Otto Bollweg

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Otto Bollweg (born July 22, 1857 in Bremen , † November 25, 1927 in Hanover ) was a German architect .

Life

The chapel in Westerode, newly built by Bollweg in 1901 - today a listed building
“Hildesheimerstraße 1” (right) in Hanover;
Postcard no. 639 of F. Karl miracle to 1898

Otto Bollweg studied in the early days of the German Empire from 1875 to 1880 at the Polytechnic School in Hanover - from 1879 Technical University - as a student of Conrad Wilhelm Hase .

From 1880 Bollweg worked in Schleswig in the Schleswig district building inspection and worked as an employee of the architect Adelbert Hotzen in the construction management of various state buildings in the Schleswig area.

In 1881 Bollweg became a member of the Hanoverian Bauhütte zum white sheet . From around 1885 he also worked as an architect in Hanover, where he ran a joint architecture office with Ernst Grelle . In addition, Bollweg taught as a professor at the local arts and crafts school

Works (if known)

The following buildings were built partly together with Ernst Grelle:

  • 1886 Hanover
    • Große Packhofstraße 3 (then and now): Pinthus business and residential building ; not received
    • Raschplatz 10 (formerly): residential building; not preserved (at the beginning of the 21st century, the parking garage behind the main train station )
  • 1888 Hanover, Postkamp 18 (previously: Am Klagesmarkt 7): Wrede residential and commercial building ; listed
  • 1890 Hanover
    • Große Packhofstrasse 1 (formerly): S. Frenkel residential and commercial building ; not received
    • Hildesheimer Straße 1 : residential and commercial building; not preserved, today the street area of ​​the widened mouth of Hildesheimer Straße
  • 1893
    • Hanover, Striehlstrasse 13 at the corner of Nordfelder Reihe (previously: Nordfelder Reihe 31 at the corner of Striehlstrasse, later: Striehlstrasse 4): apartment building; not received
    • Hamm : residential and commercial building
  • 1894-1895
    • Hanover, Aegidiendamm 4 (formerly No. 2): double apartment building ( two-in-one apartment building); A modern tenement house was built over the preserved foundation walls in the 1950s.
    • Magelsen : Reconstruction of the Evangelical Lutheran Church; receive
  • around 1895 Hanover, Marienstraße 66 (previously No. 22a, temporarily No. 38): residential and commercial building; not received
  • 1895, Nienburg / Weser : 1st prize in an architecture competition for the church tower of the Evangelical Lutheran town church of St. Martin
    • 1896 construction of the church tower; receive
  • 1901 Westerode bei Duderstadt, Westeröder Straße: New construction of the Evangelical Lutheran Chapel, preserved

literature

Web links

Commons : Otto Bollweg  - Collection of images, videos and audio files
  • Reinhard Glaß: Bollweg, Otto in the database architects and artists with direct reference to Conrad Wilhelm Hase (1818–1902) on the private page glass-portal.privat.t-online.de

Individual evidence

  1. oV : Bollweg, Otto in the database Niedersächsische people (new entry required) of the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Library - Lower Saxon State Library [no date], as last accessed on May 31, 2017
  2. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Reinhard Glaß: Bollweg, Otto in the database architects and artists with direct reference to Conrad Wilhelm Hase (1818–1902) on the private page glass-portal.privat .t-online.de , last accessed on May 31, 2017
  3. Gerd Weiß , Marianne Zehnpfennig: The northern suburban development , in: Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany , architectural monuments in Lower Saxony, City of Hanover (DTBD), part 1, volume 10.1, ed. by Hans-Herbert Möller , Lower Saxony State Administration Office - Institute for Monument Preservation , Friedr. Vieweg & Sohn Verlagsgesellschaft mbH, Braunschweig 1983, ISBN 3-528-06203-7 , pp. 80ff .; as well as in the middle of the addendum to part 2, volume 10.2: List of architectural monuments according to § 4 ( NDSchG ) (excluding architectural monuments of the archaeological monument preservation ), status: July 1, 1985, City of Hanover , Lower Saxony State Administration Office - publications of the Institute for Monument Preservation, p. 3ff.