List of monuments in Coburg / Lützelbuch

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Coburg district Lützelbuch
List of monuments in Coburg :

Core city by street name: A  · B  · C  · E  · F  · G  · H  · J  · K  · L  · M  · N  · O  · P  · Q  · R  · S  · T  · U  · V  · W  · Z

Other districts: Beiersdorf  · Bertelsdorf  · Cortendorf  · Creidlitz  · Festungshof  · Ketschendorf  · Lützelbuch  · Neu- and Neershof  · Neuses  · Rögen  · Scheuerfeld  · Seidmannsdorf  · Desert maple

The Coburg district of Lützelbuch is located east of the city center.

Lützelbuch

50 ° 15 '22.9 "  N , 11 ° 0' 34.8"  E

Street / name description photo
Gaiser Strasse 14 This former school house is located on a head lot on the western edge of Lützelbuch; At this point Teichbergweg, Alter Kirchweg and Am Steinbruch merge into Gaiser Straße. The building was built as a residential building in 1879 and was sold in 1883. In that year it was expanded to include a classroom extension, presumably by Julius Girtanner. In 1897 the roof was renovated and in 1902 the school was expanded. Above the ground floor made of sandstone, the upper floor is built as a half-timbered knee floor with brick infill. At the rear there is a single-storey saddle roof building, the attic of which has been expanded and which probably served as a former teacher's apartment. Co-Luetzelbuch-Gaiserstr14.jpg
Lützelbucher Strasse 2 This two-storey half-timbered house with a gable roof was built around 1800. It is located at the gable facing Lützelbucher Straße on a pentagonal plot of land that tapers to the north. The property is located at the intersection of the old streets Lützelbucher and Oberfüllbacher Straße with Am Herrnberg and with the Haaresgrund. The house corresponds to the type of a stable house with a half-timbered upper floor. The gable-side slate of the upper floor has a historical stencil decoration. The gable side has three window axes and two smaller windows in the lower attic. Around 1900 the ground floor, which was originally also built in half-timbered construction, was replaced by a brick construction. On the gable side, the upper floor and the gable protrude. In the description from 1864 the existence of the property is described as follows:

“1 two-story residential building with tiled roof, courtyard right and manure place to the northwest, entrance by means of stone steps from the courtyard, to the right of the entrance the apartment with apartment above, to the left stables for 4 cattle with chambers above, attached: 1 barn with 1 barn with 2 barns 1 pigsty with 2 compartments, then 1 oven with 1 pigsty with 1 compartment. "

Co-Luetzelbuch-Luetzelbucherstr2.jpg
Weiherstrasse 9 The former manor was first mentioned in 1496 when Albrecht von Brandenstein bought the property. In 1823 Duke Ernst I bought it and leased the estate. Under Duke Ernst II , large parts of the property were sold to local farmers in 1872 and the farmhouse in the castle was set up along with the remaining seven hectares of land. After Coburg was annexed to Bavaria in 1920, the institution became part of the Free State, which in 1923 transferred it to the Neuendettelsau Diakonissenanstalt with the stipulation that it should continue to operate as a nursing home for old and frail people. The Diakonie expanded the Lützelbuch care home in the following decades. A retirement home was built in 1931, a chapel in 1936 and a nursing home in 1988. In 1990 an employee residence was completed, in 1998 a replacement building for the old people's home.
The former manor house is a three-storey hipped roof building, the fabric of which probably dates from the 18th century. The facade is characterized by eight window axes on the long side and four on the transverse side as well as a arched portal with frame and wedge stone. The cellars of the building are characterized by a square vault, which probably dates from the Middle Ages. The chapel from 1936 was built according to plans by the architect Max von Berg. The simple saddle roof structure has a polygonal altar apse and a wooden roof turret. A bronze portal shows reliefs of the four evangelist symbols.
Co-Luetzelbuch-Weiherstr9.jpg