Hermann Heinze (architect)

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Hermann Heinze (born June 26, 1878 in Hanover ; † April 28, 1930 in Koethen ) was a German architect .

Life

During his studies, Heinze worked in the office of the renowned architects Mohr & Weidner in (Berlin-) Charlottenburg; In 1901 he was involved in a competition design for the new hospital and the mayor's villa in Köthen (Anhalt). who was awarded the 3rd prize. Although the design was not implemented, Heinze settled down in Köthen shortly afterwards and designed numerous buildings that shape the cityscape, most of which are now listed . In terms of style, he covered a broad spectrum of forms from late historicism to art nouveau and new architecture .

Heinze was a member of the Association of German Architects (BDA). His grave in the New Cemetery in Köthen is kept in the form of Cyclopean Art Nouveau.

Buildings in Köthen (incomplete)

  • around 1900: Baasdorfer Strasse 11/12 group of residential buildings
  • 1903: Schwerdtfeger residential and commercial building, Bärplatz 6/7
  • 1906: Tomb for the building contractor Ernst Carl
  • after 1906: own house (as renovation), Augustenstraße 7
  • 1908–1910: Building of a superphosphate factory of Düngerwerke Baalberge GmbH in ( Baalberge -) Kleinwirschleben
  • around 1910: Mühlenstrasse 17/18 residential group
  • around 1910: Wallstrasse 21/22 residential group
  • 1924–1926: Green building for the Friedrichs-Polytechnikum
  • 1927–1929: Construction management for the construction of a settlement for the Anhalt settlers' association in Köthen-Geuz, Lelitzer Strasse, Hermann-Waschke-Strasse (based on a design by the architect Leopold Fischer )
  • 1928: Club house for the Free Gymnastics Association in Köthen

Individual evidence

  1. Mohr & Weidner - Special design bureau for the construction and furnishing of hospitals, clinics, sanatoriums, sanatoriums, etc. on the website Architekturwelt Sülzhayn by Reinhard Glaß, last accessed on December 8, 2017
  2. ^ Three plans at the state archive of Saxony-Anhalt
  3. ^ The green building of the Anhalt University of Applied Sciences after the reconstruction
  4. ^ Bauhaus Dessau eV (ed.): Leopold Fischer. Modernist architect. Funk Verlag Bernhard Hein eK, Dessau-Roßlau o. J. (2010), ISBN 978-3-939197-11-9 , p. 110. ( digital version , PDF file with 6.26 MB)
  5. ^ Two plans at the state archive of Saxony-Anhalt