Franz Andreas Meyer
Franz Ferdinand Carl Andreas Meyer (6 December 1837, Hamburg - 17 March 1901, Bad Wildungen) was a German civil engineer, known primarily as the creator of the Speicherstadt on Hamburg's waterfront.
Biography
He was born to Ferdinand Wilhelm Meyer (1800–1862), a merchant who had to abandon his business in 1851, due to financial difficulties. After attending the private boys' school operated by
He returned to Hamburg in 1862 and found employment with the Port Authority. Three years later, he appointed the Technical Manager, under the Director of
When plans for the Speicherstadt were nearing completion in 1883, he became chief planner and designer for the project. He also became an advisor to the Hamburger Freihafen-Lagerhaus-Gesellschaft, which was charged with operating the warehouses. He hired several architects, including Wilhelm Emil Meerwein, Bernhard Georg Hanssen, Hugo Stammann and Gustav Zinnow, to produce the detailed specifications.[2] In addition to the Speicherstadt, he personally designed a number of bridges. He also engineered the Vierländerin-Brunnen (Four Nations Fountain), and took part in the renovation of Schloss Bergedorf .
Overall, however, his emphasis was on projects for improving public health, which included public baths and water filtration systems. Following the cholera epidemic of 1892, he was able to create drainage and sewage systems that had been proposed by William Lindley in the late 1850s, but rejected by the Hamburg Parliament. He also planned most of Hamburg's inner city parks, and was involved in planning the Ohlsdorf Cemetery. By 1896, he had prepared a general development plan for railways, canals, parks, and other public spaces. [2] He was also sought after as a consultant for projects outside of Hamburg; advising the city of Strasbourg on its proposed expansion in 1878 as well as assisting the city of Kiel with construction related to the opening of the Kiel Canal.
His health worsened in his later years, and he died while under treatment by his doctor at the spa in Bad Wildungen. A bridge and a street in Billbrook are named after him, as is a street in Winterhude.[3]
References
- ISBN 3-7672-0907-1, pg.71.
- ^ ISBN 3-937904-35-2
- ISBN 3-8225-0421-1, pg.28.
Further reading
- Oskar Beselin: Franz Andreas Meyer. Ein Baumeister der Großstadt Hamburg, H. Christians, 1974, ISBN 3-7672-0260-3
- Hermann Hipp (1994), "Meyer, Franz Andreas", Neue Deutsche Biographie (in German), vol. 17, Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 308–309; (full text online)
External links
- Christel Busch, "Franz Andreas Meyer – Hamburgs vergessener Stadtplaner" @ Kultur Port
- Literature by and about Franz Andreas Meyer in the German National Library catalogue