Dauphinestrasse

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Dauphinestrasse
coat of arms
Street in Linz
Basic data
place Linz
District Kleinmünchen
Connecting roads Seidelbastweg (west)
use
User groups Bus routes 11, 12, 19 , car traffic , pedestrian traffic , bicycle traffic
Technical specifications
Street length approx. 3100 meters

The Dauphine Street is a street in the Upper Austrian capital Linz . It is located in the statistical districts of Kleinmünchen-Auwiesen and Neue Heimat . The street was named in 1954 after Maria Antoniette, who lived on this street in 1770 for her wedding to the Dauphine Louis XVI. traveled. Before that, it was called Dauphinstrasse from 1929.

Location and characteristics

The approximately 3,100 meter long street branches off to the west from Wiener Straße to the west and crosses the former town center of Kleinmünchen in an elongated S-curve. It then runs south of the suburb of Schörgenhub and joins Siemensstrasse in the west.

building

No. 3 Tommerlhaus

The Tommerlhaus, which burned down in 1999, is an adapted square , which was bought in 1841 by the tree spinning mill owners Grillmayr and converted into a two-story workers' house between 1849 and 1850. In the inner courtyard there is an open basket arch or segment arch arcade. The building housed apartments for the employees of Linzer Textil AG until the end and was also the oldest surviving workers' residence in Linz.

No. 5 Grillmayr Schlößl

Grillmayr Schlössl

The Grillmayr Schlößl is the villa of the tree spinning mill owner Grillmayr. Together with the neighboring workers' house and the factory halls of the spinning mill (today Linz Textil) it formed an ensemble. The Grillmayer Schlößl is a listed building.

No. 9 Palais Löwenfeld

The Löwenfeld Palace, formerly Jaukermühle, is a listed, former factory owner's villa. The Jaukermühle, built in 1823, was converted into a representative residence between 1881 and 1882.

No. 11 Dirzer cotton mill

The Dirzer cotton spinning mill was built in the late 1830s by the Linz industrialist Josef Dierzer on the site of the Weidlingermühle. The factory had been empty since 1970 and was demolished after the fire in 1982.

No. 13 official residence

The official residence was built in 1845 at the same time as the construction of the neighboring Dierzer cotton mill based on plans by Johann Rueffs. The trapezoidal floor plan results from the location between Weidlingerbach and the road that was then newly laid out. The administrative building from the early days of the early days has a simple facade structure with fine grooves, a smooth background, cordon and sill cornices and parapet fields.

No. 19 Kleinmünchner Hof

The Kleinmünchner Hof is a building that was formerly used for agriculture. The irregular four-wing structure with a trapezoidal courtyard was urbanized at the end of the 19th century and rebuilt several times in the 20th century. The last major renovation in the 20th century took place between 1965 and 1966 for the Reisebauer family by master builder Hermann Kirchmayr. The building is now owned by the City of Linz and was recently adapted by around 4.3 million euros (excluding sales tax). It was inaugurated on October 10, 2008 as Volkshaus Kleinmünchen. In addition to event rooms, the Volkshaus also houses a restaurant with bowling alleys, although the building was already used for gastronomic purposes in the 1920s. The main front on Dauphinestrasse has modern stone cladding, while the east side has a historical structure. The ensemble also includes the sculpture “Arbeiter” and a fountain built in 1991 (see list of works of art in public space in Linz-Kleinmünchen ).

No. 40a Gasthaus Dauphinehof

The two-storey square was recorded in the Josephine Lagebuch in 1788 as Knädlinger-Bäck and belonged to the manor of the Ebelsberg rectory.

No. 40b Historic house

The historicist house with cordon and sill cornices was built in 1896.

No. 54 Josef Schmid department store

The Schmid department store was built around 1900 possibly using older buildings in the northern property area. Renovations followed in 1961 and 1973. The facade facing Dauphinestrasse has a four-axis, three-axis structure on the upper floor with a gable front and pillars with granite cladding. The facade on Denkstrasse has simply profiled window frames and walled-in basket arch portals.

No. 56 and 56a Kleinmünchen school and community center

No. 72 Memorial for the cultural capital Linz 09

The memorial was created on the initiative of the Kleinmünchen interest group Kaufmannschaft und Kultur with the aim of commemorating Linz 09 , the year of the Capital of Culture, and the erection of the first metal sculpture in Kleinmünchen. The inauguration took place on September 7, 2013. The metal sculpture was created by Helmut Mesaric and rises on a metal plate protruding from the concrete base. The sculpture consists of two silver-colored pillars crowned with red tips and a rust-colored ornamental grille in between, the grille being pierced by a metal rod.

literature

  • Herfried Thaler, Bernhard Prokisch and others: Austrian Art Topography, Volume LV “The profane architectural and art monuments of the city of Linz”, III. Part: Outside areas, Urfahr, Ebelsberg. Berger & Söhne, Ferdinand, 2001, published by the Federal Monuments Office, Department for Inventory and Monument Research, ISBN 978-3-85028-343-4 , S: 316 ff.

Web links

Commons : Dauphinestraße (Linz)  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ City of Linz , City History, Monuments

Coordinates: 48 ° 15 ′ 11.9 "  N , 14 ° 18 ′ 46.2"  E