Max Hans Joli

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Housing complex, Quellenstrasse 24A (1928)

Max Hans Joli (born June 16, 1879 in Vienna ; † July 8, 1946 there ) was an Austrian architect .

Life

Max Hans Joli was the son of a garden director at the Rothschild estates and grew up in well-off circumstances. He attended the structural engineering department of the Vienna State Trade School, which he graduated in 1899. From 1900 to 1903 he studied at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna in the master school with Otto Wagner . Soon afterwards he worked as an architect in Teschen from 1905 to 1911 , where he worked in Eugen Fulda’s studio. From 1912 Joli returned to Vienna. During the First World War he was busy setting up refugee camps in Lower Austria, which were used to accommodate the Jewish population who had fled westward from the Russian soldiers from Galicia . After that only a few buildings by Joli are documented. In the 1930s he published several articles in professional journals.

He and his brother Franz Joli were among the founding members of the first Austrian soccer club Vienna .

power

Max Hans Joli came out especially during his studies with Otto Wagner with sensational designs that were published again and again. But he could not achieve any of this. As executive architect is like Joli-oriented home style , which is noted even in his only municipal housing complex for the city of Vienna.

Works

  • Courtyard and tent of honor for the reception of Emperor Franz Josef during the Silesian imperial maneuvers , Teschen (around 1908)
  • Realgymnasium , Dukelský 1, Freudenthal (1909), together with Eugen Fulda
  • various country houses in Teschen (around 1910)
  • Servants' houses of the Viennese tram , Hetzendorfer Strasse 188, Vienna 13 (1912–1914), together with others
  • Gmünd refugee camp (1916)
  • Refugee camp , Pottendorf (1916)
  • Refugee camp , Bruck an der Leitha (1916)
  • Residential building , Eiserne Handgasse, Vienna 19 (1917), adaptation
  • Housing complex of the municipality of Vienna , Quellenstrasse 24A, Vienna 10 (1928)
  • Interior renovation of the Herrenhof , Herrengasse 10, Vienna 1 (1933)

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