List of architectural monuments in Meerbusch

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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 Meerbusch contains the listed buildings in the area of ​​the city of Meerbusch in the Rhine district of Neuss in North Rhine-Westphalia (status: end of 2009). These architectural monuments are entered in the list of monuments of the city of Meerbusch; 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
Old school Old school Büderich
Alter Kirchweg 57
map
two-storey, classical school building in five axes around 1820 29


St. Mauritius old church tower
more pictures
St. Mauritius old church tower Büderich
Dorfstrasse
map
Four-storey tower on a square floor plan made of tuff stone with a round arch, arcade frieze and double arcade windows, entrance door and corpus inside by Joseph Beuys . Tower of the former church of Büderich des 11./12. Century. Usage: war memorial.

For the preservation and use there are folkloric (religiousness, importance of religion in the Middle Ages, war memorial site), artistic (Romanesque architecture, door and body by the currently well-known sculptor Beuys) and urban planning reasons (location of the property to the old town center of Büderich).

Origins from the 11th / 12th century December 10, 1981 48


Town hall Büderich Town hall Büderich Büderich
Dorfstrasse 20
map
The town hall, built in 1901 by the Düsseldorf architect C. Hövel, was expanded in 1911. The building, which faces the street at the eaves, consists of a central, two-storey structure, which is symmetrically joined by single-storey extensions to the right and left. Accordingly, the facade is divided into a two-zone middle section with seven window axes, in which the wider central axis emerges as a risalit in front of the wall. The windows of the risalit are round or segment-arched. A stepped gable with a central arched window completes the risalit. To the left of the central structure, an arcade open on two sides forms an arbor-like vestibule for the set-back entrance.

The balustrade of a balcony closes off the building section at the top. The right extension is much simpler with a simple door opening. The ornamentation of the ornamentation and structure of the facade corresponds to the historical style of the turn of the century. The layout of the interior has been partially preserved in its original structure. The two stairwells, which access the building from both the front and the rear, also largely correspond to the original condition.

The new construction of the town hall far away from the former village center of Büderich creates a new center for the villages of Brühl, Necklenbroich, Niederdonk and Büderich, which grew together towards the end of the 19th century due to the strong population growth. It is therefore significant as evidence of the prosperous local development and the change from a conglomerate of village settlements to a small town. In its largely original substance, the building documents an administrative building from the turn of the century, which is worth preserving for reasons of architectural, urban and local history.

1901 12/17/1984 81


Lindenhof restaurant Lindenhof restaurant Büderich
Dorfstrasse 48
map
3-leaf brick plant. The older house is 2-storey in 5 axes with stone door walls and sills. A storey brick extension with a side hipped roof was built in the 1920s. The building is important for the people in the area of ​​today's city of Meerbusch, as it is a testimony to the Büderich settlement, as well as to the history of the restaurants. The restaurant now forms the end of the old core development of the village of Büderich. Thus, urban planning reasons also speak in favor of preservation and use.

The protection is limited to the external shape and technical construction of the house. An adaptation of the interior to modern living and economic conditions is possible.

? (Extension from the 1920s) December 10, 1981 2


Winkesgut Winkesgut Büderich
Dorfstrasse 51
map
Former 4-wing brick courtyard. The house is 2-storey in 6 axes with a large gate entrance (plastered; anchor pins with the year 1756). Courtyard building new. The estate is important for human history in the area of ​​today's city of Meerbusch, as it testifies to the settlement of the old village of Büderich and the agricultural production conditions from that time. The courtyard was built on the grounds of the former Fronhof. The harmonious, spacious building largely determines the old development on Dorfstrasse opposite the old church tower, so that urban planning reasons also speak in favor of preservation.

The protection status is limited to the external shape and technical construction of the residential building Dorfstraße 51 as part of the Winkesgut, i. H. unchanged external preservation including window structure and doors.

1756 December 10, 1981 3


Ulmenhof (formerly Neuenhof or Nauenhof) Ulmenhof (formerly Neuenhof or Nauenhof) Büderich
Dückersstrasse 6
map
Former 3-wing courtyard from 1768. 2-storey house in 4 axes (plastered, half-timbered on the side). Residential house Dückersstraße is a monument within the meaning of § 2 of the Monument Protection Act v. March 11, 1980 (GV NRW p. 226). There is a public interest in its preservation and use. The building is important for human history in the area of ​​today's city of Meerbusch, as the Ulmenhof testifies to the history of the earlier municipality of Büderich and the settlement with agricultural businesses. The Ulmenhof is part of the old town center. The building is worth preserving because of its typical design as an old Lower Rhine farmhouse. Because of the documentation of Büderich's history, local reasons speak in favor of preservation. The Rhenish Office for the Preservation of Monuments has declared its agreement with the entry of the building in the list of monuments.

The protection is limited to the external shape and technical construction of the house. An adaptation of the interior to modern living conditions is possible.

1768 December 10, 1981 5


Brick chapel with columns Brick chapel with columns Büderich
corner Dülsweg / Blumenstraße
map
circa 1925 09/11/1984 86


Parish Church of St. Mauritius Parish Church of St. Mauritius Büderich
Düsseldorfer Strasse / Dorfstrasse
map
3-aisled neo-Gothic brick church, pseudo-basilica with 3-sided choir closure and west tower in front, new furnishings. Built in 1892/93 by Theodor Roß .

The church is significant for the history of the people of today's city of Meerbusch, as it gives a testimony of religious life.

1892/93 09/11/1984 94


Residential building Residential building Büderich
Forsthausweg 1
map
2-storey stone building with tower-like side parts, main part hipped roof, tower parts curved hipped roofs, walls plastered. The house was planned in 1914 by the architect Fritz August Breuhaus . Renewal and remodeling in 1976.

The house from the time when the Meerbusch country house settlement was built testifies to the architectural ideas and living ideas of the people who created the garden house settlement in Meerbusch. In this respect, it is significant for the history of Büderich and thus for the city of Meerbusch, but also for a movement of living away from the big city in the country that emerged at the beginning of this century, but with an urban level of civilization.

1914, 1976 09/11/1984 95


Residential building Residential building Büderich
Forsthausweg 7
map
Two-storey residential building with a partially curved high mansard roof, structure structured in the middle part with a central projectile and two slightly angled side parts. Plastered building. Roof slate. Built in 1902.

The house from the time when the Meererbusch country house settlement was built testifies to the architectural ideas and living ideas of the people who left the garden house settlement in Meererbusch. In this respect, it is significant for the history of Büderich and thus the city of Meerbusch, but also for a movement of living away from the big city in the countryside that emerged at the beginning of the century, but with an urban level of civilization.

1902 09/11/1984 96


Residential building Residential building Büderich
Grabenstrasse 1
map
2-storey residential building (semi-detached house with Niederlöricker Straße 28), built in 1928. The house is important for the history of the people and the development of living and settlement conditions in the area of ​​today's city of Meerbusch. The house is part of a spacious, urbanized residential development at the gates of the big city based on a rural community. It documents the middle-class living style from the time after the First World War. There are ethnographic, in particular local history reasons for the maintenance and use of the building. Residents, visitors and passers-by can see the development of the Büderich community and the previously outlined form of living on the building. The house therefore also has a documentary character. There are also urban planning reasons for maintaining the building. The building - like the buildings in its surroundings - determines the character of a spacious housing estate along Grabenstrasse. 1928 10/11/1984 85


Residential building Residential building Büderich
Johannes-Kirschbaum-Strasse 4
map
Single-storey brick single-family house with an irregular facade and an extended attic, built around 1930. The house is evidence of the settlement of the former municipality of Büderich and of a contemporary architectural style, finally also for the bourgeois form of living that was common at the time. In this respect, this house - like the houses in its vicinity - is significant for human history and the settlement of the former municipality of Büderich. There are ethnographic, in particular local history and urban planning reasons for the preservation and use. The urban planning reasons result from the architecture described above. The local history reasons are that the house testifies to the settlement at a certain period. It is the intention of the city of Meerbusch to preserve typical buildings from the past, which can be proof of settlement in their "annual rings" for residents, users, hikers and passing citizens. around 1930 09/11/1984 87


Residential building Residential building Büderich
Johannes-Kirschbaum-Straße 6
map
The house at Johannes-Kirschbaum-Straße 6 was built around 1930 as a single-family house with a garden. It is made of brick, partly plastered. It fits into a number of other residential buildings of a similar character. There is a public interest in the preservation of this house. The house is evidence of the settlement of the former municipality of Büderich and of an architectural style that was contemporary at the time, ultimately for the bourgeois form of living that was common at the time. As far as the house, like the houses in its surroundings, is significant for human history and the settlement of the former municipality of Büderich. There are ethnographic, in particular local history and urban planning reasons for the preservation and use. The urban planning reasons result from the architecture described above. The local history reasons are that the house testifies to the settlement for a certain period of time.

It is the intention of the city of Meerbusch to preserve typical buildings from the past, which can be evidence of settlement in their "annual rings" for residents, users, but also hikers and passing citizens.

around 1930 09/11/1984 88


Old customs house Old customs house Büderich
Moerser Strasse 72
map
Former customs house from the beginning of the 19th century. The brick building is 2-storey in 4 axes with sandstone walls on the ground floor. The building is important for the history of the people in the area of ​​today's city of Meerbusch, as it is a product of the earlier customs system. In addition, the customs house with the opposite and surrounding buildings forms an old settlement core in Brühl. There are therefore ethnological and urban planning reasons for the preservation and use of the building.

The protection is limited to the external shape and technical construction of the house. It is possible to adapt the interior to modern forms of living and business.

Early 19th century December 10, 1981 4th


Old Peters Inn Old Peters Inn Büderich
Moerser Strasse 81
map
Entry:

Built: in the middle of the 19th century, 2-storey brick building in 5 axes with a single-storey three-axis extension on the right with a half-hip roof from the middle of the 19th century. Use of the object: restaurant. The restaurant, which also operated a hall until around 1970, is related to the former customs post and forms a focal point in Brühl. It is important for the history of Büderich and its settlement, and it is also a testimony to the development of the restaurant business. For reasons of local history, the restaurant is worth preserving. Urban planning reasons also speak for this, because of the ensemble formation with the opposite customs house and the courtyard.

Middle of the 19th century (after partial collapse in 1993, only the street-side facade is listed as a monument) 09/11/1984 90


Pilgrimage chapel "Maria in der Not"
more pictures
Pilgrimage chapel "Maria in der Not" Büderich
Niederdonker Strasse 99
map
Single-aisled pseudo-basilica with a polygonal cross-rib vaulted corpus from 1835 (plastered, turrets, hipped roof). Modern furnishings with an old triptych from 1538. In the church area there is a high cross from the 17th century (trachyte, stone cross and stone body).

The chapel is important for human history in the area of ​​today's city of Meerbusch, as it is a testimony to religious life. It documents the architecture from the 17th century with changes in the 19th and 20th centuries. There are therefore ethnological and artistic reasons for maintaining and using the building. The protection status extends to the unchanged preservation of the building. An adaptation to modern liturgical uses is possible.

1538, 1839 December 10, 1981 1


Residential building Residential building Büderich
Niederlöricker Strasse 12
map
Plastered bakery house with stepped gable from 1928, heavily changed in the 1970s. The house is an expression of an urbanized settlement away from the big city based on a village. It is therefore evidence of a type of living that developed after the First World War. In its external appearance, the house is still largely an expression of the architectural style preferred in the 1920s. It does not matter that the building has since been changed several times. The overall external impression still bears witness to the original architecture. There are ethnographic, in particular local history reasons for the maintenance and use of the building. The house is a document of the settlement of the former municipality of Büderich and its expansion to the east towards the Rhine.

Urban development reasons also speak in favor of preservation. The house dominates Niederlöricker Straße in its distinctive balanced shape. It is part of a generous settlement along Niederlöricker Strasse that is worth preserving.

1928 09/11/1984 98


Residential building Residential building Büderich
Niederlöricker Strasse 18
map
Two-story house with a mansard roof (1910).

The building bears witness to a spacious residential building that meets urban requirements, close to the big city, but also in the country in a large garden area. In this respect, the house is a testimony to a certain type of living after the First World War; it also testifies to the development of the settlement of the former municipality of Büderich. There are folklore, in particular local history reasons for the maintenance and use of the building, because residents, visitors and passers-by can see the development of the building that has previously been sketched out. In this respect, the house has a documentary character. Furthermore, there are urban planning reasons for the preservation, as the house characterizes the generously built settlement area on Niederlöricker Straße. The city of Meerbusch strives to maintain this generosity.

1910 09/11/1984 99


Residential building Residential building Büderich
Niederlöricker Strasse 20
map
2-storey brick house with curved side parts. The building bears witness to a spacious residential building that meets urban requirements, close to the big city, but also in the country in a large garden area. In this respect, the house is a testimony to a certain type of living after the First World War; it also testifies to the development of the settlement of the former municipality of Büderich. There are ethnographic, in particular local history reasons for the preservation and use of the building, because residents, visitors and passers-by can recognize developments outlined in the building beforehand. In this respect, the house has a documentary character. Furthermore, there are urban planning reasons for the preservation, since the house characterizes the generously built settlement area on Niederlöricker Straße. The city of Meerbusch strives to maintain this generosity. 09/11/1984 100


Residential building Residential building Büderich
Niederlöricker Strasse 22
map
2-storey house built between 1920 and 1930.

The house documents the development of the housing and settlement conditions in the area of ​​today's city of Meerbusch. It is part of a spacious urbanized residential development at the gates of the big city based on a rural community. The building - like the buildings in its surroundings - determines the character of a spacious housing estate along Niederlöricker Straße and at the same time shows a bourgeois living style from the period after the First World War.

1920 to 1930 09/11/1985 102


Residential building Residential building Büderich
Niederlöricker Strasse 26
map
Single-storey slate house with neo-baroque decorative shapes, two-storey facade with curved central gable and pilasters and a high mansard-hip roof, built between 1920 and 1930.

The house is important for human history and the development of living and settlement conditions in the area of ​​today's city of Meerbusch. It is part of a spacious urbanized residential development at the gates of the big city based on a rural community. It documents a middle-class style of living from the time after the First World War. There are ethnographic, in particular local history reasons for the maintenance and use of the building. Residents, visitors and passers-by can recognize the development of the Büderich community and the previously outlined form of living on the building. The house therefore has a documentary character. There are also urban planning reasons for maintaining the building, as the building defines the character of a spacious housing estate along Niederlöricker Straße.

approx. 1920 to 1930 09/11/1984 101


Residential building Residential building Büderich
Niederlöricker Strasse 33
map
The property consists of two parallel 1-storey wings with an inner courtyard in between. The house is built in the depths of the property, the cross bar seals off the Niederlöricker Straße.

The residential building is an elongated, 1-storey plastered building with a hipped roof and a base clad in rubble. The stairs and ceilings are made of reinforced concrete. The building has a full basement. The basement rooms are flat and have z. T. terrazzo floors. The building is accessed from the north side of the eaves. The entrance has moved to the left. A few steps lead to the front door, which is emphasized by a flat balcony and gabled house. Inside you first stand in the large hallway equipped with Solnhofen floor panels. In the opposite entrance there is a wardrobe with a concealed sink. On the left the hallway leads to the barrel-vaulted staircase to the upper floor, next to it to the large, brightly tiled kitchen with exit to the garden. From the hall to the right there is the approx. 35 m² living room, which has direct access to the garden via a stone-tiled terrace. Between this and the adjoining somewhat larger living room there is a hinged door that takes up almost the entire width of the house. It is made of oak and cut glass and can be folded away on two sides. Due to its width and the dark wood, it sets an accent that cannot be overlooked in this living area. The rear room is also directly connected to the hallway or the main entrance via a narrow hallway on the eaves side of the house. The rear connecting corridor between living room and kitchen and the enlargement of the floorboards were made possible by eliminating the bathroom at this point. A narrow concrete staircase with a brass handrail leads to the converted attic. Here there is a girls' room to the left of the stairs, to the right a living room with a balcony in front, followed by the large bedroom and bathroom with original sanitary equipment. A narrow corridor on the eaves side leads to the attic at the end. What is striking is the relatively small window volume of the entire house and the associated rather subdued lighting. Like the main house, the crossbar on the street is 1-storey and covered with a hip roof. The same materials were used as in the main house. The rooms open up to the left and right of a passage leading to the main entrance of the residential building. On the right is the office with small ancillary rooms, on the left two girls' rooms with exit to the inner courtyard, a toilet and, as a boundary, protruding somewhat into the inner courtyard, the garage. Quarry stone slabs have been laid from the passage across the courtyard to the main entrance and around the house to the kitchen door. This plating can be found again on the rear terrace with staircase and stringer. Haus Lucht in Meerbusch-Büderich is important for the history of post-war housing construction and is worth preserving for scientific, in particular architectural and local history reasons. As an indispensable part of the monument, a generously dimensioned garden area is to be seen as the surrounding open space.

89


Residential building Residential building Büderich
Niederlöricker Strasse 4
map
1½-storey house with sandstone / quarry stone, plinth and clinker brick facade. Facade to Niederlöricker Strasse from the twenties d. Century, building mainly rebuilt in 1980/81.

The house is an expression of an urbanized settlement. It testifies to a form of living that developed after the First World War. The external appearance of the house is an expression of the architectural style preferred in the 1920s. There are ethnological, in particular local history reasons for the preservation of the building. The house is a document of the settlement of the former municipality of Büderich and its expansion to the east towards the Rhine. It is part of a generous settlement along Niederlöricker Strasse that is worth preserving. Scope of protection: The monument protection extends to the facade on Niederlöricker Straße.

1920s 09/11/1984 97


Gasthof Mönchenwert Gasthof Mönchenwert Büderich
Niederlöricker Strasse 56
map
3 axes with high 2-storey hipped roof; Surrounded by modern single-storey tracts, old cellar vaults and Kölln ceilings preserved. Date of origin 1694/1701/1922.

The current buildings bear witness to the settlement and management of the former island of Mönchenwerth and the development of the catering trade. The protection extends to the unchanged preservation of the external shape of the old building structure, adaptation to modern living and economic conditions is possible.

1694/1701/1922 05/13/1982 46


Half-timbered barn Mönchenwerth Half-timbered barn Mönchenwerth Büderich
Niederlöricker Strasse 56
map
Part of the Mönchenwerth complex converted into a residential building 47


Residential building Residential building Büderich
Niederlöricker Strasse 28
map
2-storey residential building (semi-detached house with Grabenstrasse 1) built in 1928. The house is important for human history and the development of living and settlement conditions in the area of ​​today's city of Meerbusch. The house is part of a spacious, urbanized residential development at the gates of the big city based on a rural community. It documents the middle-class living style from the time after the First World War.

There are ethnographic, in particular local history reasons for the maintenance and use of the building. Residents, visitors and passers-by can recognize the development of the Büderich community and the previously outlined form of living on the building. The house therefore also has a documentary character. There are also urban planning reasons for maintaining the building. The building - like the buildings in its surroundings - determines the character of a spacious housing estate along Niederlöricker Straße.

1928 10/11/1984 84


Former Lörick sewage treatment plant Former Lörick sewage treatment plant Büderich
Niederlöricker Strasse 90
map
Large-scale system as a technical monument of the municipal urban technology, status: Temporary protection 83


House Schackum House Schackum Büderich
Schackumer Strasse 39
map
Entry:

Built: End of the 19th century Former moated castle, today 4-wing brick courtyard (open) from the end of the 19th century, two-storey house in 4 axes, rough plastered, facades heavily modified, courtyard building brick with stepped gables. The courtyard complex, known as "Haus Schackum", is significant for history and this court festival documents that people of earlier days wanted to protect themselves against military attacks with the help of fortified courtyards. The courtyard reflects the history of the people and this area with its many warlike threats. In addition, the farm is a testimony to a certain type of economy and to that extent important for the development of working and production conditions in the Meerbusch area. After all, this courtyard proves the agricultural past in the settlement of today's city of Meerbusch.

End of the 19th century 09/11/1984 93


Station cross Station cross Büderich
Siebenschmerzweg
map
Metal cross on sandstone base with inscription 1878 49


Residential house / MAN steel house Residential house / MAN steel house Büderich
Hildegundisallee 41
( Gartenstadt Meererbusch )
map
Prefabricated house of the manufacturer Maschinenfabrik Augsburg-Nürnberg (MAN) built between 1950 and 1952.

Single-storey residential building, from the upper floor basement ceiling made of corrugated deep-drawn sheets. L-shaped floor plan with side extension under a hipped roof. Main house with steep pitched roof, loft expanded, pan cover. The house in good condition is a document of serial cost-saving construction after the Second World War.

1950 12/12/1995 140


Residential building (Haus Eichenhof) Residential building (Haus Eichenhof) Büderich
Rotdornstraße 2
( Gartenstadt Meererbusch )
map
Two-storey country house with a high hipped roof, designed by the architects Fritz August Breuhaus and Carl Mauve 1910 92


Dyckhof
more pictures
Dyckhof Büderich
Am Dyckhof 1–3
cards
former moated castle 1666 9


stockyard stockyard Büderich
Am Breil 45
card
3-axle brick house with high hipped roof on a square floor plan, associated farm buildings. The cattle yard was created with the founding of the Haus Meer monastery.

The current buildings are from a later time, but testify to the agriculture that used to belong to the Meer Monastery. You are thus indirectly witnesses of the earlier manorial rule.

December 10, 1981 7th


Wayside cross Wayside cross Büderich
Lötterfelder Strasse 11
map
Sandstone base with inscription and dating 1877, metal cross with body; the cross largely destroyed. Worth preserving against documentation of religious life. 1877 10


Building on the site of the former Böhlerstraße Building on the site of the former Böhlerstraße Büderich
factory premises of the former Böhler AG , formerly Böhlerstraße, Büderich, today Hansaallee, Düsseldorf
map
Gebr. Böhler-Edelstahlwerke 82


Old boiler house Old boiler house Büderich
factory premises of the former Böhler AG
map
Former power center with training workshop and compressor house and chimney 82.1


Water supply with water tower Water supply with water tower Büderich
factory premises of the former Böhler AG
map
distinctive landmark with clock on the octagonal upper part of the tower 82.2


Porter's house II Porter's house II Büderich
factory premises of the former Böhler AG, at the south-western factory entrance
map
Gatehouse II at the south-western entrance to the factory 82.3


Former Finance Director Former Finance Director Büderich
factory premises of the former Böhler AG
map
Reinforced concrete construction with brick cladding and parapet panels in light gray artificial stone, directly attached to the air raid shelter 82.4


air-raid shelter air-raid shelter Büderich
factory premises of the former Böhler AG
map
so-called angle type , low-iron construction, characteristic conical shape, status: provisional protected position 1938 82.5


Haus Meer (farmyard)
more pictures
Haus Meer (farmyard) Büderich
house sea
map
3-wing brick courtyard, 2-storey residential building in 7 axes, brick-built, gatehouse storey with sandstone ashlar and triangular gable with the year 1735. Belonging to the former Premonstratensian Abbey.

In its present form, the farm not only testifies to the generous agricultural production conditions, but also that agricultural production belongs to the former Meer Monastery. He thus indirectly testifies to the manorial rule of the Middle Ages. The entire courtyard is worth preserving because of its closed design, especially the gate construction.

1735 December 10, 1981 6th


Remise house sea
more pictures
Remise house sea Buderich

card
Exterior masonry including foundations and partial basements of the east wing adjoining the former monastery gate to the north, approx. 80 m long and approx. 8 m wide.

Two-storey plastered building with a distinctive baroque gatehouse with east-west passage to the former grain mill. In front of the building line, pilaster strips with base and combat zone. West facade structured in irregular sequence on the ground floor by basket arches, door entrances and windows. The upper floor is structured by window openings with 9 axes south of the gatehouse and 16 axes north of the gatehouse. The building is closed on the property line to the south to parcel 112 by a fire wall from a later period (20th century). The northern end of the building or connection to the main wing of the former castle no longer exists. In the absence of known building dates or construction plans, the building fabric cannot be clearly dated, also because of recognizable changes at different times. A possible dating is the 17th century. By comparing the style of the gatehouse with z. B. the old customs house in Düsseldorf-Kaiserswerth (1635) and literature evaluation possible. “The construction activity that began after the 30 Years War lasted from 1650 to 1664” (Karl Tücking, the Premonstratensian monastery in Meer in: Contributions to the history of the Neuss-Grevenbroich district, 3rd year 1901, reprint 1992, p. 50). The monument is significant because of the supra-local importance of Kloster Meer, for the history of the Premonstratensian abbeys, for the economic and aristocratic history of the region and also for the importance of the Krefeld industrial and merchant family von der Leyen. The monument is worth preserving for scientific reasons, particularly for reasons of local history and religious history.

first construction phase in the middle of the 17th century, some with vaulted cellars from earlier times 03/28/2001 142


Tea house house sea
more pictures
Tea house house sea Buderich

card
Neo-Gothic garden pavilion from the mid-19th century. Crowned with a polygonal lantern.

The tea house is part of the former Haus Meer palace complex. As a remainder, it testifies to this magnificent complex. The balanced neo-Gothic shape, combined with the corner location to the entire park and the location to the landscape speak for a conservation. The protection extends to the unchanged receipt.

in the middle of the 19th century December 10, 1981 8th


General monument Haus Meer
more pictures
General monument Haus Meer Buderich

card
Parts of the monument are:
  1. Farm yard (monument no.6)
  2. Remise (monument no.142)
  3. Garden pavilion (monument no.8)
  4. Ice Cellar (145.1)
  5. Immunity Wall (145.2)
  6. Remnants of the foundation, vaulted cellar (145.3)
  7. Park by Josef Clemens Weyhe (145.4)
  8. Grain and Oil Mill (145.5)
  9. Grave Cross (145.6)

history

The Premonstratensian Convent Meer was founded in 1166 by Hildegunde, Countess von Meer. The monastery was built west of the Rhine on the bulging slope of an old Rhine bend. The Tranchot card No. 44, Düsseldorf from 1805/06 shows the extent of the monastery area that has existed since the Middle Ages. Numerous female members of the Lower Rhine nobility lived in Haus Meer and found their appropriate care here. Despite various fires and the resulting efforts to rebuild, the monastery was not in financial need when it was dissolved at the beginning of the 19th century.

After the secularization of 1799–1803, the complex passed into the possession of the Krefeld family of silk manufacturers von der Leyen-Bloemersheim in 1804, who had the church, part of the cloister and the cloister building laid down for economic reasons.

In 1864/1868 Freiherr Friedrich Johann von der Leyen had part of the former monastery building, the guest house, expanded into a castle-like property and gave the garden architect Josef Clemens Weyhe (1807–1871), the son of the royal garden director in Düsseldorf, Maximilian Friedrich Weyhe (1775 –1846) received the order to design a park based on the English model. In 1874 the von der Leyens laid down the western part of the cloister building and the southern garden wing.

After it was destroyed in the war from August 22nd to 23rd, 1943, demolished and demolished in June 1959, only remnants of the once important historical complex have survived. The drawer building was inhabited until the 1960s; after that it was left to decay.

planned and created around 1865 01/28/2004 145


Ice cellar house sea
more pictures
Ice cellar house sea Buderich

card
At the time the park was redesigned into an English landscape garden in the 1860s, a hill was raised over a brick-built monastery ice cellar in the sense of a "point de vue". This was clad with brick and coarse quartzite stone and around 1900 provided with a terrace, pergola and staircase. 01/28/2004 145.1


Immunity wall house sea
more pictures
Immunity wall house sea Buderich

card
According to the Premonstratensian tradition, the immunity wall encompassed the monastic district with a church, cloister building, farmyard, utility and ornamental gardens, orchard, fish ponds and separated it from the outside world.

The expanse of the monastic area and later manorial estate from the 19th century can be clearly conveyed through the immunity wall, the farm yard and the elongated coach house. The monastery wall was built from field fire bricks and natural stone blocks. Their height varies according to the course of the building. Again and again pilaster strips reinforce the masonry. With a few interruptions due to driveways, gates and repairs, the wall is almost completely preserved. In the 19th century it was changed slightly to the east. The preservation of the wall opens up the possibility for research and science to deal with the form, extent and status of a monastic district that has existed since the Middle Ages.

01/28/2004 145.2


Foundations and vaulted cellar house sea
more pictures
Foundations and vaulted cellar house sea Buderich

card
The remains of Haus Meer are also worth preserving for social and economic reasons, as the individual buildings and building remains, together with the surrounding monastery wall, one of the few completely almost completely preserved historical immunity walls, clearly show the secluded way of life of a monastery community. 01/28/2004 145.3


Park Haus Meer
more pictures
Park Haus Meer Buderich

card
The park of Haus Meer is the important garden artwork of the garden architect Joseph Clemens Weyhe, who prepared his design plan in 1865. Joseph Clemens Weyhe came from an old Rhenish and extensive gardening dynasty. His father was the Prussian garden director, Maximilian Friedrich Weyhe, who was famous beyond the Rhineland and was formerly the royal garden director in Düsseldorf, whose cousin was the internationally known garden architect Peter Joseph Lenné, general garden director of Prussia.

Around the middle of the 19th century and well into the 20th century, the wealthy landed gentry and the upper class in the Rhineland preferred this distinctive park style in their garden designs.

Relevant elements of the garden monument are:

  1. Existing path system
  2. Botanically valuable old trees
  3. Rudimentary water system
  4. Preserved sight lines
  5. Small garden architecture structures
  6. Meadows and park lawns

The "Haus Meer" landscape park is important for human history, especially in connection with the historical development and settlement history of a medieval monastery and its profane use in the 19th century. There are historical reasons for its future conservation and use. This park is a well-preserved testimony to the artistic design of the relatively early landscape garden in the Rhineland. In addition, the entire complex clearly documents a development phase in Rhenish garden art and, from the point of view of garden monument and cultural landscape maintenance, is to be classified as very worthy of preservation and protection.

01/28/2004 145.4


Grain and Oil Mill House Sea
more pictures
Grain and Oil Mill House Sea Buderich

card
About the nature of these two Meerer mills one learns for the first time more details from the literature on the basis of a document 1828: The mill owner had to fill out a form for the tax authorities with the title: "Recording and description of the mill according to the mill owner's information". In the form, the waterwheel operation is referred to as the Meerer Mühle. Literally: “The mill has 2 wheels, one of which, above, is undershot and the other, below, is overshot. The wheels are 150 steps apart and actually form 2 mills. ”The information is supplemented as follows:

"Kornmühle (flour mill) 2 grinding stages, including 1 grinding stage each for rye and one for wheat. Operation as alternating operation, ie both operations not possible at the same time. “Oil mill 1 oil press and 1 barley gear. Simultaneous operation possible, prerequisite: Sufficient water in the Mühlenbach, which was not always available at the time. Closure of the oil mill in 1865 With reference to the years 1857 and 1865, the two Meerer water mills (grain and oil mill) are mentioned again with reference to unchanged construction and operation. However, the oil mill was shut down in 1865: Very likely due to the relatively low water flow of the mill stream at that time, because the undercutting (undercutting) mill wheel requires a larger amount of water than the overshot (overshot) operation of the grain mill. In addition there was the execution of a modern garden plan, according to which the mill stream was built over there and the oil mill was demolished. Cessation of operations of the grain mill in 1902 In 1902 the Meerer grain mill also ceased milling operations after 719 years. A period of time that should be considered historically. One reason for the mill's closure was that its operation at the time no longer met economic requirements. After that, it remained structurally at first, but was no longer put into operation.

01/28/2004 145.5


Grave cross house sea
more pictures
Grave cross house sea Buderich

card
ANNO 1732 THE 26 MAY DIED THE HONORABLE PAULY HANNECKER VON ALTENKIRCH .. SCHMIT HIESIGEN CLOSTERS RI P. (The cross was found during clearing work on the site). 1732 01/28/2004 145.6


Gross-Isselhof Gross-Isselhof Ilverich
Isseldyk 1
card
Closed 4-wing brick courtyard, 2-storey residential building in 5 axes. Plant from the second half of the 19th century, some parts of the barn were changed. The farm documents a generous agricultural production facility and thus a large-scale cultivation of the areas that are around it in the Issel, but also for the settlement of the Issel, ie an island-like area between former arms of the Rhine.

The design of the brick courtyard marks a typical construction of Lower Rhine farms in the previous century.

2nd half of the 19th century December 10, 1981 37


Old school Old school Ilverich
Obere Strasse 47
map
One-storey plastered brick building with a half-hipped roof and a small bell cage, built in 1829. A break hall with glass in front of the former classroom to the south; further attachments backwards. The earlier school testifies to the history of the school system in Ilvenich, at the same time also in the Rhineland, which has become Prussian, in the previous century. It also testifies to the development of the town of Ilvenich as well as the enforcement of the classicistic architectural style by ingenious officials from the supervisory authority (von Vagedes).

The protection extends to the preservation of the external appearance of the building from 1829, but also the break hall, which was only added in that year. Window openings and door openings must remain unchanged. Changes can be permitted according to the respective use. However, the use as a former school building must always be legible.

1829 December 10, 1981 36


Ridders-Wolf farm Ridders-Wolf farm Ilverich
Obere Strasse 56
map
4-wing brick courtyard, the two-storey house in 9 axes, the middle 3 axes accentuated by triangular gables and square bars, plastered, the front brick, partially grouted, hipped roof; Apartment and 2 barn wings from 1818, the other barn wings from 1974. The farm attests to the agricultural settlement and cultivation of Ilvenich as well as a certain size and type of agricultural use. The farm is one of the oldest in Ilvenich. Due to its design in typical Lower Rhine court architecture and the special emphasis on the residential building, there are artistic reasons for its preservation.

Extent of protection: The exterior of the house and the essential room sequences in the interior are to be preserved, the external appearance of the barn wings is to be preserved and they can be adapted to modern economies.

House and two barn wings from 1818 December 10, 1981 35


War memorial War memorial Ilverich
parking lot next to the old school, Obere Straße
map
Ilverich war memorial from 1922 1922 155


Chapel of St. Martin Chapel of St. Martin Langst-Kierst (Kierst)
Schützenstrasse 1
map
Entry:

Single-aisle hall building with polygonal choir closure and square, 5-storey tower in front of the north; Portal vestibule with neo-Romanesque ornamentation; Rough plastered with neo-Romanesque round arch friezes. Witnesses of neo-Romanesque church building in a small village in the country, artistically worth preserving, of importance for religious life and its historical development, for the Christianization and settlement of Langst / Kierst.

Scope of protection: Unchanged preservation inside and outside; However, adaptation to modern usage is possible.

December 10, 1981 33


House Kierst House Kierst Langst-Kierst (Kierst)
Schützenstraße 6
map
four-wing courtyard 1730 32


Hilgers- or Köhneshof Hilgers- or Köhneshof Langst-Kierst (Langst)
Am Rheindamm 1
map
Brick courtyard from 1788 with cabbage boilers and bakery (press beams still available; used as an agricultural subsidiary until autumn 1950). The courtyard documents the settlement of Langst / Kierst with agricultural property, a certain type of agricultural economy z. At the time of construction and the connection of the agricultural subsidiary (Krautsiederei).

The flood-free farm building also documents the protection that the residents of the time sought against the floods of the not yet diked Rhine. The protection extends to the preservation of the outer appearance of the courtyard, in particular the chimney at the former herb boiling plant as well as the press beam and the oven. Adjustments to modern economy are possible.

1788 December 10, 1981 34


Main building of the Thelenhof Main building of the Thelenhof Langst-Kierst (Langst)
Vor den Höfe 16
map
1768 built 2-storey house in 5 to 2 axes with a crooked hip roof; Brick; 60 cm thick walls, roof structure made entirely of oak, the beams are all tenons.

Heavily changed and modernized inside. The Thelenhof house marks the settlement of Langst / Kierst. The building is the remainder of what was once a three-winged courtyard. The building has unusually thick walls. From this it could be concluded that it once also had a defensive function. The protection extends to the unchanged preservation of the external appearance. Changes inside are possible.

1768 05/13/1982 45


Langst-Kierst war memorial Langst-Kierst war memorial Langst-Kierst (Langst)
Schützenstraße, in front of the St. Martin chapel
map
Langst-Kierst memorial around 1950 circa 1950 158


Five old tombstones Lank-Latum (Lank)
main street, at the parish church of St. Stephanus
Gravestones from the former cemetery 73-77


Lank-Latum War Memorial Lank-Latum War Memorial Lank-Latum (Lank)
Old Cemetery Lank
Map
The war memorial of the former community of Lank-Latum, based on a design by the Klever sculptor Joseph Brüx, was originally installed on the main street in Lank. The design was made in light beige cast stone. After it was torn down by the National Socialists in 1938 due to the "non-Aryan" appearance of the depicted warriors, it found its current location in 1986 in the Lank cemetery. 1922 151


War memorial formerly Lank Office War memorial formerly Lank Office Lank-Latum (Lank)
Old Cemetery Lank
Map
Lank-Latum war memorial from 1927 1927 152


Prince's grave Prince's grave Lank-Latum (Lank)
Old Cemetery Lank
Map
Tomb of Count Mathias von Hallberg (Lord of Pesch Castle , founder of the Lank Church and the hospital) 1848 (renovated in 1986) 78


House House Lank-Latum (Lank)
Fronhofstrasse 1
map
2-storey brick building with tail gables, axles not drawn through, anchor pins with year. House from 1749, the ground floor was changed by a shop fitting.

The house bears witness to the settlement of Lanks in the 18th century and is part of the old "market square".

1749 09/11/1984 126


Residential building Residential building Lank-Latum (Lank)
Fronhofstraße 10
map
2-storey house in 3 axes, brick.

The house shows - together with the neighboring house of the same style - the development of the settlement of the former village. There are ethnological, in particular local history and urban planning reasons, because the structural development can be read off the building. In addition, this house, together with the neighboring house, shapes the appearance of Fronhofstrasse.

09/11/1984 130


House House Lank-Latum (Lank)
Fronhofstrasse 12
map
Low 2-storey half-timbered house, plastered on the ground floor, renovated in 1983/84 and changed inside.

This house shows the rest of the old buildings around the church and marks the development of the settlement. It is also worth preserving because of its construction and design.

? (Renovated in 1983/84) 09/11/1984 131


Residential building Residential building Lank-Latum (Lank)
Fronhofstraße 4
map
2-storey house in 3 axes with a gabled central axis from 1908. The house shows the development of the settlement of Lank and documents an urbanized architectural style, as it also found its way into villages at the beginning of the century. The development of the Lank-Latum district for residents, visitors and passers-by can be seen from the buildings on Fronstraße. 1908 09/11/1984 127


House House Lank-Latum (Lank)
Fronhofstraße 6
map
2-storey house in 3 axes from 1908 with a gabled central axis.

The house shows the development of the settlement of Lank and documents an urbanized architectural style that also found its way into villages at the beginning of the century. The development of the Lank-Latum district can be seen from the buildings on Fronhofstrasse for residents, visitors and passers-by.

1908 09/11/1984 128


Residential building Residential building Lank-Latum (Lank)
Fronhofstrasse 8
map
2-storey house in 3 axes, brick.

The house shows - together with the neighboring house of the same style - the development of the settlement of the former village. There are ethnological, in particular local history and urban planning reasons, because the structural development can be read off the building. In addition, this house, together with the neighboring house, shapes the appearance of Fronhofstrasse.

09/11/1984 129


War memorial of the cath.  Youth club Lank War memorial of the cath. Youth club Lank Lank-Latum (Lank)
corner of Gonella- / Claudiusstraße
map
War memorial of the cath. Lank youth club from 1920 1920 153


Parish Church of St. Stephen Parish Church of St. Stephen Lank-Latum (Lank)
main street
map
3-aisled brick basilica in classicistic round arch style with 3-sided choir closure and high round arched windows from 1844; in front of it is a 6-storey square west tower from the 12th century with a high dome roof. It gives testimony to the religious life and the importance of the church at the time of the construction of the tower and the church building itself, but also for the settlement of the country. In addition, the church is worth preserving just because of its style and architectural rank.

The protection includes the unchanged preservation inside and outside, adaptation to modern liturgical requirements and uses is possible.

12th century, 1844 December 10, 1981 24


Residential building Residential building Lank-Latum (Lank)
Hauptstrasse 10
map
2-storey residential building in 7 axes, plastered, partially changed on the ground floor, built in 1850.

The building forms the end of the market square, which is to be preserved as the old town center in its present form. The house is also worth preserving because of its harmonious facade design.

1850 09/11/1984 132


van Haags Hof van Haags Hof Lank-Latum (Lank)
Hauptstrasse 19
map
Former brick courtyard with 3-storey house in 4 axes from 1765, (dated in Torkeilstein) side facade with half-timbering, half-hipped roof, installation of a shop window on the ground floor.

The building forms part of the development around the "old market square" and is also worth preserving because of its harmonious design.

1765 09/11/1984 133


Fronhof restaurant Fronhof restaurant Lank-Latum (Lank)
Hauptstrasse 20
map
2-storey brick building in 7: 4 axes with high tail gable; partially changed on the ground floor. Built in 1758. The building documents the old development of the “market square” and is part of the historic square near the church. It is worth preserving because of its beautiful design and because of its contribution to the village-like design of the square.

The scope of protection extends to the unchanged preservation of the exterior, adaptation of the interior to modern economic and living conditions is possible, but the escape of the rooms should be maintained.

1758 December 10, 1981 25th


Residential building Residential building Lank-Latum (Lank)
Hauptstrasse 21
map
Half-timbered building from 1840, 2-storey in non-solid axes, the two right windows on the ground floor changed, plastered facade from the end of the 19th century.

The house is evidence of the development of the market square. It shapes the character of the market square together with the other old houses and is therefore important for Lank-Latum.

1840 09/11/1984 134


Van Dawen Restaurant Van Dawen Restaurant Lank-Latum (Lank)
Hauptstrasse 23
map
2-storey building in 5 axes from 1850, plastered; 1974/75 rebuilt inside.

The building is particularly important because of its contribution to the shape of the market square; As a 135 year old restaurant, it also bears witness to the development of the catering industry in Lank-Latum. In addition, the house is worth preserving because of its harmonious facade design. The protection only extends to the building on the main street, not to the rear buildings.

1850 09/11/1984 135


Restaurant and office building Restaurant and office building Lank-Latum (Lank)
Hauptstrasse 32/34
map
2-storey half-timbered building with non-continuous axes from 1848, in use connected to the brick corner building Gonellastraße / Hauptstraße; Structurally nested with the house at Hauptstraße 32, which has 2 large shop windows on the ground floor and 5 narrow windows with round arches on the upper floor.

The Hespers family's grocery store was located in the half-timbered house until around 1915. The hall was only added after the war in 1870/71, which can still be seen from the inner walls. The half-timbered house is important as evidence of a technical construction, namely the half-timbered structure. It is also evidence of the catering industry in Lank. House No. 34, which is structurally connected to it, gains its importance from its formative location on the main street.

1848 09/11/1984 137


Residential building Residential building Lank-Latum (Lank)
Hauptstrasse 33
map
2-storey half-timbered building in 3 axes from 1769, hipped roof, formerly associated gate entrance, now redesigned to a shop building. While the rear facade still shows half-timbering, the front facade and side facade are plastered at the end of the 19th century and provided with corner blocks. The facade was repainted in 1978.

The building was originally an inn ("In the golden cross"), so that it shows the development of the restaurant trade in Lank-Latum. In addition, the house is worth preserving because of its design. There is also evidence of the shape of the old town center of Lank, which is to be preserved in its current appearance.

1769 09/11/1984 136


Teloy windmill
more pictures
Teloy windmill Lank-Latum (Lank)
Kemperallee 10
map
Built in 1822 by the baker Adolph Frangen from Lank; Leased by the Ludwig Teloy family from Osterfeld since 1863. Since that time this "New Lanker Mühle" has been called "Teloy Mill".

In 1912 the mill was shut down. The pianos went to Elfrather Mühle in Traar in 1913. The tower windmill is built in brick. It stands on a high, round brick base, which enables better alignment with the wind. In 1981 the mill was given a new hood, and in 1982 new blades. After renovation 1980–1981 it is used as a cultural center. The mill is important for the history of Lank-Latum, it is worth preserving for scientific and local historical reasons.

built around 1820-30 (new mill hood from 1981, new blades from 1982) December 21, 1981 72


school school Lank-Latum (Lank)
Kemperallee 6
map
The school on Kemperallee consists of several building sections, which, with their different designs, are combined to form a heterogeneous appearance. The oldest building section, house number 4, housed the first two-class school from 1903. As early as 1912, a six-class extension was necessary, which was completed by 1915. The former school building was converted into a teacher's apartment. In 1953 the school was further expanded by extending the courtyard wing. In the course of the second expansion, an additional class was set up on the upper floor of the adjacent equipment shed for the volunteer fire brigade (built in 1928).

The left part shows the basic structure of the first two-class school. When it was converted into a teacher's apartment, the two-storey brick building that was originally located on the eaves was given a high tail gable and an additional attic. The stairwell is located in the slightly recessed eaves-facing brick wing adjoining to the right.

The subsequent extension is two-storey, four-axis with segmented arched windows and a projecting entrance axis. In this tower-like elevated entrance area, a large rusticated arch leads to the entrance hall. The round-arched, polygonal entrance bay on the upper floor ends with a slate-clad free floor with a crowning tail hood. A hip or tail gable emphasize the gable ends. At the rear there is a simple two-storey, nine-axis wing with a central entrance with an accentuating tail gable. Inside, the room structure, numerous details such as stairs and railings, floor tiles, doors and frames are preserved. The courtyard wing was extended in 1953. This extension is not part of the monument.

On the street side, the fire station was added to the school building in 1928 with its slightly set back tower for drying the fire hoses. The building is two-story, three-axis and has a flat roof. The two garage doors have been converted into windows. A semicircular protruding two-storey bay window creates the connection to the original school building. The entrance door shows two circular reliefs with representations of tools used in agriculture and handicrafts. The school building, which has grown since the beginning of the 20th century, is an important testimony to the development of rural school building. The building complex is worth preserving for architectural and local historical reasons, as a clear document for the rapid growth of the population of Lank-Latum. Responsible for this seems u. a. the establishment of the celluloid factory on Rheinstrasse in 1894, which led to an economic upswing in the previously purely agricultural village.

1903 12/17/1984 71


Heidbergmühle
more pictures
Heidbergmühle Lank-Latum (Lank)
Nierster Strasse 101
map
Multi-storey mill stump made of brick with sandstone walls, built 1751/52, hooded roof, re-covered in 1980; Wings are missing; inside, the vane shaft and vertical shaft with the associated wooden gear wheels are still completely preserved, grinders are missing.

The Heidbergmühle is not only evidence of an old artisan business, but also of the "self-sufficiency" of the Lanker farmers who wanted to evade the Geismühle's compulsory grinding. Added to this is their dominant position in agriculture. The protection extends to the unchanged preservation of the external shape; Preservation of the still existing mill gear in the interior.

built in 1751/52, newly covered in 1980 December 10, 1981 20th


Former gatehouse Westdeutsche Celluloidwerke Former gatehouse Westdeutsche Celluloidwerke Lank-Latum (Lank)
Rheinstrasse next to 18
card
To the south of the former plant passage is the 2-storey brick building of the gatehouse, facing Rheinstrasse. The building is structured by a main cornice and an eaves cornice, three wall fields are created on the long sides by means of pilaster strips. In between, arched windows with overlapping arches in yellow brick, which form a continuous band on the ground floor that follows the arches of the window and door openings. The building has 3: 2 axes.

The western facade is disturbed in its original windowing, here later openings are closed by KS stones. The south facade is also disturbed by the later installation of windows. The gatekeeper's house, together with the neighboring monuments, forms the administration building (current list number: 141) and water tower with valve house (current list number: 21) the ensemble of structural relics of the "Lanker Celluloidwerke GmbH", which produced from 1896 to 1983. There is public interest in their preservation and use, as the remaining buildings are important for the history of the cities and settlements as well as for the development of working and production conditions. There are scientific, here economic and technical-historical reasons, as the surviving workshops bear witness to the emergence and spread of a substance that could be described as a key material for the 20th century, the "plastic", for which celluloid was an initial mass consumer item. Every single preserved building of the last West German celluloid factory is suitable to preserve the memory of the production which started in Lank already 24 years after the invention of the new material (1894).

06/13/2009 143


Water tower
more pictures
Water tower Lank-Latum (Lank)
Rheinstrasse 18
map
Water tower built in 1912 with a water capacity of 100 m³.

The monument documents the settlement of businesses and the extraction of water for this area through an elevated tank. This water container is a testimony to the industry and defines the silhouette of the Lank-Latum district. The tower also testifies to the technical standard and the development of the steel industry z. At the time of its construction. The protection extends to the unchanged external preservation.

1912 December 10, 1981 21st


Former  Administration building Former Administration building Lank-Latum (Lank)
Rheinstrasse 18
map
Former Administration building of the West German Celluloid Works 1920s 141


Tafelgut Nauenhof Tafelgut Nauenhof Lank-Latum (Latum)
Bismarckstrasse 41
map
One-storey brick courtyard in non-continuous axes with a crooked hip roof; the rear gable side with half-timbering, built in the 18th century (restored in 1960).

The current building bears witness to an earlier table for the Electors of Cologne. It is thus a testimony to the history of the rule, but also to the supply of the archbishopric administration. The protection extends to the unchanged preservation as well as the preservation of the decisive construction inside, which indicates the age of the house.

18th century December 10, 1981 26th


House Latum
more pictures
House Latum Lank-Latum (Latum)
Bismarckstrasse 42
map
Former mansion with water conversion, 4-wing open brick courtyard, mansion 2-storey in 4 axes, anchor pins, barns with hipped roof, rear 2-storey brick extension with neo-Gothic windows, middle door changed, barn wings from the 19th century, mansion probably from the 17th Century. House Latum is a testimony to the history of this area. In its current form, it also shows the production site of a large agricultural enterprise, so that it is also important for the production conditions. In addition, there are urban planning reasons for preservation, as the courtyard shapes the landscape.

The protection extends to the unchanged preservation of the courtyard, modern adaptation to living and economic conditions is possible.

House probably 17th century, courtyard area 19th century December 10, 1981 19th


Jewish Cemetery
more pictures
Jewish Cemetery Lank-Latum (Latum)
Uerdinger Strasse
map
19th century cemetery with grave stones partly made of sandstone from the 19th and 20th centuries.

Folklore, especially local history, because of the documentation of Jewish community life and the development of Judaism in Lank-Latum. The protection extends to the unchanged preservation of the complex and the position of the tombstones.

19th century December 10, 1981 22nd


Door arch Door arch Lank-Latum (Latum)
Uerdinger Strasse 132
map
Entry: December 10, 1981

Built: 1800 archway with profiled transom plates and round arches with cartouche and monogram from 1800, built into the house at Uerdinger Straße 132. The house, which has been changed from the outside, formed the former north-east border of Latum. The arch of the door in the old house testifies to the will of the builders of the house. The design of the round arch justifies the preservation. Protection includes maintaining the door arch in its unchanged form.

1800 December 10, 1981 23


Residential building Residential building Nierst
Am Oberen Feld 55
card
House with a half-hip roof and a raised roof that rests on a wooden structure that is visible from the outside. As one of the oldest houses still preserved in its original state, it is located on the only built-up street at that time, and it bears witness to the old settlement of Nierst and at the same time a unity of living and business. The house is worth preserving both because of its special design and as a witness of the settlement for reasons of local history. 09/11/1984 106


Myriameter stone
more pictures
Myriameter stone Nierst
Rheinufer
map
Old myriameter stone (milestone) on the Rhine near Nierst. The cuboid stone is marked with distances: 104, 464 km to the national border, 580.00 km from Basel, 234.45 km to Rotterdam 79


Parish Church of St. Cyriacus Parish Church of St. Cyriacus Nierst
Stratumer Strasse 11
map
Single-aisle, neo-Romanesque hall church with three-sided choir closure and a western tower in front, cross vault; renewed inside in 1978. Built in 1894/95 by the master mason Adam Reiners from Lank.

The church is worthy of preservation because of its neo-Romanesque design. At the same time, it gives evidence of religious life and the increasing settlement of Nierst. Scope of protection: Unchanged preservation, but adaptation to modern usage requirements possible.

built 1894/95 December 10, 1981 30th


Küppershof Küppershof Nierst
Stratumer Strasse 19
map
2-storey brick building with a half-hipped roof in 5 axes, plastered northern gable wall, block frieze between the first and second floors and under the eaves. The Küppershof is one of the few remaining farms in Nierst. It testifies to the agriculture in the district and to this extent has significance for the history of man and the development of working and production conditions. 09/11/1984 105


Nierst war memorial Nierst war memorial Nierst in
front of the Nierster Chapel, Stratumer Strasse
map
Nierst war memorial 1936 156


Werthhof
more pictures
Werthhof Nierst
Werthallee 51
card
4-wing brick courtyard, two-storey residential building in 5 to 3 axes with arched windows on the upper floor, rough plaster, hipped roof, the facades were changed at the beginning of the 20th century, barn tracts from the 20th century. The Werthhof is already mentioned in a document in 1166. It was initially the main courtyard of "Niederseist" and has been handed down as the courtyard of stately lawyers. The house is about 250 years. The farm is still recognizable today as evidence of the settlement of our living space and testifies to the development of agriculture over many centuries. The Werthhof still documents a property structurally today, from which rule was exercised in certain legal forms of the Middle Ages, business was conducted and thus the coexistence of people was reorganized. The farm was to be retained as part of the Lower Rhine landscape with agricultural use. Scope of protection: The entire courtyard in its essential external appearance. Adaptation to modern forms of economy and living is possible while maintaining the sequence of rooms in the house and farm buildings. 1166 03/12/1982 31


Weilerhof Weilerhof Ossum-Bösinghoven
Am Weilerhof 16
map
Open 4-wing brick courtyard from 1776. The residential building from the 2nd half of the 18th century, brick-lined, the gable ends with tail gables and anchor pins; Barn wings changed significantly in the 20th century.

The Weilerhof has been known since the early Middle Ages and was apparently part of an extensive, earlier medieval village. It documents the settlement of this area in earlier times. The residential building shows the style of an agricultural house from the late 18th century. It is worth preserving because of its design. The farm marks the old settlement and the development of the agricultural production facility in the late 18th century.

1766 09/11/1984 103


House Radong House Radong Ossum-Bösinghoven
Am Weilerhof 18
map
Today's closed four-sided courtyard, built in 1859 by Jakob Herberz from Uerdingen. Stately house, 2-storey, 5-axis, with balcony above the entrance, access via a chestnut avenue.

A manorial courtyard type from the middle of the 19th century emerged after clearing (= Radong). Establishment of the property with the houses: Hamm, Pesch etc. dated from a scientific point of view in the 9th and 10th centuries. The farm documents the history of settlement and agricultural management in the area of ​​today's city of Meerbusch; it documents past and present work and production conditions and its equipment is a typical Lower Rhine farm.

1859 09/11/1984 104


Church of St. Pankratius
more pictures
Church of St. Pankratius Ossum-Bösinghoven (Ossum)
Ossum, next to 11
map
Single nave church; Middle wing from the early Middle Ages made of tuff stones, in 1868 expansion by adding the choir, which still exists today, to the east; 1911 further expansion to the west with a brick extension in neo-Romanesque style with pilaster strips, roof turrets. Mentioned for the first time in 1186, the chapel shows the development of religious life. In addition, it is worth preserving because of its structural design.

The protection extends to the unchanged receipt.

1186 December 10, 1981 38


House Gripswald
more pictures
House Gripswald Ossum-Bösinghoven (Ossum)
Ossum 13
map
Open 4-wing brick courtyard area; 3-storey mansion in 4 axes, brick with sandstone walls and round 3-storey raised corner tower with a canopy roof; high hipped roof; the gatehouse in the half-timbered passage. House Gripswald testifies to the development of the settlement of this area with large agricultural farms; it was a manor suitable for the Landtag. A semicircular, Roman temple with seven matron stones was found nearby. The manor house deserves to be preserved because of its beautiful, stately design. The monument bears witness to a form of lavish living and economic activity on a farm.

The protection extends to the unchanged preservation of the external impression of the courtyard. Conversions inside to adapt the courtyard to modern business needs are possible. Internal remodeling in the mansion should, however, be kept to a minimum.

December 10, 1981 39


War memorial Ossum-Bösinghoven War memorial Ossum-Bösinghoven Ossum-Bösinghoven (Ossum) in
front of the Ossumer Kapelle
map
War memorial Ossum-Bösinghoven 1921 154


Main building, Pesch Castle
more pictures
Main building, Pesch Castle Ossum-Bösinghoven
Schloss Pesch
map
2-storey plastered building in 13 axes with a high mansard roof; flat 7-axis central risalit with flat 3-axis gabled risalit with dorpic entrance, porticus; Construction from 1906; Remodeling and renovation in the years 1979 to 1982. As a stately residential building of an important landowner, the house testifies to the way of life, also economic conditions, of an upper class living in Meerbusch, and in the overall complex also an economic production method of agricultural large property. In the main building, the living needs and social ideas of a wealthy upper class are documented. The entire complex also attests to the existence of a noble residence that was built centuries ago and has been preserved up to our time. Scope of protection: overall external appearance down to the last detail; Internal changes in order to bring the castle to modern residential use can be permitted. The sequence of rooms on the ground floor, which should also be made accessible to the public. built from 1906, remodeling and renovation 1979/82 December 10, 1981 40


BW Rentei at Pesch Castle Ossum-Bösinghoven
Ossum 15
map
2-storey, 7-axis building with gate entrance, hipped roof and clock tower. The Rentei was the administrative part of Pesch Castle. Your contribution to human history is inextricably linked with Pesch Castle. Otherwise there are the same reasons for preservation and use here as for the main building of the castle.

The protection extends to the preservation of the exterior, so that the previous use remains recognizable as an administrative part; Modifications inside are possible.

December 10, 1981 41


BW Chapel at Pesch Castle Ossum-Bösinghoven
Schloss Pesch
map
Round building, outer walls made of brick, still unplastered. Inside there is a single-storey chapel room with 2-storey ancillary rooms facing the main house. The chapel is part of the overall complex of Pesch Castle, it marks the close connection between the landowners and the church, and also shows the obligation that the owners saw towards religious life; the chapel also makes it clear that the landowner considered a separate church necessary for his family and household. The chapel is part of the entire castle complex. The reasons for preservation result from the design of this complex and the contribution of the chapel to history.

Scope of protection: Preservation of the external appearance of the chapel in such a way that it remains recognizable as a church. If the interior is used for anything other than church purposes, an attempt must also be made to keep the original purpose.

December 10, 1981 42


BW Manor at Pesch Castle Ossum-Bösinghoven
Ossum 15a
map
Open, 3-wing brick courtyard from 1795. The barn tracts partly with tail gables, the two-storey house with embroidered arched windows and a high mansard roof. The courtyard is part of Pesch Castle and shows the close connection to agricultural production that existed at this castle. For the maintenance of the farm there are essentially ethnographic reasons, namely the local history. The courtyard must be preserved in order to make the connection between the castle and the agricultural operation clear. The courtyard also marks the typical architecture of a spacious agricultural production facility and must be preserved for design reasons.

The protection extends to the maintenance of the entire facility and the external appearance. Conversions inside to adapt to modern living and business conditions are possible.

1795 December 10, 1981 43


Former RWE building in Osterath Former RWE building in Osterath Osterath
Strümper Strasse 1-7
map
The three-part building complex consists of a two-storey building with a pitched roof, an adjoining elongated hall with a barrel-shaped roof and, as a continuation of the line, a single-storey building with a monopitch roof.

The centerpiece of the power station was the hall, in which there was a boiler on one side and a steam engine and generator on the other. A transverse wall that led up to the roof separated the boiler room. The hall is spanned by riveted steel trusses. The coal store was in the single-storey part of the building with a pent roof. In the two-story building, the switch and battery room and the office were on the ground floor. There was an apartment on the upper floor. Of the structural / functional substance of the power station, only the chimney is missing, which was located in front of the entire system. The uniform exterior design of the building structure is based on the principles of industrial architecture typical of the time. Separated from the white plastered wall surfaces are the plinths, window and door frames, wall templates, eaves as well as gable triangles and the central axis of the two-storey building in visible brickwork. The originally untreated masonry is now whitewashed. The wall structure of the hall is particularly lively with console cornices over the wall surfaces. The original wooden windows have been preserved in the hall.

Meaning:

Despite the lack of mechanical and technical equipment, the structurally almost completely preserved electricity works Osterath is a document for the beginning of the supply of the place with electricity. In addition to the historical aspect, it also illustrates how rural power supply was solved in individual cases in the early days of electrification. Since in many other cases the small towns in the countryside were supplied supraregionally from the beginning by the large electricity-generating companies, only a few examples of this type of power plant have survived. The structurally differentiated design of the plant gives an impression of how the power plant works. The surviving structural inventory is therefore important for the local history of Osterath and for the history of man and the history of the cities and settlements. As part of Osterath's commercial and industrial infrastructure, it is also important for the history of work and production conditions. The preservation of the object lies in urban planning and scientific. Particularly in the public interest for reasons of local history and technology.

With permission under monument law dated August 6, 2003, the scope of protection was limited to the external appearance (exterior masonry, windows, doors, roofs).

07/17/2001
and
08/06/2003
144


1. Footfall 1. Footfall Osterath
Fröbelstraße / Bommershöfer Weg
map
In 1764 the married couple Clemens Pool and Catharina Hausmann donated six stone wayside shrines, which were set up in Osterath. Together with the cross on the choir of the parish church, they form the “seven footfalls” as stations on a prayer path. 1764 54


2. Footfall 2. Footfall Osterath
Hochstrasse 13 in the front yard of the rectory
map
In 1764 the married couple Clemens Pool and Catharina Hausmann donated six stone wayside shrines, which were set up in Osterath. Together with the cross on the choir of the parish church, they form the “seven footfalls” as stations on a prayer path. 1764 55


3. Footfall 3. Footfall Osterath
Willicher Straße 10 in the front garden
map
In 1764 the married couple Clemens Pool and Catharina Hausmann donated six stone wayside shrines, which were set up in Osterath. Together with the cross on the choir of the parish church, they form the “seven footfalls” as stations on a prayer path. 1764 56


4. Footfall 4. Footfall Osterath
Schwertgesweg / Am Fußfall
card
In 1764 the married couple Clemens Pool and Catharina Hausmann donated six stone wayside shrines, which were set up in Osterath. Together with the cross on the choir of the parish church, they form the “seven footfalls” as stations on a prayer path. 1764 57


5. Footfall 5. Footfall Osterath
Schützendelle / Azaleenweg
map
In 1764 the married couple Clemens Pool and Catharina Hausmann donated six stone wayside shrines, which were set up in Osterath. Together with the cross on the choir of the parish church, they form the “seven footfalls” as stations on a prayer path. 1764 58


6. Footfall 6. Footfall Osterath
Gruttorfer Weg / Gatherstrasse
map
In 1764 the married couple Clemens Pool and Catharina Hausmann donated six stone wayside shrines, which were set up in Osterath. Together with the cross on the choir of the parish church, they form the “seven footfalls” as stations on a prayer path. 1764 59


7. Footfall 7. Footfall Osterath
Am choir of the parish church St. Nicholas
card
In 1764 the married couple Clemens Pool and Catharina Hausmann donated six stone wayside shrines, which were set up in Osterath. Together with the cross on the choir of the parish church, they form the “seven footfalls” as stations on a prayer path. 1764 60


BW Gravestone of Mayor Kurfgen Osterath
Bahnhofsweg
map
Resting place of the well-born Mr. Heinr. Jos. Kurfgen, born zu Linn in 1781, died May 10, 1847, in state service since 1805, he headed several offices, was mayor in Osterath and Fischeln for 25 years, was currently proposed to the district administrator and to the state parliament. u. Homage. Deputy Sr. Majesty of the King elected. Bless his memory. 1847 52


Reception building at Osterath station Reception building at Osterath station Osterath
Bahnhofsweg 31
map
The building, erected around 1860, is located on the Cologne-Krefeld railway line, which opened in 1856. After the demolition of the identical Cologne-Worringen train station, the two-storey Osterath building represents the last important document from the early history of rail traffic on this route. In addition, it is one of the few surviving examples of a fully wood-clad train station building.

The scope of protection extends to the core structure and the extension added later, which is also clad in wood, as well as the platform roof. Justification of the monument property: Significant for reasons of traffic and local history as well as traffic construction history.

circa 1860 05/21/1987 138


Bommershof Bommershof Osterath
Bommershöfe 6
map
3-wing brick courtyard, residential building from 1752, 2-storey in 3 axes, plastered with sandstone walls, courtyard building from the end of the 19th century.

The farm is an old agricultural property. Today's buildings document the development of agriculture and thus also the settlement of this area and the status of agriculture at the time of development.

House from 1752, courtyard building from the end of the 19th century 09/11/1984 113


Gravestone above Gravestone above Osterath
Bommershöfer Weg; at the morgue of the Osterather Friedhof
card
IHS AO 1689 DEN 8 JUNO GERHART DIED BEHEN AO 1695 DEN 29 7BRIS NOELGEN SEJNE HAUßFRAW DIED around 1700 62


Gravestone Pummelers Heller Gravestone Pummelers Heller Osterath
Bommershöfer Weg; at the morgue of the Osterather Friedhof
card
1705 27 DECEMBRIS, THE SAME HELENA PUMMELERS DIED LIGHTER AGE 79 around 1700 63


Janesen tombstone Janesen tombstone Osterath
Bommershöfer Weg; at the morgue of the Osterather Friedhof
card
IHS AO 1723 DIED HENRICH JANESEN AO 17th .. D .. ..... DIED GRETGEN JANESEN AO 1700 D 5 MAY DIED PETER JANESEN around 1700 64


Drewers tombstone Drewers tombstone Osterath
Bommershöfer Weg; at the morgue of the Osterather Friedhof
card
IHS AO 1700 8 JUNY DIED HENRICH DREWERS KIRCHMEISTER ALT 73 AO 1690 3 DECEMBER DIED GRITGEN SEINE HAUßFRAW around 1700 65


Bellforstter tombstone Bellforstter tombstone Osterath
Bommershöfer Weg; at the morgue of the Osterather Friedhof
card
IHS AO 1701 27 JUNY DIED HENRICH BELLFORSTTER KIRTCHMEISTER ALT 70 AO 1704 24 MAY DIED CATHARINA HIS HOUSEWIFE around 1700 66


Tilmes tombstone Tilmes tombstone Osterath
Bommershöfer Weg; at the morgue of the Osterather Friedhof
card
1707 THE 19 JUNE DIED THE HONORABLE TRUTGEN TILMES NAMED VENTEN AGED 59 YEARS 4 MONTHS around 1700 67


Gravestone Gobels Gravestone Gobels Osterath
Bommershöfer Weg; at the morgue of the Osterather Friedhof
card
Ad 7 THE DEAD OF THE Honorable JOHANES GOBELS FROM BUERICH HISIEGEN CLOSTERS PROEFENTER around 1700 68


Stolsenberg tombstone Stolsenberg tombstone Osterath
Bommershöfer Weg; at the morgue of the Osterather Friedhof
card
IHS AO 1660 DEN 15 8BRIS DIED THE TUGENTAME GERTRUDT STOLSENBERG NAMED HEUSREIT AO 15 .. THE 12 MAY DIED THE HERBARE AND FROMER PET .... .... KEN D .... KEN SELLER GOD MERCY around 1700 69


Gravestone Hausman Gravestone Hausman Osterath
Bommershöfer Weg; at the morgue of the Osterather Friedhof
card
IHS REMBOLT HAUSMAN FRAW DIED AO 1692 THE 28 OCTOBER BILGEN KRULGES DE 2 FRAW DIED AO1700 D 22 JANUARY MARIA LOEHR DSGG around 1700 70


Half-timbered house "Bockstation" Half-timbered house "Bockstation" Osterath
Goethestrasse 50
map
Single-storey half-timbered house with hipped roof, originally built in the 17th century. Rebuilt in 1965. The house is worth preserving because of its design and for a certain technique of house construction. It documents the earlier settlement of Osterath and is one of the few half-timbered houses in Meerbusch. originally built in the 17th century, rebuilt in 1965 09/11/1984 111


Former bakery Former bakery Osterath
Hingstenweg 6
map
Brick-built bakery in the adjacent courtyard. The bakery testifies to the self-sufficiency of the farms. As a production facility for this self-sufficiency, it is important for human history and the development of work and production conditions. 09/11/1984 107


Parish Church of St. Nicholas Parish Church of St. Nicholas Osterath
Hochstrasse
map
3-aisled neo-Gothic pseudo-basilica with ribbed vault, polygonal choir from 1856, west tower from the 12th century, tuff; Retained from the furnishings: organ gallery, church stalls, 2 confessionals, pulpit, baptismal font from 1647.

Testimony to the religious life and the expansion of the Osterath community. Church and tower are worth preserving because of the architectural style. The protection extends to the unchanged preservation, but adaptation to modern liturgical requirements and uses are possible.

West tower from the 12th century, three-aisled neo-Gothic pseudo-basilica from 1856 December 10, 1981 12


Former town hall Osterath Former town hall Osterath Osterath
Hochstrasse 1
map
The town hall building consists of two plastered structures with different dates of construction. The left, older wing, which was converted into the town hall in 1886 and expanded by three axes in 1905, faces the street with its eaves side. The plastered facade, designed in the classical style, is divided into two floors with seven window axes. A richly profiled eaves cornice, supported by corner pilasters, forms the upper end of the wall. The gable-facing part of the building, which is adjacent to the right and was built in 1925, appears like a broad risalit in front of the older facade. The plasticity of its structural elements gives the building a dominant monumentality. The portal in the left axis is framed by a pedicle. Wide, two-tiered wall or corner pillars let the windows on the upper floor move into the background. In front of the middle two axes, a balcony protrudes on two strong consoles. Squat, cantilevered pyramids are placed on the corner pillars, with a clock in a concave curved frame in the central axis. The gable zone is hipped. The rear building front shows a simple design. Inside the younger part of the building, a room divided by four free supports takes up almost the entire ground floor. The room layout of the upper floor is dominated by a large hall.

Although extensive renovation and conversion work took place, the structure of the elevation and the division of the interior rooms were largely preserved. The former home of the mayor, located near the outskirts, developed in the second half of the 19th century. The town hall building, which was expanded several times with the steady increase in the population of Osterath. These extensions are particularly made clear by the two clearly distinguishable building wings. The successive expansion of the town hall is important as a testimony to the increasing prosperity of the place. Its location is of urban significance as it documents the extent of the former street village beyond its former borders. The building is important for the development of a rural town hall building, which received its urban character in the 1920s. The town hall building is worth preserving for architectural and urban planning reasons and as a testimony to the local history of Osterath in the course of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

1886 11.12.1984
and
21.10.2002
50


Rectory Rectory Osterath
Hochstrasse 13
map
2-storey brick building in 5 axes, sandstone walls, door entrance with pointed arch niche, built in 1904.

Significance for the development of the parish and for the development of the town center. The protection extends to the unchanged preservation of the exterior as well as the essential sequence of rooms inside.

1904 December 10, 1981 11


Old school Old school Osterath
Hochstrasse 14
map
two-storey brick building in eight axes 1928 51


Plöneshof Plöneshof Osterath
Hochstrasse 15
map
1-storey brick building, gable-free, with a loft, plastered side. From 1791. On the left, a former horse stable from the end of the 19th century.

The building bears witness to the settlement of the Osterath community, as well as the development of agriculture, since it was originally an agricultural property. Preservation is also necessary for urban planning reasons, since the building determines the urban development rank of the elevated road. The protection extends to the unchanged external preservation, in the case of the residential building also preservation of the essential sequence of rooms.

1791 (stable at the end of the 19th century) December 10, 1981 16


Residential building Residential building Osterath
Hochstrasse 18
map
former brick courtyard The year 1855 above the door 117


Former farm Former farm Osterath
Hochstrasse 19
map
2-storey brick building in 8 axes with gate entrance, built in 1856, plastered facade, later blinded.

Initially a farm and restaurant was operated here, after 1836 a post office and a horse changing station were set up in the Hotel Ackers. The building is also evidence of the development of working and communication conditions. The building is part of the old village street of Osterath. Scope of protection: Unchanged preservation of the facade facing the elevated road.

Extended protection status: (13.05.1996)

The external appearance of the main house on Hochstrasse including the inner courtyard facade of the main house with its stair tower.

1856 09/11/1984
and
05/13/1996
118


Old Vicariate Old Vicariate Osterath
Hochstrasse 20
map
2-storey building in 3: 3 axes, plastered facade from the end of the 19th century, windows changed, half-hip roof.

The house is a testimony to the development of the Catholic parish in Osterath, as the respective chaplain lived here. The building is part of the development of the old town center of Osterath.

2. Description:

The eaves, two-storey half-timbered house with a half-hipped roof was probably built in the 18th century at the latest. The two-room-deep, transversely closed building with a central corridor has a rear, possibly more recent towing. The two-storey inner eaves wall, which has largely been preserved in its original form, shows remains of an anchor beam decoration inside the house. Cologne beam ceilings have been preserved on the ground floor. The current staircase, which is located in the towed part of the house, was probably re-installed in the 1930s.

The original straight staircase was arranged parallel to the gable in the corridor, as the change in the ceiling beams suggests. The rafter roof of the house, which has a collar beam position, is of more recent date and of no great interest in terms of carpentry. The house at Hochstrasse 20 is an important testimony to the development of the Catholic parish of St. Nikolaus in Meerbusch-Osterath. It is the predecessor of the new Vicarie built in 1872/73 on the church square. The half-timbered house thus belongs to the historical development of the old town center of Osterath and shows its original scale. The building is important for human history, especially the history of the town and settlement of Osterath. It is a typical testimony to the historic town center.

End of the 19th century 09/11/1985 119


Hotel Weindorf Hotel Weindorf Osterath
Hochstrasse 21
map
4-wing former brick courtyard, main house 2-storey in 6 axes, plastered facade from the end of the 19th century. Gatehouse in 3 axes with gate entrance, brick.

The building belongs to the old town center of Osterath and testifies to the development of the catering trade in this district.

End of the 19th century 09/11/1984 120


Residential building Residential building Osterath
Hochstrasse 26
map
2-storey brick house in 3 axes from the beginning of the 19th century.

The building shows a simple, rural style with brick decorations. It marks the development of the settlement of Osterath, but also a rural architectural style. Together with the rest of the old buildings, the house documents the image of the high street in Osterath that is worth preserving.

Early 19th century 09/11/1984 121


Residential building Residential building Osterath
Hochstrasse 27
map
2-storey brick house in 5 axes from the 18th century, plastered facade, windows partially changed.

The house shows how the houses in its vicinity, the development of the old town center of Osterath, which is to remain unchanged.

18th century 09/11/1984 122


Houses Houses Osterath
Hochstrasse 34 u. 36
card
2-storey half-timbered building with wooden walls from the 17th / 18th centuries Century. Plastered facade (before approx. 1830), hipped roof. The building was renovated in 1982 and changed inside.

The building, which has two house numbers and was used separately, is a uniform half-timbered building that shows the technology of the half-timbered structure and at the same time the settlement of the old village street in the 17th and 18th Century attested.

17./18. Century (plastering of the facade before 1830) 09/11/1984 124


"Zur Taube" restaurant "Zur Taube" restaurant Osterath
Hochstrasse 38
map
2-storey brick house in non-continuous axes, plastered, built at the end of the 18th century. Partially changed windows on the first floor. In addition to the restaurant that still exists today, the building also included the village forge. It thus testifies to the development of work, production and economic conditions.

The protection is limited to the residential and restaurant buildings. The decision of March 29, 1985 is hereby repealed.

End of 18th century 09/11/1984 125


Kröllgeshof Kröllgeshof Osterath
Hochstrasse 6
map
two-story brick building built in 1786 17th


Residential building Residential building Osterath
Kaarster Strasse 10
map
2-storey house in 7 axes from the middle of the 19th century, plastered facade, half-hip roof.

The house testifies to an earlier courtyard, which has been known since 1683. At the same time, the development of working and production conditions, but also the settlement of Osterath, is documented. The house is important for the current appearance of the district. In addition, the 2-storey house documents the architectural style of its time, as it was realized in a rural community. The well-structured facade enhances the image of the street and shapes the historical character.

1683 09/11/1984 116


Hehnenhof Hehnenhof Osterath
Kaarster Strasse 7
map
Brick house from the middle of the 19th century. 2-storey in 7 axes with brick window and door frames, crooked hip roof. The house is part of a farm that belongs to the old Osterather Höfe. The house testifies to the agricultural past of Osterath and at the same time the settlement of this place. The house is worth preserving because of its harmonious design and as a characteristic residential building of a farm. The balanced proportions give Kaarster Strasse a characteristic image.

The protection extends to the unchanged preservation of the external shape, changes in the interior to adapt to modern living and farming methods are possible.

Mid 19th century December 10, 1981 18th


Chapel of Our Lady Chapel of Our Lady Osterath
Kapellenstrasse 82
map
Brick building with a flat new wooden ceiling, arched windows, semicircular apse and gable roof. The building was erected in 1847 and renovated in 1971. The bell tower next to the chapel was also built in that year.

Local history reasons speak in favor of preservation, as the chapel is a document of religious life. The protection refers to the unchanged receipt.

1847 December 10, 1981 13


Half-timbered house Half-timbered house Osterath
Kapellenstrasse 51
map
Single-storey half-timbered house, wooden walls from the 2nd half of the 18th century, some windows changed.

Significant for the settlement of Osterath and a certain technique of house building, namely the half-timbering. The half-timbered house is the last remaining part of a farm that was mentioned as early as 1754 under the name of the Körschgenhaus. The protection extends to the unchanged preservation of the external shape and the technical construction of the house. Adaptation to modern living and economic conditions possible.

2nd half of the 18th century December 10, 1981 14th


Old steam mill Old steam mill Osterath
Kirchplatz 1
map
Two-storey brick building in 7 axes with a gate entrance, plaster facade with neo-baroque decorative shapes, built in 1883 with a steam mill. The house bears witness to the settlement and development of Osterath in the 19th century and a development of production conditions, as the builder of the house built and operated a steam mill here in competition with the existing windmill. The building with its harmonious dimensions and its neo-baroque decorative shapes determines the character of the church square, which is to be preserved as part of the old village center. The "Book and Art Cabinet Mönter" has been located in the listed building since 1983, and was expanded in 1988 with the addition of converted neighboring houses. 1883 09/11/1984 115


New Vicarie New Vicarie Osterath
Kirchplatz 27
map
The building was erected in 1872/73 as a replacement for the old vicarage building at Hochstrasse 20 behind the choir of the parish church. Characterized by the official “building policy” of the Archdiocese of Cologne, the building has a neo-Gothic shape. In 1985/86 the building was restored and the historical facade restored.

The building has

  • Significance for the history of building in the Archdiocese of Cologne
  • Significance for the construction of the parish of St. Nicholas
  • Significance for the urban development of the Osterath community.
1872/73 03/10/1987 139


Residential building Residential building Osterath
Krefelder Strasse 17
map
Residential house in the four-wing brick courtyard, 2-storey in 5 axes, plastered, hipped roof. Changed upper floor window, brick courtyard building (1836).

A Hoterhof is mentioned by its owner Jakob in dem Holte in the document dated October 2, 1364 about the reconstruction of the windmill that was destroyed in a war. In 1496 it is included in the tithe lists, attested in the deed of January 29, 1601 as a cathedral provost fief. Of particular interest, however, is that the then mayor Kurfgen bought the farm in 1836 when the state road from Haus Meer to Krefeld, the route of which cut through the grounds of the former courtyard, was built, had the courtyard buildings still preserved and took up residence there. The farm was used as a farm and restaurant. The large pub hall was only converted into living space in 1967. The first Osterath doctor Dr. Ludwig Kurfgen had his practice in this house from 1840.

1836 and before 09/11/1984 114


facade facade Osterath
Meerbuscher Strasse 17
map
Facade from 1906 with plaster ornaments, door and window structure still in their original state. For decades the building was the doctor's house in Osterath. To that extent it is a memorial for medical care in Osterath and also for the life of a doctor in the country. With its architectural style, it not only documents the style of the turn of the century and its implementation in a rural community, but also the more recent architecture, the open-minded attitude of the Osterath doctor at the time. The house at Meerbuscher Straße 17, with its beautiful and well-maintained facade, is part of the structural appearance of the Osterath district. 1906 09/11/1984 112


BW Former baking house of the Nibbelshof (disintegrated) Osterath
Nibbelsweg 20
map
Old half-timbered bakery from 1731, part of an open 4-wing brick courtyard. The building is important for human history, as it shows part of the agricultural production conditions and documents the self-sufficiency of the farms. In addition, the buildings represent the historic Nibbelshof, which has been documented since 1496. 1731 09/11/1984 108


Körschgeshof Körschgeshof Osterath
Schweinheimerweg 40
map
3-wing brick courtyard from 1906, 2-storey residential building in 5 axes, 2 axes raised, 3-storey raised and gabled, pilaster strips, segmented arched windows, crooked hipped roof.

For the property of a monument it is crucial that the buildings represent the historical Kyrgeshof or Körschgeshof, which is important for the history of the people in the area of ​​the present-day city of Meerbusch. The farm gives evidence of the settlement of the home area and of the rank of agriculture e.g. At the time of its construction. At the same time, it documents the development of agricultural work and production conditions. The courtyard is a generous ensemble of residential and farm buildings in the Lower Rhine landscape. It is an expression of the proud rural architecture from the beginning of this century. The residential building was constructed as a free-standing building

1906 09/11/1984 109


Hochkreuz former cemetery Hochkreuz former cemetery Osterath
Strümper Strasse
map
High cross of the former cemetery in Osterath 53


Former weaver house Former weaver house Osterath
Willicher Strasse 13
map
One-storey brick building in 3: 3 axes with an extended attic from the mid-19th century, former weaver's house; one gable side covered with Eternit. As a former weaver's house, the building is evidence of the living conditions of this population group. It also bears witness to the settlement of Osterath with the houses of residents who were not active in agriculture, but in a branch of industry that was important on the Lower Rhine from an early age. The building is worth preserving because of the simple but harmonious rural style of the building, and also for urban planning reasons because of its spatial location on Willicher Straße / Am Heinekamp. Mid 19th century 09/11/1984 110


Osterather tower windmill
more pictures
Osterather tower windmill Osterath
Willicher Strasse 89
map
4-storey conical brick building with pointed arched windows with sandstone walls, hooded roof, short casement beams. Built in 1883, renovated 1962–1966.

The mill is the last building in a long history of mills. It is evidence of an artisanal production facility and its development, but also of agriculture and its subsequent business. The mill also has a long history of ownership, in which the Cologne Cathedral Chapter is integrated.

There are ethnographic reasons for the preservation, as the mill attests to the local history. Urban planning reasons also offer preservation, as the mill is worth preserving as a technical building of aesthetic harmony and a striking reference to agriculture. The protection extends to the unchanged preservation of the external shape, other roof covering of the hood possible, also changes to the wing stub.

1883 December 10, 1981 15th


New Meerhof New Meerhof Strümp
Am Bergfeld 6
card
Open 4-wing brick courtyard complex, 2-storey residential building with a mezzanine in 5 axes with hipped roof, brick with sandstone cornices and sand door framing from 1846, a barn wing from the 18th century. The new Meerhof in its current form is a document for the agricultural past of the area of ​​today's city of Meerbusch and for the agricultural production method and storage. The 2-storey manor house also documents the economic conditions and the self-image of the builder and then manager of the farm. It is thus a testimony to the status of agriculture at that time. In addition, the courtyard documents a certain architecture of large agricultural farms. Its symmetry and harmony make it an asset to agriculture. Scope of protection: Entire courtyard in its current external form. Adaptation of the farm buildings to modern economic methods is possible, as well as extensions, which, however, would have to fit into the overall system. The house is to remain unchanged. 1846 December 10, 1981 28


War memorial Strümp War memorial Strümp Stocking in
front of the St. Franziskus Church , Kaustinenweg
map
War memorial Strümp 1959 157


Mönkshof Mönkshof Strümp (Schürkesfeld)
Schürkesweg 1
map
Open, 4-wing brick courtyard from the second half of the 19th century, two-storey residential building in 5 axes with a gabled single-axis central projection. The farm is a testament to rural living and economic activity. It documents past and present working and production conditions. In its architectural design it is a typical Lower Rhine courtyard.

The protection extends to the entire courtyard in its current external form, adaptation to modern economic and living methods is possible.

2nd half of the 19th century December 10, 1981 44


Schürkeshof Schürkeshof Strümp (Schürkesfeld)
Schürkesweg 7
map
Closed 4-wing brick courtyard from 1902, 2-storey house in 5 axes with a central axis emphasized by a tail gable, high hipped roof with viewing platform; the barn wing partially changed. The farm is a particularly typical example of an agricultural operation in the Lower Rhine region.

It therefore not only documents the settlement, but also the development of working and production conditions. The architectural rank of the courtyard and the location of the courtyard in the landscape justify the preservation and use of the Schürkeshof. The protection extends to the characteristic appearance of the entire courtyard.

1902 December 10, 1981 27


Crossroads on the highway Crossroads on the highway Strümp
Schürkesweg / Schlossstrasse
map
Sandstone cross, only individual parts left after being destroyed in 1980 1875 80


Individual evidence

  1. Monument Gallery Meerbusch: Architectural and ground monuments in the Meerbusch urban area
  2. City of Meerbusch: "Historical Myriameter stone on the Rhine is restored" ( Memento of the original from August 19, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. dated December 1, 2004; Accessed March 31, 2011 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.meerbusch.de

swell

List of the Meerbusch monument authority

Web links