Einar Ambt (22 March 1877,
Copenhagen – 21 December 1928, Copenhagen) was a Danish architect.
Early life and education
Ambt was born on 22 March 1877 in Copenhagen, the son of
Christian Ambt and Thekla Emilie Eleanor Mathilde Johnsen. His father served as City Engineer in Copenhagen from 1886 to 1902 and then as Director-General of the
Danish State Railways until 1915. Ambt became a
bricklayer in 1896 and simultaneously attended
technical school. He was then accepted to the
Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, graduating as an architect in 1904.
Career
He worked for Danish architect Gotfred Tvede for six years and, at the insistence of his father, worked for Danish architect
Heinrich Wenck on
Copenhagen Central Station from 1904 to 1912. He started his own practice in 1912.
He was a member of the board of directors for The
Architects' Association of Denmark from 1908 to 1910 and, from 1915, he served on the board of the Kreditkassen for Husejere i Kjøbenhavn (Credit Union for Homeowners in Copenhagen). He collaborated with the architect Axel Preisler on many works in his career.
On 2 April 1909 he married Josephine Johanne Marie Hansen (b. 23 July 1878) in Copenhagen. Ambt travelled to Germany,
Switzerland, Italy,
Finland, England, France and the
Netherlands during his life.
He won the New Residential Property of the Year Award in 1915.[1] He participated in the
National Exhibition of 1909 in Aarhus and in the Charlottenborg Spring Exhibition in 1918, 1921, 1922 and 1927. Together with Axel Preisler, he received the Diplom d'Honneur in
Ghent in 1921.
He died during construction of the Kreditkassen for Husejere i Kjøbenhavn at Rådhuspladsen 59 in Copenhagen. The building was completed by Gunnar Juul Brask in 1929. Ambt is buried at
Vestre Cemetery in Copenhagen.