Oskar Lindemann

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Oskar Lindemann (born September 15, 1880 in Nordhausen ; † August 27, 1914 died near Sedan ) was a German architect .

Life

The Protestant Oskar Lindemann was the son of the building contractor August Lindemann and his wife Wilhelmine Lindemann, née Binkenstein, who last lived in Görsbach . After an apprenticeship, Oskar attended a building trade school , which he left before 1900 as a construction technician. Around 1900 he came to Bergisch Gladbach as an employee of Ludwig Bopp , where he was initially involved in the completion of the Lerbach House and Park , and later on building the Bergisch Gladbach town hall in 1906.

Since 1905 he has also designed and built mainly residential houses independently. From 1912 he gained supra-local influence as the official head of the building advice center of the Mülheim am Rhein district . In this function he had to subject all submitted building applications to a design check, whereby fundamental changes were often recommended or ordered.

Anna Zanders influenced Lindemann's professional career by giving him the opportunity to build a few houses in the Gronauer Waldsiedlung .

Oskar Lindemann, who had remained unmarried, fell as a soldier of the 11th Company of the 3rd Battalion of the Reserve Infantry Regiment 65 in the battle near Sedan. In Bergisch Gladbach, he last lived in the Gronauer Mühle 1 house.

Buildings (selection)

As an employee in Ludwig Bopp's office

  • 1900–1905: Lerbach Palace and Park
  • 1905–1906: Town hall in Bergisch Gladbach

In independent professional practice

  • 1907–1908: Villa Feiber or "German House" in Bergisch Gladbach, Hauptstr. 17th
  • 1913: Double dwelling Kiefernweg 9-11 in the garden settlement Gronauerwald near Bergisch Gladbach
  • 1914: Double dwelling Kiefernweg 8-10 in the garden settlement Gronauerwald near Bergisch Gladbach

literature

  • Michael Werling : Oskar Lindemann in: Architects in the monument conservation plan of Bergisch Gladbach. A selection of buildings and biographies. (= Series of publications by the Bergisches Geschichtsverein , Rhein-Berg department , volume 80.) 2nd edition, Bergisch Gladbach 2019, ISBN 978-3-932326-80-6 , pp. 117–119.

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Landesarchiv NRW, Rhineland Department, PA 3103 (civil status register of deaths) No. 1507, Bergisch Gladbach, Urk. 276 of December 28, 1914 digital
  2. Spiegel Rheinischer Bauart , 5th year, No. 1 (February 1913) (special issue Bergisch-Gladbach and building advice center of the district of Mülheim (Rhine)), pp. 13-16.
  3. ^ Michael Werling: Oskar Lindemann in: Architects in the monument conservation plan of Bergisch Gladbach. A selection of buildings and biographies. (= Series of publications by the Bergisches Geschichtsverein, Rhein-Berg department , volume 80.) Bergisch Gladbach 2019, ISBN 978-3-932326-80-6 , p. 117.