Villa Puschkinallee 2

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Villa Puschkinallee 2

The Villa Puschkinallee 2 is a listed building in the Nauener Vorstadt district of Potsdam .

history

The villa in what was then Capellenbergstrasse 10 (later 2) was probably built in the early 1870s at the same time as the villa on the neighboring property, Capellenbergstrasse 11, later Puschkinallee 1, commissioned by the furniture manufacturer Hasselkampf . Since there are no building permit applications and no drafts, the client and architect cannot be named with certainty. It is possible that Hasselkampf also commissioned this villa, which master bricklayer Albert Lüdicke († probably 1901, 1903 at the latest) carried out. Master mason Friedrich August Hasenheyer (1823-1891) is also an option, since in 1875 he applied for a building permit for a stable building. Hasselkampf did not live in the house himself. In the Potsdam address book for 1877, his widow Amalie Hasselkampf, née Fischer, is listed as the owner, who sold the property.

In the address books from 1878 to 1882, under “Capellenbergstrasse 2”, the manor owner of Alt-Stutterheim is noted, followed by Elise von Alt-Stutterheim, née von Rosenberg-Grusczynska (1820-1891), widow of the manor owner auf Abbarten and Georgenau Elimar von, until 1891 Alt-Stutterheim (1812-1880). The property then belonged to the reindeer Hermann Petri and from 1897 to the Berlin factory owner and reindeer Hans Schumann, who only lived in the villa during the summer months, as did "Schuman's heirs" from 1907. The three daughters lived in Charlottenburg (Leibnitzstrasse 57) in winter . From this community of heirs, the pensioner Elise Schumann remained the last-named owner.

From 1922 at the latest, the villa belonged to the merchant Wilhelm (Willi) Niemann (Sponholzstrasse 46), who lived in Berlin-Friedenau, and Eva Niemann in 1936/37, both of whom rented living space. In the address book for 1938/1939 different house residents are named. The owner does not appear from this entry. In the 1960s, the instrument office of the Meteorological Service of the GDR used the premises. After the fall of the Wall , the villa came back into private ownership.

architecture

The six-axis plastered building is one and two-story with a flat gable and hipped roof . A loggia is located in front of the two-storey building wing on the street side. Three tall rectangular windows on the ground floor and three arched windows with cornice roofing on the upper floor illuminate the interior. Over the three tall rectangular windows of the single-storey wing , arched segment roofs are mounted on consoles . Reliefs with floral ornaments decorate the window mirrors . The floral ornaments are repeated between the jamb windows and the console below the eaves . The entrance area is on the south side.

literature

  • Ulrike Bröcker: The Potsdam suburbs 1861-1900. From the tower villa to the apartment building. 2nd Edition. Wernersche, Worms 2005, ISBN 3-88462-208-0 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. The Potsdamer furniture factory operated under the name "Hasselkampf & Sohn", Kirchstrasse 12. The houses on the street were destroyed in 1945. Kirchstrasse, which ran south between today's Strasse Am Alten Markt and Joliot-Curie-Strasse, was built over after 1955.
  2. ^ Bröcker, p. 122, p. 280.
  3. a b Bröcker, p. 280.

Coordinates: 52 ° 24 '35.1 "  N , 13 ° 3' 31.8"  E