List of monuments in Coburg / W

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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

This part of the list of monuments in Coburg describes the listed objects in the following Coburg streets and squares:

Walkmühlgasse

Street description photo
Walkmühlgasse 50 ° 15 ′ 35 ″  N , 10 ° 57 ′ 43 ″  E
Walkmühlgasse connects Webergasse and Mühlgasse in two angled sections. The alley was in 1875 after the 1431 first mentioned Walkmühle the clothier craft in house no. 15 on tap river, a mill race of Itz named.
Walkmühlgasse 7 On the property, first mentioned as Ratslehen in 1475, with a building inscription on the entrance portal from 1802, the white tanner Carl Berbig had an outbuilding built in 1874 to dry hides and wool. In 1881 an extension with a large gateway followed. The two-wing half-timbered building consists of a two-story saddle roof building and a rear three-story hipped roof building with a three-axis facade on the second house sides on the upper floors. Coburg-Walkmuehlgasse7.jpg
Walkmühlgasse 9 The two-storey building was erected in 1875 instead of a barn as a craft house for the master glazier Josef Holzheit. The eaves side house has four axes with narrow, high windows in the street facade. The deep gable roof has a central dwarf house on the eaves side, closed off by a high triangular gable and an eaves strip with a serrated frieze. The front door is still original. Coburg-Walkmuehlgasse9.jpg
Walkmühlgasse 15
Fulling Mill
The former half-mill on the Hahn river, a mill stream, which was cased in 1970, worked as a grinding and fulling mill for the cloth making trade. Mentioned for the first time in the town register in 1431, a building inscription refers to the year 1733 regarding the construction of the current building and a wedge with a mill wheel above the entrance portal from 1754 to the later owner Michael Müller. The grinding mill was given up in 1868, later it was converted into a grinding mill, now the house is only used for residential purposes. The two-storey eaves side house has a massive ground floor and a half-timbered upper floor as well as a high pitched roof. The cross-frame windows with profiled transepts are characteristic. Coburg-Walkmuehlgasse15.jpg

Webergasse

Street description photo
Webergasse 50 ° 15 ′ 34.6 ″  N , 10 ° 57 ′ 47.3 ″  E
Webergasse connects the middle Judengasse, formerly the square in front of the Judentor, with Mohrenstrasse. It was created as part of the western expansion of the city for the cloth processing industry in the 14th century and was mentioned in the city register as early as 1399.
Webergasse 21 The three-story house was built before 1823 for Privy Councilor Gruner. Christian Friedrich Freiherr von Stockmar lived in the palace-like building . In 1877 the top floor was rebuilt by Tobias Frommann for the postman Christian Mönch. The seven-axis eaves side house has a mansard roof and has an entrance portal with a profiled sandstone frame in the middle of the facade on the ground floor. On the top floor there is a three-axis dwelling in the middle of the building, next to it on each side a two-axis dormer window with segmental arch ends. The ground floor facade, which is closed at the top by a strip cornice, consists of sandstone blocks. The windows on the upper floors of the plastered half-timbered facade are framed by console benches and lintel profiles. Coburg-Webergasse21.jpg
Webergasse 23 The two-storey corner house facing Mühlgasse was a former weaver's house. In 1727 the cloth cutter Johann Georg Dietrich had the building constructed. The date 1777 in the front door should mean the change of ownership to Johann Gottfried Köllwitz. Various conversions, for example by Georg Meyer in 1878 for a shop with a shop window on behalf of master cloth maker Carl Appel, were carried out in the following centuries, most recently in 2006 for a café. The simple, plastered half-timbered house originally had five axes, the front door with a profiled transom and curved panel was in the middle. The similar, arched garage door on the left side of the house was not built until 1935. Coburg-Webergasse23.jpg
Webergasse 26 The historicizing tenement house with Art Nouveau elements was built by Max Roth in 1909 for the perfume manufacturer August Windorf. The three-storey building is characterized by a centrally arranged, three-axis oriel made of sandstone, which is closed at the top with a tail gable dwarf house. Pilasters separate the windows and support the gable. The bay window on the second floor also has an elaborate decoration, including coffering. The two-sided, two-axis brick façades next to the bay window have double windows on the upper floors that are combined by common frames and dormer windows in the mansard roof. Due to renovations in the shop area on the ground floor, nothing is left of the architecture of the two Art Nouveau shops originally located next to the main entrance. Coburg-Webergasse26.jpg
Webergasse 31 The small house with an Art Nouveau shop front was created in 1910 through a renovation by Johann Michael Probst. With a width of around two meters, the two-storey building, now used as a commercial building, is one of the smallest buildings in Coburg. It has a half-timbered construction with a gable roof. The facade has a three-part window on the first floor and a dormer on the top floor. Coburg-Webergasse31.jpg
Webergasse 32 The elongated neo-renaissance building was built from 1887 according to plans by Hans Rothbart through an extensive conversion of the former yard for the upholsterer August Frank as a residential and commercial building. The two-storey saddle roof house is divided into two sections and has a total of ten window axes. The left part has a wide, segmented, former entrance to the inner courtyard on the ground floor and is structured by vertical sandstone bands. The pairs of shop windows are divided by columns. The associated roof section is characterized by two larger, slated house dormer windows with gable roofs and a smaller slated dormer window with a pointed helmet arranged in between. The right, shorter section of the house has no vertical facade elements, it is marked in the roof area by two dormers of the smaller type. Coburg-Webergasse32.jpg
Webergasse 35 The neo-renaissance house was built in 1893 by Johannes Köhler , who converted a coach house into a residential building with a corner shop. Further expansion measures in the roof area were carried out in 1902 and 1925. The building is characterized by a two-storey corner bay on consoles, closed by a pointed helmet, which has a counterpart on the opposite side of the building of the former Bavarian State Bank. The short, two-axis facade in Mohrenstrasse is characterized by an elaborate decoration. While there are two single windows on the first floor, a triple window and a double window are arranged on the second floor, which is closed off by a gable with an arched aperture and oculus. The longer side in Webergasse, on the other hand, has a simple plastered half-timbered facade on the upper floors, each with four individual windows. Coburg-Webergasse35.jpg

Turnout right

Street description photo
Weichengereuth 50 ° 14 ′ 22.7 ″  N , 10 ° 58 ′ 20.9 ″  E
The southern continuation of the Neuer Weg begins in Wüstenahorn at the Frankenbrücke . The road is part of Bundesstraße 4 and runs along the west side of the freight yard . The name "Weyckengerewte" is documented for the first time in 1403. The name is probably derived from a clearing (Gereute) in the area of ​​the owner Weico (Weyck). From 1867 the Weichengereuth with its eastern slope developed into a residential area for officers.
Weichengereuth 11 The neo-renaissance villa was built by Bernhard Kleemann in 1874 for the retired officer von Hake. In 1877 an outbuilding was added, in 1897 the roof gable was increased by one floor by Carl Kleemann , and in 1903 the veranda was added. Similar to the neighboring buildings, the three-storey residential building has a brick facade with sandstone structures, such as the offset corner blocks at the corners of the building. The five-axis street facade is characterized by a three-axis central projection with arched, pillar-framed windows, a dwarf house and a triangular gable. Coburg-Weichengereuth11.jpg
Turnout 12 The villa was built in 1874 by Bernhard Kleemann for the retired officer Julius von Tschirschky. A roof terrace was added in 1923 when the owner changed hands. The house, which is arranged on the slope, has a brick facade with sandstone elements. The front to the street is characterized by a polygonal tower with arched windows on the right side. Next to it is a two-story, three-axis hipped roof house with rectangular windows. The top floor with a knee and a two-axis dwarf in the middle is a half-timbered construction. Coburg-Weichengereuth12.jpg
Weichengereuth 12 a The villa was built in 1873 by Bernhard Kleemann for a retired officer. Conversions followed in 1919 and 1930. The house, which is arranged on the hillside, is heavily structured by various structures and has a brick facade with sandstone structures. The front to the street is characterized by a laterally arranged polygonal tower with a flat tent roof. Next to it is a two-axis risalit, which has a protruding roof on the top floor and a three-axis bay window with segmented arched windows on the ground floor. Coburg-Weichengereuth12a.jpg
Weichengereuth between 12a and 14
Lehsgarten
Around 1925, the doll manufacturer Hans Leh had a large park, the so-called Lehsgarten, created, which was bordered in 1928 by a garden wall with two portal pillars. On the two sandstone pedestals at the driveway to house 14, two deer sculptures, which are missing the fabric, are arranged in cast bronze . Coburg-Weichengereuth12a-14.jpg
Turnout right 14 The late Classicist villa was built in 1867 for the Privy Councilor of War Weidinger from Berlin. In 1928 the villa came into the possession of the doll manufacturer Hans Leh, who had the southern entrance replaced by a dining room with a bay window. The two-story building has a flat hipped roof. The four-axis facade with tall, slender windows is divided into two single and one double axis by pilaster strips. A two-axis dormer window is also placed in the middle of the street front. The northern entrance to the house is covered by a veranda that will later be closed. Coburg-Weichengereuth14.jpg
Turnout right 15 The single-storey villa was built by Bernhard Kleemann for Count Louis von Stillfried-Rockbonitz in 1871/72. The late classicist house has a sandstone facade in the basement and a brick facade with sandstone structures on the living floor. The four-axis, symmetrical street facade is characterized by large windows and is divided by a two-axis risalit with a ground floor bay. In addition, there is a two-storey stable building with a coach house as a half-timbered construction on the property. Coburg-Weichengereuth15.jpg
[Turnout 25] [The building was erected in 1904 by Max and Tobias Frommann as a residence and guest house for the restaurateur August Hofmann. The ground and first floors had a brick facade with sandstone structures. The street gable of the two- story third hip roof and the knee sticks had a visible half-timbered construction. On the four-axis ground floor of the east facade, a group of three windows was spanned by a brick arch; on the upper floor, each of the three individual windows was bridged with two-tone relief arches. At the northwest corner stood a polygonal tower with a plastered upper floor and a tent roof. A hall extension with a bowling alley was originally attached to the south facade. The building finally housed the restaurant "El Greco". In 2009 it was acquired by the city after many years of vacancy and demolished at the end of April 2010.] Coburg-Weichengereuth25.jpg
Weichengereuth 26 The late Classicist villa was built in 1869 for a retired officer based on plans by Hans Rothbart . In addition to the ground floor, the building has a basement and an attic floor . The former residential building is now used as an office building. A three-axis, two-storey central projection with a balcony on the ground floor and three narrow windows on the first floor divides the seven-axis street facade. The building has a flat and little protruding pyramid roof. Coburg-Weichengereuth26.jpg
Weichengereuth 50
Schützenhaus
The Schützenhaus restaurant was built in 1903 together with a shooting range by August Berger . The two-storey, historicist building has a stepped structure with a large number of windows and a hipped roof . On the top floor of the street facade, a half-timbered dormer window with a pointed arched gable, a large pointed arched window and a shingled, three-sided bay window are particularly noteworthy. The corrugated gable to the beer garden is characterized by a four-axis risalit and adorned with the emblem of the Coburger Schützengesellschaft and an Art Nouveau inscription "ÜB AUG UND HAND FÜRS FATHERLAND". Coburg-Weichengereuth50.jpg

Wine route

Street description photo
Weinstrasse 50 ° 15 ′ 43.6 ″  N , 10 ° 58 ′ 56.1 ″  E
The wine route connects the Probstgrund with the fortress courtyard. It leads along the southeast edge of the Hofgarten . The name was introduced in 1883 and is intended to recall the vineyards that have long been present on the slopes of the fortress mountain.
Weinstrasse no. The single-storey garden house, standing above Weinstrasse 4, was built in 1872. It is a single-storey half-timbered building with a gently sloping pitched roof and floating gable. Coburg-Weinstrasse-Gartenhaus.jpg
Weinstrasse no. The two-storey garden house, above Weinstrasse 29, is located on the southeast edge of the courtyard garden . The theater painter Max Brückner had it built in 1896 on his garden property by the building officer Bernhard Kleemann. The building standing on the slope has a massive ground floor and first floor made of bricks with sandstone structures and half-timbered walls in the attic. It has a gable roof that protrudes far and is covered in areas with blue glazed tiles. On the south side there are two balconies with sawn balusters . Coburg-Weinstrasse-29o-1.jpg

Wettin facility

Street description photo
Wettiner plant 50 ° 15 ′ 28.9 ″  N , 10 ° 58 ′ 4.9 ″  E
The Wettineranlage is an avenue that lies between the east side of Ehrenburg Palace and the Marstall. It was named in 1985 after the Wettin family who ruled Coburg from 1353 to 1918. The avenue section belongs to the green belt with the avenue and the lower facility, which was laid out in the course of the city moat from north to south in 1834, it connects the Schlossplatz with the Steingasse. The green area consists of a walkway, a lawn in front of the Ehrenburg, which allows the facade to be freely presented without trees, and a shady row of trees leading to the stables. Coburg-Wettiner-Anlage.jpg

Wolf ranks

Street description photo
Wolf ranks Gustav-Freytag-Brunnen see Gustav-Freytag-Weg Gustavfreytag.jpg