Oscar penny

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Oscar [Oskar] Pfennig (born August 22, 1880 in Hamburg , † 1963 in Stuttgart ) was a German architect .

After a practical activity in the building trade in Lübeck , he studied architecture from 1900 to 1903 at the Technical University of Stuttgart under Theodor Fischer , Heinrich Jassoy and Gustav Halmhuber . From 1904 to 1908 he worked in Theodor Fischer's private studio, then from 1908 to 1910 in the architectural office of Ludwig Eisenlohr and Carl Weigle . He married Eisenlohr's daughter Margarete and in 1910, when Eisenlohr and Weigle separated, he became his father-in-law's new partner.

The joint office operated under the name "Eisenlohr und Pfennig". Eisenlohr's son Ludwig Eisenlohr junior joined this office in 1924 , who, together with Pfennig, caught up with modern trends in architecture (cf. Neues Bauen ) and won numerous competitions.

buildings

(incomplete)

as an employee in the Eisenlohr and Weigle office :

together with Ludwig Eisenlohr sen .:

  • 1910: Villa Abt in Schorndorf
  • 1910–1911: Reconstruction and extension of the conservatory (music college) in Stuttgart
  • 1911–1912: Julius Springer's house in Berlin-Zehlendorf- West, Schillerstraße 10
  • 1911–1912: Hertie department store in Ulm
  • 1911–1912: Johannes-Kepler-Gymnasium in Cannstatt
  • 1911–1913: Protestant Heilandskirche in Stuttgart-Berg , Sickstrasse 37
  • 1911–1913: Office building of the Württemberg credit association in Stuttgart , Willi-Bleicher-Strasse 37 (formerly: Kanzleistrasse)
  • 1912–1913: Restoration rooms in the art building in Stuttgart
  • 1912–1913: School of Applied Arts with teaching and experimental workshops in Stuttgart, Am Weißenhof 1 (in continuation of a project by Bernhard Pankok )
  • 1913: Villa Breuninger in Schorndorf
  • 1913: Villa Gminder in Lichtenstein
  • 1913–1919: Buildings on the main cemetery in Stuttgart- Steinhaldenfeld
  • 1916–1918: Extension of the Hotel Kuhn in Arosa
  • 1922, 1927: Charlottenhof restaurant in Stuttgart , Charlottenstrasse 22
  • 1922: Pietschker house in Stuttgart-Degerloch , Roßhaustraße 6
  • 1925–1927: Kursaal building, Roman-Russian bath and drinking hall of the Albertquelle in Bad Mergentheim
  • 1925–1928: Midnight building in Stuttgart, Königstraße 46 (in which the Eisenlohr und Pfennig office was then also based)
  • 1927: Sieger house in Stuttgart-Degerloch , Löwenstrasse 25

together with Ludwig Eisenlohr jun .:

  • 1929: Eisenlohr house in Stuttgart-Degerloch, Erlenweg 11
  • 1929–1931: Extension of the Breuninger department store in Stuttgart, Marktstrasse 3
  • 1933: a construction phase of the Kochhofsiedlung in Stuttgart
  • 1934: Outdoor swimming pool at Max-Eyth-See in Stuttgart-Hofen
  • 1934–1939: a section of the Vogelsang settlement in Stuttgart
  • 1936–1939: various buildings by Daimler-Benz AG in Sindelfingen and Stuttgart-Untertürkheim
  • 1958–1959: Rosental outdoor pool in Stuttgart-Vaihingen

literature

  • Karlheinz Fuchs: Architecture in the German Southwest. Architects and builders from eight centuries. Weinbrenner, Leinfelden-Echterdingen 2004, ISBN 3-87181-491-1 , p. 159.
  • Annette Schmidt: Ludwig Eisenlohr. An architectural path from historicism to modernity. Stuttgart architecture around 1900. Hohenheim, Stuttgart et al. 2006, ISBN 3-89850-979-6 , ( Publications of the Archive of the City of Stuttgart 98), (Simultaneously: Stuttgart, Univ., Diss., 2005), (p. 534ff .: detailed object review of the buildings planned jointly by Eisenlohr & Pfennig, including plans and views).

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