Werner Otto was a German entrepreneur. He founded Otto GmbH in 1949, which eventually became the world's largest mail order group. He was married three times and had five children. Otto and his family consistently ranked among the wealthiest Germans.
Early life
Werner Otto was born the son of the retailer Wilhelm Otto and his wife Frieda. His mother died shortly after his birth. He attended the school in Schwedt, later the high school in Prenzlau.
Career
After a commercial apprenticeship, he started his own business as a retail merchant in Szczecin. For the dissemination of leaflets, Otto was sentenced in 1934 to two years imprisonment. After his release, he operated a cigar shop and married in 1939 his first wife, Eva Haffner. In 1941, their daughter :de:Ingvild Goetz|Ingvild was born and two years later son Michael. The end of the war saw Otto with a head injury in a military hospital. In 1949 he divorced. Motto for his life was "Panta rhei" — everything flows. Otto founded the mail order company 'Otto Versand' in Hamburg on 17 August 1949. The management of the fast-growing company turned over to his eldest son, Michael Otto, in 1981. In 1952, he married Jutta Becker and 1957 his second son Frank was born, the only child from his second marriage. In the 1960s, he started the Sagitta Group, today's Park Property, one of the largest real estate companies in Canada. Through his North American experiences, Werner Otto got the idea to found another enterprise, the :de:ECE Project Management|ECE Projekt Management GmbH & Co. KG, which builds and manages shopping malls; finance and staff. ECE is one of the leading developers, implementers, owners and operators of large commercial real estate in Europe. His third wife Maren gave birth to Otto's youngest children Katharina and Alexander in the 1960s. Katherina is a filmmaker in New York. Alexander received from his father the real estate company ECE entrusted. In his range of social causes, he founded in 1969 the Werner Otto Foundation, which supports medical research. In 1973, when he was over 60, Otto developed the Paramount Group in New York, to invest in US real estate. At Harvard University he donated a new museum building, the Werner Otto Hall, for the art of German Expressionism, out of the Busch-Reisinger Museum. The building has now been demolished as part of a redevelopment project led by Renzo Piano.