Plischke was born in the town of
Klosterneuburg near
Vienna (
Austria) in 1903. His father worked as an architect and his mother came from a family of cabinet-makers. From an early age he spent time in workshops and studios, before studying interior- and furniture-design at
Vienna's College of Arts and Crafts at 16. At the age of twenty, influenced by his father to become an architect, he was accepted into a Master School run by leading architect
Peter Behrens. His architecture as a student reflected the dynamic and repetitious nature of the early modernist style. After graduating from the academy in 1926, Plischke worked in Peter Behrens's private office, and in 1929 travelled to
New York to work, but the start of the
Great Depression in 1929 ruined this opportunity. In 1930, the Austrian government commissioned Plischke to build the Labour Exchange building in
Liesing. Completion of this in 1931 made him one of Austria's leading architects. He became a member of the Austrian Werkbund movement, and contributed a building to the
experimental housing research project, the Werkbundsiedlung. One of the Plischke's early houses, the Gamerith House at
Attersee, foreshadows his later work in New Zealand. The house fits into the surrounding landscape and has a boat-like quality. In 1935, he married
Anna Lang-Schwizer and received the Austrian State Prize for architecture. In March 1938,
Germany occupied Austria. German law required that all architects had to become part of a centralised
Reich Chamber of Culture. Because his wife was Jewish, he was not accepted into the Chamber of Arts. This, along with the banning of modernist buildings by the German occupation, led Plischke to move to New Zealand in 1939. ==New Zealand architect==