List of architectural monuments in Augsburg-Hochfeld
In the list of monuments in Hochfeld the monuments in the Augsburg district are Hochfeld in the same planning area Hochfeld ( IX ) are listed. There is also a collection of pictures for these monuments .
This list is a partial list of the list of architectural monuments in Augsburg . The list is based on the Bavarian Monument List , which was first created on the basis of the Bavarian Monument Protection Act of October 1, 1973 and has since been maintained and updated by the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation . The following information does not replace the legally binding information from the monument protection authority.
ensemble
location | object | description | File no. | image |
---|---|---|---|---|
Hochfeld ( location ) |
Ensemble Hochfeld | The Hochfeld is a residential district in Augsburg, which from around 1910 in the spatial connection to the infantry barracks (Prinz-Karl-Kaserne) built from 1882 to 1884 on still undeveloped land in the south of Augsburg has been continuously laid out by cooperative housing developers and accordingly a cohesive picture of Housing forms of the first half of the 20th century.
The main axes of the quarter are the west-east-facing Schertlinstrasse, which passes the infantry barracks, and the Firnhaberstrasse and Hochfeldstrasse, which run perpendicular to it, i.e. north-south. Firnhaberstraße refers to the central axis of the barracks, while Hochfeldstraße connects the barracks with the city center. From this vertical scheme of the main streets, which was established in the early days of the development, a grid floor plan results for the northern part of the district. The ensemble only comprises the first row of blocks south of Schertlinstrasse, including the north side of this street east of the barracks area. It is an undisturbed area that was built on by various housing associations between 1910 and 1928, the demarcation to the south being dictated by a subsequent fault zone with replacement buildings from the period after 1945. The immediate reason for the development of the high field was the construction of the railway depot from 1903 to 1906, which resulted in the construction of residential buildings for railway workers on Firnhaberstraße in 1910/11 (construction cooperative of traffic personnel Augsburg-Süd). Due to the great efforts that had to be made after the First World War to meet the pressing housing shortage, the new residential area continued to grow by leaps and bounds in the 1920s. The building cooperative of traffic personnel Augsburg-Süd completed its building block up to Hochfeldstrasse by 1925; To the east, between 1923 and 1928, on the other side of Hochfeldstrasse, the tenants' association Augsburg and the surrounding area built a mixed development made up of multi-storey rows and terraced houses with steep ornamental gables, and the municipality of Augsburg built the three-wing complex of the Zeppelinhof around a garden courtyard. While the buildings from the time before the First World War still present the reduced, historicizing formal language of the late Art Nouveau, the residential buildings from the 1920s show a more sober design with a slightly expressionistic touch in the details. The ensemble provides an insight into the range of architectural compositions in non-profit housing construction from the time of the Weimar Republic: the layout forms range from the fully enclosed courtyard with a green inner space surrounding the communal building to the open three-wing courtyard with a wide garden parterre (Zeppelinhof) to the parallel connection of multi-storey living rows and the row house sequence. The signature of the architect Gottfried Bösch, which is common to all of the facilities, gives the ensemble area east of Hochfeldstrasse a special formal unity. |
E-7-61-000-21 |
Individual structures
location | object | description | File no. | image |
---|---|---|---|---|
Alter Postweg 24 to 38 c (even), Bauernfeindstraße 23 to 37 (odd), Robert-Gerber-Straße 24 to 36 (even) ( location ) |
War memorial settlement | Northern and southern peripheral development of three-storey hipped roof buildings with staircases and apartments in front of them, in between eight two-storey row houses, each with four-horse row houses with hipped roof, transverse to the central axis, entrance at Alte Postweg flanked by sculptures in modern, functional shapes based on a design by Otto Holzer, 1928 | D-7-61-000-24 |
more pictures |
Am Silbermannpark 1 ( location ) |
Former office building of the F. B. Silbermann company | Two-storey mansard roof building with volute gable and triangular attachment and rear three-storey extension, in the core in 1787, redesigned in the late 19th century | D-7-61-000-359 | |
Am Silbermannpark 1 a ( location ) |
Former factory owner's villa of the F. B. Silbermann company | Two-storey hipped roof building with balcony porch and curved gable, late Art Nouveau, by E. Zimmermann (Munich), 1911
Fencing with a garden pavilion from the same period |
D-7-61-000-1232 | |
Am Silbermannpark 2 to 6 (straight), Am Silbermannpark 2 a and b ( location ) |
Former factory owner's house of the company F. B. Silbermann | Three-storey flat roof building with a cross-shaped floor plan, classicism, around 1875/80
Connected, ground-floor garden wing with pavilions merging into one another, labeled "1898" Associated park, mostly landscaped, with cast sculptures from the same period |
D-7-61-000-1233 | |
Bauernfeindstrasse 2 to 10 (even), Firnhaberstrasse 27 to 31 (odd), Hennchstrasse 1 to 9 (odd), Hochfeldstrasse 58 to 64 (even) ( location ) |
Cooperative residential courtyard | Three-storey hipped roof buildings connected by arches with five-storey corner blocks facing Firnhaberstrasse, accented on the courtyard side by stepped gables, built by Gottfried Bösch from 1927 to 1929 | D-7-61-000-1173 | |
Bismarckstrasse 21 ( location ) |
Tenement house | Four-storey corner building with a polygonal oriel tower and gable with volutes, facade decoration in Rococo forms, around 1900 | D-7-61-000-179 | |
Firnhaberstraße 5 and 7, Dr.-Lagai-Straße 1 ( location ) |
Cooperative block of flats | Three-storey mansard roof building with bay windows and gable gables, historically reduced, built in 1910/11 | D-7-61-000-1162 | |
Firnhaberstraße 1 to 3 (odd), Schertlinstraße 22 to 26 (even) ( location ) |
Cooperative block of flats | Three-storey mansard roof building with bay windows and gable gables, reduced-historicizing, built 1910–11, changed radically inside in 2010 | D-7-61-000-1193 | |
Firnhaberstraße 22 a to 22 c, Firnhaberstraße 110 b and c, Firnhaberstraße 22 f, Firnhaberstraße 74 c to d and f, Firnhaberstraße 20 a ( location ) |
Depot | Operating and repair workshops on extensive grounds, essentially built between 1903 and 1906 and expanded from 1922 to 1924
Two ring sheds, 1903 and 1905, the southern half demolished in half in 1986, with turntables from 1922 Locomotive execution hall, 1922 Car assembly hall, south-eastern part in 1906, extensions in 1923/24 Two wheel set repair shops, 1906 Magazine, 1906 Forge, 1908 Boiler house, 1907 Overnight building, 1906 Railcar hangar, 1935 |
D-7-61-000-1164 | |
Haunstetter Straße 36 ( location ) |
Evangelical cemetery | With grave monuments from the 18th to 20th centuries, laid out in 1543
Cemetery church, hall building with western tower facade and flat saddle roof, classicism, by Johann Michael Voit, August Voit and city planning officer Balthasar von Hößlin, 1825 Mortuary, cubic hipped roof building with a northern entrance projection, classicism, by Franz Joseph Kollmann, 1837 Enclosure, probably from the 19th century |
D-7-61-000-360 |
more pictures |
Haunstetter Straße 64 ( location ) |
Israelite cemetery | Created in 1868
Enclosure, neo-Romanesque brick wall from the same period |
D-7-61-000-361 |
more pictures |
Hochfeldstraße 28 1/5 ( location ) |
Former building of the Prinz-Karl-Kaserne , now a juvenile prison | Two-storey bare brick building with hipped roof, around 1882 | D-7-61-000-1171 | |
Hochfeldstrasse 63 ( location ) |
Catholic Church of St. Canisius | Three-aisled basilica with retracted choir and south-western block-like tower with a tent roof, by Fritz Kempf, 1934, with furnishings
Rectory, two-storey hipped roof building from the same period |
D-7-61-000-421 | |
Schertlinstrasse 19 to 25 (odd) ( location ) |
South wing of the Prinz-Karl-Kaserne | South wing (building 301) of the former barracks of the royal Bavarian 3rd Infantry Regiment Prinz Karl, so-called Prinz-Karl-Kaserne, symmetrical, exposed brick building with five-storey central projection and tower-like corner projections as well as four-storey intermediate buildings, red and yellow bricks, richly divided into historicizing forms, built from 1882 to 1884
Remains of the enclosure, brick pillars and iron fence from the same period |
D-7-61-000-877 | |
Schertlinstrasse 48 to 54 c (straight) ( location ) |
Zeppelinhof | Housing complex grouped around the garden courtyard in a three-wing shape with a pronounced central axis, east and west wings three-storey hipped roof buildings, north wing two-storey hipped roof building with a central, two-storey structure with stepped gable, built by the municipality according to designs by Gottfried Bösch, 1927/28
Garden sculptures from the same period |
D-7-61-000-1194 |
more pictures |
Von-der-Tann-Strasse 37 ( location ) |
North wing of the Prinz-Karl-Kaserne | North wing (building 309) of the former barracks of the royal Bavarian infantry regiment Prinz Karl, so-called Prinz-Karl-Kaserne, five-storey, unplastered, planar brick building, built from 1882 to 1884
Cenotaph, octagon opened in arcades, around 1920, in it a bronze figure of a lion, around 1890, in the courtyard Regimental monument, gun barrel in a columnar arrangement, inscribed "1887", formerly in Calmbergstrasse 2a |
D-7-61-000-1061 | |
Von-der-Tann-Strasse 44 ( location ) |
Tenement house | Four-storey corner building with risalits and flat bay windows, facade in neo-baroque shapes, around 1900 | D-7-61-000-1062 | |
Werderstrasse 3 and 5 ( location ) |
Double tenement house | Four-storey building with bay windows and decorative tail gables on the sides, facade with classicizing and Art Nouveau motifs, around 1900
Enclosure from the same time |
D-7-61-000-1106 | |
Werderstrasse 4 and 6 ( location ) |
Double tenement house | Four-storey, symmetrical hipped roof building with side risalits, facade in neo-renaissance style, around 1900 | D-7-61-000-1107 | |
Werderstrasse 7 ( location ) |
Tenement house | Four-storey, asymmetrically structured building with bay windows and tail gables, facade design using Augsburg Renaissance motifs, around 1905
Enclosure from the same time |
D-7-61-000-1109 | |
Werderstrasse 11 ( location ) |
Tenement house | Four-storey corner house with wave gables and polygonal corner bay window with onion dome, classifying stucco decor, around 1905 | D-7-61-000-1110 | |
Werderstrasse 13 ( location ) |
Tenement house | Four-storey hipped roof building with a gabled central risalit, curved volute gable and original Art Nouveau stucco decor, 1902 | D-7-61-000-1111 |
Remarks
- ↑ This list may not correspond to the current status of the official list of monuments. The latter can be viewed on the Internet as a PDF using the link given under web links and is also mapped in the Bavarian Monument Atlas . Even these representations, although they are updated daily by the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation , do not always and everywhere reflect the current status. Therefore, the presence or absence of an object in this list or in the Bavarian Monument Atlas does not guarantee that it is currently a registered monument or not. The Bavarian List of Monuments is also an information directory. The property of a monument - and thus the legal protection - is defined in Art. 1 of the Bavarian Monument Protection Act (BayDSchG) and does not depend on the mapping in the Monument Atlas and the entry in the Bavarian Monument List. Objects that are not listed in the Bavarian Monument List can also be monuments if they meet the criteria according to Art. 1 BayDSchG. Early involvement of the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation according to Art. 6 BayDSchG is therefore necessary in all projects.
literature
- Bernt von Hagen, Angelika Wegener-Hüssen: City of Augsburg (= Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation [Hrsg.]: Monuments in Bavaria . Volume VII.83 ). Karl M. Lipp Verlag, Munich 1994, ISBN 3-87490-572-1 .
- Bernd-Peter Schaul: Swabia . Ed .: Michael Petzet , Bavarian State Office for the Preservation of Monuments (= Monuments in Bavaria . Volume VII ). Oldenbourg, Munich 1986, ISBN 3-486-52398-8 .
Web links
- List of monuments for Augsburg (PDF) at the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation
- Hochfeld in the Bavarian Monument Atlas