Gustav Gull (December 7, 1858 in Altstetten – June 10, 1942 in Zürich) was a Swiss architect. He designed the Swiss National Museum for which marked a breakthrough in his architectural career.
Life
Gull was the son of Rudolf Gottlieb Gull, a builder, and Anna (née Fries). He studied architecture at the Polytechnic of Zürich attended courses at the École des Arts Décoratifs in Geneva from 1879 to 1880. This was followed by an internship with Benjamin Recordon in Lausanne until 1882. After a trip to Italy (1883–1884), he first entered into a partnership with Conrad von Muralt, with whom he built the main post office in Lucerne, the Lavater schoolhouse in Zurich, among other things. In 1890, he received the first commission from the city of Zurich to draw up a plan for a Swiss National Museum. From 1895 to 1900, he was a master builder in Zurich, then he worked as professor of architecture at the Zurich Polytechnic until 1929.[1][2]
Another of Gull's buildings is the Zurich Stadthaus, for whose construction the northern part of the Kratzquartier and the Fraumünster monastery were demolished; Gull integrated the rest of the cloister into the inner courtyard of the Stadthaus.[3]