Blasiistraße 10 (Quedlinburg)

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House Blasiistraße 10

The house Blasiistraße 10 is a listed building in the city of Quedlinburg in Saxony-Anhalt .

location

It is located on the south side of Blasiistraße, southwest of the Quedlinburg market square. The building is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and is listed in the Quedlinburg Monument Register as a merchant's farm. To the east is the also listed building Blasiistraße 9 , to the west is the house Blasiistraße 11 .

Architecture and history

The three-story plastered half-timbered house was built around 1730. A baroque staircase that leads from the courtyard passage to the upper floors is remarkable . The banister is decorated with twisted columns and lush carvings in the form of leafy tendrils. The design corresponds to the design of the gallery supports of St. Benedikti and St. Nikolai . The stairs were extensively restored in 2002/2003 for € 363,000. In the hall of the house there is a free-standing column that supports the middle truss and thus enables a large space. A winch wheel has been preserved in the roof of the house , with which loads could be pulled up or down.

On the west side of the courtyard is a wing made up of two buildings. The older of the houses was built by the master carpenter Martin Lange according to a building inscription in 1695 . The inscription M.LANGE.ZM refers to him . Overlapping can be found on the framework on the ground floor. The younger house dates from the 19th century.

The south wing of the property was built as a storage building in the Baroque era. Around 1780 the warehouse was converted into a residential building. The building has a magnificently designed baroque door from around 1720.

The building department of the city of Quedlinburg was housed in the house until 2013. The owner is the Wohnungswirtschaftsgesellschaft mbH Quedlinburg, which has been planning to sell it since 2013. There are a total of 30 office rooms in the property. The total usable area is 934.95 m², of which 609.05 m² in the front building and 325.9 m² in the side buildings with a plot size of 878 m².

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Hans Hartmut Schauer, Quedlinburg, half-timbered town, world cultural heritage , Verlag Bauwesen Berlin 1999, ISBN 3-345-00676-6 , page 43
  2. ^ Hans Hartmut Schauer, Quedlinburg, half-timbered town, world cultural heritage , Verlag Bauwesen Berlin 1999, ISBN 3-345-00676-6 , page 44
  3. Hans-Hartmut Schauer, Quedlinburg, specialist workshop / world cultural heritage , Verlag Bauwesen Berlin 1999, ISBN 3-345-00676-6 , page 146
  4. Hans-Hartmut Schauer, Quedlinburg, specialist workshop / world cultural heritage , Verlag Bauwesen Berlin 1999, ISBN 3-345-00676-6 , page 150

Coordinates: 51 ° 47 ′ 18.2 "  N , 11 ° 8 ′ 22.8"  E