Julius Deininger

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plastic portrait of Deiniger at the Vienna City Hall

Julius Deininger (born May 30, 1852 in Vienna ; died August 15, 1924 there ) was an Austrian architect.

Life

Grave of Julius Deininger

Deininger was born into a middle-class family in Vienna. After studying at the Technical University and the Academy of Fine Arts (among others with Heinrich Ferstel ), he was temporarily a member of the construction office of the Vienna Cottage Association and from 1876 worked in Friedrich Schmidt's office . In 1883 Deininger received a professorship at the state trade school, where he also campaigned for reforms in the curriculum. In the same year he founded his own architecture office.

As a result, he built numerous villas, residential houses and public buildings, especially in Vienna and Gutenstein , where he stayed in the summer. In addition to his work as an architect, Deininger also designed art objects of all kinds and worked on monuments. He was also an employee of specialist magazines and a sought-after juror, and in 1905 he was appointed senior building officer. 1900–1904 he was a member of the Vienna City Council.

He was the brother of Johann Wunibald Deininger and the father of Wunibald Deininger , who from 1899 realized some works together with him.

His grave is in the area of ​​the honorary graves (group 30 B, row 14, no. 13) in the Vienna Central Cemetery .

Works

Deininger, although a representative of late historicism , was most stylistically oriented towards the early and high renaissance , as well as the so-called " German Renaissance " at the time . In keeping with the client's taste, his villa buildings consistently feature “picturesque” elements such as wooden balconies, bay windows and turrets. Despite his roots in historicism, he was open enough to the new tendencies to enter into a fruitful working relationship with his son Wunibald, a Wagner student , in which his style was pragmatically developed.

buildings

Central elevation of the " Van-Swieten -Hof"
Villa Trebesiner in Gutenstein (1889/1890).
Hoyos Castle in Gutenstein ; Remodeling (1909/1910)
  • 1885–1886 Rental houses at Piaristengasse 60 and 62, Vienna 8
  • 1887–1888 Villa Berl, Urgersbach 3, Gutenstein
  • 1889 Villa Tyrolit, Gutenstein 34
  • 1889 swimming pool, Gutenstein 86
  • 1889–1890 Villa Trebesiner, Markt 88, Gutenstein
  • 1890 Villa Schaumann, Vorderbruck 27, Gutenstein
  • 1892 Jasper printing press, Tongasse 10–12, Vienna 3
  • 1894–1895 Villa Marx, Weissenbach bei Mödling 32, Hinterbrühl
  • 1895–1896 “Van Swieten-Hof” rental house, Rotenturmstrasse 19, Vienna 1
  • 1897–1898 Villa Gerlach, Dittesgasse 11 / Parkstrasse, Vienna 18
  • 1897–1898 Landhaus Walz, Spitz on the Danube
  • 1899 “Römerhof” residential and commercial building, Wipplingerstraße 2, Vienna 1, with Wunibald Deininger, the facade was changed after war damage
  • around 1900 apartment and office building at Wollzeile 28
  • 1904–1905 Villa Ladewig, Gutenstein 95, with Wunibald Deininger
  • 1904–1905 trading and commercial bank in Mährisch-Ostrau ( Ostrava ), with Wunibald Deininger
  • 1905–1907 New Vienna Commercial Academy, Hamerlingplatz 5–6, Vienna 8th
  • 1906–1907 Kurhaus for the Austrian Society of the Golden Cross, Karlsbad ( Karlovy Vary ), with Wunibald Deininger
  • 1907–1910 Kk Staatsgewerbeschule, Rosensteingasse 79 / Hernalser Hauptstrasse 98–100, Vienna 17, with Wunibald Deininger
  • 1909–1910 Hoyos Castle, Gutenstein (renovation)
  • 1914 Altmann office and factory building, Siebenbrunnengasse 21, Vienna 5

Monuments

  • 1895–1896 Prince Hohenlohe crypt, Niederhofen, Stainach-Pürgg
  • 1896 Friedrich Schmidt monument (architecture), Friedrich Schmidt-Platz, Vienna 1, with sculptor Edmund Hofmann von Aspernburg
  • around 1897 Tomb of the Trebesinger family, Gutenstein cemetery

Web links

Commons : Julius Deininger  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. viennatouristguide: Julius Deininger's grave , accessed on October 12, 2018