Rudolf Lodders
Rudolf Lodders (born September 19, 1901 in Altona ; † June 3, 1978 in Hamburg ) was a German architect .
biography
After completing an apprenticeship as a bricklayer, Lodders attended the Hamburg building trade school from 1921 to 1924 . He then worked from 1924 to 1925 in the office of the Hamburg architect Karl Schneider . From 1925 to 1927 he worked in the structural engineering department of the city of Altona under Gustav Oelsner . In 1927 he moved to the building construction department of the city of Frankfurt am Main , where he worked for Ernst May and Martin Elsaesser on the New Frankfurt project . In 1929 there was a change to the building construction department of the city of Berlin to Martin Wagner . In 1930 he became an employee of Wilhelm Arntz in the building department of the city of Cologne. After returning from a stay at Villa Massimo on a scholarship in 1931 , he founded his own architectural office in Hamburg, which Friedrich Sünnemann joined in 1934 .
In 1934 Lodders became the in-house architect of the Bremen Hansa-Lloyd and Goliath-Werke (from 1938 Carl F. W. Borgward ) until the Borgward Group went bankrupt in 1961.
Lodders had been friends with the photographer Ernst Scheel since his student days and had his work documented by him and the Bremen photographer Hermann Ohlsen while he was self-employed and during his time at the Borgward factory .
Lodders is buried in the Altona cemetery.
buildings
- 1931: "Senator (Carl) Cohn" tomb (only Lodders grave monument in Hamburg's Ohlsdorf cemetery )
- 1932–1933: Reconstruction and expansion of the ILO engine works in Pinneberg
- 1933–1934: Christiansen house on Elbchaussee in Hamburg-Nienstedten
- 1934–1935: Hansa-Lloyd -Werke in Bremen
- before 1935: Heidehaus near Bremen
- 1935–1936: Wachholz house in (Hamburg-) Altona
- 1935–1937: Goliath factory in Bremen (with Friedrich Sünnemann)
- 1937: House in the Taunus
- 1938: Summer house in the Lüneburg Heath
- 1939: own house in Altona
- 1939–1940: Twin house at Babendiekstrasse 36/38 in (Hamburg-) Altona- Blankenese
- 1946–1956: Participation in the construction of the Grindel high-rise buildings in Hamburg
- 1949: Wooden house on the Elbe
- 1950–1961: Buildings for the shipbuilding research institute in Hamburg
- 1951–1959: Buildings for the BP refinery in Hamburg
- 1952–1953: Conversion of the Borgward House in Bremen
- 1952–1961: Buildings for the Hamburg slaughterhouse
- 1953–1954: Lloyd-Motoren-Werke, Hall 4 , Bremen - Neustadt, Richard-Dunkel-Strasse 120–124
- 1954–1958: Philosophenweg elementary school in Hamburg-Othmarschen (together with Hans-Georg Lehmann and Friedrich Sünnemann)
- 1957–1959: Building of the professional association for health and welfare services in Hamburg-Eimsbüttel
- 1959–1960: Student residence in Hamburg-Stellingen
- 1960–1962: Office building of the Hamburg Medical Association
- before 1962: Single-family house in Hamburg-Flottbek
literature
- Olaf Bartels : Rudolf Lodders. Writings on the reconstruction 1946–1971. Hamburg 1989.
- Olaf Bartels: Altona architects. A history of urban construction in biographies. Hamburg 1997.
- Free Academy of the Arts Hamburg (ed.): Rudolf Lodders. Buildings from 1931–1961. Hamburg 1961.
- Ralf Lange: Hamburg. Reconstruction and re-planning 1943–1963. Langewiesche publishing house, Königstein im Taunus 1994, ISBN 3-7845-4610-2 . (including a short biography)
- Alfons Leitl : The second and third generation. To the buildings of a fifty year old. In: Baukunst und Werkform , born 1951, issue 10, pp. 30–48.
Web links
- Architect portrait of Rudolf Lodders by Jan Lubitz
- Website of the Rudolf Lodders Foundation
Individual evidence
- ↑ Hans Bunge: Ernst Scheel Photographer 1903 - 1986 , . Hamburg 2015, ISBN 978-3-86218-076-9 .
- ↑ Der Baumeister , volume 5/1935
- ↑ a b c d Rudolf Pfister (Ed.): 150 Eigenheime 8th edition, Bruckmann Verlag 1951
- ↑ Der Baumeister , No. 8/1935
- ↑ The Builder , Issue 10/1935
- ↑ The Builder , Volume 4/1938
- ↑ Interior decoration, issue 5/1943
- ↑ Hamburg Monument List
- ↑ Der Baumeister , volume 9/1963
- ^ Kurt Hoffmann: New Single Family Houses , Alexander Hoffmann Verlag 1962
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Lodders, Rudolf |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German architect |
DATE OF BIRTH | September 19, 1901 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Altona |
DATE OF DEATH | June 3, 1978 |
Place of death | Hamburg |