Richard Jordan (architect)
Richard Jordan (born March 6, 1847 in Vienna ; † February 7, 1922 there ; full name: Richard Franz Jordan ) was an Austrian architect and builder of late historicism .
Life
Jordan came from a Viennese family. His father Leopold Jordan was a civil engineer and councilor. Richard Jordan studied from 1864 to 1868 at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna under Friedrich von Schmidt , in whose construction studio he joined in 1867. There he took over the construction management of the Brigittakirche and the Lazaristenkirche . In 1871 he received the master builder license. As an architect, Richard Jordan specialized primarily in church buildings, many of which are characterized by the use of exposed brickwork in neo-Romanesque and neo-Gothic forms. Together with Victor Luntz and Franz von Neumann , he was one of the busiest architects from Friedrich von Schmidt's school. Richard Jordan was buried at the Grinzinger Friedhof (group MA, number 25A).
Buildings
- Hollabrunn boys' seminar (built 1880–1881)
- Hütteldorfer parish church in Vienna- Penzing (built 1881–1882)
- Norbertinum in Tullnerbach (built 1881–1890)
- Chapel of Mary, Queen of St. Rosary in Vienna (built 1885–1886)
- Pilgrimage basilica Maria Puchheim (built 1886–1890)
- Redemptorist Church in Vienna- Hernals (built 1886–1889)
- Maria Immaculata Monastery Church (Vienna) - Floridsdorf (built 1887–1888)
- Parish church Lichtenwörth (Gothic-Neo-Gothic completed 1887–1889)
- Gersthof parish church in Vienna- Währing (built 1887–1891)
- Reconstruction and enlargement of the Kalvarienbergkirche in Vienna-Hernals (1889-1894)
- Mother of God Church in Vienna- Landstrasse (built 1890-1891)
- Sacré Coeur Pressbaum (built 1891–1894)
- Wiener Neustadt Cathedral (reconstruction of the church towers according to the existing plans from 1892 to 1899)
- Basilica of the Mother of Mercy in Marburg (built 1892–1900)
- Carmelite Monastery Döbling (built 1898–1901)
- Krahuletz Museum in Eggenburg (built 1901–1902)
- Emergency Church of the Immaculate Conception of Mary in Vienna- Meidling (built in 1905, destroyed in 1945; today Church of the Mary Conception )
- Parish Church Gastern (built 1904/1905)
- Parish church Enzersfeld in the Weinviertel (built 1908–1909)
- Three buildings in the Rosenhügel Neurological Hospital in Vienna- Hietzing (built around 1908–1912)
- Parish church Kierling in Klosterneuburg (built 1912-1914)
- Trinity Church in Vienna- Favoriten (built 1913–1914)
- Filial church hl. Wolfgang in Kirchberg am Wechsel (partly rebuilt 1919–1926)
Awards and honors
- Knight of the Papal New Year's Order (1873)
- Imperial Austrian Cross of Merit with the Crown (1874)
- Highest recognition from the emperor (for the restoration of the Wiener Neustadt cathedral ; 1899)
- Highest recognition of the emperor (for the establishment of emergency churches; 1906)
literature
- Jordan, Richard. In: Austrian Biographical Lexicon 1815–1950 (ÖBL). Volume 3, Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Vienna 1965, p. 132.
- Martin Stangl: Richard Jordan - sacred buildings. Diploma thesis, University of Vienna 1999.
Web links
- Richard Jordan. In: Architects Lexicon Vienna 1770–1945. Published by the Architekturzentrum Wien . Vienna 2007.
- Richard Jordan. In: arch INFORM .
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Jordan, Richard |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Jordan, Richard Franz (full name) |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Austrian architect and builder |
DATE OF BIRTH | March 6, 1847 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Vienna |
DATE OF DEATH | February 7, 1922 |
Place of death | Vienna |