Jakob Schrammen

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Jakob Schrammen (born December 3, 1871 in Rheinbach , † 1944 in Weimar ) was a German architect and construction clerk .

Schrammen, the son of a high school teacher, studied architecture at the Technical University of Munich and the Technical University of Charlottenburg from 1893 after graduating from high school in Opole in 1892 . During his studies he became a member of the Rhenania Munich fraternity . He completed the subsequent legal clerkship in 1903 with the second state examination and was then appointed government master builder ( assessor in the state building administration). In 1907 he was promoted to agricultural inspector .

Schrammen took part in the excavations in Pergamon in 1902 and 1903 . a. published on the Great Altar . He was later entrusted with the construction management for the construction of the Realgymnasium in Bünde , where he also built some buildings for private clients. In 1908 he was employed at the Prussian Mining Authority in Dortmund and was involved in the construction of the new Kurhaus in Bad Oeynhausen . In 1909 he worked again in Berlin. In 1912 he moved from the Prussian civil service to the building department of the Grand Ducal Saxony-Weimar-Eisenachische government in Weimar , initially with the rank of government and building councilor, and from 1913 as chief building director. In 1921 he became a lecturer in the Thuringian Ministry of Finance. In 1930 he was put on hold due to the dissolution of the building construction authorities and retired in 1933.

In 1926 he designed and built the state gymnasium in Jena

Fonts

literature

  • Hans-Georg Kremer, Kristin Knebel: Does the State Gymnastics Institute look like the Weimar Belvedere pleasure palace? In: Jena contributions to sport. 75 years of the State Gymnastics Institute. Jena 2004, pp. 8-14. ( PDF ).

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Directory of the old men of the German fraternity. Überlingen am Bodensee 1920, p. 205.