List of architectural monuments in Old Saarbrücken
In the list of architectural monuments in Alt-Saarbrücken , all architectural monuments of the Saarbrücken district of Alt-Saarbrücken are listed. It is based on the publication of national monument list of 16 December 2013 in last 9 with stand August 2017 as part monument list state capital Saarbruecken the monument list of Saarland .
location | designation | description | image |
---|---|---|---|
Komturstrasse, Deutschherrnpfad location |
Ensemble Old Cemetery Alt-Saarbrücken | The old cemetery was laid out and opened in 1851. Between 1907 and 1909 the area was expanded. When the city's inner-city cemeteries reached their occupancy limits in the 1910s, the city administration decided in 1914 to create a new burial place in the south of Saarbrücken and closed the cemetery in 1917. Today the almost 4 hectare area is used as a park and recreational facility. | |
Graf-Simon-Strasse location |
Ensemble of the old Jewish cemetery | The Jewish community of Saarbrücken buried its dead in Forbach until 1840. The old Jewish cemetery in Saarbrücken was laid out in 1841. The oldest tombstone also dates from this period. | |
Altneugasse / Küfergasse // Probsteigasse / Schlossstrasse location |
Ensemble Altneugasse | Only a few remains of the former old town of Alt-Saarbrücken have been preserved. These can be found around the Altneugasse, where you can see the remains of the city wall, but where the old structure of the city has also been preserved. | |
Altneugasse 3, vaulted cellar (dungeon), integrated in the new building | |||
Altneugasse 5, city wall | |||
Altneugasse 7, house from the 18th century with vaulted cellar, city wall | |||
Altneugasse 8–12, city wall | |||
Altneugasse 9–11, residential building, city wall | |||
Altneugasse 11a / 13, city wall | |||
Altneugasse 15 / 15a, vaulted cellar | |||
Altneugasse 17, residential building, city wall | |||
Altneugasse 21, residential building, around 1750 | |||
Altneugasse 22, residential building: The original residential building with cellar was from the 18th century. In 1966 it was demolished and replaced by a new building, while the facade from the 19th century was retained. | |||
Altneugasse 23: residential building, vaulted cellar, remains of the city wall | |||
Altneugasse 24–28, Luisenbrunnen: The fountain was built in 1912 by August Kuhn in the neo-baroque style. The quarter round consists of a low wall that forms the back of a bench. The focus is on a raised part with a pronounced round arch as a conclusion and a crowning vase. The round arch is supported by pilasters that frame a medallion in the central field. Underneath, the water flows from a lion's head into the oval fountain basin. The fountain originally stood in a small park and is supposed to remind of Queen Luise of Prussia . The medallion in the center of the fountain shows a portrait of her. The original relief was destroyed, it is a duplicate. | |||
Altneugasse 25, Palais Bode with surrounding walls, courtyard portal, vaulted cellar: the baroque two-storey building with a hipped roof was built in 1745 by Friedrich Joachim Stengel for Councilor Friedrich Bode. After being destroyed in World War II, the building was rebuilt from 1962 to 1964. | |||
Altneugasse 27 residential building: The residential building was built in the 18th century and an additional floor was added in 1877. | |||
Küfergasse 12, vaulted cellar | |||
Probsteigasse 12, Propstei of the Premonstratensian monastery Wadgassen, residential building, rock cellar, city wall, vaulted cellar 1608, residential building 1st half of the 18th century, destroyed in 1944 | |||
Schlossstrasse 34/36, remains of the city wall | |||
Pfählerstraße 2 location |
Ensemble Deutschherrnkapelle | The Kommende St. Elisabeth is a former branch of the Deutschherrnordens. It was founded in 1227. Of the former castle-like building complex around two courtyards, only a barn, the Deutschhaus and the chapel have survived. After the French Revolution, the estate was secularized and auctioned. The buildings served as a farm, the chapel was used as a barn. In 1896 the city bought the Kommende and converted it into an orphanage. The buildings were badly damaged in the war and only rebuilt in the 1950s. | |
Tithe barn of the German rulers (1738) | |||
Deutschhaus der Deutschherrnkommende (1557–1561), changes around 1887 and 1953–1959 | |||
Deutschherrnkapelle der Deutschherrnkommende: The chapel dates from the 13th century and is Saarbrücken's oldest preserved building. In the square nave of the chapel was the hospital ward, in the choir made of stone with buttresses with a ⅝-ending stood the altar. The services were held there. The tower built on the south side of the choir was renewed in 1868 and received a neo-Gothic battlement and a pointed tower dome. | |||
In the Ehrental 2 location |
Ehrental ensemble | The cemetery was laid out in 1870 because soldiers who fell in the immediate vicinity of the Spicherer Heights, which were heavily contested in the Franco-German War, were buried there. Important graves from Germany's oldest military cemetery are still preserved. Later honorary citizens and important personalities of Saarbrücken were buried there, including Katharine Weißgerber . | |
Cemetery keeper's house: The long rectangular brick building with a gable roof is single-storey and has four window axes. There is a meandering cornice under the low attic. The house with an entrance in the gable end was built by Carl Benzel around 1872. | |||
Metzer Strasse location |
Ensemble main cemetery | The cemetery was laid out in 1914 and initially served as a burial place for fallen soldiers of the First World War. From 1916 the cemetery was opened for civil burials, in 1917 the inner-city cemeteries in St. Johann and Alt-Saarbrücken were closed. In 1926 it was decided to expand the cemetery and make it the main cemetery in Saarbrücken. In the period that followed, the cemetery was expanded and modernized several times. Today the main cemetery is the largest cemetery in southwest Germany with around 65 hectares. | |
Porter's house at the old business entrance of the main cemetery, 1951 by Peter Paul Seeberger (individual monument) | |||
Shelter with public facilities, 1955 by Peter Paul Seeberger (individual monument) | |||
Old accommodation, residence building, lavatory, farm building, 1950 by Peter Paul Seeberger (individual monument) | |||
War memorial, 1870–1871, elevated water tank, 1934 by Walther Kruspe (individual memorial) | |||
Memorial of the 2nd Hanoverian Infantry Regiment No. 77, war memorial (individual monument): The memorial for the 2nd Hanoverian Infantry Regiment No. 77 was erected in 1872 after the end of the Franco-German War. A Corinthian column with fluting stands on a base. An eagle rests on it with outspread wings. | |||
Consecration hall with crematorium (individual monument): From 1928 to 1930, a congregation hall and a crematorium were built according to the plans of city building officer Walther Kruspe for around 2 million francs. | |||
Südfriedhof (single monument) | |||
Metzer Straße 150/152/154/156, apartment building for employees of the cemetery administration, 1929–1930 by Walther Kruspe and P. Schmidt | |||
Metzer Straße 158/160/162/164, apartment building for employees of the cemetery administration, 1929–1930 by Walther Kruspe and P. Schmidt | |||
Hohenzollernstrasse / Werderstrasse location |
Ensemble Hohenzollernstrasse | ||
Hohenzollernstrasse 79 (residential and commercial building): The building was built around 1906. The three-story brick structure of the corner building rises above a rusticated sandstone base. The two street facades are symmetrical and have a central projectile with a curved gable. In the sloping corner of the building, the entrance to the inn is on the ground floor, above which a bay window extends to the attic. Light cornices made of sandstone and ribbons divide the building horizontally, corner pilaster strips in the central projectile and in the bay window divide it vertically. | |||
Hohenzollernstrasse 81 (residential building, around 1895) | |||
Hohenzollernstraße 83 (residential building, around 1891 by Ludwig Fr. Schmidt) | |||
Hohenzollernstrasse 85 (house, 1904 by August Martin) | |||
Hohenzollernstraße 87 (house, 1904 by August Martin) | |||
Hohenzollernstraße 89, (house, around 1904 by August Martin) | |||
Hohenzollernstrasse 108 (residential building, around 1890): The three-storey corner house rises above a low base. The ground floor is delimited to the first floor by a projecting cornice. A slightly protruding corner projection emphasizes the corner of the building with access to the restaurant on the ground floor. The windows on the ground floor and the second floor are rectangular and have an accentuated keystone in the profiled reveal. The windows on the first floor are framed by pilasters that support a narrow beam with triangular pediment. The windows on the upper two floors are connected by circumferential sill cornices. | |||
Hohenzollernstrasse 110 (residential building): The residential building was built by Friedrich Towae around 1890. The three-storey building has four window axes. The first axis sits in a risalit. There is a round arched gate on the rusticated ground floor. The fourth axis sits in a barely protruding risalite and accommodates the door on the ground floor. The rusticated base completes the building. Ribbons and sill cornices made of red sandstone structure the building horizontally. A cornice sits above the ground floor. The windows on the second floor have a straight, profiled roof, some with triangular gables. | |||
Hohenzollernstrasse 112 (residential building, around 1892 by Friedrich Towae) | |||
Hohenzollernstraße 114 (house, around 1902–1904 by Alwin Heinker and Kurt Witzschel) | |||
Hohenzollernstrasse 116 (residential building, around 1902–1904 by Alwin Heinker and Kurt Witzschel) | |||
Hohenzollernstraße 118 (semi-detached house, around 1895 by Ludwig Lauwitz) | |||
Hohenzollernstraße 120, (semi-detached house, around 1895 by Ludwig Lauwitz) | |||
Werderstraße 10 (residential building, around 1906 by Alfred Fabian) | |||
Werderstraße 12 (residential building, around 1903 by Philipp Burgemeister) | |||
Werderstraße 14 (residential building, around 1904 by Philipp Burgemeister) | |||
To the ruler location |
Ensemble of the Israelite cemetery | The entrance pavilion of the Jewish cemetery, which was designed by Hans Peter Weszkalnys in 1929 , is a listed building. The pavilion consists of four square high columns made of rubble stones, which support plastered beams with a flat roof. There is a smaller tent roof on top. Next to this large pavilion is a similar smaller pavilion without a tent roof, but with an entrance gate with a round arch. | |
Kamekestrasse location |
Ensemble Kamekestrasse | ||
Kamekestraße 2 (house, 1899 by Hans Weszkalnys) | |||
Kamekestraße 4 (house, 1899 by Hans Weszkalnys) | |||
Kamekestrasse 6 (house, 1899 by Hans Weszkalnys) | |||
Kamekestrasse 8 (house, 1899 by Hans Weszkalnys) | |||
Kamekestrasse 10 (house, 1899 by Hans Weszkalnys) | |||
Kamekestrasse 12 (house, 1899 by Hans Weszkalnys) | |||
Kamekestrasse 14 (house, 1899 by Hans Weszkalnys) | |||
Kamekestrasse 16 (house, 1899 by Hans Weszkalnys) | |||
Talstrasse / Feldmannstrasse / Saargemünder Strasse / President-Baltz-Strasse / Winterbergstrasse Location |
Ensemble crossing Talstrasse, Feldmannstrasse, Saargemünder Strasse, President-Baltz-Strasse, Winterbergstrasse | ||
Feldmannstrasse 1, residential and commercial building | |||
Feldmannstrasse 3, residential and commercial building | |||
President-Baltz-Strasse 1, residential and commercial building | |||
Saargemünder Straße 2, residential and commercial building | |||
Saargemünder Straße 4, residential and commercial building | |||
Saargemünder Straße 5, residential and commercial building | |||
Saargemünder Straße 7, residential and commercial building | |||
Talstrasse 71 (residential and commercial building, around 1901 by Georg Becker, individual monument) | |||
Talstraße 78 (residential building, around 1876 by Ludwig Fr. Schmidt, individual monument) | |||
Talstraße 80 (residential building, around 1896 by August Rahfeld, individual monument) | |||
Winterbergstrasse 2, residential and commercial building | |||
Bruchschneidersdell / Pfählerstraße location |
Ensemble Pfählersiedlung | The former social housing estate was built during the founding period after the Pfähler siblings bequeathed a large amount to the Saarbrücken district for charitable purposes. In 1906 it was decided to build residential houses. The plans were drawn up by the district master builder Victor Hendler, who was essentially based on the Saarland miners' houses. | |
Bruchschneidersdell 2 (semi-detached house in the Pfählersiedlung, 1906 by Victor Hendler) | |||
Bruchschneidersdell 4 (semi-detached house in the Pfählersiedlung, 1906 by Victor Hendler) | |||
Bruchschneidersdell 6 (semi-detached house in the Pfählersiedlung, 1906 by Victor Hendler) | |||
Bruchschneidersdell 8 (semi-detached house in the Pfählersiedlung, 1906 by Victor Hendler) | |||
Bruchschneidersdell 10 (semi-detached house in the Pfählersiedlung, 1906 by Victor Hendler) | |||
Bruchschneidersdell 12 (double dwelling of the Pfählersiedlung, 1906 by Victor Hendler) | |||
Pfählerstraße 22 (residential building, 1906 by Victor Hendler) | |||
Pfählerstraße 24 (residential building, 1906 by Victor Hendler) | |||
Pfählerstraße 26 (house, 1906 by Victor Hendler) | |||
Pfählerstraße 28 (semi-detached house in the Pfählersiedlung, 1906 by Victor Hendler) | |||
Pfählerstraße 30 (twin house of the Pfählersiedlung, 1906 by Victor Hendler) | |||
Schlossplatz / Talstrasse location |
Ensemble Schlossplatz | ||
Schloßplatz 1–2 (Old Town Hall, 1748–1750 by Friedrich Joachim Stengel , burned out in 1944, reconstruction 1950–1951, individual monument): The town hall was built between 1748 and 1750 according to plans by Friedrich Joachim Stengel. The south wing of the baroque building originally consisted of two residential buildings, which were probably also built by Stengel. It was not until the end of the 18th century that this wing was adapted to the town hall. When the cities of Saarbrücken and St. Johann were merged in 1909, the mayor's seat was moved to the more spacious St. Johann town hall. The building burned down in 1944 and was rebuilt in 1950/51. The main wing has six window axes, the two middle ones in a risalit with a segmented gable. The Saarbrücken city arms can be found in a neo-baroque cartouche in the gable field. There is a balcony with wrought iron bars above the two wooden double doors. There is a square clock tower on the mansard roof. After a setback with a wrought iron grille, a single-storey structure with beveled edges and an onion helmet rises. The southern wing has eight axes, the southernmost axis is now missing on the ground floor and instead runs through a pedestrian passage. | |||
Schlossplatz 3 (Erbprinzenpalais, around 1750 by Friedrich Joachim Stengel , 1816–1880 Mining Authority, 1978–1981 extensive renovation, individual monument) | |||
Schlossplatz 4/5, residential building (individual monument): The house was built by Friedrich Joachim Stengel around 1750 . From 1868 to 1906 it was a mountain school, then a residential building again. From 1978 to 1981 it was extensively renovated. | |||
Schlossplatz 8–15, Saarbrücker Schloss : The castle was built from 1738 to 1748 according to plans by Friedrich Joachim Stengel . It was destroyed in 1794 and rebuilt in a major way from 1810 onwards. From 1982 to 1989 there was a comprehensive renovation and conversion with redesign of the central facade. The vaulted cellars and parts of the surrounding wall have been preserved from the former baroque castle. | |||
Schloßplatz 16, Kreisstandsehaus . The building was built in 1910/11 by Alfred Salinger and Eugen G. Schmohl. The vaulted cellar comes from the previous building (Princely Lingerie and Remise, around 1755). The baroque banister was taken from the Palais Bode. | |||
Schloßstraße 2 (residential building, around 1750, remodeling 1974–1975, individual monument) | |||
Vorstadtstraße 1 (residential building, around 1750, badly damaged in 1944, reconstruction in 1951, individual monument) | |||
Talstraße 10 (window frames from the 18th century in the new building from 1968–1970, individual monument) | |||
Talstraße 12 (window frames from the 18th century in the new building from 1962–1963, individual monument) | |||
Talstrasse 14 (residential building, around 1760/1770, individual monument) | |||
Talstrasse 16 residential building, around 1760/1770 (individual monument) | |||
Talstrasse 18 (residential building, around 1760/1770, renovation 1982–1984, individual monument) | |||
Talstraße 22/24 (residential building, 1760/1770, renovation 1926, individual monument) | |||
Am Schloßberg (castle church with the grave monuments of the house of Nassau Saarbrücken, 4th quarter of the 15th century, Protestant since 1575, heavily damaged in 1677 and 1944, reconstruction 1956–1958 by Rudolf Krüger, individual monument) | |||
Am Schloßberg 3 (residential building, around 1750, reconstruction 1958–1960, individual monument) | |||
Am Schloßberg 4 (vaulted cellar under the district stand building, individual monument) | |||
Am Schloßberg 5 (residential building, around 1750, extension in 1874, renovation and repair 1979–1981, individual monument): the painter Otto Lackenmacher lived here around 1978. | |||
Am Schloßberg 11 (residential building, 4th quarter of the 18th century / 1st quarter of the 19th century, later extension, 1973–1974 renovation, individual monument) | |||
Bozenerstraße / Feldmannstraße / Hohe Wacht / Spichererbergstraße location |
Ensemble "Siedlung Hohe Wacht" | As part of the development of the southern outskirts of the city, numerous new residential buildings were built in 1927/28 according to designs by Walther Kruspe . The houses survived the Second World War almost unscathed and are now considered a typical example of urban housing construction in the 1920s, which was characterized by the housing shortage. | |
Bozenerstraße 1, apartment building, 1927–1928 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Bozenerstraße 2, apartment building, 1927–1928 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Bozenerstraße 3, apartment building, 1927–1928 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Bozenerstraße 4, apartment building, 1927–1928 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Bozenerstraße 5, apartment building, 1927–1928 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Bozenerstraße 6, apartment building, 1927–1928 (single monument) | |||
N ensemble component) | |||
N ensemble component) | |||
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Bozenerstraße 16, apartment building, 1927–1928 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Bozenerstraße 17, apartment building, 1927–1928 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Bozenerstraße 18, apartment building, 1927–1928 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Bozenerstraße 19, apartment building, 1927–1928 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Bozenerstraße 20, apartment building, 1927–1928 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Bozenerstraße 21, apartment building, 1927–1928 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Bozenerstraße 22, apartment building, 1927–1928 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Bozenerstraße 23, apartment building, 1927–1928 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Bozenerstraße 24, apartment building, 1927–1928 (part of the ensemble) | |||
N ensemble component) | |||
Bozenerstraße 27, apartment building, 1927–1928 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Bozenerstraße 29, apartment building, 1927–1928 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Bozenerstraße 31, apartment building, 1927–1928 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Bozenerstraße 33, apartment building, 1927–1928 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Bozenerstraße 35, apartment building, 1927–1928 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Bozenerstraße 37, apartment building, 1927–1928 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Bozenerstraße 39, apartment building, 1927–1928 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Bozenerstraße 41, apartment building, 1927–1928 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Feldmannstraße 132 (semi-detached house, 1927) | |||
Feldmannstraße 134 (semi-detached house, 1927) | |||
Feldmannstraße 136 (semi-detached house, 1927) | |||
Feldmannstraße 138 (semi-detached house, 1927) | |||
Feldmannstrasse 140 (semi-detached house, 1927) | |||
Feldmannstraße 142 (semi-detached house, 1927) | |||
Feldmannstraße 144 (semi-detached house, 1927) | |||
Feldmannstraße 146 (semi-detached house, 1927) | |||
Feldmannstraße 148 (semi-detached house, 1927) | |||
Feldmannstraße 150 (double house, 1927) | |||
Feldmannstraße 152 (semi-detached house, 1927) | |||
Feldmannstraße 154 (semi-detached house, 1927) | |||
Feldmannstraße 156 (semi-detached house, 1927) | |||
Feldmannstraße 158 (semi-detached house, 1927) | |||
Feldmannstraße 160 (semi-detached house, 1927) | |||
Feldmannstraße 162 (semi-detached house, 1927) | |||
Feldmannstraße 164 (semi-detached house, 1927) | |||
Feldmannstraße 166 (semi-detached house, 1927) | |||
Hohe Wacht 57 (apartment building, 1927–1928) | |||
Hohe Wacht 59 (apartment building, 1927–1928) | |||
Hohe Wacht 61 (apartment building, 1927–1928) | |||
Hohe Wacht 63 (apartment building, 1927–1928) | |||
Hohe Wacht 65 (apartment building, 1927–1928) | |||
Hohe Wacht 67 (apartment building, 1927–1928) | |||
Spichererbergstraße 113 (apartment building, 1927–1928) | |||
Spichererbergstraße 115 (apartment building, 1927–1928) | |||
Spichererbergstrasse 117 (apartment building, 1927–1928) | |||
Spichererbergstrasse 119 (apartment building, 1927–1928) | |||
Spichererbergstrasse 121 (apartment building, 1927–1928) | |||
Spichererbergstrasse 123 (apartment building, 1927–1928) | |||
Spichererbergstrasse 125 (apartment building, 1927–1928) | |||
Spichererbergstrasse 127 (apartment building, 1927–1928) | |||
Spichererbergstrasse 129 (apartment building, 1927–1928) | |||
Spichererbergstrasse 131 (apartment building, 1927–1928) | |||
Spichererbergstrasse 133 (apartment building, 1927–1928) | |||
Spichererbergstrasse 135 (apartment building, 1927–1928) | |||
Spichererbergstrasse 137 (apartment building, 1927–1928) | |||
Spichererbergstrasse 139 (apartment building, 1927–1928) | |||
Spichererbergstrasse 141 (apartment building, 1927–1928) | |||
Steinmetzstrasse location |
"Steinmetzstraße settlement" ensemble | ||
Steinmetzstraße 3 (residential building, around 1897) | |||
Steinmetzstraße 4 (residential building, around 1897) | |||
Steinmetzstraße 5 (residential building, around 1897) | |||
Steinmetzstraße 6 (residential building, around 1897) | |||
Steinmetzstraße 7 (residential building, around 1897) | |||
Steinmetzstraße 8 (residential building, around 1897) | |||
Steinmetzstraße 9 (residential building, around 1897) | |||
Steinmetzstraße 10 (residential building, around 1897) | |||
Steinmetzstraße 11 (residential building, around 1897) | |||
Steinmetzstraße 12 (residential building, around 1897) | |||
Steinmetzstraße 13 (residential building, around 1897) | |||
Steinmetzstraße 14 (residential building, around 1897) | |||
Wilhelm-Heinrich-Strasse / Ludwigsplatz (Saarbrücken) location |
Ensemble "Wilhelm-Heinrich-Strasse / Ludwigsplatz " | ||
At Ludwigsplatz ( Ludwigskirche , individual monument): The Evangelical Lutheran parish and court church was built from 1762 to 1775 based on designs by Friedrich Joachim Stengel . In 1944 it was destroyed in a bombing raid on Saarbrücken. The reconstruction took place from 1947. 1966 to 1982 the interior was reconstructed. The plan of the church is a Greek cross. The east and west arms have a polygonal end and are shorter than the north and south arms with a straight end. Baroque and Rococo elements determine the interior and exterior of the church. High windows, transverse and high oval windows lie above and below. The roof landscape was set back and begins behind a surrounding balustrade with sculptural decoration. | |||
Am Ludwigsplatz 4/5 (house, school, 1736–1765 by Friedrich Joachim Stengel , burned out in 1944, reconstruction around 1955, individual monument) | |||
Am Ludwigsplatz 6/7 (residential building, 1767–1768 by Friedrich Joachim Stengel , burned out in 1944, reconstruction around 1955) | |||
Am Ludwigsplatz 9 (Palais Doeben, residential building, 1764–1767 by Friedrich Joachim Stengel , increase in 1882, burned out in 1944, reconstruction in 1965, individual monument) | |||
At Ludwigsplatz 10/11 (Protestant Lutheran parsonage), 1768 by Friedrich Joachim Stengel , burned out in 1944, reconstruction in 1955, individual monument | |||
Am Ludwigsplatz 12/13 (residential building, 1764–1765 by Friedrich Joachim Stengel , burned out in 1944, reconstruction 1952–1954, individual monument) | |||
Am Ludwigsplatz 14 (Palais Lüder, residential building, 1765–1767 by Friedrich Joachim Stengel , destroyed in 1944, reconstruction in 1955, individual monument) | |||
Am Ludwigsplatz 14a (State Chancellery, 1954–1958 by Friedrich Ahammer and Schroeder, individual monument) | |||
Am Ludwigsplatz 15 (Palais Freital, residential building, 1763–1766 by Friedrich Joachim Stengel , destroyed in 1944, reconstruction in 1955, individual monument) | |||
Am Ludwigsplatz 16/17 (Palais Röder, residential building) | |||
Keplerstraße 5 (Comeniushaus, hospital, poor house, orphanage and penitentiary, 1765–1769 by Friedrich Joachim Stengel , burned out in 1944, reconstruction and extension by Hans P. Koellmann, individual monument) | |||
Wilhelm-Heinrich-Straße (Friedenskirche, parish church of the Old Catholic and Russian Orthodox communities, 1743–1746 by Friedrich Joachim Stengel , tower 1760–1761, 1820 converted into a schoolhouse, 1892 restoration of the sacred space, after destruction in 1947 reconstruction 1961–66, individual monument ): The Quersaalkirche was built between 1743 and 1751 by Friedrich Joachim Stengel for the newly approved Reformed Community of Saarbrücken. After 1793 the church was converted into a "Temple of Virtue" by revolutionaries, and later it was converted into a grammar school. A false ceiling was used and the building received small rectangular windows. In 1892 the Old Catholic Church purchased the building and renovated the interior as a church. In 1944 the church was largely destroyed in World War II. The exterior building was reconstructed from 1961 to 1966 according to Stengel's plans. The hall church with a hipped roof has a wide central projection with pilasters and a triangular gable on the north side. The tower on the south side has three square storeys, which are optically separated by cornices. Corner pilaster strips emphasize the corners. After an expansive cornice and a recess with a wrought iron grille, a single-storey structure with beveled edges rises. The tower is crowned by a slate dome with a curvature and a Welscher dome. Each building field has two long windows. The entrance on the west side is combined with a shorter window and is framed by a baroque aedicula with ox eyes. | |||
Wilhelm-Heinrich-Strasse 2 (residential building with vaulted cellar), around 1750, reconstruction after being destroyed in the war 1953–1955 | |||
Wilhelm-Heinrich-Strasse 6–12 (city wall, individual monument) | |||
Wilhelm-Heinrich-Straße 14–16 (city wall, individual monument) | |||
Wilhelm-Heinrich-Straße 17 (residential building with vaulted cellar, around 1750, conversion and extension 1922–1925, reconstruction after war damage 1946–49, individual monument) | |||
Wilhelm-Heinrich-Straße 18 (residential building, around 1750, individual monument) | |||
Wilhelm-Heinrich-Straße 20 (residential building, around 1750, individual monument) | |||
Wilhelm-Heinrich-Straße 22/24 (adjoining building of Palais Bode, around 1750, individual monument) | |||
Wilhelm-Heinrich-Straße 26 (residential building, around 1750, individual monument) | |||
Talstrasse / Zähringer Strasse location |
"Zähringerstraße" ensemble | ||
Talstrasse 19 (residential building, 1891, by Georg Becker, increase in 1907) | |||
Talstrasse 21 (residential building, 1925 by Paul Jäger) | |||
Zähringerstraße 2 (residential building, around 1901 by Arnold Müller) | |||
Zähringerstraße 2a (residential building, around 1903 by Arnold Müller) | |||
Zähringerstraße 4 (residential building, around 1900 by Hans August Zeeh) | |||
Zähringerstraße 5 (residential building, around 1870, extension in 1884, individual monument) | |||
Zähringerstraße 6 (residential building, around 1900) | |||
Zähringerstraße 7 (house, 1896 by August Rahfeld) | |||
Zähringerstraße 8 (residential building, 1906 by Johann Steffgen), seat of the public prosecutor's office | |||
Zähringerstraße 10 (residential building, 1924 by Richard Rosprich) | |||
Charlottenstrasse 7 location |
Kgl. Institute for Hygiene and Infectious Diseases | The two-storey plastered building was built by Heinrich Wiese in 1911/12. Corner pilaster strips emphasize the corners of the building. The street side has five window axes, three axes lie in a central projectile with a rounded gable. There are two twin windows and an oval one. All windows boil framed with a weakly profiled reveal. On the upper floor, the windows also have a curved roof. An eaves cornice closes the building from the hipped roof. | |
Dellengartenstrasse 1 location |
House, 1877 | ||
Deutschherrnpfad 11–15 location |
Deutschherrnpfad 11–15, factory building, 1924 by Peter Weiß | ||
Deutschherrnstrasse location |
Lantern base | ||
Deutschherrnstrasse 1 location |
Citizen Hospital | The Bürgerhospital was built between 1868 and 1871 according to plans by Hugo Dihm. In 1906 it was converted into a school. The city archive has been housed there for several years . The front facade is on the actual rear of the building. Two four-axis corner projections with triangular gables flank the five-axis central building with central projections with triangular gables. Gothic ornaments adorn the facade and gable of the two-story building. | |
Deutschherrnstrasse 2/4 location |
Gasthaus "Zum Adler" | The house was built around 1750 according to plans by the general building director Friedrich Joachim Stengel . In 1876/77 the service wing on the western side of the house was redesigned. In the years 1881/82 this was increased, converted for residential purposes and adapted to the existing part of the building. From the beginning the house was used as an inn. The two-storey baroque building with a mansard roof and utility wing now has six window axes, of which the fourth and sixth axes on the ground floor each have a door. The three-axle extension has a larger double door. The shutters are missing. The facade is structured with wide corner pilasters and a cornice. Windows and doors are accentuated by stepped frames. The back of the building, which is heavily divided by additions, has a wooden balcony on the first floor over which the roof extends. | |
Deutschmühlental (movable monument) |
Mine locomotive from the Viktoria mine in Püttlingen in the train shed of the Franco-German Garden, 1950 | ||
Deutschmühlental 15 location |
Franco-German garden , landscaped gardens, 1958–1960 | The beginnings of the Franco-German garden date back to the 19th century, when the valley was expanded into a green area with forest. After the Saarland joined the Federal Republic, efforts were made to relax relations and a joint garden show was organized. On April 23, 1960, the "Franco-German Garden Show" was opened by the then German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer and the French Prime Minister Michel Debré . The park is still an important local recreation area in the city today. The attractions are a cable car and a railroad. Lawns alternate with planted beds and themed gardens. In the center there is a small lake. | |
Dr.-Vogeler-Strasse location |
Consecration hall with nursery accommodation, 1963–1965 by Peter Paul Seeberger | ||
Eisenbahnstrasse location |
Weather pillar, 1876 by Hugo Dihm | The weather pillar is an obelisk with a sundial, thermometer and barometer. It was donated in 1876 by Saarbrücken citizens, including Hugo Dihm , who also provided the design. Originally it was in the Luisenanlage, in 1976 it was moved to its present location. It was restored in 2003/04. | |
Feldmannstrasse 22 location |
House, built in 1927/28 by Oskar Ruthemann | ||
Feldmannstrasse 24 location |
Semi-detached house, built in 1924 by August Rahfeld | ||
Feldmannstrasse 26 location |
Semi-detached house, built in 1924 by August Rahfeld | ||
Feldmannstrasse 34 location |
House, 1905 by Friedrich Kappel | ||
Feldmannstrasse 36 location |
Semi-detached house, 1905 by Paul Wiesert | ||
Feldmannstrasse 38 location |
Semi-detached house, 1905 by Paul Wiesert | ||
Feldmannstrasse 60 location |
House, designed by Karl Kremer in 1924 | ||
Feldmannstrasse 92 location |
House, built in 1923 by Franz Kaiser jun. | ||
Feldmannstrasse 100 location |
House, 1935 by Ludwig Nobis | ||
Fliederstrasse 32 location |
Garden house, 3rd quarter of the 19th century | ||
Forbacher Strasse 6/8 location |
Double house, built in 1866 by Johann Adam III (junior) Knipper | ||
Forbacher Strasse 12 location |
Garden shed, around 1800 | ||
Franz-Josef-Röder-Straße 7 location |
Society house for the Saarbrücken casino company, seat of the Saarland state parliament | The building was built in 1965/66 by Julius Carl Raschdorff as a society house for the Saarbrücken casino company in late classicist forms. In 1862 a kitchen wing was added on the east side. After being destroyed in the Second World War, the annex was expanded by two axes. The building has been the seat of the Saarland Parliament since 1947. The two-storey core building was structured with sill and storey cornices and has a high eaves cornice. The central window axes are bundled by a risalit. Columns stand in front of the recessed entrance on the ground floor, pilasters frame the high windows on the upper floor. Reliefs are integrated into the facade as decoration. The windows on the upper floor are combined into twins, framed by rectangular pilasters and separated by a Corinthian column. Pilasters and pillars support an entablature with a straight roof. | |
Franz-Josef-Röder-Straße 15 location |
Service building for the civil departments of the regional and local court, courthouse, | 1911–1914 by Paul Thoemer , 1920–1935 seat of the Saar government commission, restoration and expansion after the Second World War | |
Franz-Josef-Röder-Straße 21/23 location |
formerly "Reichsfinanzamt", 1937, after the Second World War the seat of the Haut-Commissariat de la République Francaise en Sarre | ||
Gärtnerstrasse location |
Ev.-luth. Church, 1902 by August Rahfeld, reconstruction 1949–1952 | ||
Gersweilerstraße 43a location |
House, 1907 by Georg Becker | ||
Behind the Deutschhaus no. (At no. 6) location |
Steel pavilion, 1947 by Jean Prouvé | ||
Hohenzollernstrasse 45 location |
House of Workers' Welfare with relief and wall mosaic, administration building, 1929–30 by Otto Zollinger , heightening and renovation 1969–70, relief by NS Magg around 1930, wall mosaic in the stairwell after 1945 by Franz Masereel | ||
Hohenzollernstrasse 60 location |
French embassy with enclosure and furnishings, 1951–53 by Georges-Henri Pingusson , Hans Bert Baur and Bernhard Schultheis, since 1960 Ministry of Culture | ||
Lerchesflurweg 53–61 location |
Water tank | Erected around 1890 | |
Lilienstraße 5 location |
Grave chapel of the Röchling family | Carl Röchling had the chapel built in 1907/08 by the Metz architect H. Hermüller as a neo-Gothic grave chapel with a crypt. After devastation in World War II, the crypt was closed in 1964. In 1993 the chapel was extensively renovated and restored to its historical state. 22 members of the Röchling family are buried in the crypt of the burial chapel. The neo-Gothic hall with two groined vaults is followed by a rectangular choir. The four windows in the hall were designed in a four-pass shape, the choir has three arched windows. A tall, narrow roof turret sits centrally on the steep, hipped roof. A sandstone sculpture with a crucifixion group is set into a shallow niche in the masonry above the arched portal. | |
Lohmeyerstrasse location |
Nussberg memorial, memorial to fallen soldiers | Erected in 1931 | |
Lohmeyerstraße 20 location |
Nussberger Hof , residential building | The Nussberger Hof was built in 1906 by Karl Lohmeyers and his cousin, the building construction department and government and building advisor Karl Hüter. The transverse rectangular building was built in neo-baroque forms with a mansard hipped roof. Both long sides have a central projection. The rusticated basement level with segmented arched windows ends with a surrounding cornice. The building sections on both sides of the risalit each have three window axes with high rectangular windows, the profiles of which are lavishly decorated. The mansard windows are also designed as segmented arched windows and adorned with an oval in the curved roof. The two central projections, each with a closing gable, are triaxial. The risalit on the street side takes up the portal in the middle axis of the ground floor with blown carnies arch, above which a wall field with ornamentation and coat of arms emblazoned. The portal can be reached via a two-flight staircase with a wrought-iron railing. Rusticated pilasters frame the risalit on both floors and can also be found on the corners of the ground floor. The ground floor pilasters have Ionic capitals and those on the upper floor Tuscan capitals. | |
Metzer Strasse location |
Memorial at the former Neue Bremm prison camp, prison camp 1943, memorial from 1947 (inauguration 11 November 1947) | ||
Metzer Strasse 13 location |
First aid station with a ruinous house | From 1870 | |
Metzer Strasse 102 location |
Alte Bellevue, residential building | Erected in the 19th century, expanded in 1912, formerly "Restoration Bellevue" | |
Moltkestrasse location |
Catholic parish church of St. Mauritius | Built in 1955/56 by Albert Dietz and Bernhard Grothe | |
Moltkestrasse 60 location |
Residential and commercial building | Built in 1894/95 by Alwin Heinker and Kurt Witzschel | |
Moltkestrasse 62 location |
Residential and commercial building | Built in 1894/95 by Alwin Heinker and Kurt Witzschel | |
Moltkestrasse 64 location |
Residential and commercial building | Built in 1894/95 by Alwin Heinker and Kurt Witzschel | |
Moltkestrasse 66 location |
Residential and commercial building | Built in 1894/95 by Alwin Heinker and Kurt Witzschel | |
Narzissenstrasse location |
Garden shed | Built around 1898 by Hans Weszkalnys | |
Reppersbergstrasse 12 location |
Double house, built in 1909 by Karl sen. Ries and Otto Büche | ||
Reppersbergstrasse 14 location |
Duplex house | 1909 by Karl sen. Ries and Otto Büche built | |
Reppersbergstrasse 45 location |
Residential building with office | Built in 1931 by Rudolf Krüger | |
Reppersbergstrasse 64 location |
villa | The building, built by Georg Stricker in 1924, was the official residence of Saarland Prime Minister Johannes Hoffmann from 1949 to 1955 , after which the Saarland Finance Court was housed here. It has been privately owned since 1995. | |
Saar location |
Old bridge | The bridge was built under Count Philip II in 1546/47 after Emperor Charles V was unable to cross the river at this point for several days due to flooding. After the Roman Bridge a little further upstream, which fell into disrepair in the early Middle Ages, the Old Bridge was the first Saar bridge in centuries. It was destroyed and rebuilt at least twice. In 1904, two of the middle bridge piers were lavishly expanded to make room for an equestrian statue of Kaiser Wilhelm I, which was inaugurated on May 14, 1904 in the presence of Kaiser Wilhelm II and Empress Auguste Viktoria. On the St. Johann side of the bridge, several of the original 14 arches were lost or filled in due to the construction of the Ministry of Finance and the construction of what is now called the Tbilisi (or Tbilisi) square. On the old Saarbrücken side, too, an arch was lost in the course of straightening the Saar around 1763. Conversely, when the city motorway was built from 1961 to 1963 on the old Saarbrücken side, the bridge was extended by a steel footbridge. | |
Saar location |
Bismarck Bridge, road bridge | The Bismarck Bridge was built from 1913 to 1915 according to plans by Paul Meißner. Originally the bridge was built of stone, after the destruction in World War II it was rebuilt as a reinforced concrete bridge with sandstone cladding. As originally, the bridge was built with a large arch over the Saar and smaller round arches on the land side in the south. | |
Saarufer location |
Former Bismarck plant, park | Erected 1910–1920 | |
Saarufer location |
Saarkran , 1761–1763 by Friedrich Joachim Stengel | ||
Schlossstrasse 28 location |
Residential building, 16./17. Century, extension of the 18th century | ||
Schlossstrasse 30 location |
Residential building, 16./17. Century, extension of the 18th century | ||
Spichererbergstrasse location |
Emergency church at the 40er grave (former Swiss army barracks), consecrated September 29, 1946 | ||
Spichererbergstrasse 9 location |
House, around 1860 by Hugo Dihm | ||
Spichererbergstrasse 11 location |
Residential house, around 1869, restoration 1954–1955 | ||
Spichererbergstrasse 23 / 23a location |
NS Weszkalnys | ||
Spichererbergstrasse 25 location |
House, built by Friedrich Sehmer from 1878–1879 | ||
Spichererbergstrasse 78 location |
Residential house with restaurant and shop | 1899–1900 by Hans Weszkalnys | |
Spichererbergstrasse 86a location |
Garden shed, 1904 | ||
Stengelstrasse location |
Catholic parish church St. Jakob | St. Jakob was built from 1884 to 1887 based on designs by Arnold Güldenpfennig. In 1906 the transept and choir were renovated by Moritz Gombert. | |
Stengelstrasse 29 location |
Facade sculpture | 1937 by Fritz Korte | |
Talstrasse 27 location |
Residential house, around 1872 | Built around 1872 | |
Talstrasse 30 location |
Residential building | Built in 1865, remodeled 1887–1895 | |
Talstrasse 32 location |
Former farm building, now a residential building | Built around 1762 | |
Talstrasse 49 location |
Residential building with interior fittings, 1880, administrative building since 1918, additional storey in 1930 | In 1880 the merchant Wilhelm Heinrich Korn had a villa built in the “Roman style”. In 1908 his widow had the house redesigned by the architect Hans Peter Weszkalnys . At the end of the First World War, she finally sold the property, which has since been used as an administration building. In 1923 the villa was rebuilt again. In 1930 the building was expanded to include a mezzanine floor. The two-storey villa with a gable roof was built in the Italian Neo-Renaissance style. While the front part of the house is covered with a flat roof, the rear part has a hipped roof. The street side has four axes and is very varied. Each storey of the facade has its own design. | |
Talstrasse 53 location |
Residential and commercial building | 1910 by Peter Weiß | |
Talstrasse 65 location |
Uhereck Pavilion, garden house ruins | 18th century | |
Talstrasse 66 location |
Residential building | The house was built by Georg Becker around 1888. The brick building on the eaves is adorned with plenty of sandstone diamond blocks. Multi-storey cornices structure the two-story building with a rusticated base. The middle of the building is emphasized on the upper floor by a striking frame, which is crowned by a dwelling. | |
Talstrasse 67/69 location |
Residential and commercial building | Built in 1935/36 by Rudolf Krüger | |
Trillerweg 54 location |
Economic building of Villa Röchling with surrounding wall | Built in 1897/98 according to designs by Hans Weszkalnys | |
Trillerweg 58 location |
Villa Obenauer with equipment | The two-storey villa was built from 1905 to 1907 according to plans by Peter Behrens for the entrepreneur Gustav Obenauer. The cubic structure with a tent roof and high basement is divided into rectangular plastered fields on the street facade. In front of the house is a terrace with a pergola on mighty supports. Behrens also designed the furnishings for the master's room, the dining room and the hall. In 1910 he expanded the villa to include a study and a library. In 1940 Obenauer sold the villa, which had been damaged in the war, to the Reichsautobahnverwaltung. After the war, the house was used as a youth home before the Federal Property Administration moved in here in 1962. The villa has been privately owned again since 2001 and has been extensively renovated in recent years. | |
Trillerweg 68 location |
Residential building | Erected in 1900/01 by Heinrich Güth and Friedrich Mertz | |
Vorstadtstrasse 13 location |
Residential building | Built in the 18th century, remodeled in the 19th century | |
Vorstadtstrasse 33/35 location |
Slope retaining wall | Erected in 1788 by Balthasar Wilhelm Stengel | |
Vorstadtstrasse 55 location |
Residential building | Built in the 18th century, rebuilt in 1942 after being destroyed in the district | |
Vorstadtstrasse 57 location |
Terrace garden with remains of the sculptures and tombstone for Johann Adam Knipper the Elder. Ä. | Established in the 1st quarter of the 19th century | |
Yorkstrasse 2 location |
Residential building | The two-storey plastered building was built by Matthias Quast around 1874 and expanded in 1884. The building is structured by storey and sill cornices. | |
Yorkstrasse 6 location |
Residential house with interior fittings | The house was built in 1924/25 by J. Huge and Heinrich Voll. |
literature
- Walter Zimmermann: The art monuments of the city and the district of Saarbrücken. Schwann, Düsseldorf 1932, (Unchanged reprint. Association for Monument Preservation in Saarland, Saarbrücken 1975).
- Fritz Kloevekorn : Saarbrücken's past in pictures (= The Saar region's past in pictures. Volume 1). 2nd, greatly increased edition. Gebr. Hofer, Saarbrücken 1934.
- Josef Baulig, Hans Mildenberger, Gabriele Scherer: Saarbrücken architecture guide. Historical association for the Saar region, Saarbrücken 1998, ISBN 3-921870-05-4 .
Web links
Commons : Architectural monuments in Saarbrücken - collection of images, videos and audio files
- List of monuments of the Saarland: List of monuments in the state capital of Saarbrücken (PDF file; 1.73 MB)
Individual evidence
- ↑ Charly Lehnert : The Saarland Geheichnis, Volume 1: Stories and glosses . Lehnert Verlag, Bübingen 2014, ISBN 978-3-939286-18-9 , Unheimliches am Schlossberg, p. 289-290 .