List of architectural monuments in Neunkirchen (Saar)
In the list of architectural monuments in Neunkirchen , all architectural monuments of the Saarland city of Neunkirchen are listed according to their districts. The basis is the publication of the state monuments list in the Saarland official gazette of December 22, 2004 and the current list of sub-monuments of the district town of Neunkirchen in the version of August 9, 2017.
Furpach
location | designation | description | image |
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At Wallratsroth location |
Furpach estate, manor house, farm building | In 1806, the Saarbrücken merchant Johann Caspar Karcher acquired what was then Forbacher Hof. The three-sided Hofgut was built in its current form in 1821 and consists of a manor house and farm buildings. The estate was used for agriculture until 1963 and renovated in 1975. The house has an octagonal risalit on the street side . The south wing is two-story with a gable roof, the north wing is single -story with a hipped roof . To the inner courtyard there is a tower in front of the facade with a four-sided tower hood over a square floor plan. |
Hangard
location | designation | description | image |
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Pastor-Seibert-Straße location |
Catholic Church of the Holy Family | The church was built between 1899 and 1900 according to plans by the architect Wilhelm Hector . The three-aisled hall church in neo -Gothic style is a pseudo-basilica. In front of the nave there is a bell tower, behind it a rectangular choir. The middle and side aisles are separated by pointed arches on round columns. The church windows date back to the Wilhelmine era and depict the Holy Family as a family of craftsmen. |
Kohlhof
location | designation | description | image |
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Niederbexbacher Straße (hallway 2, parcel 13/77) location |
Ev. Kohlhof Church | Built in the 1960s |
Münchwies
location | designation | description | image |
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Lautenbacher Strasse location |
Catholic Church of the Heart of Jesus | The church was built in the years 1906/07 according to plans by the architect Wilhelm Hector in the neo-Gothic style. In the years 1952 to 1954 the hall church received a new bell tower according to designs by the St. Wendel architects Walz and Reif. In front of the nave is a strictly symmetrical westwork , in the middle of which sits a square bell tower. A choir with a three-sided end is attached to the nave. |
Neunkirchen
location | designation | description | image |
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Saarbrücker Strasse location |
Ensemble Neunkircher Eisenwerk | An ironworks had existed in Neunkirchen since the 16th century. The heyday of the factory began with the purchase by the Stumm brothers in 1806. In the second half of the 19th century, Carl Ferdinand Stumm led the company to become a market leader in the iron and steel industry. In 1982 the plant became part of ARBED following the bankruptcy of the parent company . The pig iron production was stopped immediately. | |
Saarbrücker Straße, small blower hall, machine hall (individual monument): only a few parts of the once huge complex in downtown Neunkirchen have been preserved. These include the machine hall built in 1903 and the blower hall , which were built from bricks in the typical style of their time. | |||
Saarbrücker Straße, blast furnace 6 of the ironworks with blast heaters, built in 1910 (individual monument): Of the once six blast furnaces of the ironworks, only blast furnace 6, which was built in 1910, and its blast heater are preserved. | |||
Georgstrasse location |
Ensemble Georgstrasse | The monument ensemble consists of the workers' houses that were built in the first quarter of the 20th century for the workers of the Neunkirchen iron and steel works. The single-storey, eaves-standing buildings were built from two-tone bricks. Many are decorated with blind arches and colored ribbons. | |
Georgstraße 10-20, workers' houses (part of the ensemble) | |||
Georgstraße 21–41, workers' houses (part of the ensemble) | |||
Bachstrasse / Goethestrasse location |
Ensemble Goethestrasse | The villas in Goethestrasse were built between 1902 and 1905 for senior mine officials | |
Karl Brugger's villa, Bachstrasse 12/14, around 1905 (part of the ensemble): three-storey corner building with a wide corner bay window. Half-timbered adorns the top floor of the bay window at roof height. The wider windows are designed with segmental arches, the narrower ones with a straight lintel. | |||
Villas by Karl Brugger, Goethestrasse 22–34 (even numbers), 1902–1904 (part of the ensemble): The villas in Goethestrasse 22–34 are all similar. The recessed middle section with two storeys is flanked by wide corner projections with triangular gables and a half-hip roof. In front of the ground floor of the plastered building are cantilevers made of sandstone. A cornice, corner blocks and sandstone reveals decorate the building. | |||
Villas by Karl Brugger, Goethestrasse 35–45 (odd numbers), 1902–1904 (part of the ensemble): the villas are similar to those on Goethestrasse 22–34. They are two-storey plastered buildings with sandstone decorations, bay windows and openings. | |||
Bliesstrasse / Parallelstrasse / Willi-Graf-Strasse location |
Ensemble Hüttenhof | The monument ensemble of multi-family houses was built in 1926/27 according to plans by the architect Vanoni. | |
Apartment building by Vanoni, Bliesstrasse 1–4, 1926/27 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Apartment buildings by Vanoni, Parallelstrasse 65-77, 1926/27 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Apartment building by Vanoni, Willi-Graf-Straße 88, 1926/27 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Knappschaftstrasse / Mendelssohnstrasse / Hospitalstrasse location |
Ensemble Knappschaftsstraße | The ensemble consists mainly of villas and apartment buildings from the 1920s. | |
Knappschaftstraße 4, Villa (individual monument): Two-storey plastered building with a tent roof and a semicircular opening in the street facade. The windows are designed with a straight lintel as well as with pointed and round arches. The villa was built in 1925 based on a design by Ernst Brück . | |||
Knappschaftsstraße 6/8, double house by Ernst Brück, 1920–30 (single monument): The three-storey double house was built from 1920 to 1930 by the architect Ernst Brück. The horizontal stripes of plaster with windows and exposed bricks are striking. | |||
Knappschaftsstrasse 12, residential building, 1920–30 (part of the ensemble): The plastered building erected in the 1920s has a corner bay window and large dormers with triangular gables. The three window axes are designed with upright rectangular windows. A surrounding cornice divides the building with a rusticated sandstone base. | |||
Mendelssohnstrasse 26/28, residential building, 1920–30 (part of the ensemble): Conspicuous two-storey plastered building from the 1920s. On the side of the building, which is structured with cornices, is a round tower with a recessed pointed helmet, in which the stairwell is located. | |||
Mendelssohnstraße 47, residential building, 1920–30 (part of the ensemble): three-story, simple plastered building with a high base and a cantilevered cornice. There is a narrow bay window in the far right window axis of the facade. | |||
Hospitalstraße 44, nurses 'home of the Knappschaftskrankenhaus (part of the ensemble): The elongated two-storey plastered building was originally the nurses' home of the Knappschaftskrankenhaus and is now used as a residential building. A sill cornice on the upper floor and a protruding eaves cornice structure the structure. In the center there is a high portal with cloaks and a skylight over the door. Above that, on the first floor, is a field with the year of construction: 1924. | |||
Koenigstrasse location |
Ensemble Koenigstrasse | The monument ensemble consists of small single-storey houses for ironworks workers. The former "Masters' Houses" were built in 1892 as company apartments. | |
Königstraße 8–30, residential buildings, workers' houses (part of the ensemble) | |||
Kuchenbergstrasse / Ziehwaldstrasse location |
Ensemble Kuchenbergstrasse | The residential buildings on Kuchenbergstrasse and Ziehwaldstrasse were built in 1906 and 1907 as residential and commercial buildings based on designs by the architect Franz Emmrich . | |
Kuchenbergstraße 264, house of Franz Emmrich, 1906 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Kuchenbergstrasse 266, Franz Emmrich's residential and commercial building, 1906 (individual monument) | |||
Kuchenbergstraße 268, house of Franz Emmrich, 1906 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Ziehwaldstraße 2, Franz Emmrich's house, 1907 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Ziehwaldstraße 2a, Franz Emmrich's house, 1907 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Ziehwaldstraße 4, Franz Emmrich's house, 1907 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Steinwaldstrasse location |
Ensemble Steinwaldstrasse | The ensemble consists of two residential buildings that were built around 1900 and 1904. | |
Steinwaldstraße 87/89, residential building, around 1900, extension around 1918 (individual monument) | |||
Steinwaldstraße 93, residential building, 1904 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Lower market location |
Ensemble Unterer Markt | The Christ Church is at the center of the “Unterer Markt” monument ensemble. | |
Unterer Markt, Protestant Christ Church (individual monument): The Christ Church was built in 1867/68 according to a design by Heinrich Wiethase, rebuilt in 1949 by Rudolf Krüger after war damage . The church building was designed as a neo-Gothic cross church with stone-faced red sandstone masonry and a western tower in front. The three-aisled hall church is divided into three bays, each accentuated by a stitch roof. A wide transept with polygonal finishes adjoins the nave. This is followed by a five-sided choir room. | |||
Unterer Markt, Monument to Fallen, 1874 (individual monument): The memorial from 1874 commemorates those who died in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870/71. The obelisk has cast iron panels with inscriptions in the base and forms the center of the Lower Market. | |||
Unterer Markt, commercial building, 1923 by Fritz Voggenberger , 1938 addition by the architect Stockhausen (individual monument) | |||
Unterer Markt 2, Karl-Ferdinand-Haus (single monument) The Karl-Ferdinand-Haus was built by Karl Brugger in 1903/04 as an old people's home and orphanage. Two recessed wings are placed alongside the two-storey plastered building. The window axes are strictly symmetrical and grouped together by brick pilasters. In the outer left window axis sits the entrance door with a round portal made of sandstone above the rusticated base. The dormers with a vaulted roof are surmounted by a larger one in the center, which is decorated with volutes. | |||
Willi-Graf-Strasse location |
Ensemble Willi-Graf-Strasse | The monument ensemble consists of lavishly decorated, two-storey, eaves-free residential buildings that were built at the beginning of the 20th century. | |
Willi-Graf-Straße 20–30, residential buildings, 1905/12 (part of the ensemble) | |||
Willi-Graf-Straße 27–31 (odd numbers), apartment buildings, 1905/12, (part of the ensemble) | |||
Adolf-Kolping-Straße 6 location |
House, 1892 | ||
Bachplatz location |
Bach school , school and barracks | The Bach School was built in 1905 by the architect Köhler. The elongated plastered building has three floors. The windows on the ground floor are made with round arches. On the first floor, a sill cornice connects the windows with straight roofs and beams. The windows on the top floor are designed with a straight roofing and end section and connected by a slightly profiled cornice. The entrance to the school is in a risalit with a tent roof. The structure begins with a basement and a protruding cornice. | |
Bachstrasse 4 location |
Residential building | The house was planned in 1920 by the architect Holzhausen. The entrance to the three-storey plastered building is framed by an aedicule with a triangular gable and skylight. Glare fields separate the windows on the first and second floors. The second and third window axis is formed on the upper floors by a rounded bay window with three narrow windows. A sill cornice connects the windows on the first floor and is also through the works. | |
Bachstrasse 6 location |
Residential building | The two-storey plastered building with eaves was erected in 1905. Sandstone sill and cornices structure the building. The window axes on the ground floor and upstairs are connected by glare fields with floral decor. A risalit sits on the left. In the extreme left axis is the entrance with a profiled wall. A quatrefoil sits above it. Above the first and second axis of the risalit sits a narrow balcony with a sandstone balustrade on the upper floor, which is divided by a polygonal bay window and forms a small balcony in the curved gable. | |
Brunnenstrasse 86 location |
villa | The villa was built by Fritz Voggenberger in 1924 and converted by Richard Müller in 1933. | |
Büchelstrasse location |
Brewing tower of the former castle brewery with equipment | The brewery was founded by Jacob Christian Schmidt in 1838 and remained family-owned until 1988. In that year the company was taken over by the Karlsberg Brewery, which closed the Neunkirchen location in 1997. The south tower, which Ludwig Wertes created in two colors from cubic elements in 1928 , has been preserved. | |
Falkenstraße |
Monument "mother and child" | The sculpture, which shows a mother with her child, was created in 1955 by the Neunkirchen artist Hans Bogler . | |
Friedrichsthaler Strasse location |
Gas machine hall, gas blower hall | The gas machine center of the former coking plant is a steel-framed building and was built in 1904/05 by the Prussian mining treasury and expanded in 1920. It is his very few art nouveau industrial buildings . Arched windows illuminate the building. The 11 large windows are subdivided by bars and are divided in the middle by steel girders with decorative strips in front. Cast turrets on pilaster strips separate the axes. The gable roofs of the building complex partially have ventilation domes and skylight towers. | |
Goethestrasse 12 location |
Stable building | Built in 1906 by Fritz Mundorf | |
Goethestrasse 27 location |
villa | The detached single-storey villa was built in 1906 by Gleitz and Ernst Brück. The building with a gable roof is loosened up by numerous bay windows, turrets and a dwarf house. Wide arched windows alternate with narrower, rectangular windows. | |
Heizengasse 7 location |
Residential building | Built in 1779 | |
Hermannstrasse location |
Jewish Cemetery | The dead of the Jewish community in Neunkirchen were buried in Illingen for a long time . In 1831, a piece of land outside the city was acquired and turned into a cemetery. The natural stone wall was erected in 1870 and the cemetery was expanded in 1880. The cemetery was destroyed during the pogroms in 1938 and forcibly sold to the city in 1942. In 1949 the right of use was transferred to the Saar synagogue community, which had the cemetery restored. A memorial commemorates the dead during National Socialism and was inaugurated in June 1955. | |
Hüttenbergstrasse location |
"Iron caster" | The iron caster is a fountain sculpture by Fritz Koelle from 1938. It shows a caster in typical clothing at work. | |
Hüttenbergstrasse 6 location |
Residential and commercial building | Built in 1904 | |
Hüttenbergstrasse 7–13 Location |
Residential building | Built in 1875, expanded in 1899 | |
Maze street location |
South-west corner tower of the Renaissance castle (remains) | The Renaissance palace was built from 1570 to 1585 according to plans by Christian Stromeyer at the height of today's Upper Market as a three-wing complex. The castle was partially destroyed in the Thirty Years War, but was repaired between 1663 and 1665. It served as a hunting lodge in the 17th and 18th centuries until it was partially demolished in 1752 under Prince Wilhelm Heinrich von Nassau-Saarbrücken. In the same year, construction work began on a baroque summer palace. | |
Irrgartenstrasse 1 location |
Remnants of the wall in the south-east tower of the Renaissance castle | 1570/85 by Christmann Stromeyer | |
Lindenallee location |
Hammergraben | 19th century moat | |
Lindenallee 2b location |
Director's villa Arndt | The villa was built in 1921 by August Rahfeld for the directors of the Neunkirchen ironworks. The two-storey plastered building with a hipped roof is structured by cornices and crossed pilaster strips. On the garden side, an almost semicircular spout protrudes from the facade. On the upper floor, this forms a balcony. The three window axes are framed by two semicircular pilasters . | |
Marienplatz location |
Catholic Church of St. Mary | The Marienkirche was built in 1885 by Ferdinand Schorbach in the neo-Romanesque style of the Rhenish style. The basilica with a cross-shaped floor plan has a nave with four bays. A transept adjoins the nave, followed by the choir with a semicircular apse. The ceiling of the central nave is formed by ribbed vaults, that of the side aisles by groined vaults. | |
Marienstraße 2 location |
District Court | Built in 1883, expanded in 1896 and 1931/33 | |
Moselschachtstraße (corridor 30, parcel 221/948) location |
outdoor pool | Built in 1949 | |
Moselschachtstrasse location |
Heinitz tunnel, tunnel mouth hole | The tunnel mouth hole of the Heinitz tunnel was made of sandstone in 1847. In 1979 it was moved to its present location. The mouth hole was built from sandstone blocks and ends with a profiled cornice. Another row of cuboids was placed on top and raised at the corners. | |
Norduferstraße 8 location |
Annaheim | The children's home was created in 1928 by the architect Becker. | |
Upper market 4 location |
Cellar vault former Renaissance castle | 1570/85 by Christmann Stromeyer | |
Peter-Neuber-Allee location |
Pointed bunker , air defense tower | The air defense tower, known as the “Spitzbunker”, was built in 1939/40 to protect 400 people from the nearby ironworks. The designer was the architect Leo Winkel from Cologne. The air defense tower in Neunkirchen belongs to the early planning type 2c. It consists of an outer skin made of reinforced concrete, which protects the nine floors with a steep central staircase. The entrance and the emergency exit are opposite each other on different levels. | |
Peter-Neuber-Allee location |
Silent Chapel | The chapel was built in 1852/53 by Mathias Joseph Bußweiler for the Stumm entrepreneurial family . It is considered to be one of the earliest examples of neo-Gothic style and was part of a landscaped garden that adjoined the mansion of the Carl Friedrich Stumm family , which they moved in in 1839, to the northwest . Until the family moved to Halberg Castle near Saarbrücken in 1880, it served as the Stumms' private chapel, after which it was hardly used. In 1933 the chapel was damaged by a gasometer explosion, in 1945 it was burned down by artillery fire. The building fell into disrepair and the bell was melted down. In 1987 the chapel came under municipal ownership and was renovated the following year. The cross-rib vaulted hall building is entered via a pointed arch portal. A gable rider towers over the portal. The hall is closed by a three-sided choir. | |
Ringstrasse 25 location |
Villa, park, enclosure | The vila with park and wrought iron enclosure was created in 1924 by Wilhelm Werner. The two-story, eaves-mounted plastered building with a mansard hipped roof sits on the street side with seven window axes with profiled walls and elaborately ornamented keystones. A closed porch was placed in front of the middle three window axes on the ground floor, which was preceded by a portal with an elaborate neo-baroque aedicula . On the upper floor, the porch forms a balcony with a stone balustrade. The masonry dormer above it ends with a mighty tail gable. Square pilaster strips and a sill cornice on the upper floor structure the building. | |
Rödelsgasse 3a location |
Cellar vault of the former Renaissance castle | Erected by Christmann Stromeyer in 1570/85 | |
Saarbrücker Strasse location |
Stumm family riding house | The outbuilding of the Stumm manor, which was destroyed in 1945, was initially used as a riding arena for the children of the Stumm family (1858/59). Later the riding hall was used as a wagon shed (1880), then as a fire station and finally as a training workshop. Today the riding hall is the venue for the city of Neunkirchen. The octagonal building has a window on each side and is structured by pilaster strips. A console cornice completes the structure. The entrance with two large arched gates is slightly pulled out of the building in an extension with a gable roof. | |
Saarbrücker Strasse 7 location |
Director's villa | The two-storey villa was built in 1921 by the architect Holzhauser. The street side of the building is loosened up by a corner projectile with a tail gable. The side facing the work also has a corner projectile towards the rear, with a stone balcony in front of it on the upper floor. | |
Saarbrücker Strasse location |
Ironworks water tower | The ironworks water tower was built in 1936. An iron container was placed on the steel and brick base. The tower held 2,150 cubic meters of water. Today there are four cinemas in the water tower, which can be entered through a modern glass extension. | |
Saarbrücker Strasse 39 location |
Hut school | The hut school was founded in 1850/51 on the initiative of Henriette Strantz, b. Erected in silence. The “female industrial school in Neunkirchen” was supposed to enable the daughters of the workers in the iron and steel works to be trained in domestic economics. During the First World War the building was used as a military hospital, later it was used to house the hut archive. The former school is an elongated, eaves-standing plastered building with 11 window axes with segmented arches. In the center of the facade there is a three-axis central projection with a triangular gable. Corner pilaster strips structure the building, and an arched frieze closes the structure. | |
Saarbrücker Straße 40 location |
Director's villa Boehm | The villa was built in 1893/94 and expanded in 1908. The villa was rebuilt in the 1920s. The two-storey, eaves brick building is structured by square pilaster strips and cornices. The windows on the ground floor are designed with simple straight lintels, those on the upper floor with beams and profiled roofing. | |
Schlossstrasse 20 location |
Cellar from the side wing of Jägersberg Castle | After the renaissance castle was demolished, work began on a baroque summer residence in 1752. The designs for it came from Friedrich Joachim Stengel . Construction was completed in 1765. The hunting lodge served the princely family in 1792 as the last refuge from the French revolutionary troops for half a year. In May 1793, the troops raided and looted the castle and set it on fire. After its gradual decline until 1822, the area was parceled out and partially built over. | |
Schlossstrasse 22 location |
Cellar vault and parts of the central pavilion of Jägersberg Castle | 1752–65 by Friedrich Joachim Stengel | |
Sinnerthaler Weg location |
Hereditary burial place of the Stumm family | The small private cemetery was created in 1839 and is surrounded by a wall. The last burial took place in 1996. The 18 graves, 17 of which are provided with cast iron crosses, are grouped around an approx. 5 m high cast iron neo-Gothic stele from 1845. The stele bears inscriptions on its four sides. | |
Silent Street location |
Monument to Freiherr von Stumm | The silent monument erected in 1902 by the sculptor Fritz Schaper shows Carl Ferdinand von Stumm-Halberg. The larger-than-life bronze statue shows Stumm as a coal and steel entrepreneur with magnifying tongs and mold . The statue on a stone plinth changed location several times and is now in Stummstrasse on Stummplatz. | |
Stummstrasse 2 location |
Residential building | Built in 1896 | |
Stummstrasse 17 location |
Commercial building | Built in 1928 by Ernst Brück | |
Unterer Friedhofsweg location |
Fallen memorial | Erected in 1933/34 | |
Unterer Friedhofsweg location |
Cemetery chapel | The small chapel was built in 1894/95. The small hall building in neo-Romanesque forms with two window axes is closed off by a semicircular apse with clover-leaf windows. Crossed pilaster strips and arched friezes decorate the building. In the west facade there is a round arched portal and round window. A modern functional building is attached to the north side. | |
Unterer Friedhofsweg 2 location |
school | The school, built in 1881/82, is an elongated building made of smooth sandstone blocks. Two mighty risalits with triangular gables divide the facade. A cornice separates the first and second floors, pilaster strips adorn the corners of the building. Windows and doors are spanned by segment arches. | |
Vogelstrasse 6 location |
Parish hall | Built by Otto Kuhlmann from 1911 to 1913 , later converted into a residential and commercial building | |
Vogelstrasse 13 location |
Residential building | Built in 1888/89, in 1909 a mansard roof was built | |
Wellesweilerstraße 44 location |
Residential building | Built around 1900 | |
Wellesweilerstraße 70/74 location |
Eugenio Bertossi house | Built in 1897 | |
Wilhelmstrasse 4 location |
Residential building | Built in 1920–30 | |
Zweibrücker Strasse 64 location |
Mechanical engineering company Herzog with machine equipment, 1920s to 1970s | ||
Zweibrücker Strasse 71 location |
Villa with terraces | Built in 1923/24 by Franz Dehler |
Wellesweiler
location | designation | description | image |
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Eisenbahnstrasse 18–22 location |
Hofhaus, so-called Junker House | The courtyard house was built in the 16th century. After the Thirty Years War, the building fell to the County of Saarbrücken. During the coalition wars, the estate was confiscated by French troops in 1793 and auctioned off to private individuals in 1805. The one-storey building with an extension facing the street was rebuilt at the end of the 18th century and is kept simple. The plastered building is covered by a hipped roof. To the rear, the building is two-story. A sill cornice runs around the upper floor. | |
Eisenbahnstrasse 18–22 location |
Old Forge | The forge was built behind the courtyard house in 1880 and was used until the 1930s. The small solitary building and parts of the courtyard house were bought and renovated by the Wellesweiler Working Group for History, Regional Studies and Folk Culture in 2003. Today it contains historical furnishings. | |
Homburger Strasse location |
Ev. Parish church, so-called Stengelkirche | The Protestant church was built in 1756 by Carl Abraham Dodel or the builder Garros. The elongated baroque building has an octagonal slated roof turret on the hipped roof. Cleaning pilaster strips structure the building. on the street side are three axes with flat segment arches and keystones. The middle one houses a baroque portal over which an oculus sits. A three-sided choir completes the hall. | |
Rombachstrasse location |
Palm tree tunnel of the Wellesweiler pit , tunnel mouth hole | Coal was already being dug in Wellesweiler in the 16th century, and industrial mining of the seams began in the 18th century. The palm tree stole was struck in 1816, making it one of the oldest in Saar mining. The small tunnel mouth hole consists of roughly hewn sandstone blocks and is closed off by a profiled cornice. | |
Rombachstrasse 3 location |
Residential building | Built in the 18th century |
Wiebelskirchen
location | designation | description | image |
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In the Stauch / Martin-Luther-Straße / Römerstraße location |
Ensemble Martin-Luther-Strasse | The monument ensemble consists mainly of farmhouses from the 18th and 19th centuries around the Protestant and Catholic church in the Wiebelskirchen district. | |
Im Stauch 2, farmhouse: Southwest German single house from 1819. The two-storey plastered building consists of a residential wing with a barn and stable. The house has five window axes of which the middle one on the ground floor accommodates an entrance door with beams and a straight roof. | |||
Im Stauch 6/8, farmhouse, around 1820 | |||
Im Stauch 10, farmhouse, 18th century | |||
Martin-Luther-Strasse, Ev. Parish Church : The oldest part of the church are the lower floors of the bell tower from the Middle Ages. Between 1860 and 1863, a new nave in the neo-Romanesque style was added to this tower according to plans by Ferdinand Neufang . At the same time, the tower received an octagonal tower with a pointed helmet. A semicircular choir closes the hall church. a wooden gallery runs on both sides of the nave and closes in the organ gallery above the entrance. The portal is framed by an aedicule with a triangular gable. The plastered building is structured by sandstone pilaster strips. | |||
Martin-Luther-Straße 16, house by the church: The building attached to the nave was built as early as 1732 as a two-story plastered building with a hipped roof. Five window axes illuminate the long sides, three the gable sides. It was originally used as a school. | |||
Martin-Luther-Strasse 17, residential building, 1782 | |||
Martin-Luther-Straße 19, farmhouse, around 1820 | |||
Martin-Luther-Strasse 23, farmhouse, 1813 | |||
Martin-Luther-Straße 25/27, residential building, around 1820 | |||
Römerstrasse 11, Ev. Rectory, 1820 (part of the ensemble): The Protestant rectory behind the church was built in 1820 and is still inspired by the late baroque. The two-storey plastered building with eaves and hipped roof has eight window axes. The entrance door is located in the sixth axis on the ground floor and is reached via a two-flight flight of stairs with an arched structure. | |||
Römerstraße 14, school (part of the ensemble): The former school was built in 1852. The two-storey plastered building with eaves now serves as a residential building. A high basement level with rectangular windows rises above the slightly sloping terrain. above it sit two storeys with seven axes, which are separated by a cornice. A sill cornice connects the windows on the upper floor. All windows have a profiled wall, the windows on the upper floor also have a profiled straight roof that protrudes. | |||
Ebersteinstrasse or no. Location |
Forest house Eberstein and forest workers' dormitory | The royal forest ranger's office in Neunkirchen was established in 1821. The head forester initially had his office at the forester's house on Biedersberg. With the increasing demand for wood in the second half of the 19th century, the decision was made to build another forester's house on Ebersteinstrasse. The building was owned by the Treasury until the end of the 20th century, when it was sold in private hands. The transverse house made of sandstone is a single-storey plastered building with five axes. The farm wing adjoining the living area is divided into the barn and stables. A small outbuilding originally served as a coach house. In 1908 a dormitory with 16 beds was built for the forest workers. The two-storey clinker building with partial basement is a functional building with a large overhang of the gable roof. In 2011 a modern extension was built. | |
Kuchenbergstrasse 38 location |
Residential building | Built in the 1st quarter of the 20th century. | |
Prälat-Schütz-Strasse location |
Catholic Church of St. Trinity | The Dreifaltigkeitskirche was built between 1914 and 1916 based on a design by Peter Marx . The church building was built in the neo-baroque style and is a three-aisled basilica with a tower in front. The barrel vault and the walls are richly painted. Round arches on square columns separate the central and side aisles. A transept adjoins the country house. A choir room with a semicircular end sits behind the transept. |
literature
- Publication of the state monument list in the Saarland Official Gazette on December 22, 2004
Web links
Commons : Baudenkmäler in Neunkirchen (Saar) - Collection of images, videos and audio files