Self-employed architect and monument conservator As a young architect specialising in the preservation of monuments, Weyres was mainly involved in the restoration of numerous churches in the Rhineland and the Eifel in the 1930s. During the restoration of the in Münstermaifeld, wall paintings from the 13th to 15th centuries were uncovered, followed by further repairs, but also extensions, painting of interiors or the design of church windows. In 1937, one of the few new churches of this time was built in the Eifel village of
Rinnen near
Kall according to designs by Weyres.
Cathedral master builder during the period of reconstruction At the end of the war, Weyresʼ greatest task was the restoration of Cologne Cathedral, which had suffered considerable damage in the Second World War, even if it appeared comparatively undamaged in the extensively destroyed city. Numerous bombs had hit the roof trusses, 12 vaults had collapsed or been severely damaged, window tracery had been destroyed, the lead roofing had been almost completely torn away, the crossing tower had been damaged and the old
organ had been completely destroyed. The western part was much more severely damaged than the older eastern part with the inner choir. Under Weyresʼ direction, the roofs were first remade, with the help of an American art protection officer to procure the materials. An early rescue measure was also directed at the south transept, whose southwest corner had suffered severe damage from a bomb strike. Weyres and his colleagues succeeded in restoring the eastern part of the cathedral - ambulatory,
transepts and the two eastern bays of the nave - to such an extent by the 700th anniversary of the laying of the foundation stone on 15 August 1948 that the celebrations desired by Cardinal
Josef Frings could take place in the cathedral. Weyres had the still unrenovated nave closed off to the west with a temporary partition wall. Weyres pushed ahead with an important decision as early as 1945: he convinced the cathedral chapter to use the time of the restoration work for archaeological excavations under the cathedral. At his suggestion,
Otto Doppelfeld was entrusted with this task in 1945. As early as 1946, Doppelfeld found parts of the previous building during the excavations, and further excavations revealed finds dating back to the 4th century AD. Weyres also made the decision, which was considered far-sighted, not to fill in the site about two metres below the current floor, but to secure it statically with concrete and make it permanently accessible. The restoration work always included new creations as well as pure reconstructions for Weyres. He engaged young and established artists who introduced numerous modern elements and sculptures to the freely designed components that did not directly affect the architectural form as a whole. Weyres' successor in office, his pupil
Arnold Wolff, praised these works as "zones of young, fresh sculpture typical of the time, which fit harmoniously into the cathedral's overall inventory"; The destroyed organ was replaced by a new one, for which Weyres had a completely new concrete structure built on the east side of the northern transept. The painting of the lower sides of the gallery were carried out by the artist
Peter Hecker. Unlike the large, modern west window by
Vincenz Pieper from 1963, which was restored to its 1870 state under Arnold Wolff in 1980, the organ gallery, despite a certain aesthetic displeasure From the point of view of monument conservation, Weyre's work as diocesan architect and that of his contemporaries
Karl Band and Wilhelm Hartmann fell into a "creative" phase, in which existing buildings and works of art were preserved and protected, but what had been destroyed was not replaced by "imitative copies" but by modern new creations. Weyre's approach to the new buildings in the diocese, which was considered successful, was characterised by the idea of "[bringing in] the best architect possible and then [allowing him] the greatest possible degree of freedom". In addition to restoring and repairing the churches in the archdiocese, Weyres was also responsible as an architect for a number of new buildings. Together with Günter Ständer, Weyres realised the parish church of St. Mary's Assumption in
Wuppertal- in 1953, and together with Kobes Bong among others the parish church of St. Bernhard in
Wittlich and the parish church of St. Hedwig in
Bonn. Weyres was also involved in the restoration and redecoration of the Romanesque churches of
St. Maria im Kapitol and
St. Pantaleon. == Awards ==