Villa Wernerstraße 16 (Berlin-Grunewald)
The Villa Wernerstraße 16 was built by Alfred Messel from Berlin in Berlin-Grunewald for Lily Braun at a price of 32,000 marks. It was part of the Grunewald villa colony and was destroyed in World War II.
owner
Lily and Heinrich Braun initially lived in the villa , who at the turn of the century sold the house to Maximilian Harden due to financial difficulties , who lived in the house until he moved to Switzerland in 1923.
Harden invited his friends Friedrich Dernburg , Fritz Mauthner and Lilli Lehmann to his villa . Karl Kraus alluded to the villa in his polemics about Harden. The building was destroyed in the war. The architects Sobotka and Müller built three semi-detached houses with garages on the property, which is divided into six parts. In 1988, a memorial plaque for Maximilian Harden was attached to house number 16.
description
The villa was a one-story building with an ocher-colored facade and the gable facing Wernerstrasse. In the garden around the villa a thick hedge had been created and pine trees were planted, which grew into tall trees.
literature
- Wilhelm Kick (Hrsg.): Modern new buildings , 4th year, Stuttgarter Architektur-Verlag Kick, Stuttgart 1902.
Individual evidence
- ^ Association of Berlin Architects, Berlin 1900. Berliner Architekturwelt , Volume 2, E. Wasmuth., 1900, books.google.de
- ^ Margrit Bröhan: Theodor Wolff . Experiences, memories, thoughts in exile in the south of France . Boldt, Boppard am Rhein 1992, ISBN 3-7646-1922-8 , p. 167, books.google.de
- ↑ Herbert Schwenk: This country, these murderers, this justice ... Maximilian Harden and his plea against terrorist anti-Semitism . In: Berlin monthly magazine ( Luisenstädtischer Bildungsverein ) . Issue 2, 2001, ISSN 0944-5560 , p. 34-39 ( luise-berlin.de ).
- ↑ stadtnavigator-berlin.de
- ↑ berlin.de
- ^ Mirko Nottscheid (ed.): Karl Kraus - Frank Wedekind. Correspondence between 1903 and 1917 . Königshausen & Neumann, 2007, ISBN 978-3-8260-3701-6 , p. 222, books.google.de
- ↑ berlin.de
- ^ Ulrich Eckhardt , Andreas Nachama : Jewish places in Berlin . 2005
- ↑ B. Uwe Weller: Maximilian Harden and the "future" , Schuenemann CE, 1970
Coordinates: 52 ° 28 '56.4 " N , 13 ° 16'26.7" E