgasse 6 , Dornbach
Primary school Schulgasse 23 , Reichenau an der Rax; Design: Moritz and Carl Hinträger
Palais Bourgoing (construction work); Design: Dominik Avanzo and Paul Lange
“Villa Glaser”, Dornbacher Straße 62 , (construction work); Design: Karl Haybäck
Palais Hoyos-Sprinzenstein (part of the construction work), Hoyosgasse 5–7 / Gußhausstraße 8 ; Design: Amand Louis Bauqué and Albert Emilio Pio

Franz Glaser jun. and Heinrich Glaser were the sons of the Dornbach master builder and mayor Franz Glaser sen. , from her marriage to Josefa Glaser, geb. Dengler († 1860), came. Both were in Komarno born, where his father during his military service as Fortifikations mason polish was stationed.

Franz Glaser jun.

Franz Glaser (born November 28, 1852 , Komorn, Austria-Hungary ; December 15, 1934 in Vienna), the older of the two brothers, was an architect.

From 1871 to 1875 he studied architecture at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna under Theophil Hansen . From 1877 to 1878 he was a member of the Wiener Bauhütte .

In 1883 he received the dispensation to marry his cousin Maria, née Glaser (1864–1936). The marriage produced six children, Maria Anna (1884–1909), Franz Xaver (1885–1931), Heinrich Anton (1888–1934), Anna (1893–1976); Ernst (1897–1968) and Emma (1902–1960). Heinrich Anton Glaser was a master locksmith and later also entered the construction industry as a qualified engineer .

Besides his father, Franz Glaser should not be confused with the city ​​architect of the same name (1864–1906) and the carpenter of the same name from Vienna- Neubau , born in 1887 .

Heinrich Glaser

The second-born Heinrich Glaser (born April 12, 1855 in Komorn, Austria-Hungary, † April 1, 1928 in Vienna) was an architect and city ​​builder .

He studied from 1873 to 1878 at the Technical University of Vienna and then until 1880 also with Theophil Hansen at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna. He was also a member of the Wiener Bauhütte from 1877 to 1878. In 1882 he received the master builder license and became a member of the building and masonry cooperative in Vienna. From 1897 he was also a member of the Association of Master Builders in Lower Austria. It is also known that, like his father, he was a member of the municipal council in Dornbach near Vienna.

In 1890 he married Barbara Degel, widowed Fahnauer. From the marriage with her came the Heinrich (1891–1966), Marianne (1894–1980) and Julius (1895–1974). Heinrich Glaser became a lawyer .

history

After the widowed father Franz Glaser sen. In 1861 he left the military and settled in Dornbach near Vienna as a building contractor and later master builder, both sons also work in the father's office after their studies. On behalf of his father, the older son Franz was able to realize his first own building in 1877 at Seidlgasse 33 , Vienna 3, before Heinrich Glaser had finished his studies.

Father Franz Glaser died in 1885. The following year, both sons founded the company Heinrich and Franz Glaser from his company . Heinrich presented the company to the outside world more strongly than his older brother. In addition to realizing their own designs, the brothers managed to use their father's good contacts, also with the Viennese branch of the Rothschild banking family , for business and to develop them. During the lifetime of his father they were awarded the contract for the construction work at Rothschild Castle in Hinterleiten in Reichenau an der Rax according to the plans of the architects Amand Louis Bauque and Albert Emilio Pio , which formed the basis for further Bauausführungen to plans by Bauque and Pio.

The villas in Franz-Glaser-Gasse 8, 10 and 12 were built by the Association for the Preservation of the Townscape of Dornbach and Neuwaldegg , whose founding chairman Franz Glaser junior. 1882 was declared as a "protection zone".

The “Villa Glaser” at Kreuzwiesengasse 19 (several of the family's villas were named this way) was acquired and expanded in April 1928 by the missionary sisters “ Queen of the Apostles ” as the seat of the congregation approved by Cardinal Friedrich Gustav Piffl .

No buildings are currently assigned after 1919. Like the father, Franz Glaser jun. and Heinrich Glaser are buried in the Dornbacher Friedhof .

buildings

  • 1883–1884: Construction of the “ Zur Güldenen Waldschnepfe ” restaurant , Dornbacher Straße 88 , Vienna 17 Execution (design: Dominik Avanzo and Paul Lange )
  • 1884–1889: Construction of Rothschild Castle / Hinterleiten, Reichenau an der Rax (design: Amand Louis Bauqué and Albert Emilio Pio)
  • 1885: Extension of the residential building at Dornbacher Strasse 70 , Vienna 70 (expanded again in 1895 by H. & F. Glaser)
  • 1886: Rental house, Kochgasse 19 , Vienna 8th
  • 1886: Elementary school, Knollgasse 6 , Vienna 17
  • around 1887: House, Dornbacher Straße 70 Vienna 17
  • 1888: Villas at Franz-Glaser-Gasse 10 and 12 , Andergasse 21 and 23 , Vienna 17
  • 1888: House, Andergasse 25 , Vienna 17
  • 1888–1889: Construction of the primary school, Schulgasse 23, Reichenau an der Rax (design: Moritz and Carl Hinträger )
  • 1889: Adaptation of the residential building, Dornbacher Straße 100 , Vienna 17 (built in 1870 by Franz Glaser senior)
  • 1890: Construction of Palais Bourgoing , Metternichgasse 12 , Vienna 3 (design: Amand Louis Bauqué and Albert Emilio Pio)
  • 1891: Construction of the residential building (former residence of Heinrich Glaser), Rennweg 23 Vienna 3, execution (design: Amand Louis Bauqué and Albert Emilio Pio)
  • 1892: Construction of the "Villa Glaser", Dornbacher Straße 62 , Vienna 17 (design: Karl Haybäck )
  • 1895–1896: Construction of the Palais Metternich-Sándor , Jacquingasse 39 / Fasangasse 24–26 , Vienna 3 (destroyed; design: Amand Louis Bauqué and Albert Emilio Pio)
  • 1896: "Villa Glaser" (mission house of the sisters "Queen of the Apostles"), Kreuzwiesengasse 19 , Vienna 17
  • 1899: Part of the construction work on Palais Hoyos-Sprinzenstein , Hoyosgasse 5–7 / Gußhausstraße 8 , Vienna 4 (design: Amand Louis Bauqué and Albert Emilio Pio)
  • 1902: Villa, Andergasse 50 , Vienna 17
  • 1905: "Villa Kraus", Amundsenstraße 10 , Vienna 17 (1919 rebuilt again by H. & F. Glaser)
  • 1905: Residence Hietzinger Hauptstrasse 41 / Eitelbergergasse 26 , Vienna 13

literature

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. Franz Glaser Sr. In: Architects Lexicon Vienna 1770–1945. Published by the Architekturzentrum Wien . Vienna 2007.
  2. ^ Association for the preservation of the townscape of Dornbach and Neuwaldegg , austriaweb.at.
  3. Maria Goretti: From the Glaser Villa to the International Mission Monastery. Missionary Sisters Queen of the Apostles, Grätzelzeitung Dornbach-Neuwaldegg, No. 10; Vienna, March 2007.
  4. ^ Dehio-Handbuch Wien. X. to XIX. and XXI. to XXIII. District . Bundesdenkmalamt (Ed.), Anton Schroll, Vienna 1996. p. 236. ISBN 3-7031-0693-X .