Orgelbau Wech Pipe Organ



Builder: Robert Wech of Orgelbau Wech
Buchloe, Germany

September 2010 Press Release

The organ was built to specifications for this church sanctuary located atop Queen Anne Hill by noted Organ Builder, Robert Wech, President of Orgelbau Wech of Buchloe, Germany, near Munich. Wech is currently in Seattle completing the assembly and the voicing of the new instrument which is contained in twin pipe towers that flank the Holy Spirit floor-to-ceiling window in the rear of the church’s worship space.

The new instrument is a “tracker” or mechanical action instrument, meaning that slender, strong, and sometimes long pieces of wood (trackers) connect the keyboards of the organ directly to the valves that open beneath pipes chosen to “speak.” This is the oldest and most sensitive key-action system used, allowing the organist to have maximum control over how the organ will play. The sound is produced by wind (air under pressure) generated by a bellow

The organ consists of 25 stops and more than 1,500 pipes. The two towers of pipes and mechanism are constructed of beautiful German maple wood acquired from high in the Alps. The north tower houses the Great and Swell divisions, and the Pedal division is housed in the south tower. A reversed console of German white oak sits in front of the Swell/Great division tower and has electric stop action.

The new pipe organ was assembled in the Orgelbau Wech shop in Germany. It was pre-voiced, and disassembled before being shipped through the Panama Canal to Oakland, then on rail to Seattle, by truck to Queen Anne Lutheran Church arriving September 1, 2010. Volunteers from the church assisted Wech and his crew in unloading the shipping container.

Robert Wech was raised in Augsburg, Germany and began his education as an organ designer and builder in 1984 with the firm of Hubert Sandtner in Dillingen/Donau and in the Technical School for Musical Instrument Design and Production in Ludwigsburg. After many years of schooling and on-the-job experience in all aspects of organ craftsmanship, Wech opened his own firm in 2001. Wech’s most recently completed instruments are located at the Cathedral of the Epiphany in Sioux City, Iowa (2006) and at the Pontifical North American College in Vatican City, Italy (2009).

Pipe Organ Stops

Tracker action, Two Manuals, Twenty-five Stops
Electric Stop Action with Combination System
Kellner temperament
North Wall―Swell and Great Tower, Reverse Console
South Wall―Pedal Tower



Great Swell Pedal
Bourdon 16′ Bourdon 8′ Subbaß 16′
Principal 8′ Salicional 8′ Gedeckt 8′
Rohrflöte 8′ Vox celeste 8′ Principal 8′
Voce umana 8′ Principal 4′ Choralbaß 4′
Octave 4′ Flöte 4′ Posaune 16′
Spitzflöte 4′ Cornet II Trompete 8′
Superoctave 2′ Waldflöte 2′
Nasard 2 2/3′ Scharff 1′
Mixtur 1 1/3′ Dulcian 8′
Trompete 8′
Tremulant
Cymbelstern
Couplers:   II/I       I/Ped       II/Ped