Senate building directors of Berlin
The Senate Building Director in Berlin is an office with the rank of State Secretary in the Senate Department for Urban Development and Housing , which deals with municipal building tasks and the overall planning of Berlin. The office was introduced in West Berlin in 1951 by the Reuter Senate . There are also Senate building directors in the state of Bremen ; in the state of Hamburg , the corresponding position is called Senior Construction Director .
This list shows the Berlin Senate Building Directors and their predecessors in East Berlin , Greater Berlin , the City of Berlin and comparable architects and builders of the Prussian kings who were formative for the cityscape.
Senate building directors of West Berlin
Surname | Period | Remarks |
---|---|---|
Regula Lüscher | since 2006 | Lüscher founded the “Baukollegium”, a committee of architects and construction experts, to which investors and their builders are supposed to present their plans. |
Hans Stimmann | 2000-2006 | |
Barbara Jakubeit | 1996-1999 | |
Hans Stimmann | 1991-1996 | Implemented the historical city plan as a planning model from 1996 to 1999 with the “ Inner City Plan ”. This resulted in the "Inner City Plan". |
1982-1991 | Office vacant | |
Hans Christian Müller | 1967-1982 | dismissed by building senator Ulrich Rastemborski (CDU) |
Werner Düttmann | 1960-1966 | is one of the most important representatives of post-war modernism , planned the construction of the Märkisches Viertel. In the late 1960s and 1970s, Düttmann played a key role as city planner in the implementation of area renovation measures in Berlin-Kreuzberg , especially in the area around the Kottbusser Tor . |
Hans Stephan | 1956-1960 | Resigned in 1960 due to political pressure |
Ludwig Lemmer | 1951-1956 |
Chief architect of East Berlin
The post of chief architect of East Berlin was created in 1953. In order to guarantee the architectural-artistic development of the Berlin building projects and to take into account the urban development-artistic side of the reconstruction plan of Berlin according to its importance, it was decided to reorganize the construction department and to assign a chief architect for Greater Berlin to the mayor. In addition to the “official” chief architects for Berlin ( Henselmann , Gericke , Näther and Korn ) there were others who were responsible for certain areas or projects.
Surname | Period | Remarks |
---|---|---|
Roland Korn | 1973-1990 | Chief architect of East Berlin, especially in the reconstruction of the Nikolai district involved |
Joachim Näther | 1964-1973 | Chief architect of East Berlin, was largely responsible for the redesign of the Fischerinsel . |
Hans Gericke | 1959-1964 | Chief architect for the reconstruction of Berlin |
Hermann Henselmann | 1953-1959 | Chief architect at the magistrate of East Berlin |
Other important chief architects | ||
Heinz Graffunder | 1976-1988 | Chief architect and head of urban planning in Berlin-Mitte (building complex along Rathaus- and Karl-Liebknecht-Strasse), head of the design collective and chief architect of the Palast der Republik and the new Berlin districts of Marzahn and Hellersdorf |
Josef Kaiser | 1973 | Chief architect and personal advisor to the director of construction management for special building projects in East Berlin, Erhardt Gißke . |
Erhardt Gißke | 1958-1963 | City planning director of Berlin, 1955 to 1958 deputy of the chief architect Henselmann |
City planning officer of Greater Berlin / City of Berlin
After the new urban order in Prussia came into force in 1808 and the establishment of the Magistrate of Berlin , Friedrich Wilhelm III. Friedrich Wilhelm Langerhans as the first town planning officer. The city ordinance provided for a magistrate constitution with two organs: the elected city council assembly and the magistrate appointed by it with paid and unpaid city councilors as the executive . According to the city code, the salaried members were two lawyers, a syndic , a chamberlain and a city councilor for construction. In 1845 a second building council office was set up and the office was divided into civil engineering.
The tasks of the municipal building councils mainly included the planning, implementation and monitoring of municipal building projects.
Surname | Period | Remarks |
---|---|---|
Karl Bonatz | 1946-1948 | Since 1947 successor to city planning officer Hans Scharoun and from 1949 city planning director in West Berlin |
Hans Scharoun | 1945-1946 | City planning officer, head of the building and housing department. Elaboration of a reconstruction concept |
Albert Speer | 1937-1945 | General building inspector for the capital of the Reich in the rank of minister, the municipal building administration lost its powers |
Max Rendschmidt | 1933-1937 | “Stadtbaudirektor” with city councilor Benno Kühn (civil engineering) and Adalbert Pfeil |
Martin Wagner | 1926-1933 | Successor to Hoffmann, who saw himself as the “organizer of the metropolis of Berlin” and was also responsible for the new urban housing developments. "On leave" in March 1933 as town planning officer by the Nazi rulers |
unoccupied | 1924-1925 | After Hoffmann retired at the age of 71 through the introduction of the age limit of 65 years, a successor was not found until 1926 in Martin Wagner. |
Friedrich Krause | 1897-1921 | City planning officer for civil engineering, successor to Hobrecht |
Ludwig Hoffmann | 1896-1924 | With more than 300 buildings, it had a decisive impact on the cityscape |
Hermann Blankenstein | 1872-1896 | An almost unmistakable number of buildings, including 120 schools, still characterize the Berlin cityscape today. His brick and terracotta style outlasted the eclecticism of the founding years . |
James Hobrecht | 1884-1896 | City Planning Council of the City of Berlin for road and bridge construction; developed the Hobrecht Plan |
Carl Theodor Rospatt | 1873-1884 | City planning officer for civil engineering designed the typical Berlin lavatory " Café Achteck " |
Adolf Gerstenberg | 1861-1871 | In 1851 he founded the Berlin professional fire brigade together with Ludwig Scabell and worked as a fire inspector until 1861. City planning officer in Berlin and predecessor of Hermann Blankenstein |
Gustav Holtzmann | 1852-1860 | Built u. a. the Friedrichs orphanage in Rummelsburg and the provost office of the Nikolaikirche . |
Franz Alexander Wilhelm Kreyher | 1845-1859 | From 1845 city architect at Langerhans, from 1849 his successor |
Christian Gottlieb Cantian | 1822-1832 | Unpaid city planning officer. Created the large granite bowl in the pleasure garden . |
Friedrich Wilhelm Langerhans | 1809-1849 | Berlin's first full-time urban planning officer |
Royal court architect / building director / architect of the king
The builders and architects listed here can, in the broadest sense, be considered the ancestors of the Senate building directors. You were in the civil service and decisively shaped the cityscape of Berlin.
Surname | Period | Remarks |
---|---|---|
Johann Carl Ludwig Schmid | 1842-1849 | Head of the Oberbaudeputation; Drafted the development plan for the Berlin area in 1827, Schmid's work was one of the conceptual forerunners of the later Hobrecht plan of 1862 |
Peter Joseph Lenné | 1840 | In 1840 he was one of the first to draw up an overall plan for Berlin and the surrounding area: Projected decorative and border trains from Berlin to the immediate vicinity. Many of Lenné's ideas and ideas flowed into the Hobrecht Plan . |
August Adolph Günther | 1841-1842 | From 1836 he was also a teacher at the building academy, was promoted to deputy senior building director in 1838 and, after Schinkel's death in November 1841, was appointed as his successor as senior building director, but died in December 1842. |
Karl Friedrich Schinkel | 1815-1841 | Oberlandesbaudirektor and architect of the king |
Johann Albert Eytelwein | 1809-1830 | As director of the Oberbaudeputation he was Oberlandesbaudirektor and predecessor Schinkel from 1816 |
Carl Gotthard Langhans | 1788-1806 | In 1788 Friedrich Wilhelm II. Appointed director of the newly established Oberhofbauamt in Berlin, which was closed in 1806 |
Georg Christian Unger | 1787-1799 | Unger was Oberhofbaurat from 1787 and director of the Immediatbaukommission from 1788 |
Michael Philipp Boumann | 1778-1803 | Secret Oberhof building officer, general manager and building director |
Georg Friedrich von Boumann | 1776-1778 | Successor to his father as senior building director and senior court building officer under Langhans |
Jan Bouman | 1755-1776 | Senior Building Director for building projects in Berlin and Potsdam |
Christian Friedrich Feldmann | 1746-1765 | Kurmärkischer Oberbaudirektor in Berlin |
Georg Wenzeslaus von Knobelsdorff | 1740-1746 | Chief architect of King Friedrich II. In 1746 he resigned the management of Friedrich's most important buildings for health reasons. |
Titus de Favre | 1737-1740 | Senior Building Director, together with Johann Carl Stoltze; under King Frederick II, Favre was only active in the provinces. |
Philipp Gerlach | 1707-1737 | Royal building director, from 1720 senior building director |
Johann Friedrich Eosander von Göthe | 1699-1713 | Court architect |
Andreas Schlueter | 1698 (1699?) -1713 | Palace building director, was in competition with Eosander |
Martin Grünberg | 1695-1698 | Chief Building Director of the Electorate of Brandenburg |
Johann Arnold Nering | 1691-1695 | Chief Building Director of the Electorate of Brandenburg |
Johann Gregor Memhardt | from 1650 | Court architect under Friedrich Wilhelm |
literature
- Dörte Döhl: Ludwig Hoffmann: Building for Berlin 1896-1924 . Ernst Wasmuth, Tübingen 2004, ISBN 978-3-8030-0629-5 .
- Uwe Kieling: Berlin - buildings and master builders . from the Gothic to 1945. Berlin Edition, Berlin 2003, ISBN 978-3-8148-0095-0 .
- Berlin City Law: A Handbook of Administrative Law of the City of Berlin
Web links
- Does Berlin need an official building security guard?
- Henriette Heischkel: Building in West Berlin 1949–1963. The role of building management in the field of tension between art and politics. Gebr. Mann Verlag, 2018, accessed on January 28, 2019 . With short biographies
Individual evidence
- ^ Planning works / State of Berlin. In: stadtentwicklung.berlin.de. January 29, 2010, accessed May 2, 2019 .
- ^ Neue Zeit , July 26, 1953, p. 10
- ↑ Manfred Sack: Old Berlin has lost face. In: zeit.de . June 16, 1972, Retrieved May 2, 2019 .
- ^ Ludwig Hoffmann: Building for Berlin 1896-1924
- ^ Dörte Döhl: Ludwig Hoffmann ... , 37.
- ↑ Todtenschau . In: Deutsche Bau-Zeitung . tape 35 , 1901 ( online [accessed May 7, 2019]).
- ^ Gustav Holtzmann at Deutsche Fotothek. In: deutschefotothek.de. Retrieved October 28, 2019 .