Heinz Tesar (16 June 1939 â 18 January 2024) was an Austrian architect who had an international reputation for his church and museum architecture.
Life and career
Tesar studied architecture from 1961 to 1965 at the Akademie der bildenden Künste in the master class of Roland Rainer. After several stays in Hamburg (1959âÂÂ1961), Munich (1965âÂÂ1968) and Amsterdam (1971), he opened, in 1973, his own studio in Vienna. From 1972 to 1977 he was a member of the Board of the Austrian Society for Architecture and from 2002 to 2006 he was a member of the Baukollegium of the city of Zurich. In 2000 he opened an office in Berlin. Tesar died on 18 January 2024, at the age of 84, in Baden bei Wien.
Academic career
From the 1980s, he taught at various universities in Europe and America:
Design competitions
For various international competition entries he received the first or second prize: e.g. for Klösterliareal in Bern (1981), the University Library in Amiens (1991), the Synagogue in Dresden (1997), the Museum for Art and Design in Ingolstadt (2000) and the Museum of Medicine in Padua, Italy (2004).
Notable buildings
- 1974âÂÂ77 Music Studio, Steinach am Brenner
- 1976âÂÂ78 Unternberg Parish church.
- 1977âÂÂ86 Church and Cemetery, Wagrain
- 1976âÂÂ83, 1985âÂÂ88 Residential Development, Vienna,
- 1981âÂÂ83 Firestation Perchtoldsdorf.
- 1981âÂÂ83 Haus Grass Bregenz.
- 1981âÂÂ85 Biberhaufenweg settlement, Vienna, (with Carl Pruscha and Otto Häuselmayer)
- 1985âÂÂ87 House Grobecker, Vienna,
- 1986âÂÂ87 Administration building Schömer, Klosterneuburg,
- 1987âÂÂ90 Day-care, residential complex Wienerberggründe, Vienna.
- 1991 Design Koloman Walisch Square, Kapfenberg.
- 1993âÂÂ95 Keltenmuseum in Hallein
- 1994 Stadttheater / cinema and museum, Hallein, (the conversion of Wunibald Deininger building which was erected in 1925 â Deininger was a student of Otto Wagner)
- 1995 Evangelical Church, Klosterneuburg. [3]
- 1995 Warehouse area, St. Gallen Styria,
- 1995 â³Taschenberg Residenceâ³ (Haus am Zwinger next to Taschenberg Palace), Dresden
- 1998âÂÂ99 Essl Collection Museum Klosterneuburg
- 1999 Donau City Church of Christ, hope of the world in the Danube City Vienna.
- 1999 Haus am Zwinger, Dresden
- 2000âÂÂ05 Conversion Bode Museum Kaiser Friedrich Museum, Berlin,
- 2001âÂÂ06 Teichgartencalvario, Klosterneuburg near Vienna,
- 2001âÂÂ06 BTV City Forum, Innsbruck,
- 2007âÂÂ08 Auditorium, Institute of Science and Technology Austria (ISTA), Klosterneuburg
- 2013 Conversion of Kahlsperg Castle for the Franciscan Sisters of Hallein [2]
References
External links