Max Bauder

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Max Albert Ludwig Bauder (born August 31, 1877 in Freudenstadt ; † after 1935) was a German architect .

Life

He was the son of the professor and architect Albert Bauder (1853-1930) and his wife Mathilde nee Weiß and was of Protestant denomination. His younger brother Theodor Bauder (1888-1945) became a civil engineer and SA leader during the Nazi era.

In 1898 his parents moved to Stuttgart with their family . After attending the secondary school there, Max Bauder passed the first state examination in building construction in 1901 and was appointed government building supervisor. After Max Bauder had successfully passed the second state examination in 1906, he was appointed government master builder.

Max Bauder worked as an architect until 1900 and then switched to the company Wayß & Freitag in Neustadt an der Weinstrasse as an architect and engineer . After three years in Munich , he became director of the stone factory in Ulm in 1906 , and one year later he joined the military construction department in Ulm. From 1908 to 1909 he was involved in the construction of the Mürwik Naval School near Flensburg. He then took over the construction management of the court theater in Stuttgart until 1912. In 1913 he can be found in Berchtesgaden while renovating and building a grand hotel. From 1914 to 1928 he worked in Berlin, first as director and finally as general director at Heilmann & Littmann GmbH. In 1929 he took over the construction management of the Europahaus in Berlin and designed other large buildings, such as the Haus des Rundfunks in Berlin. He also achieved the breakthrough in Hedemannstrasse with the construction of twelve new houses. Other buildings by him were the new IG Farben building in Frankfurt am Main or the administrative building of a mechanical engineering factory in Lübeck .

He lived in Berlin-Tempelhof , Albrechtstrasse 56.

family

Max Bauder married Martine nee Greil in Stuttgart in June 1910. The marriage resulted in two daughters and four sons.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Address Book of Directors and Supervisory Boards , 1928, page 696.
  2. Irmgard Wirth: The buildings and art monuments of Berlin , Volume 2, Edition 2, 1961, page 345.