Johann Georg Carl Hampel

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Johann Georg Carl Hampel , also Georg Karl Hampel or Conrad Martin Christian Hampel , (born May 31, 1789 in Ballenstedt , † March 5, 1842 in Berlin ) was a German architect and Prussian construction clerk .

Life

As a conductor , Hampel received interim employment in military buildings in Cologne in 1817/18 with appointment as a building inspector with a conductor's salary and diets from the military building fund. In 1821 he became a building officer in the Prussian War Ministry and moved to Berlin in June 1822, where he became director of the army construction administration in 1827. In 1836 he became a senior building officer. He was the first major military architect and worked closely with Karl Friedrich Schinkel .

buildings

  • 1819: Cavalry barracks in Düsseldorf, design and construction management (together with building inspector Friedrich Arnold Felderhoff; no longer available)
  • before 1821: Cuirassier barracks in Cologne Deutz
  • 1822–1826: Construction management for the conversion of the Georgesche Sechserhäuser into the Medical and Surgical Friedrich Wilhelm Institute in Berlin-Mitte, Friedrichstrasse 139/141 (Head: Friedrich Triest; no longer available)
  • 1826–1828: Construction management: NCO school in Potsdam , Jägerallee 10–12 (design: K. F. Schinkel; today Justice Center)
  • 1827/28: Parade house of the 2nd Guards Regiment on foot (based on a sketch by KF Schinkel) in Berlin-Mitte, Karlstrasse (today Reinhardtstrasse 29) and riding hall of the Escadron barracks in Berlin, on the corner of Ritterstrasse and Alte Jacobstrasse (together with Schinkel; not available anymore).
  • 1828/29: Parade house of the Kaiser-Alexander-Gardegrenadier-Regiment in Berlin, Prenzlauer Allee (formerly Heinersdorfer Weg; no longer available) 
  • Around 1829/30: Parade house of the Kaiser-Franz-Garde-Grenadier-Regiment No. 2 in Berlin-Mitte, Heinrich-Heine-Platz 9-12 (presumably together with August Ferdinand Fleischinger )
  • 1829–1831: Guard barracks in Berlin-Mitte, Charlottenstrasse 42/43 (with KF Schinkel, site manager Johann Jacob Helfft ; today location of the State Library )
  • 1830: Reconstruction of the facade of the General Staff building in Berlin-Mitte, Behrenstrasse 66 (later military cabinet; destroyed in World War II)
  • 1833: Construction management: reconstruction of the garrison church (design: KF Schinkel)
  • 1833–1835: Karlstrasse infantry barracks (with KF Schinkel) in Berlin-Mitte (today Reinhardtstrasse; no longer available)
  • 1833–1836: Guard barracks in front of the Brandenburg Gate in Potsdam, Luisenplatz 9 (today Sparkasse)
  • 1834–1836: Warehouse of the Heeresproviantamt in Potsdam, Leipziger Strasse (with KF Schinkel), so-called Schinkel-Speicher
  • 1838: Expansion of the Prussian War Ministry in Berlin-Mitte, Leipziger Strasse (no longer available)
  • 1839–1842: Hussar barracks in Potsdam, Berliner Straße (with KF Schinkel)

literature

  • Uwe Kieling: Berlin building officials and state architects in the 19th century. Biographical Lexicon. Society for local history and for the preservation of monuments in the Kulturbund der DDR, Berlin 1986, p. 38

Individual evidence

  1. Kathrin Chod, Herbert Schwenk, Hainer Weisspflug: Hampel, Conrad Martin Christian . In: Hans-Jürgen Mende , Kurt Wernicke (ed.): Berliner Bezirkslexikon, Mitte . Luisenstadt educational association . Haude and Spener / Edition Luisenstadt, Berlin 2003, ISBN 3-89542-111-1 ( luise-berlin.de - as of October 7, 2009).
  2. ^ Structure and organization of the Prussian building administration , p. 431, gsta.spk-berlin.de (PDF)
  3. Barracks of the Cuirassier Regiment No. 8 in Cologne-Deutz
  4. ^ Portal of the parade house of the 2nd Guards Regiment on foot in the monument list Berlin
  5. The new riding arena of the Königl. Teaching Escadron. In: Architekturmuseum TU Berlin
  6. Parade house Kaiser-Franz-Grenadier-Guard-Regiment No. 2 in the monument list Berlin
  7. Speicherstadt . In: Potsdam-wiki
  8. ↑ Life Guard Hussar Barracks . In: Potsdam-wiki