Leinnerhaus

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Leinnerhaus (2011)

The Leinnerhaus in Eisenstadt in Burgenland is a baroque building . The building with the enclosure wall is a listed building.

The three-winged, two-storey, baroque building has three-axis arcades in the courtyard on the upper floor on the north and south sides. The arched portal in the south shows a coat of arms with a wine tusk's tools and the year IS 1769 in the wedge stone with rocailles decoration . In the east there is a relief tondo. The north front has a gable risalit with a three-part arched window.

In 1816 Karl Straub bought the so-called Pfanschen Stadl as a wine merchant from the Palatinate . Straub made a renovation in 1820. Michael Leinner bought the house in 1842 and started the wine trade in Eisenstadt and it is assumed that the hall was added in 1860. From 1875 to 1921 the Leinnerhaus was the seat of the casino association, which used the building in particular for music maintenance. The newly founded state school started teaching in the Leinnerhaus in 1881. After 1918 the Wolf family of wine merchants acquired the building and from 1926 to 1938 the Burgenland State Museum was located in the Leinnerhaus with the museum founder Sándor Wolf . From 1938 to 1994 the building was used as the Burgenland State Archive . The farm school used the building from 1946 to 1951. In 1979 the building was expanded to include the state observatory. Today (2013) the building serves as a gallery, coffee house and event center.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ The Leinnerhaus in Eisenstadt

Coordinates: 47 ° 50 ′ 37.5 ″  N , 16 ° 31 ′ 16.4 ″  E