Friedrich Schulze

Friedrich Schulze, often Friedrich Schulze- Colbitz or Friedrich Schulze- Kolbitz, ( born March 8 or March 18, 1843 in Colbitz; † 30 July 1912 in Steglitz in Berlin; Complete name: Johann David Friedrich Otto Schulze ) was a German architect and construction officer, Mr Prussian.

Life

Friedrich Schulze lived since 1862 in Berlin, where he studied at the Berlin Building Academy after high school from 1862 to 1867, interrupted by his participation in the Austro-Prussian War, 1866. During his studies he worked as an assistant of the architect Friedrich Adler. Until the builder exam 1873, he worked as a foreman in the railway interrupted by his participation in the German - Prussian War of 1870 /, 1871. In 1873 he got a job at the ministerial Baukomission and taught part-time at the Berlin Trade Academy. As the state government building officer brought him Friedrich Adler in 1877 in his staff in the Prussian Ministry of Public Works. In 1879, he worked briefly at the District Government Kassel, but returned in 1880 as a building inspector back to ministerial Baukomission to Berlin. In 1892 he became a member of the Board of Architects Association in Berlin, where he served since 1870. As a result of a car accident in 1907 he retired on 1 January 1909.

Buildings and designs

  • 1873: extensions of the Charité, Berlin
  • 1874: Growing for the Veterinary School, Luis Street, Berlin
  • 1875-1876: Construction management in the expansion of the Ministry of Public Works, Voßstraße 35, Berlin ( destroyed)
  • 1880-1882: Luis High School, Tower Road, Berlin
  • 1880-1890: Friedrich- Wilhelm-Gymnasium, Koch Straße 13, Berlin
  • 1882: Victoria regia - house of the Botanical Garden in Berlin
  • 1884-1886: Augusta- girls' school and teacher training college, Small Beer, Berlin
  • 1885-1886: Reconstruction of Trinity Church, Berlin
  • 1891-1893: Community School and Prince Henry High School Schöneberg, Berlin
  • 1892: Buildings for the Botanical Garden Dahlem, Berlin
  • 1892: transformation of the church of St. Sophia, Berlin
  • 1892-1894: Saviour Church, Berlin ( further planning team: Paul Kieschke, Max Hasak )
  • 1892-1898: Prussian Chamber of Deputies, Prinz- Albrecht-Strasse (today: Niederkirchnerstraße ), Berlin
  • 1898-1904: Prussian mansion, Leipziger Strasse 3/4, Berlin
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