Wilhelm Jollasse

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Wilhelm Jollasse (born June 10, 1856 in Hamburg ; † January 24, 1921 there , full name: Johannes Georg Wilhelm Jollasse , very often misspelled: Wilhelm Jolasse ) was a German architect who worked independently from 1884 in association with the architect Johann Gottlieb Rambatz (office "Rambatz und Jollasse") worked in Hamburg.

Life

Wilhelm Jollasse was born as the second son of the architect Jean David Jollasse (* April 12, 1810; † April 1, 1876) and his wife Ida geb. Schultz. The family had a total of 13 children.

Wilhelm Jollasse attended the district trade school in Würzburg and graduated with a school leaving certificate. After studying at the Royal Bavarian Industrial School in Nuremberg , he served as a one-year volunteer in an infantry regiment in Würzburg. He then studied for eight semesters at the Technical University of Munich , where he passed his exam "with distinction".

At the beginning of his career, Wilhelm Jollasse worked as a specialist teacher at the building trade school in Buxtehude and in an architecture office in Hamburg.

Jollasse family grave , Ohlsdorf cemetery

In 1887 he married Camilla Biernatzki, both had several children, including the future General Johannes Erwin Jollasse .

At the age of 28 (1884), Jollasse and the architect Johann Gottlieb Rambatz founded a joint architecture office in Hamburg ("Rambatz and Jollasse"), which was one of the most renowned of its kind in Hamburg for around thirty years.

In 1906 Jollasse was involved in founding the Hamburg branch of the Association of German Architects (BDA) .

Wilhelm Jollasse was buried in the Jollasse family grave in the Ohlsdorf cemetery (grid square M 6, roughly opposite the cemetery museum), the grave monument was created by the German sculptor Arthur Bock .

The Jollassestieg in Hamburg-Winterhude was named after the architect.

buildings

Alsterhaus at Ballindamm 13 in Hamburg's old town .

(incomplete, all in cooperation with Rambatz)

  • 1886: Bath house in Döse (today called "historical bath house")
  • 1888–1889: Residential and commercial building with pharmacy in Hamburg-Hohenfelde , Güntherstrasse 1
  • 1896: Residential and commercial building for the Joh. Mich company. Fett & Co. in Hamburg, Schanzenstrasse 56-62 (under monument protection)
  • 1899–1900: “Alsterblick” office building in Hamburg, Ballindamm 1 / Glockengießerwall
  • 1900: Office and commercial building in Hamburg, Ballindamm 14/15
  • 1902–1903: "Alsterhaus" office and commercial building in Hamburg, Ballindamm 13 and Ferdinandstrasse 32 (facade Ferdinandstrasse by Albert Erbe )
  • 1904: Participation in the drafts for the cinema theater "Schauburg" in Hamburg-Sankt Pauli (destroyed)
  • 1905: Office and commercial building in Hamburg, Ballindamm 4/5 / Brandende
  • 1906–1907: “Hermannshaus” office and commercial building in Hamburg, Bergstrasse 16 / Hermannstrasse (1923–1924 rebuilt by Zerbe and Harder)
  • 1907–1908: "Wallhof" office and commercial building in Hamburg, Glockengießerwall 2 (with the architects Frejtag and Wurzbach)
  • 1908: Administration building for the German-American Petroleum-Gesellschaft mbH (DAPG) in Hamburg, Neuer Jungfernstieg 21 / Esplanade (replaced by a new building in 1936/1937)
  • 1908: Country house for the shipowner George Henry Lütgens in Großhansdorf near Hamburg (today the seat of the Institute for Forest Genetics , in the "Landhauspark Tannenhöft")
  • 1908–1910: “ Bieberhaus ” office and commercial building in Hamburg-St. Georg, Hachmannplatz 2 / Kirchenallee
  • 1910–1912: Office and commercial building " Versmannhaus " in Hamburg, Mönckebergstrasse 29/31 / Kniehauertwiete (changed in the roof area)
  • 1912: Wagnerstrasse subway station (today: Hamburger Strasse) in Hamburg-Barmbek-Süd , Hamburger Strasse (changed)
  • 1912–1913: "Esplanadebau" office and commercial building in Hamburg, Esplanade 6
  • 1914: " Alsterpavillon " (5th building) in Hamburg, Jungfernstieg (not preserved)
  • before 1915: House in Hamburg-Eppendorf , Heilwigstrasse 118 / Kellinghusenstrasse

and (undated): “St. Nicolai House”, churches in Hamburg-Hammerbrook and Lübeck

The "Bieberhaus" in Hamburg-St. George

literature

  • Ralf Lange: Architecture Guide Hamburg. Edition Axel Menges , Stuttgart 1995, ISBN 3-930698-58-7 .
  • Erwin Jollasse: A Soldier's Life in Four Epochs. Compiled by Wilhelm Böker. Self-published, Tutzing 1982.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Royal District, Agricultural and Trade School

Web links

Commons : Rambatz & Jollasse  - Collection of images, videos and audio files