Eggert Achen

Eggert Achen (30 November 1853 – 20 December 1913) was a Danish architect.[1]

Biography

Eggert Christoffer Achen was born in the parish of Kvislemark in Næstved Municipality. Denmark. He was the son of Hillerød Eggert Christoffer Achen and Johanne Georgine Wilhelmine Cecilie Tryde. He was the brother of the painter Georg Achen (1860-1912).[2]

He attended the Copenhagen Technical College and was admitted to the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts in January 1872. Around 1877, Achen settled in Randers.

Chairman of the Architects' Association of Denmark between 1910 and 1914, he was a Freemason and member of the Danish Masonic Order. He designed several lodges for the Freemasons including one in Randers in 1881, together with Frits Uldall, and in Aarhus in 1908. He collaborated frequently with the Aarhus architect Thorkel Møller, mainly in Central and South Jutland in the restorations of manors and hotel conversions. Varna Palæet, a restaurant, and the Technical School in Hobro can also be counted amongst his works.[3] Achen moved to Aarhus ca. 1895 where he died in 1913.

gollark: Graphs of things like e^x, I assume.
gollark: See, you have to have the perfect balance of hating humans enough that it wants to spend its entire existence beating them at a mostly meaningless game, and being incompetent and underpowered enough that it won't become sentient and wipe out humanity.
gollark: I doubt it. Anyway, I'm busy working on the AI code.
gollark: If I did that, I would have to write a lot of annoying code to map all the positions onto isometric things, and code to draw the isometric thing in the first place.
gollark: So it just uses the existing grid output code.

See also

References

  1. "Eggert Achen". Kunstindeks Danmark & Weilbach Kunstnerleksikon. Retrieved May 1, 2019.
  2. Finn Terman Frederiksen. "Georg Achen". Den Store Danske, Gyldendal. Retrieved May 1, 2019.
  3. "Frimureriet i Århus" (in Danish). Vrijmetselaarsgilde. Retrieved 5 October 2012.



This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.