Schaumburg-Lippe-Strasse 6

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Villa Schaumburg-Lippe-Strasse 6 (2014)

The building Schaumburg-Lippe-Straße 6 is a villa in Bonn district of south town , which was built in 1911/12. It is located on a spur road that branches off from Adenauerallee ( Bundesstrasse 9 ) above the banks of the Rhine (Rathenauufer). From 1950 to 1960 the villa was the seat of the Representation of the State of Berlin to the federal government .

history

The house was built as half of a double villa (half villa) for the client Heinrich Mannstaedt according to plans by the Godesberg architect Carl Doflein (* 1856) on the newly parceled property of the former villa Franz Heinrich Freiherr von Rigal (built in 1846, demolished in 1905/06). The other half of the house (Schaumburg-Lippe-Straße 8) was built in 1904/05 for Professor Theodor Rumpf . Following Mannstaedt's building application from February 25, 1911, the building permit was granted on April 26 . The house was built in solid brick , plastered and provided with solid ceilings; for extending over all floors and well ahead of the building line passing bay and also greatly projecting side terrace were special permits required. Construction work began at the beginning of May 1911 , on October 21, 1911, the building shell was accepted and on May 23, 1912, the acceptance test .

In the Second World War , 50 percent of the house was destroyed in the Allied air war . After Bonn had become the provisional seat of parliament and government of the Federal Republic of Germany in 1949 , the Magistrate of Greater Berlin decided to set up the Bonn office of its state representation ( representation of the Magistrate of Greater Berlin to the Federal Republic of Germany ) in the semi-villa . In mid-July 1949, the building was inspected in the presence of the Berlin mayor Ernst Reuter and selected for rent. The owner at the time, Ottilie Mannstaedt in Rostock , tied her consent to a rental, initially to a permit to move to Bonn. The reconstruction, including the clearing of rubble , was financed with the help of two mortgage loans brokered by the State of North Rhine-Westphalia , for the servicing of which the State of Berlin granted the owner an annual construction subsidy, took over interest payments and also paid her 6,000 DM annually. The reconstruction work began in mid-September 1949, the acceptance of use took place on July 21, 1950. The State Representation was headed by the Senator for Federal Affairs and initially had another office at the former seat of the Economic and State Council of the Bizone in Frankfurt am Main .

In February 1960, the Berlin state representation within Bonn moved to Villa Joachimstrasse 7 . The office of the German Society for Foreign Policy (DGAP) had previously been located there, which in return rented the previous building of the state representation and started work there on October 1, 1960. The Catholic Church later became the new owner of the house . In August 1964, she terminated the lease of the DGAP for March 1965. Today the house is used as a residential community for senior citizens.

Garden pavilion

Garden pavilion, view from Rathenauufer (2016)

The property also includes a garden pavilion above the Rathenau shore, which was formerly part of the Adenauerallee 63 property and was built in 1880 as a garden room with a covered hall. It is a rectangular pavilion with bevelled corners in clinker masonry, which is equipped with a balcony on two sides on cast-iron supports with original wrought-iron lattice. The pavilion stands as a monument under monument protection , registration in the list of monuments of the city of Bonn took place on February 6, 1998th

literature

  • Olga Sonntag : Villas on the banks of the Rhine in Bonn: 1819–1914 . Bouvier Verlag, Bonn 1998, ISBN 3-416-02618-7 , Volume 3, Catalog (2), pp. 282-284. (also dissertation University of Bonn, 1994)

Web links

Commons : Schaumburg-Lippe-Straße 6  - Collection of images

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Olga Sonntag: Villas on the banks of the Rhine in Bonn: 1819–1914 . Volume 3, catalog (2), p. 322.
  2. ^ Olga Sonntag: Villas on the banks of the Rhine in Bonn: 1819–1914 , Volume 2, Catalog (1), p. 41.
  3. ^ Olga Sonntag: Villas on the banks of the Rhine in Bonn: 1819–1914 . Volume 3, Catalog (2).
  4. a b c d Helmut Vogt: Bridgeheads: The Beginnings of the State Representations in Bonn 1949–1955 . In: Rheinische Vierteljahrsblätter , ISSN  0035-4473 , volume 64/2000, pp. 309-362. ( online )
  5. ^ Daniel Friedrich Eisermann: Foreign policy and strategy discussion: the German Society for Foreign Policy 1955 to 1972 , Oldenbourg Verlag, Munich 1999, ISBN 3-486-56338-6 , p. 82/83. (also dissertation University of Bonn, 1995)
  6. The information is taken from the legally binding list of monuments of the city of Bonn. It is managed by the Lower Monument Authority , from which the entries for the individual monuments can be obtained for a fee.
  7. List of monuments of the city of Bonn (as of March 15, 2019), number A 3361

Coordinates: 50 ° 43 ′ 47.5 "  N , 7 ° 6 ′ 36.8"  E