The plan was now made up of eight floors for Leica production.It shows a little sign from normal use.Film advance works smooth.
Ernst Leitz Wetzlar Microscope S Serial Number 368330 WithErnst Leitz Wetzlar camera, serial number 368330 with leather case.
First image taken from the Ur-Leica by Oskar Barnack 1913, Eisenmarkt, Wetzlar, Germany Leica Camera AG is a German company that manufactures cameras, lenses, binoculars, rifle scopes, microscopes and ophthalmic lenses. Leica Camera AG is 45 owned by The Blackstone Group 2 which licenses the Leica brand name from the independently-owned Leica Microsystems GmbH. Ernst Leitz Wetzlar Microscope S Serial Number Lookup HistoryErnst Leitz Wetzlar Microscope S Series Rangefinder 10M-series rangefinder 10 L-mount mirrorless (dual-scale sensors and lenses) 14 Early digital cameras 15 Compact film cameras 16 Single lens reflex 17 Co-operation 18 List of Leica lenses Leica Drp Ernst Leitz Wetzlar Serial Number Lookup History edit From the year 1907 to the 1950s, the buildings that formed Leica factory were built on Ernst Leitz Street (Wetzlar) and remained until 1986, when the factory was moved to the city of Solms. The Wetzlar factory was located on the opposite side of the administrative building of 1957 and formed a special urban architecture; it is upstream from the slope of Kalsmunt and forms a structurally attractive graduation from the skyscrapers to the ruins of Kalsmunt Castle. Already in the last decades of the 19th century inconsistent, Ernst Leitz and its production facilities had moved to the slopes of Kalsmunt. In the first years, residential buildings and workshops on the Laufdorfer Weg were still sufficient. ![]() The oldest part of this row of tall buildings is now hidden by a new building at the Schtzenstrae. The first plans of the architect Jean Schmidt in 1907 show a brick building on a stone base, which was covered by a sloping roof and a slate roof. However, in the same year, it was decided to use the new construction of concrete skeletons and a simpler faade design. The four-story building is divided into six groups of windows, each of which has three windows. Narrow wall patterns and lightly embedded parapets summarize the three lowest floors. The fourth floor is visually separated from the lower part of the building by a very distant cornice. On either side of the central building there was a hip roof that had high ceilings. The mansards floor expanded as production and workers also increased. Only a few years later, Leitz again demanded the construction of a tall building. After the planning of Jean Schmidt, contractor Robert Schneider built a four-story building in 1911. The basement building was made of reinforced concrete with brick stairs. Again, the original plan, which provided a horizontal structure of the building through the cornucopia, was abandoned in favor of a simpler faade design. In the ten-axis building, similar to the oldest skyscraper, the lower levels are grouped by pilasters. ![]() Once again, it was Jean Schmidt, who prepared the plans for a first seven-story skyscraper. The still existing faade drawings show the columns with arches on the ground floor and that are fitted between a long strip of windows with excessive pilasters. The general design shows a mixture of very graphic elements and remains of curved Modernist forms that recall the buildings by Joseph Maria Olbrich at Mathildenhhe of Darmstadt.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |