Paul Schmohl

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Paul Schmohl (born July 29, 1870 in Cannstatt , † May 29, 1946 in Backnang ) was a German architect .

Bartholomäus Church in Ilsfeld
Roigelhaus in Tübingen
Villa Franck in Murrhardt
Martinskirche Ebingen
Hindenburg building in Stuttgart

Life

He was the son of the Ludwigsburg master builder Johannes Schmohl and studied from 1890 to 1894 at the Technical University of Stuttgart . With his college friend Georg Stähelin , he founded a law firm in Stuttgart after completing their studies in 1895 . Schmohl & Stähelin were able to achieve initial success with buildings for the Stuttgart trade exhibition in 1896 and then planned villas in the north of Stuttgart in particular .

In 1900 Schmohl became a professor and from 1906 to 1935 director of the Stuttgart School of Applied Arts . He reformed the curriculum of the building school and in 1905 also proposed the establishment of an advice center for the building trade, which he chaired until 1924. In 1908 he initiated the Stuttgart building exhibition. In the same year he was awarded the Knight's Cross of the Friedrich Order . In 1909 he was one of the founders of the Württemberg Federation for Homeland Security, which he also chaired until 1914.

He is the father of the architect Hans Paul Schmohl .

plant

  • 1890: small villa in Stuttgart, Gänsheidestrasse 35
  • 1900: Building of the Teufel company in Stuttgart, Neckarstrasse
  • 1901: Villa Schliz in Heilbronn , Alexanderstraße 53
  • 1901–1902: so-called Röteburg in Stuttgart, Rötestrasse 12–16
  • 1902: Bürgerhalle in Stuttgart
  • 1902: Apartment building in Stuttgart, Paulusstraße 4/6
  • 1902: Villa Java in Stuttgart, Stafflenbergstrasse 34
  • 1902: Group of houses in Stuttgart-Relenberg, Herdweg 96–98
  • 1902: Apartment building in Stuttgart, Alexanderstraße 118
  • 1902: Group of apartment buildings in Stuttgart, Paulusstraße 4–10
  • 1903: Villa in Bad Brückenau , Valentin-Becker-Straße 29
  • 1904: Roigelhaus for the Tübingen royal society Roigel in Tübingen
  • 1904–1907: Villa Hohenstein (Villa Franck) in Murrhardt , Hohenstein 1
  • 1904–1906: Reconstruction of the public buildings in Ilsfeld after the city ​​fire of 1904
  • 1905–1906: Reconstruction of the Bartholomäuskirche in Ilsfeld
  • 1905–1906: Partial new construction of the Protestant Martinskirche in Ebingen
  • 1906–1907: Villa in Stuttgart-Relenberg, Herdweg 10
  • 1906: Villa Malabar in Stuttgart, Stafflenbergstrasse 36
  • 1908: Stadtbad in Ludwigsburg
  • 1908–1909: Villa Schöttle in Stuttgart-Sonnenberg, Falkenstrasse 8
  • 1910: Factory building of the Bühler leather furniture factory in Stuttgart, Rosenbergstrasse
  • 1910–1911: Villa Gut Berneck, Schramberg . For the entrepreneur Arthur Junghans
  • 1911: Schiller-Mörike-Gymnasium in Ludwigsburg
  • 1911: Villa for Emil Kienlin in Esslingen am Neckar , Mörikestraße 4
  • 1913–1914: Heidenheim concert hall
  • 1922: Villa in Stuttgart, Feuerbacher Heide 49
  • 1922: Villa in Stuttgart, Salzmannweg 11
  • 1924: Villa Mayser in Stuttgart, Eduard-Pfeiffer-Strasse 20
  • 1922–1923: Residential houses in Stuttgart-Lenzhaide, Ganghoferstraße 24 and 28
  • 1925–1926: Ufa-Palast cinema (later Metropol ) in Stuttgart, Bolzstrasse 10
  • 1928: Hindenburgbau office and commercial building (with Germany's largest concert café at the time) opposite Stuttgart Central Station
  • before 1933: Luther Church in Stuttgart-Feuerbach

Fonts

  • Viennese baroque. Verlag Wilhelm Meyer-Ilschen, Stuttgart 1913.
  • Württemberg prince seats. Verlag Wilhelm Meyer-Ilschen, Stuttgart 1913.
  • The German House. Konrad Wittwer Publishing House, Stuttgart 1915.

literature

  • Alfred Lutz: Paul Schmohl . In: Württembergische Biograpbhien , Stuttgart 2011.
  • Bernhard J. Lattner, Joachim H. Hennze: Silent contemporary witnesses. 500 years of Heilbronn architecture. Edition Lattner, Heilbronn 2005, ISBN 3-9807729-6-9 , p. 116 and p. 121. ( online as a PDF document with approx. 10 MB)

Web links

Commons : Paul Schmohl  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Zentralblatt der Bauverwaltung , Volume 28, 1908, No. 87 (from October 31, 1908) ( online ), p. 577.
  2. a b c d e f g h i j k l m List of monuments Stuttgart (PDF; 501 kB)
  3. "100 Years of Gut Berneck - A Villa and its Time". Retrieved December 19, 2019 .
  4. ^ Walter Distel: Protestant church building since 1900 in Germany. Zurich 1933, p. 70. (floor plan of the church) ( online as PDF document with approx. 6 MB)