Paul Kienzle

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Portrait by Paul Kienzle, 1913

Paul Heinrich Kienzle (born March 28, 1861 in Birkenfeld (Württemberg) , † January 26, 1941 in Ulm ) was a German architect and hotelier .

Life

Paul Kienzle attended the Latin school in Neuenbürg and was trained as a stone cutter by J. Springer in Birkenfeld from 1875 to 1878 . In the following years he worked as a stone cutter in the summer and continued his education at the building trade school in Stuttgart from 1876 in the winter half-year . After his state examination as a master builder in 1887, he studied architecture at the Technical University of Stuttgart under Christian Friedrich von Leins . In 1891/1892 Kienzle took over the construction management of the Villa Wieland in Ulm for Leins . He settled there as an architect and mainly built villas, residential and commercial buildings in Ulm in the style of historicism and later also in Art Nouveau . In 1893 he received a travel grant from the King of Württemberg to visit the 1893 World Exhibition in Chicago , where he met the American architect Dankmar Adler (in the Adler & Sullivan office).

In 1894 the Laichinger Tiefenhöhle under Kienzle , which was only discovered in 1892, was measured in detail.

Paul Heinrich Kienzle was married to Bertha geb. Remshardt and had three children. He died in Ulm on January 26, 1941.

Buildings (selection)

In addition to Ulm, Kienzle also built in Birkenfeld, Rastatt , Laichingen , Ostrach and Deggingen .

Residence Dr. Frank, Laichingen, 1893
Inscription on the house on Keplerstrasse, 1897
Bahnhofstrasse with the Munster Hotel in Ulm around 1901
Villa Heimstrasse 9 in Ulm, built in 1903
  • 1891–1892: Construction management for the construction of Villa Wieland in Ulm, Neuthorstraße / Olgastraße (based on a design by Christian Friedrich von Leins; destroyed in World War II; today the Ulm Theater stands in its place .)
  • 1893–1894: House with practice for the doctor Dr. Reinhold Frank in Laichingen. The house later became known as "Haus Hirschle" or "Kaufhaus Klotz". Today it no longer stands.
  • 1896: Heimstrasse 17 building in Ulm (under monument protection)
  • 1897: House at Keplerstrasse 29 in Ulm for Augustin Wachter (with a Kepler relief)
  • 1899–1901: Münsterhotel in Ulm, Bahnhofstrasse (destroyed in World War II)
  • 1901: Concert hall in Neu-Ulm, Silcherstraße 2 (demolished in 2012)
  • 1902: Building Schülinstrasse 20–22 in Ulm
  • 1903: Residential building at Olgastraße 139 in Ulm (under monument protection, former house number 81; at times apartment of Hans and Sophie Scholl )
  • 1903: Heimstrasse 9 building in Ulm (listed)
  • 1903–1904: Residential and commercial building at König-Wilhelm-Strasse 5 in Ulm
  • 1903–1904: House for the pasta manufacturer Laible in Ulm, Promenade 6
  • 1909: House at Lichtensteinstrasse 14 in Ulm
  • 1910: Residential group at Lichtensteinstrasse 5–9 in Ulm
  • 1911–1912: House for the cattle dealer Julius Mohr in Ulm, Zinglerstrasse 76
  • 1911: Extension of the school building in Birkenfeld based on a report by Prof. Paul Bonatz (today the Friedrich Silcher School)
Schoolhouse Birkenfeld, diagram (1910)

literature

  • Uwe Heinloth, Reintraut Semmler: On the trail of Art Nouveau and Historicism in Ulm. Klemm & Oelschläger, Münster / Ulm 2001, ISBN 978-3-932577-93-2 .
  • Thomas Vogel: Art and cultural monuments in the Alb-Danube district and in Ulm. Theiss, Stuttgart 2005, ISBN 3-8062-1901-X .

Individual evidence

  1. a b The Laichinger Tiefenhöhle. In: Blätter des Schwäbischen Albverein ( ISSN  1438-373X ), year 1895, p. 73.
  2. a b c Südwest Presse , Volume 35, No. 78 of April 3, 1979, p. 15.
  3. ^ Photo of Villa Wieland in the image database of the Baden-Württemberg State Archives
  4. ^ Contributions to the history of Laichingen, Issue 1, 1958; Reprint 2003, Ed. Fr. Oelhafen, p. 19.
  5. a b List of cultural monuments in downtown Ulm
  6. Hans-Joachim Albinus, Detlef Suckrau: Reminiscences of Johannes Kepler's stay in Ulm 1626-1627. New, strange and unsolved puzzles. In: Ulm and Upper Swabia. Volume 61, 2019, pp. 175–211 (Chapter 6 on the residential building at Keplerstrasse 29).
  7. ↑ Swan song. In: Augsburger Allgemeine Zeitung , issue 279 of December 3, 2011, local section Neu-Ulm, p. 34.
  8. ↑ On-site meeting The number one topic of conversation among the regulars of the Café Concert Hall is the possible demolition of the building. (PDF; 240 kB), accessed on June 6, 2017
  9. Uwe Heinloth, Reintraut Semmler: On the trail of art nouveau and historicism in Ulm. P. 41.
  10. Uwe Heinloth, Reintraut Semmler: On the trail of art nouveau and historicism in Ulm. P. 28.
  11. Explanation and photos of the building known today as the 'Geschwister-Scholl-Haus' on 'uropraxis-ulm.de'
  12. ^ Thomas Vogel: Art and cultural monuments in the Alb-Donau district and in Ulm. P. 97.
  13. Uwe Heinloth, Reintraut Semmler: On the trail of art nouveau and historicism in Ulm. P. 37.
  14. Uwe Heinloth, Reintraut Semmler: On the trail of art nouveau and historicism in Ulm. P. 55.
  15. Uwe Heinloth, Reintraut Semmler: On the trail of art nouveau and historicism in Ulm. P. 52.
  16. Uwe Heinloth, Reintraut Semmler: On the trail of art nouveau and historicism in Ulm. P. 51.
  17. Uwe Heinloth, Reintraut Semmler: On the trail of art nouveau and historicism in Ulm. P. 72.
  18. Archives of the Birkenfeld community
  19. August Engelhardt: Birkenfeld - The history of the place and its inhabitants. Birkenfeld 1980, p. 200.