Carpzow's house

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The Carpzowsche Haus Steinstrasse, corner of Brüderstrasse
The old portal of Carpzow's house; since 1893 in the old Saldria school building on Walter-Rathenau-Platz

The Carpzowsche Haus is an eye-catching and historic residential and commercial building at Steinstrasse 57 in Brandenburg an der Havel . It is designated as an architectural monument .

history

Carpzow's House was built in 1563 on the previous building in the Renaissance style. The builder was the then mayor of the Neustadt Brandenburg, Simon Carpzow . It was built as a house for him and his wife Anna Lintholtz. It is the last remaining representative massive patrician house of the Brandenburg Renaissance. It was the headquarters of the family Carpzow .

In 1800 the building housed an inn and a distillery . From 1819 to 1829 the inn was called Zum Rothirsch . It was then used as a residential and commercial building. In 1891 the house was rebuilt. The existing portal of sandstone was the Gotthardt Church Square to the local school building of the old Saldria implemented. On August 19, 1932, the roof structure was destroyed in a house fire and the impressive Renaissance gable was damaged. During the subsequent demolition and reconstruction , the pre-existing pilasters or pilaster crowns were lost. In 1962, the building was renovated again to mark its 400th anniversary. During a comprehensive renovation between 1997 and 2001, the crowning, which had been lost in 1932, was renewed. Since the renovation, there is a restaurant on the ground floor. The upper floors are used as apartments and by a law firm.

Building

The house stands at the gable facing Steinstrasse. The tail gable typical of the Renaissance , the round bay window on the 1st floor and earlier the large seating niche portal are striking .

The house is built in half-timbered style and has a massive stone facade. On the first floor, the half-timbered structure is completely preserved with simple paintings in the bay room, but was faced for optical reasons in order to preserve it. The half-timbered structure is still visible in the rear courtyard.

The house was rebuilt around 1891. The alcove portal was removed to give more business space. As a result, the stairwell was completely redesigned. Two door frames from the construction period 1563 are still in the current stairwell.

The ground floor has been expanded for restaurant operations with large shop windows . The entrance to the house is simple. Above this floor, the two or three storey roof begins. In the Brüderstraße, the eaves were partially raised above the lower attic. The windows are simple rectangular windows . In the pitched roof to Brüderstraße some were towing dormers incorporated. The floors are optically divided by cornices . Vertical dividing elements in the gable are pilaster strips that are crowned above the verge . On the ground floor, the plaster is designed with horizontal grooves .

The gable roof is covered with red beaver tails . Most of the cellar comes from the previous building. It consists of two large rooms with barrel vaults .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Brandenburg State Office for Monument Preservation and State Archaeological Museum (ed.): List of monuments of the State of Brandenburg - City of Brandenburg an der Havel . D) Monuments of other genres, ID number 09145512, December 31, 2018, p. 27 ( bldam-brandenburg.de [PDF; 201 kB ; accessed on May 13, 2019]).
  2. Marcus Cante: City of Brandenburg an der Havel , Part 1: Dominsel - Altstadt - Neustadt, Wernersche Verlagsgesellschaft, Worms 1994, p. 372, ISBN 3-88462-105-X .

Coordinates: 52 ° 24 '26.3 "  N , 12 ° 33' 40.3"  E