Hammerschmidt Villa Explained

Hammerschmidt Villa
Native Name:Villa Hammerschmidt
Status:complete
Building Type:Official residence (secondary)
Architectural Style:Neo-classical
Location City:Bonn
Location Country:Germany
Coordinates:50.7228°N 7.1175°W
Current Tenants:President of Germany (secondary)
Namesake:Rudolf Hammerschmidt
Completion Date:1860
Renovation Date:1868
Destruction Date:-->
Owner:Federal Republic of Germany
Architect:August Dieckhoff
Unit Count:-->

Hammerschmidt Villa (German: Villa Hammerschmidt) is a villa in the German city of Bonn that served as the primary official seat and primary official residence of the president of the Federal Republic of Germany from 1950 until 1994. President Richard von Weizsäcker made Bellevue Palace in Berlin his primary official seat and residence in 1994. In German, the Villa is also called the "White House of Bonn", and served as a political symbol of West Germany and its capital Bonn. Since 1994, the Hammerschmidt Villa has been the secondary official seat and secondary official residence of the president of Germany. The president's standard is flown above Hammerschmidt Villa when the president is in Bonn.[1] The villa is situated in the heart of the former government quarter of Bonn, bordering the river Rhine to the north and opposite the zoological Museum Koenig to the south. It is also adjacent to the secondary official seat and secondary official residence of the chancellor, the Palais Schaumburg, to the west.

The upper floor of the building houses a private apartment for the German president, while the ground floor consists of state rooms which are used for ceremonial purposes.

Villa Hammerschmidt was built by August Dieckhoff in 1860 in Neo-classical style, as a stately home for a wealthy industrialist. It was redecorated in 1868 by the architect Otto Penner.

Past owners

Since its construction, Villa Hammerschmidt has been owned by:

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Schloss Bellevue . 2022-01-22 . Bundespräsidialamt .