Vicarage Salzburg-St. Elisabeth
The rectory of the Elisabethkirche in Elisabeth-Vorstadt (Froschheim, Plainviertel), a district of Salzburg, is the former Caspisschlössl , which was later also called Schloss Schöneck and then Villa Haimerle , which was located in Haimerle Park , which was gradually built , 1931 with a school house.
It stands diagonally to the right behind the Elisabeth Church and is a listed building .
history
The Caspisschlössl , built by Giovanni Gaspare Zuccalli (the builder of the Erhard Church and the Kajetan Church ) for the free lords of Caspis in 1685, was located closer to the banks of the Salzach before the Salzach regulation and had its own shipping pier. The surrounding fields Caspisfelder and the local Au Caspisau were named after the small, but tastefully furnished and well-preserved castle .
The organ and piano maker Ludwig Mooser (1807–1881), who renovated the Salzburg cathedral organ from 1842–45, lived and worked here. In August 1858 Mooser set off from the pier at Villa Haimerle in a self-built ship, on board he had eight new organs he had created and destined for Hungary.
Today the house houses the rectory of the parish Salzburg-St. Elisabeth of the Archdiocese of Salzburg and the parish kindergarten .
Building description
It is a square, two-story building typical of the area with a stepped pyramid roof, which has an upper floor on which there was a round-helmeted tower room. The tower room was redesigned into a bell tower in the 1950s. The house was a - in Salzburg so-called - through house; the ground floor could be crossed by carriages in order to get on or off the same dry feet when it rained.
Web links
Individual evidence
Coordinates: 47 ° 48 '56.56 " N , 13 ° 2' 29.33" O