Higher technical federal teaching and research institute Wiener Neustadt
HTBLuVA Wiener Neustadt | |
---|---|
type of school | Higher Technical Institute |
founding | 1873 |
address |
Dr. Eckener Gasse 2 |
place | Wiener Neustadt |
state | Lower Austria |
Country | Austria |
Coordinates | 47 ° 49 '23 " N , 16 ° 14' 5" E |
carrier | Federal Ministry for Education, Science and Culture |
student | about 1,500 |
Teachers | about 150 |
management | Ute Mutton |
Website | www.htlwrn.ac.at |
The higher technical federal teaching and research institute Wiener Neustadt is a vocational higher school of the federal government in Wiener Neustadt . Affiliated is the state research institute for structural engineering Wiener Neustadt (hence the name HTBLuVA).
Description of the school
The HTL Wiener Neustadt is after the HTBLuVA Mödling , the largest HTL in Austria, the second largest vocational school in Lower Austria for construction (there is also the HTL Krems ), and with the HTLuVA St. Pölten , HTL Hollabrunn and HTBLuVA Waidhofen / Ybbs one of those for Mechanical and electrical engineering.
- Characteristics
- Class level: 57
- Student status: 1546
- Teacher level: 141
- (As of the beginning of school 2010/2011)
Structure and structure
Schools:
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Higher department
- Higher education institution: regular school 5 years with Matura ( vocational high school / BHS)
- Higher educational institution for working people : part-time / continuing education school with Matura
- Technical school : 4-year-old regular school with a vocational qualification ( Vocational Middle School / BMS)
- College for working people: Post-secondary vocational / advanced training for AHS / BHS high school graduates
Technical focus / training focus: Educational offerings of technical, commercial and arts and crafts schools (around 15 subject areas / occupations ) or to be determined independently from the school
Department | school | Technical focus | Training focus | annotation |
---|---|---|---|---|
Construction engineering | Higher educational institution | Architecture, construction and building technology, civil engineering | Building construction | |
Construction engineering | Higher educational institute for working people | Architecture, construction and building technology, civil engineering | Building construction | |
Construction engineering | College | Architecture, construction and building technology, civil engineering | Building construction | |
Construction engineering | Higher educational institution | Architecture, construction and building technology, civil engineering | Construction industry | |
Electronic data processing and organization | Higher educational institution | Information and communication technologies, new media | Commercial data processing | expiring |
Electrical engineering | Technical school | Electrical engineering, energy and communications engineering | ||
Electrical engineering | Higher educational institution | Electrical engineering, energy and communications engineering | Power engineering and industrial electronics | |
Electrical engineering | Higher educational institution | Electrical engineering, energy and communications engineering | Information technology | |
Electrical engineering | Higher educational institute for working people | Electrical engineering, energy and communications engineering | Power engineering and industrial electronics | |
Electrical engineering | Higher educational institute for working people | Electrical engineering, energy and communications engineering | Information technology | |
Electrical engineering | College | Electrical engineering, energy and communications engineering | Power engineering and industrial electronics | |
Electrical engineering | College | Electrical engineering, energy and Communications engineering | Information technology | |
Computer science | Higher educational institution | Information and communication technologies, new media | ||
Mechanical engineering | Higher educational institution | Mechanical engineering, mechanical engineering | Automation technology | |
Mechanical engineering | Higher educational institute for working people | Mechanical engineering, mechanical engineering | Automation technology | |
Mechanical engineering | College | Mechanical engineering, mechanical engineering | Automation technology |
- Status 2010/11; Source: HTL Wr. Neustadt; Lower Austria Bildungsges. f. Technical colleges and universities
Research institute for structural engineering
The affiliated research institute for structural engineering Wiener Neustadt is an accredited Austrian research institute (institution of standards and testing).
It is a test center for building materials of the groups concrete , precast concrete parts (ÖNORM B 3303); Hollow and solid blocks (ÖNORM B 3206); Natural stone and inorganic building materials (ÖNORM B 3126-2); Screed mortars and compounds (DIN 18150-2); Chimneys (DIN 18150-2).
It also offers numerous services (such as concrete core drilling, building physics tests and measurements (which are currently not subject to any standard), structural reports , construction site controls and advice).
History of the technical center in Wiener Neustadt
The technical school for mechanical engineering was founded in 1873 with only four students and two teachers attached to what was then the secondary school in Wiener Neustadt and in 1874 the secondary school moved into the newly constructed secondary school building on Babenbergerring. The first leaving exams were held in 1879.
In the school year 1889/1890, 80 students attended the school. The catchment area that the school had at this time is remarkable. Of the 80 students, only 12 came from the city of Wiener Neustadt itself.
Areas of origin of the students:
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1922 was a fateful year for the school. Because of the precarious financial situation, the Federal Ministry of Commerce and Industry planned to close the school. It is thanks to the massive commitment of the mayor of Wiener Neustadt at the time, Anton Ofenböck , that the school was preserved. A promise by the community was the establishment of training workshops, the construction of which began in 1925 and which could be used for the first time in 1927.
When the school, then called the Engineering School, was finally separated from the Realschule in 1941, Ernst Kielhauser became its first director.
During the Second World War, classes continued almost undisturbed in the first years of the war. The training of technicians was too important to those in power. It was not until Wiener Neustadt was exposed to increasingly heavy bombing that the school was closed in December 1944, at a time when most of the other schools had long since been evacuated from the city.
Classes began again on September 17, 1945. Eight teachers taught a total of 129 students in four classes under the most difficult conditions. The school building had suffered badly from the bombing and the workshops and laboratories were practically unusable after the Soviet troops stole all the machines and tools.
The following decades were mainly characterized by a continuous expansion of the focus of training offered. In 1946, the Ischl program was implemented and the previously four-year department was converted into a five-year higher department for mechanical engineering . In addition, a three-year technical college for mechanical engineering was opened. In 1947 a three-year building school was opened, and in 1960 a five-year higher department for building construction was added. From 1965, the technical schools were converted to their current four-year form. With regard to the new, larger school building, which was just under construction, the educational offer was expanded in 1972 to include a higher department and a technical college for electrical engineering . The HTL for working people, specializing in mechanical engineering , also started this year in the form of an evening school. In the following year, the HTL for working people was expanded to include structural engineering and electrical engineering . The evening school for building construction had to be closed again in 1981 due to a lack of demand, but a special course in electronic data processing and applied microelectronics was offered from 1981 to 1983 .
The school experienced a major upgrade in 1984 with the establishment of an authorized research institute for building technology, specializing in building materials, specializing in mineral building materials . The establishment was preceded by intensive efforts by the municipality of Wiener Neustadt.
In the school year 1987/88 the fourth and so far last mainstay of the former mechanical engineering school started with the higher department for electronic data processing and organization . At the same time, the higher department for mechanical engineering was converted into a higher department for mechanical engineering, training branch automation technology. Most of the higher departments (except building construction) were now run in two classes, but the technical schools for mechanical engineering and building construction ended with the 1989/90 school year.
Lengthy naming
The school has been renamed several times over the years. In 1895, which was the Lower Austrian State Trade School in Higher Vocational School mechanical-technical direction renamed. The next renaming takes place in 1921 in the Federal College for Mechanical Engineering and in 1936 in the Higher Federal Trade School . In 1941 the next new name came with the State Engineering School . The school was almost given its final name in 1963 as the Higher Technical College Wiener Neustadt . The name of the higher technical federal teaching and research institute Wiener Neustadt was given to the school when the research institute was built in 1984.
Constant growth, lack of space and temporary arrangements
The history of the school is marked by a steadily increasing number of students. As a result, there were always space problems. The premises of the secondary school on Babenbergerring, to which the HTL was connected after its establishment, was soon no longer sufficient, mainly due to the lack of space for the machines necessary for practical lessons. This problem had previously been resolved through practical work in factories in the area. In the years 1925 to 1927, a separate training workshop was therefore set up with the support of the municipality.
When a construction school was connected in 1947, the initial lack of a building yard was compensated for by the fact that the students were used to build the community hall. However, when a higher department for building construction was added in 1960, the space problem escalated. As alternative quarters, the building yard was housed in the basement of the grammar school, parts of the training workshop in the basement of the secondary school, the company laboratory in a building of the fire brigade (which had already been approved for demolition) and some classes in the building of the commercial academy. The gymnasium and sports field were rented by the Gymnastics and Sports Union.
From 1967 further temporary arrangements were added. The VÖEST pavilion (also known as steel construction) was moved into at Babenbergerring 5a and accommodated six classes. In the next year, a former herb factory was adapted as a building yard and one year later the steel structure was expanded to include a south-facing pavilion, which accommodated six more classes.
A short-term improvement brought the construction of a new school building, which was completed after five years of construction in 1974 (Dr.-Eckener-Gasse 2). The school now offered space for 27 classes with the associated special classrooms, workshops and laboratories. In 1978 an additional sports hall was opened. Shortly after the new Electronic Data Processing and Organization (EDVO) department was added in 1987 , there was not enough space again. In the school building, which was built for 27 classes, there should have been room for 39 to 44 classes in the day school. Since the provisional facility on Babenbergerring still existed, the IT department moved into the steel house as a branch until the completion of the extension in 2001 after a 2-year construction period, adding an information desk, IT laboratories and a new restaurant area to 20 more classes.
During all this time so-called hiking classes were formed again and again - in order to avoid the space problem. These classes did not have a permanent classroom, but used the rooms that were free when other classes had workshop lessons, since these lessons took place in the workshops and not in the classes. As a result, these classes moved to a different classroom each day.
Faculty and school management
Directors
Surname | from | to |
---|---|---|
Heinrich Schramm | 1873 (from 1868 director of the secondary school) | 1874 |
Andreas Pöschko | ||
Robert Kirchberger | ||
Anton Nagele | ||
Martin Spiegel | ||
Karl Prokopp | ||
Adalbert Irsigler | ||
Franz Pieschel | ||
Adolf Silberbauer | ||
Hans Keller | ||
Alfred Lipp |
Surname | from | to |
---|---|---|
Ernst Kielhauser | 1941 | 1946 |
Karl Horak (provisional) | 1945 | 1946 |
Nikolaus Eichlehner (appointed to the BMfU) | 1946 | 1949 |
Karl Horak (provisional) | 1949 | 1953 |
Bernhard Schmeiser (died on September 24, 1958) | 1954 | 1958 |
Karl Horak (provisional) | 1958 | 1959 |
Heinrich Eckl (sick since 1970) | 1959 | 1971 |
Wilhelm Popp (provisionally until 1972) | 1970 | 1990 |
Leopold Ramharter | 1990 | 1991 |
Hans Maschl | 1991 | 1992 |
Karl Tkalcsics (provisional) | 1992 | 1992 |
Herbert Schwarzer | 1993 | 2005 |
Hermann Wohlfart (provisional) | 2005 | 2006 |
Wolfgang Voltmann (provisional) | 2006 | 2007 |
Kurt Hillebrand (provisional) | 2007 | 2012 |
Ute Mutton | 2012 | today |
Head of department
Surname | from | to |
---|---|---|
Wilhelm habenicht | 1933 | 1944 |
Bernhard Schmeiser | 1945 | 1953 |
Karl Horak | 1954 | 1961 |
Heinrich Mossig | 1961 | 1984 |
Hermann Wohlfart | 1984 | 2010 |
Johannes Bierbaumer | 2010 | 2017 |
Kurt Wagner | 2017 | today |
Surname | from | to |
---|---|---|
Josef Patzelt | 1967 | 1987 |
Klaus Ruzicka | 1988 | 1999 |
Karl Johann Opferkuch | 2000 | 2018 |
Martin Lang | 2018 | today |
Surname | from | to |
---|---|---|
Leopold Ramharter | 1977 | 1979 |
Anton Wollenek | 1979 | 1984 |
Hans Maschl | 1985 | 1993 |
Karl Tkalcsics (provisional head) | 1993 | 1994 |
Helmuth Bleyer | 1994 | 2010 |
Bernhard Sachernegg | 2010 | 2018 |
Karl felt | 2018 | today |
Surname | from | to |
---|---|---|
Hermann Wohlfart (attached to Dept. M) | 1987 | 1989 |
Kurt Hillebrand | 1993 | 2007 |
Felix Schwab (provisional head) | 2007 | 2012 |
Kurt Hillebrand | 2012 | 2014 |
Felix Schwab (provisional head) | 2014 | today |
Others
In 2017, at the Robotics World Cup in Oklahoma , students won the world title against 360 other teams with their robot, which had to complete certain tasks within three minutes. In addition, they received the special prize in “Construction and intelligent programming”. Also in 2018 they achieved this success where it performed at international robotics competition Botball in Indian Wells was world champion in the category of UAVs.
In 2019 the students were able to defend this title. A second team was runner-up in the botball world championship.
literature
- Franz Blüml and Erich Greistorfer: 125 Years of the Higher Technical Training and Research Institute Wiener Neustadt , 1998.
- Lioba Bauer: The school system in Wiener Neustadt from 1850 to 1914 , 1972
- Josef Schermaier: Technical schools in Austria - Schools of skilled worker training: the technical schools for individual commercial branches . A contribution to the past and present of the vocational middle school system in Austria. Peter Lang, 2009, ISBN 978-3-631-58651-8 , The State College for Mechanical Engineering in Wiener Neustadt , p. 233 ff . ( limited preview in Google Book search).
Web links
- Homepage of the HTL Wiener Neustadt , htlwrn.ac.at
- Homepage of the Research Institute for Structural Engineering , vsva.at
Individual evidence
- ↑ Focus on technical and (art) commercial schools. (No longer available online.) In: abc.berufsbildendeschulen.at. Federal Ministry for Education, Art and Culture , archived from the original on May 27, 2014 ; Retrieved May 26, 2014 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ curricula. (No longer available online.) In: HTL-innovativ, htl.at. Federal Ministry for Education, Art and Culture, archived from the original on May 28, 2014 ; Retrieved May 26, 2014 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ We introduce ourselves. (No longer available online.) In: htlwrn.ac.at. Formerly in the original ; accessed in March 2011 . ( Page no longer available , search in web archives ) Info: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ Higher Technical Federal Training and Research Institute Wiener Neustadt. (No longer available online.) NÖ Bildungsgesellschaft mbH for technical colleges and universities, archived from the original on March 24, 2016 ; accessed in March 2011 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ a b Examples of services , vsva.at
- ↑ The teacher Rudolf Steiner graduated from this school in 1879 . Schermaier: Technical schools in Austria . Footnote 453, p. 233 .
- ^ Free management of the estate of Rudolf Steiner - Heinrich Schramm (p. 523) . Accessed January 27, 2015.
- ^ Free administration of the estate of Rudolf Steiner - Heinrich Schramm (p. 614) . Accessed January 27, 2015.
- ↑ New director of the HTL - Mag. Ute Hammel is the new headmistress of the technical college in Wiener Neustadt.
- ↑ Suggestion of three fixed: Ute Hammel first in line
- ^ Robot world champion from Wiener Neustadt on ORF from July 16, 2017, accessed on July 16, 2017
- ↑ HTL students won the Robotics World Championship on ORF from July 30, 2018, accessed on August 1, 2018
- ↑ Wr. Neustädter defend robotics world title on ORF from July 14, 2019, accessed on July 14, 2019