Robert Natus
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Robert Natus (March 16, 1890 in Viljandi, Estonia - March 31, 1950 in Bad Wilsnack, Germany) was an Estonian architect of Baltic German descent. He studied in Tallinn and Riga (in Riga Technical University). In 1939, Natus moved to Germany.
His best known work is the current City Hall of Tallinn, built in 1932 - with its red clinker mosaique façade and lanterns by the Estonian sculptor Jaan Koort, it is the most prominent building surrounding Freedom Square, and the most beautiful example of expressionist art deco in Tallinn. Red clinker mosaique was soon copied on another of Natus' well-known building on the corner of Pärnu and Roosikrantsi street, only a few hundred meters from the City Hall. This building was inspired by Johann Friedrich Höger's Chilehaus in Hamburg. Natus has also created several functionalistic apartment buildings and private dwellings.
In 1920s Natus (together with Ernst Gustav Kühnert) drew the general plans for garden cities Merivälja and Nõmme, both just outside Tallinn (Nõmme was added to Tallinn in 1940).