Blasiistraße 2a, 3 (Quedlinburg)
The house Blasiistraße 2a, 3 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 and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site . The property is registered as a residential building in the Quedlinburg monument register. The building, which is also protected, is Blasiistraße 2 to the east and Blasiistraße 4 to the west. On the south-facing rear, the property borders on Word Street .
Architecture and history
According to an inscription M. WULF GÖTZE decorated with a hatchet , the three-storey half - timbered house was built in 1653 by the builder Wulf Goetze . It is the last verifiable building by Goethe, which probably also created the neighboring house at Blasiistraße 2. As in number 2, the builder was Hans Bethge, with number 2a according to the inscription already intended for his son Andreas Bethge, who was then also listed as owner from 1660. The half-timbered facade is decorated with valleys , notch-cut medallions and pyramid beam heads. The inscription is carved into the wood. In earlier buildings in Quedlinburg it was previously customary for the writing to be carved out of the beam. An Art Nouveau facade was later built on the ground floor .
The core of the western part of the building, Blasiistraße 3, dates from the late Renaissance , but was largely renovated in the 19th century. In the roof of the house there is a historical rotating tree with which goods could be transported up or down. The shop fitting on the ground floor was done in the style of historicism . Both shops on the property are used by the Schuh-Naumann shoe store .
On the back of the property, which faces south towards the Word, there is a striking commercial building with a loading hatch integrated in the roof . It is possible that this building dates back to the late Middle Ages .
literature
- State Office for the Preservation of Monuments of Saxony-Anhalt (Ed.): List of monuments in Saxony-Anhalt. Volume 7: Falko Grubitzsch, with the participation of Alois Bursy, Mathias Köhler, Winfried Korf, Sabine Oszmer, Peter Seyfried and Mario Titze: Quedlinburg district. Volume 1: City of Quedlinburg. Fly head, Halle 1998, ISBN 3-910147-67-4 , page 83.
Individual evidence
- ↑ Hans-Hartmut Schauer, Quedlinburg, specialist workshop / world cultural heritage , Verlag Bauwesen Berlin 1999, ISBN 3-345-00676-6 , page 149
- ^ Karlheinz Wauer, The carpenter Wulf Götze and his circle in the old town of Quedlinburg in Harz-Zeitschrift 2002/03, page 165 ff., 180
- ↑ Hans Hartmut Schauer, Quedlinburg, half-timbered town, world cultural heritage , Verlag Bauwesen Berlin 1999, ISBN 3-345-00676-6 , page 71
- ^ Hans Hartmut Schauer, Quedlinburg, half-timbered town, world cultural heritage , Verlag Bauwesen Berlin 1999, ISBN 3-345-00676-6 , page 44
Coordinates: 51 ° 47 ′ 18.9 " N , 11 ° 8 ′ 27" E