Welcome to Ebba Simon Haus
in Hamburg
On this website, we have put together all the information you need to make settling in and living in our Felixx student houses easier. We wish you a wonderful and exciting time at Ebba Simon Haus and a successful course of study or training with lots of new experiences!
When you move in, you will receive an email with a link to the WhatsApp group and the contact details of your tutor team. The names and numbers of your tutor team, who are responsible for community life in the house and are available to answer any questions or suggestions you may have, can also be found on the notice board.
Studying in Hamburg:
You can find helpful information and tips here:
Important names & addresses
Property management
Anke Sparer
Phone: 09131 6180 40
Mail: anke.sparer@felixx-student.de
Janitorial service
Hauke Zempel
Phone: 0172 238 359 9
Mail: hamburg-hkh@felixx-student.de
Accounting
Celine Kufner
Phone: 09131 6180 753
Mail: celine.kufner@felixx-student.de
Internet provider DS-Networks
Phone: 09131 927 013 10
Mail: info@DS-networks.de
Service provider launderette
RentWash
Phone: 01801 73 689 274 (Hotline)
Mail: info@rentwash.de
Website: rentwash.de
Emergency key service
Schlüsseldienst Hamburg Erbse
Phone: 040 548 057 81
Website: www.erbse-hamburg.de
Who was Ebba Simon?
Born in 1906 in Hamburg, died in 1999 in Hamburg.
Ebba Agnes Simon (née Westberg), great-niece of Beiersdorf owner Oscar Troplowitz, dedicated her life to supporting young people. Despite her extensive education in health, caregiving, education, gymnastics, and massage, she was barred from working during the Nazi era. Due to her Jewish mother, she was classified as a “half-Jew” and thus prohibited from marrying her non-Jewish fiancé or practicing her profession. After the war, she married chemist Alfred Simon, a long-serving board member of Beiersdorf AG. The couple had no children, and after her death, much of her estate was transferred to her cousin Georg Claussen’s foundation, which became the Claussen-Simon Foundation. It supports “science, research, education, and the arts,” especially for young people on their educational and career paths.