List of architectural monuments in Malstatt
This list of monuments in Malstatt lists all the monuments of the Saarbrücken district of Malstatt . The basis is the publication of the state monuments list of February 16, 2011 and the current partial list of monuments of the state capital Saarbrücken in the version of August 9, 2017
location | designation | description | image |
---|---|---|---|
Jenneweg location |
Ensemble cemetery Malstatt | The old Malstatter cemetery was opened in 1879. Between 1886 and 1905, the cemetery was repeatedly expanded to its final size. The current enclosure walls also date from this period. As early as 1909 it was foreseeable that the cemetery would again be too small and announced the closure of the cemetery in 1912. The cemetery has been largely abandoned in the past few decades and redesigned as a park. There are 200 grave monuments of high artistic value in the complex. | |
Jenneweg, cemetery (individual monument): The cemetery from 1880 with the enclosure wall, the entrance portal and the grave monuments, including two monuments from the town of Malstatt-Burbach for Mayor Wilhelm Meyer (1835-1900) and for those who died in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870, are listed as historical monuments / 71. | |||
Jenneweg 61–67 location |
Ensemble Jenneweg | The buildings in Jenneweg were built in 1910 by Wilhelm Beyer as residential houses. | |
St.-Albert-Straße 75 location |
Ensemble St. Albert | The monument ensemble includes the cath. Church of St. Albert also the neighboring parish hall. | |
St.-Albert-Straße 75, Pfarrheim: The brick church built in 1938/39 was destroyed in a bomb attack in 1944. Dominikus Böhm and Gottfried Böhm built the parish hall from the stones of this church in 1948/49. The two-storey, gable-facing brick building with a gable roof is unadorned and borders directly on the church. The four window axes on the gable side are square. The window axes on the long side are close to each other in the center of the facade and are separated by narrow concrete struts. | |||
St.-Albert-Straße 75, Catholic Church St. Albert : After the brick church, which was built in 1938/39 according to plans by the architect Reinhard Güthler, was destroyed in a bomb attack in 1944, the preserved crypt, private apartments and a parish hall served as an emergency church from 1949. In 1952 the crypt was finally used as an emergency church until St. Albert was built by Dominikus and Gottfried Böhm between 1952 and 1954. The church is egg-shaped and consists of 70,000 bricks from the previous church. A glass dome is enthroned above the building and is held in place by massive buttresses. The bell tower made of concrete buttresses stands as a campanile next to the church. | |||
At the gatehouse 19 location |
Remains of a gate tower in the Ludwigsburg park | Built around 1790 and rebuilt in the 19th century | |
At the gatehouse 24 location |
Rectory | Built in 1948/49 by Rudolf Krüger | |
Outside of the location |
Winding machine house II and compressor house of the Neuhaus mine | The Neuhaus mine originally belonged to the "Von der Heide" mine. The two shafts were sunk in 1901 and 1921. after the end of the mine, the daytime facilities were almost completely demolished. Only the carrier house II and the compressor house are preserved. The plastered buildings with sandstone bases were built between 1926 and 1929. its neoclassical structure with pilasters and triangular gables is typical of the mine buildings of this time. | |
Out of town location |
Forest and park grounds Ludwigspark, Ludwigsberg, Dianenhain, Schönthal | In 1769 Prince Ludwig von Nassau-Saarbrücken had a spacious garden landscape laid out on Ludwigsburg near Saarbrücken. Built in the center Friedrich Joachim Stengel , a pleasure palace. To the north-east of this castle, the Rodenhof was built around 1770 . In 1788/89 Prince Ludwig had the Schonthaler Hof laid out as a country residence for his second wife, Katharina. In addition, the Diana Grove, a park with a star-shaped network of paths and a temple, was created during this period. Numerous small architectures adorned the park. The buildings in Ludwigspark were destroyed by French revolutionary troops in 1793 and used as a quarry. The park went wild. Today only remnants can be seen. | |
Breite Straße 75/77 location |
Residential building | The house, built in 1899, is made of light-colored bricks and is structured by narrow pilaster strips and cornices made of sandstone. An arched frieze under an eaves cornice completes the structure. The corner house has a rectangular bay window that extends from the first floor to the roof. Two risalits loosen up the three-story facade. Both tall rectangular and arched windows sit in the axes. The tall rectangular windows are finished with a straight, profiled roof. The arched windows are grouped in twos or threes and are coupled by rusticated blind arches made of sandstone. In the risalits, the rectangular windows are also coupled from these arches and enhanced with ornamental decorations. | |
Fischbachstrasse location |
Ev. Rußhütte parish church | The Evangelical Church of Rußhütte was built in 1935/36 according to designs by the architect Rudolf Krüger. The simple nave with three window axes has a wooden ceiling and is closed off by a rectangular choir. On the opposite side of the gable, a tower with a square floor plan and a gable roof is pushed slightly into the nave. | |
Fischbachstrasse 93 location |
Portal of the cath. Parish Church of St Marys | The neo-baroque portal was built in 1926/27 as part of the historicized church by Ludwig Becker and Anton Falkowski. The double-wing door with unadorned drapery is framed by wide pilasters that support a profiled cornice. Above that there is a high entablature with a central relief showing the citizens of Russhütte as workers and miners. A framed relief with the Mother of God and little putti is located above another cornice with shell ornaments. | |
Forsthaus Neuhaus location |
Forsthaus Neuhaus | The oldest part of the forester's house is the barn, which was built around the middle of the 19th century. Count Philip III. von Nassau-Saarbrücken had the Palatine builder Christmann Strohmeier build the Philippsborn hunting lodge as a four-wing complex in the Renaissance style. The castle was destroyed in the Thirty Years War and rebuilt around 1750. Prince Wilhelm Heinrich von Saarbrücken converted the hunting lodge into a manor with pasture and arable land between 1740 and 1768. In the course of the French Revolution, large parts of the facility were burned down in 1793. Part of the complex was rebuilt and managed until the middle of the 19th century; from 1854 the building complex was used as a forester's house. The castle was built on an approximately square floor plan and had four corner towers. Today's buildings are inspired by the late baroque. | |
Forsthaus Wolfsgarten location |
Forest house Wolfsgarten | The forester's house Wolfsgarten is a simple, single-storey plastered building with a crooked hip roof and was built in 1830. From 1879 it was the royal chief forester's office. Around 1900 the building's stable was expanded. Today the building is the headquarters of NABU. | |
Grühlingsstrasse 91 location |
Rodenhof | The Rodenhof was built around 1765 by Prince Ludwig von Nassau-Saarbrücken as an agricultural property. The courtyard building served a lordly forester as an official residence until 1793, when the courtyard became the property of the city of Malstatt-Burbach. In the period that followed, the farm kept changing hands and purpose, although an inn was set up there as early as the 19th century. The building has been empty since 2006. The baroque building with a crooked hipped roof and attic was built in the Baroque style, but is less splendid than the buildings by Friedrich Joachim Stengels in the city center. While the windows in the attic are axially symmetrical, the ground floor is asymmetrically offset slightly to the south. The entrance to the house is between two segmented arched windows. Windows and doors are framed here in sandstone. The attic is covered with slate, the roof with red tiles. Both in the north and in the west, the core building was supplemented by extensions. | |
Heinrichshaus 4 location |
"Heinrichshaus", hunting lodge | The hunting lodge was built in the 18th century. Barn and stable were rebuilt around 1920. The dreamlike, two-storey plastered building has seven window stalls with two entrances on the street side. The building is closed by a gable roof. | |
In Knappenroth 4 layers |
Rastpfuhlschule | The school was built from 1952 to 1954 and from 1957 to 1960 by Peter Paul Seeberger as part of a school rebuilding program. 1963 to 1966 it was expanded with a single-storey pavilion and gym. The building was constructed as an L-shaped structure with two storeys and was later supplemented by several parallel structures connected by advertising buildings. The buildings erected as grid structures are strictly structured and flooded with light. The art in architecture comes from Paul Schneider , Helmut Collmann , Fritz Zolnhofer , Wolfram Huschens and Mia Münster . | |
Ludwigstrasse location |
South portal of the road tunnel under the railway bridge | The south portal of the tunnel was built from sandstone in 1905. It consists of two flanks with rounded edges and a slightly recessed round arch with an arched frieze on the upper edge. The arch is decoratively framed with rustic ashlar. A balustrade runs over the entire width. | |
Malstatter Markt 7 location |
Wappenstein from the old Rentrisch waterworks, around 1900 | ||
Paul-Schmook-Straße location |
monument | The cast iron monument was designed by Walther Neu and inaugurated on August 30, 1934. A worker is shown with a victim. On the base you can see the inscription The Victims of Labor . The monument served propaganda purposes of the National Socialist ideology. | |
Pfarrer-Bungarten-Straße 49 location |
Catholic rectory St. Josef | The three-story plastered building was built in 1910. The three storeys rise above a high base with a basement that extends to the first floor. Corner blocks in sandstone emphasize the corners of the building. A dwarf house with a truncated triangular gable emphasizes the center of the facade, in which on the upper floors there are also the windows with elaborate ornamentation connected by glare fields. | |
Rastpfuhl 15 (at) position |
Grave site Traugott Roemer, war memorial | The obelisk commemorates the young soldier Traugott Roemer, who was hit by a grenade here during the Franco-Prussian War in 1870. | |
Riegelsberger Strasse 17-25 location |
Residential houses | Built in 1931 | |
Schillstrasse 18 location |
House, 1909 | The two-storey plastered building with eaves was erected in 1909. The elaborate decoration with ornament fields under and between the windows is striking. The right axis of the window is closed off by a dwelling with a curved gable. | |
St. Johanner Strasse location |
Railway bridge | The one-eyed sandstone bridge is used to cross St. Johannes Straße at the entrance from St. Johann to Malstatt. It was built in 1883. Consoles carry a cantilevered cornice with a wrought iron railing. The railway line leads from Saarbrücken main station to the industrial area of the Burbacher Hütte. | |
St.-Josef-Strasse location |
Catholic Church of St. Josef , 1908–1910 by J. Rüppel, 1946–1954 reconstruction after severe war damage | The Josefskirche was built between 1908 and 1910 according to plans by Johann Adam Rüppel in neo-Gothic style. After severe war damage, it had to be rebuilt from 1946 to 1954. A tower with a Gothic portal and rose window was placed in front of the nave in the style of a basilica. A transept adjoins the country house. An octagonal roof turret with a pointed helmet rises above the star-vaulted crossing. The building ends with a polygonal choir. | |
Trier street location |
Railway bridge, 1938 | The northernmost of the three bridges was built in 1938/39 as a one-eyed sandstone bridge. After war destruction, it was rebuilt in 1951/52 in the old reinforced concrete form and clad with sandstone blocks. | |
Trier street location |
Railway bridge, 1908 | The middle of three bridges was built between 1905 and 1908. The three round arches with savings arches in the spandrels are framed by rusticated ashlar. | |
Waldstrasse 48 location |
Sandstone relief of three ironworkers on the Burbacher Hütte apartment building, 1952 by Günter Maas | The sandstone relief was embedded in the plaster of an apartment building in the Burbacher Hütte. It shows three ironworkers and was created by Günter Maas in 1952. | |
Ziegelstrasse 21 location |
Tennis clubhouse | Built by Julius Ammer around 1914. | |
Ziegelstrasse 35 location |
Elementary school | The elementary school, today Rodenhof elementary school, was built by Peter Paul Seeberger in 1949/50 as a free-standing building and expanded from 1953 to 1955 and 1962 to 1964. The one and two-story buildings are strictly structured and grouped around the schoolyard. The art in architecture comes from P. Schneider, W. Huschens and H. Vollmann. | |
To Malstatt 6 location |
Ev. church | The Protestant church was built in 1869/70 as a three-aisled, neo-Gothic hall church based on designs by the Trier government building councilor Seyffart. After severe war damage, Rudolf Krüger rebuilt the church. Instead of a vault, however, it was decided to use another floor with community rooms. The windows were designed by György Lehoczky . The old churchyard is still preserved with graves. |
See also
Web links
Commons : Monuments in Malstatt - Collection of images, videos and audio files