Landhaus Mehlhorn

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The Landhaus Mehlhorn is located in the Niederlößnitz district of the Saxon town of Radebeul , at Paradiesstraße 48. Until the 19th century, the property belonged to the Villa Waldhof , with today's address Paradiesstraße 46 .

Landhaus Mehlhorn. On the street the former winegrower's house, behind it the later country house extension.

description

The simply plastered country house is an “assembly of a winegrower's house on the street with an attached manorial country house facing the garden”.

The two-storey winegrower's house, which was originally listed as a historical monument, stands on the eaves facing Paradiesstrasse, it has a massive ground floor and a plastered half-timbered upper floor. Above it is a hipped roof with four gable dormers .

On the garden side is the later country house extension with a high, extended mansard roof that towers over the roof of the winegrower's house. In front of the southeast side there is a porch with a polygonal tent roof and an entrance porch. On the north side there is a massive polygonal tower .

history

In the 18th century the building in Paradiesstraße 48, mentioned in a document in 1773, was built as a winegrower's house . In 1862, Lieutenant Colonel Johann Karl Adolph von Metzradt (also Carl von Metzradt) requested "to build a new farm building, largely from raw roots, on the morning side of the old house and [to] build a new residential building", ie on the back of the building To add farm buildings and to build a house at today's address Paradiesstrasse 46. Both designs came from the Serkowitz builder Moritz Ziller .

In 1875, Metzradt applied for the addition of a single-storey farm building, also on the back of his winegrower's house, carried out by the Ziller brothers' construction company .

In 1908 Major General Alfred Mehlhorn applied for the complete renovation of his country house Mehlhorn by considerably expanding the farm buildings at the back and including the main building. The design is attributed to the Dresden architect Georg Heinsius von Mayenburg , who was also the site manager. The builder was the Serkowitz architect Paul Ziller .

After Alfred Mehlhorn's daughter died childless, the house became the property of the city of Radebeul in 1960. Acquired privately in the 1990s, it went to another private owner in 2005, who subsequently extensively renovated it.

After the half-timbered upper floor of the original winegrower's house was replaced by massive masonry in the 2000s, the building lost its monument status.

literature

Web links

Commons : Landhaus Mehlhorn  - Collection of images

Individual evidence

  1. a b 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. 241 f .
  2. ^ Written information from the Radebeul Monument Preservation to Jbergner dated September 23, 2008

Coordinates: 51 ° 6 ′ 42 "  N , 13 ° 39 ′ 26.5"  E