Ludwig Bernoully

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Christoph Ludwig Bernoully (born May 23, 1873 in Frankfurt am Main ; † January 13, 1928 there ) was a German architect who mainly worked in Frankfurt am Main. He belonged to a sideline of the family of scholars Bernoulli .

Bernoully studied at the Städelschen Kunstinstitut , at the Technical University of Karlsruhe (with Carl Schäfer ) and most recently at the Technical University of Stuttgart . He then worked as an employee in Hermann Billing's office in Karlsruhe . Joint competition designs by the architects L. Bernoully, O. Linde, and H. Schneeweiss have survived from this period and were published in print in 1900.

Ludwig Bernoully still settled in 1899 as a freelance architect in Frankfurt am Main, where he also temporarily taught at the municipal trade school. He initially built in the styles of historicism , but later turned to modern architecture . His most famous building is the House of Technology , which was built on the exhibition grounds. Otto Haesler was one of his employees .

literature

  • Thomas Zeller: The architects and their building activities in Frankfurt am Main from 1870 to 1950. Frankfurt am Main 2004, ISBN 3-921606-51-9 , p. 49.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Holdings in the Architekturmuseum der Technische Universität Berlin , accessed on May 12, 2013