List of architectural monuments in Hilchenbach

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Shield-shaped memorial plaque of the state of North Rhine-Westphalia with the coat of arms of the state of North Rhine-Westphalia, above it in capital letters "Monument", top left and right as well as a nail in the middle.

The list of architectural monuments in Hilchenbach contains the listed buildings in the area of ​​the city of Hilchenbach in the Siegen-Wittgenstein district in North Rhine-Westphalia (as of December 2011). These architectural monuments are entered in the list of monuments of the city of Hilchenbach; The basis for the admission is the Monument Protection Act North Rhine-Westphalia (DSchG NRW).

image designation location description construction time Registered
since
Monument
number
villa Hilchenbach
Bruchstrasse 34
Two-storey plastered building on a high basement as a cube in eaves under a hipped roof with high chimneys and a short ridge. The entrance is a recessed pilaster portal on the narrower side of a tall, straight flight of stairs pushed up to the right of the main building. 1895 04/10/1984 001


Two-storey half-timbered house Hilchenbach
Dammstrasse 21
The half-timbered house, built in two storeys, has its gable facing Dammstrasse (southwest) and shows a framework of different construction under a gable roof covered with slate. The south-west gable has half-timbered storey construction, struts pointing outwards on the upper floor and is locked once for each storey and has the following inscription: GOES • THE • TIME • HERE • COMES • THE • DAG • THE HOUR ALSO NIMANT • WISEN • MAG • DRUMG • RESEARCH • GOD • AND • THINK • DARBEY • THAT • THIS • HOUR THE LAST SEY • I KNOW THAT MY SAVIOR • HE LIVES • BUILDS • BY FRIEDRICH • HOPPE • ELISABED • EHLEUD ANNO 1692. 1692 11/06/1984 002


Villa construction with parapet wall facing the street Hilchenbach
In the Herrenwiese 45
Villa building built in 1901/02 with wall-mounted fittings from the time it was built, its stucco ceilings and its old doors. Its forms are eclectic, borrowed from the Renaissance and the Baroque. The picturesque, rich outline with two turrets, the curved window bars on the upper floor, as well as the corresponding ones of the winter garden (with original colored glazing) on ​​the ground floor to the street front and the mansard roof are artistically designed particularly sophisticated. 1901/1902 03/14/1985 003


Protestant church Müsen
Hauptstrasse 84
It is a three-axis quarry stone hall with a high semicircular apse, two low, flanking extensions and a plastered tower with plastered corner blocks, four gabled roofs and a peak. The west tower is a relic of the previous building from 1775 to 1778 with a Romanesque core. The 18th century ship burned down in 1893. It was expanded during the reconstruction and received a hall with a flat ceiling and wooden galleries on three sides.
The "Ladegast organ", which was brought back to its original disposition from 1895 in 1974, with main, upper and pedals as well as the organ prospectus. Friedrich Ladegast was one of the most important organ builders of the 19th century.
1893/94 03/14/1985 004


Two-storey half-timbered house Dahlbruch
Hochstrasse 14
The two-storey half-timbered building over an elongated rectangular floor plan, accessible at the eaves, dates from the end of the 18th century. It has a gable roof with a steep slope with a later built-in jamb. The saddles visible on the gable side were corrected during the construction work in 1983.
The exterior of the building is under protection.
End of 18th century 03/14/1985 005


Two-storey half-timbered house Allenbach
Siegener Strasse 3
Two-storey, gable-independent half-timbered building set back from Siegener Straße, gable roof with later jamb. Four-post house with wall-high corner posts, house entrance on the gable side. The top of the gable is open, the inscription Fraktur single line: "Zimmer Meister has been Thomas Fiegener von Hof Musen opened the 12th June anno MDCCLXXXII 1782." (the last number is obviously only painted on).
The exterior of the central building is under protection.
1782 03/21/1985 006


Two-storey half-timbered house Allenbach
An der Ferndorf 9
Two-storey half-timbered structure, independent from the gable, accessible on the gable side, first floor plastered masonry replacing the originally existing framework, saddle roof covered with asbestos-cement templates, dwarf house on the left side, upper floor slated in the gable, corner studs profiled across corners. On the gable end there is a striking, particularly long inscription: “A house is built through wisdom and maintained through understanding, and through proper housekeeping the chambers become full of all delicious, lovable riches. Proverbs Sa. Approx.24.3. Lord, teach us to remember that we must die in order that we may become wise. Fill us early with your grace so we will boast and be happy all our lives. Psalm 9o.Vers 12 and 14. This house was built by Ludwig Hein An.Catr.Marriage Opened July 16, 1782, carpenter Johannes Doß in Lützel ”.
The exterior of the building is under protection.
1782 03/30/1985 007


Two-storey half-timbered house Allenbach
Siegener Strasse 7
Semi-detached house with a rectangular floor plan, gable-independent, accessible from the eaves, mid-house above the entrance, visible half-timbered brown and white, wall-high main stand (4-stand construction).
One-line inscription in the sturdy ground floor frame:
“What God denies us with conflagration, replaces his favor, so noble heart do not despair. God will also bless children with confidence, so he will bless children’s children, too, Wittiber Jost Justuss Münker through whom this house was built, opened May 18, 1782, Zimmer Meister was BIM Mittelhoff. ”
The exterior of the building is under protection.
1782 03/25/1985 008


Two-storey half-timbered house Allenbach
Siegener Strasse 9
The two-storey half-timbered house with wall-high corner posts shows the strut figures typical of the 18th century. Stems are arranged between the main stems, which only remain storey high. At the height of the storey beam position, the horizontal wood gains in importance. Semi-detached house with a rectangular floor plan, independent from the gable, accessible on the gable side, visible half-timbering brown and white, left eaves side slated with eternit, wall-high main stand (4-stand construction).
The exterior of the building is under protection.
1782 March 27, 1985 009


Two-storey half-timbered house Allenbach
An der Ferndorf 8
Two-storey half-timbered house, construction period: 18th century. Continuation of the same profile from the house at An der Ferndorf 10, accessible on the eaves side, wooden cladding with imitation of the stone joint cut, dwarf house, slated in the gable, horizontal roof truss. However, the position and shape of the windows on the entrance side show that the original framework, as can be seen on the other half of the house, has been preserved under the cladding.
The exterior of the building without the extension is under protection.
18th century March 27, 1985 010


Two-storey half-timbered house Allenbach
Alte Landstrasse 1
Two-storey half-timbered structure, independent of the gable, accessible from the gable side, steep pitched roof, slate-covered, brown-white framework. The building in turn shows a structure with wall-high collar and corner posts, as well as the associated bracing of the wall scaffolding. Presumably in the 19th century, a knee stick was put on to make better use of the floor space. Inscription: “Raise all your worries God, then he worries about us. Built by Friedrich Heyn, Anna Cathrine. Opened June 10th, 1782. The master carpenter is Adam Neus von Hilchenbach ”.
The exterior of the building is under protection.
1782 March 28, 1985 011


Two-storey half-timbered house Allenbach
An der Ferndorf 11
Two-storey half-timbered building, independent from the gable, accessible on the gable side, gable roof covered with artificial slate, front gable side slated. The eaves side with the rear gable still shows the original framework, brown and white.
The exterior of the building without an extension is under protection.
18th century 04/16/1985 012


Two-storey half-timbered house Allenbach
An der Ferndorf 10
Two-storey half-timbered building, forming a group with the house at An der Ferndorf 8 on a rectangular floor plan, set back from the street and standing at an angle to it, accessible from the eaves, visible half-timbered brown and white.
The exterior of the building is under protection.
18th century 04/16/1985 013


Two-storey half-timbered house Allenbach
An der Ferndorf 20
Gable-independent, two-storey half-timbered building, slate-covered saddle roof over rectangular floor plan, ground floor plastered masonry, south-western double cantilevered gable side slated over the ground floor (ornamental slate), north-eastern gable in artificial slate, south-eastern side from the upper floor half-timbered brown and white, single horizontal locking in the half-timbered side full Stand.
The exterior of the building is under protection.
18th century 04/29/1985 014


Two-storey half-timbered house Allenbach
Alte Landstrasse 8
Two-storey half-timbered house. In the case of the group of buildings presented today, it can be seen that it is a gable-free core building to which extensions were connected with the same eaves height. All parts of the building are under a steep pitched roof. However, the ridge height of the extensions remains just below the ridge height of the main house. The gable of the main house facing the street was built on two floors in half-timbered construction. The gable surface is boarded up. The structural stands still recognizable refer to a system from the 18th century, which was probably originally built in three-column construction. The attachment on the east side also shows older half-timbering on the eaves side facing the street, each with a lock on each floor. The extension on the west side was built in frameless half-timbering and thus refers to a late form Siegerland half-timbered construction, which was officially decreed at the end of the 18th century.
The exterior of the building without the rear annex is protected.
18th century 04/30/1985 015


Two-storey half-timbered house Allenbach
Alte Landstrasse 10
Two-storey half-timbered house. In the case of the group of buildings presented today, it can be seen that it is a gable-free core building to which extensions were connected with the same eaves height. All parts of the building are under a steep pitched roof. However, the ridge height of the extensions remains just below the ridge height of the main house. The gable of the main house facing the street was built on two floors in half-timbered construction. The gable surface is boarded up. The structural stands still recognizable refer to a system from the 18th century, which was probably originally built in three-column construction. The attachment on the east side also shows older half-timbering on the eaves side facing the street, each with a lock on each floor. The extension on the west side was built in frameless half-timbering and thus refers to a late form Siegerland half-timbered construction, which was officially decreed at the end of the 18th century.
The exterior of the building is under protection.
18th century 04/30/1985 016


Two-storey half-timbered house with extension Allenbach
Am Bühl 2
Two-storey half-timbered building over a rectangular floor plan, cardboard shingles saddle roof, part of the barn - converted in 1983 for residential purposes - extended flush on the eaves side, but somewhat narrower, black and white half-timbered structure visible from all sides, eaves facing the access path, but with the gable looking into the urban environment, accessible from the eaves side, wall-high main stems, four-frame house. The building erected after the fire marks the edge of the old location. Above warrior wood, inscription Fraktur in one line: "Where the master does not build the house, those who work on it work for free. Where the master does not protect them, the guard watches for free. This house was built by Johan Hermann Nöh Anna Catharina Eleut Auffgericht on April 20, 1782 Zimmer master is by now Johannes Stöcker von Erndebrück ”.
The exterior of the building with its half-timbered extension is under protection.
1782 05/07/1985 017


Two-storey residential building Allenbach
Stift-Keppel-Weg 3
The building on the eaves side shows a well-ordered facade in the classical sense. The axially arranged double-leaf entrance door with skylight can be reached via an outside staircase. The strictly symmetrically arranged windows have a profiled frame with a roof with the door. The white painted wooden parts contrast with the delicately executed slate.
The exterior of the building is under protection.
End of the 19th century 04/30/1985 018


Two-storey half-timbered house Allenbach
Wittgensteiner Strasse 33
The frameless half-timbered building is accessible over the eaves, slated gable roof with gable on the north and south sides with a slated jamb surface and ornamented eaves cornice, half-timbered structure in brown / white only on the south side.
The exterior of the building without an extension is under protection.
19th century 05/07/1985 019


Two-storey half-timbered house with a hall built later on the eaves side Allenbach
Siegener Strasse 4
Two-storey half-timbered building, eaves side, accessed on the eaves side by a later extension, added backwards, to the street on the ground floor Eternit slate stencils - gray-green, slated above in the usual way, gable to Ferndorf visible half-timbering brown-white. Classicist main cornice with tooth cut and corresponding profiling arranged above it from the beginning of the 19th century, new baroque-style door from the 30s of our century, essentially the same repetition of the half-timbering on the opposite gable.
The exterior of the building is under protection.
May 24, 1985 020


Two-storey half-timbered house Allenbach
Stift-Keppel-Weg 8/10
Elongated two-storey half-timbered structure, extended by additions, standing in the direction of the valley, accessible on the eaves and gable sides, steep gable roof covered with slate, visible half-timbering brown and white. One-line Fraktur inscription in the frame: "Lord God through your good and grace, That Hauß preserve harm for everything / The living in it, you see the blessing / At the end bring them to the blessed ... / Rest Built by the noble collegiate hunter ... / Maria Elisabeth Spouses Auffgericht d. 6.ten 9br 1766 / The master was Johann Henrich Holdinghaußen. / Von Haarhaußen. ”
The exterior of the building is under protection.
May 24, 1985 021


Two-storey half-timbered house Allenbach
An der Ferndorf 7
Two-storey half-timbered building, gable-independent, gable roof with later jamb , interlocking tiles , ground floor brick masonry painted with brown oil paint to replace the formerly existing half-timbered structure, upper floor and in the gable triangle Eternit, light gray, with the continuous inscription Fraktur kept free:
“Because with God nothing is impossible Lucas on 1 Cappitel V 3
Built by Johannes Stein Maria Catharina Ehleut, pitched on July 6th, 1782. “
The exterior and interior of the building are under protection.
1782 May 28, 1985 022


Two-storey half-timbered house Allenbach
An der Ferndorf 18
Two-storey half-timbered building with a rectangular floor plan, independent of the gable, accessible on the gable side, steep pitched roof with slate, left-sided dwelling, visible half-timbered brown and white. Inscription Fraktur, partly one, partly two lines: "This house was built by Johannes Schreiber Maria and Ellisabet Juli l0ten 1732 In God took whom we trusted God can do it through his graces and give that after our death we inherit the true heavenly building".
The exterior of the building is under protection.
1732 06/13/1985 023


Two-storey half-timbered house Allenbach
Stift-Keppel-Weg 2
Two-storey half-timbered building on a rectangular floor plan, saddle roof with later jamb, concrete roof tiles, gable-side, but essentially with the eaves side looking into the street, visible half-timbering brown and white.
The exterior of the building without any extensions is under protection.
06/19/1985 024


1-storey half-timbered house Allenbach
Siegener Strasse 1
At the Siegener Straße 1 building, the roof space of the house is already fully used for residential purposes, since the floor space is no longer required for storing supplies. To achieve better living conditions, the shape of the mansard roof is chosen. In the construction and structural design of the house, traditional forms of the half-timbered house remain recognizable.
The exterior of the building without any extensions is under protection.
06/18/1985 025


Two-storey half-timbered house with a gable facing the street Allenbach
Siegener Strasse 5
Two-storey half-timbered building on a rectangular floor plan with a steep, slate-covered gable roof, at the gable end, accessible on the gable side, visible half-timbered brown and white. Open gable triangle, inscription Fraktur in one line: "I said My fortune is gone and my hope in the Lord. But the Lord's good is that we are not even over yet. His mercy has not yet ended. Built by Johann Henrich Fick Aiina Cattarina Ehleut May 1782 Zimmer Meister has come by Johannes Holldinghaussen von Haarhaussen. ”
The exterior of the building is under protection.
06/18/1985 026


Two-storey half-timbered house with an extension from the 19th century Allenbach
Alte Landstrasse 4
Two-storey half-timbered building, eaves, accessible from the eaves, steep slate-covered gable roof, diaphragm horizontally boarded over the house entrance, later shop extension, visible half-timbered brown and white. Inscription Fraktur in the ground floor frame and interrupted in each case on the continuous main posts, one line: “In God's blessing, don't doubt whether a big fire judgment already takes everything and ... otherwise steals nothing from you that again you can only put Vest on God trusts Him and build on it. Built in 1782. “
The exterior of the central building with an extension from the 19th century is protected.
1782 06/18/1985 027


Two-storey half-timbered house Allenbach
Siegener Strasse 11
The house part no. 13 can only be assessed in connection with the building part no. 11, as it is a structural system (semi-detached house).
The half-timbered house, built on two floors, faces Siegener Strasse with the eaves side and is located at the intersection of Siegener Strasse - Stift-Keppel-Weg - An der Ferndorf. According to a written reference (1735), the building is one of the houses in the village that survived the fire of 1781. Access to house no. 13 is on the eaves side; the house part no. 11 has its entrance on the gable side.
The exterior of the building without an extension is under protection.
06/18/1985 028


Two-storey half-timbered house Allenbach
Siegener Strasse 13
The house part no. 13 can only be assessed in connection with the building part no. 11, as it is a structural system (semi-detached house).
The half-timbered house, built on two floors, faces Siegener Strasse with the eaves side and is located at the intersection of Siegener Strasse - Stift-Keppel-Weg - An der Ferndorf. According to a written reference (1735), the building is one of the houses in the village that survived the fire of 1781. Access to house no. 13 is on the eaves side; the house part no. 11 has its entrance on the gable side.
The north-east facade of the two-storey half-timbered house facing Siegener Straße is under protection - only the central building - including the roof areas with the dwelling on the north-east side of the building.
06/18/1985 029


Two-storey residential building Allenbach
Siegener Strasse 15/17
The residential building is oriented with the eaves side to Siegener Straße and stands following the slope of the terrain, above the old location. The apartment building, designed as a couple, has a massive ground floor and a slated upper floor, on which an equally slated, hipped roof structure is attached.
The two-storey double residential building including the existing shutters is under protection
after 1920 06/18/1985 030


Two-storey half-timbered house Allenbach
An der Ferndorf 3
Longitudinally divided semi-detached house, core from the end of the 17th century, with extensions on both sides, originally two-storey half-timbered building with a rectangular floor plan.
The exterior of the building is under protection.
17th century 06/28/1985 031


Two-storey half-timbered house Allenbach
An der Ferndorf 2
Two-storey half-timbered building with a rectangular floor plan, independent of the gable, accessible on the gable side. Inscription
board above the door in strict fracture: "I act carefully and honestly with those who belong to me and walk faithfully in my house. I do not take any bad things for myself I hate the transgressor and do not let him stay with me in the CI psalm."
The exterior of the building is under protection.
06/28/1985 032


Backhaus (Backes) of the Stöcken courtyard, Grunder Straße 26 Allenbach
Grunder Strasse 28
The half-timbered building originally belonging to the Stöcken farm has a rectangular floor plan with a gable roof covered with folded tiles, broken stone plinth, brown-white framework.
The exterior of the building is under protection.
06/28/1985 033


The Stöcken courtyard with a stable house Allenbach
Grunder Strasse 26
Stately two-storey half-timbered building over an elongated rectangular floor plan, eaves, accessible from the street and the courtyard on the eaves side, brown and white half-timbering visible in essential parts. 06/28/1985 034


Two-storey half-timbered house Allenbach
An der Ferndorf 12
Developed as a rectangular floor plan, two-storey eaves, accessible on the eaves, visible half-timbering brown and white.
The exterior of the building is under protection.
06/28/1985 035


Two-storey half-timbered house Allenbach
An der Ferndorf 22
In the background of the house at An der Ferndorf 20 on the eaves side facing the urban space, a two-storey half-timbered building with a rectangular floor plan.
The exterior of the building is under protection.
06/28/1985 036


Two-storey half-timbered house Allenbach
An der Ferndorf 1
Longitudinally divided semi-detached house, core at the end of the 17th century, with extensions on both sides, originally two-storey half-timbered building with a rectangular floor plan, at the gable end, accessible on the gable side.
The exterior of the building is under protection.
17th century 10/01/1985 037


Two-storey half-timbered house Allenbach
An der Ferndorf 5
Two-storey half-timbered building with a steep gable roof, cement roof tiles, gable-side, accessible from the eaves, gable side visible half-timbered brown-white, four-frame house.
The exterior of the building without an extension is under protection.
06/28/1985 038


Two-storey half-timbered house Allenbach
Alte Landstrasse 7
Two-storey half-timbered building set back slightly across from the street, facing the gable, accessed from the eaves, pitched roof slated, half-timbered brown and white.
The actual body of the house without a stable or shed is under protection.
06/28/1985 039


Two-storey half-timbered house Allenbach
Grunder Strasse 28
Two-storey building with a risalit-like porch.
The exterior of the building is under protection.
06/28/1985 040


Evangelical parish church Hilchenbach
Kirchplatz 1
At the point - slightly offset to the west - and z. Using the material from the medieval church, which was demolished in 1839, the large late Classicist quarry stone church was built in 1844–1846; its architect Althoff came from Siegen. Friedrich August Stüler, a successor of Schinkel in the Technical Ober-Bau-Deputation in Berlin, worked on the building. In 1863 the missing tower attachments were added by the architect Stechow from Bonn.
After the destruction of the Second World War, the Hilchenbach Church took a leading position in North Rhine-Westphalia for the church architecture of the Schinkel Succession.
09/27/1985 041


Two-storey half-timbered house and former horse stable Lützel
in the quiet corner 5
The main house is a two-storey complex under a gable roof. Visible framework, wall-high uprights, simple horizontal locking on each floor, simple struts on the main posts on both floors. The half-timbering of the stable part on the ground floor was massively replaced.
The half-timbered house - without the extension on the valley side - and the former horse stable are placed under protection.
1772 09/13/1985 042


Two-storey half-timbered house Hilchenbach
Dammstrasse 11
Two-storey gabled house with five-axis window division and central entrance door, which is accompanied by two small windows on the left and right. Slate facade. The front part of the house, made of frameless half-timbering, was added to an older one, still consisting of three containers, around 1800 and provided with a common roof.
The protection status relates to the inner structure and the exterior of the building.
18th century 07.10.1985 043


Two-storey half-timbered house Hilchenbach
Ferndorfstrasse 7
Two-storey half-timbered house from the 19th century slated on a stone base, roof and outer walls. Symmetrical facade design on the eaves side with five window axes.
The exterior of the house is under protection.
19th century 09/30/1985 044


3-storey half-timbered house Hilchenbach
Kirchweg 1
The three-storey half-timbered structure is accessible from the gable with a towing extension on the left and visible half-timbered brown and white. In 1982, to the left of the front door, a keystone with the engraved date 1723 was walled in, which comes from the formerly vaulted cellar.
The components that are visible from the outside are under protection, including the surrounding walls of the house and the roof surfaces.
1723 09/19/1985 045


Road bridge Hillnhütter Strasse Dahlbruch
Hillnhütter Strasse
Quarry stone construction with a arched bridge yoke. The bridge is of great rarity due to the removal of historical structures everywhere after 1950. before 1855 09/27/1985 046


Residential building Müsen
Glück-Auf-Straße 35
Two-storey house on the eaves side. The design features of the late Baroque of Siegerland have been preserved in the sturdy framework.
The residential building and the Ern as part of the structure are placed under protection.
around 1760 October 16, 1985 047


Two-storey half-timbered house Dahlbruch
Hillnhütter Strasse 16
Two-story shorter half-timbered house on a brick basement base. Frameless framework with continuous main posts. Half-hip slate roof on projecting timber ledges. Younger side wing in frameless framework under a slate gable roof. In addition, a smaller modern porch under a monopitch roof. Eaves-side location on a bend in Hillnhütter Straße. 2nd half of the 18th century October 15, 1985 048


Two-storey half-timbered house Dahlbruch
Hillnhütter Strasse 18
Two-story shorter half-timbered house on a brick basement base. Frameless framework with continuous main posts. Half-hip slate roof on projecting timber ledges. Younger side wing in frameless framework under a slate gable roof. In addition, a smaller modern porch under a monopitch roof. Eaves-side location on a bend in Hillnhütter Straße. 2nd half of the 18th century October 15, 1985 049


Two-storey half-timbered house Dahlbruch
Hillnhütter Strasse 11
Two-storey half-timbered house on a stone base. Half-timbered frame in multi-storey construction, struts and transom frame. Slated gable roof with crane house over the eaves side. On the eaves side on the threshold of the upper floor, long inscription, dated 1781 and 1803.
The outer facade of the two-storey half-timbered house on a stone plinth is placed under protection, without the rear wall (north-west side).
1781 October 15, 1985 050


Two-storey residential building Dahlbruch
Hillnhütter Strasse 30
Two-storey residential building. Ground floor partly solidly bricked, otherwise half-timbered with bars and struts.
Judging by its shape, the house was built in the second half of the 18th century. In 1828 it was entered in the original cadastre as existing. It is an extremely well-preserved Siegerland house from the 18th century. Slated façade, steep roof with half-hipped ends and the largely preserved half-timbered framework document the form and function of a typical regional residential building with associated agriculture. This was housed in the massive area of ​​the ground floor.
The exterior and the historic wooden structure of the house are under protection.
2nd half of the 18th century 11/23/1995 051


Two-storey half-timbered house Hilchenbach
Bruchstrasse 23
Gable-independent, two-storey half-timbered house with beautiful artificial slate on the street gable and on both sides of the eaves.
The exterior of the residential building, the structural structure and the late Baroque double-winged entrance door, as well as the historical parts of the interior, are protected - but without the small extension on the eastern side of the building
2nd half of the 18th century October 21, 1985 052


Two-storey half-timbered house Hilchenbach
Market 14
Two-storey, gable-independent half-timbered house with mezzanine, built according to the inscription in the framing beam of the first floor on August 20, 1689. Motto: "FRUHDE • DICH • FLVCHE • NOT • IN • THIS HOUSE • SO • GO • ALSBALT • ZVR • THUR • HINAVS • OTHER • LIKE • GOD • FROM • HEAVENLY • PUNISHMENT • ME • VND • YOU • ZV • EQUAL. ANNO • 1 • 6 • 8 • 9 • DEN • Z0 • DAY • AVGVSTI SOLI • DEO • GLORIA. ”
The exterior of the half-timbered house is under protection.
1689 October 21, 1985 053


Two-storey half-timbered house Hilchenbach
Dammstrasse 13
Two-storey half-timbered house with a dwelling above the eastern eaves wall. One-line Fraktur inscription on the ground floor: “Built by Johann Thomas Schmiedt and Anna Margaretha Eheleuth, Aufgericht d. lo. June 1788 carpenter was Johann Jakob Freudenberg zum Dahlbruch “on the property Dammstrasse 34. In November 1982 moved to the property Dammstrasse 13. 1788 10/22/1985 054


Two-storey half-timbered house Müsen
Poststrasse 7
Two-storey half-timbered house from 1757. Low, partly protruding stone base. The uprights (four on the gable side, six on the narrow side) run through, the framing bars (swell bars) are placed in between. The continuous inscription on the eaves entrance side with sayings and inscription: "Built in 1757 by master carpenter Johannes Schmitsen for the married couple Johannes Kremer and Maria Elisabeth".
Two-line circumferential inscription Fraktur: “God the Father Son and Holy Spirit through Your Grace and Assistance, that Your power will keep the house and protect us, guide all trouble and danger, that your fullness will be ready at all times through your spirit, Father Heist and truly holy Dearest son who is unprepared, Lord, Let me call you now. The wife and also the husband Sampt their children and sint to you. All holy and all die happy there, all live forever. This house was built by Jost Hannes Kremer and Maria Elissabeta Eh-leut by room master Johannes Schmit on the 9th day of June, Herr Heilige Du Nun, this house is wicked Let us give you pure hearts every time and let's get ready We will be blessed in eternity oh Lord Since you give life and only give the holy walk that I give my life! Time Delivery In True Holy "
1757 10/30/1985 055


Residential and farm buildings Dahlbruch
Müsener Strasse 4
The two-storey building, probably from the turn of the century, the eaves side of which is designed as a front side facing the street in visible half-timbering with an axially arranged entrance, clearly shows the building work of this neoclassical construction phase, which is also clear in the formation of the verges, cornices and window frames. In addition, there is a certain urban significance of the house, which, together with the neighboring building No. 2, marks the entrance area of ​​Müsener Straße. The construction and proportions refer to a construction period in the second half of the 19th century (cf. the same, but older type of building, Hillnhütter Straße 33). As a characteristic building with the late half-timbered construction of local importance.
The exterior of the residential and farm building is under protection.
2nd half of the 19th century 11/22/1985 056


Outbuildings Dahlbruch
Müsener Strasse 6
From the same construction period as the main building at Müsener Straße 4, probably built around the turn of the century. around 1900 11/22/1985 057


Ginsberg castle ruins with outer bailey house and half-timbered house and observation tower with memorial as well as newer building additions and buildings
more pictures
Ginsberg castle ruins with outer bailey house and half-timbered house and observation tower with memorial as well as newer building additions and buildings Reason
The Schloßberg
The castle is significant for Hilchenbach to the extent described, because the history of the rule of the population of Nassau and Westphalia is attested here and because important European events began from here in 1568 through William I of Orange with the beginning of the Dutch Wars of Liberation. After 1957, as a memorial to Dutch history, the castle became an important place for German-Dutch international understanding. 11/22/2008 058


Forest service farmstead Hof Ginsberg with bakery and stables Grund
Hof Ginsberg
a) Forest house.
Single-storey, slated building on a natural stone base. Together with the Marstall, the house forms a group that characterizes this Hilchenbach region. The monument value relates to the external appearance.
b) Marstall.
Emerged from the old buildings below the Ginsburg. The St. Antonius Church, which was in the immediate vicinity in the Middle Ages, and other buildings have perished. The rectangular building was brought into its present form from older parts in the 18th century. The exterior and the entire historical construction of the complex are of monumental value.
c) Backes.
Small half-timbered building from 1823 with a slated gable roof. Typical frameless framework from the Siegerland era.
a) 1904
b) 18th century
c) 1823
11/22/1985 059


Two-storey half-timbered house Dahlbruch
Hochstrasse 18
Half-timbered house on a massive base. Former farm complex in rural construction. The two-storey framework on the entrance side shows continuous main structural frameworks with struts connected on both sides. The central frame on the eaves side entrance is decorated with an inscription that shows the construction date. Wording of the inscription: “Lord God through your grace and good this house for Bößer Raff and all harm and you bless the living in it That they are according to your will and commands the Lord the ways of God He will do everything well. Built by Johann Jacob Freudenberg Maria Elisabeth Auffgericht the 29th May 1775 carpenter Johann Jacob Freudenberg " 1775 11/29/1985 060


Half-timbered building Hilchenbach
Kirchweg 9
Half-timbered building from around 1700. Corner posts reinforced in the lower part. Judging by the structure, the beam subsequently attached above the front door with the inscription: "Johannes Kleb Catharina Married couple April 15, 1691" may have belonged to the house and name the time of construction and builder.
The exterior and the historical construction as well as the wall stucco, the relief and the Ern of the half-timbered building are placed under protection.
around 1700 December 19, 1985 061


Two-storey half-timbered house Ruckersfeld
Dreisbachstrasse 11
Two-storey half-timbered gable house. Inscription beams on the sill beams between the ground floor and first floor. This outstanding building is located at the intersection of several paths and the county road that opens onto the square and is of extraordinary importance for the design of the square. 1765 December 20, 1985 062


Two-storey half-timbered house Grund
Jung-Stilling-Strasse 21
Two-storey half-timbered house in the typical shape of the simpler, medium-sized farmhouse of the Siegerland type (2nd half of the 18th century).
Folklore as a well-preserved example of this type of importance, it effectively completes the historical development of the village in the south and is therefore an essential part of the village of Grund.
The two-story half-timbered house is under protection with the exception of the extensions on the northeast side.
2nd half of the 18th century 12/30/1985 063


Two-storey timber-framed eaves house Helberhausen
Im Henkenhof 1
Two-storey timber-framed eaves house from the end of the 18th century with a steep gable. A hatch is installed in the gable. Forms part of the old village center of Helberhausen, which would otherwise be obscured by the construction of new half-timbered houses. End of 18th century 12/30/1985 064


Monastery church with the furnishings altar with altarpiece, pulpit, choir stalls, epitaphs, grave slabs, nuns gallery, organ prospectus and bell. Monastery building with a convent hall with a rococo ceiling. Allenbach
Stift-Keppel-Weg
Keppel Abbey, former Premonstratensian nunnery, founded around 1239, since the end of the 16th century a Protestant women's monastery. The former monastery church, now an evangelical parish church, in the core from the 13th century has been rebuilt and renewed many times. The two-storey western section with a vaulted nun's gallery on the upper floor and the early Gothic choir with vaults have been preserved from the construction of the 13th century. The nave from 1779 has been flat-roofed since 1908. Carved altar from 1701, pulpit attested in 1682, organ prospectus from 1685, remains of the late Gothic choir stalls have been preserved. Monastery building, built from 1747 to 1751/52, convent hall with rococo ceiling. The bell is a historical piece of equipment that forms a unit of monument value with the church as a monument. The items of equipment are to be considered in the same way. 13th century 12/30/1985 065


Former chapel school Ruckersfeld
Am Oberrain 3
Rectangular timber-framed building placed on a stone base, which balances out the slope.
The school chapel, built in 1710, was converted into a hall on two cast iron supports in the late 19th century.
The type of the Siegerland school band is an important type in terms of religion, school history and folklore. The building is an important part of the historic district of Ruckersfeld.
1710 01/06/1986 066


Former chapel school Grund
Jung-Stilling-Strasse 11
Small half-timbered school chapel with a gable roof and turret.
For reasons of local history and urban development, it is of great importance as the center of the part of the community of Grund; in addition, the type of school chapel as a Siegerland in-house development is of folkloric and scientific (religious and school history) importance.
1792 01/06/1986 067


Waldheim House Dahlbruch
In der Mahlbach 2
Two-storey plastered solid construction. Due to the construction and location of special local importance for historical reasons (coat of arms!). 1784 01/08/1986 068


Two-storey half-timbered house Hilchenbach
Bruchstrasse 28
The two-storey building with a central entrance is an important type of house for the structural development of Hilchenbach in the 19th century. In the street scene on Bruchstrasse, the house is an essential part of the historical ensemble. In addition, the sheet metal cladding from the time of window framing is a popular example of the design inventions of historicism on half-timbered buildings. Birthplace of Carl Kraemer (father of the Animal Welfare Act). 1st half of the 19th century 01/22/1986 069


3-storey half-timbered house Hilchenbach
Market 6
The building has three floors and is gable-free on the south side of the market. In terms of urban planning, the house represents the representative type of town house when it was rebuilt after the fire of 1689. The half-timbered house built on a solid base is one of the few remaining buildings from the 17th century; Important urban planning location in the entrance area of ​​the market. The abrasive ornamentation prepares the construction methods of the half-timbering of the 18th century and is therefore important in terms of architectural history (scientific, folkloristic) for the half-timbered development in southern Westphalia.
The exterior and the old structural structure of the three-storey half-timbered house without the single-storey north-western extension on the ground floor, which has been replaced, are under protection
17th century 01/13/1986 070


3-storey half-timbered house Hilchenbach
Market 12
The three-storey half-timbered building has a slate-covered gable roof, is gable and accessible on the gable side. Its visible framework is dark brown / white.
The outer walls including the roof areas of the main building are protected, without the extension on the south side of the house.
End of 17th century 02/13/1986 071


Watermill Lützel
Altenteich
Single-storey half-timbered building on the basement. Originally there was a water wheel inside the building, this water wheel chamber is still there today, the upper ditch of the mill drains through the mill body. The structure of the framework suggests that the entire framework was used a second time. It lacks at least a complete basement. 1779 02/20/1986 072


Former Prayer house Müsen
Auf der Stollenhalde 4
Right next to the “Tiefen Stahlberger Stollen”, built between 1740 and 1780, is the prayer house, which can also be dated from this period. It is a single-storey building on a high basement level built into the slope. In the eastern gable is a clock with a Schlegel & Eisen symbol above it.
The whole building is under protection.
1740-1780 02/20/1986 073


Residential building Grund
Jung-Stilling-Strasse 15
In terms of urban planning, it is located in the center of Grund. Folklore of great importance as an example of the richly decorated Siegerland farmhouse. In the Grund district, this is the most important and largest historical building.
The elongated core of the 18th century was extended by about 1/3 in the 19th century. The original use of the farmhouse is now replaced by residential use. Detailed inscription on two sides of the house in the frame bar.
1767 02/20/1986 074


Residential building Grund
Jung-Stilling-Strasse 16
Two-storey, eaves-standing building, solid and plastered on the ground floor, and frameless timber-framed upstairs. On the ground floor there is a stone with the inscription: "Built by Johan Ebert Jung Margaretha, married couple, Ao 1730". In the 20th century the building burned down to the ground floor and then rebuilt in half-timbered houses in 1928. The famous ophthalmologist and poet Johann Heinrich Jung-Stilling (1750–1820) was born in the old house and lived there. A memorial room has been set up in the house. As a historical site, the building has a special meaning beyond the ground. 1730 02/20/1986 075


Storage building Helberhausen
Ferndorfstrasse 161
The exterior of the warehouse and its historical construction are worth a monument.
As the only agricultural outbuilding of importance, historical reasons and those for the production conditions in Helberhausen are decisive.
Because of the significant location in the street not far west of the houses by the school chapel, it is necessary to preserve it for urban planning reasons.
18th century 02/20/1986 076


Two-storey half-timbered house Ruckersfeld
Am Acker 4
Because of its rich carvings, it is listed for folklore reasons and at the same time as the southern end of the important village ensemble for urban planning reasons.
The house has two floors with sturdy wood, only the corner posts are braced.
The slated roof was raised by a low jamb strip in the second half of the 19th century, the old construction of the roof structure has been preserved in the Siegerland style, this type of conversion is of ethnological interest as it is a characteristic of the Siegerland phenomenon.
The rich carvings on the stands, mostly adorned with a protruding field on the base, which end with rolling volutes in rococo style, are of particular importance.
The threshold frame construction with profiled beam heads and filler wood is a motif which is otherwise to be found in town houses of the late 17th century (e.g. Hilchenbach am Markt). The northern eaves facade, designed as a show side, is equipped with inscriptions (biblical sayings).
1784 02/21/1986 077


Two-storey half-timbered house Vormwald
Vormwalder Strasse 44
The two-story half-timbered house is important for the street and the local history. 1st half of the 18th century 02/21/1986 078


Two-storey half-timbered house Oechelhausen
In der Rembach 3
Two-storey half-timbered house facing the street at the gable.
A barn has been preserved from the same period, but only partially can be seen because of its many additions. Groups of buildings from one time are very rare, but can be found twice here in Oechelhausen. In addition to the main building with the cattle shed, the barns are part of the economic unit and document the rural structure of the place.
The roofs of the buildings in Oechelhausen were still thatched until after the Second World War, when a hurricane covered them. Since then, the roofs have been closed with sheet metal or slate.
1752 02/21/1986 079


Half-timbered house Ruckersfeld
Dreisbachstrasse 7
Half-timbered building from the 18th century. Because of the independent details of the timber framing and the ornamented corner posts, the house is of folklore importance, also in connection with the historically and town-planning important village center of Ruckersfeld.
The house is under protection - the details of the interior are excluded from the protection. The protection status relates to the building as a whole without the younger extensions and the transverse extensions to the west.
18th century 02/21/1986 080


Two-storey half-timbered house Helberhausen
Im Henkenhof 2
Two-storey half-timbered house from the 2nd half of the 18th century. Together with the house Im Henkenhof 1 and 3, the old center of the village is marked here. For reasons of local history, the structural structure without the newer extensions is under protection. 2nd half of the 18th century 02/21/1986 081


Two-storey half-timbered house Helberhausen
Im Henkenhof 3
The property forms a structural unit with the house at Im Henkenhof 1 and was only later divided. End of 18th century 02/21/1986 082


Half-timbered house Lützel
Gillerbergstrasse 31
The former farmhouse is a well-preserved half-timbered house from the 2nd half of the 18th century. From a folkloric point of view it belongs to the type of the simpler farmhouse of the Siegerland, it was still thatched until the 20th century, today it has been replaced by sheet metal. Inside, the layout of the house from the time it was built has largely been preserved unchanged. Due to the rarity of an unaltered Erns, the house is to be assessed as of particularly high importance for folklore, making it the most important historical witness in the Lützel district. 2nd half of the 18th century 02/21/1986 083


barn Ruckersfeld
Dreisbachstrasse 9
An essential part of the town of Ruckersfeld, which is important in terms of both urban development and history.
The rear barn dates from the early 19th century. It is a vivid example of the frameless Siegerland half-timbered building. Barns in this comparably good state of preservation are almost no longer to be found in Hilchenbach. The barn is therefore of particular importance for folklore.
02/24/1986 084


Residential building Ruckersfeld
Dreisbachstrasse 9
An essential part of the town of Ruckersfeld, which is important in terms of both urban development and history.
The house is a mostly slated half-timbered building, probably rebuilt after fire around 1840 to 1860 in the traditional building tradition of the Siegerland.
Mid 19th century 02/24/1986 085


Two-storey building (so-called cruet) Müsen
Auf der Stollenhalde 7
Two-storey building on a high basement made of quarry stone.
The whole building is under protection.
02/24/1986 086


Former powder booth Müsen
On the property, the Müsen district
On the site of the former Stahlberg mine on the slope of the Martinshardt, only the so-called powder house, built in 1817, which was converted into a shelter by the SGV in 1931, stands today. Plastered building standing on a square floor plan under a rising pyramid roof. The weather vane carries flails and iron. The last landmark of a formerly flourishing ore mine.
The whole building is under protection.
1817 02/25/1986 087


Half-timbered house Oechelhausen
In der Rembach 14
The half-timbered house, dated 1756, was massively replaced on the ground floor and rebuilt inside. However, because of its location in the district of Oechelhausen, which is characteristic of urban development, the half-timbered upper floor and the gable triangles are of such great importance in terms of urban development and local history that the listed half-timbered parts are to be considered listed in their external appearance. 1756 02/25/1986 088


Two-storey half-timbered house Oechelhausen
Dreisbachstrasse 63
Two-storey half-timbered house facing the street with the gable and the double cantilevered triangle of the gable being provided with wooden paneling. The building is one of the most elaborate in the region and is in a good state of preservation, although the half-timbered structure has also been replaced by masonry on the ground floor in the stable area. 1752 02/25/1986 089


barn Oechelhausen
Dreisbachstrasse 63
Excellently preserved barn, the structure of which is secured with long struts. The profiling of the protrusion of the gable triangle is rare for the functional buildings. The barn is designed as a drive-through barn. 02/25/1986 090


Two-storey half-timbered house Ruckersfeld
Am Elme 2
Simple two-storey half-timbered house from the beginning of the 19th century. The house is an essential part of the appearance of the historically and town-planning important village of Ruckersfeld. It holds the east side of the village square. Loss of the house would destroy the unity of the historic village center. Beginning 19th century 02/25/1986 091


Two-storey half-timbered house Müsen
Hauptstrasse 99
Two-storey half-timbered house with eaves, built according to the inscription on the swell bar in 1769. The other parts of the inscriptions and ornaments are filled.
The exterior and the load-bearing historical half-timbered construction of the residential building without the details of the interior are placed under protection.
1769 28.2.986 094


Two-storey half-timbered house Müsen
Glück-Auf-Straße 20
Two-storey half-timbered building on the eaves side with continuous uprights and threshold bars in between.
The whole building is under protection.
around 1800 02/28/1986 096


Two-storey half-timbered house Müsen
Glück-Auf-Straße 34
Two-storey half-timbered house with eaves as a multi-storey building with threshold bars between the storeys. Religious sayings are noted on the threshold bars, as is the master carpenter of the house: “Johann Heinrich Koltinghausen”. The corner stands show lace scroll ornaments. In the strong central frame the inscription Fraktur partly in two lines, but no longer fully legible: "Now begin to bless that home of your servant, that he may be forever Before you then what you Lord bless ... the Lord your ways and hope in Him He will be." well he will bring his justice for like light and your justice like the Mitag 1763 master carpenter Johann Henrich Holinghausen in Haarhausen holiness is the ornament of your house forever. ”
The building is under protection as a whole without the western extension.
1763 02/28/1986 097


Half-timbered outbuildings Need
to luck-on-road 34
Half-timbered ancillary building belonging to the main building, which was built directly on Glück-Auf-Straße and probably at the same time as the house was expanded. It is partly two-story.
The whole building is under protection.
02/28/1986 098


Two-storey half-timbered house Hilchenbach
Bruchstrasse 35
This building still belongs to the earlier gable-facing development on Bruchstrasse, which was largely replaced by eaves-facing buildings towards the end of the 18th century. The building is therefore of particular importance for the history of Hilchenbach's settlement and, above all, for the development of the Bruchstrasse.
The well-preserved inner and outer structural structure also has strong folkloric informative value for the construction in the first half of the 18th century.
The half-timbered house including the internal structural structure is under protection.
1st half of the 18th century March 24, 1986 099


Jung-Stilling monument at the Protestant church Jung-Stilling monument at the Protestant church Hilchenbach
Market / Kirchweg
The historically significant monument, erected in 1871 according to the archives, is located on the east side of the Protestant church facing the market. In the axis of the church, above the stone lining wall of the church hill (with the memorial plaques of the warrior honor), the sandstone stele stands on a stepped square high base. The classicistic echoes of the monument probably refer to the life dates of the doctor and poet who died in 1817. Artistically, the monument is well integrated into the surroundings of the market square ensemble and is an important urban planning point of departure in front of the large east facade of the church.
As an example of the deliberately reserved monument design of historicism, the formal harmony in terms of design and detail design is remarkable.
1871 March 24, 1986 100


Bakehouse Lützel
Kronprinzenstrasse
This bakery has been reconstructed true to the original in simple half-timbering in accordance with the previous predecessor. All essential characteristics have been retained. The original oven is located under a pent roof on the west gable. The oven is walled in with field fire bricks. All roof surfaces are covered in sheet metal. The compartments are cleaned and painted white. 04/01/1986 101


Bakehouse Helberhausen
In der Wiere
The bakery "In der Wiere" was built from field fire stones on a rubble base. The very flat gable roof is covered in sheet metal in the typical local way. The gable triangles were made in half-timbered with plastered fields, the southern gable has a loading hatch for fuel storage. The bakehouse is accessible through a simple wooden door, while the light is provided through a central window in the south wall. 04/01/1986 102


Former tannery building Dahlbruch
Hillnhütter Strasse 35/37
The building is the last structural handicraft evidence of the former tannery village of Hillnhütten, and moreover, a tannery building is seldom so clearly recognizable in its former function. The first tannery in Dahlbruch was run by the Loos-Böcking families since 1828. It seems as if the outbuilding, now operated as a tree nursery, was the former tannery. To ventilate the upper floor of the tannery, only metal rods were inserted into the parapet, which are still preserved today. The Hillnhütter Strasse 35/37 building is shown together with the Hillnhütter Strasse 34 building on a map of the Siegen Mining Authority from 1828. 04/08/1986 103


Two-storey half-timbered house Müsen
Martinshardtstrasse 2
Two-storey half-timbered house, built in 1894 (year on the weather vane). The gable and rear eaves are slated, the front eaves shows half-timbering with infills in yellow clinker.
The front door of the house has a small gable and in the skylight is a coat of arms with a crossed hammer and mallet. Behind the house there is a still working well with a cast-iron column. This building appears to be a mine manager's villa.
The half-timbered house building is protected as a whole, without the western extension.
1894 04/28/1986 104


Single storey half-timbered house Dahlbruch
Winterbachstrasse 46
One-storey, wide-proportioned half-timbered house under a gable roof. Together with the Winterbachstraße 48 building, the building formerly formed a courtyard, which can still be recognized as such today and is located on a slight hill east above the Winterbach, characterizing the landscape.
The building that used to belong to the courtyard is now used as a residential building. It used to be the farm's barn.
18th century 06/04/1986 105


Half-timbered outbuildings Müsen
For Luck On-Road 32
Half-timbered ancillary building belonging to the main building, which was built directly on Glück-Auf-Straße and probably at the same time as the house was expanded. The small, simple half-timbered house consists of frameless uprights in which a swell bar was inserted roughly in the middle. It is partly two-story.
The whole building is under protection.
06/26/1986 106


Main house of the former courtyard Dahlbruch
Winterbachstrasse 48
Stretched two-storey half-timbered house, characterizing the landscape on a slight hill east above the Winterbach. Strong ancient framework made of stems, double struts and bolts.
After the owners changed, the building was completely renovated some time ago. The internal spatial structures were changed. Nevertheless, the framework structure is well preserved and shows the typical construction of the time with threshold bars, foot struts and short diagonal timbers. The front corner stand is particularly richly decorated. Over the threshold bars on the front side of the eaves there is an inscription that can hardly be read due to weathering.
1766 07/11/1986 107


Two-storey half-timbered house Hilchenbach
Bruchstrasse 14
Gable-independent, two-story half-timbered house, essentially from the 17th / 18th centuries. Carved left corner post on the right side of the eaves.
The northeast facade of the residential and commercial building is under protection.
17./18. Century 07/21/1986 108


Two-storey half-timbered house Hilchenbach
Bruchstrasse 3
Gabled, two-storey half-timbered house, the core from the 17th century with a rear extension from a later period (barn?).
The exterior and the historical construction of the building without the south-eastern extension are under protection.
17th century 07/21/1986 109


Two-storey half-timbered house Hilchenbach
Bruchstrasse 29
Eaves, two-storey half-timbered building from around 1800, rebuilt and extended at the end of the 19th century, renovated in 1984/85. Five-axis street facade provided with light-colored plaster and crowned by an aedicule with an oval window. The first floor was converted into a shop around 1900 and provided with shop windows.
The exterior and the constructive structure of the residential and commercial building are protected.
around 1800 07/21/1986 110


villa Hilchenbach
Trift 3
Two-storey doctor's villa with a practice, built in 1926/27, with light plaster over the eaves.
The outside and the stairwell inside are placed under protection.
1926/27 07/23/1986 113


Two-storey half-timbered house Hilchenbach
Unterzeche 4
Two-storey, gable-independent half-timbered house above a high cellar. Spolie with the year 1689 above the cellar door; Core of the house probably from this time. The entry of the inscription bar was deleted from the list of monuments on November 13, 1997.
The southeast half-timbered facade of the first floor of the residential and commercial building is under protection.
1689 01/12/1987 114


Two-storey half-timbered house Dahlbruch
Hillnhütter Strasse 33
Representative two-storey half-timbered house on a stone base, hipped slate roof on a profiled cornice. Remarkably symmetrical framework structure with posts, struts and transoms. An inscription on the left of the first floor threshold. Of local importance for historical reasons.
The exterior of the half-timbered house is under protection.
1793 03/17/1987 115


Two-storey half-timbered house Hilchenbach
In the Herrenwiese 29
Two-storey building with a half-hip roof. Half-timbered upper floor with slated street front. The building part facing the street indicates a construction period of the 18th century with its sturdy diagonal struts.
The historical wooden construction and the external appearance without the details of the interior of the house are under protection.
18th century March 31, 1987 116


Former Workers' dormitory Dahlbruch
Carl-Kraus-Strasse 4
The building is an almost 30 meter long half-timbered house with a gable roof facing the street. The building was erected in 1872 using what is known as the “economy half-timbered construction”. The building was originally divided into four almost equally sized dormitories by three transverse partition walls. Each hall had a stove, which can still be seen on the outside of the chimney heads. Each dormitory was accessed separately, namely those at the head ends through upstream staircases, which also provided access to the attic, the two middle ones through an upstream, closed entrance area with two doors on the eaves side.
The exterior of the former workers' dormitory without later staircase extensions on the north and south sides is under protection and inside only the original half-timbered construction for dividing the building into dormitories and the three chimneys from the time the building was built.
1872 04/10/1987 117


Half-timbered house with vaulted cellar Hadem
In der Dahl 4
With neighboring house witnessed the historical peasantry rags so important for the history of this settlement. In terms of urban planning, the house and its neighbor (No. 1) are centrally located on the slope and determine the group of houses in this settlement.
The core of the house is an 18th century complex, on the western and southern sides it was slated in the 19th century and appealingly structured with new windows with white window frames (here small extensions from the 19th century). The other two sides show the framework. On the gable side, ethnically significant clay infills with incised ornaments are partially visible.
In the house there is a small cellar with a barrel vault. The stair access is typically located on one of the sides of the arch. The basement receives ventilation and a little light through a sloping shaft because it is fully underground. Cellars of this shape are difficult to date precisely, they exist from the Middle Ages to the middle of the 19th century. Judging by the woodwork above it, it may have originated here in the 18th century. Together with the house, it forms a unit of monumental value.
The exterior and the structural structure of the half-timbered house with the vaulted cellar are protected.
18th century 05/13/1987 118


Two-storey half-timbered house Hilchenbach
Unterzeche 6
Small two-story half-timbered house on a high cellar. It was built in the first half of the 19th century before 1854. From this point in time until 1890 it was used as a municipal guardhouse with a prison. In private ownership since 1890, initially still used as a prison, then as a residential building. The house is listed for reasons of town history and urban development. As an important urban development object, which can be seen from the market square as well as from the Unterzeche, its outer outlines and its constructive structure as well as the historically preserved structure on the inside are placed under protection.
The exterior and the structural structure are protected, and the historically preserved structure of the building inside.
1st half of the 19th century 07/01/1988 119


Residential and commercial building Hilchenbach
Bruchstrasse 1
Two-storey, gable-independent building over a half-basement, probably from the 19th century. Gable triangle protruding slightly. Historical shop windows on the ground floor, from the same time the gable side was slated. The urban historical value is high.
According to the documents submitted, the south-eastern extension of the house (back gable side) is well preserved as a historical half-timbered part (probably from the 18th century). It is part of the entire house.
The exterior and the historical construction including the south-eastern extension are under protection.
19th century 07/01/1988 120


Residential and commercial building Hilchenbach
Gerbergasse 6
The house was rebuilt shortly after 1844 (before 1850) after its previous building (called 1810-1822) was destroyed in the town fire in 1844.
It is a late classical two-storey eaves house made of half-timbered houses with a gable roof. The slab of walls show the pretty, local field divisions and decorative ribbons.
circa 1844 01/13/1988 121


Two-storey half-timbered house Hilchenbach
Schützenstrasse 16
The house, which already existed in 1772, is a two-storey half-timbered house with a gable roof, which faces the Schützenstraße without the gable. In the eastern part of the city, the house is one of the oldest surviving buildings. Both the half-timbered structure and the relatively steep roof show that it was built in the 18th century.
The house is under protection without the small, towed part at the rear building.
before 1772 March 22, 1988 122


Half-timbered house Hilchenbach
Dammstrasse 19
The house, which dates from the 18th century, was renovated and converted in 1982/83 in coordination with the Westphalian Office for Monument Preservation. The detailed design of the interior had to be largely renewed and adapted to today's use.
Despite the need to replace the missing half-timbered material, the historical shape of a house from the 18th century was retained, which was given its present-day shape in the 19th century with regard to the window openings and through partial replacement of the half-timbered structure (pure frame construction).
The exterior and the historical half-timbered construction are under protection, as far as they are still preserved, without the details of the interior.
18th century 10/11/1988 123


Entrance building of the Vormwald train station Entrance building of the Vormwald train station Reason
at the customs post 2
Two-storey, transversely accessible half-timbered building under a gable roof and with floating gables, down the valley there is a wing of the same height, the floating gable of which is designed as a crooked hip on the track side.
Waiting room III was on the ground floor. Class as well as the station master's office.
1887 10/12/1988 124


Farmhouse and barn Vormwald
Dorfstrasse 10
Main house from the 18th century with a younger extension and the barn on the side of the street, dated 1765. The house is a two-storey half-timbered building from the 18th century with a younger transverse building on the south side that has been changed several times. This courtyard can be assessed as particularly well preserved, as only small parts of the ground floor have been replaced. 1765 10/31/1988 125


Half-timbered house Ruckersfeld
Dreisbachstrasse 5
Typical Siegerland farmhouse. End of 18th century 12/12/1988 126


Former school Im Hänchen 4 Grund
Jung-Stilling-Strasse 9b
School built around 1920 with hipped roof, plastered masonry, base made of quarry stone. Right wide door with stairs in front to the classroom; on the narrow side entrance to the teacher's apartment. around 1920 12/12/1988 127


Entrance portal of the tunnel mouth hole (so-called prince portal) Müsen
On the property, the Müsen district
Oval standing tunnel mouth hole with board door, flank walls sloping down on both sides, executed in rough quarry stone masonry. Semicircular keystone, in the ridge of the portal with the inscription: Entry and exit to the Müsener Stahlberg, made in May 1789. 1789 01/25/1989 128


Entrance portal of the tunnel mouth hole Müsen
on the Stollenhalde
Standing oval mouth hole with walls made of quarry stone. In the semicircular keystone inscription "Tiefer Müsener Stollen 1740 - 1780". A coat of arms inserted in the cheek wall next to the tunnel mouth hole on the left. Both the heraldic plaque and the inscription in the keystone are based on documents from the Westphalian Office for Monument Preservation, Munster, after the Stahlberg mine was closed; it refers here to contemporary photographs from 1931. 01/25/1989 129


villa Hilchenbach
In the Herrenwiese 17
The villa, begun in 1907 and completed in 1908, was built by the architects Weyer & Kneip in Siegen for the reindeer Wilhelm Wolschendorff. In 1939 it came into the possession of the ev.-ref. Parish of Hilchenbach. It is an artistically balanced example of the homely style of home. 1907/1908 March 22, 1989 130


Half-timbered house Hilchenbach
Dammstrasse 10
The timber-framed house from the 18th century without the hall or staircase extension and without the massive extension at the rear is worth a monument.
The Dammstraße is part of the historic area of ​​Hilchenbach, it is the eastern part of the town center, as the plan shows: Demolition of the Hilchenbach area in 1772 (shown in: 300 Jahre Stadtrechte Hilchenbach 1987, p. 17). There it is the first (larger) house in the southeast row diagonally across from the Wilhelmsburg. The situation at that time can still be seen today, even in substantial parts of the houses, which means that the entire section of Dammstrasse, in which No. 10 is located, is also important for urban planning reasons as well as city history. The Hilchenbach townscape at its core is one of the most important old townscapes in the Siegerland. The house represents the large urban house type that became common in Hilchenbach after the fire in 1689; gable-independent and multi-storey, rich half-timbered configuration and steep pitched roof.
18th century 06/26/1989 131


Bakehouse Ruckersfeld
Rittersbergstrasse
The bakery is a community bakery in the village of Ruckersfeld.
The building shows the characteristic shape of this type as a relatively small single-storey half-timbered house with a gable roof. The black and white framework is exposed on three sides. It shows the design features of the later 18th century with symmetrically arranged oblique struts.
late 18th century 06/30/1989 132


The 1986 building of the Jung-Stilling-Gymnasium Hilchenbach
Jung-Stilling-Allee 8
The building is important for the regional Siegerland school history, as well as for the local history, as a teacher’s seminar of major regional importance. In terms of urban planning, the building shapes the historic townscape through its striking location on the mountain above the city center.
The brick building in the shape of a horseshoe with a rear connection to a central wing follows the style typical of the Prussian Empire, consisting of eclectic motifs from Italian brick architecture, classicist and renaissance forms. The somewhat sober, but effectively structured structure is a clear example of this style level.
1896 10/17/1989 133


Two-storey half-timbered house Hilchenbach
Bruchstrasse 41 and 43
The property is a two-story half-timbered house with a gable roof, facing the street. The northern extension took place in 1848 and is carried out in Siegerland economy framework.
The building is said to have been rebuilt in Hilchenbach an der Bruchstrasse in 1655 and was one of the few houses to be spared from a fire in Hilchenbach in 1687. The top floor ceiling, the roof structure and the roof covering were renewed after the fire.
The half-timbered house including the transverse extensions on the front northern side and the rear southern side is under protection.
17th century 03/12/1990 134


Lookout tower on the Giller
more pictures
Lookout tower on the Giller Lützel
The scaffolding includes the entire tower structure with platforms. On the 653 m high Giller near Hilchenbach-Lützel, the steel structure was built as a lookout tower in 1892. The tower is about 25 m high and has 2 platforms with a base area of ​​about 4 × 4 m. It is accessed by a self-supporting spiral staircase. Steps and platforms are equipped with checker plate floors. The Gillerturm belongs to a group of 5 lookout towers in the Siegerland Bergland, each of which is constructed differently. 1892 09/17/1990 135


Three-storey half-timbered building Hilchenbach
Unterzeche 11
The building is a three-storey half-timbered building with a massive wall section on the northern ground floor. While the lower two floors are made of massive Siegerland truss technology from the time up to the 18th century, the upper floor shows the Siegerland economy truss from the 19th and 20th centuries.
Today's twin house Unterzeche 11/13 was probably built in 1692 after a painted date, although the incised bar inscription refers to a “Rabartur” under the direction of master Johann Henrich. The builder could have been Johannes Müller the Elder, as he is mentioned as a citizen in 1687 according to the citizens' list for the house that burned down on May 1st, 1689.
The division into a semi-detached house must have taken place before 1821, as the owners JH Scheib (Unterzeche 11) and J. Homrich (Unterzeche 13) are already mentioned in the original cadastre from 1821.
The monument includes the half-timbered structure under a gently sloping gable roof without the flat extension on the south-eastern gable.
1692 01/09/1991 136


Two-storey half-timbered house Müsen
Glück-Auf-Straße 32
Two-storey half-timbered house with eaves built as a multi-storey building with threshold bars between the storeys. Religious sayings are noted on the threshold bars, as is the master carpenter of the house: “Johann Heinrich Koltinghausen”. The corner stands show lace scroll ornaments. At the beginning of the 19th century the house was extended to the right and then divided into a double house in the middle.
The exterior and the exterior and interior historical, load-bearing wooden construction that holds the house together without the details and the room layout of the interior are protected.
1763 06/17/1991 137


Two-storey half-timbered house Müsen
Hauptstrasse 101
The two-storey half-timbered house standing on the eaves, which, according to the inscription on the Schwellriegel, was built in 1769 and extended to the right in the 19th century, together with the half-timbered house on Hauptstraße 99, which was entered in the list of monuments of the city of Hilchenbach in 1986, forms a semi-detached house, with a respective dwelling for the district of Müsen is of high testimony value. Apart from the church, the building belongs to the old village center and is one of the earliest construction groups there in the 19th century. The small division of the house and its neighbor, Hauptstrasse 99, testifies to the sparse economic power of the place in the 19th century, but with its expansion in the 19th century, it documents circumstances that are probably related to the real division and inheritance law of the time. In this respect, the building is a remarkable testimony to social history in the 18th and 19th centuries. Its scientific value is increased by the fact that the expansion in the 19th century can be seen in the type of framework. The older and smaller half-timbered forms - in order to save wood - are being replaced by larger-sized ones, which is characteristic of the Siegerland half-timbering in the 19th century and has led to the term "saving framework". It is particularly easy to read on the gable side. By filling some of the old carved inscriptions with a spatula, the exterior of the house also contains old sources, which must be kept for the history of the building but also for folklore for the purpose of cataloging.
The exterior of the semi-detached house without the barn extension to the north is under protection.
1769 09/04/1991 138


Half-timbered house Oechelhausen
Dreisbachstrasse 61
On the southern gable front, the corner post is carved as an angular baroque baluster. In the half-timbered building in the Hilchenbach area, rich in many independent detail forms, the baluster stand is not to be found anywhere else.
On today's half-timbered exterior, the balusters carved into the corner posts indicate an originally rich ornamental treatment of the front, which may still largely be completely preserved under the younger, also listed slate. The half-timbered cladding with slate has been prevalent in the Siegerland since the 19th century, the associated window designs with the white bezels once again formed a creatively valuable state.
The exterior and its historic wooden construction without the new northern extension of the building are under protection.
05/13/1992 139


Half-timbered house Vormwald
Im Watzenseifen 1
One of the most important farmhouses in the Siegerland. The half-timbered house is one of the most valuable of this type in the Siegerland from the 18th century (cf. Kienzier, Siegerland half-timbered houses, p. 33). The two-storey house, a transverse Ernhaus, is now completely converted for residential purposes. The house is the oldest and most important in the street village of the Vormwald district, and is also of great importance for folklore for the independent style of the historic Siegerland half-timbered house. 1770 05/13/1992 140


Half-timbered house Vormwald
Siebelnhofer Strasse 2
The half-timbered house is one of the most valuable of this type in the Siegerland from the 18th century (cf. Kienzier, Siegerland half-timbered houses, p. 33). The two-storey house, a transverse Ernhaus, is now completely converted for residential purposes. The threshold beam of the upper floor is marked with a continuous inscription on the gable front. The house is the oldest and most important in the street village of the Vormwald district, and is also of great importance for folklore for the independent style of the historic Siegerland half-timbered house. 1770 05/13/1992 141


Two-storey half-timbered house Grund
Auf der Burg 1
Two-storey half-timbered house attached to the eaves from the 2nd half of the 18th century and renovations and extensions from the 1st half of the 19th century.
The facade of the house forms an ensemble with the school chapel and illustrates the location.
Exactly opposite this chapel school is the house Auf der Burg 1, which, according to the entries in the original cadastre, was built in its current form between 1828 and 1840. Despite some modernizations, the house is an essential historical reference point for the core of the village settlement. It still clearly shows the old form of settlement with the type of house that combines living and agriculture.
The building in its historical wooden construction, the outline of the building and the eaves facade facing the chapel are placed under protection; the details inside are exempt from monument protection.
2nd half of the 18th century 05/20/1992 142


Half-timbered building Hilchenbach
Market 2
Gable-independent half-timbered building from the 1st half of the 19th century. The group of houses at Bruchstrasse 2, Markt 2, consisting essentially of two rectangular houses that meet in an L-shape, was built in and rebuilt in the 19th and 20th centuries in such a way that a structurally coherent complex was created.
The exterior and the structural structure of the house without the extension to the church path, the converted ground floor and the 19th century front door are placed under protection.
1st half of the 19th century 06/12/1992 143


Three-storey half-timbered house Hilchenbach
Bruchstrasse 2
Gable-mounted three-storey half-timbered building from the early 19th century and an extension to the rear. The group of houses at Bruchstrasse 2, Markt 2, consisting essentially of two rectangular houses that meet in an L-shape, was built in and rebuilt in the 19th and 20th centuries in such a way that a structurally coherent complex was created.
The exterior and the constructive structure of the residential and commercial building without the shop on the ground floor are protected.
19th century 06/12/1992 144


Half-timbered building Dahlbruch
Ernst-August-Platz 1
Two wings at right angles to each other. Single-storey half-timbered houses on stone plinths under saddle roofs. Irregular half-timbered framework, almost without a bolt. Of importance for the history of the house.
The exterior of the building is under protection.
1836 10/12/1992 145


Residential building Dahlbruch
Wittgensteiner Strasse 163
Representative and stately two-storey slated house on a stone basement, with open stairs and terrace in front. Of the eight axes, the four in the middle are grouped under a flat gable. Because of the opulent and harmonious design and for historical reasons of national importance. 1835 10/12/1992 146


Two-storey half-timbered house Dahlbruch
Hillnhütter Strasse 34
Two-storey half-timbered eaves house under a slate gable roof.
The exterior of the house and the historic wooden construction without the massive outer wall on the south side and without the details inside are placed under protection.
18th century 06/08/1993 148


Perforated brick Müsen
on the Martinshardt
Marking made in ashlar on a rectangular floor plan, visible approx. 10 cm above ground. Marking in the form of a cross worked into the head surface. 04/29/1994 149


building Hilchenbach
In der Erzebach 1
The building, erected in the late 19th century, is located at the historic west end of the old town of Hilchenbach, where it forms an important group of buildings from this period with the houses Bruchstrasse 46, 47.
The exterior and the structural structure including the roof and the roof skin of the south-facing transverse tract and the details of the south-east street facade of the building are under protection; The interior of the building is excluded from the preservation order.
19th century 10/17/1994 150


Classicist half-timbered house Hilchenbach
Im Unteren Marktfeld 1
Classicist half-timbered house with a slate-covered half-hip roof / including a slightly recessed part of the building with a slate-covered gable roof as an economic part. On the back of these two buildings, the common eaves line of both houses delimits the monument.
The main house with the present two-armed flight of stairs and the extension are placed under protection. The protection position relates to the exterior and to the constructive frictional framework and the current interior room layout. The room layout on the ground floor and first floor is excluded.
10/21/1994 151


Two-storey gable roof eaves house Hilchenbach
Rothenberger Strasse 24
It is a two-storey gable roof eaves house as a former horizontal deel house, the deel of which was on the rich eaves side. The building was erected using the frameless framework customary in the landscape and its facade was initially clad with wooden blocks. This cladding is still preserved in the base area. This was followed by slate cladding on the facade and the right-hand gable side.
The south, east and west building walls with their structural structure including their visible external cladding and the roof covering of the house are placed under protection.
2nd half of the 19th century 02/10/1995 152


Three-storey half-timbered building Hilchenbach
Bruchstrasse 12
Gable-mounted, three-storey half-timbered building, essentially from the 17th century with a three-storey extension at the rear.
The exterior of the house including the north-western extension (ie the construction and cladding of the outer walls and the roof truss) is under protection, but without the other extensions.
17th century 02/07/1995 153


15 historical boundary stones between Hilchenbach and Kirchhundem various
different hallways
and parcels
The historical boundary stones between Hilchenbach, Kirchhundem, Kreuztal and Olpe prove the historical development in this area. The border between Siegen-Nassau and Kurköln has been marked since the early 14th century by a Landwehr that can still be seen in large parts. These border marking and security systems lost their importance in the second half of the 17th century. Partial areas were sold. They were replaced by the boundary stones in question, which can thus be regarded as the "modern" successors of the Landwehr.
The historical boundary stones are important for the districts of Olpe and Siegen-Wittgenstein, because they make the history of this region more explorable and demonstrable. There are scientific reasons for their preservation and use with regard to regional and political history, because important political events in Westphalia and Germany, but also in the indirectly affected narrower regions, can be attested on the basis of the earlier borderline.
08/24/1995 154


Historic landmark A Historic landmark A Wingeshausen district
Front inscription: COLLEN in the state coat of arms, letter A; Inscription on the back of NASSAW in the state coat of arms 08/24/1995 154 A


Historic landmark B Historic landmark B Wingeshausen district
Front inscription: COLLEN in the state coat of arms, letter B; Inscription on the back of NASSAW in the state coat of arms 08/24/1995 154 B


Historic landmark C Historic landmark C District Kirchhundem
Inscription on the front: coat of arms, Balkenkreuz, 1674; Inscription on the back IAC-T, coat of arms, 1674, hunting horn 1674 08/24/1995 154 C


Historic landmark D Historic landmark D District Kirchhundem
Inscription on the front: coat of arms, Balkenkreuz, 1674; Inscription on the back IAC-T, coat of arms, 1674, hunting horn 1674 08/24/1995 154 D.


Historic landmark E Historic landmark E District Kirchhundem
Front inscription: COLLEN in the state coat of arms, letter E; Inscription on the back of NASSAW in the state coat of arms 08/24/1995 154 E.


Historic landmark F Historic landmark F District Kirchhundem
Front inscription: COLLEN in the state coat of arms, letter F; Inscription on the back of NASSAW in the state coat of arms 08/24/1995 154 F.


Historic landmark G Historic landmark G District Kirchhundem
Inscription on the front: COLLEN in the state coat of arms, the letter G; Inscription on the back of NASSAW in the state coat of arms 08/24/1995 154 G


Historic landmark H Historic landmark H District Kirchhundem
Inscription on the front: COLLEN in the state coat of arms, the letter H; Inscription on the back of NASSAW in the state coat of arms 08/24/1995 154 H.


Historic landmark I Historic landmark I District Kirchhundem
Front inscription: COLLEN in the state coat of arms, letter I; Inscription on the back of NASSAW in the state coat of arms 08/24/1995 154 I.


Historic landmark K Historic landmark K District Kirchhundem
Front inscription: COLLEN in the state coat of arms, letter K; Inscription on the back of NASSAW in the state coat of arms 08/24/1995 154 K


Historic landmark L Historic landmark L District Kirchhundem
Inscription on the front: COLLEN in the state coat of arms, the letter L; Inscription on the back of NASSAW in the state coat of arms 08/24/1995 154 L


Historic landmark M Historic landmark M District Kirchhundem
Front inscription: COLLEN in the state coat of arms, letter M; Inscription on the back of NASSAW in the state coat of arms 08/24/1995 154 M.


Historic landmark N. Historic landmark N. District Kirchhundem
Front inscription: COLLEN in the state coat of arms, letter N; Inscription on the back of NASSAW in the state coat of arms 08/24/1995 154 N.


Historic landmark P Historic landmark P District Kirchhundem
Front inscription: COLLEN in the state coat of arms, letter P; Inscription on the back of NASSAW in the state coat of arms 08/24/1995 154 P.


Historic landmark Q Historic landmark Q District Kirchhundem
Front inscription: COLLEN in the state coat of arms, letter Q; Inscription on the back of NASSAW in the state coat of arms 08/24/1995 154 Q


Half-timbered house Vormwald
Dorfstrasse 6
Completely preserved half-timbered building as a gable roof eaves house in frameless framework, which was built as a sideline in 1865 according to the building files. The house still shows all functional relationships through its original room layout and all traffic, work and living areas in the building. It is characterized as a house that should enable a farmer in rural areas to live in middle-class living, and it seems to be one of the earliest in such a village environment.
The restructuring of the Siegerland at that time to a landscape completely determined by industry is easy to understand here.
The property is important for the city of Hilchenbach because it is part of the earliest layer in Vormwald with regard to the redensification of the 19th century and the building has been completely preserved both inside and out. This makes the property particularly suitable for showing and researching historical processes and developments in Hilchenbach.
There are scientific reasons for the monument value, because with regard to the building history, the residential house built in bourgeois form with agricultural sideline occupation confirms the tradition of the Siegerland frameless framework, which was introduced since 1790, also for the 1860s.
Urban planning reasons for the monument value exist because the house is at the fork in the road to the village entrance. Here it is a noticeable urban planning reference point in the through-town of Vormwald. Here it determines the appearance of the street scene and characterizes it. Therefore, there is a close connection between the house and the other facilities and buildings in Vormwald. The completely preserved internal structures of the building, which make up the construction and the floor plan, are also particularly valuable.
1865 09/27/1995 155


Three-storey half-timbered building Hilchenbach
Bruchstrasse 4
Gable-independent, three-storey half-timbered building with later additions. For urban planning reasons, the half-timbered construction and the facade are worthy of protection.
The facade, including the roof outline and the historical half-timbered construction, is under protection, but without the additions and without the details of the interior, the residential and commercial building.
06/12/1996 156


Entrance portal of the tunnel mouth hole without the iron door of the deep tunnel including retaining walls of the former quarry Have to
Round-arched closed tunnel mouth hole located in a rose cut on the slope. The entrance portal made of processed natural stones carefully put together. Large keystone with the inscription “Entrance and exit of the Brueche pit. Started in 1777. Bricked in 1802.1822 with the tunnel hewn into the passage ”.
An iron door with the inscription “Wasserwerk Müsen-Dahlbruch 1951” and the mine emblem Schlägel und Eisen closes the entrance. It is not part of the monument.
Retaining walls in dry masonry running to the east. The northern wall, however, only survives in very few remains and has been partially buried (therefore it cannot be precisely mapped).
The object is significant for human history, as it is an important testimony to the once flourishing metal ore and iron stone mining in the Siegerland, which dates back around 2500 years. For the preservation and use of the property, scientific reasons, in particular relating to the economic and mining history of the region, must be named. In addition, the tunnel mouth hole provides information about the solution to this special building task at that time and enables comparisons with other objects, so that in this context architectural and historical reasons must also be given for its preservation and use.
10/01/1996 157


Former Vormwald school Vormwald
Vormwalder Strasse 45
Slightly set back from the street, massive building consisting of two structures; single-storey plastered building on the eaves with a slate-covered gable roof - probably added at the end of the 19th century.
The building is important for the school history of Hilchenbach, especially for the formerly independent district of Vormwald. The building erected in 1879 contains a classroom and a larger teacher's apartment. The class wing was increased at the beginning of the 20th century in order to enlarge the teacher's apartment or to create a second apartment, since the substance and structure have largely been preserved, the school conditions of the late 19th and 20th centuries in a village can still be clearly seen . The school building is a good example of a small, historic school; the building type is still very well preserved despite the later addition.
1879 11/17/1997 158


Florenberg School (1906) Hilchenbach
Kirchweg 17
Representative simple school building - two-storey plastered building (rough plaster) with a pitched roof (roof covering - artificial slate) on a further protruding, slope-leveling basement.
The building is important for the history of Hilchenbach because it is evidence of its development. Industrialization and the associated prosperity led to a number of representative new buildings that are important both for the infrastructure of the place and for its appearance. The former four-class elementary school was the new city school, which replaced the old school building on Hilchenbacher Strasse.
The school house is evidence of the very elaborate style of the late imperial era; According to today's criteria, representation, building volume and function are in a certain disproportion to function, which is typical of the time. This is particularly evident in the exterior and the elaborately designed staircase. The styles mark the transition from historicism to reform style.
The newer extension and the modern components in the old building are excluded from the protection status.
1906 11/17/1997 159


The grave of Lina Krämer from 1913 in the old cemetery Hilchenbach Hilchenbach
Jung-Stilling-Allee
Basket-arch shaped tombstone (concrete) with bas-relief (kneeling female figure with robe) described; bears the inscription: Lina Krämer geb. Wirth, * Dec. 20, 1868, † Sept. 29, 1913.
The tombstone is important for human history, as it is a testimony to the change in the cult of the dead and ideas about the afterlife in the early 20th century. In contrast to the usual representations and symbols on tombstones, there is no evidence of a religious-Christian topic, which is most likely due to the worldview of the deceased and their family. Since there are no pictorial and textual indications of a life after death and a resurrection, it can be assumed that the depiction of a grieving woman suggests the thought of death as final.
The tombstone is a high quality document for cemetery culture at present. The motif of the grieving woman and the ornamentation are high-quality evidence of the late Art Nouveau.
1913 11/17/1997 160


Former Nassau country palace "Wilhelmsburg" Former Nassau country palace "Wilhelmsburg" Hilchenbach
Im Burgweiher 1
card
Former Nassau State Palace - seat of the district court until 1976; Well-proportioned massive baroque building with ground floor, upper floor and attic.
The building is significant for Hilchenbach because it is a testimony to the rulership and administrative history of the place and the former northern part of the County of Siegen. The previous buildings in the same place were a castle, which was expanded in 1623, and two residential buildings. The current building follows on from these previous buildings.
The building is a testament to a simple, late baroque-classicist, stately building with a symmetrical arrangement of the five-axis eaves and two-axis gable facades. The extension of 1844/46, recognizable by the somewhat wider wall section between the windows of the core building and that of the annex as well as the roof structure, is carried out in the same forms as the original building. The dwelling is likely to come from the same period. In terms of urban planning, the building is important because the parcel is one of the fixed points in the development of the area. a. also orientated the reconstruction of the place, which was partially destroyed by multiple fires.
11/04/1997 161


Sweat cellar of the former Hüttenhein tannery Hilchenbach
Bruchstrasse
The memorial consists of the two right basement vaults 1 and 2 made of quarry stone, the two extraction shafts in the side walls and another, smaller room behind basement 2 (see attached plan). There are several large iron hooks in basement rooms 1 and 2. Each basement room can be reached via a separate entrance. The gate openings with a segmented upper end are closed by double-leaf, simple iron gates on the inside. In the middle between the two gates, in the upper area of ​​the facade, a rectangular stone is walled up with the designation "1846" and in old German numbers - "1495".
The sweat cellars of the former Hüttenhain tannery are important for human history because they represent a vivid document for the development of local economic history. The property continues to be important for the development of working and production conditions in the tannery trade in the second half of the 19th century.
1846 04/27/2004 162


Rectory with its barn Hilchenbach
Kirchplatz 2
The rectory
The building is a simple, eaves-facing, two-storey residential building with a slate-covered gable roof, facing the church square. The rectory was built in 1866 as the fourth rectory in the parish. In 1867, the house received slate on its rear wall surface to protect it against rain. In 1877 it was plastered with a water-lime plaster, in 1911 it received electric light, in 1912 a telephone. Allegedly a covered, old well in the basement of the rectory.
The barn
The barn was built in half-timbered houses and received a sheet metal roof. In a major fire on May 1, 1689, the rectory and the parish barn burned down in Hilchenbach. Based on calculations, it must be assumed that the parish barn was built in 1691. However, it must also be assumed that the parish barn was repeatedly repaired, so that only a small portion of the old building fabric from 1691 is preserved. The rectory and barn are to be seen as a functional unit.
The rectory with its barn is important for the city of Hilchenbach because it was the residence of the leading theologian and thus one of the most important personalities in the town for a long time. There are scientific reasons for its preservation and use in terms of church history and the building history of the rectory, which always had to follow its own building laws. However, there are considerable reasons for the preservation and use of the rectory and barn for reasons of urban development, because the rectory and the church form a historical ensemble in the middle of the historic town center of Hilchenbach. Without the rectory and its barn, an essential part of this historical character would be lost.
1866
1691
07/19/2004 163


Confirmation house Hilchenbach
Kirchplatz 3
The former confirmation house is a half-timbered house with gable roofs facing the eaves and facing the church square. It is a typical half-timbered construction that has become known under the name Sparfachwerk and, because of its clear and aesthetic design, has been included in the work of the famous photographers Bernd and Holla Becher, especially in this example.
The building was built in 1880 as a toddler school and confirmation house, and later also served as a community center. The children's school was run by a sister in Bethel, who for a while lived in the house with the deaconess who cared for the sick and was employed by the city.
The building is important for the city of Hilchenbach because it bears witness to the social welfare in this city. There are scientific reasons for preservation and use with regard to regional history and educational history. In addition, urban planning reasons speak for the monumental value of the building to a considerable extent, because it gives the church square its historical appearance in connection with the church, the rectory and the parish barn.
07/19/2004 164


Residential building Hilchenbach
Ferndorfstrasse 23
The exterior and the constructive structure inside are worth a monument. It is a two-storey, eaves-standing half-timbered house with a slated gable roof on a plastered basement leveling the slope. The front, back and left gable sides are slated, the back is plastered on the ground floor. The right gable has a plastic panel cladding.
The front door at the front is emphasized by a central dwelling in the roof. The windows seem to have received a new frame around 1900. In the process, they were given simple planks, mirrors and profiled roof cornices, including a tooth-cut frieze and shutters with slats. The window sashes were renewed again later in the old format, but without bars. The house entrance, with the same frame, also has a new door. The original workshop extension, which today serves as a garage, is located on the right gable.
The building is important for the city of Hilchenbach, because it is part of the historical inventory of half-timbered buildings that characterize the place and was also built on an early extension of the town, Neustraße. As a contemporary and locally representative home of a carter and then a cooper, it bears witness to the living conditions of urban tradespeople in the 19th century in Siegerland. Folklore reasons for entry in the list of monuments must also be given here.
There are scientific reasons for the maintenance and use of the building with regard to the economic history, because the history of the traders in the Siegerland is not sufficiently documented and researched. To a considerable extent, however, there are also urban planning reasons in favor of the monument value, as the house is located in the soft image of the historic town center, which is characterized by half-timbered and slate buildings and thus contributes to the character of the existing house.
12/18/2006 165


Two-storey half-timbered house with extension Hilchenbach
Kirchweg 11
Small, two-storey, gable-independent half-timbered house with an extension at right angles to the main house and in line with the rear gable.
The house is visible on the church square and market, which are important in terms of urban development, and are surrounded by several architectural monuments. Due to its simpler and smaller construction, it can be clearly assigned to a different development phase in Hilchenbach than the neighboring houses to the market that were built earlier.
The property is important for the city of Hilchenbach because it is a testimony to the development of the city in the 19th century using the example of the house of its less wealthy owners. Its location also testifies to the continuation of Hilchenbach's development, because it is the first significantly smaller house on the street that was freshly developed out of town in this part around 1830.
There are scientific reasons for its preservation and use with regard to social history and folklore reasons. There are considerable urban planning reasons because the house - even if it is in the outskirts - determines the characteristic impression of the Hilchenbach town center.
The entire house with its extension is worth a monument. The plastic cladding on the house is not part of the monument scope.
1835/1903 08/15/2008 166


Two-storey half-timbered house Hilchenbach
Dammstrasse 2
Building no. 2 is a two-storey, fully basement half-timbered building on the eaves facing Dammstraße on a slope on a sandstone plinth.
The building in question Dammstr. 2 is important for the city of Hilchenbach. It was built in 1821 by the saddler and businessman Johannes Knipp (1759-1852) for his daughter Katharina Knipp, (4-803-1858) and his son-in-law, red tanner Friedrich Hüttenhain (1801-1849). Their marriage took place in 1824. In 1890, the couple's son, Ferdinand Hüttenhain, applied for the shop window to be installed in house no. 2, which is still to the left of the front door. In this move, the whole house seems to have been adapted to the living requirements of the time, and the toilet bay was probably added in this context. The house is thus a testament to the living and working of a Hilchenbach family in the 19th century. The history of the city and a family can be seen and explored on the basis of this building in a prominent location. In terms of town planning history, the house is one of the buildings for which it was permitted for the first time to build on the line of sight between Wilhelmsburg and the valley. This process is historically remarkable, but not yet adequately investigated. It is all the more important to preserve the structural evidence of this new era in Hilchenbach. Urban planning reasons also speak for the preservation and use of the property with regard to its location. The house limits the significant open space between Wilhelmsburg and Dammstrasse. This connection between historical structures on Markt, Wilhelmsburg and Dammstraße, which is still visible today, is an essential part of the original substance of this space delimitation.
10/13/2010 167

Notes: The missing numbers 92, 93, 95 and 111 are deleted entries. The missing number 147 contained a monument that was overturned due to an administrative court ruling. The monument 112 is not mentioned because it concerns equipment details of a residential building that have not been released for publication (in some cases features according to monument list C).

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