Jühnsdorf manor house

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Jühnsdorf manor house

The Jühnsdorf Manor is a manor house in Jühnsdorf , a district of the municipality of Blankenfelde-Mahlow in the Teltow-Fläming district in the state of Brandenburg .

location

Landstrasse 792 runs as a village road coming from the northwest in a southeast direction through the village. In the historic village center it spans south through the also as a village street named compound a village green on. The village church Jühnsdorf stands in the middle of this . The manor house is southwest of the street.

history

In 1823 the village came to Friedrich Wilhelm von dem Knesebeck . In 1824 he had a simple, single-storey Prussian country house built with seven axes . His family moved in there while they leased the Löwenbruch manor , which they also owned. In 1862 the building was rebuilt and extended to adapt it to the increased demands of the family. Hiltrud and Carsten Preuß suspect in their work The manor houses and manors in the Teltow-Fläming district that the increase dates from this time. The building still received a roof turret , but this will no longer exist in 2020. In 1920 the family sold the estate and the associated Gutswald to the Nordic Timber Trading Company. From there, the estate came to the Teltow district in 1925/1926 for 720,000 marks . The estate remained more or less family-owned and was used, for example, by the Teltower District Administrator Leo von dem Knesebeck as an official residence. He campaigned, albeit in vain, to move the district office from Teltow to Jühnsdorf.

In 1929 there was a fire in which the roof structure had to be completely rebuilt. During the Second World War , the building was partially used as the Romanian embassy . A women's school then moved there, and later a dormitory for apprentices at the district agricultural school. From the mid-1990s, some apartments were used privately. In 2002 the roof structure had to be removed because it was contaminated with wood preservatives. The attic was then renovated in 2003 and 2004 by the architect Petra Kahlfeldt and converted for residential purposes.

Building description

Manor park

The single-storey structure now has eleven axes, the two outer axes of which have been set back a little. The individual axes are structured by pilaster strips in which tall rectangular windows have been installed. The building has a mansard roof and a triangular gable with a medallion in the middle on the street side , which extends into the attic. On the park side, there is a garden hall typical of the mansions in the region on the ground floor, which can be reached via a staircase from the garden. Its decor is influenced by Art Nouveau .

literature

  • Hiltrud and Carsten Preuß: The manor houses and manors in the Teltow-Fläming district , Lukas Verlag für Kunst- und Geistesgeschichte, 1st edition, November 29, 2011, ISBN 978-3-86732-100-6 , p. 244
  • Georg Dehio (edited by Gerhard Vinken et al.): Handbook of German Art Monuments - Brandenburg Deutscher Kunstverlag, Munich / Berlin 2012, ISBN 978-3-422-03123-4 .

Web links

Commons : Gutshaus Jühnsdorf  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Coordinates: 52 ° 18 ′ 0.3 ″  N , 13 ° 23 ′ 1.6 ″  E