Villa Pietschker

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Villa Pietschker / Villa von Winterfeld, Puschkinallee 12

The Villa Pietschker , also called Villa von Winterfeld , is a listed building in the Nauener Vorstadt district of Potsdam , Puschkinallee 12.

history

The villa built in 1909/10 in what was then Kapellenbergstrasse 12 was designed by the architect Paul Baumgarten . The construction company A. Grabkowsky & Sons from Potsdam was responsible for the execution . The client was Käthe Pietschker (1861–1949), daughter of the industrialist Werner von Siemens and widow of pastor Carl Pietschker (1846–1906) who was in Bornstedt from 1878 to 1894 . She had the house built for her son, the aviation pioneer Werner Alfred Pietschker , who had a fatal accident in 1911.

Lieutenant Ludwig von Winterfeld , later a member of the board of Siemens-Schuckertwerke, and his wife Charlotte (1885–1970), née Pietschker, moved into the villa in 1912 . In 1913, outbuildings with staff apartments and garages were added, as well as a hall extension designed by the architect Hans Hertlein . In the Potsdam address book for 1914, Käthe Pietschker, who lives at Marienstraße 22 (later Gregor-Mendel-Straße), is still registered as the owner, and from 1917 at the latest Ludwig von Winterfeld, who also owned the neighboring house at Kapellenbergstraße 13. In the address book for 1936/37, Charlotte von Winterfeld is the owner. She had rented the villa and lived at Bergstrasse 9 (later Schlegelstrasse). Ludwig von Winterfeld had moved to Berlin-Charlottenburg (Badenallee 23).

After the fall of the Wall until 2002, the Public Services, Transport and Traffic Union (ÖTV), Brandenburg District Administration, used the building. Since the end of December 2010, the villa has housed an eye day clinic.

architecture

The five-axis plastered building is two-story with a basement and hipped roof . On the side facing Puschkinallee, the tall rectangular windows and French doors are partially equipped with shutters. The central projection is crowned by a pointed triangular gable with a semicircular window. There is a patio in front of the risalit and the windows and French doors are designed as triplet windows . A relief shows putti playing and making music . A meandering ribbon runs around the building below the eaves .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Ulrike Bröcker: The Potsdamer Vorstädte 1861-1900. From the tower villa to the apartment building. Worms 2005, p. 289 (Grabkowsky, August).
  2. ^ Jörg Limberg: Potsdam. A place of modernity? Architects and their buildings in the first third of the 20th century . In: Brandenburgische Denkmalpflege, vol. 6, issue 2, Berlin 1997, p. 66.
  3. Olaf Thiede, Jörg Wacker: Chronology. Potsdam and the surrounding area . Volume III, Potsdam 2007, p. 1147.
  4. Acta specialia, Puschkinallee 12, sheet 24-26, sheet 43 (front garden fence), sheet 69f, 72 (outbuilding), cf. Jörg Limberg. In: Brandenburgische Denkmalpflege, vol. 6, booklet 2, Berlin 1997, p. 66, note 25, p. 84.
  5. Acta specialia, Puschkinallee 12, sheet 148f, sheet 170f (addendum), cf. Jörg Limberg, p. 66, note 27, p. 84.

Coordinates: 52 ° 24 '46.5 "  N , 13 ° 3' 34.7"  E