Lucien Weissenburger
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Lucien Weissenburger (Nancy, 2 May 1860 – Nancy, 24 February 1929), was a French architect. He was one of the principal architects to work in the Art Nouveau style in Lorraine and a member of the board of directors of the École de Nancy.
Some of Weissenburger's principal buildings include:
- Magasins Réunis (1890-1907; destroyed), Nancy
- Villa Jika, also known as the Villa Majorelle (1898-1902, in collaboration with Henri Sauvage), Nancy
- Imprimerie Royer (1899-1900), Nancy
- Maison Bergeret (1903-4), Nancy
- Villa Corbin (1904-9), Nancy (now the grounds of the Musée de l'École de Nancy)
- Immeuble Weissenburger (1904-6), Nancy
- Villa Henri-Emmanuel Lang (1906), Nancy
- Maison Chardot (1907), Nancy
- Theater of Lunéville (1908)
- Exposition Internationale de l'Est de la France (1909), Nancy:
- Maison des Magasins Réunis
- Pavillon du Gaz [Gas Pavilion]
- Brasserie Excelsior and Hotel Angleterre (1911), Nancy
- Magasins Vaxelaire, Pignot, and Cie (1913), Nancy