Moritz Feldhendler
Townhouse on the corner of Daponte- and Engelsberggasse
Moritz Feldhendler (born April 8, 1858 in Bielsko, died December 25, 1909 in Vienna) is an Austro-Jewish architect and engineer.
He was the son of a grain merchant from Bielsko (now Bielsko-Biała) in the Austrian Silesian. Long lived his life in Bulgaria. Until 1892 he was employed as a technician in the Bulgarian railway, among others. The construction of a line connecting Yambol and Burgas. He was subsequently entrusted with the construction of pavilions for the First Bulgarian National Exhibition in Plovdiv.
In the years 1893-1904 he worked as an architect in Sofia. After moving to Vienna, he worked on the design and construction of tenement houses. The buildings of his authorship represent a neo-Renaissance style. The arrangement of the balconies at the corner of the Daponte- and Engelsberggasse is a unique contribution to the architecture of the Viennese corner houses. Bibliography
Feldhendler, Moritz. W: Allgemeines Künstlerlexikon (AKL). The visual artists of all times and peoples. T. 38. De Gruyter / SAUR.
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