Otto Goetze (architect)

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Otto Goetze (born January 5, 1832 in Otterndorf , † May 4, 1894 in Hanover ; full name: Gustav Wilhelm Otto Goetze ) was a German architect who worked in Hanover.

Life

Otto Goetze was the third of eight children of the lawyer and notary in Hagen Hermann Christoph Goetze (1801–1862) and his wife Wilhelmine Christine, b. Luebcke.

Otto Goetze studied at the Hanover Polytechnic School and worked briefly in Munich , then in Hanover with Hermann Hunaeus , Dobo, Christian Heinrich Tramm and Conrad Wilhelm Hase . He is considered to be a representative of the neo-Gothic style and in part also made use of the English neo-Gothic style. In 1860 he went into business for himself with his own office. After 1880, Hermann Schaedtler worked for him. For 1883 Goetze was elected deputy chairman of the Architects and Engineers Association in Hanover . Some of his buildings have been preserved in Hanover and are now a listed building .

Work (selection)

Villa Zimmermann in Chemnitz (photo 2008)
Café Robby in front of the opera house (photo taken around 1887)

(unless otherwise stated, all in Hanover)

  • 1860: Walhalla wine bar, Windmühlenstrasse 4
  • 1860: Restoration box, Theaterplatz 8
  • 1862–1864: Palais Grote for Count Adolf von Grote , Sophienstraße 7 (listed)
  • 1864: Restaurant Kasten Königshalle , Theaterplatz 9
  • 1860–1878: Conversion of the Tivoli concert garden between Königstrasse 1 and Schiffgraben 48
  • 1862 to 1864: St. Nicolai Church in Uthlede
  • 1865: House Becker, Große Packhofstraße 29
  • 1865–1867: Villa for Johann von Zimmermann , Carolastraße 9, Chemnitz
  • 1866: Villa Goetze, Am Schiffgraben 41 (sold in 1869, listed)
  • 1867: Villa Struckmann, Am Schiffgraben 43 (listed)
  • 1868: Villa Drechsler, Am Schiffgraben 39 (listed)
  • 1869: Villa Goetze II, Am Schiffgraben 37 (sold in 1871, listed)
  • 1869: Café Robby (new: Café Kröpcke ), cast iron pavilion, Georgstraße (not preserved)
  • 1870: Villa Bernuth, Seelhorststrasse 1a
  • 1872: Villa Oppermann, Emmerberg 15
  • 1872: Goetze home and studio, Hinüberstrasse 1
  • 1875: House Fischer, Georgsplatz 19
  • 1877: Königstrasse 1 building
  • 1878: Three Men Wine Bar, Luisenstrasse
  • 1878: Exhibition hall of the Hanover trade exhibition in Welfengarten
  • 1879: Conversion of the Thalia Theater into the Residenztheater , Marktstrasse 47 (not preserved)
  • 1881: Conversion of the royal carriage house to the Palmengarten concert hall , Goethestrasse 15 (listed)
  • 1883–1886: Cumberlandsche Galerie for the Duke of Cumberland Ernst August , Prinzenstrasse (mostly destroyed by the war, remains are listed)
  • 1883–1886: Königstrasse residential group

literature

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. a b Local family book Lesum and Bramstedt. List of persons of the Goetze family , accessed on June 20, 2010
  2. Centralblatt der Bauverwaltung , 2nd year 1882, No. 44 (from November 4, 1882) , p. 402, rubric miscellaneous .
  3. Open Monument Day 2009 on September 13th in Chemnitz: The Villa Zimmermann: a neo-Gothic residential palace ( memento of the original from September 15, 2009 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , Website of the city of Chemnitz, accessed on June 20, 2010 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.chemnitz.de
  4. ^ Franz Rudolf Zankl : View into the theater of the Thalia Association. In: Hanover Archive , sheet K11
  5. Exclusive view of the Cumberlandsche Galerie , in: Hannoversche Allgemeine Zeitung of December 21, 2009, accessed on June 20, 2010