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Sanatorium Purkersdorf

Sanatorium Purkersdorf
Sanatorium Purkersdorf (German)
Sanatoriumpurkersdorf1-2.JPG
Front view of the Sanatorium Purkersdorf
General information
Architectural style Jugendstil
Location Purkersdorf, Austria
Coordinates 48°12′14.4″N 16°11′47.40″E / 48.204000°N 16.1965000°E / 48.204000; 16.1965000Coordinates: 48°12′14.4″N 16°11′47.40″E / 48.204000°N 16.1965000°E / 48.204000; 16.1965000
Construction started 1903
Completed 1904
Design and construction
Architect Josef Hoffmann
Other designers Wiener Werkstaette

The Sanatorium Purkersdorf was built as a sanatorium in Purkersdorf, Wien-Umgebung, Lower Austria. It was built in 1904-05 by the architect Josef Hoffmann for the industrialist Victor Zuckerkandl and is an example of the style of the Viennese Secession in architecture.

Zuckerkandl, the general director of the Silesian Iron Work of Gliwice, purchased the property at the city border of Vienna in 1903. It was acquired as a "mineral spa together with cure-park." Since the 19th Century a mineral spring bubbled on the property. The original furnishing were made by the Wiener Werkstätte with which the architect Hoffmann was involved. The ownership and management of the sanatorium were lost in the course of the Aryanization of 1938.

The sanitorium was more of a hotel than hospital and turned into a social and artistic venue of Viennese society. Among the treatments were mineral baths, physical therapies, therapeutic massages and physiotherapy. Convalescence cases and mental illnesses were especially treated in the upper classes. Through silence, light and air, and the rationality of the facility with ornament reduced to a minimum, cures of the new illnesses such as nervousness, and hysteria were sought. Also provided were reading rooms, a playroom for card games, table tennis, billiard and music-rooms for the entertainment of the guests.

In 1926, against the will of Josef Hoffmann, the architect Leopold Bauer heightened the building with another floor, which impaired the original artistic conception.

After the death Victor Zuckerkandls in 1927 the sanitarium was inherited to his nephews and nieces. From 1930, a son-in-law continued the business with little success. Trude Zuckerkandl tried in 1938 to restore the ailing business. Before an economic recuperation, Austria's Anschluss took place and in March 1938 was the Aryanization. Towards the end of World War II, the building served as a military hospital. In 1945, it was requisitioned by the Russian occupying forces.


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