Haus Gießenbier

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Gießenbier House (2013)

The house pouring beer is a number 5 in the list of monuments of the city Bad Salzuflen in North Rhine-Westphalia Lippe in Germany registered monument .

The entry was made on April 7, 1986; The basis for inclusion in the list of monuments is the Monument Protection Act of North Rhine-Westphalia (DSchG NRW).

location

The Gießenbier house in downtown Salzufler is located opposite the historic town hall, directly on the salt bridge , on the corner of Am Markt / Otto-Künne-Promenade . The old house number was 9 , the current address is Am Markt 32 .

history

The Mayor of Bad Salzufler Jobst Gießenbier (* 1475 in Salzuflen; † 1552) had the two-storey quarry stone building built in 1533 in the Weser Renaissance style.

To secure the building site near the salts, massive oak piles were driven into the ground because of the quicksand and the foundation walls were built on top of them. This substructure supports the massive house to this day, without any indentation or crack in the brickwork.

The scrolls to the seasons of the gable and the four floors suggestive Kaffgesimsen , the construction of stylistic similarities with the little later built town hall: scrolls with bizarre, sickle-shaped growths; Relays crowned with obelisks and a triple motif of a ring in the snapdragon.

There is a stonemason's mark on the house , as can also be seen on the town hall but also on Stadthagen Castle and Neuhaus Castle - the Gießenbier House is thus related to important Renaissance buildings.

Relief over the front door

An originally existing hall gate was probably replaced by the two-winged entrance door as early as the 18th century. In the facade above there are also two “speaking coats of arms” from the owners of the 17th century . The stone with the year 1602 and the relief from the creation of Eve to the expulsion from paradise were only added to the facade afterwards. They were originally located on an Utlucht , which was removed before 1900, and was probably built in 1602. The half- timbered gable triangle on the back is more recent. The roof structure is at least partially renewed. On the right eaves wall of the main building, stone walls from the 18th century can be seen.

Inside there are still pieces of equipment from the 19th century . Presumably around 1900 the ground floor was redesigned to accommodate commercial use.

Behind the main building there is an important half-timbered extension from the 16th century with a recessed hall and a flat cellar below. The half-timbered construction of the extension consists of five storey timbered containers with head and foot straps as well as an upper floor protruding on curved lugs .

Today the house is owned by the Schäfer family, who are the third generation to run a business with products for everything to do with paints, fabrics and writing implements.

See also

literature

  • Franz Meyer (Ed.): Bad Salzuflen-Epochs of the city history. Publishing house for regional history, Bielefeld 2006, ISBN 978-3-89534-606-4

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Franz Meyer (Ed.): Bad Salzuflen Epochs of City History . Publishing house for regional history, Bielefeld 2007, ISBN 978-3-89534-606-4 . , Page 82.
  2. Mayor Gießenbier at www.hpenke.de, accessed on April 5, 2020.
  3. ^ “Am Markt 32” at www.myheimat.de, accessed on April 6, 2020.
  4. Otto Pölert: Manuscript on the history of the Salzufler houses
  5. Bad Salzuflen mayor houses at www.baukunst-nrw.de, accessed on April 5, 2020.
  6. About me at https://wolfgang-schaefer.com , accessed on April 6, 2020.

Coordinates: 52 ° 5 ′ 0.1 ″  N , 8 ° 44 ′ 50.3 ″  E