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Studio: international art — 49.1910

DOI Heft:
No. 205 (April, 1910)
DOI Artikel:
Recent designs in domestic architecture
DOI Seite / Zitierlink: 
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.20969#0243

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Recent Designs in Domestic Architecture

ROOM IN A DRESDEN HOUSE.

new forms ; these come naturally, he thinks, by
making use of new technical and hygienic improve-
ments. Wherever he is reproached for imitating,
he can always prove that practical considerations
have led to-day to the same results as in former
days. The houses we reproduce show his character
as an architect. The house at Swinemunde, in
Pomerania, with its low
sloping red tile roof, is a
distinct adaptation of the
fisherman-cottage of that
Northern district. Yet
the architect has under-
stood how to combine
respect for local traditions
with a full sense of the
modern requirements of
the cultivated citizen.

The country-house at
Schopfheim in Baden
breathes the sense of
purity and of discreet
elegance which marked
the days of Goethe. It is
at once reposeful and dig-
nified. There are some
modest classical reminis-
cences at the entrance
part of the fagade and
the homely turret in the
centre of the slate roofs

expresses the wish to mark
out the house unobtru-
sively as a country man-
sion. The situation on
the slope of a hill has in
no way cramped propor-
tions. The sameness and
symmetrical spacing of
the windows with their
setting of green shutters,
the comfortable terrace ex-
tending along the ground
floor, clearly denote that
the keynote of the inside
treatment is breadth and
simplicity. The two
gardens at Mannheim re-
present Professor Schultze-
Naumburg’s idea that
garden - designing must
coincide with the human-
ising of nature. The
straight walks, the flower-
beds, trees, hedges and pools show that his idea
by no means implies a soulless coercion of nature.
His walks with their long perspective, his pavilions,
pergolas, arbours, trellis and seats recall the style
in vogue a century ago. His interior decorations
also show his preference for the simple Empire
style and its German offspring the Biedermeier. The

DESIGNED BY PROF. PAUL SCHULTZE-NAUMBURG

ROOM IN A DRESDEN HOUSE. DESIGNED BY PROF. PAUL SCHULTZE-NAUMBURG

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