Johann Wendelin Braunwald

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Former Villa Löw in Stuttgart, architect: Johann Wendelin Braunwald, 1874.

Johann Wendelin Braunwald also Johannes Wendelin Braunwald (born November 29, 1838 in Creglingen ; † December 30, 1889 in Stuttgart ) was a German architect .

Braunwald mainly worked in Stuttgart, where he created numerous residential and commercial buildings. Many of his buildings are listed .

Life

Nothing is known about Johann Wendelin Braunwald's life apart from his life data.

Buildings

The surviving structures in the following list are listed as cultural monuments in the Stuttgart list of monuments. All information on the buildings can be found there (unless otherwise stated).

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image year place Street genus Architectural style / notes
1868 Stuttgart-Bad Cannstatt Koenig-Karl-Strasse 13 Residential building classicism
1869 Stuttgart Gerberstrasse 2b Classicism, former journeyman's hostel
1869 Stuttgart Gerberstrasse 8a-8b Double tenement house Late classicism
1871 Stuttgart Olgastrasse 42 Late classicism
1870 Stuttgart Wilhelmsplatz 1 Residential and commercial building
1870 Stuttgart-Bad Cannstatt Koenig-Karl-Strasse 27, 27a Residential building with coach house Neo-renaissance
1870 Stuttgart Gaisburgstrasse 27 Apartment building Neo-renaissance
1871 Stuttgart New Weinsteige 20 Neo-Renaissance, attribution uncertain
1872 Stuttgart Werastraße 10 Residential and commercial building Late Classicism, Neo-Renaissance
1872 Stuttgart Alexanderstrasse 158 Tenement house Neo-renaissance
1873 Stuttgart Silberburgstrasse 177 Residential building probably destroyed in the war, now a new building
1873 Stuttgart Marienstrasse 37 Neo-renaissance
1873 Stuttgart Olgastrasse 100/102 Double tenement house Late Classicism, Neo-Renaissance
1873 Stuttgart Hasenbergsteige 5 Tenement house Neo-renaissance
1874 Stuttgart Olgastrasse 1a Double tenement house Louis Seize forms
1874 Stuttgart Bopserwaldstrasse 52 villa former Villa Löw, demolished around 1922,
1874 Stuttgart Boeblinger Strasse 70 Residential and factory building Former iron foundry Hermann Kuhn, illustration from 1874, building today heavily changed
1875 Stuttgart-Bad Cannstatt Koenig-Karl-Strasse 38 Residential building Neo-renaissance
1875 Stuttgart Leibfried's Garden villa former Villa Moser , almost completely destroyed in 1944
1879 Stuttgart Hasenbergsteige 3 Bach Academy Neo-Renaissance, canceled around 1922,
1880 Stuttgart Marienstrasse 39 Apartment building Neo-renaissance
1884 Stuttgart Rosenstrasse 31 Residential and commercial building historicism
1885 Stuttgart-Feuerbach Stuttgarter Strasse 51 Residential and commercial building Neo-Renaissance, old pharmacy
1885 Stuttgart Mörikestrasse 1 Apartment building Neo-renaissance
1886 Stuttgart Böblinger Strasse 46 Residential and commercial building Neo-renaissance
1887 Stuttgart Cottastrasse 43 Residential and commercial building Historicism, cemetery gardening
1888 Stuttgart Tübinger Strasse 80 Apartment building Neo-renaissance
1888 Stuttgart Tübinger Strasse 83 Residential and commercial building Neo-renaissance
1888 Stuttgart Tübinger Strasse 88 Residential and factory building Dinkelacker Brewery
1889 Stuttgart Heusteigstrasse 37 Tenement house Neo-Renaissance, former Greiner & Pfeiffer Hofbuchdruckerei
1890 Creglingen Jewish Cemetery enclosure

literature

  • Gebhard Blank: Stuttgart villas in the 19th century. A booklet accompanying the exhibition in the Wilhelms-Palais from March 18 to August 16, 1987. Stuttgart 1987, page 17.
  • Norbert Bongartz: Inventory. Residential buildings in Stuttgart 1865–1915. A photo exhibition on the European Monument Protection Year 1975, art building on Schloßplatz, 21. 8. – 21. 9. 1975, Württembergischer Kunstverein Stuttgart. Stuttgart 1975, page 101.
  • Christine Breig: The construction of villas and country houses in Stuttgart 1830–1930. Stuttgart: Hohenheim Verlag, 2000, ISBN 3-89850-964-8 , pages 111-112, 517.
  • Gabriele Kreuzberger: Factory buildings in Stuttgart: their development from the middle of the 19th century to the First World War. Stuttgart: Klett-Cotta, 1993, pages 136, 188-192, 302, 333, 335.
  • New buildings in Stuttgart and the surrounding area, volume 2: House of Mr. Friedrich Kolb, JW Braunwald, architect. Stuttgart 1876.
  • State capital Stuttgart, Office for Urban Planning and Urban Renewal, Lower Monument Protection Authority (publisher): List of cultural monuments, immovable architectural and art monuments, status: April 25, 2008 - by districts , Stuttgart 2008, pdf .
  • Dankmar Trier: Braunwald, Johann Wendelin . In: General Artist Lexicon . The visual artists of all times and peoples (AKL). Volume 14, Saur, Munich a. a. 1996, ISBN 3-598-22754-X , p. 22.
  • Martin Woerner; Gilbert Lupfer; Ute Schulz: Architectural Guide Stuttgart. Berlin 2006, page 70, number 107.

Web links

Commons : Johann Wendelin Braunwald  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ In the Stuttgart address books from 1865 to 1901 there are entries for the family name Braunwald. According to this, Johann Wendelin Braunwald was the son of a master craftsman, whose widow Elisabethe is mentioned from 1870 to 1874. Braunwald was married to Marie Kuttroff (family register Stuttgart AZ), who outlived him by about 12 years and died around 1901. In 1875 Johann Wendelin Braunwald built the house at Hauptstätter Straße 128 for himself, in which he and his wife lived until their death. From 1879 to 1887 Braunwald was a member of the Stuttgart City Council. Braunwald's marriage resulted in the Flaschner Conrad Braunwald and the foreman Wilhelm Braunwald, who built two listed buildings: the house at Hohenheimer Strasse 63 (1872) and the house at Schwabstrasse 12 (1888, →  photo ). In addition to the house at Schwabstrasse 12, Wilhelm Braunwald also owned houses 10 and 10 1/2 in Schwabstrasse.
  2. #Stuttgart 2008 .
  3. Stuttgart-Mitte.
  4. #New buildings 1876 , #Bongartz 1975 .
  5. #Breig 2004 , page 111-112, #Blank 1987 , page 17.
  6. # Kreuzberger 1993 , pp. 189-192, 136.
  7. # Wörner 2006 .
  8. # Kreuzberger 1993 , pages 333-344.
  9. # Kreuzberger 1993 , pp. 302-309.
  10. ^ Alemannia Judaica .