List of architectural monuments in Nettetal
The list of architectural monuments in Nettetal contains the listed buildings in the area of the city of Nettetal in the district of Viersen in North Rhine-Westphalia (as of September 2011). These monuments are entered in the list of monuments of the city of Nettetal; 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 |
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Jewish Cemetery | Kaldenkirchen Akazienweg map |
The plot of the new Jewish cemetery is on the outskirts, next to the municipal cemetery. Most of the fenced-in lawn has been cleared, and 13 gravestones and slabs have been placed in two rows in the rear. According to D. Peters, however, only three of them are in their original condition, all the others are new or replacement stones from the period after 1945.
The plot shows the location of the newer Jewish cemetery in Kaldenkirchen, which has been occupied since the 1920s, and its burials. It is important for Kaldenkirchen, city of Nettetal. The character as a Jewish cemetery is appropriately designed and still vivid. The preservation of the open space and the tombstones as a cemetery and memorial is in the public interest for scientific, local and cultural-historical reasons |
1920 | Oct 15, 2007 | 186
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Altenhof Manor | Kaldenkirchen Am Altenhof 1 |
Manor from 1664 (R. 1937) as a four-wing brick complex, grouted, with blue stone blocks and plinth; Two-story manor house in 10 axes with a large bluestone portal; Gable top with coat of arms and year; the two outer axes are designed as risalites with cross-saddled hipped roofs; at the rear, single-storey commercial wing buildings; single-storey gatehouse, brick paved, with gate passage, hipped roof. | 1664 | 3rd Sep 1985 | 38
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Windmullershof | Kaldenkirchen Am Altenhof 2 |
1661; four-winged brick courtyard, single-storey residential building with a half-hipped roof; Barn wings at the end of the 18th and 19th centuries.
The farm was removed from the list of monuments as a submerged monument at the end of 2012 due to its poor structural condition |
1661 | Feb. 14, 1989 | 110
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Courtyard | Breyell Am Heydevelthof 11 |
Mid-18th century, formerly three-winged courtyard, residential building, one-storey in three axes, half-hipped roof, brick; Barn half-timbered, partially clad with brick. | 18th century | Jan. 20, 1989 | 74
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Sitio Cross (Breyell Cemetery) | Breyell Am Kastell map |
Monumental high cross system (originally with the body of Christ) as a stone cross made of trachyte and andesite, early 18th century. The cross represents a prominent point in the cemetery, is very important for the district and should therefore be preserved for reasons of local history. | Early 18th century | Oct 10, 1990 | 170
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Catholic parish. To the. St. Josef, Lobberich | Lobberich Am Treppchen 1 card |
The monument is the old parish church "Zum Heiligen Josef". The church, which was built in 1450/70, was expanded into a hall church in 1642 and in 1818 additional buildings were added to the south and north sides. The church is a three-aisled Gothic hall church with a single-storey west tower and a polygonal long choir made of brick, partly with stone, especially on the rear pillars, and sandstone tracery. | 1450/70 | Feb 13, 1987 | 53
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Residential building | Lobberich Am Treppchen 2 card |
Early 19th century, two-storey in five axes with a later plaster facade, hipped roof. | Early 19th century | Feb 16, 1989 | 136
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Brick chapel | Hinsbeck An der Karstrasse map |
It is a small brick chapel on a rectangular floor plan with a rounded end, a round arched opening closed by a decorative lattice door and a pitched roof. It is located at a fork in the road on the historically significant Karstrasse (later also Römerstrasse). In the map of Tranchot / von Müffling, a chapel is already recorded at this point at the beginning of the 19th century. | Early 19th century | 19 Sep 2001 | 183
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Catholic parish church St. Anna | Schaag An der Kirche card |
1865, neo-Gothic brick hall church with cross-section, polygonal choir, roof turret and western tower in front, neo-Gothic furnishings completely preserved, new glass paintings in the choir windows. | 1865 | Jan. 20, 1989 | 61
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Rectory of St. Anna | Schaag An der Kirche 7 card |
Early 19th century, brick, two-storey in 7: 4 axes with stone walls and split pins, hipped roof. | Early 19th century | Jan. 20, 1989 | 62
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Restaurant to the old post | Schaag An der Kirche 9 card |
The monument is a two-story brick house with a gable and plastered sides that was built shortly before the middle of the 19th century. At the rear there is a lower, single-storey extension made of brick with arched windows. The building is one of the characteristic testimonies of Rhenish brick architecture from the 19th century and, together with the neo-Gothic parish church from 1865 and other brick buildings, characterizes the center of the village of Schaag. | in the middle of the 19th century | June 26, 1981 | 7th
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Brick courtyard | Hinsbeck at Bey House 11 |
2nd half of the 18th century / 1851; Four-wing brick courtyard, single-storey residential building in six axes, in 1851 a new two-story residential building was added at an angle to the old one and the entire complex was changed. | 2nd half of the 18th century | Jan. 20, 1989 | 87
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Brick courtyard | Hinsbeck An Haus Bey 12, 13, 14 |
2nd half of the 18th century / 1844; three-winged brick courtyard, single-storey residential building in three axes; House and barn changed in 1844 (Torkeilstein with the year 1844). | 2nd half of the 18th century | Jan. 20, 1989 | 88
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Brick courtyard | Hinsbeck at Bey House 16 |
1610; Former Schaesberger Rentamt, two-storey in four axes with a simple rectangular floor plan with a polygonal tower with a dome roof and lantern on the southeast corner, brick paved, wooden walls, entrance side with raised ground floor and stairs, hipped roof, utility wing later. | 1610 | January 20, 198 | 89
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Catholic parish church of St. Peter | Hinsbeck An St. Peter Card |
1863/67; three-aisled, neo-Gothic brick hall church with transept, polygonal choir and offset west tower from 1882, with largely preserved old furnishings. | 1863/67 | May 2, 1986 | 47
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Brick courtyard | Hinsbeck An St. Peter 4 card |
1899; Three-wing brick courtyard, two-storey residential building in five axes, barn tracts partly new. | 1899 | Jan. 20, 1989 | 90
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Catholic parish church of St. Sebastian | Lobberich To St. Sebastian 1 card |
1891, 1893 neo-Romanesque brick basilica with double tower facade, transept with polygonal choir, with strolling tower, brick with ashlar and basalt ashlar base. | 1891 | Feb 16, 1989 | 137
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Brick courtyard | Schaag Annastraße 8, 10, 12, map |
The monument is a four-winged former brick courtyard with a two-storey house in seven axes with a slightly forward central axis, built as a trading yard in the 18th century / beginning of the 19th century / beginning of the 20th century. | 18.-20. Century | Oct 18, 1988 | 60
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House Baerlo castle complex | Breyell Baerlo 12 |
Water-enclosed castle complex as a former knight's seat; Brick building with hipped roof, 4: 5 axes, central axis of the entrance side pulled out to an entrance tower; the building dates from the middle of the 17th century (probably 1647). It is mentioned as early as 1326 as a noble fief of the family of those (von Krickenbeck-) von Baerle. The solid house, which was formerly reinforced with moats and walls, marked the border with the Duchy of Geldern; in the 17th century he founded several courts and forts. | Late 18th century | Jan. 20, 1989 | 63
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Receiving area Insel Grenzbahnh. Kaldenk | Kaldenkirchen Bahnhofstrasse 1, 1a, 1b map |
The station building on the side of the Bergisch-Märkische Eisenbahn tracks facing away from the city was built around 1865 as a symmetrical, plastered reception building type with a gabled dwarf in the form of a central projection. The main structure was erected at the gable facing the track. A four-axis, single-storey building in front of the station forecourt with an exit to the flat roof served as access for the two railway companies (Bergisch-Märkische and Rheinische) that used the station building. The main structure was given a central projection in two axes and the otherwise usual risalit was retained as the gable facing the platform. The rear of the two-storey building was given a single-storey extension with a three-axis central projection in 13 axes as a waiting room wing, which allowed the already described access to the platforms on both sides. The ground floor windows (now rectangular formats) were presumably modernized and changed in the early post-war years. The old entrance situation is particularly clear behind the platform tunnel that was built around the turn of the century. The design of the exterior provides the artistic, the legibility of the development of the station building from the early railway to the closure period provides the scientific reasons for the maintenance and use of the station reception building. The effect of the station on the economy of the German border area around Kaldenkirchen makes the property mentioned above important for the city of KaldenkirchenNettetal and its residents as well as for the general history of railway construction and the development of working conditions at the stations. Thereafter, there is a public interest in the maintenance and use of the reception building according to § 2 (1) of the Monument Protection Act NRW (DSchG NRW). | 1865 | Oct 25, 1995 | 176
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Residential building | Kaldenkirchen Bahnhofstrasse 4 map |
Built in the 2nd half of the 19th century; six-axis, two-story, eaves-facing residential building with plastered brick facade; the entrance axis (outside left) is projected like a pilaster strip, gabled and richly decorated (pillars on the ground floor, arched door with segmented arched gable, double arched window on the upper floor); the ground floor shows a plastered, partly diamond-coated cuboid; Base, belt and coffee cornices are available; A mosaic band runs around under the cornice supported by consoles; the windows on the upper floor are plastered with fascia, the cheeks of which represent columns and are crowned alternately with segmented arch and triangular gables; under the windows of festoons; the typical rear building is available. | 2nd half of the 19th century | 30th Mar 1989 | 111
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Brick courtyard | Breyell Berg 21/22 card |
End of the 18th century; four-wing brick courtyard, single-storey residential building with a half-hipped roof; changed in the 19th century. | Late 18th century | Jan. 20, 1989 | 64
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Residential building | Hinsbeck Bergstrasse 1a map |
Around 1800, late 19th century; 3-storey corner house facing the market in 4: 4 axes, neo-baroque stucco decor with corner blocks and cornice (end of the 19th century), hipped roof. | around 1800 | Jan. 20, 1989 | 91
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Residential building | Hinsbeck Bergstrasse 9 map |
Two-storey brick house with a pitched roof from the second half of the 19th century, with a garden a little away from the street. Eaves-facing facade on three axes with regular structuring by cornices or friezes and corner pilasters as well as an accentuated central entrance axis; side gables with blind windows. Entrance door, floor plan with central corridor, floor tile, stairs and doors probably original. At the back, modern extension without monument value. | 2nd half of the 19th century | Nov 17, 1999 | 181
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St. Croix Chapel | Hinsbeck Bergstrasse 32 map |
Before 1731; octagonal plastered building with flat wooden ceiling and oval windows, hooded roof with neo-Gothic lantern, rough plaster around 1905; Station of the Cross now as footfalls. | before 1731 | Jan. 20, 1989 | 92
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Residential building | Breyell Bieth 29 |
The monument is a semi-detached house divided in the direction of the ridge, which used to be a cohesive residential unit. The outer wall, stud frames and roof as well as the old chimney block inside have been preserved. Overall, despite some changes, the house still offers the vivid picture of a cottage on the Lower Rhine, as was typical for the country up into the 19th century. Preservation is in the public interest for scientific, especially ethnographic and settlement-historical reasons. | 19th century | July 16, 1984 | 24
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Residential building | Breyell Bieth 30 |
The monument is a two-story brick building with a five-axis facade facing the main road. At the rear there is a utility wing. The house dates from the middle to the second half of the 19th century. It was created at a time when the structural forms of the hall house on the Lower Rhine - as it is preserved in the houses Bieth 28/29 and 31 - was abandoned and a stronger structural separation of residential and commercial areas was sought. The change is particularly clear due to the direct connection with the Bieth 31 building. Preservation is in the public interest for scientific, especially ethnographic and settlement-historical reasons | in the middle of the 19th century | July 16, 1984 | 25th
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Residential building | Breyell Bieth 31 |
The monument is a stud house with solid external walls made of field fire bricks, dated “1788” by wall anchors, which was later converted into an inn. Inside, the stud work and roof construction from the 18th century, as well as the block of the former double chimney in the middle of the house, a cheek board and part of the front board in the later added smokehouse are preserved from the northwest hood. In addition, there is also the operating room in the north corner. Preservation is in the public interest for scientific, especially ethnographic and settlement-historical reasons. | 1788 | July 16, 1984 | 26th
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Heiligenhaus | Lobberich Bocholt (Niederbocholt) 13 card |
17th century (?); plastered block with curved gable with niche and cross | 17th century | Feb 16, 1989 | 139
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Brick courtyard | Lobberich Bocholt (Niederbocholt) 23 card |
1903; four-wing brick courtyard, two-storey residential building in 5: 4 axes, dated in the gate wedge, wooden pergola. | 1903 | Feb 16, 1989 | 140
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Stiegerhof (Vierhöfe) | Lobberich Bocholt 7 card |
Three-wing brick courtyard, T-house with a stable part from the late 19th century and a residential building from the end of the 19th century, the converted stable part made of brick in non-continuous axes with wooden window frames, the living part in 3: 5 axes with bluestone plank benches and hipped roof, northern stable and drawer wing from 1880, third wing through a barn, which was partially rebuilt in 1970, whose preserved outer masonry is important for the structure of the courtyard. | 19th century | Feb 16, 1989 | 138
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Kaiserturm and Bocholt House | Lobberich Bocholt 14 card |
Up until the end of the 18th century, Haus Bocholt was the ancestral seat of the important Lower Rhine dynasty of the same name. The remainder of the former outer bailey (now the courtyard) is the late Gothic gate. The ruins of the imperial tower - including the beginnings of a chapel in the vaulted ground floor - formed a four-story brick tower that belonged to the high castle in the 14th to 15th centuries. The building monument is the courtyard and tower ruins including the depression adjacent to the complex on the recognizable former wall. | Late 18th century | Dec 30, 1983 | 21st
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Brick courtyard | Lobberich Bocholt 25 card |
1889; four-wing brick courtyard, two-storey residential building in five axes; Year in the Torkeilstein. | 1889 | Feb 16, 1989 | 141
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Brick courtyard | Lobberich Bocholt 26, 26a, 26b card |
Second half of the 19th century, around 1905; Three-winged brick courtyard, old two-storey house in five axes, new house around 1905, two-storey in three axes, left axis widened and gabled, brick pilaster strips and decorations. | around 1905 | Feb 6, 1991 | 171
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Brick courtyard | Lobberich Bocholt 30–30c card |
18th century / late 19th century; three-wing former brick courtyard, single-storey residential building, end of the 19th century, two-storey raised at the rear; Barn wing partly in half-timbered, renovated in the 20th century. | 18th century | Feb 16, 1989 | 142
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Residential building | Lobberich Breyeller Strasse 30 map |
The house at Breyeller Straße 30 in a three-axis, two-story house with a stucco facade built in 1887 (in connection with the houses at Breyeller Straße 32 and 34). It stems from the lively construction activity on Breyeller Strasse in the 1880s. Houses no. 32 and 34 are the last remains of the original development on Breyeller Strasse. From a local historical point of view, preservation is in the public interest. | 1887 | Feb 13, 1987 | 51
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Residential building | Lobberich Breyeller Strasse 32 map |
The house at Breyeller Straße 32 is a three-axis, two-story house with a stucco facade built in 1887 (in connection with the houses at Breyeller Straße 30 and 34). It stems from the lively construction activity in the 1880s on Breyeller Strasse. Houses 30 and 34 are the last remains of the original development on Breyeller Straße. In the house at Breyeller Straße 32, stucco ceilings have been preserved on the ground floor including the hall and in the front room of the upper floor tiled floors and stairs. From a local historical point of view, preservation is in the public interest. | 1887 | Feb 13, 1987 | 52
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Nelsen Mill | Breyell Breyeller Strasse 114, 116, 118 |
Mid 19th century; former three-winged mill, of which the front angular building with two-storey brick residential building in four axes with arched window and frieze has been preserved; Gable side later with newer window openings, gate entrance changed, utility wing 1½-storey. | in the middle of the 19th century | Feb 16, 1989 | 161
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Residential building | Kaldenkirchen Bruch 39 map |
Kate from the 18th century with the date "1799" in a stone of the east gable; Modified and enlarged in the first half of the 19th century with the preservation and use of the framework, whereby the half-timbered walls inside, the chimney block and some old doors have been preserved. Noteworthy is the seldom found operating room, which is located in the middle of the northern long side. The preservation of the building is in the public interest for scientific, architectural, historical and ethnological reasons. | 1799 | Dec 5, 1984 | 29
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Wayside cross | Schaag Bruckrath 1 card |
Around 1900; Plastered sandstone, base with inscription, cross with body. | around 1900 | Jan. 20, 1989 | 65
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Schaager Mill | Schaag Bruckrath 57, 59 card |
Windmill from 1801 without wings, brick, with brick outbuildings | 1801 | Aug 26, 1985 | 34
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Ingenhoven House | Lobberich Burgstrasse 10 map |
The architectural monument "Haus Ingenhoven" dates from the 15th century (1403) with significant changes around 1544, 1581, 1866 and in the 20th century. It is a mansion, three-storey in 3: 4 axes, brick with sandstone walls and anchor pins, high hipped roof with four round corner towers; Gatehouse at the front, two-storey with two flanking round towers, brick with sandstone walls; at the park entrance two gate pillars made of ashlar blocks from 1700 (inscription with coat of arms). | 1403 | Aug 27, 1984 | 28
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Crucifixion Chapel | Leuth Busch map |
Open path chapel built in 1898 with a brick back wall and a saddle roof resting on two stone pillars, as well as a crucifixion group made of wood. | 1898 | 3rd Sep 1985 | 36
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Tribal Mill | Hinsbeck Büschen 1a card |
Windmill from the 19th century, brick covered with a canopy and wooden blades. | 19th century | Apr 12, 1985 | 32
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Catholic parish church St. Lambertus, Leuth | Leuth Buscher Weg 1 map |
The Leuther parish church is a three-aisled neo-Gothic brick hall church built in the 2nd half of the 15th century and in 1860/61 with a polygonal choir, side chapels and a western tower (2nd half of the 15th century); the old equipment is preserved. There is a sandstone cross from 1712 in the churchyard. | 2nd half of the 15th century | Feb 13, 1987 | 55
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Weyer fort | Breyell Dohrstrasse 55 map |
The Weyer-Kastell is a formerly water-defended three-wing complex. The two-story mansion, covered with a mansard hipped roof, is dated to 1634 by wall anchors. There is a round corner tower at one corner of the utility wing. The building is an important testimony to Breyell's history. Preservation and use are therefore in the public interest according to § 2 DSchG NRW for artistic and scientific reasons. | 1634 | Apr 1, 1982 | 9
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Former Town hall Leuth | Leuth Dorfstrasse 83 map |
The monument is the former town hall of the municipality of Leuth. It dates back to 1622 and was rebuilt around the middle of the 18th century. The two-storey brick house with a half-hipped roof and windows in wooden block frames is not only a very characteristic example of Lower Rhine architecture, but, together with the church, is also one of the important historical buildings that characterize the center of Leuth. | 1622 | June 26, 1981 | 8th
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Courtyard | Leuth Dorfstrasse 84 map |
The monument is a three-wing courtyard around 1800 with an addition from the 2nd half of the 19th century with a former tithe barn. The residential building with a half-hipped roof and bluestone window sills is located on Dorfstraße in an important corner position in terms of urban planning, and the former village blacksmith's shop belongs to the building, and an old stucco ceiling inside the residential building. | 1800 | June 26, 1981 | 2
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Brick villa | Breyell Dülkener Straße 1–3 map |
Around 1900; two-storey brick villa, the corner axes each three-storey raised with round turrets and hipped roof | around 1900 | Jan. 20, 1989 | 66
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Residential building | Lobberich Düsseldorfer Strasse 23 map |
Around 1900, three-axis and two-storey residential building with eaves and a central bay window on the upper floor and laterally offset transverse gable as well as a plastered facade decorated with new Renaissance shapes. | around 1900 | 3rd Mar 1986 | 42
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Wayside chapel (Hermitage) | Lobberich Düsseldorfer Strasse map |
1746; Brick path chapel with niche and life-size wooden figures of the cavalry scene. | 1746 | Feb 16, 1989 | 143
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Thielenhof | Lobberich Dyck 61 card |
Four-wing brick courtyard area; Two-storey residential building on a roughly square floor plan with sparing pilaster strips and pilasters, pilasters with Ionic ashlar or artificial stone capitals, plastered window frames. Front side with transverse gable and semicircular window, underneath with inscription dated 1910. Gate to the courtyard in a resalit with neo-baroque gable. The farm buildings are essentially older than the residential building; Remains (including the gates in the east wing) partly from the 18th or early 19th century. The preservation of the courtyard is in the public interest. It is important for the settlement history of the place and gives a clear example of the development of a farm from around 1800 to the beginning of the 20th century. | 1910 | Dec 14, 1992 | 175
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Winkelshof | Lobberich Dyck 130 card |
2nd half of the 19th century, four-winged brick courtyard, two-storey residential building in five axes with pilaster strips. | 2nd half of the 19th century | Feb 16, 1989 | 144
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Pötterkreuz (Mühlenweg) | Lobberich Dyck 161 card |
1875, plastered sandstone, neo-Gothic, base with inscription, cross with body. | 1875 | Feb 16, 1989 | 146
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Path stick | Lobberich Dyck 175 card |
18th century; Square block with flat, round, deep niche, rough plastered, small metal cross. | 18th century | Feb 16, 1989 | 145
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Prayer room of the Ev. Parish | Lobberich Elisabethstraße 23 map |
1885 in the arched two-storey prayer hall of the evangelical community with street-side anteroom and church room , in which, in addition to the cast-iron row of pillars, parts of the wooden bench platforms are still present. On the upper floor (accessible via a staircase in the anteroom) there is an apartment and a classroom. In addition to the architectural structure of the building, which is worth a monument, the prayer room can be seen in the tradition of those churches in the Lower Rhine region which, as it were, camouflaged themselves in connection with a residential building. This type of building, which can be traced back to the 17th century, was remarkably taken up again in the late 19th century in Lobberich, while elsewhere at this time Protestant churches followed the usual pattern of church building. In addition to its architecture and the testimony to the history of Lobberich and the Protestant community, the significance of the monument lies in the special aspect of the history of the Protestant church. | 1885 | 3rd Mar 1986 | 41
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War memorial, cemetery, lobby area | Lobberich Eremitenstrasse, Lobbericher Str. Map |
1900, war memorial, built to commemorate the wars of 1866–1870–1871, with subsequently engraved dates from 1914–1915 and 1916. 1918, octagonal granite plinth with four wider surfaces with inscription panels, four narrower surfaces with three-dimensional leafy branches and a central part made of red Sandstone, which carries a sculpture made of light sandstone, depicting a dying warrior with an angel. | 1900 | June 27, 1988 | 59
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Gate system, gatehouses cemetery. Praise | Lobberich Eremitenstrasse, Lobbericher Str. Map |
Gate, approx. 1860–1870, flanked by two brick pavilions with pilaster strips that are part of the cemetery wall; concave curved tent roofs and pointed openings. The gatehouses were used as equipment room and storage space for the hearse. The preservation of the buildings is in the public interest for reasons of architectural history, folklore and local history. | 1860-1870 | Apr 3, 1992 | 173
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Rococo garden house (Nettetal-Kaldenkirchen) | Kaldenkirchen Friedrichstrasse 22 a map |
The rococo pavilion is a single-storey building from the 2nd half of the 18th century. Brick paved with a curved mansard hipped roof, rococo door with a small double staircase. The year 1760 is on the banister. The rococo pavilion is a listed building within the meaning of § 2 (1) DSchG NRW . Preservation and use are in the public interest. It was heavily renovated in 2014. | 1760 | 26 Sep 1983 | 19th
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Hubertus Chapel | Hinsbeck Glabbach map |
1871; Single-nave, neo-Gothic, plastered chapel with corner struts and roof turrets, wooden crucifix on the inside, dating in the gable. | 1871 | Jan. 20, 1989 | 93
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Mathäus chapel | Hinsbeck Glabbach 34 map |
End of the 19th century, small neo-Gothic brick chapel, old wooden door with wrought iron grille. | at the end of the 19th century | Jan. 20, 1989 | 94
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Schommers-Hof | Hinsbeck Glabbach 42 map |
End of the 18th century; One-storey brick courtyard with a half-hip roof, originally a one-storey gabled house, today the gate entrance to the window has been redesigned. | Late 18th century | June 7, 1989 | 165
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Brick residential house | Lobberich Graf-Mirbach-Strasse 13 map |
The two-storey brick building with a hipped roof is a free-standing structure within a row of houses, the buildings of which were also built in the 20s and 30s. Compared to the neighboring residential buildings - both one-family and two-family houses - however, the property has a more representative character, which documents the aspirations of an upper-class client. The front of the building on the street side is structured asymmetrically: a 2½-storey, flat-roofed side projection with a rounded corner accentuates the right-hand part of the building, which also houses the doctor's practice with consulting room, waiting room and laboratory. A single-storey extension with a flat roof and a rounded corner mediates between the risalit and the left part of the house. The arrangement of the window openings on the southern corner of the building and the transfer of the ribbon of windows on the eastern corner of the risalit associate architectural design elements of the Bauhaus. The rear front with the five arched openings and the window bay on the ground floor as well as the three rectangular window openings on the upper floor is laid out more conventionally and without tension. A French door leads from the living room onto a terrace which, like the small retaining wall with stairs to the garden, dates from the time it was built. The design of the simple house garden with a rectangular, sunken lawn is also unchanged. Inside, the floor plan position has remained unchanged, as has the stairwell, tiled and terrazzo floors.
The building is important for the history of man and the village of Nettetal-Lobberich, as it documents a certain residential architecture typical of the 1920s, which is rather exceptional in a rural area. The building is worth preserving for scientific, in particular architectural, local and social-historical reasons. As a doctor's residential and practice building under one roof, it represents a type of building that was constituted as a definable form at the beginning of the 20th century and that was stylistically varied. In the architectural-historical context, for which the social affiliation of the client is not insignificant, the building represents a type that on the one hand is committed to the will to form modern architectural trends, on the other hand - concession to the tradition-boundness of the Lower Rhine - has conservative elements. |
1920-1930 | Jan. 10, 1997 | 179
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Tomb Jansen, Matth. Grab 13-15 Fd. E | Kaldenkirchen Grenzwaldstrasse, Am Friedhof map |
Tomb in the form of a Greek tomb with a crowned cross and medallion with the head of Christ. The gable is supported by half columns in a Doric shape. The substance consists of artificial stone. The stonemason was K. Hoss from Kevelaer. The tomb should be preserved because it is a good example of the implementation of classic forms from 1910 to 1920 and preservation is necessary for reasons of contemporary and local history. | 1910-1920 | June 5th 1990 | 166
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Angel figure, entrance Grenzwaldstraße | Kaldenkirchen Grenzwaldstrasse, Am Friedhof map |
Angel made of copper, end of the 19th century, remains of a disappeared tomb. The preservation of the figure is required for reasons of local history. | Late 19th century | Oct 10, 1990 | 169
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Old pastorate | Breyell Haagstrasse 16, 16a map |
Well-preserved two-storey building with side wings, which was built around 1800. In 1889 the building was renovated and provided with neo-Gothic elements (gable and entrance). The inscribed date in the gable is also 1889. Hipped roof around 1800. In the interior of the building, remains of the furnishings of the time have been preserved (stucco and doors). | 1889 | Aug 17, 1990 | 167
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Wayside cross | Lobberich Hagelkreuzstrasse map |
17th century, brick chapel with a wooden hail cross. | 17th century | Feb 16, 1989 | 147
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Water tower | Lobberich Hagelkreuzstrasse map |
1898; Brick with plaster bands and tent roof, dated in the lintel | 1898 | Feb 16, 1989 | 148
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Way of the Cross in the cemetery | Leuth Hampoel card |
1860 rectangular system with neo-Gothic stations of the cross from 1865/66 made of sandstone | 1860 | Feb. 14, 1989 | 131
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Old school (town hall) | Leuth Hampoel 17 map |
End of the 19th century, brick, one-storey in seven axes with a two-storey central wing, neo-Gothic decorative shapes (use: until 1970 town hall, now administrative branch, citizens' hall and Netteverband) | at the end of the 19th century | Feb. 14, 1989 | 132
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Courtyard | Hinsbeck Hamsel 4 map |
Four-wing, closed corner stone complex from the second half of the 18th century, single-storey house with a high pitched roof, with a fully preserved half-timbered barn dating from the 18th century, which is an important testimony to this type of construction on the Lower Rhine. The entire courtyard, the historical substance of which has been partially disrupted, is a listed building in the sense of § 2 (1) DSchG NRW. Preservation and use are therefore in the public interest. The garden opposite the house is part of the monument. | March 25, 1983 | 25th Mar 1983 | 17th
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Living u. Commercial building | Hinsbeck Hauptstrasse 9 map |
Single-storey residential and commercial building on four axes in the center of Hinsbeck, probably arose from an older farm building of a courtyard, 18th century, extended to the street in the 19th century by a flatter towing of the gable roof and with a brick plastered roof at the front. Decorative facade provided; on the right side brick-facing gable (with walled-up old openings and Dutch triangles on the verge), built on the left. A decorative gable above the entrance door as part of the historic decorative facade, the roof area otherwise closed.
Inside numerous historical components and elements, which were several modifications and extensions in the 18th and 19th centuries. 19th century, so that today an overall inconsistent, but largely unadulterated inventory can be determined in the individual elements. The oldest part probably in the rear area still as a half-timbered construction with partially preserved woodwork and mud brick or wickerwork walls. Also u. a. Rare brick masonry details (the upper row is inclined in a wall). In the straight corridor there is a partial base painting in the manner of a marbling and a decorative floor; old wooden stairs, wooden floors. History: The house is located in the southern area of the historical center of Hinsbeck, on the main street running in north / south direction. The origin and structural core of this building and the neighboring numbers 7 and 11 probably go back to the Beekhof, a courtyard that was abandoned in 1858. As far as we know today, the history of this farm can be traced back to the middle of the 18th century. From the documentation of the VVV (quotations in italics): 1756–1814: The farmer Martin Beek owns a farm here, which included the houses on today's main street 7-11. The house at Hauptstrasse 9 was the cattle shed, the house at Hauptstrasse 11 was the residential building. 1814–1856: After Martin Beek's death, his son Heinrich Beek becomes the owner of the farm. His siblings live in the house as employees in the yard at Hauptstrasse 7. 1856–1858: Heinrich Beek dies in 1856 without an heir. In 1858 the farm is sold. After Heinrich Beek's death, the farm will probably be abandoned and divided up. The history and owner of today's house No. 9 between 1858 and 1885 are unknown. 1885–1935: Johann Föhles (locksmith, honorary fire master of the Hinsbeck volunteer fire department) acquires the house and sets up a workshop in the extension. In 1935 he sold the house on a pension basis, but stayed here until his death in 1948. 1935–1956: Josef and Maria Breuers, previously Bergstrasse 2, purchase the house on a pension basis. He died in 1939, but his wife was able to keep the house. In 1943/44 Wilhelm Sternemann, who was deployed as Schanzer, was quartered with her. They get married after the Second World War and stay in Hinsbeck. In 1956 they sell the house and move to Krefeld-Tackheide. 1956–2008: Eduard Minnaert purchases the house and sets up a shop for seeds. In the local tradition, Eduard Minnaert and his shop were last seen as Hinsbeck's “originals”, with “time stood still”. Justification of monument value: As a traditional testimony to a courtyard from the 18th century, of which the residential building and other parts of the core are still preserved, with a history that is known verbally and in writing in the village (see documentation from VVV / Netteagentur), the building at Hauptstr. 9 meaning for Hinsbeck, city of Nettetal. The numerous historical structural details d. 18. u. The 19th century, inside and out, does not give a uniform picture, but it is all the more evidence of the well-known history of the house, which was shaped by changes. They are also individually of noteworthy importance for the transmission of historical building and living methods in a rural context. Some of them are now very rarely preserved, such as B. the different masonry techniques with mud bricks or the brick composites mentioned. Preservation and use of the house are therefore in the public interest for scientific reasons, in addition to local history and in particular architectural history. The urban situation of the house is also important. On the one hand, its simple, but effective decorative facade sets a defining accent on Hinsbeck's main street. The house also stands on the eaves in a slight curve of the street, which already has the tower of the parish church on the Hinsbeck market in view. This creates a pictorial connection - also often photographed - with the tower as a focal point and the mixed gable and eaves-standing houses on the street. House at Hauptstraße 9 is an important part of this context, in which the loss of the neighboring house at Hauptstraße 13 in favor of a parking lot a few years ago is very regrettable. There is therefore a public interest in maintaining and using Hauptstraße 9 for urban planning reasons. Swell: Archive and database of the LVR Office for Monument Preservation in the Rhineland. Materials on the story, created by v. Netteagentur und Verkehrs- und Verschönerungsverein (VVV) Hinsbeck, courtesy of the UDB Nettetal u. Owner Dr. Christian. |
late 19th century | 3rd Mar 2010 | 189
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Michael's Chapel | Leuth Heerstrasse map |
Prayer chapel, mentioned for the first time in 1660, later plastered and clinkered in the interior, small rectangular building with barrel vaults, gable raised over the roof surfaces, sacrificial box and door preserved. The interior of the chapel is severely impaired by clinking. | 1660 | Feb 13, 1989 | 160
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Hochkreuz "Dö schwoarten Herrjott" | Leuth Heronger Strasse map |
High cross made of tuff from the 17th / 18th centuries Century with body and inscription as well as with console with holy water font. | 17./18. century | 3rd Sep 1985 | 35
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Courtyard | Leuth Hinsbecker Strasse 33, 35, 37 map |
The Hofanlage Hinsbecker Straße 33-37 in Nettetal-Leuth consists of a residential stable house with a barn in front of it and two connecting small side wings. In the stable house and the barn there are considerable remains of the 18th century studs. The appearance changed in the 19th century when the stable house and barn were enlarged. In the stable house, the operating room above the flat-roofed cellar and the old doors from the 18th century with their fittings leading to the operating room have been preserved. The 18th century front door is also still there and is currently stored in the courtyard. The courtyard is important for human history because it bears witness to rural life and work on the Lower Rhine in the 18th and 19th centuries. For the preservation and use there are scientific, above all architectural greens, because here there is not only an almost complete courtyard complex from the 18th century in the residential stable house and barn, but also the change in the 19th century under the influence of the square courtyards of this time becomes clear . There are also ethnological reasons for the preservation and use, because here the changes in rural living and business from the 18th to the end of the 19th century can be read. | 18th century | Apr 17, 1996 | 177
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Leuther mill | Leuth Hinsbecker Strasse 34 map |
The Leuther Mühle is a two-story brick building with ancillary buildings, labeled "1738". The old grinder is completely preserved. | 1738 | Oct. 1, 1982 | 10
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House Erlenbroich | Lobberich Hochstrasse 2 map |
The monument is a stone-faced villa built in neo-Gothic forms from around 1905/10, a building of quite sophisticated architecture and largely in good condition. Remnants of the garden and a half-timbered garden shed belong to it. | 1905/10 | June 26, 1981 | 4th
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Brick residential house | Lobberich Hochstrasse 29 map |
Early 19th century; Brick, two-storey in six axes, wooden walls. | Early 19th century | Feb 16, 1989 | 149
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Commercial building (hotel and restaurant) | Lobberich Hochstrasse 37 map |
The monument is a two-storey house on the eaves with a courtyard entrance on the left, which is used as a hotel and restaurant. The substance dates from the 18th century. The old block frame windows are still preserved on the first floor. The building is important for the local history of Lobberich and the architectural history of the Lower Rhine. | 18th century | Dec 5, 1984 | 30th
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Brick residential house | Lobberich Hochstrasse 58 map |
1st half of the 19th century; Brick, two-storey in four axes; Changed windows on the first floor. | 1st half of the 19th century | Feb 16, 1989 | 150
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Brick residential house | Lobberich Hochstrasse 70 map |
Two-story brick house built in 1883/84 with a flat hipped roof and a facade structured by pilaster strips and transverse strips as well as a simple but high-quality emphasis on the entrance situation. In contrast to the inner-city residential buildings of the bourgeoisie, which were provided with elaborately structured plastered facades during this period, the classicist building shows a calm, harmonious design with clear and simple dimensions on its facade. The building, which was very progressively designed for the time, documents (setting urban accents through its design and exposed location) the way of living and living of the citizens, without showing the external pomp that was common at the time of its creation. The building Hochstrasse 70 (without the subsequent wing-like annex building) is significant for human history. Also because of the town's historical significance, folklore and town planning reasons require the building to be preserved. | 1883/84 | Feb 16, 1989 | 151
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Path stick | Hinsbeck Hombergen 50 card |
19th century; Brick, plastered with a deep niche, curved gable and wooden panel with the Descent from the Cross. | 19th century | Jan. 20, 1989 | 96
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Farmhouse | Hinsbeck Hombergen 83 map |
The building is a farmhouse built in 1790, whose studs and chimney views have been preserved. The facade was plastered around 1905. The building is therefore an important testimony to the history of Hinsbeck. According to § 2 (1) DSchG NRW, preservation and use are therefore in the public interest for ethnological and scientific reasons. | 1790 | Oct. 1, 1982 | 14th
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Brick courtyard | Hinsbeck Huebeck 5 map |
The monument is one in the 18./19. Four-wing brick courtyard, built in the 19th century, single-storey residential building in 4: 7 axes (entire complex changed in the mid-19th century). The courtyard is typical of the 19th century, the external appearance of which - apart from a few openings - has been preserved. The courtyard is particularly important in the landscape-defining connection with the neighboring Huebeck 7 courtyard and the chapel opposite. | 18./19. century | Apr 10, 1984 | 23
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Lommetrzhof | Hinsbeck Huebeck 23, 24 map |
Early 19th century; four-wing brick courtyard, two-storey residential building in five axes, partly renovated, barn wings with brick pilaster strips, partly older. | Early 19th century | Jan. 20, 1989 | 98
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Brick courtyard | Hinsbeck Huebeck 7 map |
18./19. Century; closed four-wing brick courtyard, single-storey house in 4: 7 axes, changed in the middle of the 19th century, bakery in 1792; Half-timbered with brick lining. | 18./19. century | Jan. 20, 1989 | 97
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Jewish Cemetery | Kaldenkirchen Jahnstrasse / corner Frankstrasse map |
The Jewish cemetery is now located within the expanded town center of Kaldenkirchen. The plot is on a street corner and is enclosed with a knee-high fence. It is designed as a lawn, there are no old crosses. In the background stands the memorial stone of the city of Kaldenkirchen (1964; inscription: "Our former Jewish fellow citizens in memory. City of Kaldenkirchen"), in the foreground the three-part memorial stone of the citizens' association from the year 2000 with the names of the murdered and lost Jewish citizens of Kaldenkirchen also a lying plate with an inscription plaque in front of it belongs. ("In memory of the Jewish community and the Jewish citizens of Kaldenkirchen who were murdered by the National Socialists between 1933 and 1945 and who were missing. The Kaldenkirchen Citizens' Association, August 2000").
The plot shows the location of the possibly first Jewish cemetery in Kaldenkirchen, which was occupied until the 1920s, and, since no reburial activities were carried out, the burials that took place here. It is important for Kaldenkirchen, city of Nettetal. Today's memorial is appropriately designed and preserves the character of a former cemetery. The preservation of the open space as a memorial is in the public interest for scientific, local and cultural-historical reasons. |
1964 | Oct 15, 2007 | 185
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Half-timbered courtyard | Kaldenkirchen Jahnstraße 1 and 1a map |
End of the 19th century, former half-timbered courtyard, two-storey residential building in five axes with blue stone sills, rough plastered, side covered with eternit, the year 17 on the changed barn in iron anchors. | at the end of the 19th century | Feb. 14, 1989 | 113
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John's Chapel | Hinsbeck Johannesstrasse map |
1671; single-nave brick chapel with flat choir end, flat ceiling, roof turret; Choir with ribbed vault and half columns with leaf capitals, buttresses outside; 1671 (anchor pins in the side), front extension building and completely new sheathed, crucifixion group on the choir from 1844. | 1671 | Jan. 24, 1989 | 107
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Rectory | Leuth Johann-Finken-Straße 2 map |
1664, around 1900; Brick, 2-storey in five axes; 2-storey brick porch (around 1900), with crenellated cross in front of the right two axes, anchor pins with the year, old wooden door on the garden side; Brick barn with a hip roof. | 1664 | Feb. 14, 1989 | 133
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Neyenhof | Leuth Johann-Finken-Straße 4 map |
18th century, formerly one-storey brick courtyard, on the back a plaster facade from around 1905. | 18th century | Feb. 14, 1989 | 134
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Brick building | Breyell Josefsstrasse 24 map |
Brick building, two-story, plaster facade with decorative shapes | around 1800 | Jan. 20, 1989 | 67
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Residential building | Breyell Josefsstrasse 30 map |
The building was rebuilt in the 19th century, but is essentially an older two-storey residential building with farm buildings at the rear, which is largely unchanged. It also forms an essential part of Josefstrasse and thus the center of Breyell. The building is therefore an important testimony to the history of work and production conditions in Breyell as well as to the history of the place in general. According to § 2 (1) DSchG NRW, conservation and use are therefore in the public interest for scientific and urban planning reasons. | 19th century | Jan. 10, 1983 | 15th
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Residential building | Breyell Josefsstrasse 33 map |
The building is a two-storey residential building that was built at the end of the 19th century and is largely unchanged. It also forms an essential part of Josefstraße and thus of the old town center of Breyell. The building is thus a testimony to the history of the place. According to § 2 (1) DSchG NRW, maintenance and use are therefore in the public interest for urban planning reasons | at the end of the 19th century | 25th Mar 1983 | 16
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Catholic parish church of St. Clemens | Kaldenkirchen Kehrstrasse 32 map |
1st half of the 15th century, 1893/97, three-aisled, neo-Gothic brick hall church with polygonal choir closure, side aisles with transverse roofs, protruding west tower (1st half of the 15th century) made of brick with tuff bands; old fittings and glass windows preserved. | 1st half of the 15th century | Feb. 14, 1989 | 114
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Rectory | Kaldenkirchen Kehrstrasse 30 map |
1663, 1855; two-storey brick house in seven axes with a neo-romantic plastered facade with crenellated wreath, blinded in 1855; Back heavily changed, anchor pins with the year 1663 on the back. | 1663, 1855 | Feb. 15, 1989 | 115
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Residential building | Kaldenkirchen Kehrstrasse 43 map |
2nd half of the 19th century; 2½-storey in five axes; Plastered facade with Gothic stucco ornaments. | 2nd half of the 19th century | Feb. 15, 1989 | 116
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Residential building | Kaldenkirchen Kehrstrasse 48 map |
Late 19th century; two-storey in 7: 4 axes, late classicist ashlar plaster facade with two surrounding cornices; Hipped roof; Changed windows on the first floor. | at the end of the 19th century | Feb. 15, 1989 | 117
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Ev. Parish church and parish hall | Kaldenkirchen Kehrstrasse 59, 61 map |
1670-72; Hall building, brick paved with curved gable and roof turret, straight end of the choir; old equipment preserved; Anchor pins and artouche with the year 1672; Grave slabs of the 17th / 18th centuries Century in the forecourt wall, new plaster, rear new extension. | 1670/72 | Feb. 15, 1989 | 122
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Residential building | Kaldenkirchen Kehrstrasse 50 map |
2nd half of the 19th century; two-storey in five axes, late classical brick plaster facade; old wooden door; Changed windows on the first floor. | 2nd half of the 19th century | Feb. 15, 1989 | 118
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Residential building | Kaldenkirchen Kehrstraße 52, Poensgenstraße 14 Map |
End of the 18th century, two-storey in five axes, the middle three axes emphasized by a triangular gable; Plastered facade from the 1920s, ground floor changed by installing a shop | Late 18th century | Feb. 15, 1989 | 119
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Residential building | Kaldenkirchen Kehrstrasse 53 map |
18th century, early 20th century; two-storey in four axes, plaster facade around 1905/10 with stucco ornamentation, old shop fitting on the ground floor; the neighboring building (No. 55) changed very much. | 18th century | Feb. 15, 1989 | 120
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Cellar vault | Kaldenkirchen Kehrstrasse 54 map |
Cellar vault across the street, 18th century. Significant for the history of urban development also from the point of view that the vault in connection with the vaulted cellars in the neighboring house Kehrstr. 52 / Poensgenstrasse 14 gives a lot of information about the development of the city's ground plan despite modifications made to the above-ground parts. | 18th century | Sep 30 1991 | 172
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Residential building | Kaldenkirchen Kehrstrasse 57 map |
18th century, 20th century; two-storey and mezzanine with segmented window, plastered facade from the 20th century, ground floor changed by installing a shop. | 18th century | Feb. 15, 1989 | 121
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House Bousselot | Kaldenkirchen Kehrstrasse 65 map |
2nd half of the 18th century; two-story, plastered house with seven axes, flat central gable; inside baroque doors and stairs; Changed windows on the first floor. | 2nd half of the 18th century | Feb. 15, 1989 | 123
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Living u. Commercial building | Kaldenkirchen Kehrstrasse 67 map |
Around 1800; three-storey, plastered house in six axes with iron anchors; Ground floor changed through shop fitting. | around 1800 | Feb. 15, 1989 | 124
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Living u. Commercial building | Kaldenkirchen Kehrstrasse 79, Jahnstrasse map |
Early 19th century; two-storey in four axes, plastered, ground floor changed by installing a shop; on the gable side windows partially bricked up. | Early 19th century | Feb. 15, 1989 | 125
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Former customs house | Kaldenkirchen Kehrstrasse 93 map |
Two-storey in nine axes, central axis widened and slightly forward; plastered; Crooked hip roof. | Early 19th century | Feb. 15, 1989 | 126
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Residential building | Lobberich Kempener Strasse 23 map |
Small, post construction, probably from the 18th century, exterior walls partly in brick, partly in half-timbered construction, with the original chimney block inside the house. The fact that such small houses were built very rarely speaks for the preservation of the house, which can be described as very modest, although in them - in contrast to the more stately farmhouses that have been preserved - the way of life of a large part of the population becomes clear. | 18th century | Jan. 13, 1988 | 58
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Residential building | Lobberich Kempener Strasse 55 map |
Three-axis, two-storey residential building with an Art Nouveau plaster facade, the 3rd axis with a balcony and crowned by a tail gable, entrance door and hall area with Art Nouveau furnishings, a stucco ceiling visible on the upper floor, possibly stucco ceilings on the ground floor and the suspended ceilings. | unknown | Feb 16, 1989 | 152
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Wayside chapel | Schaag Kindt 1 card |
1901; neo-Gothic brick chapel with sandstone walls, one nave with a three-sided apse, inscription plaque with a date above the portal. | 1901 | Jan. 20, 1989 | 69
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Old school Schaag | Schaag Kindter Strasse 15–17c map |
The monument is a former school building with an interestingly grouped brick structure from the 2nd half of the 19th century, in which two-storey, gable-top corner buildings are symmetrically attached to a single-storey central wing with an eaves facing the street and a pointed main entrance. | 2nd half of the 19th century | May 2, 1986 | 44
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Residential building | Kaldenkirchen Kirchplatz 3 map |
The house at Kirchplatz 3 is a two-storey corner house dating from 1621 (modified in the 20th century) in 3: 6 axes to Kirchstrasse with a curved gable and stucco ornamentation. The ashlar plaster facade on the gable side was changed around 1910, the long side and the mansard roof also changed in the 20th century. The building is dated by iron anchors on the long side (1621). | 1621 | June 14, 1985 | 33
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Chaplaincy | Kaldenkirchen Kirchplatz 7, 9 map |
1623, 20th century; Two-storey, plastered brick house in six and five axes, completely changed, cross-frame windows, anchor pin with the year on the back, No. 7 today kindergarten. | 1623 | Feb. 15, 1989 | 127
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Wayside cross | Lobberich Kölsumer Weg map |
19th century; Trachyte base with sandstone inscription, sandstone cross with metal body | 19th century | Feb 16, 1989 | 153
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House Milbeck | Hinsbeck Koul 4 card |
Former manor 1486, 19th century; Four-winged late Gothic brick water castle complex, three-storey residential building in non-continuous axes, brick with sandstone cornices and cotter pins on the sides, windows partly with bluestone walls, wooden doors from the 19th century, barn doors from 1851 | 1486 | Jan. 20, 1989 | 99
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Half-timbered yard Alt Kaempken | Hinsbeck Krickenbecker Allee map |
The small half-timbered courtyard with brick additions from around 1800, also known as "Alt-Kämpken", is a very characteristic and well-preserved example of rural architecture in the Viersen district. | 1800 | June 26, 1981 | 3
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Coach house | Hinsbeck Krickenbecker Allee 22 map |
1787; Single-storey brick gabled house in non-solid axes, brick with wooden walls, newer hipped roof covered with sedge, dating in an inscription in the door beam. | 1787 | Jan. 20, 1989 | 95
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Old church tower | Breyell Lambertimarkt map |
Urban center of the place from Gothic times, 15th century, tower of the old Catholic parish church, brick, three-storey with tuff ribbons | 15th century | Dec 15, 1986 | 49
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Catholic Parish Church of St. Lambertus, Breyell | Breyell Lambertimarkt map |
1904/05; neo-Romanesque brick basilica with double tower facade, transept, semicircular choir closure and chapel | 1904/05 | Jan. 20, 1989 | 70
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Chapel of St. Peter u. Paul | Breyell Leutherheide 35 map |
1628; Brick chapel with ridge turrets, only the facade with inscription plaque and year of the old building is preserved. | 1628 | Jan. 20, 1989 | 71
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Villa Ursula | Breyell Leutherheide 30/32 map |
Around 1900, five-axis, two-storey plastered villa with eclectic ornamental forms, predominantly classicism and baroque, central axis with gabled portal framed with half-columns as a central projection and crowned with a dormer with Baroque style elements, surrounding cornices with, under the eaves a coffered frieze with foliage Several neo-baroque attic houses, staircase leading to the portal with curved cheeks painted like marble, property border in the area of the villa with wrought-iron fence, otherwise brick walls, the crowning grating is missing, remains of a landscape park. | around 1900 | Jan. 20, 1989 | 72
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Brick house | Breyell Leutherheide 36 map |
Early 19th century; two-storey brick house in five axes with a half-hip roof; Bluestone door; Plastered sides. | Early 19th century | Jan. 20, 1989 | 73
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English post | Kaldenkirchen Leuther Strasse 2 map |
The building was originally located directly on the country road to Leuth, from which it was cut off in the course of the renovation of the underpass of the road under the railway tracks around 1989. However, the proximity to the Kaldenkirchen border station remained intact and more important for the purpose of the building.
As Leo Peters explains in his local history, the post office Kaldenkirchen served 1900–1914 and 1926–1939 as a border post office for parcels to and from England. The transport was carried out by the forwarding company CA Niessen, which in 1880 had taken over the general agency of a Dutch railway that was still private at the time. Equipped in this way, the forwarding company operated parcel post traffic with England in conjunction with the Reichspost, for which it was known as the “English Post”. It is a two-storey plastered eaves building with five window axes on the ground floor and six on the upper floor. The center is emphasized as a risalit by a pilaster frame, which is converted into a triangular gable with a gable top in the roof area. The side gables of the house also have acroterion-like masonry on the edges and on the ridge. The storey and eaves cornices are emphasized as a German band or block frieze, which open out into corner pilasters at the building edges or are cranked around them. The upright rectangular window and door openings are bricked with segmental lintels, as is typical of the time. The existing T-division of the windows should correspond to the original. The back of the building is kept simple without internal structure and has a staircase porch that attaches to the lintel height of the upper floor windows with a pent roof. The two gable surfaces are closed except for two small windows in the attic, on the right there are larger fragments of an old advertising painting of the forwarding company, which symbolizes the connection from Hook of Holland to England. Inside, only small remnants of the original room organization or furnishings are preserved. The original staircase (straight in the opposite direction with a turning platform) and the roof structure, which is in good condition, are remarkable. Some old doors, including a double-leaf sliding door on the ground floor, can possibly still be used. The two more recent single-storey additions to the left and right of the gable (around 1910) are structurally severely disrupted and are not counted as historical monuments. As the proverbial “English Post” (formerly the parcel post processing building with England), the Leuther Strasse 2 building in Kaldenkirchen is important for the city of Nettetal. It is essentially a well-preserved building from the late 19th century, in which the early period of a branch of industry that is important for the local history of Kaldenkirche can still be clearly experienced. Leo Peters again in his local history of Kaldenkirchen (p. 440 f.): “The transport and forwarding trade was of great importance for the border town. The oldest company in the industry was founded in 1819 by Peter Wilhelm Kauwertz. (...) Between 1910 and 1937 alone, 13 forwarding companies were founded on site. ”There is therefore a public interest in maintaining and using it for scientific reasons, here for reasons of local and economic history. The requirements of § 2 (1) DSchG NRW for the classification as a monument are therefore fulfilled. |
at the end of the 19th century | June 9, 2008 | 188
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Old Town Hall | Breyell Lobbericher Strasse 1 map |
The house Lobbericher Straße 1 is a brick building, two-storeyed in five axes with stone walls and a flat triangular gable, whose preservation beyond these essential characteristic features for reasons of folklore and local history as the birthplace of the composer Johann Peters and because of its use as an old Breyeller Town hall is in the public interest. | 1810 | Feb 13, 1987 | 54
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Residential building | Breyell Lobbericher Strasse 3 map |
1810; Two-storey in three axes, late classical plastered facade with pilasters and a flat triangular gable. | 1810 | Jan. 20, 1989 | 75
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Brick house | Breyell Lobbericher Strasse 5/7 map |
Early 19th century, two-story brick house in five axes, ground floor partially changed. | Early 19th century | Jan. 20, 1989 | 76
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Brick house | Breyell Lobbericher Strasse 6 map |
Early 19th century, two-story brick house in five axes, ground floor partially changed. | Early 19th century | Jan. 20, 1989 | 77
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Residential building | Breyell Lobbericher Strasse 8 map |
Late 19th century; Two-storey in three axes, plastered facade with historicizing decorative shapes. | at the end of the 19th century | Jan. 20, 1989 | 78
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Residential building | Breyell Lobbericher Strasse 10 map |
Late 19th century; Two-storey in three axes, plastered facade with historicizing decorative shapes. | at the end of the 19th century | Jan. 20, 1989 | 79
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Residential building | Breyell Lobbericher Strasse 12 map |
Late 19th century; Two-storey in three axes, plastered facade with historicizing decorative shapes. | at the end of the 19th century | Jan. 20, 1989 | 80
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Residential and commercial building | Breyell Lobbericher Strasse 13 map |
The monument is a residential and commercial building built at the end of the 19th century, two-storey, in 6 axes with a shop fitting on the ground floor. It is part of the Breyell town center, including the rest of the original interior (stucco ceilings). The building meets the requirements of § 2 (1) DSchG NRW both as a whole, including the historical interior, and as part of the center of Breyell. | at the end of the 19th century | July 16, 1984 | 27
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Brick house | Breyell Lobbericher Strasse 19 map |
The building is a two-storey brick house in late Classicist forms with a side gate that was built around the middle of the 19th century and has largely been preserved. It forms an essential part of the old town center of Breyell. The building is therefore an important testimony to the history of the place. According to § 2 (1) DSchG NRW, preservation and use are therefore in the public interest for artistic and scientific reasons. | in the middle of the 19th century | Oct. 1, 1982 | 13
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Courtyard | Leuth Locht 73 map |
Former Winkelhof from the 18th century, brick residential building, one storey with a crooked hip roof, the remnants of the pavement that have been preserved. | 18th century | May 2, 1986 | 45
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Courtyard | Leuth Locht 75 map |
The monument is a cottage from the 1st half of the 17th century with a formerly protruding cripple hip, one-storey brick, to which a gable with Dutch masonry was placed in front in the 18th century. The building in which the stud frame is preserved is essentially still one of the oldest buildings in Leuth, which also documents the earlier economic structure of the community. For reasons of local history and the history of the settlement, the preservation of the building is in the public interest. | 1st half of the 17th century | Feb 13, 1987 | 50
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Brick semi-detached house, former chaplaincy | Breyell Loirfeld 7b, 8 map |
End of the 19th century, two-storey brick semi-detached house with historicized decorative shapes, six axes, the outer axis widened and gabled; rear single-storey wing buildings. | at the end of the 19th century | Jan. 20, 1989 | 68
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Brick courtyard | Breyell Lötsch 39 map |
2nd half of the 19th century; Four-wing brick courtyard, two-storey residential building in five axes with ornate brick cornices, courtyard buildings partially 1½-storey. | 2nd half of the 19th century | Jan. 20, 1989 | 81
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Residential building | Lobberich Marktstrasse 34–36 map |
The buildings at Marktstrasse 34 and 36, together with the former town hall, form the eaves-facing south wall of the old market square in Lobberich. Although they have separate entrances, they can be seen as a unit due to the uniform facade and roof cladding. They are also connected inside. So far, no sources have been found about the history of the building and ownership. The decorative facade has been faded in from an older substance around 1905; to the rear is, historically customary, unplastered brick masonry, under No. 34 there is a vaulted cellar that is definitely older. The smooth plastered facade is characterized by "picturesque" decorative shapes typical of the time: Variation of the window formats (on the upper floors with plastered overhangs), abandonment of axial symmetry, balcony bay window at No. 36 in the corner of the square (the glass structure still existing in 1978, lost today), two different gable ends, flat curved with stucco ornaments at No. 34, stilted at No. 36, round arched. The interior of No. 34 has been completely modernized except for the Köller. No. 36, however, still has the old spatial structure; To be emphasized are the old doors with associated walls, an old simple wooden staircase and a partially colored glass window on the side with flower motifs.
Because of its prominent location next to the old town hall and because its historical building fabric has passed down two contemporary histories of Lobberich's history (essentially an older one, possibly from the 18th / 19th century and a facade from the beginning of the 20th century) and reminds of the square's former central function the objects at Marktstrasse 34 and 36 are important for Nettetal. The high-quality facade with Art Nouveau motifs, together with Marktstrasse 32 and 38, is part of an ensemble of historical buildings or facades and has a shaping effect on the cityscape. The simpler brick back to the staircase or to the old parish church is also of public importance. No. 36 also has some details inside that are worth preserving. |
18th - 19th century | Nov 16, 2000 | 182
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Living u. Commercial building | Hinsbeck Markt 3 map |
After the work to be carried out (conversion and renovation of the residential and commercial building), the property of the monument is limited to the facade of the building, which should be retained for urban planning and local historical reasons. | around 1800 | Jan. 20, 1989 | 101
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City administration | Lobberich Marktstrasse 32 map |
Early 20th century; two to three storeys in 11 axes, slightly stepped facade, plastered with arched windows on the ground floor, right part with mansard roof; left tract a little younger. | Early 20th century | Feb 16, 1989 | 154
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Brick house | Schaag Moubisstraße 2 map |
1914; Two-storey brick in five axes, hipped roof with flat triangular gable; Ashlar walls, uniaxial angle extension on the right; The year in the lintel and garden gate. | 1914 | Jan. 20, 1989 | 82
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Wayside cross | Breyell Natt card |
1886; Plastered sandstone; Marble top with inscription in the base, cross with body. | 1886 | Jan. 20, 1989 | 83
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Residential stable house | Breyell Natt 2, 2c, 2d card |
A closed courtyard developed from a residential stable house from the end of the 18th century with a crooked hip roof, attached barn, closed by a stable wing around 1910 in the form of the Heimat style. The residential stable house is almost completely preserved. The gatehouse is simply designed, the passage is crowned by a pointed gable. The inner courtyard is covered with blue paving. The structure of the outbuildings and all the details are well preserved. Op chamber, Cologne ceilings and tiled floors are available. The staircase, which shows an exceptionally beautiful entry post with style elements of Art Nouveau, is remarkable. The building is important for local and art historical reasons. | 18th century | 27 Mar 1987 | 56
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Residential building | Hinsbeck Neustraße 12 map |
Residential house through wall anchors in the rear gable to 1870, gatehouse through keystone to 1899; former four-winged, today three-winged brick courtyard (rear bolt missing); gable-independent two-storey residential building in 5: 4 axes with crippled hip, sills made of bluestone, brick cornice; Gatehouse with gabled passage, cornice and pilaster structure; the former coach house is still preserved behind the missing bolt; Keien paving in the courtyard. | 1870 | Jan. 20, 1989 | 102
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Courtyard | Hinsbeck Neustraße 15 map |
The building is a courtyard house built in 1731 and slightly modified at the end of the 19th century with preserved studs and large pebble paving in the threshing floor and courtyard. The good quality of the architecture therefore makes it an important example of the construction of the Lower Rhine farmhouse. The building is also an important testimony to the history of Hinsbeck. According to § 2 (1) DSchG NRW, preservation and use are therefore in the public interest for ethnological and scientific reasons. | 1731 | Oct. 1, 1982 | 12
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Former school | Lobberich Niedieckstraße 73 map |
Former school, at the end of the 19th century, two-storey in six axes, two-axis gabled central project, brick with pilaster structure. | at the end of the 19th century | May 2, 1986 | 46
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Brick courtyard | Hinsbeck Oberstrasse 7 map |
2nd half of the 18th century, four-winged brick courtyard, one-storey, gabled house with raised entrance, 4: 5 axes, plastered, old door, renovated in the 19th century, some stables at the end of the 19th century. | 2nd half of the 18th century | Jan. 20, 1989 | 103
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Rectory | Hinsbeck Oberstrasse 16 map |
1600 / end of the 19th century, brick, two-storey in three axes, hipped roof, windows changed in the 20th century; Door late 19th century. | 1600, late 19th century | Jan. 20, 1989 | 104
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Brick courtyard | Hinsbeck Oirlich 13 map |
End of the 18th century, three-winged brick courtyard, single-storey residential building with split pins and hipped roof. | Late 18th century | Apr 17, 1989 | 163
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Courtyard | Hinsbeck Oirlich 17 map |
It is a courtyard facility built in the 18th century with a single-storey attached top floor. The original external appearance of all facades (brick visibility, window openings with wooden block frames, related window division) as well as the constructive half-timbered structure make it a monument. | 18th century | Dec 3, 1985 | 39
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Chapel of the Stegerhof | Hinsbeck Oirlich 18 map |
The Stegerhof chapel, built in 1897, is a small neo-Gothic building. It is particularly noteworthy that the color scheme and the furnishings from the time of origin have been completely preserved to this day. The chapel is a listed building in the sense of § 2 (1) of the DSchG NRW. Preservation and use are in the public interest. | 1897 | July 1, 1983 | 18th
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Brick courtyard | Hinsbeck Oirlich 22 map |
1804, two-winged courtyard, brick, single-storey residential building with wooden walls, anchor pins with year. | 1804 | Apr 10, 1989 | 162
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Gehnenhof (residential building) | Hinsbeck Oirlich 23 map |
Residential house 1923, 2-storey with brick ornamentation, hipped roof, porch from 1920, one-storey with brick ornamentation around the door and window, mosquito-painted portal frame with curved gable above; Window with stained glass from 1923, stable building 1852. | 1852 | Jan. 20, 1989 | 105
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Tüschenmühle | Leuth Perdsvenn 36 map |
1752; 20th century, single storey with axles not drawn through and a crooked hip roof; Brick with split pins; from 1752 the facade and part of the right side front, heavily renovated in 1930 | 1752 | Feb. 14, 1989 | 135
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Corner house | Kaldenkirchen Poensgenstrasse / Bahnhofstrasse 60 map |
Corner house on Poensgenstraße, 18th century, 2nd half of 19th century, 20th century, two-storey in 4: 1: 4 axes, corner axis emphasized by triangular gable, plastered facade in 2nd half of 19th century with Corinthian and Ionic pilasters on the entrance side. | 18th century | Feb. 14, 1989 | 112
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Wayside cross | Schaag Rahe card |
Around 1900; Plastered sandstone, base with neo-Gothic inscription, cross with metal body. | around 1900 | Jan. 20, 1989 | 84
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Half-timbered barn (Remise) | Rennekoven Rennekoven 9 card |
Half-timbered barn, probably 18th century; outside brick and partly still clay wickerwork, inside the half-timbered construction still largely preserved. The back side possibly added later, typical overhang of the gable roof on the front eaves side.
In this completeness it has become very rare evidence of agricultural construction on the Lower Rhine. The half-timbered construction in particular is of great housekeeping value. According to current knowledge, elements such as the double anchor construction and the scissor chair of the roof point to the second half of the 18th century, other details such as B. the longitudinal stiffening by St. Andrew's crosses or high curved struts, the neatly chamfered head struts and the wooden connections (tenons, overlapping, wooden nails) could also indicate older age. The barn is the last structurally intact remnant of a farm that is to be regarded as the origin of today's Rennekoven 9 farm. It therefore delivers an older layer of settlement development at the Auerhütte residential area. In this sense it is important for Nettetal. As a rarely vivid and completely preserved example of a half-timbered barn with a very interesting construction from a housekeeping point of view, its preservation and use is in the public interest for scientific, here architectural-historical reasons. It is therefore a monument in the sense of § 2 DSchG NRW. |
18th century | June 9, 2008 | 187
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Brick courtyard | Lobberich Rennekoven 9 card |
1869, four-winged brick courtyard, single-storey house in four axes; Year in the Torkeilstein. | 1869 | Feb 16, 1989 | 158
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Wegestock (Auerhütte) | Lobberich Rennekoven 16 card |
18./19. Century; Slurry brick, horseshoe-shaped niche, triangular gable with crabs added later. | 18th / 19th century | Jan. 27, 1989 | 156
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Brick residential house | Lobberich Rennekoven Auerhütte 16 |
End of the 18th century, former brick courtyard, single-storey residential building in non-continuous axes, some with wooden walls; Doors and windows mostly changed; Barn 19th century. | Late 18th century | Feb 16, 1989 | 157
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Tower windmill | Kaldenkirchen Ringstrasse 109 map |
Mid-18th century, brick tower with flat tent roof, single-storey brick buildings. | Mid 18th century | Feb. 15, 1989 | 128
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Wayside cross | Breyell Ritzbruch in front of No. 52 card |
1878: sandstone plastered, neo-Gothic shapes, cross with metal body | 1878 | Jan. 20, 1989 | 85
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Heierhof stable house | Breyell Ritzbruch 71 map |
Residential stable house; the core from the end of the 18th century, with preserved studs, double chimney completely preserved on the hall side and still legible on the stable side, operating room in the middle of the right aisle. | Late 18th century | Nov 12, 1986 | 48
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Old stable / coach house | Lobberich Robert-Kahrmann-Strasse 4 map |
Former coach house, dated 1885, 1½-storey tuff stone building with transverse gable and vertical three-part structure. There is a floating gable above the middle field and a two-part extension set back to the side. The preservation of the building is in the public interest for scientific, architectural, historical and ethnological reasons. | 1885 | Dec 14, 1992 | 174
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St. Roch Chapel | Lobberich Sassenfeld 48/49 card |
1671, 1688; Brick plastered with an open vestibule with gable, niche with a crucifixion group made of wood, newly coated in the 18th century. | 1671 | Nov 6, 1987 | 57
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Thöneshof | Lobberich Sassenfeld 198 map |
Multi-part brick courtyard complex consisting of a residential building, barn, gatehouse and stable buildings, which combine to form a largely closed complex; two-storey house of 4: 2 axes with a gable roof and pigsty from 1913, gatehouse and barn older (19th century; a keystone on the barn with the date 1868; barn extension 1927); an older residential stable was replaced by the new residential building, but the stable wing and a smaller part of the residential part are still preserved. Outside and inside, apart from the modernized windows of the house, the buildings have been preserved in a clear, unified manner in the state in which they were built (house, mainly floor plan, tile and floorboards, stairs, doors); The characteristic agricultural functions of the individual buildings can be read from the proportions and designs of the structure (especially small openings for light in farm buildings); the cultural landscape integration with garden / meadow and open land areas is intact. | 1868 | Oct 7, 2003 | 184
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Stemmeshof | Lobberich Sassenfeld 199/200 card |
The property is a four-wing courtyard that was created in 1871 from the expansion of a typical Lower Rhine hall house. Thus, the Stemmeshof is evidence of the development of the single house into a courtyard, as it often happened in the 19th century, but is not often preserved at this stage. According to § 2 (1) DSchG NRW, conservation and use are therefore in the public interest for scientific and ethnological reasons. | 1871 | Oct. 1, 1982 | 11
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Marienhospital | Lobberich Sassenfelder Straße 1 map |
At the end of the 19th century, two-storey brick building in seven axes with historical decor, central axis emphasized by bay windows, balcony and gable; in the south-eastern extension, single-nave, Gothic-style brick chapel with polygonal choir closure and roof turret; Rear extension from the 20s. In the chapel, the neo-Gothic first painting shows a simple, colorfully accentuated architectural structure that is applied directly to the plaster in oil emulsion. | at the end of the 19th century | 3rd Mar 1986 | 43
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Merzhof | Hinsbeck Schlöp 1 card |
The "Merzhof" is a four-winged brick courtyard, 17/18. Century, one-storey house, the gable side of the house has been modernized as an entrance. The Merzhof is a listed building in the sense of § 2 (1) DSchG NRW. The preservation and use of the monument are in the public interest for ethnological and scientific reasons. | 17th / 18th century | 26 Sep 1983 | 20th
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Brick courtyard | Hinsbeck Schlöp 2 map |
2nd half of the 18th century, former courtyard, three-winged, brick house, one storey with a half-hipped roof, plastered facade, changed door and windows, new walled up barn. | 2nd half of the 18th century | Jan. 20, 1989 | 106
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St. Roch Chapel | Leuth Schloßallee map |
Simple, single-nave brick hall with a flat, three-sided abside from the end of the 17th century with a curved facade gable and roof turret above the steep gable roof. From an architectural and historical point of view, the chapel is an example of rural sacred architecture from the late 17th century. Folklore reasons also speak in favor of the protection as a testimony to popular piety. | Late 17th century | 3rd Sep 1985 | 37
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Krickenbeck Castle | Hinsbeck Schloßallee 1 map |
Krickenbeck Castle was built around the middle of the 13th century as an important Lower Rhine moated castle. In 1904, after a fire, the three-wing complex was built in a new Renaissance style with remains of the old castle. The two-storey, three-wing outer bailey with a gate tower from 1695 is part of the monument; Brick with blue and sandstone, the side wings with wooden walls; dated 1904 in the entrance portal and 1683 and 1695 in the door vaults of the side wings. In addition to its importance as a building and art monument, Krickenbeck Castle is an important historical site as the center of the office of the same name, first mentioned in 1305. Together with Landsburg and Merode, it forms a special group among the Rhenish castles built in the course of the 19th century. Krickenbeck Castle is a multi-layered and comprehensive monument to Rhenish art and history. | Mid 13th century | Dec 5, 1984 | 31
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Gabled house | Hinsbeck Schloßstraße 1 map |
At the gable end, two-storey, two-column house with a baroque stepped gable, formerly dated to 1670 by wall anchors, changed on the ground floor by installing a shop, baroque brick gable preserved under plaster. Roof structure with beautiful, elaborate truss construction, vaulted cellar available. | 1670 | Jan. 24, 1989 | 108
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Corner house | Hinsbeck Schloßstraße 2a map |
Around 1800 / end of the 19th century; two-storey corner house with mezzanine facing Schloßstraße in 4: 3: 8 axes, plastered facade, end of the 19th century faced with two shop fittings, hipped roof | around 1800 | Jan. 20, 1989 | 100
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Former Alt-Hinsbeck restaurant | Hinsbeck Schloßstraße 4 map |
The monument is a two-storey brick building with a central gable from the early 19th century, a typical, albeit simple, example of classicist construction. | 19th century | June 26, 1981 | 1
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Residential building | Hinsbeck Schloßstraße 10 map |
End of the 18th century, two-storey in three axes, baroque plaster facade from around 1900. | Late 18th century | Jan. 24, 1989 | 109
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Bengerhöfchen | Lobberich Sittard 1 card |
End of the 18th century, former brick courtyard, single-storey residential building in non-continuous axes, some with wooden walls; Doors and windows mostly changed; Barn 19th century. | Late 18th century | Feb 16, 1989 | 159
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Wayside cross | Schaag Speck 47 card |
1906; Stone, base with inscription, cross with body, historicizing jewelry forms | 1906 | Jan. 20, 1989 | 86
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Venlo city restaurant | Kaldenkirchen Venloer Strasse 3 map |
The monument is a two-story brick house with a high hip roof, the core of which probably dates back to the 18th century, but the facade was changed in the 19th century. A characteristic example of Lower Rhine architecture in a small town. | 18th century | June 26, 1981 | 5
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Lankeshof | Kaldenkirchen Zum Altenhof 3 |
The monument is a broad-based brick living-stable house, dated 1778, with a crooked hip roof and wooden window frames, a typical agricultural land for the Lower Rhine landscape. Estate. | 1778 | June 26, 1981 | 6th
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Royal Chapel | Kaldenkirchen Zur Lärche map |
Saint's house from the 18th century, brick wall plastered, front plastered with tail gable and anchor pins, deep barred niche with Pietà | 18th century | Dec 10, 1985 | 40
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Residential building | Kaldenkirchen Zur Lärche 17 map |
Around 1900; Two-storey in five axes, the two right axes slightly forward and gabled, plaster facade in neo-renaissance - decorative shapes. | around 1900 | Feb. 15, 1989 | 130
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War memorial | Kaldenkirchen Zur Lärche, corner of Kehrstrasse map |
1913, brick with work stones in neo-baroque shapes, inscription panel with date. | 1913 | Feb. 15, 1989 | 129 |
Web links
- Monuments in the district of Viersen ; Accessed September 12, 2011
- List of registered monuments of the city of Nettetal ; Accessed August 26, 2020
Remarks
- ^ Resolution of the City Planning Committee of the City of Nettetal of November 29, 2012, notification from the administration of February 20, 2012.
- ↑ Homepage
- ↑ Rheinische Post (print version January 3, 2015 page C3 (Nettetal)
- ↑ website on Steinheim-Institut .de