Karl Siebrecht

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Karl Siebrecht (born January 27, 1875 in Hanover ; † February 15, 1952 there ) was a German architect .

Life

Karl Siebrecht initially completed an apprenticeship as a carpenter and then attended the Hanover School of Applied Arts and the Höxter building trade school . He then began studying architecture in 1897 at the Technical University of Hanover with Heinrich Köhler and Hubert Stier , then from 1899 to 1900 in Berlin at the Technical University of Charlottenburg with Theodor Goecke and Friedrich Seeßelberg . In 1900 Siebrecht returned to Hanover and initially worked there as an employee in Hermann Eggert's office during the construction of the New Town Hall .

Administration building of the Bahlsen biscuit factory with fire station in Hanover (1911–1912 and 1913)

In 1903 Karl Siebrecht went into business for himself and worked with his brothers Albert Siebrecht († 1950) and August Siebrecht († 1955), for example for his main plant, which was built from 1910 onwards, the former Bahlsen biscuit factory on Podbielskistraße and built on behalf of Hermann Bahlsen in Lister Strasse in Hanover. The factory buildings, which were furnished with special Art Nouveau furnishings by artists such as Julius Diez , Georg Herting , Adolf Hölzel , Willy Jaeckel , Änne Koken , Georg Krüger , Martel Schwichtenberg or Ludwig Vierthaler , are the architectural focus in the Hanover district of List .

Karl Siebrecht was appointed as a member of the Association of German Architects (BDA) in 1907 and felt architecturally related to the style of the Stuttgart School . He was a member of the architects' association Der Block .

After his death in 1952 Siebrecht was buried in the New St. Nikolai Cemetery in the northern part of Hanover.

Buildings and designs

  • 1904: House on Corvinusstrasse in Hanover
  • 1905: Factory building for Hölscher & Breimer (formerly Norddeutsche Tapetenfabrik Hölscher & Breimer - NORTA ) in Hanover, Walsroder Straße
  • 1908: Rectory in Lohne
  • 1909: Extension buildings for the Pelikan-Werke Günther Wagner in Hanover-List
  • 1909–1910: Bahlsen factory in Hannover-List, Lister Strasse 10–14
  • 1910: Weekend house for the Stichweh family in (Wunstorf-) Steinhude, Steenewark 17
  • 1911–1912: Bahlsen administration building in Hannover-List, Podbielskistraße 11
  • 1911–1912: New construction of the Auermühle estate in Steinhorst near Celle
    A competition design by Otto Lüer from 1909 was not carried out, instead the complex was built from May 1911 to July 1912 according to plans by Karl Siebrecht for Fritz Beindorff , the owner of Pelikan -Works, erected.
  • 1912: Kreissparkasse in Lüneburg , Auf dem Meere 1/2 (after a competition design that was awarded 1st prize in 1910)
  • 1913: Fire station in Hanover-List, Podbielskistraße 13
  • 1913: Residential and commercial building in Hannover-List, Ferdinand-Wallbrecht-Strasse 8a / Göbelstrasse
  • 1913–1914: Gatehouses for the Pelikan-Werke Günther Wagner in Hanover-List, Podbielskistraße 139/141
  • 1914: Exhibition pavilion “Bahlsen's Kekshaus” at the German Werkbund exhibition in Cologne 1914

In the last few years before the First World War, various residential buildings were also built in Hanover based on winning competition designs by Siebrecht, e.g. B. Gartenheim housing estate , building on Podbielskistraße, groups of houses on Listholz and Franz-Abt-Straße (renamed Fritz-Beindorff-Allee in 1931 )

  • 1927: Kurierhaus office and commercial building for the publishing house of the daily newspaper Hannoverschen Kurier in Hannover-Mitte, Georgstraße 52
  • 1927: Parish hall for the Friedenskirche in Hanover, Schackstrasse 24
  • 1927–1929: Residential development Im Kreuzkampe in Hannover-List, Im Kreuzkampe / Gottfried-Keller-Strasse / Adalbert-Stifter-Strasse / Spannhagenstrasse / Am long Kampe (together with Friedrich Wilhelm Schick)
  • 1928: Voss stove factory with residential building in Sarstedt , Bahnhofstrasse 6
  • 1928: Administration building for the Sprengel-Werke in Hanover, Glünderstraße 8
  • 1930: Housing complex on Fritz-Beindorff-Allee in Hanover-List
  • 1930–1931: Sea water wave swimming pool on Norderney , Marktplatz
  • 1930: Component of the residential development on De-Häen-Platz in Hanover-List (other components, among others by Wilhelm Kröger , Jürgens & Menke, Friedrich Wilhelm Schick)
  • 1932–1933: Model house “House in the Garden” at the annual show of German garden culture in Hanover 1933
  • 1937: Commercial building of the Sparkasse of the district of Hanover in Hanover, Höltystraße / Wilhelmstraße
  • 1938: Retirement home of the Gustav Brand Foundation in Hanover, Bischofsholer Damm 79
  • 1938: Administration building for the Emden Chamber of Commerce and Industry in Emden, Ringstrasse
Residential house with restaurant Kreuzklappe in Hanover

literature

Web links

Commons : Karl Siebrecht  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f g Hugo Thielen , Helmut Knocke: Siebrecht, Karl. In: Hanover. Art and culture lexicon . Pp. 121-182.
  2. a b c d e f g h i j Alexander Dorner: Karl Siebrecht. In: 100 years of building in Hanover. For the centenary of the technical university. 1931, p. 42.
  3. Bettina Reimann (ViSd § 55 RStV): Wallpaper for the world , in the online edition of the city magazine Langenhagen, Verlag Bettina Reimann [undated]; last accessed on July 10, 2013
  4. The spiritualisation the German labor (=  Yearbook of the German Work Federation . Band 1 ). H. Reckendorf, Berlin 1912, p. 109 ( Textarchiv - Internet Archive - picture of the facade).
  5. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Friedrich Lindau: Karl Siebrecht. In: Hanover. Reconstruction and destruction. The city in dealing with its architectural identity. 2001, p. 336 f.
  6. Carolin Krumm (arrangement): Hanover region, northern and eastern part, with the cities of Burgdorf, Garbsen, Langenhagen, Lehrte, Neustadt a. Rbge., Sehnde, Wunstorf and the communities Burgwedel, Isernhagen, Uetze and Wedemark. (= Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany , architectural monuments in Lower Saxony , Volume 13.2.) Vieweg, Braunschweig / Wiesbaden 2005, ISBN 3-8271-8255-7 , p. 569.
  7. ^ Dataset on Otto Lüer in the database architects and artists with direct reference to Conrad Wilhelm Hase (1818–1902) , accessed on November 22, 2018.
  8. Werner H. Preuß (ed.): Urban development and architecture. Lüneburg in the 20th century. Husum 2001, ISBN 3-89876-004-9 , p. 64.
  9. Deutscher Werkbund (ed.), Peter Jessen: German form in the war year. The exhibition Cologne 1914. F. Bruckmann AG, Munich 1915, p. 33 and p. 143-145 ( Textarchiv - Internet Archive , Textarchiv - Internet Archive ).
  10. ^ Waldemar R. Röhrbein: Beindorff (1), Fritz. In: Hannoversches Biographisches Lexikon. P. 47.
  11. Aufbauschule, Walsrode , non-digitized images in the photo archive of Photo Marburg
  12. Der Baumeister , 32nd year 1934, volume 3, p. 80 f.
  13. Dietrich Janßen: Emden 1943, establishment of a defensive city  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , Lecture given on December 3, 2008 in the Kulturbrücke Ems-Delta e. V. in connection with Kulturbunker.de , revised on December 11, 2008, downloadable as a PDF document . Retrieved December 17, 2012@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.bunkermuseum.de  
  14. ^ Waldemar R. Röhrbein : 1949. In: Hannover Chronik . Pp. 223–226, here: p. 226.