Landhaus Am Bornberge 5 (Radebeul)

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The Landhaus Am Bornberge 5 is located in the Kötzschenbroda district of the Saxon city of Radebeul . The late classicist house on the border with Niederlößnitz is one of the buildings that have been awarded the Radebeul Builders Prize. The country house had been a listed building since at least 1979 during the GDR era .

Landhaus Am Bornberge 5

description

The listed country house , including the fencing and paved driveway, stands behind a front garden at the beginning of a property that extends long to the rear. The simple, two-story house is four by two window axes. The longer side of the building faces the street, has a plastered base and a flat sloping, slate-covered hip roof with a German covering . The street view is symmetrical, with a bat dormer in the middle above the two rows of windows. A historic lightning rod protrudes from the center of the roof ridge . Just outside the so-called accumulation points , where the ridge and roof ridges meet, there are two chimneys that are covered by sandstone head plates.

The simply plastered floors are separated by a cornice , and there is a cornice towards the roof . The base is also plastered. The windows are framed by simple sandstone walls, each with folding shutters on the ground floor .

The enclosure consists of picket fence fields between sandstone pillars with a bishop's hat, the two stronger pillars of the driveway have cover plates with a crowning ball. There is an arched wooden gate between the entrance pillars.

The access road consists of historical cobblestones , the small pavement footpath stands out from the large pavement driving areas.

The inner courtyard behind the residential building is enclosed on both sides by two massive, single-storey shed buildings that delimit the property from the neighboring properties.

history

View of Kötzschenbroda. 1867. Contemporary lithograph. The Bornberge corridor is in the center of the picture (light field).
Location of the country house (colored red) on the field corridor, 1857. Kötzschenbroda train station at the bottom right . Excerpt from the maneuver plan for the Königl. Saxon. Troops near Dresden in 1857.

According to the “ memories of an old Niederlößnitzer , the vineyards had withdrawn to Mittlere Bergstrasse [today: Winzerstrasse] around 1860. Only a few walled-in vineyards extended uphill from Kötzschenbroda, otherwise there were still wide fields of grain there . There was only a single house on Borngasse [today: Am Bornberge]. ”On a lithograph from 1867, Ludwig-Richter-Allee (the former Thienemanns Allee, which led from Meißner Chaussee to Altfriedstein ) leads from today's intersection Today's Winzerstraße and Am Jacobstein (both together part of the historic Salzstraße ) a path (Borngasse) to the east, which led through a north-south vineyard wall at the current property boundary between the corner property Käthe-Kollwitz-Straße 13 and Am Bornberge 5. Behind it, in otherwise free space, stood today's two-story country house with a hipped roof and a small outbuilding to the southwest of it. The vineyard wall leads a little further north and north of the path there was a somewhat larger, one-story outbuilding with a gable roof (instead of Am Bornberge 6). This field corridor south of Borngasse (Bornstrasse from 1883) had the field name Bornberge in the land register of 1870 .

The country house was built towards the end of the first half or around the middle of the 19th century, and at the same time a side room with a shed, stable and oven was built right behind the house. In 1887/1888 an entrance porch was built on the back to the south with an exit on top, at the same time another outbuilding was built on the current left side of the property, which partially covers a historical well shaft. Around 1910 a roof house was built on the front of the hipped roof facing the street .

From 1999 to 2000 the house was repaired in coordination with the preservation authorities with "great attention to detail". The "combination of old, reused components and the pleasant coloring make the building an example worthy of imitation." The misshapen roof house was replaced by a Bat dormer replaced. "The existing topography [of the sloping front garden] was cleverly used, [... whereby] especially [...] the new form of the linear, terraced garden design" is emphasized. Because of the reasons given, the client was awarded the Radebeul client award in 2000.

literature

Web links

Commons : Landhaus Am Bornberge 5  - Collection of images

Individual evidence

  1. a b monument entry 08951280. Retrieved on December 14, 2019.
  2. Otto Thienemann: Memories of an old Niederlößnitzer. Elbaue 1924. (Otto Thienemann belonged to the branch of the family that owned Altfriedstein . The other branch of the family owned the Hohenhaus ).
  3. Quoted from: Adolf Schruth ; Manfred Richter (arrangement): Chronicle Niederlößnitz . Radebeul 2010, p. 19 (first edition: 1930, online version (pdf; 427 kB) ).
  4. ^ View of Kötzschenbroda. 1876. Contemporary lithograph.
  5. ^ Adolf Schruth; Manfred Richter (Ed.): Chronicle Kötzschenbroda Part I . Radebeul 2010, p. 12 (First edition: 1934, online version Part I (pdf; 423 kB) ( Memento from January 16, 2014 in the Internet Archive )).
  6. Volker Helas (arrangement): City of Radebeul . Ed .: State Office for Monument Preservation Saxony, Large District Town Radebeul (=  Monument Topography Federal Republic of Germany . Monuments in Saxony ). SAX-Verlag, Beucha 2007, ISBN 978-3-86729-004-3 , p. 52 .
  7. Radebeul Builder Award 2000. Category: Monument renovation. In: Radebeuler builder award. Association for Monument Preservation and New Buildings, Radebeul, accessed on July 22, 2012 .

Coordinates: 51 ° 6 ′ 37 "  N , 13 ° 37 ′ 49.7"  E