- Source: Hermann Eggert
Georg Peter Hermann Eggert (3 January 1844 – 12 March 1920) was a German architect. He designed important public buildings such as the Frankfurt Main Station and the New Town Hall in Hannover, often in the style of Neo-Renaissance.
Career
Born in Burg bei Magdeburg, Eggert studied with Heinrich Strack at the Bauakademie in Berlin.
He worked from 1875 to 1889 as Universitätsbaumeister in Strasbourg, designing several buildings of the university in the Neustadt such as the observatory, and building the Palais du Rhin (Emperor's Palace) for Wilhelm II. He built the Frankfurt Main Station from 1883 to 1888, regarded as his most important building.
Eggert served as Oberbaurat in the Ministerium für öffentliche Arbeiten (Ministry of Public Works) of Prussia in Berlin, where he was mostly responsible for church buildings. He participated in the competition for the New Town Hall in Hannover in 1895, won the second competition a year later and was commissioned to build the exterior. From 1898 he worked in his own office in Hannover. He was in conflict about the design of the Prunkräume (Representative Rooms) of the Town Hall with Christian Heinrich Tramm who had designed the Welfenschloss (Welf palace, now the main building of Leibniz University Hannover), As a result, his contract was cancelled in 1909.
Many of Eggert's designs are in the style of Neo-Renaissance. He was a member of the Prussian Academy of Arts from 1896 in the section Bildende Künste (Arts). Eggert died in Weimar.
Recognition
Many of Eggert's designs are held at the Museum of Architecture of Technische Universität Berlin. In the central Frankfurt Gallus quarter a section of a street called after Camberg was renamed Hermann-Eggert-Straße in 2009.
Selected works and designs
1869: Competition design for the new Berlin Cathedral (not built)
1872–1877: Ernst Moritz Arndt Tower on Rügen
1881: Observatory of the Strasbourg University
1883–1888: Frankfurt Main Station
1884–1889: Palais du Rhin in Strasbourg
1898: Hamburg-Altona station (demolished in 1978)
1898–1899: Tierärztliche Hochschule (Academy of Veterinary Medicine) in Hannover (destroyed in World War II)
1898–1909: New Town Hall in Hannover
1899–1902: Annex of the Technische Hochschule in Charlottenburg (now Technische Universität Berlin) (now Straße des 17. Juni 145)
1907: Bismarckturm in Burg bei Magdeburg
Literature
Spemanns goldenes Buch vom eigenen Heim 1905, No 493.
Alexander Dorner: 100 Jahre Bauen in Hannover. Zur Jahrhundertfeier der Technischen Hochschule. Hannover 1931, p. 26.
Christine Kranz-Michaelis: Das Rathaus im Kaiserreich. Kunstpolitische Aspekte einer Bauaufgabe des 19. Jahrhunderts. Kunst, Kultur und Politik im deutschen Kaiserreich}, vol. 4.) Gebr. Mann, Berlin 1982, ISBN 3-7861-1339-4, pp. 395–413.
Wolfgang Steinweg: Das Rathaus in Hannover. Von der Kaiserzeit bis in die Gegenwart. Schlüter, Hannover 1988, ISBN 3-87706-287-3, p. 38f
References
External links
Hermann Eggert Akademie der Künste
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Neues Rathaus (Hannover)
- Stasiun Sentral Frankfurt
- Reichsautobahn
- Daftar pelukis Jerman
- Daftar komponis
- 1. FC Saarbrücken
- Hermann Eggert
- Eggert
- Observatory of Strasbourg
- 1920 in architecture
- 1844 in architecture
- 1913 in architecture
- Hamburg-Altona station
- Frankfurt (Main) Hauptbahnhof
- New Town Hall (Hanover)
- Burg bei Magdeburg