Wolfgang Streiter
Wolfgang Streiter (* 1763 in Mainz ; † December 29, 1831 in Aschaffenburg ) was a German architect who worked as a master builder in Aschaffenburg.
When the archbishop's residence was moved from Mainz to Aschaffenburg in 1792, the Streiter family also came to Aschaffenburg. The father Johannes Streiter and two brothers were also active in the building trade.
Engineer Michael von Streiter (1773-1838), fortress construction director of Ingolstadt , worked on the expansion of the fortifications and was also active as an architect in Munich .
Friedrich Streiter (born January 27, 1780 in Mainz) applied on May 15, 1804 to Prince Johann Karl Ludwig zu Löwenstein-Wertheim -Freudenberg (1740-1816) as a master builder. On May 22, 1804 he got the job and became a well-known architect in the Wertheim area.
Wolfgang Streiter was a close collaborator of Emanuel Joseph von Herigoyen , and when he went to Regensburg with Karl Theodor von Dalberg in 1804 , he was his successor as town and country architect in Aschaffenburg. In 1812 he was a sub-lieutenant in the engineer corps in the Grand Duchy of Frankfurt. In the Kingdom of Bavaria he was promoted to lieutenant on October 12, 1822 and retired in the same year.
plant
- House Weihergarten 5, Mainz , nine-axis northern part of the house with risalit for the Schott music publisher (around 1790)
- House Weihergarten 9, Mainz, three-storey row house with a gate drive, it is a special feature in that it only uses the stylistic device of the window roofing for every second window on the first floor (around 1790)
- Residential house, Metzgergasse 11 and 13, Aschaffenburg, three-storey semi-detached house, quarry stone with house integrations, side gate, together with brother Michael, for archivist Urban Müller (1803)
- Draft for a morgue for a cemetery "Neuhof - Seegarten" (between Brentano and Schweinheimer Strasse at the intersection of these streets with Alexandra, Wermbach and Lamprechtstrasse), Aschaffenburg (1804)
- Residential house, Karlstraße 2, Aschaffenburg , three- story eaves-side hipped roof building with plastered half-timbered upper floors and column portal (1804/05)
- Residential house, Webergasse 4, Aschaffenburg, two-and-a-half-storey saddle roof building with classicist facade decor, pilaster strips and portal (1804/05)
- Portal construction with staircase and terrace, near Suicardusstraße, belonging to Kleine Metzgergasse 5 (1808)
- Catholic parish church of St. John the Baptist in Rieneck , classicist hall building with semicircular closed choir, west tower, with furnishings (1809)
- Old Catholic parish church of the Annunciation in Faulbach , with furnishings (1809)
- Residential house, Schlossgasse 10, Aschaffenburg, three-storey saddle roof building with cornice and toothed frieze, classicistic, (1810)
- Former riding stables, Hauptstraße 23, Kleinheubach for the Löwenstein princely family (1812)
- Servant building, Schlosspark 4–7, Kleinheubach, elongated classical wing with 25 axes, together with brother Friedrich (1819–25)
- Aschaffenburg Municipal Hospital (then a hospital and charity institution) two-storey main building, classicistic style, with 15 window axes along Wermbachstrasse, one side wing at each end (1824)
- Infantry barracks Aschaffenburg, Goldbacher Straße in front of the Herstalltor, one wing each along Weißenburger Straße and Heisestraße (1805–1807), demolished after 1895
- Trockenbrodt residential and commercial building, Wermbachstrasse 1, destroyed in World War II
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ In the Kurmainzer Hof- und Staats-Kalender for the year 1797 a Wolfgang Streiter is mentioned as a master mason under “Jury of Builders” (p. 147).
- ↑ Beatrix Schönewald: With the eyes of the artist - motifs and views of Ingolstadt from five centuries. Exhibition in the city museum Ingolstadt 2006 for the anniversary 1200 years Ingolstadt
- ↑ Ortschronik von Lengfurt - A boatmen and winegrower village through the centuries. Compiled by Edith Müller, Burkard Kuhn and Horst Otremba. Reports on the history of the Triefenstein market, Volume 6, p. 116.
- ↑ which, however, was not built at this point, but in 1809 very close by, namely to the south of the city wall on the Güterberg (today's old town cemetery). Peter Körner: "So that the dead don't kill the living" ... 200 years old town cemetery. Aschaffenburg History and Art Association 2009, ISBN 978-3-87965-112-2 .
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Streiter, Wolfgang |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German architect |
DATE OF BIRTH | 1763 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Mainz |
DATE OF DEATH | December 29, 1831 |
Place of death | Aschaffenburg |