Paul Brandes

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Paul Brandes (* 1873 in East Prussia ; † after 1951) was a German architect .

Life

Paul Brandes was trained as an architect at the building trade school Deutsch Krone and in Hanover .

In 1903, together with Paul Hakenholz , he received the order for the cooperative housing project in Neu- Siebethsburg near Wilhelmshaven . From 1903 to 1913, the two orientated themselves “still on English country house architecture and its Berlin continuations”. The Bauverein Rüstringen worked together with the architect duo for three decades until it was brought into line in 1933, before Fritz Höger was commissioned with the further design of Neu-Siebethsburg.

In the middle of World War I , the military hospital inspector Probst privately bought the Schützenhof in Bad Oeynhausen . After Probst had received approval to build a military sanatorium with 250 beds with the consent of the military authorities, in 1916 he commissioned Paul Brandes to build the new institution. In 1917, the Hanover-based Brandes was honored with the award of the Red Cross Medal, 2nd class.

At the beginning of the Weimar Republic , Brandes worked from 1920 in Hanover in an architecture office operated jointly with Paul Hakenholz.

In 1945, immediately after the end of the Second World War , Brandes entered into an office partnership with the architect Dieter Oesterlen in Hanover , but this only lasted until 1949. Brandes also worked with his son Rudolf Brandes in the post-war period .

buildings

Hedwigstraße 18, restored with a simplified facade after the World War
The former
Magis department store on Kröpcke , built in the early 1950s and now a listed building
  • 1902: together with Hakenholz: corner house Lemwerderstrasse / Fröbelstrasse in Bremen-Nord for the Spar- und Bauverein Blumenthal (today GEWOSIE)
  • 1904: together with Hakenholz: Helenenkapelle for the Hohenlychen sanatorium
  • 1907: sanatorium: with hooks wood waste Rose , also Good Zeisigberg called
  • together with Hakenholz: Convalescent home Friedrichshöhe in Bad Pyrmont
  • around 1915:
    • Allerhof manor in Engehausen on the Aller; View from the house of a summer house at the end of the garden, ink on banner, architect Paul Brandes
    • House garden in Bissendorf
  • around 1925: Facade for the office building of the construction business Adolf Henning , Hedwigstraße 18
  • 1925: Lutherhaus in Hanover, Ebhardtstrasse 3a
  • from 1928–1930: Expansion of the Friederikenstift in Hanover, Humboldstrasse 5
    • 1946–1951: reconstruction
    • since 1954 considerably expanded by Paul Brandes' son Rudolf Brandes
    • after 1959: on Goetheplatz extension of the nurses' home instead of the previously demolished garrison church
  • 1951 or 1952, together with Ludwig Thiele : Magis department store

literature

Archival material

Archival material by and about Paul Brandes can be found, for example

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f o.V. : Brandes, Paul in the database of Niedersächsische Personen (new entry required) of the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Library - Niedersächsische Landesbibliothek in the version of January 17, 2014, last accessed on March 25, 2018
  2. Sommer Ingo: The city of the 500,000th Nazi urban planning and architecture in Wilhelmshaven . Springer-Verlag, 2016, ISBN 978-3-322-89736-7 ( google.de [accessed on March 25, 2018]).
  3. Der Industriebau, monthly for the artistic and technical promotion of all areas of industrial buildings, including all engineering structures, as well as all the advances in technology , 7th year 1916, p. 111. ( limited preview in the Google book search)
  4. Zentralblatt der Bauverwaltung , 37th year 1917, p. 445. ( limited preview in Google book search)
  5. Thomas Katzke: Monograph / Contemporary? Tradition and space with Dieter Oesterlen , review of Anne Schmedding's thesis: Dieter Oesterlen. Tradition and contemporary space (Tübingen; Berlin: Wasmuth, 2011, ISBN 978-3-8030-0744-5 ), in: Bauwelt , edition 20/2012, p. 40; as a PDF document also on the bauwelt.de website
  6. Friends of the Helenenkapelle Hohenlychen e. V. ( Memento of the original from January 20, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.kapelle-hohenlychen.de
  7. ^ A b Andreas Jüttemann: The Prussian Lung Sanatorium 1863-1934. Dissertation, Berlin 2015, p. 69.
  8. oV : Brandenburg / Please come in! / For “Open Monument Day” on September 9th, numerous historic buildings in Brandenburg are also open to visitors. A small selection. Article on the page of the daily newspaper Der Tagesspiegel from August 31, 2007, last accessed on March 26, 2018
  9. a b c Gert Gröning , Uwe Schneider (arr.): Estate of Christian H. Roselius (1871–1945). Finding aid for the Bremen State Archives, inventory 7.66 , ed. from the Berlin University of the Arts, Berlin: University of the Arts, 1996, ISBN 3-89462-052-8 , pp. 52, 56; limited preview in Google Book search
  10. ^ Paul Siedentopf (main editor): Adolf Henning, construction business, owner: Adolf Henning, Hanover, Hedwigstrasse 18, bricklaying, carpentry, concrete, reinforced concrete , in: The book of the old companies of the city of Hanover in 1927 , Leipzig: Jubilee Verlag Walter Gerlach, 1927, p. 98
  11. a b c d e f Helmut Knocke , Hugo Thielen : Keyword Paul Brandes , in Dirk Böttcher , Klaus Mlynek (ed.): Hannover. Art and culture lexicon , new edition, 4th, updated and expanded edition, zu Klampen, Springe 2007, ISBN 978-3-934920-53-8 , pp. 101, 121, 154