Julius Loenholdt

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Grave site of the Lönholdt family, Frankfurt main cemetery

Julius Lönholdt (born October 5, 1865 in Frankfurt-Bockenheim ; full name: Julius Hermann Lönholdt ) was a German architect and building contractor . From 1907 to 1911 he was a city ​​councilor in Frankfurt am Main and belonged to the national liberal democratic parliamentary group.

Lönholdt was the son of master carpenter Georg Hermann Löhnholdt (1840–1910). He founded the construction company Julius Lönholdt & Co. in Frankfurt.

After four years as a city councilor, he submitted his resignation in 1911. At the end of 1917 he was awarded the Iron Cross .

plant

Robinsohn Brothers fashion house, Zeil, built 1905, front right

In his hometown of Frankfurt he built the Robinsohn fashion house on the Zeil and the classicist Villa Zeppelinallee 43 (later the Greek consulate).

  • 1902: Double residential group Paul-Ehrlich-Strasse 41/43, 45/47 and 49/51 in Frankfurt (under monument protection )
  • 1906: House at Schumannstrasse 11 in Frankfurt (under monument protection)
  • 1906: House at Schumannstrasse 15 in Frankfurt (under monument protection)
  • 1911: House at Blanchardtstrasse 18–24 in Frankfurt
  • Apartment building Günthersburgallee 3–5 in Frankfurt
  • 1894: Apartment building Bornheimer Landstrasse 58
  • 1894: Apartment building Bornheimer Landstrasse 60
  • 1894: Apartment building Bornheimer Landstrasse 62
  • 1914: Houses at Paul-Ehrlich-Strasse 1, 3, 5

In addition to Bruno Paul and Peter Behrens , he also designed door handles and fittings for the SA Loevy factory in Berlin .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Register office Frankfurt am Main I: Marriage subsidiary register . No. 1156/1891.
  2. Zentralblatt der Bauverwaltung , Volume 37, 1917, No. 99 (from December 8, 1917), p. 593.
  3. a b c Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany , cultural monuments in Hesse: City of Frankfurt am Main. 2nd edition, Societäts-Verlag, Frankfurt am Main 1994, ISBN 3-7973-0576-1 .
  4. H. Schomann, Malerviertel, p. 303f.
  5. ^ Die Kunst, monthly books for free and applied arts , 1916, p. 204.