Alt-Marzahn 26

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The house Alt-Marzahn 26 is a single-family house and a monument in Alt-Marzahn in the district of Berlin-Marzahn the Berlin district of Marzahn-Hellersdorf .

history

Residential building

Alt-Marzahn residential building 26

The single-storey single-family house with a gable roof was probably built on a field stone base in 1825, the construction and equipment date from this time and have largely been preserved. In the 1920s there were changes in use to the four doors and windows. In the post-war period, the western living space on the street side was probably originally divided by two window axes . On the east side of the courtyard, the former high cellar has been buried since the 1980s and the floor in the room was lowered one floor above. What has been preserved is the mud brick cellar neck facing the hallway on the courtyard side as a chamber . The approx. 55 centimeter thick outer walls of the house are made of rammed earth and were newly plastered around 1990, the approx. 28 centimeter thick inner walls made of adobe bricks are walled in lime or clay mortar, have been provided with clay plaster and a thin lime plaster . The door and window openings are made of solid block frames . The two house entrance doors with transoms can be removed with skylights and fittings and are completely preserved.

The courtyard door is a single-leaf, doubled lamella door. On the street side is the double-leaf frame panel door with fan-shaped rosettes. The three cross-frame windows facing the street with fighters in the upper third are made of hardwood and have been completely preserved with cladding, shutters and fittings. The three windows on the courtyard side are a cross-stock window from the construction period and have no shutters. Stored on block steps, a chiselled staircase leads from the courtyard to the attic. In addition, the partition and the door are made of approx. 40 centimeters wide planks. The collar beam roof without slips consists of a double standing chair and shows a continuous beam system. Some of the collar beams can be reused. In the area of ​​the five western rafters there is an attic chamber with half-timbered walls, which is attached centrally over the collar beam layer with a construction-time cover. On the courtyard side there is a profiled eaves plank and it is from the construction period and still has remnants of the paint.

Old age part

The two northern rooms in the residential use can later be occupied in the separated small hallway through the box double windows with sparger in the upper third and the whole in the profile in the style of the neo-renaissance . There are simple color frames on the northern ceiling and walls.

barn

The outside of the barn is made of red bricks, inside colored bricks have been bricked up and they were actually plastered. At the end of the 1990s, the remains of the cap ceiling of the high cellar on the east side, which was 1.20 meters above ground level, were demolished. In the western half of the barn, remains of the wooden construction have been preserved, such as the girder with a profiled head and the handle with headbands. At a height of 4.50 meters, the beam holes in the masonry were arranged exactly on both sides in the middle of the passage and the ceilings were drawn in. Above the 3.70 meter wide passage, the space under the roof had no joists .

literature

  • Anja Franziska Denker, Karoline Terlau-Friemann: The monuments in Berlin, Marzahn district: Biesdorf, Friedrichsfelde Ost and Marzahn districts . 1st edition. District Office Marzahn of Berlin, Lower Monument Protection Authority, Berlin 2000, ISBN 3-00-006595-4 , p. 56-59 .

Individual evidence

  1. Entry in the Berlin State Monument List

Coordinates: 52 ° 32 '36.9 "  N , 13 ° 33' 31.1"  E