Briescht old forestry department

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Alte Försterei Briescht is a monument in the village of Briescht , a district of the Tauche municipality in the Oder-Spree district of Brandenburg . The building ensemble was laid out around 1900 as a royal forester's house on the former Briescht manor and has served as a place for art, culture and recreation since its privatization in 2009.

history

Forest house and stable in 2014
Courtyard side of the horse stable
Coffee garden and barn

Briescht, a village on the Krummen Spree , belonged in the early modern period to the neighboring rule of Kossenblatt to the west . In 1736 the "Soldier King" Friedrich Wilhelm I acquired the goods and the Kossenblatt Castle , so that the goods including Briescht were finally under the royal rule of King Wusterhausen until 1872 . After the Kossenblatt Castle and its land had passed into private hands in 1872, the Briescht manor burned down in 1896 . In 1898 the manor Briescht was bought back for the royal household entails . Around 1900, the Royal Forestry Briescht was built on the estate in the middle of the village; The agriculturally usable area of ​​the estate was leased in plots from 1904. Also in 1904, the Sabrodt forester's office (part of Trebatsch ) was relocated to the Briescht Forestry Office. In addition, in 1928 the areas of the dissolved Trebatsch manor district, which belonged to the Briescht forestry, were added to the rural community of Briescht. In the meantime, the Prussian state forestry department, during the GDR era , the area belonged to the state forestry of the GDR as a district forestry department and was ultimately the Brandenburg forestry department until 1990. In 2009 the area was privatized.

Protected building ensemble

In 2008 the ensemble was added to the list of monuments . According to the Brandenburg State Office for Monument Preservation, the monument includes the State Archaeological Museum

  • Forestry department with forester's house, horse stable, two barns and earth cellar.

The two-storey, three-axle forester's house stands on the eastern edge of the courtyard and was built from red brick on a field stone base . The massive 1 ½ storey brick stable is attached to the house. The barns border the courtyard to the south and west. The drive-through barns are made of wood or boarded timber. The buildings are with gable roofs covered. The massive cellar system on the roadside entrance to the courtyard consists of field stone and brickwork.

Venue

In 2009 the Landesbetrieb Forst sold the ensemble to an interior designer who, together with his partner, developed the 11,000 m² area into a place for culture, the environment and tourism while preserving the rural tradition. The events in 2010 ranged from a festival on Arbor Day to theater performances, exhibitions, concerts, readings, cinema evenings and support for visiting school classes to participation in the Open Monument Day . Barbecue evenings and cozy get-togethers with brass music and a children's program in the coffee garden with a view of the Spree, offers for cyclists on the Spree Cycle Path that leads past , excursions, flea markets and a series of seminars complement the offer or are being planned.

In 2012 a musical reading (Hehle reads and Fährmann plays) took place, which was recorded and in 2013 as a double CD Fährmann - Live in Briescht. Old forestry. with texts by the poet , speaker and moderator Andreas Hähle and music by Fährmann appeared. In addition, the Alte Försterei is now a registered pilgrim hostel on the Way of St. James between Frankfurt (Oder) and Leipzig .

Web links

Commons : Alte Försterei Briescht  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Joachim Schölzel (edit.): Historical local dictionary for Brandenburg. (HOL) Part IX: Beeskow - Storkow. (Publications of the Potsdam State Archives , Volume 25). Publishing house Klaus-D. Becker, Potsdam 2011, ISBN 978-3-941919-86-0 (reprint of the edition: Verlag Hermann Böhlaus Nachhaben, Weimar 1989, ISBN 3-7400-0104-6 ) pp. 40f, 137.
  2. Briescht old forester's house. History.
  3. ^ Brandenburg State Office for Monument Preservation and State Archaeological Museum (BLDAM): Monument database. Försterei Briescht, OBJ-Dok.-Nr. 09115528. As of July 8, 2014.
  4. Iris Stoff: Alte Försterei has become an insider tip. In: Märkische Onlinezeitung (MOZ), February 4, 2011.
  5. Briescht old forester's house. Calendar of events. ( Memento from October 7, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  6. One eighth bay leaf: Review: Fährmann - Live in Briescht.
  7. Brandenburger Jakobswege. Pilgrim hostels.

Coordinates: 52 ° 6 '27.4 "  N , 14 ° 7' 3.3"  E