Henry Grell

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Henry Grell (born April 1, 1870 in Hamburg , † December 23, 1937 in Ahrensburg; full name George Henry Paul Grell ) was a German architect . He studied from 1892 to 1896 at the Technical University (Berlin-) Charlottenburg and at the Technical University of Stuttgart . From 1898 he worked as an architect in Hamburg. From 1917 member of the building maintenance commission. From 1929 to 1936 board member of the AIV Architects and Engineers Association Hamburg e. V.

Buildings and designs (all Hamburg)

  • 1901–1902: Row villa in Harvestehude, Brahmsallee 101
  • 1902–1903: Row villas in Harvestehude, Oberstrasse 36, 38 and 42
  • 1905–1906: Row villas in Harvestehude, Parkallee 68, 72 and 74
  • 1904–1907: Entrance building for the Hamburg-Ohlsdorf train station
  • 1907-1908: Kontorhaus "Commeterhaus" mountain road 11 / Hermannstraße 37 (together with Franz Jacobsen and George Radel; builder Wilhelm Suhr, owner of the gallery Commeter )
  • 1908-1909: Kontorhaus " Huebner-house " Poststraße 2 / Neuer Wall
  • 1908-1909: office building "Exchange castle" (formerly Sauernheimerhof) Börsenbrücke 2a (along with G. Stuhlmann)
  • 1910–1911: Hulbe-Haus , bei der Petrikirche 1 / Mönckebergstrasse 21
  • 1911–1912: Mönchshof, Mönkedamm 9 (demolished in the 1990s)
  • 1913: Country house for JL Heinr. Wulf in 21266 Jesteburg
  • : 1912-1913 Kontorhaus (destroyed in 1944, reconstruction in 1949, architect Peter Pruter, 1871-1973) "Be Hausbrandt" Mönckebergstraße 27
  • 1913: Villa in Rahlstedt, Stapelfelder Strasse 30
  • 1914–1916: Lyceum in Wandsbek, Neumann-Reichardt-Strasse 20–22 (today Charlotte-Paulsen-Gymnasium )
  • 1914–1917: Rothenburgsort Children's Hospital, Marckmannstraße 129 (together with Walter Martens; expansion 1927/1928 together with Peter Pruter; destroyed in 1943, rebuilt in 1950)
  • 1921: Conversion of the former Bank of British West Africa, Schauenburgerstraße 49 (built in 1880s, conversion in 1950 by Ernst Langloh)
  • 1921–1922: Conversion of Landhaus Cadmus in Harvestehude, Mittelweg 116 (built in 1827)
  • 1921–1922: Single-family houses in Eppendorf, Arnold-Heise-Strasse 22, 24 and 25
  • 1923: Apartment buildings in Winterhude, Gryphiusstraße 8-10 (together with Peter Pruter)
  • 1924: Gustav JJ Witt grave , Ohlsdorf cemetery , grid square Y 20 (together with Peter Pruter)
  • 1925: Landhaus in Nienstedten, Polostraße 4 (together with Peter Pruter)
  • 1925: Two-family house in Blankenese, Godeffroystraße 22 (together with Peter Pruter)
  • 1925–1926: Front building of the former Voss margarine factory , Bramfelder Straße 138 (together with Peter Pruter)
  • 1927–1928: Villa in Winterhude, Winterhuder Kai 21 (together with Peter Pruter)
  • 1927–1928: Goldbekufer apartment blocks, Arensweg, Hamelausweg, Semperplatz (Jarrestadt) (together with Peter Pruter)
  • 1930: Single-family house at Alte Landstraße 242 (together with Peter Pruter)
  • 1930: Café Heinze, Millerntorplatz 2a (together with Peter Pruter, destroyed in 1945)

Web links

Commons : Henry Grell  - Collection of Images, Videos and Audio Files

literature

  • Ralf Lange : Architecture in Hamburg. Junius Verlag, Hamburg, 1st edition 2008, ISBN 978-3-88506-586-9
  • Ralf Lange: The Hamburg office building. Dölling and Galitz Verlag, 1st edition 2015, ISBN 978-3-86218-067-7
  • Jan Lubitz: Grell, Henry . In: Franklin Kopitzsch, Dirk Brietzke (Hrsg.): Hamburgische Biographie . tape 6 . Wallstein, Göttingen 2012, ISBN 978-3-8353-1025-4 , p. 109-110 .
  • Jörg Beleites: The construction of the main building of the Charlotte-Paulsen-Gymnasium (CPG) and its architect Henry Grell , Wandsbek informative (publisher: Wandsbek Citizens Association from 1848) 2/2017, pages 15–17.
  • Dominik Schendel, Architekturführer Hamburg , DOM publishers, 2013, ISBN 978-3-86922-242-4 . Objects A022, A031 and B084.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Architects and Engineers Association Hamburg e. V.
  2. http://www.bildarchiv-hamburg.de/frames/index_architekten_grell.htm