Villa Pfleiderer
The Villa Pfleiderer (also Villa Brüggemann ) was a villa at Lerchenstraße 79 in Heilbronn , which was extensively recognized in the national magazine "Decorative Art" .
history
The villa was built in 1907/1908 by the architectural office Beutinger & Steiner for the manufacturer Walter Brüggemann (1868–1958) ( Brüggemann Group ). In 1922 he sold the villa to Adolf Pfleiderer (1877–1957), who was co-owner of the GH Pfleiderer timber wholesaler . Pfleiderer moved to Upper Palatinate in 1944 and rented the house to the Heilbronn Police Department from 1944 to 1946. After that the house served as accommodation for the Spruchkammer until 1948. In the following years the house was used as a school until 1955, initially as a higher commercial school, later as a private commercial school Merkur. When the owner Pfleiderer died in 1957, the building was sold to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints , which stayed there until 1969. When it moved into a new house in Böckingen , a property developer from Heilbronn acquired the villa and had it demolished in 1973.
description
Sandstone was used to structure the floors, while the facade was otherwise plastered in gray . Two polygonal oriel towers extending over two floors with a balcony in between divided the facade. Superstructures made of oak were attached to the two oriel towers, which in turn were connected to one another with a loggia-like roof extension in between . The oriel superstructures were given green patinated copper hoods .
literature
- A little corner of Heilbronn with history - the city archive shows the former Brüggemann villa in the series “Heilbronner Hausgeschichte (s)” . In: Heilbronner Stadtzeitung, September 9, 1999, p. 4.
- Franz Mannheimer: The Brüggemann house in Heilbronn . In: "Decorative Art XIV", March 6, 1911, pp. 249–263
Web links
- Heilbronn City Archives, Contemporary History Collection Signature L006-Hr 3 Man-1911, Franz Mannheimer: The Brüggemann House in Heilbronn . In: “Decorative Art XIV” March 6, 1911 (trade journal) There p. 249–263 in the HEUSS database. In addition photography .
- Heilbronn City Archives, Contemporary History Collection, signature E020-112, Two allegorical female figures as facade decorations of the Villa Brüggemann. As symbols they hold a distaff and a beehive (probably for hard work / work) or a bird and a bouquet of flowers (nature / recreation?). in the HEUSS database. In addition photography .
- Heilbronn City Archives, Contemporary History Collection, signature E020-113, Two allegorical female figures as facade decorations from the Villa Brüggemann. As symbols they hold a distaff and a beehive (probably for hard work / work) or a bird and a bouquet of flowers (nature / recreation?). in the HEUSS database. In addition photography .
- Heilbronn city archives, contemporary history collection, signature E020-114, woman's head as a facade decoration over a window of the Villa Brüggemann. Bas-relief in the HEUSS database. In addition photography .
- Stadtarchiv Heilbronn, contemporary history collection, signature E003-304, two corbels with a lion's head - decorative elements from Villa Brüggemann. The corbels were built in on the garden side. in the HEUSS database. In addition photography .
Coordinates: 49 ° 8 ′ 13.4 " N , 9 ° 13 ′ 56.8" E