List of architectural monuments in Neuss (1 / 100–1 / 199)

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

The list of architectural monuments in Neuss (1 / 100–1 / 199) contains the listed buildings in the area of ​​the city of Neuss in the Rhine district of Neuss in North Rhine-Westphalia (status: March 2011). These architectural monuments are entered in the list of monuments of the city of Neuss; The basis for the admission is the Monument Protection Act North Rhine-Westphalia (DSchG NRW). Some texts of the monument descriptions are available in abbreviated form (partial description). The list is sorted by serial number. The consecutive number is given in brackets in the “Monument number” column.

image designation location description construction time Registered
since
Monument
number
Residential building Residential building Dreikönigenviertel
Deutsche Strasse 5
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Built in 1922 by the city of Neuss as part of a settlement complex with officers' apartments for Belgian occupation troops, architect Eugen Engels; 2-storey terraced house, saddle roof, in three axes with a slightly forward entrance axis; Door axis with rectangular window on the upper floor; Brick, door and window frames made of ashlar with decorative shapes from the 1920s; Front yard.

Part of a high-quality example of a residential area built in a traditionalist design language from the 1920s, worth preserving for architectural and urban planning as well as local and social-historical reasons.

1922 12/13/1996 No. 3/028 (1/101)
Residential building Residential building Dreikönigenviertel
Deutsche Strasse 7
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Built in 1922 by the city of Neuss as part of a settlement complex with officers' apartments for Belgian occupation troops, architect Eugen Engels; 2-storey terraced house, saddle roof, in three axes with a slightly forward entrance axis; Door axis with rectangular window on the upper floor; Brick, door and window frames made of ashlar with decorative shapes from the 1920s; Front yard. 1922 12/13/1996 3/029 (1/102)
Residential building Residential building Dreikönigenviertel
Deutsche Strasse 9
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Built in 1922 by the city of Neuss as part of a settlement complex with officers' apartments for Belgian occupation troops, architect Eugen Engels; 2-storey terraced house, saddle roof, in three axes with a slightly forward entrance axis; Door axis with rectangular window on the upper floor; Brick, door and window frames made of ashlar with decorative shapes from the 1920s; Front yard. 1922 12/13/1996 3/030 (1/103)
Residential building Residential building Dreikönigenviertel
Deutsche Strasse 11
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Built in 1922 by the city of Neuss as part of a settlement complex with officers' apartments for Belgian occupation troops, architect Eugen Engels; 2-storey terraced house, hipped roof, in three axes with a slightly forward entrance axis; Door axis with rectangular window and arched window on the upper floor; Brick, door and window frames made of ashlar with decorative shapes from the 1920s; Front yard. 1922 12/13/1996 3/031 (1/104)
Residential building Residential building Dreikönigenviertel
Deutsche Strasse 13
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Built in 1924 by the city of Neuss as part of a settlement complex with officers' apartments for Belgian occupation troops, architect Rüland; 2-storey terraced house, saddle roof, in three axes with a slightly forward entrance axis; Door axis with rectangular window on the upper floor; Brick, door and window frames made of ashlar with decorative shapes from the 1920s; Front yard. 1924 12/13/1996 3/032 (1/105)
Residential building Residential building Dreikönigenviertel
Deutsche Strasse 15
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Built in 1924 by the city of Neuss as part of a settlement complex with officers' apartments for Belgian occupation troops, architect Rüland; 2-storey terraced house, saddle roof, in three axes with a slightly forward entrance axis; Door axis with rectangular window and arched window on the upper floor; Brick, door and window frames made of ashlar with decorative shapes from the 1920s; Front yard. 1924 12/13/1996 3/033 (1/106)
Residential and commercial building Residential and commercial building Dreikönigenviertel
Dreikönigenstrasse 2
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Built in 1909/10, builder Ernst Kraus, architect Greven & Heurich (construction management architect Heurich); distinctive 3-storey corner house Jülicher Strasse / Dreikönigenstrasse in 5: 4 axes, the axes partly designed as a double axis, above the entrance on Dreikönigenstrasse wide rectangular bay window with a balcony above, mansard roof with 3-sided tower, tower with curved dome roof, the right one 4-storey raised wing with a crooked hip roof; Mansard windows with curved hoods; Stone facade, old shop fitting on the ground floor, right shop on Jülicher Straße changed in 1967, windows renewed.

As part of the Dreikönigenviertel urban expansion area from the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the house is important for the history of urban development. There are architectural, historical and urban planning reasons for its preservation and use.

1909/10 03/03/2004 3/064 (1/107)
Residential and commercial building Residential and commercial building Downtown
Drususallee 5
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Built in 1903 by Michael Schmitt as a residential and commercial building, architect Josef Zimmermann; 3-storey in three axes, extended mansard roof; Ashlar plaster facade with historicized decorative shapes; entrance set back on the ground floor with flat arch in the left axis, angel's head as keystone; two shop windows in the lateral axes, shop door in the middle; final cornice; in the upper floor windows with flat arches or with rectangular openings, parapet fields, sill cornices; Cornice on consoles, 3-sided bay window with roof crowning in the left axis; in the right axis a stepped gable house with the year of construction above a pair of windows, underneath a decorative field with the lettering “Salve”; dormer windows with a pair of windows in the middle axis; Door, shop and bay window renewed.

The Drususallee as a main axis of the Wilhelminian city expansion is characterized by original, well-designed bourgeois houses. The street has been called Drususallee since 1945. The original name Krurstraße changed in 1898 to Drususstraße . From 1935 to 1945 the name was changed to Andres-Hofer- Allee. House no. 5 is an important testimony to the history of urban development and the way of living and living around the turn of the century.

1903 08/13/1998 1/292 (1/108)
Residential and commercial building Residential and commercial building Downtown
Drususallee 8
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Built in 1910 by pharmacist Eberhard Brunswicker, architect Carl Schaumburg; 3-storey corner house in 3: 1: 7 axes, developed hipped roof on Erftstrasse, developed saddle roof (with roof attachment) on Drususallee; Plastered facade with neoclassical decorative shapes, on the ground floor facing Erftstrasse and up to the left axis of Drususallee pharmacy, set-back shop door in the sloping corner axis; on the Erftstraße in the upper floor middle projecting with triangular gable, above the wall openings of the first floor decorative decoration; on Drususallee, the middle section is slightly protruding in three axes, purified roof attachment, colossal pilaster arrangement, entrance doors in the middle and right axis, shop window in the left axis; in the upper floor three-sided bay window with semicircular arch roofing in the central axis; Ornamental decoration, wall openings on the ground floor with cornice roofing, the two outer openings also with vase crowns; with the simple side axes decorative decorations over the wall openings of the 1st floor; cranked and richly decorated cornice; 1971 installation of a new pharmacy; Windows and doors renewed, right door on Drususallee, original condition.

The Drususallee as a main axis of the Wilhelminian city expansion is characterized by original, well-designed bourgeois houses. House no. 8 is an important testimony to the history of urban development and the way of living and living around the turn of the century. It is worth preserving for scientific, architectural, historical and urban planning reasons.

1910 08/11/1998 1/300 (1/109)
Street facade Street facade Downtown
Drususallee 9
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Built in 1900/01 by Fritz Cappel, architect Jakob Renner; 3-storey in three axes, extended mansard roof; Brick / plaster facade with historicizing decorative shapes; rustified base with diamond blocks, base cornice; segmental arched wall openings on the ground floor, recessed entrance in the right-hand axis, closing cornice; on the 1st floor 3-sided bay window in the central axis, on the 2nd floor ending as a balcony with parapet, side windows with triangular gables suspected; on the 2nd floor arched windows with beams; cantilevered eaves on consoles; Gabled house with a pair of windows in the central axis, in the lateral axes gabled houses with one window each; Door and window renewed. 1900/01 08/10/1998 1/293 (1/110)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 10
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Built in 1901 by Cornelius Pannenbecker according to his own designs; Ribbon plaster facade with rich neo-gothic and neo-renaissance decorative shapes; 3-storey in three axes, gable roof; Twin and triple windows, balcony on the 1st floor, gabled houses with pinnacles, year of construction in the middle gable; 1981/82 Interior renovation, installation of a shop in RG, with windows extended in the base zone, stucco in the entrance area and in the stairwell preserved, new windows without muntin division. 1901 04/04/1985 1/012 (1/111)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 11
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Built in 1904/05 by the building contractor Heinrich Weyers according to his own design (?). Plastered facade with rich neo-Romanesque and Art Nouveau decorative shapes, 3-storey in three axes, gable roof; right ache pulled forward. Wall surfaces on the ground floor rustic ashlar plaster above smooth plaster base, segment-arched windows, arched frieze under sills, entrance flanked by ashlar plaster pilasters and columns in the right axis, final frieze, overlying three-pass arch with inscribed twin arcades as wall openings and round windows; final cranked cornice. Wall surfaces of the upper floor in ashlar plaster. On the first floor, richly decorated parapets, arched wall openings flanked by columns, arched roofing on heads; In the right axis round bay on face console with three windows, above the windows of the middle and left axis figure reliefs. On the 2nd floor there is a cranked sill cornice, richly framed arched windows in the middle and left axis, in the right axis three-pass window with an overwritten arch. Overhanging cornice in the left facade section as a cube frieze, in the right battlement. Windows mostly original condition (renewed on 2nd floor), door renewed. 1904/05 12/22/1992 1/188 (1/112)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 13
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Built in 1904, architect Heinrich Weyers; Ribbon plaster facade with rich neo-baroque decorative shapes; 3-storey in three axes, flat pitched monopitch roof; left axis accentuated by portal crowning with relief and ox-eye, colossal pilaster on the upper floor, balcony and carnation gable, base and belt cornice, windows in round and segmented arches, year of construction in the lintel; new door, original window condition. 1904 04/04/1985 1/013 (1/113)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 17
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1908 by Dr. Ludwig Dünbier built, architect Heinrich Rennert; Corner house, 2-storey in 2: 2 axes, extended mansard hipped roof; Stone facade, windows on Drususallee combined by framing, in the right axis of the upper floor balcony in front of the right window, arched skylight; Entrance on Kirchstrasse, right part of the building pulled forward, windows framed together, staircase with elliptical ox eyes, arched skylight; Original door and window condition.

Example of a new villa construction around 1910, corner development indispensable in the context of the historical development on Drususallee; Worth preserving for scientific, architectural, historical and urban planning reasons.

1908 08/10/1998 1/294 (1/114)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 20
Built in 1900 by Heinrich Ingerfeld, architect Jacob Renner; Brick facade with sandstone structure in neo-Gothic decorative shapes, plastered ground floor; 3-storey in three axes, mansard roof with a central gable structure and two side roof houses; Central axis emphasized by bay windows, balcony and roof gable, between the window crowns on the 2nd floor 6 times the state coat of arms, year of construction on the gable; new door, new windows with muntin division.

Important testimony to the history of urban construction, worth preserving, especially for urban planning reasons.

1900 04/04/1985 1/014 (1/115)
House / practice House / practice Downtown
Drususallee 21
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Built in 1898/99 by Alexander Müller, architect Jakob Renner; 3-storey in three axes, right axis slightly forward; Gable roof; Brick-plaster facade with historicized decorative shapes; wide entrance portal in the forward axis; framed wall openings, e.g. Partly with rungs made of ashlar; figurative keystone in the left axis on the ground floor and on the first floor; via wall openings on the ground floor and via the left window of the 1st floor cornice; balustrade fields in relief on the 1st floor; between left windows cartridge with year of construction; in the right axis of the 2nd floor richly decorated decorative fields on the side of a higher window in the gable house, in the parapet field the lettering "Salve"; 1960/61 conversion of the EC into a doctor's practice; 1965 increase of the two left axles; Portal filling and window renewed.

The Drususallee as a main axis of the Wilhelminian city expansion is characterized by original, well-designed bourgeois houses. Despite the changes, house no. 21 is an important testimony to the history of the city's construction and is worth preserving for urban planning reasons.

1898/99 08/10/1998 1/295 (1/116)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 22
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Built by Peter Hülskamp in 1898/99, architect Jacob Renner; Brick facade with sandstone structure in neo-Gothic decorative shapes; 3-storey in three axes, gable roof with middle gable structure and two side roof houses; Central elevation with balconies in the upper floor and pointed gable, state, city and monastery coats of arms in the window crowns, year of construction in the door leaf; The pinnacles on the gable and balconies removed, the skylights of the upper floor windows boarded up, in the rest of the original condition. 1898/99 04/04/1985 1/015 (1/117)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 24
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Built by Karl Kayser in 1898/99, architect Jacob Renner; light brick-plaster facade with remnants of historicizing decorative forms, 3-storey in three axes, extended saddle roof with original roof houses; Base cornice, as plastered surfaces leveled belt, sill, fighter and wreath cornices, wall openings with profiled ashlar framing, on the ground floor and 1st floor with segmented arches, as plastered surfaces leveled parapet fields and window crowns; Entrance set back in the left axis with skylight, central axis accentuated by a bay window, on the ground floor with rectangular floor plan, on the 1st floor with 3 windows with sloping sides, on the 2nd floor as a balcony; The facade was purified in 1960 by leveling all the sculptural decorative shapes and removing the top of the roof houses; Door renewed, some windows changed.

Despite external changes, this is an important testimony to the history of the city's architecture and is worth preserving, especially for urban planning reasons.

1898/99 08/04/1986 1/079 (1/118)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 28
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Built in 1900/01 by W. Bloser, architect Theodor Lümen; Plastered facade with ashlar ashlar, 2-storey in 2: 1: 1 axes over high plinth, sill, ledge and cornice, wall openings with ashlar framing; Developed saddle roof with changing ridge direction, in the left back part of the building entrance with stairs and open porch with there. Column and wrought iron railing on the 1st floor, on the left in the ground floor pair of windows, on the 1st floor window with stone cross, on the upper floor a narrow dormer window; right forward part of the building with gable top, on the ground floor triple window stepped to the sides, on the 1st floor triple window with a round end at the side, in the gable French door with wrought iron railing; 1948 repair, 1949 reconstruction of the roof structure in its original form, 1951 installation of an underground car park in the left part of the building, original entrance door, windows renewed. 1900/01 08/04/1986 1/080 (1/119)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 30
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Built in 1901/02 by A. Pelzer, architect Pannenbecker; Plastered facade with historicizing decorative shapes, 2-storey in three axes, extended mansard roof (raised as a full storey on the courtyard side); Plinth, sill, belt, cornice; On the ground floor ashlar plaster, wall openings with archivolts framing on a cornice, arranged in pairs in the middle and right axis, entrance set back on the right with skylight, on the 1st floor window of the lateral axes with profiled framing, false balusters in parapet fields and triangular gable coronation, central axis as a whole raised like a risalit, on the 1st floor. Upper floor 3-sided bay window with rich pilasters, false balusters in the parapet fields and recessed segment gable coronation, in the roof a gable top with twin windows and rich decorative shapes, simplified roof houses in the lateral axes; Original door and window, new door skylight. 1901/02 08/04/1986 1/081 (1/120)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 32
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Built in 1901/02 by Carl Schaumburg according to his own design; Plastered facade with decorative forms of Art Nouveau, ground floor in red sandstone, 3-storey in three axes, expanded gable roof; on the ground floor arched window and door in the right axis, on the 1st and 2nd floors in the lateral axes of Art Nouveau stucco framed windows with ornamental railings on cantilever plates, on the 1st floor carried by caryatids in niches, in the central axis 3-sided bay windows over two floors, in the attic as a balcony with ornamental railings ending between solid pillars, parapet fields filled with Art Nouveau tendrils, above the arched balcony door a gable-like ornament-adorned structure, on the 2nd floor laterally over the roof edge decorations; Roof renewed with large roof windows in the lateral axes instead of the original roof houses; Original door and window; Door skylight and window on the left axis on the ground floor and first floor reconstructed; original rich interior. 1901/02 04/04/1986 1/082 (1/121)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 33
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Built in 1903/04, builder and architect Jakob Renner; 3-storey, from the 1st floor in three axes; Pent roof / mansard roof; Brick plaster facade with historicized decorative shapes; embossed base, base cornice; on the ground floor strip plaster, arched window with sill, on the right side recessed entrance, above circular skylight window, in the central axis decorative field with triangular roofing; 1st and 2nd floor combined axially by square plaster pilasters between the belt and cornice, on the 1st floor 3-sided bay windows in the central axis, framed windows with sill on brackets and an intermediate parapet as well as triangular gable roofing on brackets, on the 2nd floor framed windows with sill, underneath in the windows of the lateral axes fringed consoles, cornice with decorative fields; Cranked eaves above the two central pilasters; semicircular roof attachment in the central axis; Original door skylight, renewed door and window.

The Drususallee as a main axis of the Wilhelminian city expansion is characterized by original, well-designed bourgeois houses. House no. 8 is an important testimony to the history of urban development and the way of living and living around the turn of the century.

1903/04 07/20/1998 1/297 (1/122)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 34
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Built in 1902/03 by Carl Schaumburg and Frans Schellers, architect Carl Schaumburg; Plaster facade with Gothic ornamental shapes; on the ground floor ashlar plaster; 3-storey and expanded attic, gable roof, from the 1st floor in two axes, ground floor without axis alignment, base, belt and sill cornices, frieze; Entrance in the left axis, framed by a cornice and a pointed arched half-window above, in the ground floor pointed arch window, in the upper half surrounded by a frieze, 1st floor three-pass window with decorative shapes in the spandrels, in the right axis from the 1st floor bay window with balustrade and parapet fields filled with tendrils , on the top floor gable top with large ogival window opening, 1946 repair as part of the housing emergency program, original windows and front door; Stucco ceiling in the entrance hall, transverse stairs. 1902/03 06/06/1986 1/076 (1/123)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 35
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Built in 1902/03 by Cornelius Pannenbecker, architect Jakob Renner; Ribbon plaster facade with historicizing decorative shapes, 3-storey in four axes, gable roof with glare gable; Base, belt and roof cornice, entrance set back in the left axis with skylight, rich framing and roofing, window framed, on the ground floor with arched arch and console-shaped keystone, on the 1st floor with stucco crown and parapet fields between consoles; 2nd axis from the left emphasized; on the ground floor wide window, on the 2nd floor balcony end with original iron railing, above pilaster strips Carnies arch gable with oval window; Changed door and window. 1902/03 07/28/1986 1/078 (1/124)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 37
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Built in 1904 by Jacob Tillmann, architect Carl Schaumburg; 2-storey in three axes; Gable roof on the garden side expanded as a full storey; heavily modified strip-plaster facade with historicizing decorative shapes on the upper floor; high smooth plaster plinth, plinth cornice, left axially shifted entrance with framing above base cornice (formerly pilaster with entablature, above round arched skylight), ground floor in banded plaster, rectangular window (formerly high round arched window) with sill; OG divided axially by pilasters between belt and cornice, central axis accentuated by risalit-like protrusion and flat bay windows on consoles and with triangular gable roofing, bay window with pilaster framing, sill cornice, balusters in the parapet field instead of the former round arched cornice, side windows with profiled sill framing, base Triangular gable roofing on consoles and closed (formerly open) skylight fields; Balustrade removed over eaves, newly inserted dormer windows in the window axes; Door and window renewed.

The Drususallee as a main axis of the Wilhelminian city expansion is characterized by original, well-designed bourgeois houses. Despite major changes, house no. 37 is an important testimony to the history of the city's architecture, particularly for urban planning reasons.

1904 08/10/1998 1/298 (1/125)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 40
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Built around 1900; 2-storey in non-continuous axes, extended mansard roof; Brick plaster facade with historicizing decorative shapes, high base, ground floor in strip plaster, segment-shaped wall openings, entrance on the right-hand side (without axis alignment), final cornice; 1st floor in brick, axis division by plaster pilasters, in the central axis 5-sided bay windows with pilasters in between, over corner pilasters, side windows suspected with blown triangular gables; ornate cornice, block frieze, cantilevered eaves; large dormer window; Window and door renewed.

The Drususallee as a main axis of the Wilhelminian city expansion is characterized by original, well-designed bourgeois houses. House no. 40 is an important testimony to the history of urban development and the way of living and living around the turn of the century.

around 1900 08/11/1998 1/302 (1/126)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 42
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Built in 1904/05 by Theodor Remy, architect Carl Schaumburg; 2-storey in three axes, mezzanine storey, mansard roof, ashlar facade; originally arched wall openings (ceilings suspended); On the ground floor, the entrance is set back and is accessible by stairs on the right-hand side (without alignment of axes), profiled framing, final cornice; on the first floor and on the mezzanine floor in the central axis aedicula, original balcony grille on the first floor, semicircular arch roofing with keystone on cornice; in the mezzanine round window; Original door, renewed window.

The Drususallee as a main axis of the Wilhelminian city expansion is characterized by original, well-designed bourgeois houses. House no. 42 is an important testimony to the history of urban development and the way of living and living around the turn of the century.

1904/05 08/11/1998 1/303 (1/127)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 44
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1927/28 by Dr. med. W. Mahne built as a residential building with a doctor's office, architect H. Ingerfeld; 3-storey in three axes (only drawn through to the upper floor), gable roof with lead cladding (originally slate covering), brick facade with ashlar; Ground floor in ashlar with plastic banding and subsequent belt cornice, house entrance door set back on the right, remaining wall surface with two large garage doors perforated (originally small windows in a row); red brick on the upper floors, balconies with balcony doors in ashlar niche in the central axis, above the door of the 1st floor, year of construction, above the door of the 2nd floor, Äskulapstab; cantilevered eaves made of ashlar; 1975 Conversion of the EC from practice rooms to garages; Doors and windows renewed.

The Drususallee is characterized by original, high-quality bourgeois residential buildings. House No. 44 is an important testimony to the history of the city's development and the way of living and living in the 1920s.

1927/28 08/11/1998 1/304 (1/128)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 46
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Built in 1903/04 by Albert Koch, architect Gebr. Pannenbecker; Brick facade with stone and house stone, 2-storey in three axes, lined mansard roof; Base in house stone, wall openings with ashlar framing and roofing (on the ground floor with carved arches); house entrance door set back in the right axis with skylight and year of construction in ashlar; Continuous sill cornice on the upper floor, window door with balcony in the central axis (originally window); Console frieze under the overhanging eaves; Renovations in the 50s; Garage installation in the left axis with partial raising of the basement ceiling, French door with balcony in the center axis on the 1st floor instead of window, widening of the stone window frame (reversible), simplified renewal of the dormers; Door and window renewed.

In the ensemble of Drususallee, despite significant changes, this is an important testimony to the history of urban construction, worth preserving, especially for urban planning reasons.

1903/04 08/11/1998 1/305 (1/129)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 48
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1936 by Dr. med. Hubert Kranz built, architect Prof. Walter von Wecus ; 3-storey corner house in 3: 1: 2 axes, flat roof, plastered facade with horizontal and vertical clinker brick structure, clinker brick base; garage entrance on the left side, entrance door to the right; cantilevered semicircular bay window on the upper floor, side arched windows with small balconies on the first floor; Door, window and window grille are in their original condition, garage door replaced in the 1950s; original pitched roof and one-piece round window system on the 1st and 2nd floors destroyed in the war; Round window replaced by segment window; on the garden side of the 1st floor subsequently added bathroom; mostly original inside.

The Drususallee is characterized by original, high-quality bourgeois residential buildings. House number 48 is an important testimony to the history of urban development and the way of living and living in the 1930s.

1936 08/11/1998 1/306 (1/130)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 54
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Built in 1907 by Mrs. Reinartz, architect Carl Schaumburg; Brick facade with decorative bandages; 3-storey in three axes; the two basement floors are emphasized by four colossal pilasters, above them a four-part ribbon window and stepped gable, year of construction in anchor pins; as a result of severe war damage in 1947/48, interior renovation on all floors, new door, new windows with muntin division. 1907 04/04/1985 1/016 (1/131)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 66
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Built in 1902 by Jacob Tillmann, architect J. Esser; Plastered facade with white glazed clinker brick and historicizing decorative shapes on the upper floors, 3-storey in three axes (central axis with two coupled windows each) gable roof; Ground floor in ashlar plaster, round arched, profiled wall openings with continuous sill cornice and keystones, recessed entrance in the right axis, concluding cornice; in the upper floors, lateral edging with ashlar plaster, framed arched windows with continuous sill cornice and parapet fields, in the central axis over both floors; Belt cornice over 1st floor, cornice, cantilevered eaves; richly decorated gabled house with eagle crown; Door and window renewed. 1902 10/06/1986 1/096 (1/132)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 71
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Built in 1910, architect Heinrich Greven, plaster facade with scarce historicizing decorative shapes, 3-storey with a loft, four axes on Sternstrasse, three axes on Drususallee, here the ground floor is irregular, mansard roof; on Drususallee on the right the entrance with a multi-profiled round arch, surrounded by a slightly protruding rectangular window, cross-lattice window on the ground floor with basket arch, on the upper floor with a straight end, in the central axis over both floors with bay windows with three narrow windows each flanked by continuous pilasters stylized Corinthian capital, metopes under the cornice, inscribed with squares made of ovules; on Sternstrasse cross-mullion windows on the ground floor with a basket arch, on the upper floor with a straight end, on the first floor a central bay window with three narrow basket-arch windows, flanked by fluted pilasters with capital, under the cornice with metopes, in the bay axis a roof attachment with four narrow windows; new dormer windows on Drususallee. 1910 06/06/1986 1/077 (1/133)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 72
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Built in 1907 by August Stevens, architect Heinrich Greven; 3-storey corner house in 2: 3: 1: 2 axes, extended roof, saddle roof / mansard roof, 2-axis annex slightly back on Sternstrasse, plastered facade with historicizing decorative shapes;

Main building on Sternstrasse raised by a gable, richly decorated cornice cranked above the ground floor, middle window on the first floor with balcony; the middle window on the 2nd floor with beam roofing, gable window with elaborate plaster framing, crooked hip on console, cantilevered corner bay window with rich ornaments on the top floor, roof balcony; on Drususallee ground floor without alignment, entrance on the right-hand side, above it a deep-drawn, 3-sided bay window with balcony closure on the mezzanine floor; Skylight; Door and window renewed, roof balcony over corner bay window created later. Extension on the ground floor in strip plaster, suspected wall openings with beams; Windows in the upper floors combined by framing and gable roofing on the second floor, two dormer windows; Window renewed. The Drususallee as a main axis of the Wilhelminian city expansion is characterized by original, well-designed bourgeois houses. House no. 72 is an important testimony to the history of urban development and the way of living and living around the turn of the century.

1907 08/11/1998 1/307 (1/134)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 73
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1913/14 built together with similar houses No. 75 and 77 by Johannes Geller, architect Constantin Wienstroer based on sketches by Peter Behrens , rough plaster facade with stone base, 2-storey in three axes, strictly structured according to the design principles of the new objectivity, extended saddle roof; Wall openings through recessed parapet surfaces on the 1st floor. axially combined, entrance in the left axis, cornice and widely cantilevered eaves, two broad dormers in the roof; Door with skylight and lattice window, original condition. 1913/14 08/04/1986 1/083 (1/135)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 74
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Built in 1904 by Josef August Stevens, architect Jacob Renner; 3-storey in four axes, extended pitched roof; left axis slightly forward; Plastered facade with historicized decorative shapes, ground floor in striped plaster, arched wall openings, window frames, recessed entrance in the right axis, elaborate decorative crowning with round window, concluding belt cornice; in the upper floor wall openings with rich roofing, accentuation of the left axis by semi-elliptical, cantilevered balconies (on the 1st floor with balustrade on consoles, on the 2nd floor supported by five columns of the 1st floor) and by angled gable with round windows, dormer windows; Door and windows in their original condition, windows on the ground floor renewed.

The Drususallee as a main axis of the Wilhelminian city expansion is characterized by original, well-designed bourgeois houses. House no. 74 is an important testimony to the history of urban development and the way of living and living around the turn of the century.

1904 08/11/1998 1/308 (1/136)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 75
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Built in 1913/14 together with similar houses No. 75 and 77 by Johannes Geller, architect Constantin Wienstroer, rough plaster facade with stone plinth, 2-storey in three axes, strictly structured according to the design principles of the new objectivity, extended saddle roof; Wall openings through recessed parapet surfaces on the 1st floor. axially combined, entrance in the left axis, cornice and widely cantilevered eaves, two broad dormers in the roof; Door with skylight and lattice window, original condition. 1913/14 08/04/1986 1/084 (1/137)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 76
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Built in 1904/05 by August Steven, architect Jacob Renner; Ashlar plaster facade with rich neo-Gothic decorative shapes; 2-storey in three axes, extended pitched roof; right axis slightly forward; windows coupled in the lateral axes, on the upper floor with elaborate framing and parapet reliefs; entrance set back in the central axis with tracery skylight, window next to it, 3-sided bay window on the upper floor; Continuous base, belt and parapet high cornice, the latter with rich tracery filling and in the lateral axes on consoles of different lengths; high, ornate gable top in the right axis, balcony in front of the middle window, in the left axis small gable, in the central axis newer dormer window; Door and windows in their original condition on the first floor, windows on the first floor and in the attic renewed. 1904/05 06/03/1987 1/109 (1/138)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 77
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Built in 1913/14 together with similar houses No. 75 and 77 by Johannes Geller, architect Constantin Wienstroer, rough plaster facade with stone plinth, 2-storey in three axes, strictly structured according to the design principles of the new objectivity, extended saddle roof; Wall openings through recessed parapet surfaces on the 1st floor. axially combined, entrance in the left axis, cornice and widely cantilevered eaves, two broad dormers in the roof; Door with skylight and lattice window, original condition. 1913/14 08/04/1986 1/085 (1/139)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 78
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Built in 1904/05 by August Steven, architect Jacob Renner; 3-storey in two axes, right axis slightly forward, extended gable roof; Plaster facade with historicizing decorative shapes; Ground floor in banded plaster, round-arched, framed wall openings, recessed entrance in the left axis, concluding belt cornice; in the 1: upper floor parapet fields with blind balustrades, in the right axis a semicircular bay window with three windows, window in the left axis with a decorative field and a canopy of the floor; Window on the right axis on the 2nd floor framed by pilasters on the side, balcony with original balcony grille, wall openings in the shape of a carnation, suspected to be entablature in the left axis; Ornamental field and gable house in the right axis, 2 skylights; Original door, renewed window.

The Drususallee as a main axis of the Wilhelminian city expansion is characterized by original, well-designed bourgeois houses. House no. 74 is an important testimony to the history of urban development and the way of living and living around the turn of the century.

1904/05 08/11/1998 1/309 (1/140)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 79
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Built in 1913/14 together with similar houses No. 73–77 by Johannes Geller, architect Constantin Wienstroer; Rough plaster facade with house stone plinth, 3-storey in three axes, strictly structured according to the design principles of the new objectivity, extended hipped roof; Wall openings on the ground floor and 1st floor combined axially by recessed parapet surfaces, entrance in the right axis, cornice above the 1st floor, cornice and far cantilever cornice; Half-round dormer in the roof in the central axis, door with skylight and lattice window, original condition. 1913/14 08/04/1986 1/086 (1/141)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 80
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Built around 1900; Brick facade with historicizing decorative shapes, on the ground floor ashlar plaster; 3-storey in three axes, gable roof; On the 1st floor girdle and sill cornice with baluster fields under the windows, rich window framing and crowning, on the 2nd floor sill cornice and richly decorated console cornice; 1980–82 Interior fittings, door and windows in their original condition. around 1900 04/04/1985 1/017 (1/142)
Residential and office building Residential and office building Downtown
Drususallee 81
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Built in 1910/11 by Albert Josephs, architect Dominikus Heurich. 3-storey residential and office building in a closed row with an extended mansard roof; Narrow 3-storey extension on the courtyard side. Street-side plastered facade with design elements between Art Nouveau and New Objectivity, the rectangular wall openings arranged in 3 axes (irregular on the ground floor). Ground floor in striped plaster over a base made of rusticated cuboids; house entrance set back on the left, overhead projecting skylight field from side brackets, with oval window and crown of carnies; then on the right a narrow window and similar group of 4 windows in the central axis, on the far right the gate entrance with a banner and a canopy above; final cornice. The upper floor is summarized by flat pilasters in the lateral axes, in the wall panels figurative relief panels between the windows. The central axis is emphasized by semi-oval arched bay windows over both upper floors, with strongly marked cornice strips and three windows each with relief parapet fields, the window pillars with an abacus-shaped top. Coffered cornice, strongly protruding eaves cornice pulled through the bay window. In the roof area there is a wide 3-window dormer, the middle window is slated with a semi-oval projecting roof surface. Modern door and window renewed. 1910/11 05/18/1994 1/202 (1/143)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 82
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Built in 1900, plastered brick facade with historicizing and floral decorative elements; 3-storey in three axes, gable roof, banded plastering on the ground floor and pilaster structure on the upper floors, central axis emphasized by the balcony on the first floor and carnies arched gable with the year on the roof; 1983 Interior renovation, loft extension and modernization, original door inventory, new windows (plastic frame with decorated cross without muntin division), stairs and floor of the stairwell preserved inside. 1900 06/10/1985 1/058 (1/144)
Residential and office building Residential and office building Downtown
Drususallee 83
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Built in 1922 by Bernhard Ruland according to his own designs; Brick facade, ground floor, walls and decor in sand-lime brick; 3-storey in four axes, gable roof; Entrance in the right axis, window on the 1st floor with parapet fields, over the two central axes a gable with a window bay, flanking eagle sculptures, wide cornice and triangular end, gable field with herringbone structure, one roof house on each side of the gable; new door; 1984/85 repair and modernization, new windows (wooden frame with original muntin division), former wooden staircase in concrete renewed, loft extension, all floors changed in plan. 1922 04/29/1985 1/057 (1/145)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 84
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Built in 1901/02 by government architect Julius Busch. 3-storey house in seven axes, extended attic, two courtyard-side extensions. Richly structured brick facade with historicizing decorative shapes. On the ground floor smooth plaster base, segmented arched window with continuous sill cornice, recessed entrance in the 3rd axis from the left, cornice; on the 1st floor segmented arched window with continuous sill cornice and parapet fields with three-pass filling, in the central axis 3-sided bay windows on consoles; on the 2nd floor lancet windows with continuous sill cornice, parapet fields with quatrefoil infill and profile roofing, in the central axis balcony with wrought iron railing, richly decorated cornice; Gabled house above the 3 central axes, laterally lower gabled houses additionally structured by triangular pillar templates between the windows (partly ending on brackets at the height of the windows of the 2nd floor). Original windows, renewed door. 1901/02 06/23/1988 1/135 (1/146)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 88
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Built in 1909, builder and architect Jacob Renner; 2-storey in five axes, the two axes to the right of the door combined, slightly pulled forward and gabled, with a flat three-sided bay window on the upper floor; Mansard roof; Plaster facade with flat stucco ornamentation; rectangular wall openings, window frames, ground floor in banded plaster, entrance in the left axis; in the upper floor window with crowning and parapet fields in flat stucco ornamentation; Knee gable with coupled windows, windows with decorative crowns, in them elliptical wall opening; strong eaves, gabled houses; Input axis changed.

The Drususallee as a main axis of the Wilhelminian city expansion is characterized by original, well-designed bourgeois houses. House no. 74 is an important testimony to the history of urban development and the way of living and living around the turn of the century. It is worth preserving for scientific, architectural, historical and urban planning reasons.

1909 08/11/1998 1/310 (1/147)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 89
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Built around 1910 by Eduard Rheins; 2-storey in two axes, right axis widened; Basement, expanded mansard roof, stone facade; Entrance set back in the left axis of the basement, elaborate portal framing with cartouche relief, putti and garlands above the door lintel, in the cartouche monogram ER (Eduard Rheins), closing cornice; in the right axis of the ground floor flat arched bay window, bay window with two laterally arranged fluted columns, frieze end, above balcony with lattice; remaining windows with plastic framing and roofing; Block frieze under eaves; original window grilles in the basement as well as original balcony grilles, front door and windows original. around 1910 08/20/1997 1/278 (1/148)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 93
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Built in 1913/14 by Andreas Thewald, architect H. Ingerfeld. Ashlar edging in horizontal stripes, 2-storey in two axes, left axis with high gable house 3-storey, expanded gable roof. On the ground floor basalt lava plinth under the window zone, recessed entrance framed above the plinth zone in the asymmetrically structured left axis. Wall strips between the ground floor and first floor windows, protruding like pilaster strips, also above the upper floor windows. On the upper floor there is a continuous cornice with a flat arched bay window in the left axis with three windows between fluted pilasters. In the right axis, the eaves protruding far with a block frieze, a wide dormer window. Round-arched gable house in the left axis with two windows between continuous sill cornice and a slightly protruding semicircular gable field; in the middle of the field a cartouche with the builder's monogram, on the edge of the sheet framed with a block frieze. Door probably original, window renewed. 1913/14 January 17, 1989 1/146 (1/149)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 95
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Built in 1912/13 together with house no. 97 by Johannes Geller as a semi-detached house, based on a design by Fritz Helmuth Ehmcke by the architect Constantin Wienstroer; 2-storey in three axes, extended mansard roof, plastered facade in the style of the new objectivity; rectangular wall opening, entrance in the right ache; 1st floor with sill cornice; Cornice, cantilevered eaves, three semicircular dormers; heavily modernized, windows renewed; Door original.

The Drususallee as a main axis of the Wilhelminian city expansion is characterized by original, well-designed bourgeois houses. Despite changes, house no. 95 is an important testimony to the history of the city's construction, especially for urban planning reasons.

1912/13 08/10/1998 1/299 (1/150)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Drususallee 97
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Built in 1912/13 by Johannes Geller based on a design by Fritz Ehmke by the architect Constantin Wienstoer; Plastered facade in the style of the new objectivity, 2-storey in three axes, extended hipped roof; rounded corner accentuation with semicircular bay window on the 1st floor, here four lattice windows with skylight; cranked sill cornice on the 1st floor, as well as all-round eaves; three semicircular dormer windows on Drususallee; Side entrance with inscription plaque, on the 1st floor four narrow wall openings, roof house; Window and door z. T. original. 1912/13 08/26/1992 1/178 (1/151)
Building and loading facility Building and loading facility Barbaraviertel
Düsseldorfer Straße 1b
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The group of commercial buildings of the Neusser Lagerhausgesellschaft extends approximately in a north-south direction at the mouth of the port basin I in the Rhine port canal. A distinction is made between two tiers of buildings: on the one hand the commercial buildings directly on the quay and on the other hand the assembly of the administration building and a garage wing between the silo tier and Düsseldorfer Strasse. Only the commercial buildings directly on the quay are considered worthy of protection.

1) General cargo warehouse from 1924/25 2) Grain warehouse from 1896: without building part from 1934 and 1957 3) Grain loading facility from 1953

The facility is important for the history of cities and settlements, as well as for the development of working and production conditions. There are artistic, urban and scientific reasons for the preservation and use.

09/16/2010 1/365 (1/152)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Elisenstrasse 10
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The house at Elisenstrasse 10 was built in 1910/11 by the building contractor Gebr. Holthausen according to their own designs for the businessman Theodor Zingsheim. 3-storey in four axes with a rough plaster facade. Ground floor with rough ashlar plaster sock up to window sill height. Entrance in the left axis, lavishly framed, crowned with clapboard decoration as a roof house. The upper floors are emphasized by a protruding bay window on the two central axes. A curved roof house above the central window above a cantilevered box gutter. Mansard roof with small dormers to the right and left of the roof house.

Original entrance door with corridor area behind. Original checkerboard tiles and marble paneling. On the ground floor original entrance door system, inside the original room structure is largely preserved as well as the stairwell with original entry post and banister.

1910/11 06/20/2011 1/407 (1/153)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Elisenstrasse 14
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Built in 1912, client: Albert Hilgers, construction management Gebr. Holthausen; 3-storey terraced house with a loft; 3-axis dormer window above a strong cornice with hipped roof and warm feet and single dormer window; Middle bay over both upper floors; Input in the left axis; rectangular door and window openings; Plaster facade profiled in flat relief in the typical, brittle decorative forms of the period after Art Nouveau; the inside structure and division largely retained with numerous equipment details such as staircase with marble walls and steps in the entrance area, banisters, floor doors, windows etc .; The rear facade has been purified, partially changed by replacing doors and windows.

The house is important for the history of urban development. It is located in the urban expansion area between the old town and the train station, the structure of which is still connected to the Wilhelminian row houses, designed in decorative forms of the reform style.

1912 04/11/2003 1/339 (1/154)
House Eppinghoven
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House Eppinghoven Map of Holzheim
Eppinghovener Strasse
1231 Establishment of the Kaarst branch monastery by the Saarn Cistercian monastery near Mülheim ad Ruhr and acquisition of a farm in Eppinghoven. Before 1237 relocation of the monastery from Kaarst to Eppinghoven. 1465 restoration of the monastery buildings. 1650 Conversion into a noble women's monastery. 1695 Renewal of the abbey building under Abbess Agnes Dorothea Elisabeth von Landsberg. 1710 Construction of the gatehouse by Abbess Anna Margaretha von Randerath, 1768 Construction of the farm buildings by Abbess Lucretia Bernardina von Graureben. After secularization in 1802 the complex was acquired by landowner Kamper. The monastery church is demolished. 1905 Acquisition by Walter Christian Heye.

The abbey building (I) was renovated in 1695. It forms the east wing of the former monastery complex. 2-storey, 15-axis brick building with hipped roof, colossal Ionic pilasters, bases and capitals in stone, rectangular windows in house framing, east and south side of the roof house with volutes and triangular gable, arched portal to the garden side, half-column templates, heraldic relief with the family coat of arms of Elisabeth of the abbess .

On the courtyard side on the ground floor, pointed arch openings were later walled up. The interior was completely rebuilt in 1979/80, the stairs removed. Preserved: historical masonry, two baroque, barrel-vaulted cellars, remains of a door jamb and a Cologne ceiling on the upper floor, transition to the south wing room with cross-ridge (13th century) and ribbed vaults (15th century) mostly original oak roof trusses.

North wing (II) of the former monastery complex is now a muddy brick barn with two gates and two ogival openings. Right pointed arch opening, the beginnings of ma tracery, north long side of the barn remains of a tuff stone wall from the 13th century, presumably the monastery church. The northern extension from the 1930s is not part of the monument.

South wing (III) of the former monastery complex, 1768, 2-storey, muddy brick building, on the courtyard side round arched upper storey window with beveled jumble, 13th century stone bulge under the eaves, an upper storey room cross-vaulted with brushed caps (connects to the corresponding rooms of the abbey building), roof structure predominantly 18th century, south side 20th century, inscription stone over the passage, dating, and two stone lion reliefs from the 14th / 15th century. Century

West wing (IV) from the 1930s. It is not part of the listed building structure. However, the floor plan, which can illustrate the unity of the 4-winged monastery complex, is a monument.

Baroque pigeon house (V) 1710, brick, polygonal floor plan, curved hood. Ground floor with round arched passage, rising masonry with numerous small openings.

Torhaus (VI), 1710 brick with hipped roof, living room over arched passage, the windows with stone walls. Sandstone portal with pilaster frame, pilasters with volute capitals, simple bases, arched gable with acantus relief, coat of arms of Abbess Margaretha von Randerath, chronogram, two angels. Above the gable Madonna figure.

Outbuildings (VII, VIII) adjoining the gatehouse on the left and right, 1768. Right building heavily modified, left roof structure predominantly 18th century. Both buildings in outline 18th century.

Mill building (IX – XI), 1765 and later, 2-storey, 4-wing, grouted brick system with hipped roof, segment-arched windows with cloisters, colossal pilasters, profiled cornice, gabled middle section, stone tablet with volutes and chronogram. Left the gate wing, recently converted into apartments, right the former mill building. Load-bearing containers of the roof structure from the 18th century. Three wooden floors were inserted in the mill wing from around 1906, from the time Francis turbine (Schuch / Rheydt), vertical shaft drive, belt transmission to the generator, two wooden silos, a later brick silo. At the rear a small courtyard surrounded by outbuildings, gatehouse, stables, storage. Mainly 18th century in outline and substance. Southern building, roof structure from the 18th century. Two double-leaf baroque doors to the courtyard, two baroque room doors with old fittings, re-use from the abbey building.

The former Eppinghoven monastery is significant for human history, especially for the history of monasteries since the 13th century. At the beginning of the 13th century, a wave of monasteries was founded by the Cistercian women. The Saarn mother monastery, founded in 1214, was the first Cistercian monastery in Germany. Around 1700 reform movements lead to new intellectual and economic prosperity. The abbey building is an expression of this time.

The former monastery is important for the history of the settlement and the economic structure, due to the deliberately sought-after seclusion and settlement near rivers. Until the 19th century the Erft valley was almost completely swampy, and settlement near the river was only possible on elevated terraces.

The complex is worth preserving for scientific and architectural-historical reasons. With its numerous historical details, the complex provides information about the structural development of Eppinghagen from the 13th to the 18th century and clearly conveys the history of the building and the monastery.

The complex is worth preserving for social and local historical reasons, as a clear document of an appropriate pension institution for aristocratic and wealthy middle-class classes.

1231 09/27/2001 7/015 (1/155)
City wall section Niedertor and Hamtorplatz City wall section Niedertor and Hamtorplatz Downtown
Erftstrasse 5–15
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The north-western section of Neuss city fortifications between the former Niedertor and the confluence with Hamtorwall has been heavily reshaped by modern interventions. Originally, the city fortifications at this point consisted of a wall ring from the 13th century, an outer wall ring from the 14th century that was parallel to each other at a distance of 16.5 m, and a moat in front of the field. The trench system was piped in the 19th century and built over by the then newly built row of houses Erftstrasse 1-15. The inner wall ring, which was probably not more than sixty centimeters deep, was completely demolished in this section. From the outer wall ring from the 14th century, which is more than three meters deep, remains of the foundations have been preserved in the basement area and in the rear courtyard area of ​​the houses Niederstraße 5 and Erftstraße 5, 7, 9, 11, 13 and 15. The city wall, which is between 90 cm and 1.2 m wide, consists of layers of field fire bricks and basalts. In addition, a round tower has been preserved in the escape from the city wall. The round tower, with a cross-section of around 9 m, is still preserved in the original wall substance in the basement and on the ground floor. In the basement, the basalt / tuff or basalt / brick masonry is around 1.2 m thick. The tower segment on the field side, protruding from the city wall, has a closed curve, the city side, only one third of the curve, is divided by four niches. The foundations of the outer city wall of the 14th century go off to the east and west of the tower. To the east in the direction of the former lower gate, the city wall foundations can be traced over a distance of 23 m in the cellar. 13th century 07/09/2002 1/327 (1/156)
Residential building Residential building
City center Erftstrasse 62
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Built in 1898 by Franz Deselaers, architect Theodor Lümen; Brick facade, wall openings bordered with ashlar plaster; 3-storey in 5 axes, gable roof; in the upper floors girdle and sill cornices, eaves with consoles, windows with different opening shapes on each floor; 1978 modernization of the ground floor, 1981 modernization of the 2nd floor and loft extension with five semicircular dormer windows, door and windows in their original state. 1898 04/04/1985 1/018 (1/157)
Residential building Residential building
City center Erftstrasse 64
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Built in 1899 by the Neumann siblings, architect P. Tillmann, Duisburg; Brick plaster facade with historicizing decorative elements; 3-storey with mezzanine in non-continuous axes, gable roof; Three windows on the ground floor, entrance on the right, the upper floor 3-axis, central axis accentuated by 3-sided bay windows over both upper floors with balcony closure, above arched windows and curved angled gable, the side mezzanine windows arranged in pairs, on the first floor belt and sill cornices and parapet fields, Eaves; 1926 change of the ground floor facade with stone plaster, with window frames and crowns as well as cornices removed, 1954 loft extension, door and z. T. window cross in original condition. 1899 07/27/1985 1/059 (1/158)
Residential building Residential building
City center Erftstrasse 66
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Built in 1901/02 by Mrs. Sels, architect Jacob Renner; Ashlar plaster facade with rich neo-baroque decorative shapes; 3-storey in three axes; left axis accentuated by an open veranda with column structure on the 1st floor above balcony with wrought iron railing, in the ornamental gable the year of construction and coat of arms, portal in the right axis with column frame and ox eye; 1959 basement and ground floor converted to office space, 1983 modernization and division into condominiums, two new horizontal skylights, door and window in their original state. 1901/02 04/04/1985 1/019 (1/159)
Residential building Residential building
City center Erftstrasse 68
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Built in 1899 by Carl Renner, architect Jacob Renner; Ashlar plaster facade with neo-Gothic decorative shapes in sandstone; 3-storey in three axes, gable roof with gable construction; in the central axis portal with keel arch roofing, above it a 2-storey 3-sided bay window and curved gable, richly decorated garments with cross and tracery division on the upper floors, coats of arms in the window crowns, year of construction on the bay window; Door original condition. 1899 04/04/1985 1/020 (1/160)
Residential building Residential building
City center Erftstrasse 70
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Built in 1900 by the notary Tils, plastered brick facade with rich historical decorative shapes, 3-storey in four axes, gable roof; Ground floor with ashlar plaster closed off by cornice with brackets in the window axes, door and window in the shape of a round arch with cornice, on the 1st floor balcony on large brackets reaching into the ground floor, the upper floor connected by window frames and parapet fields and sill cornices, on the 2nd floor windows with blown windows Gables suspected, eaves with consoles; 1980 Interior construction and modernization, attic floor extension with four-part, slate-clad dormer strip, door in original condition, window new (aluminum frame with false bars). 1900 01/06/1986 1/062 (1/161)
House, facade and roof House, facade and roof
City center Erftstrasse 74
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The house at Erftstrasse 74 was built in 1898/99 by master roofer Mathias Groß. The architect was Wilhelm Fasbender, and in 1909 the ground floor was converted. The front door was moved to the right axis and a basement access was created in the left axis. The 3-storey eaves house is three axes wide and has a slate mansard roof. The brick plaster facade shows historical design. The ground floor has a parapet zone with diamond ashlars above a low, smooth plaster base and strongly profiled strip plaster above a sill cornice. The segment-arched wall openings are crowned by Keilstein motifs in the form of three-dimensional heads. A cornice closes the ground floor.

The brick-clad floors above are structured by sill cornices and additional horizontal plaster strips. The rectangular windows sit in plaster frames. On the first floor, a roof summarizes the window axes, the central axis is emphasized by round arches with plastic decoration in the gable field. The window parapets are decorated with balusters. The windows on the 2nd floor show simple, straight roofing. The eaves are simply renewed. A roof house with volute decorations, arched gable and coupled arched window rises above the eaves in the central axis. The roof house is flanked in each of the side axes by a small, renewed dormer. The front door is original. The windows have been renewed in style. The house is important for the urban history of Neuss. It is part of the Wilhelminian city expansion, which can be experienced here in vivid density. The preservation of the facade is in the public interest for reasons of urban development and architectural history.

1898/99 11/15/2007 1/385 (1/162)
Residential building Residential building
City center Erftstrasse 76
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Built in 1864 by Cornelius Reistorff in a row of eight houses on the corner of Kanalstrasse, architect Peter A. Bohnen; Plastered facade with pilaster structure; 3-storey in three axes each, gable roof; Entrance side facing Erftstrasse without the gable, windows with segmental arches; extension to the north from the same period, 2-storey in three axes, entrance gate removed in 1937, flat roofed; 1981 interior work e.g. Partly for office use and loft conversion with three dormer windows on Kanalstrasse, new door and new windows (aluminum frames with dummy bars).

Important testimony to the history of urban construction, worth preserving, especially for artistic and urban planning reasons.

1864 04/04/1985 1/021 (1/163)
Residential building Residential building
City center Erftstrasse 78
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Built in 1863 by the notary Heinrich Knein and Helene Clostermann as an economic part and servant's apartment together with the house at Kanalstrasse 2, architect Carl Verhas; Plastered facade with late classicist decorative shapes; 2-storey with mezzanine in five axes, flat inclined monopitch roof; right axis with entrance created in 1932 set back, on the ground floor simple and coupled segmented arched windows alternately, in the upper floor arched windows and in the mezzanine occuli, cornice up to the entrance axis, portal with pilaster framing and split skylight; Original window condition. 1863 04/04/1985 1/022 (1/164)
Residential building Residential building
City center Erftstrasse 86
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Built in 1909/10 by Ludolf Ricken, architect Carl Schauburg; 3-storey in three axes, gable roof, plastered facade with historicizing decorative shapes; Ground floor in banded plaster, entrance in the left axis, semi-oval bay window in the middle axis, ending on the 1st floor as a balcony with openwork parapet and decorative shapes on the side, final cornice with frieze; on the first floor sill cornice, two fields bordered in the middle axis, flat aedicula; on the 2nd floor under the side windows decorative fields, wall openings with frieze finish; richly decorated cornice, cantilevered eaves with coffered decoration; Door and window renewed; original front yard edging. 1909/10 04/26/1986 1/239 (1/165)
Residential building Residential building
City center Erftstrasse 88
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Built in 1903/04 by Josef van Endert, architect Theodor Lümen; Plastered facade with rich historical decorative forms, 3-storey in four axes over a high base (basement), extended mansard roof; in the 2nd axis from the left 5-sided bay window in the basement and ground floor, ending as a balcony on the 1st floor; all wall openings with richly decorated framing; In the basement, the axes are laterally bordered by rusticated cuboids, in the left axis the farm entrance, concluding cornice; on the ground floor mainly strip plaster, sill cornice, house entrance in the right axis (partly in the base zone) with transversely oval skylight window in decorative field and canopy of carnies, concluding belt cornice; in the upper floor ashlar plaster, laterally edging of the 2nd axis from the left by decorative pilasters, gable coronation with decorative field; Windows on the 1st floor with continuous cornice and canopy over a decorative field, windows on the 2nd floor with continuous cornice and ornamental crowning; cantilevered eaves; Original window grilles in the basement and balcony grilles; Windows mostly renewed, doors original. 1903/04 December 18, 1988 1/145 (1/166)
Residential building Residential building
City center Erftstrasse 96
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Built in 1906 by the Pannenbecker brothers together with the houses at Erftstrasse 98 and 100 and Liedmannstrasse 1; Plaster, slate and half-timbered facade; 2-storey with basement and gable in the right axis and mezzanine in the left axis, gable roof; Staircase axis on the left, entrance flanked by two narrow windows, on the right side of the facade in the basement with ashlar plaster and a final basement cornice a semicircular, three-part basement window, in the high ground floor bay window with three narrow windows with decorated roller shutter boxes, on the upper floor balcony with original wrought iron railing, behind it 3-part Carnies arched window, slate roof gable with two windows, in the middle of the roof a second gable with half-timbering; 1930 former balcony consoles removed; Original door, mostly new windows (wooden frame with all-glass panes). 1906 01/06/1986 1/063 (1/167)
Residential building Residential building
City center Erftstrasse 98
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Built in 1906 by the Pannenbecker brothers together with the houses at Erftstrasse 96 and 100 and Liedmannstrasse 1; the facades of nos. 98 and 100 mirror-inverted with pilasters and decorative figures in the mirror axis; Plastered and half-timbered facade; 2-storey with basement and gable in the right axis and mezzanine in the left axis, gable roof; Staircase axis on the left, entrance on both sides with ashlar plaster and a final plinth cornice two-part basement window, in the high ground floor ashlar plaster belt cornice and wide window, on the upper floor corner pilaster and semicircular balcony with original wrought iron railing, behind the window door flanked by two narrow windows, overhanging pointed arches with two half-timbered windows; With the exception of the corridor and roof windows, all wall openings are arched in the shape of a basket; Door in its original condition, window e.g. T. original condition (wooden frame with split bars). 1906 01/06/1986 1/064 (1/168)
Residential building Residential building
City center Erftstrasse 100
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Built in 1906 by the Pannenbecker brothers together with the houses at Erftstrasse 96 and 98 and Liedmannstrasse 1; the facades of nos. 98 and 100 mirror-inverted with pilasters and decorative figures in the mirror axis; Plastered and half-timbered facade; 2-storey with basement and gable in the left axis and mezzanine in the right axis, gable roof; Staircase axis on the left, entrance bordered on both sides with ashlar plaster and final cornice, on the left facade side slightly protruded, in the basement with ashlar plaster and a final plinth cornice two-part basement window, in the high ground floor ashlar plaster belt cornice and wide window, on the upper floor corner pilaster and semicircular balcony with original wrought iron railing behind it of two narrow windows, overhanging pointed arch gable in the framework with two windows; With the exception of the corridor and roof windows, all wall openings are arched in the shape of a basket; New door (all glass), window in its original condition (wooden frame with elaborate bar division). 1906 01/06/1986 1/065 (1/169)
Residential and office building Residential and office building
City center Erftstrasse 102
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The house at Erftstraße 102 was built together with no. 104 in 1905 according to plans by the architect Jacob Renner. In 1910 the construction of the rear building was approved. The client was Wilhelm Moll. The 2-storey house with eaves is three axes wide and has a built-out mansard roof with beaver tail covering. The plastered facade shows historicizing forms of jewelry. All wall openings are framed with stucco. The low plinth and the ground floor are made of ashlar plaster. In the left axis there is the recessed entrance with a decorative crown and an elliptical skylight, in the right axis a closed door with a decorative field. There is a coupled window between the doors. A cornice closes the ground floor.

The central axis of the upper floor is accentuated by a risalit with a gabled house and an attached central section with a curved bent gable and a coupled window. The gable of the middle part shows the coat of arms and ornaments. The gable of the gable house also has a coupled window, crowned by a straight roof and a decorative ornament in the gable field. A strong cornice forms the end of the gable. The lateral axes are closed off by a cantilevered cornice on consoles and a high eaves above that, offset to the rear, with decorations flanking the gable house. To the right and left of the gabled house there is a small dormer window. Windows and doors have been renewed. Inside, the historical floor plan structure and the historical furnishings are protected, insofar as they have been preserved in their original form (e.g. the original staircase). The house is important for the urban history of Neuss. It is part of the Wilhelminian city expansion, which can be experienced here in vivid density. The preservation of the facade is in the public interest for urban development and architectural-historical reasons.

1905 08/24/2007 1/386 (1/170)
Residential and office building Residential and office building
City center Erftstrasse 104
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The house at Erftstraße 104 was built together with No. 102 in 1905 according to plans by the architect Jacob Renner. In 1910 the construction of the rear building was approved. The client was Johann Kurth. The 3-storey eaves-standing house is three axes wide and has a flat monopitch roof. The plastered facade shows historicizing forms of jewelry. The low plinth in front and the ground floor are made of strip plaster. All wall openings are provided with stucco frames. In the right axis is the recessed entrance with a decorative crown and an elliptical skylight. A cornice closes the ground floor.

The windows on the first floor have parapets and ornamental roofing. The windows on the second floor are provided with a simpler beam roofing. A curved bent gable with three-dimensional ornamentation in the gable field and a strong cornice forms the end of the facade. Windows and doors have been renewed. Inside, the historical floor plan structure and the historical furnishings are protected, insofar as they are still original. The house is important for the urban history of Neuss. It is part of the Wilhelminian city expansion, which can be experienced here in vivid density. The preservation of the facade is in the public interest for urban development and architectural-historical reasons.

1905 08/24/2007 1/387 (1/171)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Erftstrasse 108
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The house at Erftstraße 108 was built in 1903/04 by Jacob Renner according to his own design. In 1924 a tailor's workshop was approved as a rear extension. The 3-storey eaves house is three axes wide and has an extended mansard roof. The plastered facade shows historicizing forms of jewelry.

All wall openings are framed with segmental arches and stucco framing. The reset input is in the left axis. The ground floor is made of strip plaster. A cornice closes the ground floor. On the upper floors, the right axis is framed by plaster blocks. The windows on the first floor have parapet fields and canopy arches with a decorated inner field. Above the window on the right axis is the architect's monogram on the 1st floor and the architect's emblem on the 2nd floor. A cantilevered roof cornice completes the facade. Above it sits in the right axis a gabled house with an ox-eye motif over the window and flanked by vases to the side. There is a dormer in the left and in the middle axis. The windows have been renewed, the front door, also with the architect's emblem, is original. Inside, the historical floor plan structure and the historical furnishings are preserved in their original form. The house is important for the urban history of Neuss. It is part of the Wilhelminian city expansion, which can be experienced here in vivid density. The preservation of the facade is in the public interest for urban development and architectural-historical reasons.

1903/04 11/15/2007 1/388 (1/172)
Residential building Residential building
City center Erftstrasse 110
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Built in 1907/08 by widow Gerhard Wienstroer, architect Konstantin Wienstroer, plaster facade with historicizing decorative shapes, 3-storey in three axes, extended saddle roof; widened right axis; Ground floor in ashlar plaster, three-window on the right axis richly framed, recessed entrance in the left axis (without axis alignment) with elaborate framing and selective skylight, concluding cornice; in the upper floors plastered bands, parapet fields, semicircular bay window in the right axis, windows of the left axis combined by framing, cornice zone with stucco ornaments; cantilevered eaves, three dormer windows with a carnation arch; Windows (except for the skylight of the triple window on the ground floor and bars of the bay window on the upper floor) and door in original condition. 1907/08 11/26/1986 1/101 (1/173)
Residential houses Residential houses Furth
Frankenstrasse 254–58, 31–59
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With the "Statute for the protection of the Kolpingviertel monument area in the city of Neuss" of May 30, 1986, the following streets or street sections with the adjacent property were placed under monument protection:
  • the Frankenstrasse in the section between the house lots numbers 24-58 (north side) and the house lots No. 31-59 (south side),
  • House plots nos. 112-120 on Fuhrter Strasse (not the street area on Further Strasse),
  • Gotenstrasse, without the house plot No. 30,
  • the Kettelerstrasse,
  • the Kolpingstrasse,
  • the Römerstraße in the section between the house plots nos. 50-68 (east side) and the house plots nos. 49-69 (west side) as well as the house plots nos. 71-79,
  • the house lots on Weissenberger Weg nos. 59–83 and 125–129 (not the street area of ​​Weissenberger Weg).

The residential area on both sides of Kolpingstrasse, within the boundaries of the monument area, is a testament to earlier cooperative settlement activity in Neuss. The economic upswing that began after 1871 brought with the expansion of the port and the settlement of new industrial companies a strong influx of workers for whom inexpensive and family-friendly apartments had to be created as close as possible to the company. In Neuss, among others, the workers' housing cooperative eGmbH, founded in 1901, took on this task, which acquired the areas between Further Straße and Weissenberger Weg and built on them in sections with the help of well-known Neuss architects. In 1903 the first houses were built on Kolpingstrasse as the main axis of the new settlement layout. Until the First World War, the streets branching off from it were largely built on. In the 1920s and 1930s, a few vacant lots were closed, especially on the edges of the new settlement, and the building block between Römerstrasse and Weissenberger Weg was built.

The appearance of the settlement still has its old homogeneity today, which has largely been preserved in the street layout and the formal language of the facades. The area, which was built up until the First World War, is characterized by two-and-a-half-storey two-family houses with varied facades made of exposed brick, plastered brick or plastered surfaces, often with large street-side gables. The later buildings from the 1920s and 1930s are mostly three-storey apartment buildings with exposed brick facades and are more uniform and more reserved. The houses, which were rebuilt in the 1950s after being destroyed in the Second World War, especially on the north and south edges of the settlement, are relatively well adapted in their external appearance to the old building stock. In some places, the historical appearance of the settlement is more severely disturbed by the modernization of individual houses and replacement buildings from more recent times that are unsatisfactory in terms of design. In the event of future changes, a better fit should be sought.

As a document of the cooperative workers' housing construction in the first third of the 20th century, the Kolpingviertel is an important testimony to the social and urban development of Neuss. There is therefore a public interest in maintaining this residential area in its traditional historical appearance, which is taken into account with these statutes.

Kolping district (1/174)
Chaplains Chaplains Downtown
Freithof 1–5
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Built in 1834 based on a design by Stephan Hermkes from the city of Neuss as a schoolhouse for the girls' elementary school with a teacher's apartment (No. 1 and 5); Rough plaster facade, 2-storey in 3: 7: 3 axes, gable roof; Base, in the central axis of the houses entrance with skylight via stairs, door of house no. 3 has two wings; all wall openings with ashlar walls, sills, cantilevered eaves; House no. 3 with two dormer windows in the 2nd axis from the left; Windows renewed in style, doors from house no. 1 and 5 renewed, double-leaf door from house no. 3 original. 1889 Conversion of the school into a chaplaincy, shifting the inner boundaries of the house by moving or adding rooms. 1834 08/01/2002 1/332 (1/175)
Rectory Rectory Downtown
Freithof 7
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The house was built in 1725 under the abbess Maria Luise von Loe zu Wissen as a residence for a canon of the Quirinus pen. After the abolition of the monastery in 1802, the house served as a rectory and, with the construction of a new rectory in 1904, as a chaplain. After the new rectory was destroyed in the war, it was used again as a rectory in 1945. The house is a 2-storey corner house in 4: 4 axes, facing the Freithof with a curved volute gable in front of a partially expanded hipped roof. On the east side there is a gable house with a volute gable. The main facade is plastered and provided with corner blocks, the wall openings are framed as stone. The recessed entrance, emphasized by a profile cornice, is in the second ache from the left. There is a figure niche between the middle windows of the upper floor. The gable is divided into two floors by cornices and crowned by a profile-framed triangular gable. Below is the year of construction. The side and rear sides of the building show silted brick. The windows are z. T. bricked up. Doors and windows are renewed. After the Second World War, the damage was repaired.

A thorough restoration took place in 1980. The ceiling above the ground floor and the roof were renewed. The heavily damaged trachyte frames of the wall openings, the cornices and volutes were renewed with new parts in Niedermendiger basalt. Some non-load-bearing walls were changed inside the house. There is a Cologne ceiling above the ground floor. In the stairwell, parts are from the original staircase. The brick cellar has a barrel vault. In the garden corner there is a small arbor from the 19th century, designed as a seat. The lower part is made of openwork filling boards, the upper part is open. The roof has a sweeping overhang. The arbor is painted in color. The building is important for human history, especially the history of cities and settlements. It is important for the history of church and town planning in Neuss because it is the only completely preserved monastery building to remind of the historical origins of the place, the past of the Quirinus monastery and today it has a significant impact on the Freithof area in terms of town planning.

1725 06/15/2007 1/395 (1/176)
Priest tomb Priest tomb Grefrath
Friedhof Grefrath, Am Friedhof
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Granite made by H. Moser in Belgium around 1910; Ground plan of the tomb consisting of two rectangular grave fields and a cross in the middle; in front and on the sides low stone frames, originally with lattice, back wall as towering plates with metal plates with the names and dates of life of the deceased; Two-step staircase in the middle, stone cross on a three-step plinth that tapers upwards, which is closed at the top by a profiled cornice with console and beveled cover plate, the inscription “I am the resurrection and life” engraved on the front of the plinth, simple stone cross with a metal body.

The priest's burial place is important for the village of Grefrath and the parish and for popular piety in this Catholic region of the Lower Rhine. With the shape typical of the time with a cross flanked by plates in the middle, there is a public interest in its preservation for scientific and local historical reasons.

around 1910 09/20/2001 6/009 (1/177)
Hochkreuz Hochkreuz Downtown
cemetery Holzheim
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Stone cross, erected in neo-Gothic form in 1857 by M. Richartz, Cologne. Stair-shaped substructure with three steps, base with beveled cover plate, on top of which a central section with an open, ogival niche in the middle and side gable pillars, above which the cross rises on a four-sided gable foot. Body in stone. At the foot of the pillars, the sides of which are enlivened by ogival panels, small consoles, which, like the niche, were probably intended to accommodate figures. The names and life dates of pastors Johann Hartmann, Joseph Gerards, Jacob Schnaufender and Johannes Otten are recorded on the base.

Important evidence of local history, worth preserving, especially for scientific and ethnological reasons.

1857 08/02/1991 7/003 (1/178)
Residential and commercial building Residential and commercial building Downtown
Friedrichstrasse 5
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With the demolition of the city gates and parts of the city fortifications at the beginning of the 19th century, the city grew beyond its medieval borders. New significance initially arose along the historic arterial roads, including on Friedrichstrasse beyond the customs gate. For an orderly development, a "building plan" was developed from 1836, which was approved in 1846. He envisaged the expansion of the arterial roads with inserted cross roads.

The house at Friedrichstrasse 5 was built before 1886. In 1926, as a result of the expansion of Friedrichstrasse, the outside staircase in front of the house entrance was replaced by a staircase integrated into the house. In 1932 a toilet was added at the height of the landing between the 1st and 2nd floors. Shop windows were built into the right and left window axes of the ground floor. In 1979/80 the attic was expanded with the arrangement of dormer windows. It is an eaves-standing three-storey terraced house in three axes with a saddle roof and a late classicistic plastered facade. The ground floor has ashlar plaster on a low smooth plaster base. The recessed entrance to the house is in the central axis. It has a portal frame made of pilasters and a straight roof in a flat plaster relief. The ground floor is closed by a cornice. The upper floors show smooth plaster. The window seats on sill cornices and are framed, whereby the windows on the 1st floor are accentuated by roofing. A cornice completes the facade. Front door and windows have been renewed. Inside, the historical floor plan structures and the historical furnishings, insofar as they are still original, are protected. The house is important for the urban history of Neuss. It is part of the Wilhelmine city expansion. Preservation and use of the facade are in the public interest for urban planning and architectural-historical reasons.

1886 06/11/2007 7/389 (1/179)
Residential and commercial building Residential and commercial building Downtown
Friedrichstrasse 7
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With the demolition of the city gates and parts of the city fortifications at the beginning of the 19th century, the city grew beyond its medieval borders. New significance initially arose along the historic arterial roads, including on Friedrichstrasse beyond the customs gate. For an orderly development, a "building plan" was developed from 1836, which was approved in 1846. He envisaged the expansion of the arterial roads with inserted cross roads.

The house at Friedrichstrasse 7 was built before 1864. In 1864 Hubert Dürselen built a fruit store behind the house for his regional products and commission business based on a plan by Julius Thomas. In 1892, the client, Franz Ermanns, built a storage cellar for petroleum. In 1893 the same builder built a shed in place of the destroyed fruit store. In 1926, initiated by the expansion of Friedrichstrasse, he replaced the outside staircase in front of the house entrance with a staircase incorporated into the house. In 1952 a shop window was installed in the right window axis of the ground floor. 1959 also in the left window axis. In 1979/80 the attic was expanded with the arrangement of dormer windows. It is an eaves-standing three-storey terraced house in three axes with a built-in saddle roof and plastered facade in late classicist decorative shapes with remarkable details. The ground floor shows plaster strips over a low, smooth plaster base. The recessed entrance to the house is in the central axis. The ground floor is closed by a cornice. The upper floors show ashlar plaster. The windows are framed, with the windows on the first floor sitting on a sill cornice being accentuated by roofing and lavish decorations, including baluster panels and ornamental decorations in the parapet fields. A cornice completes the facade. Inside, the historical floor plan structures and the historical furnishings, insofar as they are still original, are protected. The house is important for the urban history of Neuss. It is part of the Wilhelmine city expansion. Preservation and use of the facade are in the public interest for urban planning and architectural-historical reasons.

1864 06/11/2007 7/390 (1/180)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Friedrichstrasse 9
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With the demolition of the city gates and parts of the city fortifications at the beginning of the 19th century, the city grew beyond its medieval borders. New significance initially arose along the historic arterial roads, including on Friedrichstrasse beyond the customs gate. For an orderly development, a "building plan" was developed from 1836, which was approved in 1846. He envisaged the expansion of the arterial roads with inserted cross roads.

The house at Friedrichstrasse 9 was built around 1890 based on a plan by Robert Strerath. The building owner was Karl Lux. In 1926 the construction of a winter garden was approved and in 1946 the reconstruction of a toilet and a laundry room. In 1951/53 the attic was expanded with the arrangement of dormers. It is an eaves-standing three-storey terraced house in five axes with a saddle roof and plastered facade in late classicist decorative shapes. The ground floor shows diamond cuboids in the parapet zone of the windows above a low, smooth plaster base, above a sill cornice and above that ashlar plaster. The house entrance lies in the central axis and is emphasized by a flat relief frame and a straight roof. A cornice closes the ground floor. The upper floors are smoothly plastered. The windows are framed, whereby the windows on the first floor, which sit on a sill cornice, are accentuated by roofing and lush ornaments, by plaster ornaments in the parapet fields and below the roofing. A cornice over a wide plaster relief strip completes the facade. Front door and windows have been renewed. Inside, the historical floor plan structures and the historical furnishings, insofar as they are still original, are protected. The house is important for the urban history of Neuss. It is part of the Wilhelmine city expansion. Preservation and use of the facade are in the public interest for urban planning and architectural-historical reasons.

around 1890 06/11/2007 1/391 (1/181)
Railway bridge, retaining wall, connecting bridge with forecourt Railway bridge, retaining wall, connecting bridge with forecourt Furth
Further Strasse
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In 1846 the Aachen-Düsseldorf railway company was established. In 1853 the Aachen-Oberkassel line ran via Neuss. The route to Krefeld followed in 1856, Neuss-Düren in 1869, Neuss-Viersen in 1879. The level guidance of rail and road, however, resulted in increasingly unsatisfactory conditions for both transport systems. In 1891, therefore, an initial plan to improve traffic conditions was presented, which was followed by 20 further planning stages by 1899.

From 1899 to 1911, the inner-city railway system was converted and raised, and the lines leading out of the city were relocated to dams. However, this did not affect the reception building of the main train station. The high railway embankments sealed off the city area from the north and west. It was only after the Second World War that new breakthroughs were made. The four bridges over Further Straße were repaired at the beginning of the 1950s after war damage while largely preserving the original construction and appearance of the bridges. The current situation in the area of ​​the main train station is a clear indication of the city's traffic history to this day: two railway companies, the Bergisch-Märkische and the Rheinische Eisenbahngesellschaft, provided Neuss with connections to the wide world. Both routes touched at Neuss station, in the north is the route of the former Bergisch-Märkische, in the south that of the former Rheinische Eisenbahn. According to the plans drawn up by the Royal Railway Construction Department in Neuss in 1905 and under revision by the Royal Railway Directorate in Cologne, two flat-arched wrought-iron two-hinge arch bridges with elevated roadways were planned. The riveted roll iron structures are each made up of two parts, so that a total of four independent bridge structures have been created, which help to soften the tunnel-like impression of such a deep overpass. The front views are dominated by the uncovered canopy views. On the western outside there are red sandstone pylons according to the original plan, the railing here was renewed in the period after the Second World War. In the east, however, the northern abutment has been renewed, but the railing has been preserved in its original state. The crossover over the driveway to the island train station in a stone-clad view is executed in a similarly flat arched construction. Opposite the approach to the Inselbahnhof, a shop front, which was probably built in the last thirty years, forms the end of the inner area formed by the four bridges over Further Straße. The buildings are important for the history of cities and settlements as well as for the development of working and production conditions. It is in the public interest to preserve them, as there are artistic, scientific and urban planning reasons for them. The bridges represent the state of iron construction technology at the beginning of the 20th century. The construction form is left visible in the sense of an aesthetic display value, but is also framed and backed by elements of conventional stone architecture with elaborate decorative shapes. The ensemble, made up of four bridges over Further Straße, the cross bridge and the design of the rear wall of the square, is the historical testimony to the development of traffic after the nationalization of the railway in Germany, which consisted of raising inner-city railway lines to solve the traffic problems caused by the railway. In terms of urban planning, the bridges have something of the character of a city gate, as they represent the transition from the closed, built-up inner city to the northern part of the city, which has developed in a different way and is characterized by commercial settlement. They also have an orientation function in the urban fabric.

1905 October 19, 2004 2/016 (1/182)
Residential building Residential building Furth
Further Strasse 88
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Built in 1905/07 by Jacob Renner according to his own design; Plaster facade with neo-baroque decorative shapes, 2-storey in two axes, mansard roof; right ache pulled forward like risalit and with mansard-hip roof; Smooth plaster base, ground floor in ashlar plaster, wall openings with basket arch, window with sill, entrance in the right axis on the right and window on the left, in between narrow rectangular plaster cartouche with stucco framing, belt cornice; 1st floor in smooth plaster; Upper floor in smooth plaster with overlying frame structure, rectangular window with sill, parapet window with stucco tendrils, frame fields above the windows with carnies arch frieze and stucco tendril, cornice; Roof surfaces on the street side with beaver tail covering, in the left axis dormer windows with oval windows and Carnies arch cornice, in the right axis roof houses with richly framed rectangular windows and triangular gables; Door and window (partly without muntin division) new. 1905/07 11/06/1986 2/005 (1/183)
Residential building Residential building Furth
Further Strasse 90
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Built in 1905 by Jacob Renner according to his own design; Plaster facade with neo-baroque decorative shapes, 2-storey in 3 axes, mansard roof; Central projection with concave curved side walls and mansard hipped roof; Plaster base with framed cellar windows; Ground floor formerly in strip plaster, wall openings with narrow profile framing and basket arch, window with sill, recessed entrance in the narrowed left axis, cornice; Upper floor in smooth plaster, window with sill, carnation arch and rich framing (in the central risalit over the entire wall surfaces, in the right axis with carnation-shaped cornice crowning), parapet and lintel windows with ornamental tendrils, in the left ache instead of windows stucco garlands with the year of construction and professional emblem ( Compass and triangle), cornice and sweeping eaves; Roof surfaces on the street side with beaver tail covering, dormer windows in the middle and right-hand axis with oval windows and carved cornice; The door is new, some of the windows are original (wooden frame with split bars). 1905 11/06/1986 2/004 (1/184)
Residential building Residential building Furth
Further Strasse 92
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Built in 1905/07 by Jacob Renner; Plastered facade with neo-baroque decorative shapes, 2-storey in three axes, mansard roof with gable house, sill, cornice, eaves; curved central projection, right axis narrowed; arched wall openings; Entrance with skylight in the right axis; parapet fields on the 1st floor, elaborate cartouche in the right axis, window with multi-pass arches and decorated inner field overwritten; Original door, new window. 1905/07 08/14/1990 2/007 (1/185)
Residential building Residential building Furth
Further Strasse 94
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Built in 1906/07 by Jacob Renner according to his own design; Plastered facade with historicizing decorative forms of the Rococo; 2-storey in three axes, mansard roof. The central axis is accentuated by two-storey curved bay windows with three windows each, above a framed tail gable with round arched window, entablature and carnies arch attachment. Three-dimensionally structured base, strong, drawn-through belt cornice, projecting eaves in the outer axes. In the narrow left axis the house entrance with skylight, in the upper floor a cartridge on a smooth wall surface. Elaborately framed windows of different widths with heavily profiled sills, the 2 and 3-part windows with curly battens; on the upper floor additionally richly decorated blinding pilasters and rocaille decorations in the parapet and roof areas. Roofing on the street side from plain tiles; a dormer window in the right axis. Original door and window condition. 1906/07 02/09/1989 2/006 (1/186)
Residential building Residential building Furth
Further Strasse 104
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1906/07 built by Peter W. Holthausen according to his own design; 2-storey in four axes, the two central axes combined and emphasized by coupled windows on the ground floor, balcony-crowned bay windows and curved angled gables; Mansard roof; Plastered facade with historicizing elements and Art Nouveau decor. Ground floor with strip plaster; Front door in the right axis; 1st floor in smooth plaster; Window sills in rough plaster; decorative window canopies, additionally crowned by festoons in the left and right axes; above the bay window with a trapezoidal plan, balcony with a rectangular plan; original balcony parapet replaced by simple railing; Gable with profiled frame, elliptical window (ox-eye) with profiled frame and keystone-like crown; inside u. a. original panel doors, some with colored glazing. 1906/07 12/09/1996 2/015 (1/187)
Residential building Residential building Furth
Further Strasse 109
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Built in 1905 by Adam Dickmann (1876–1961) according to his own designs; Front garden with lattice closure; richly structured ashlar plaster facade with neo-baroque decorative shapes; 2-storey with basement in three axes, mansard roof; Entrance with a two-leaf door in the left axis, above a balcony supported by columns, in the central axis a 2-storey bay window with column templates, above both axes an elaborately curved gable with window and year of construction, in the right narrow axis a veranda with column position, balcony and oval window , Windows richly structured; Mostly preserved original condition, top floor expanded in 1982. 1905 04/04/1985 2/001 (1/188)
Residential houses Residential houses Furth
Further Strasse 112, 114, 116, 118, 120
See serial no. 1/174 Kolping district (1/189)
Residential and commercial building Residential and commercial building
City center Gartenstrasse 22
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Built in 1896/97 by contractor Hans Joachim Schwien as a corner house with an extension along Gartenstraße; Plastered facade with historicizing decorative shapes, 3-storey with mezzanine in 2: 1: 9 axes; flat pitched gable roof (originally mansard roof); Wall openings with segment arch and prof. Framing; on the ground floor prof. Base, sill and cornice, extension in ashlar plaster with unframed wall openings, recessed entrance in the central axis of Gartenstrasse, in shop fittings 1908/10 rectangular windows each with two axes on both sides of the shop entrance in the corner axis and in the two right axes of the structure, adjacent windows 1961 extended in the doorway; on the 1st floor parapet fields under the cornice, balcony door with original grid in the corner axis, semicircular arch roofing on consoles; on the 2nd floor sill cornice, windows with beams on consoles suspected; in the mezzanine sill cornice only in the extension; cantilevered, multi-profiled eaves; Original windows, shop windows and doors renewed. 1896/97 12/02/1986 1/102 (1/190)
Residential and commercial building Residential and commercial building
City center Gartenstrasse 24
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The house was built in 1900/1901. The builder was Theodor Lümen. It is a 3-storey eaves-standing house in four axes with a gable roof and brick / plaster facade in historicizing decorative shapes. The extension is 3 ½ storeys and has a monopitch roof. In the right axis is the recessed entrance to the house, in the left axis the driveway to the courtyard. The ground floor shows ashlar plaster over a low smooth plaster base. The front door and window are framed with profiled plaster, crowned with keystone motifs. The ground floor is closed by a cornice. The upper floors are made of white clinker. The left window axis, above the entrance to the courtyard, is laterally framed by pilaster strips in plastered ashlar. The upright rectangular windows have a profiled plaster frame. The windows on the 1st floor are roofed (segmental arch and Carnies arch). Gable fields and parapet fields show three-dimensional jewelry. The windows on the 2nd floor have a keystone-like plastic crown. The facade is completed at the top by a cornice made of plaster with strictly geometric motifs. Above that sits the above, simplified, renewed eaves. Windows and dormers are new.

Inside, the historical floor plan structures and the historical furnishings, insofar as they are still original, are protected. The house is important for the urban history of Neuss. It is part of the Wilhelmine city expansion. Preservation and use of the facade are in the public interest for urban planning and architectural-historical reasons.

1900/1901 03/01/2007 1/370 (1/191)
Residential building Residential building
City center Gartenstrasse 26
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Built around 1900; Brick plaster facade with historicized decorative shapes; 3-storey in three axes, gable roof with original roof houses; Ground floor with ashlar plaster, entrance in the left axis, on the 1st floor zone with parapet fields bordered by belt and sill cornices, the left window with blown gable and obelisk, the other two windows crowned with triangular gables, on the 2nd floor window with cornices suspected and with sill consoles, eaves with consoles; The door is new, the window is in its original condition (wooden frame with muntin division, on the ground floor and second floor also in the skylights). around 1900 01/06/1986 1/066 (1/192)
Residential and commercial building Residential and commercial building
City center Gartenstrasse 28
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The house was built in 1898/1899 together with house at Gartenstrasse 30 by Albert and M. Gustorf. The architect was Albert Gustorf. It is an eaves-standing 3-storey house in four axes with a pitched roof and brick plaster facade and 3-storey extension. The house entrance is on the right axis. The red brick facade rises above the low, smooth plastered base, which is given an accentuated horizontal structure by means of plastered cornices and sill cornices as well as narrow plaster strips. The eaves are strongly profiled. The segment-arched wall openings have a three-dimensional plaster frame made of arched cuboids and interlocked cuboids on the sides. The front door is original.

Inside, the historical floor plan structures and the historical furnishings, insofar as they are still original, are protected. The house is important for the urban history of Neuss. It is part of the Wilhelmine city expansion. Preservation and use of the facade are in the public interest for urban planning and architectural-historical reasons.

1898/1899 03/01/2007 1/371 (1/193)
Residential and commercial building Residential and commercial building Downtown
Gartenstrasse 37
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Built in 1897; Client: Gerhard Classen, Architect: Heinrich Frommen; 3-storey residential and commercial building in three non-continuous axes with a pitched roof, 3-storey extension on the courtyard side with a monopitch roof; Brick plaster facade with historicized decorative shapes; on the ground floor above a low smooth plaster plinth, smooth plaster divided by rough plaster strips; reset input in the right axis; original shop facade changed; Plaster tape under strong belt cornice for receiving advertising material; on the 1st floor above continuous sill cornice, rectangular window with plaster framing and cornice roofing with attached triangular gable, triangular gable with shell work, in the front door axis with segmented arch; Parapet areas in plaster, parapet area above the front door with a plastic angel's head; in the 2nd floor rectangular window with plaster framing and cornice roofing over a continuous cranked cornice; 1st and 2nd floor divided by horizontal plaster strips; Eaves no longer available; Window and door renewed. 1897 05/29/1996 1/247 (1/194)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Gartenstrasse 41
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Built in 1899, client and architect Albert Gustorf; 3-storey house in three axes with mezzanine and pitched roof, 3-storey extension on the courtyard side with pent roof; Street-side facade made of red brick with historicizing decorative shapes made of stone; on the ground floor, lower smooth plaster plinth, later raised, recessed entrance in the right axis, arched door and window openings with a profiled frame flush with the wall, keystone accentuated by relief, cornice; on the 1st floor above a continuous sill cornice divided by beams, upper window closure with keel arch, parapet fields with plastic decorations (balusters), stone band flush with the wall with the year "anno 1899" at the height of the corner stones; on the 2nd floor above cornice windows with profiled framing flush with the wall, window openings divided by beams, upper window end as shoulder arch, parapet fields with plastic ornamentation (tracery), cornice; Mezzanine window with profiled frame flush with the wall and cantilevered sills, stone band flush with the wall at sill height, single profiled eaves; Windows and front door renewed. 1899 04/21/1992 1/176 (1/195)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Gartenstrasse 43
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Built in 1899 by Wilhelm Küster, architect M. Gustorf. 3-storey house in three axes with mezzanine and gable roof; On the courtyard side, 3-storey extension in four axes with a monopitch roof. The street-side facade made of yellow brick with historicizing decorative shapes. On the ground floor ashlar plaster above a low smooth plaster base, recessed entrance in the left axis, round arched door and window openings with framing and keystone, continuous cornice, strong cornice. On the 1st floor, rectangular window above a continuous cornice, the upper third with a pilaster frame and entablature, above that segment arch opening with keystones and corner stones and tracery infill. On the 2nd floor and mezzanine, framed rectangular windows with protruding sills and plaster strips flush with the wall at sill height. Simply profiled eaves. New entrance door, new large plastic windows. 1899 11/25/1987 1/111 (1/196)
Residential building Residential building Downtown
Gartenstrasse 49
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Built in 1905 by Michael Schiffer, plan and execution by construction company Albert Gustorf; Neuss. 3-storey house with mezzanine in five axes, low building depth (mostly only one room). Street-side facade made of (now grouted) bricks, with decorative shapes in plaster or stone. Protruding plinth in ashlar plaster, the same wall surface up to the lower floor EG window; on the 1st floor wide plaster tape at the height of the window frames, above the 2nd floor narrow cornice, cornice with double tooth cut. Above the ground floor 3-storey gabled bay window in two axes on two consoles, the consoles on the front side with semi-plastic masks (lion heads) made of cast concrete, above the consoles colossal pilasters with Art Nouveau profiles and capitals; the same pilasters flank the house facade; Wall fields between the oriel pilasters set off by basket arches, in the gable an eagle in bas-relief over a heraldic dome with the year 1905, in the gable corners two further heraldic dents. Door and window frames with different Art Nouveau ornaments on each floor on cast concrete blocks. Windows partially original condition, door renewed.

As a remarkable testimony to the design of rental houses at the beginning of the 20th century, it is worth preserving for artistic, scientific and urban planning reasons.

1905 07/23/1987 1/113 (1/197)
Pilgrimage Chapel of St. Cornelius Pilgrimage Chapel of St. Cornelius Selikum
Gerhard-Hoehme-Allee
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Originally, a private chapel of the fortified knight's seat Selikum had stood at this place, probably since the beginning of the 13th century. In 1986 the foundations of the chapel were exposed during renovation work. They consisted of Roman reused demolition material, which was mixed with high medieval shards of Pingsdorf style. The burials of a 35- to 40-year-old man and a 7-year-old child came to light under the floor of the chapel. The burials were probably family members of the Selincheim family, which has been documented since the 13th century.

The first written evidence of a Cornelius chapel dates from 1573. In 1607, a pilgrimage to the Cornelius chapel is recorded for the first time (Rentbuch der Pfarre Grimlinghausen). The chapel was built in the 17th and 18th centuries. 18th century looked after by Jesuits who promoted pilgrimage. In 1912 the owner at the time, Baron Dietrich von Boeselager, sold the Selikum house with the chapel to the city of Neuss. The design of the chapel has changed several times over the centuries. Around 1900 the baroque version was rebuilt in a neo-Gothic style. In 1950 the chapel, which was badly damaged in the Second World War, was renovated in a simple style according to plans by the Neuss architect Paul Hermes. The chapel is a single-aisled, small brick building with slurry plastering, with set pieces of the house, with straight east and west ends and an open bell tower. Next to the entrance door on the north side is a grin head that serves as a holy water font. A small sacristy is added to the north side. The interior is completed by a straight beam ceiling. Inside there are reliquaries and a pilgrimage picture with St. Cornelius, probably from the 17th century. On the east side there is an outside altar with a limestone Cornelius statue donated by the town council in 1995. On the north side of the chapel is a stone cross from the 18th century made of basalt lava with a body relief on a skull over two crossed bones. The cross was erected in 1937. The chapel is important for human history, especially the history of cities and settlements. It is a vivid testimony to popular piety. Preservation and use of the building are in the public interest for scientific reasons, in particular for reasons of local history and folklore, as well as urban planning reasons.

13th century 07/13/2007 4/011 (1/198)
Residential building Residential building Rosellen
Gierer Strasse 5
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Probably built before 1800, former vicarie, withdrawn during the secularization and sold in 1803, bought back by the parish in 1818; 2-storey in five axes, left axis as a widened door axis, no basement except for a small cellar room (vaulted cellar), not developed gable roof, partly half-timbered construction; Street front with stucco facade, garden front with newer external plaster; Ground floor above a low plinth in ashlar plaster, lateral border with pilaster strips, back entrance in the central axis with stucco framing; Upper floor above strong cornice in smooth plaster, lateral edging by pilaster strips in ashlar plaster; Windows renewed, shutters on the street front. before 1800 03/10/1997 8/015 (1/199)


Individual evidence

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