Max Bromme
Max Bromme ( born August 18, 1878 in Grünberg ( Lower Silesia), today Zielona Góra, † September 9, 1974 in Frankfurt am Main ) was a German landscape architect, who as director of horticulture of the city of Frankfurt am Main ( chief officer from 1912 to 1945 ) at the New Frankfurt and Director of the Palm garden in Frankfurt from 1932 to 1945 worked. He worked as a planner known Frankfurter green spaces, in his tenure, he expanded the urban green spaces from 200 to 450 hectares.
Framed Objects
- Park at the Bornheimer Hang
- Green area of I.G. -color building
- Extension of the main cemetery Frankfurt
- Brentanopark
- Holzhausenpark
- Solms Park
- Rothschild and Goldschmidt Park
- Frankfurt Waldstadion
- Settlement Westhausen
- Settlement Frankfurt- Roman city
- Huth Park
- People's Park Lohrberg Lohr Berger with the vineyard slope
1925 onwards Bromme initial concepts for the conservation of Nidda environment as a green space between the core city and the new settlements that were planned as part of the New Frankfurt under for Construction Ernst May. A well-known example of a successful transition between city and countryside is the settlement Roman city. Leberecht Migge planned gardens and greenery of this settlement.
Honors
- Landscape architect in National Socialism
- Agencies of the Federal Cross of Merit
- Architect ( Frankfurt am Main )
- Person (New Frankfurt)
- Born in 1878
- Died in 1974
- Man