Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Paul Maximilian Heinrich Schneider von Esleben (née Schneider, 28 August 1915 – 19 May 2005), known as Paul Schneider-Esleben, was a German architect who worked in the modernist movement, mostly on airports, throughout the 1960s.

  2. August 1915 in Düsseldorf; † 19. Mai 2005 in Hausham [1] im Landkreis Miesbach, Oberbayern) war ein deutscher Architekt, Designer für Möbel und Schmuck, Zeichner, Maler und Hochschullehrer, der mit seinen Bauten das demokratische Selbstverständnis und Leben in der jungen Bonner Republik vorantrieb.

  3. Paul Schneider-Esleben. Paul Maximilian Heinrich Schneider von Esleben, conocido como Paul Schneider-Esleben (Düsseldorf, 23 de agosto de 1915; † Fischbachau am Schliersee, 19 de mayo de 2005) fue un arquitecto, diseñador y profesor universitario alemán.

  4. Paul Schneider-Esleben, cuyo nombre completo es Paul Maximilian Heinrich Schneider von Esleben (1915-2005), fue un reconocido arquitecto que cursó estudios en Darmstadt y Stuttgart, además de impartir clases en la Academia de Arte de Hamburgo. Entre los años 1947 y 1948, colaboró con Rudolf Schwarz.

  5. hansaviertel.berlin › en › architektenPaul Schneider-Esleben

    29 de may. de 2018 · Paul Schneider-Esleben. 29/05/2018 by. * 1915 in Düsseldorf. † 2005 in Hausham/Fischbachau. from 1935 worked in his father’s architectural office. from 1937 Technical University Darmstadt, followed by military service. 1946–1947 Technical University of Stuttgart. from 1949 own office in Düsseldorf; housing estates, churches, commercial ...

  6. Paul Schneider-Esleben (1915–2005) is one of the architects who had a significant influence on postwar modernism, the construction of mega-projects in concrete, high-tech architecture, and building in the historical fabric. His Mannesmann high-rise in Düsseldorf (1954–1958) was Germany’s first steel frame structure with a curtain wall.

  7. www.frieze.com › article › modelThe Model | Frieze

    Paul Schneider-Esleben in his office, with a model of Cologne/Bonn airport, 1962. Courtesy: Claudia Schneider-Esleben Archive. Two current retrospectives, in Munich and Düsseldorf, offer the chance to discover the work of German architect Paul Schneider-Esleben, who would have turned 100 in August.