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  1. Fellner & Helmer was an architecture studio founded in 1873 by Austrian architects Ferdinand Fellner and Hermann Helmer. They designed over 200 buildings (mainly opera houses and apartment buildings) across Europe in the late 19th and early 20th century, which helped bind the Austro-Hungarian Empire together and cement Vienna as its cultural ...

  2. Ferdinand Fellner (19 April 1847 – 22 March 1916) was an Austrian architect. Biography. Fellner joined his ailing father's architecture firm at the age of nineteen. After his death he founded the architecture studio Fellner & Helmer together with Hermann Helmer in 1873. References

  3. The architects Ferdinand Fellner (1847–1916) and Hermann Helmer (1849–1919) had established a proper theatre construction business and were experts in acoustics and fire protection. Their offices employed up to 35 draughtsmen, and the buildings were all designed to a standardized layout.

  4. 1847, Vienne, Autriche. Death. 1916, Vienne, Autriche. Nationality. Autriche. Gender. Homme. Commentary. Architecte à Vienne. Associé de Hermann Helmer au sein du bureau d'architectes : Fellner und Helmer. Elève à l'Ecole polytechnique de Vienne. Passage en France : prrésent à l'Exposition universelle de 1878, puis de 1900, à Paris.

  5. Ferdinand Fellner was a German painter, illustrator and graphic artist. After receiving a high-class education he went to Munich to study art, and remained there from 1825 to 1831, but later on he established himself at Stuttgart and published a number of illustrations. As a painter his works are less meritorious. He died at Stuttgart in 1859.

  6. Ferdinand Fellner (Frankfurt, 1799) was a German painter, illustrator and graphic artist. After receiving a high-class education he went to Munich to study art, and remained there from 1825 to 1831, but later on he established himself at Stuttgart and published a number of illustrations.

  7. Fellner, Ferdinand (1847–1916). Viennese architect and critic. Much influenced by Semper, he specialized in theatre-design, using Renaissance and Baroque languages, and, later, Jugendstil.

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