Gosda II mansion

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Mansion Gosda II (2020)

The manor house Gosda II is a manor house in the village of Gosda II in the Spree-Neisse district in the southeast of Brandenburg . The building, erected in the 18th century, is a listed building and is in decline.

history

The manor house Gosda II is located at the northeast exit of Gosda II on the road to Preschen . It was built around 1750 and is a single-storey brick building with a mansard hipped roof in the Baroque style . The mansion was later plastered, and due to the decay, the brickwork is visible again in the lower area of ​​the facade. The manor house was rebuilt around 1850. Two extensions were added to the house in the first quarter of the 20th century.

The former aristocratic residence changed hands frequently over the years, and the building was sold eight times between 1891 and 1900 alone. The last owners before the land reform were the Hahnefeld family. During the land reform in the Soviet occupation zone after the Second World War, the landlords were expropriated and the owner at that time was shot. In the GDR, the manor house became public property . After the reunification , the building initially belonged to the Preschen community, in 1991 it was bought by a private individual. The value of the house was estimated at around 1.8 million marks (approx. 920,000 euros). The new owner created a boulder park in the garden behind the castle , but he got into debt.

In the course of a dispute over the ownership of the Gosda II manor, the owner at the time finally destroyed the interior of the building and tried to set the house on fire. In 2000, the value of the mansion was estimated at an upcoming foreclosure auction at 276,800 marks (approx. 141,500 euros). The following year the house was bought by an investor from Gelsenkirchen . Also in 2001, the Brandenburg State Office for Monument Preservation prepared an expert opinion in which it classified the Gosda II manor house as interesting in terms of building history. At the beginning of 2005, the then owner tried to sell the house again for around 19,500 euros on a negotiated basis.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Entry in the monument database of the State of Brandenburg , accessed on August 19, 2020.
  2. “The Sheikh of Dubai would have to come.” Lausitzer Rundschau, January 27, 2005, accessed on August 19, 2020.

Coordinates: 51 ° 38 ′ 19.5 ″  N , 14 ° 38 ′ 14.4 ″  E