Hugo Wagner (architect)

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Hugo Wagner (born June 29, 1873 in Wittgirren , Insterburg district, East Prussia; † February 22, 1944 in Insterburg ) was a German architect .

biography

Wagner's parents were Auguste and Bernhard Wagner. In 1894 he graduated from the Realgymnasium . He studied at the Technical University (Berlin-) Charlottenburg and then until 1898 at the Technical University of Hanover and the Technical University of Karlsruhe . In 1898 Wagner came to Bremen to take up an auxiliary position at the technical state schools. On July 22, 1900, he submitted a request to the authorities to be given leave of absence from his position as a teacher in order to work as a building inspector for the new construction of the St. Jürgen Asylum ( Bremen-Ost Clinic ). In July 1900 he married Else Bücking (* 1876), the daughter of the building director Hermann Bücking .

In 1903 Wagner opened his own architecture office - probably also in order to achieve his architectural goals, such as avoiding ornamentation and reducing it to the minimum. In 1906 the collaboration with the entrepreneur Ludwig Roselius began to build the coffee-Hag factory on the banks of the Weser .

From 1907 Wagner was a partner in the company H. Wagner, Lotz & Schacht . During the First World War he took an active part in the reconstruction in East Prussia. To this end, he was resident and active as a district architect in Johannisburg in 1915 .

Between 1930 and 1940 Wagner was in Berlin at the German Academy for Housing and as Reich Commissioner responsible for social housing.
He was buried in the family grave in Stagutschen ( Wolodarowka ).

plant

  • 1900: Collaboration at the St. Jürgen Asylum for the mentally and nervously ill, today the Bremen-Ost Clinic
  • 1903: Chicken farm with wood cultivation and central heating for Alexander Theye in Bremen, Lindenweg 30 (not preserved)
  • 1903: Conversion of the Hofmeierhaus lken in Bremen, Rockwinkeler Landstrasse 35
  • 1903: Cemetery chapel in Bremen, Oberneulander Landstrasse 41
  • 1904: House Bätjer in Bremen, Leher Heerstraße 16
  • 1905: Residential and commercial building in Bremen, Parkallee 21
  • 1905: Landhaus in Bremen, Basdahlerstraße 11 (not preserved)
  • 1905: Baby and children's home of the jute spinning mill in Bremen, Nordstrasse 270 (demolished in 1954)
  • 1905: Water tower in Bremen-Walle (only foundation preserved)
  • 1905–1906: Toddler school in Rotenburg (Wümme), Lindenstrasse
  • 1906: Further education school with gym in Osterholz-Scharmbeck, Lindenstrasse 55
  • 1906–1907: Kaffee-Hag factory (Plant I) in Bremen, at the Holz- und Fabrikenhafen
  • 1906–1907: Landhaus Tack in Bremen, Schwachhauser Heerstraße 337
  • 1906–1907: Hugo Wagner house (with garden pavilion) in Bremen, Brahmsstrasse 1 / Georg-Gröning-Strasse (demolished in 1972)
  • 1906: Müller house in Bremen-Rockwinkel, Mühlenfeldstrasse 48
  • 1906: Farmhouse for the potash company at the touring exhibition of the German Agricultural Society
  • 1907: Competition design for workers' houses on Scharnhorststrasse and Schenkendorffstrasse in Bremen, for the Eugen Kulenkamp Foundation
  • 1907: Wachhausen house in Bremen, Brahmsstrasse 3
  • 1907: House Bücking for chief construction director Bücking in Bremen, Brahmsstrasse 5
  • 1907: Apartment building at Georg-Gröning-Straße 56 in Bremen
  • 1907: country house for Dr. Smidt in Bremen, Bürgermeister-Spitta-Allee 38, formerly Vahrerstraße 377 (garden by Christian Roselius ; demolished in 1987)
  • 1907: Extension to civil servant houses of the Delmenhorst linoleum factory "Ankermarke" in Delmenhorst, Mühlenstrasse
  • 1907: Deichhorst gymnasium in Delmenhorst, Kantstrasse
  • 1907: Grave of Countess Egloffstein in Stolp (Pomerania)
  • 1907: Osterholz district house in Osterholz-Scharmbeck, Rübhofstraße 4 (today land registry)
  • 1907–1908: Group of residential buildings at Hohenlohestrasse 20–22 in Bremen
  • 1907–1908: Stuhr station
  • 1907–1908: Kirchhuchting railway station (not preserved)
  • 1907–1908: Moordeich station (demolished in 1983)
  • 1908: House for senior teacher Pflüger in Delmenhorst, Bismarckstrasse
  • 1908: House for Dr. Schulze-Smidt in Bremen, Georg-Gröning-Strasse 37
  • 1908: 36 semi-detached houses for the Einswarden workers' settlement
  • 1908–1909: Advanced training school in Varel, Neumühlenstraße 11 (preserved slightly changed)
  • 1909: Bätjer tomb in Bremen, in the Riensberg cemetery , field T 91
  • 1909: country house for Dr. Spitta in Bremen, Kirchbachstrasse 107 (destroyed in World War II)
  • 1909: Sparkasse in Delmenhorst, Bahnhofsstraße
  • 1909: Estate Tecklenburg, Gut Gothard in Rotenburg (Wümme), Verdener Straße (partially demolished in 1976, completely demolished in 1988)
  • 1909–1910: Landhaus Delius in Versmold , Kämpenstrasse 4 (broken off)
  • 1910: Taaks grave complex in Bremen, at the Riensberg cemetery, fields EE 113–117, EE 132–138, EE 154–155, EE 258
  • 1910: Workers' settlement in (Bremen-) Burg-Grambke, in the area of ​​Hüttenstrasse (completely demolished between 1954 and 2007)
  • 1910–1911: Landhaus Halbrock in Bielefeld-Hillegossen, Bielitzer Strasse (today a youth center)
  • around 1918: Bücking tomb in Bremen, in the Riensberg cemetery, field W 149 (attribution unsecured)

literature

  • Jörn Christiansen: From a single source. Reinforced concrete coffee factory. Hugo Wagner, Bremen 1907. Bremen 1991, ISBN 3-88132076-8 .
  • Holger Maraun: Hugo Wagner (1873-1944). An architect of the reform movement. Simmering, Bremen 1995, ISBN 3-927723-27-4 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f g Jörn Christiansen: From a single source. Reinforced concrete coffee factory. Hugo Wagner, Bremen 1907. Bremen 1991, ISBN 3-88132076-8 .
  2. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al Holger Maraun: Hugo Wagner (1873–1944). An architect of the reform movement. Simmering, Bremen 1995, ISBN 3-927723-27-4 . (Catalog raisonné p. 88–108)
  3. ^ NN: The St. Jürgen Asylum for the mentally and mentally ill in Ellen near Bremen. Built by the Building Inspectorate, Building Councilor Weber with the assistance of the architects Wagner and Ohnesorge. In: Zeitschrift für Bauwesen , 55th year 1905, pp. 43–58, Atlas Bl. 6–7. ( online )
  4. Monument topography Oberneuland, p. 73.
  5. Water tower in Bremen. In: Moderne Baufformen , 7th year 1908, p. 438.
  6. ^ Emil Beutinger : The factory of the Kaffee-Handels-AG in Bremen. In: Der Industriebau , 1st year 1910, issue 4, pp. 73–77.
  7. Erich Haenel, Heinrich Tscharmann (Ed.): The apartment of the modern times. Leipzig 1908, p. 135. (Illustration of an interior)
  8. a b c 3 single-family houses on Brahmsstrasse in Bremen. In: Moderne Baufformen, 7th year 1908, pp. 439–442, p. 444.
  9. ^ W. von Kalckstein: The competition of the Eugen-Kulenkamp-Stiftung to obtain designs for small residential houses in Bremen. In: Zeitschrift für Wohnungswesen , Volume 6, 1908, No. 14, pp. 185–189.
  10. a b c d e f Friedrich Seesselberg, Werner Lindner: Modern Lower Saxony construction. In: Architektonische Rundschau , Volume 25, 1909, Issue 6, pp. 41–48, Tables 41–48, 1st supplement to Issue 6.
  11. Building file at the Bremen building regulations office
  12. hfb: Liberals saved the old train station. In: Syker Kurier, September 15, 1988.
  13. uwi: Now it is a "piece of cake". In: Syker Kurier from September 19, 1988
  14. ^ Die Kunstwelt , Volume II (February to May 1912), p. 448
  15. ^ Süddeutsche Bauhütte from September 22, 1910
  16. ^ Emil Högg : Bremen in the struggle for the domestic building method. In: Weekly of the Berlin Architects' Association , 4th year 1909, pp. 191–194.