List of architectural monuments in Neuss (1 / 200–1 / 299)
The list of architectural monuments in Neuss (1 / 200–1 / 299) 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 |
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Residential building | Rosellen Gierer Strasse 9 map |
Stately brick house built in the second half of the 19th century, 2-storey in 5 axes, eaves with a gable roof. Street-side facade made of orange-red exposed brick with decorative shapes made of yellow brick. Center axis slightly forward, with house entrance via stairs and gabled house in the roof area. Horizontal structure with a narrow plaster base as well as belt cornices and elaborate cornice (console band with roofing in between) made of yellow exposed brick. The tall, narrow wall openings are closed off with segmental arches, which are accentuated by a red and yellow patterned lintel zone (on the first floor there is an additional short roof). In the gable of the central axis protruding steps and small window. 2-leaf house entrance door with original skylight; Windows mostly renewed.
The interior of the house is largely original, in particular the carpet-like floor covering made of colored ceramic tiles in the staircase and the wooden staircase. Ground floor partly used as a shop. The high quality design of the house, which stands out from the surrounding, more village-like buildings, is an important testimony to the emergence of urban life in the villages near the city, here especially Rosellen, in the 2nd half of the 19th century. For the maintenance and use of the house there are ethnological and local historical reasons. |
2nd half of the 19th century | 02/03/1994 | 8/013 (1/200) |
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Former school, old Weckhovener elementary school | Weckhoven Gillbachstrasse 23 map |
The monument protection includes the former school building with the open space planted with linden trees in front and the former school yard at the back with the row of linden trees along Sandstrasse.
The building was erected in 1845. It is an eaves-standing, 2-storey building in the middle and 1-storey on the side wings in 9 axes. The gable roofs are pan-covered. The facade is made of brick in the classical canon of forms. The central projection is completed by a triangular gable with an oculus. The entrance is in the central risalit. The entrance doors with skylights were renewed like all windows, the verge was slated. The room layout was changed several times. In 1949/50 a third classroom was created in the middle wing. In 1965 it was converted into a kindergarten. For this purpose, a corridor was separated on the ground floor of the central wing. There is an apartment on the upper floor of the middle wing. The building is important for human history, especially the history of cities and settlements; the local and settlement history of the Weckhoven district, because as a representative, clearly preserved school building with high-quality details in an important urban location, it marks a center of the formerly independent local situation. The preservation and use of the building are based on scientific, in particular urban, architectural, local, social and school-historical reasons, because as an indispensable part of the settlement concept, with its original cubature and original proportions, it represents a benchmark in terms of urban development. |
1845 | 05/01/2007 | 7/019 (1/201) |
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Parish Church of St. Joseph | Weißenberg Gladbacher Strasse 5 map |
Part description:
Built in 1883/84 based on a design by government architect Julius Busch. 3-aisled brick basilica in neo-Gothic styles. 4-storey north-west tower with a polygonal pointed helmet. The central nave with a polygonal end of the choir and a saddle roof with helmeted dormers. The side aisles pulled forward to the tower front, also on the choir side with a straight end, each with pent roof. The beginning yoke (Marien or baptistery) is lifted out by a raised tent roof, the end yoke by a hipped transverse roof. At the end of the left aisle on the choir side, a round tower with a polygonal top and pointed helmet, connected to the side is the sacristy with a tent roof. 1961 damaged building sculpture of the tower (pinnacles, finials, side sculptures on the 2nd floor) removed. Tympanum at the entrance area as a glass window (designed by Ernst Jansen-Winkeln) instead of the original mosaic picture. Tower helmet completely renewed in 1984. With its distinctive high tower, it is still an urban landmark in the northern part of Neuss. |
1883/84 | 08/22/1995 | 2/012 (1/202) |
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Jewish Cemetery | Stadium district Glehner Weg map |
A first Jewish burial place is shown for the first time on a city map from 1829 on Düsseldorfer Straße; for the time before it is assumed that burials took place in country cemeteries in the area. In 1887 the community acquired today's property on Glehner Weg for its cemetery, in the immediate vicinity of the municipal cemetery on Büttger Landstrasse (today Rheydter Strasse), which was laid out in 1873. The old burial place on Düsseldorfer Straße was closed in 1890 with the opening of the new cemetery and abandoned in 1920; the tombstones there were moved to Glehner Weg. The Jewish cemetery on Glehner Weg covers an area of approx. 0.24 hectares. It is enclosed with a fence and partly a hedge; the entrance on Glehner Weg is formed by a two-leaf metal gate. A middle birch avenue leads into the depths of the rectangular property, on which 212 grave steles of different shapes from the period between 1845 and 1965 have been preserved. Since the cemetery is still occupied, there are also some younger graves. In the rear section, the oldest grave sites, which were transferred from the closed cemetery on Düsseldorfer Straße, are set up as a closed group. The names and inscriptions of the 212 steles are documented (Rohrbacher pp. 279–299). These 212 steles form the historic core that is worth protecting.
As a testimony to Jewish life in Neuss and its checkered history, persecuted and wiped out under National Socialism, the Jewish cemetery on Glehner Weg is important for human history and for Neuss. There is a public interest in its preservation for scientific reasons, here for reasons of local history and cultural history. In relation to the design of the tombstones and their inscriptions, there are also artistic reasons. The cemetery in its entirety forms a monument, with the historical gravestones as an essential constituent and worthy of protection component. |
1887 | 03/30/2006 | 3/065 (1/203) |
Klara Fey settlement | Stadium district Glehner Weg 30–36 map |
From 1930 to plans by the architect Heinrich Ingerfeld of "Neusser Spar- und Bauverein" (today Gemeinnützige Wohnungsgesellschaft eG) built settlement ensemble of exemplary quality of the overall design; two-storey apartment buildings made of brick masonry with towering hipped or saddle roofs; At both ends of the street building rows are closed off by raised, flat-roofed corner buildings (- only one-sided to Glehner Weg), which set urban accents with the cranked gable or hipped roofs of the adjoining row houses; rhythmic structure of the smooth facades through rectangular windows; regular vertical emphasis through the staircase windows above the entrances with their wide-reaching canopies, separated from the base and partly loosened up by brick relief; Dormers of different sizes; cranked cornices emphasize the corners of the building; in front of the corner buildings there were small hedge-enclosed front gardens; Windows and front doors z. T. original.
As a high-quality example of a traditionalist housing estate from the 1920s, it is worth preserving for reasons of architecture and town planning as well as local and social history. |
1930 | 04/09/1992 | 3/010 (1/204) |
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Kamillianerstraße settlement | Stadium district Glehner Weg 54–64 map |
1924–28 by the “Neusser Housing Cooperative for Civil Servants and Private Employees GmbH” (today Gemeinnützige Wohnungsgesellschaft eG) in an open construction with exemplary quality of the overall design; Architect Peter Dörner; Mostly semi-detached houses (only Kamillianerstraße 11–55 divided into three parts) made of brick masonry with high, hipped tile roofs; Corner houses at both ends of the street emphasized by shops (Kamillianerstraße 1 and 20/22) or cranked segmental bay windows; brick-walled front gardens; the smooth exterior walls of the house divided by cornices or pilaster strips; some of the entrances lead to staircase extensions ;; regularly arranged dormers and loggias on the back; sparingly inserted decorative details in expressionistic forms (stepped gable, surface relief made of brick); Windows and front doors z. T. original.
As a high-quality example of a traditionalist housing estate from the 1920s, it is worth preserving for reasons of architecture and town planning as well as local and social history. |
1924-28 | 04/09/1992 | 3/009 (1/205) |
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Residential building | Downtown Glockhammer 43 map |
2-storey residential building in a closed row, with an eaves gable roof. Built around 1875 (possibly older in the core); 1893 EG window enlarged as a shop window. Street-side plastered facade in 2 axes, with historicizing design elements. Wall surfaces on the ground floor: plinth with rough plaster fields between the continuous base and cornice, above plaster blocks alternating in rough and smooth plaster. Rectangular wall openings, above a continuous cornice as a top end and cornice. House entrance on the right axis. Wall surfaces of the upper floor in finely drawn ashlar plaster, the layers alternating in height. Rectangular window with profiled plaster framing on continuous sill cornice, in the lintel center stucco emblems. Modern door and window renewed.
In connection with the entire row of houses on the Glockhammer, this is an important testimony to the history of the city's construction, worth preserving, especially for urban planning reasons. |
around 1875 | 11/15/1995 | 1/221 (1/206) |
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Part of the immunity fixation u. Cellars of the women's monastery at St. Quirin | Downtown Glockhammer 43a map |
Part description:
In the corner between Glockhammer and Münsterstrasse, under the Glockhammer 43a building, there is a medieval basement room measuring approx. 10.5 × 9.0 m, the visible outer walls of which extend to around 4 m below the current street surface (39.60 m above sea level). The cellar is located in the area of the ladies' monastery of St. Quirin, which was founded in the 10th century. A plan made in 1802 shortly before the demolition gives information about the dimensions and structure of the building. The part of the immunity fortification with the adjoining cellars of the women's monastery of St. Quirin is an important testimony to the town's history from the 12th and 13th centuries. There are scientific reasons for the preservation. |
10th century | 01/21/2002 | 1/325 (1/207) |
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Residential building | Downtown Glockhammer 45–47 map |
Originally 2 residential houses built around 1875 (possibly older in the core), converted into a residential house around 1900; Part of a small-scale row development that follows the course of the immunity wall of the former Benedictine monastery of St. Quirin; 2-storey in 5 axes, saddle roof, brick / plaster facade with historicized decorative shapes; on the ground floor ashlar plaster over the base cornice, wall openings on the right axis widened, entrance in the central axis; between the ground floor and upper floor cornice with 3 unadorned fields and a final profile strip; brick facade on the first floor; Arched windows with richly profiled stucco framing and keystone-like ornaments, parapets under the sills, rich console cornice under the cantilevered eaves; Original door, window e.g. T. renewed.
As part of a closed row of houses, it is an important testimony to the history of urban construction, worth preserving for architectural-historical, scientific, especially urban development-historical reasons, as well as for local history and townscape-defining reasons. |
around 1875 | 01/09/1997 | 1/241 (1/208) |
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Residential building | Downtown Glockhammer 49 map |
Built around 1875 (possibly older in the core); Part of a small-scale row development that follows the course of the immunity wall of the former Benedictine monastery of St. Quirin; 2-storey in 2 axes, plastered facade, extended saddle roof; high plinth, entrance with skylight in the left axis; Console cornice under cantilevered eaves; Dormer window; Door and window renewed.
As part of a closed row of houses, it is an important testimony to the history of urban construction, worth preserving for architectural-historical, scientific, especially urban development-historical reasons, as well as for local history and townscape-defining reasons. |
Around 1875 | 01/09/1997 | 1/242 (1/209) |
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Residential building | Downtown Glockhammer 51 map |
Built around 1875; 2-storey plaster facade in 2 axes, gable roof; recessed entrance with skylight and profile frame in the left axis; Console cornice under cantilevered eaves; Door renewed, original window. | Around 1875 | 08/28/1992 | 1/181 (1/210) |
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Residential building | Downtown Glockhammer 53 map |
2-storey house with a gable roof on the eaves; as part of a closed row of similar simple houses (Glockhammer 47–57), probably built at the end of the 18th century; Reshaped around 1875. On the street side, plastered facade in 2 window axes, with economical design elements (offset plinth, widely protruding eaves cornice with block frieze). House entrance in the right axis with sandstone frame and skylight; the windows with a simple stone window sill (renewed on the first floor with reduced dimensions). Oversized new dormer windows obscure the original appearance of the entire row of houses. Door and window (partly) original (19th century)
The interior of the house is largely original, with simple wooden staircases and a large format. Stone slabs in the entrance area (black and white, laid diagonally in a checkerboard pattern). In connection with the entire row of houses on the Glockhammer, this is an important testimony to the history of the city's construction, worth preserving, especially for urban planning reasons. |
End of 18th century | 10/26/1993 | 1/204 (1/211) |
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Residential building | Downtown Glockhammer 55 map |
Built around 1875 (possibly older in the core); Part of a small-scale row development that follows the course of the immunity wall of the former Benedictine monastery of St. Quirin; 2-storey in 2 axes, gable roof, house entrance in the right axis; sparingly designed plaster facade, smooth, slightly protruding base, wide front door frame, strong simple window sills, eaves; Original door with skylight, window renewed.
As part of a closed row of houses, it is an important testimony to the history of urban construction, worth preserving for architectural-historical, scientific, especially urban development-historical reasons, as well as for local history and townscape-defining reasons. |
Around 1875 | 01/09/1997 | 1/245 (1/212) |
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Residential building | Downtown Glockhammer 57 map |
Built around 1875 (possibly older in the core); Part of a small-scale row development that follows the course of the immunity wall of the former Benedictine monastery of St. Quirin; 2-storey in 2 axes, gable roof, house entrance in the right axis;
Simple plastered facade, the original strong window sills replaced by new narrow ones, front door with skylight, eaves; Door and window renewed. As part of a closed row of houses, it is an important testimony to the history of urban construction, worth preserving for architectural-historical, scientific, especially urban development-historical reasons, as well as for local history and townscape-defining reasons. |
Around 1875 | 01/09/1997 | 1/246 (1/213) |
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Marienberg Church | City center Glockhammer 58–60 map |
Former Church of the branch (canyon) of regulated choir women founded by Aleidis vanme Stade in 1439 and dissolved in 1802. Today's name Marienbarg (mons beatae Mariae) has been traceable since 1464.
Church: In 1462 (one year after the monastery donor's death), instead of the original house chapel, it was consecrated to the title of Mariae. Badly damaged by the great city fire in 1586, largely rebuilt in the following years, consecrated again in 1607 by the Cologne auxiliary bishop Kripan. 1805 to 1906 Protestant parish church. In 1888 extensive restorations (new organ stage and grisaille windows). Catholic monastery and school church since 1911. 1944 destroyed except for the surrounding walls; 1953/54 Reconstruction according to the design of the Neuss architect Käthe Gilges, with the original ribbed vault replaced by a flat wooden ceiling, a north aisle attached to the originally single-nave nave, with a gallery above in connection with the extended west gallery; old inventory lost; Walled up choir window. Brick building partly plastered in extensions of the monastery wing. On the street side 5 buttresses with pointed arched windows in between, polygonal choir (5/8 end). Saddle roof with 3 dormers, 8-sided, pointed roof turrets with bells from 1631 and 1792. Former Monastery and school: Building badly damaged by the great fire in the city in 1586, reconstruction in the following years; Severe fire damage in 1685, then reconstruction and extensive expansions. 1856 Seat of the Catholic orphanage (moved to Rheydter Straße in 1908). Since 1857 the Sisters of the Poor Child Jesus and girls' high school settled down, 1877 to 1887 during the Kulturkampf the sisters were expelled, 1900–1912 considerable expansion of the school, to which almost all old monastery buildings fell victim. 1944–45 foreign labor camp of the Todt Organization, school operations resumed at the end of 1945. Now girls high school and commercial vocational school. Glockhammer building: Remains of the original monastery buildings, now the sisters' living quarters. Corner house Glockhammer / Rheinstraße, 2-storey in 9: 3 axes, plastered facade, expanded attic, hipped roof with dormers in the window axes. The windows with simple ashlar walls; Baroque central portal flanked by corner pilasters with volutes, crowning window, volutes on the side and profiled semicircular canopy. Windows (including stone surrounds) and pilaster portal faithfully renewed in 1957. School building Rheinstrasse: Built in 1928. The street-side wing is 2-storey (ground floor with auditorium at double storey height) with a half-hipped roof and a gabled dwarf house; Courtyard wing 3-storey. Street side plastered facade in 7 axes, with neo-baroque decorative shapes: In the greatly widened left Ache, recessed entrance in ashlar plaster edging, with crowning on profiled beams, above and across the corner in the gable each 2 superimposed windows. The high rectangular windows on the ground floor with stone surrounds, sills on consoles and keystones. Emphasis on the center of the facade by a niche figure on the console and lamp on the ground floor and by a volute gable with a round window. Cornice between the ground floor and first floor. On the upper floor 3 groups of 3 rectangular windows each, to the side and between the windows, glare pilasters, above the middle group of windows, split gables with decorative shapes on the sides. Dormers on both sides of the gabled house. Front door and window renewed. Marienberg church and school are an important testimony to the city's history, both in terms of the buildings and their varied uses. There is a public interest in their preservation and further use for urban planning as well as church and school history reasons. |
1439 | 11/06/1995 | 1/243 (1/214) |
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Residential and guest house | Downtown Glockhammer 59 map |
Built by Peter Doetsch before 1875, part of a row house development that follows the course of the immunity wall of the former Benedictine monastery of St. Quirin; 2-storey in 6 axes, kinked to e axes due to the street alignment, plaster facade with historicizing decorative shapes; on the ground floor strip plaster over smooth plinth, wall openings with profile framing and keystones (partly head busts), parapet areas; Input in the right axis; between ground floor and upper floor cornice; on the first floor arched windows with profile frames and keystones; cantilevered eaves; Windows and doors renewed.
As part of a closed row of houses, it is an important testimony to the history of urban construction, worth preserving for architectural-historical, scientific, especially urban development-historical reasons, as well as for local history and townscape-defining reasons. |
Before 1875 | 01/09/1997 | 1/243 (1/215) |
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Residential houses | Dreikönigsviertel Goethestrasse 2, 2a, 4 and 4 ° map |
1928/1929 by the Neusser Gemeinnützigen Bauverein AG based on plans by the architect Dominikus Heurich built on the corner; three-storey apartment buildings with towering hipped or saddle roofs; developed attic; Dormers of different sizes; a shop on the corner of Bergheimer Strasse and Goethestrasse that is still in use today; Brick facades structured by risalits and accentuated by sparing brick ornamentation and stone plaster structure; Particularly emphasized entrance axes and corners; Doors and windows z. T. original. | 1928/1929 | 08/20/1992 | 3/011 (1/216) |
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Residential houses | Furth Gotenstrasse 3–30 map |
Statute for the protection of the Kolpingviertel monument area in the city of Neuss
On May 30, 1986, the City Council of Neuss, based on Section 5 of the Law on the Protection and Maintenance of Monuments in the State of North Rhine-Westphalia (Monument Protection Act - DSchG) of March 11, 1980 (GV. NW, p. 226), last amended by law of November 6, 1984 (GV. NW, p. 663), these statutes adopted: § 1 Order of protection The area of the Kolpingviertel described in § 2 is hereby placed under protection as a monument area according to § 5 of the Monument Protection Act NW. § 2 Territorial scope The monument area comprises the following streets or street sections with the adjacent house plots:
The boundaries of the monument area are shown with a black border in the plan produced on a scale of 1: 2000, which is attached as Annex 1 of these statutes as a component thereof. § 3 Material scope With these statutes the historical cityscape of the Kolpingviertel is placed under protection. The protected cityscape is determined by the route of the street (cityscape plan), by the partially inherited stock of trees in the street area, and by the original structure of the building parts visible in the street area, preserved from the time it was built. Details on this can be found in the plan “Building structure of the building fronts” produced on a scale of 1: 2000 and the associated photo documentation, which is attached as part of Annex 2 to these statutes. § 4 Measures requiring a permit In the designated monument area Kolpingviertel, measures according to § 9 of the Monument Protection Act NW are subject to approval. The regulations of the Monument Protection Act apply. § 5 Justification 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 20s and 30s, 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 of the 20s and 30s are mostly three-story apartment buildings with exposed brick facades, designed more uniformly and more restrained. 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 to the old buildings in terms of their external appearance. 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 this 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. The expert opinion of the Rhineland Regional Council - Rhenish Office for Monument Preservation - of November 25, 1985, which is relevant for the above justification, is attached to these statutes as Annex 3 for information. § 6 entry into force These statutes come into force on the day after their public announcement. |
Kolping District (1/217) |
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Wayside shrine | Speck Grafenstrasse / Harbernusstrasse map |
1743 (dated with inscription on the metal niche door). In a newly designed facility approx. 2.50 m high, restored structure made of sandstone blocks: On all around protruding, transversely rectangular base, narrower shaft block with inscription on the front:
THE-GLORY-HELPENSTEIN-HAS-THIS STATION-RAISING-READING-AND WEEAR OUR YEARS OF GOD DRAGT-THE-BLESSING-GIVEN MEAN-ABOUT-WHOLE-AND BIT-FOR-US-OHL- JOSEF-WOLTHARDER 1743 and bead-like conclusion; the middle block with stepped, framed rectangular niche closed with a punched metal door; severely impaired inscriptions on the lintel beam; Above it, a wide, overhanging cornice with several steps; new metal cross. The object is significant for human history as a vividly preserved, simple testimony to popular piety. In addition to the public interest, there are scientific, in particular local historical and folkloric reasons for maintaining the crossroads. |
1743 | 03/30/2006 | 7/018 (1/218) |
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Administration building | Barbaraviertel Graf-Landsberg-Strasse 1 map |
Completed in 1929 according to plans by the architect Fritz Hildebrand, Düsseldorf; 3-storey brick building with a 4-storey middle section in 4 axes, the side wings in 4 axes each, high hipped tile roof; 3 front sides with canted pilasters; balcony later added to the rear, main facade with strong sill cornice made of artificial sandstone on the ground floor, sparingly added brick ornamentation, portal framing also in artificial sandstone; strong eaves; Inside a staircase made of artificial stone with original wooden railing, a second staircase changed by installing an elevator at the end of the 1960s. Windows and doors renewed.
As a high-quality example of a traditionalist administrative building from the 1920s with expressionist details, particularly worthy of preservation for reasons of architecture and local history. |
1929 | 04/03/1992 | 2/010 (1/219) |
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Residential and commercial building | Downtown Hafenstrasse 66 map |
1898/99 built by Wilhelm Metzer according to his own design, 3-storey in 4 window axes with a very high, extended mansard roof; on the courtyard side 3-storey extension in 7 axes with a monopitch roof. The street-side facade made of yellow bricks, door and window frames made of plastered neo-renaissance decorative shapes. On the ground floor originally an entrance door on the right axis, in 1984/85 an openwork second entrance door, at that time the old door and window were probably replaced by new ones made of aluminum. Original profiled window frames and balcony door on the 1st and 2nd floors. On the 1st floor on both central axes 3-sided bay windows (half hexagon); the bay window rests on an acanthus leaf half-capital with 4 simulated gargoyles. On the bay window a balcony with a wrought-iron railing, rich foliage. Above the 2nd floor a 2-axis-wide gable with a cartouche and initials MW, in the roof above a curved, high gable with fittings and 2 windows that are drawn together. On both sides 1 dwelling over projecting gallery on consoles.
Almost unchanged neo-renaissance building with richly structured facade. Worth preserving as an area of the Wilhelminian city expansion in the Hafenstrasse area that still exists for reasons of the history of the city's construction. |
1898/99 | 08/20/1992 | 2/173 (1/220) |
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Foreland bridge and bridge towers on the left bank of the Rhine | Port area Hammer railway bridge map |
Part description:
Built as "King Wilhelm Railway Bridge" from 1868–70 by the Bergisch-Märkische Railway Company for 2-track rail operations; partially rebuilt in 1913 to adapt to the former parallel bridge from 1910–12 approx. 386 m long foreland bridge on the left bank of the Rhine, pillars and flat segment arch vaults made of brick. Partly with ashlar attachments, bridge sides with continuous baluster railings and cornice over arched frieze, arches accentuated by narrow cornices. Structure in 4 sections: abutment structure over flood dam, with a central passage (semicircular vault) and laterally projecting wall parts like risalit.
The portals between Duisburg in the north and Cologne in the south are unique for the work from the early days of large bridge construction in the 19th century. In this respect, the approach bridges and bridge towers are a unique and distinctive part of the Lower Rhine landscape between Düsseldorf and Neuss. |
1868-70 | 04/16/1987 | 5/001 (1/221) |
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Remnants of the city wall arches 1 and 2 | Downtown Hamtorplatz / Hamtorwall map |
Remains of the 2-train ma city wall from the 13th century made of basalt, tuff and brick, partly heavily restored. External wall to the Erftmühlengraben with 2 bastions and stepped support pillars. From the inner wall, only 2 free-standing supporting arches of the former battlement have been preserved, which were uncovered and restored in 1961 when the building was demolished. They were built against an older wall of tuff and cast iron with rubble that could not be preserved.
There are hardly any visible remains of the fortifications that have shaped the city. The remains of the Hamtorwall are the only ones to document the connection between the wall, rampart and moat and, despite their fragmentary character and extensive restoration, are classified as a monument for scientific and urban planning reasons. |
13th century | October 24, 1988 | 1/141 (1/222) |
Residential building (facade) | Downtown Hamtorstrasse 1/3 map |
Built in 1891/95 by Ludwig Schiffer in place of two older houses, architect Wilh. Fasbender; Brick plaster facade in neo-renaissance decorative shapes; 3-storey in 4 axes, mansard roof; Above wide cornice on the 1st floor window with arched roofing and combat cornice, on the 2nd floor cornice crowning, on the roof block frieze and console cornice, in the roof zone three richly decorated gable houses, the middle one larger with a two-part window; 1979/80 interior work, attic extension and modernization, addition of a stairwell; Ground floor with former shop integrated into the new passage building, pilaster frame of the former house entrance preserved, windows in their original state (wooden frame with decorated cross-window without muntin division). | 1891/95 | 01/06/1986 | 1/067 (1/223) |
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Residential and commercial building | Downtown Hamtorstrasse 2 map |
Built in 1912 by Adam Viehmann in place of two older houses, architect Carl Schaumburg. 3-storey house with shop on the ground floor, eaves in a closed row, extended mansard roof. Street-side plastered facade in 4 axes, designed in the style of New Objectivity. On the ground floor, shop window on a narrow plinth in the middle over 2 axes; in the outer axes left shop door, right ashes; in the outer axes shop door on the left, house entrance door on the right, pillars originally probably striped plaster; upper end through cornice. The upper floor with continuous wall pillars combined in the manner of colossal pilasters, like parapet surfaces in smooth plaster; narrow rectangular windows with sill and slightly recessed framing. Strongly protruding narrow eaves cornice. Wide dormer window in the roof (originally probably a bat dormer window). Skylight zone of the shop door changed (closed flush with the wall); Doors and shop windows renewed, windows on the first floor original.
The front section of Hamtorstraße is characterized by buildings dating from the Wilhelminian era. House No. 2 shows the New Objectivity styles as a special feature. There is a public interest in the preservation and use for reasons of local building history and urban planning. |
1912 | 11/20/1995 | 1/225 (1/224) |
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Residential building | Downtown Hamtorstrasse 6 map |
3-storey house with mansard roof, built after 1904, 2-storey extension with pent roof on the courtyard side.
Street-side brick plaster facade with historicizing decorative shapes, divided into 3 axes. On the ground floor, wide right entrance to the courtyard via 2 axes, the house entrance set back in the left axis; the narrow wall piece in strip plaster over a narrow stone base, concluding belt cornice. Wall surfaces of the upper floor in yellow brick; the rectangular windows on continuous sill cornices. Windows on the 1st floor with elaborately structured framing, laterally plaster strips and cornice roofing on consoles, framed plaster field under the sill cornice; directly adjoining console cornice above. Slated mansard roof with 3 dormers in the window axes (upper end originally semicircular). Original front door, window renewed based on the original division. |
after 1904 | 09/16/1994 | 1/212 (1/225) |
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Residential building with shop | Downtown Hamtorstrasse 8 map |
2nd half of the 19th century, 3-storey house, on the ground floor shop, on the eaves. Saddle roof with high jamb to the street side; On the courtyard side, 2-storey extension with a monopitch roof. Street-side plastered facade in late classical design, divided into 3 axes. On the ground floor a narrow stone plinth with a final cornice; recessed house entrance in the right axis; Shop window with shop entrance (instead of the original window as in the upper floor) from 1919, renewed in 1965, the like. Wall surfaces in rough and smooth alternating strip plaster, closed off by a narrow cornice. Wall surfaces of the upper floor in smooth plaster; the rectangular windows with all-round profile framing, on the 1st floor on continuous sill cornices, on the 2nd floor on simple sills. 3 square wall openings in the window axes on a continuous cornice under the cantilevered roof cornice, decorated with block frieze and consoles. Original entrance door and first floor window. | 2nd half of the 19th century | 09/16/1994 | 1/213 (1/226) |
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Residential building | Downtown Hamtorstrasse 21 map |
Built in 1888/89 by Wilhelm Roßelnbroich, architect Wilhelm Schnitzler; with the east side z. Partly adjacent to house no. 19, otherwise free-standing; Bach stone plaster facade with classical decorative shapes, 2-storey in 5: 3 axes, mezzanine, hipped roof; Wall openings on the ground floor and first floor with straight ends; on the side facades mostly window windows; Smooth plaster base; Ground floor in ashlar plaster, window with sill, parapet (diamond ashlar) and elaborate keystone in the lintel; recessed entrance in the central axis, pilaster frame with richly decorated entablature on capitals; on the upper floor brick, between cranked cornice and cranked sill cornice on the side. 1st diamond cuboid each, the rest of the upper floors bordered on the sides by plastered cuboids, under the framed windows decorated parapets, under the central window framed with pilasters, a balustrade, an elaborate decorative motif sprinkled with a round arch roof on beams, in the lateral axes with a vase motif blown up triangular gable roofing the lintels horizontal plaster strip, no parapets on the side facades, less complex segmental arch roofing of the windows, plaster strips and medallions on the wall surfaces in between; in the mezzanine in each axis 2 flat arched windows on continuous sill cornices, framed plaster fields in between, widely cantilevered eaves. | 1888/89 | 07/09/1990 | 1/153 (1/227) |
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Residential building | Downtown Hamtorwall 44 map |
Built at the end of the 19th century. 3-storey house with mezzanine floor / saddle roof, 2-storey extension on the courtyard side with pent roof. Street-side brick-plaster facade, 3-axis with historicizing decorative shapes. On the ground floor above smooth plaster base strip plaster (alternating in rough and smooth plaster), house entrance set back in the left axis with steps, trapezoidal keystone in rough plaster above the wall openings, closing cornice. In the upper floor exposed brick, horizontal strip plaster at the level of the sills and the window crowns, all windows framed. On the first floor parapet fields with richly decorated garlands, profiled triangular gable roofing with an inscribed circle on entablature; French door and balcony with wrought iron grille in the left axis. On the 2nd floor, sole benches on consoles, entablature roofing on console heads, above them arched keystones in smooth plaster. Mezzanine zone in smooth plaster, small square windows flanked by pilasters and capitals, lateral pilasters; Block frieze under the overhanging console cornice. Door with skylight part and window renewed in accordance with listed building standards. | End of the 19th century | 04/26/1993 | 1/191 (1/228) |
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Residential building | Downtown Hamtorwall 46 map |
Built at the end of the 19th century. 3-storey house with mezzanine floor / saddle roof, 2-storey extension on the courtyard side with pent roof. Street-side brick-plaster facade, 3-axis with historicizing decorative shapes. On the ground floor over a smooth plaster base, strip plaster (lower strip in rough plaster, otherwise smooth) up to the level of the wall openings, with a capitular cornice at the end; Above it, smooth plastered surface framed by cornices, as a typical design element for lettering areas, house entrance with stairs in the right axis, window with sills. In the upper floor exposed brick, windows with richly decorated plaster framing and roofing on beams. On the 1st floor parapet zone between the cornice and continuous cranked cornice in plaster, beneath the windows parapet surfaces with garlands, side pilasters with knob-like top over cornice; segmented arched window roofing with richly decorated inner field. Window on the 2nd floor with sills on consoles above the cornice; Roofing of windows, very ruinous mezzanine with small coupled windows above continuous rudimentary cornice; cantilevered eaves. Door and window renewed. | End of the 19th century | 04/26/1993 | 1/192 (1/229) |
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Residential building | Downtown Hamtorwall 48 map |
Built at the end of the 19th century. 3-storey house with mezzanine floor / saddle roof, 2-storey extension on the courtyard side with pent roof. Street-side brick-plaster facade, 3-axis with historicizing decorative shapes. On the ground floor via a smooth plaster base, strip plaster up to the height of the wall openings; Smooth plastered surface that runs over the wall openings and is bordered by cornices as a typical design element for lettering areas, house entrance with steps in the left axis. In the upper floor exposed brick, windows with plaster framing, parapet areas and roofing. Continuous cranked cornice on the first floor, the parapet areas decorated with masks and ornaments and framed by pilasters; Timber roofing ruinous. The parapets on the 2nd floor are decorated with garlands of fruit, windows with triangular gable roofing, wide plaster tape between the windows at height. Wall surfaces of the mezzanine zone over belt cornices in plaster with flat cuboids, framed coupled windows. Projecting eaves, block frieze. Door and window renewed. | End of the 19th century | 07/21/1993 | 1/193 (1/230) |
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Residential building | Downtown Hamtorwall 50 map |
Built at the end of the 19th century. 3-storey house with mezzanine floor / saddle roof, 2-storey extension on the courtyard side with pent roof. Street-side brick-plaster facade, 3-axis with historicizing decorative shapes. On the ground floor via smooth plaster base strip plaster up to the height of the window parapets; Above that, ashlar plaster, above the wall openings as a keystone-like diamond ashlar; Entrance to the house with steps in the right axis, window with sole benches, closing cornice. In the upper floor exposed brick, window with plaster framing. On the 1st floor parapet zone under continuous cranked cornice in plaster, the windows with framed parapet fields and arched roofing, inner fields each with rich ornamental decorations in the central axis balcony; between the windows over the cornice and at the height of the tower there is a wide plastering tape. Windows on the 2nd floor with continuous sill cornices on brackets, festoons on smooth plastered surfaces as crowning of windows. In the mezzanine zone, smaller square windows with plaster framing. Overhanging eaves. Door and window renewed. | End of the 19th century | 07/21/1993 | 1/194 (1/231) |
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Residential building | Downtown Hamtorwall 54 map |
Built in 1889 by Joseph Stürmann, architect Wilhelm Schnitzler. 3-storey house with mezzanine floor / saddle roof, courtyard-side extension 2 ½-storey with pent roof. Street-side 3-axis plaster facade with historicizing decorative shapes. All wall openings framed with arches, windows on the upper floor. Ground floor in strip plaster over smooth plaster base; house entrance set back in the right axis with steps; Windows with sills, underneath parapets with framed diamond blocks; finally cornice. Windows on the 1st floor on continuous sill cornice, below framed parapet fields; between the windows 3 flat broad cornices; Side windows with entablature roofing on consoles, central window with semicircular arch roofing, bursting with a vase motif on the keystone. Continuous sill cornice on the 2nd floor, on consoles as an extension of the side window frames; between the windows 2 flat, wide cornices; Keystones in the vertices of the window, larger on the central window and with a ball attached. Closing cornice at the same time a continuous cornice of the mezzanine windows. Far cantilevered eaves on a serrated frieze. Door with original skylight, large windows new. | 1889 | 12/30/1992 | 1/190 (1/232) |
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Rectory | Holzheim Hauptstrasse 4 map |
Rectory of the cath. Parish of St. Martinus built in 1792 as a residential house (type "Querdielenhaus") of a farm. 2-storey angular building with 2 ½ axes, brick paved, main wing with gable roof, extension with hipped roof. On the south side, year of construction 1792 with wall anchor. All wall openings with straight lintel, door and skylight field in wooden block frames, 2-part door leaf with baroque decorative shapes, wood carving of the skylight repeats the year of construction. Window faithfully renewed. Original stairs and doors inside the house; In the hallway on the ground floor, 2 wall pillars with a profiled overhang under the ceiling, presumably remains of a fireplace.
The rectory is an important testimony to the local history of Holzheim. There are scientific, ethnological and urban planning reasons for its preservation and use. |
1792 | 09/03/1992 | 7/005 (1/233)
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Lyrmann's court | Neuss-Holzheim Hauptstraße 15 map |
In the middle of the 19th century next to the parish church in place of an older courtyard, a closed, four-winged courtyard complex made of brick, e.g. T. slurried; on the south corner, 2-storey house in 3: 4 axes with gable roof; pilaster strips at the corners, wide frieze under the eaves, step-shaped frieze on the gable, tall rectangular lattice windows, on the upper floor in rural buildings rare arched windows with ornamentally decorated skylights, entrance on the courtyard side; Barn rebuilt around 1910; 1891 Shop installation in the former stable building on Hauptstrasse.
Significant evidence of the local history, worth preserving, especially for reasons of folklore and urban planning. |
Middle of the 19th century | 12/30/1992 | 7/001 (1/234) |
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Residential building | City center Hermannsplatz 14 map |
Erected in 1908, builder Heinrich Moser, architect Klaus Röhlinger; 2-storey in 2 axes, mansard roof, extended attic, in the left axis roof house with curved gable with year of construction; House stone / plaster facade in Art Nouveau decorative forms; Entrance door in the right axis, rectangular wall openings, above a base in basalt lava, ground floor in red sandstone, the rest of the facade in rough plaster with sandstone integration; Window openings with profiled sandstone framing, front door and accompanying small corridor window with representative portal framing, curved roofing; Original front door and window of the staircase axis; inside numerous original details such as marble flooring and wall cladding in the entrance, stairwell, doors; Back z. T. changed. | 1908 | 13/01/2004 | 1/352 (1/235) |
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Residential building | Downtown Hesemannstrasse 17–17a map |
Built in 1935 by the Neuss non-profit building association on the corner of Breite Straße as part of the closed group of 6 shared houses, architect Eugen Engels; Brick facade with hard cement walls; 4-storey in 4: 6 axes; Corner structure with flat roof, raised and set back slightly with windows positioned across corners, windows combined into strips by cornices, new two-part windows. (Plastic frame without rung division).
Important testimony to the history of urban construction, worth preserving, especially for urban planning reasons. (particularly successful corner solution together with the opposite assembly). |
1935 | 06/25/1985 | 1/023 (1/236) |
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Residential building | Downtown Hesemannstrasse 19 map |
Built in 1930 by the Neuss non-profit building association on the corner of Breite Straße as part of the closed group of 5 shared houses, architect Dominikus Heurich; Brick facade with hard cement walls; 4-storey in 3: 4 axes; Corner structure with flat roof, raised and set back slightly, window ledge, sill and lintel cornice; Aluminum door and new two-part window. (Plastic frame without rung division). | 1930 | 04/04/1985 | 1/024 (1/237) |
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Residential building | Downtown Hesemannstrasse 21 map |
Built in 1930 by the Neuss non-profit building association as part of the closed group of 5 shared houses, architect Dominikus Heurich; Brick facade with hard cement walls; 3-storey in 3 axes; expanded gable roof; Entrance and raised ribbon windows in the central axis, cornice; new aluminum door, new two-part window. (Plastic frame without rung division). | 1930 | 04/04/1985 | 1/025 (1/238) |
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Throat tower | Downtown Hessentordamm map |
Round tower with a diameter of 12 m, originally a gun bastion of the medieval city wall at the landing site of the arm of the Rhine (called Kehl); presumably 2-storey, only the upper storey partially visible from the ground, upper end platform on brick vault inside the tower; Wall 2 m thick, on the outside made of basalt blocks, on the upper edge circumferential profiled cornice; Rectangular wall openings to the south and north, inside wide niches (former gun positions); door opening on the east side broken in the 19th century. After the destruction of the subsequent former monastery buildings in 1956, the tower was partially exposed and restored in 1956. | unknown | 09/30/1987 | 1/127 (1/239) |
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"Old School" Holzheim | Holzheim Hindenburgplatz 7 map |
The school building was built in 1837/1838 and expanded in 1877 and 1912. The original component of the two-storey, ten-axis slurry brick building includes segmented arched windows, stone sills, two double high wooden entrance doors with skylights, the doors with diamonds and semicircular decor, inside two old stairs to the top floor with wooden railing, Mettlach floor and stone-clad floor in the hallways. In the left part of the house, which houses the apartment, there is a vestibule with a molded, glazed door. The room structure is understandable. Inside doors and frames are partly old. The extension from 1912 closes to the right of a double-leaf wooden door. The staircase from 1912 behind it connects with the old building. The building from 1912 is accessible in the middle. The classrooms are on the left and right. The ground floor shows three segment-arched wide windows in stepped walls, the upper floor each five narrower rectangular windows. The rear exit is pulled forward and gabled like a risk. The original stock also includes the double-winged wooden doors in stepped walls, lava basalt steps, the terrazzo hall, the stairs and railings, the parquet flooring of the classrooms, the articulated hipped roof that emphasizes the center.
The "old school" is located in the center of Holzheim, in sight of the Martinskirche. Due to its location, the rich windows and the many entrance doors, the area is easily recognizable as a school building. The extension building, emerging from flight, with an articulated hipped roof and wider class windows is part of the grown school monument, as it clearly shows the necessity of a school extension due to the rapidly increasing number of pupils at the beginning of the 20th century. The "old school" in Holzheim is important because it shows the development of school building from the first half of the 19th century to the beginning of the 20th century. Their preservation and use is in the public interest for scientific, architectural, social and local historical reasons. |
1837/1838 | 07/31/2001 | 7/016 (1/240) |
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Kuckhof | Rosellen Horremer Strasse 1 map |
Closed 4-wing brick courtyard at a historical location (first mentioned in 1050), built in the 2nd half of the 19th century (on the barn roof in lacquered bricks, the year 1883). The east wing on the street side is more elaborately designed: 2-storey house in 5 axes, central axis framed and gabled by pilaster strips, stepped side gables, elaborate eaves and verge cornices; then 1 ½-storey stable wing divided by pilaster strips and brick cornices; Gabled gate passage projected on both sides, gable with elaborate verge cornice, side and center attachments on the street side. To the north and south of the commercial wing (partly with apartments), the design is simpler and lower. West wing, elongated high barn, in the middle section towed canopies on wooden pillars.
The courtyard is an important example of the building type of the exposed large farm from the time before 1900 and of the continuity of the locations of large courtyards. |
2nd half of the 19th century | 07/11/1990 | 8/007 (1/241) |
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Jesuit tower residence | Downtown Jesuitenhof 13 map |
Part description:
The Jesuit tower was built in the 1st half of the 17th century. It is three-storey plastered on an octonal floor plan, and has a curved canopy roof, crowned by an openwork weather vane with the letters CT (Caspar Thywissen). On the northeast side of the tower there are two cartouches made of sandstone, one with the IHS coat of arms in aureole, the second inscription "IN hoc signo praeclaro his domibus sit salus". Both cartridges are badly damaged or weathered. A sandstone memorial plaque is embedded in the east side of the tower. It was installed in 1911 and contains data on the history of the square. The tower is the remainder of the former Jesuit monastery and grammar school. Between the Oberstrasse and Mühlenstrasse and adjacent to the Rottelsgasse there was the Minorite monastery from 1234 to 1615, which the Jesuits took over in 1616. In 1773 the Jesuit order was abolished. In 1785 the monastery came into private hands. In 1787 the church and the wing of the building on Oberstrasse were demolished. Industry settled in the other buildings, from 1818 to 1836 a sheep's wool mill, then from 1839 to 1905 an oil mill. In 1906 the oil mill moved to a new facility at harbor basin 1. The old factory buildings were demolished and in 1911 residential houses were built in their place on the property now known as the Jesuitenhof, including the tower. During the Second World War, the buildings, including the tower, were severely damaged. In 1968 the tower was restored and included in the new construction of a small three-story house. There is an apartment on each floor, with the turret inserted as a bay window for each floor. The building is important for human history, especially the history of cities and settlements. For the maintenance and use of the building, there are scientific and in particular urban planning reasons, because the tower is indispensable for the urban structure of the historical Jesuitenhof area. |
06/11/2007 | 1/384 (1/242) |
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Marie Curie High School | Furth Jostenallee 49–51 map |
Part description:
The building was built in 1914–1916 by the city of Neuss for a Royal Prussian teacher training college. The architect was city architect Carl Sittel . It is a 3-wing building with facades made of brick and artificial stone or stone plaster. Incorrect fires loosen the brick masonry. The hip and mansard roofs are covered with slate. The main wing is 3-storey in 12 axes. The left wing is 2-storey and connected to the main wing with an intermediate wing. The right wing is formed by the former gymnasium. The building is important for human history, especially the history of cities and settlements. For the maintenance and use of the building, there are scientific and in particular urban planning reasons. |
1914-1916 | 06/20/2007 | 2/018 (1/243) |
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Residential building | Dreikönigenviertel Jülicher Straße 44 map |
Built in 1913/14 opposite the Dreikönigenkirche by Dr. Franz Bauer, architect Heinz Ingerfeld; 1938 Construction of a garage and reconstruction of the storage room at the rear; bomb damage in World War II, restoration in the old state; 2-storey in non-continuous axes, hipped roof; Brick facade in restrained design language; Accentuation by a gabled house with a tail gable and a bay window on a segment-arched floor plan, crowned by a balcony on the upper floor with a wooden railing; recessed covered entrance on the SE corner; Front yard. Numerous original interior details including windows, doors, floors, stucco ceilings, stairwell, marble wall plinth in the hall, ceiling lamps in the dining room, dumbwaiter.
The building is important for human history, especially for the way of living and living in a villa building from the time before the First World War in the newly created Dreikönigenviertel. |
1913/14 | October 29, 2002 | 3/061 (1/244) |
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more pictures |
Dreikönigenkirche | Dreikönigenviertel Jülicher Strasse 65 map |
Part description:
Built in 1909/11 based on a design by Eduard Endler; 3-aisled pillar basilica with transept, raised long choir with polygonal apse; 55 m high square tower arranged on the south side of the choir, which ends in a platform, handling with wrought iron lattice, on the platform masonry eight-sided structure with a triple curved tower dome. On the south side of the tower adjoining sacristy and round stair tower with a hooded roof. Facade made of tuff and sandstone, roofs with slate covering. Inside high triumphal arch to the choir; After being destroyed in the war in 1946, a suspended ceiling was drawn in as a concrete shell. The Dreikönigskirche is important for the history of church construction. The church is worth preserving for scientific, in particular architectural-historical and urban planning reasons. |
1909/11 | 05/11/2000 | 3/052 (1/245) |
Residential building | Dreikönigenviertel Jülicher Strasse 68 map |
Part description:
Built in 1913 by JH Menser as a two-family house, architect Rudolf Medler and Gehlen; Brick facade with basalt lava base, walls and cornices in shell limestone, 2-storey in 3 axes, mansard roof; Central axis slightly offset, therein arched portal with pillar framing and spherical attachments, putter and cartouche with the year of construction above the door, overlying window running through to the gable, in the outer axes quadruple windows, ground floor and upper floor with parapet fields, large gable in Neo-Renaissance decorative shapes, cornices Interrupted in the central axis, largely preserved original condition, 1975 installation of a dormer on the courtyard side, door in original condition, new windows without muntin division. |
1913 | 04/04/1985 | 3/001 (1/246) |
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Keutenhof | Dreikönigenviertel Jülicher Strasse 70 map |
3-wing brick courtyard, built in 1851 by Caspar Thywissen, acquired by Jean Keuter in 1917, managed until 1960. Representative symmetrical building arrangement: 2-storey side wing, gable-free, in 2 axes each; in between, the street-side wall with a gabled central gate, house gable and gate system emphasized by structured design elements in brick. The front 3 axes of the side wings are designed as residential buildings. To the south on the left street gable formerly a secondary entrance with an original iron gate.
The Keuterhof is the only inner-city courtyard in Neuss that has largely been preserved in its original condition. There are scientific folklore and urban planning reasons for the preservation and use of the building. |
1851 | 01/16/1992 | 3/012 (1/247) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kaiser-Friedrich-Strasse 20 map |
It is a two-storey row house on the eaves, three axes wide, with a facade-wide dwarf gable (with crooked hip), built in 1913 for the master carpenter Jakob Krüll. Construction manager was Constantin Wienstoer. Inside, with the stairwell and terrazzo floors, characteristic features of the construction period have been preserved. A winter garden was added to the rear in 1920.
The house, part of the Wilhelminian expansion of the city from the Wilhelminian era, originally joined the neighboring residential buildings No. 22-28 with a natural stone facade. As a defining component of the Wilhelminian Wilhelminian urban expansion area, the residential building at Kaiser-Friedrich-Strasse 20 is important for Neuss. After removing the disfiguring facade painting, it is a clear testimony to the reform architecture of the early 20th century, implemented on a simple row house. |
1913 | 05/05/2006 | 1/366 (1/248) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kaiser-Friedrich-Strasse 22 map |
1912/13 built together with houses 24, 26 and 28 by Johannes Geller, architect Fritz Helmuth Ehmcke; originally group of 4 houses reduced to 3: house no. 28 replaced by a new building; House stone facade with antique decorative forms, strictly structured according to the design principles of the New Objectivity, 2-storey in 3 axes No. 24 and 26; Sill cornice, cornice; Accentuation of the axes by colossal pilasters, under the windows and in the gable field ashlar masonry; embossed base, entrance set back in the right axis with skylight, cornice with triglyphs, blind discs inscribed in the metopes; Gable with frame and lower round window; Window and door renewed. | 1912/13 | 10/09/1986 | 1/099 (1/249) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kaiser-Friedrich-Strasse 24 map |
1912/13 built together with houses 22, 26 and 28 by Johannes Geller, architect Fritz Helmuth Ehmcke; originally group of 4 houses reduced to 3: house no. 28 replaced by a new building; House stone facade with antique decorative shapes, strictly structured according to the design principles of the New Objectivity, 2-storey in 3 axes No. 22 and 26; Sill cornice, cornice; Accentuation of the axes by colossal pilasters, under the windows and in the gable field ashlar masonry; embossed base, entrance set back in the right axis with skylight, cornice with triglyphs, blind discs inscribed in the metopes; Gable with frame and lower round window; Original windows, renewed door. | 1912/13 | 10/09/1986 | 1/098 (1/250) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kaiser-Friedrich-Strasse 26 map |
Built in 1912 together with houses 22, 24 and 28 by Johannes Geller, architect Fritz Helmuth Ehmcke; originally group of 4 houses reduced to 3: house no. 28 replaced by a new building; House stone facade with antique decorative shapes, strictly structured according to the design principles of the New Objectivity, 2-storey in 3 axes, shared saddle roof with house numbers 22 and 24; Sill cornice, cornice; Accentuation of the axes by colossal pilasters, under the windows and in the gable field ashlar masonry; embossed base, entrance set back in the right axis with skylight, cornice with triglyphs, blind discs inscribed in the metopes; Gable with frame and lower round window; Large areas of door and window renewed. | 1912 | 10/09/1986 | 1/097 (1/251) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kaiser-Friedrich-Strasse 76 map |
Built in 1922/23 as a company apartment, client company Rennert und Korinthenberg, site manager Walter Rennert; 1949/50 restoration of the war-damaged house, with minor simplifications in the room layout and exterior design; 2-storey half-villa made of brick (Oldenburg clinker) and stone in non-continuous axes; slate-covered hip roof with modified gable house on the entrance side; facing Kaiser-Friedrich-Straße arbor on a polygonal ground plan, fluted pillars between the windows and curved cornice made of stone, on the upper floor women's sculptures made of shell limestone (attached here in 1949/50); Front door with ornamented stone frame with crowned head; Front garden with surrounding wall from 1950.
The house is an important testimony to the history of urban construction as an example of the upscale housing construction of the 1920s. There is a public interest in preservation, particularly for urban planning reasons. |
1922/23 | 05/16/2002 | 1/329 (1/252) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kaiser-Friedrich-Strasse 84 map |
Part description:
Built in 1904/05, builder and architect city architect Carl Sittel ; 1949 increase of 1 room at the rear; 2-storey, not continuous axes, loggia with house entrance in the right axis, in the upper floor trapezoidal bay window on a profiled console, tuff stone, base made of basalt lava, wall openings on the ground floor with flax arches, on the upper floor rectangular window openings; Bay windows with restrained relief structure. Original front door, new windows not in keeping with the style. The house is part of the Wilhelmine city expansion. It is important for the history of urban development. There are architectural, historical and urban planning reasons for its preservation and use. |
1904/05 | 01/24/2005 | 1/356 (1/253) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kaiser-Friedrich-Strasse 86 map |
Part description:
Built in 1904/05, client: Mayor Franz Gielen, architect Carl Schaumburg; In 1927, a bathroom was added to the rear of the upper floor; 1938 Wall breakthrough on the upper floor of the right axis between the street-side and garden-side room. 2-storey with tufa facade, base made of basalt lava, non-continuous axes, gable roof, extended attic with gable house. New dormer windows, original front door, window z. T. original. The house is part of the Wilhelmine city expansion. It is important for the history of urban development. |
1904/05 | 01/24/2005 | 1/357 (1/254) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kaiser-Friedrich-Strasse 88 map |
Built in 1906 by Eduard Kiedrichs, architect Carl Schaumburg; Tuff facade; 2-storey with basement in non-continuous axes, mansard roof; Ground floor window and door with arched ends, on the upper floor a flat bay window resting on consoles, above a curved gable with 2 windows in the blind arch, next to it 2 roof houses with parapet grille; Door original condition. | 1906 | 04/04/1985 | 1/026 (1/255) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kaiser-Friedrich-Strasse 90 map |
Built in 1935, client Dr. med. Karl Landen, architect Wilhelm Rose; 2-storey in 3 axes; Basement floor, extended attic, pitched roof, a dormer in each of the axes, house entrance in the right axis, staircase axis in the upper floor slightly pulled forward and provided with loggias; original garage; The street-side facade is clad with basalt lava slabs up to the base height, the rest of the area including the house entrance with Tiffstein slabs; Tuff stone surface sparingly accentuated by individual protruding tuff stones; on the upper floors original sliding windows, original flower box brackets and balcony grilles, original front door, garage door renewed, rear balcony removed; The structure and furnishings are original; received: staircase with marble steps and wall cladding, brass railing with wooden handrail; Oak, mahogany and ebony parquet floors; Sliding windows with fittings; Doors, handles, frames; Ceiling valley.
The building is important for the way of life in the 1930s in a middle-class atmosphere. |
1935 | 05/13/2002 | 1/330 (1/256) |
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Residential and office building | Downtown Kaiser-Friedrich-Strasse 104 map |
Part description:
The house at Kaiser-Friedrich-Straße 104 was built in 1904/06 by Robert Lonnes jun. built. The architect was Heinrich Greven, who also designed the neighboring houses No. 104 to 124. In 1927 changes were made to the facade (renewal of the base, removal of the cement balustrade on the first floor, replaced by iron grids). The DG was expanded in 1978/80. The mezzanine windows of the facade were enlarged and part of the eaves raised. The eaves-standing house is 3-storey with a pan-covered gable roof. As part of the Wilhelminian city expansion, which can be experienced here in vivid density, the house is important for the history of Neuss. It is an important testimony to the upscale residential development that emerged at the beginning of the 20th century directly on the city garden. |
1904/06 | 06/11/2007 | 1/392 (1/257) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kaiser-Friedrich-Strasse 106 map |
Part description:
The house at Kaiser-Friedrich-Straße 106 was built in 1904/06 by Robert Lonnes jun. built. The architect was Heinrich Greven, who also designed the neighboring houses No. 104 and 108 to 124. In 1907 a scullery was added to the rear, in 1929/30 conversions were carried out in the attic, and a dormer window was added to the rear. In 1971 further modifications were made. For example, an entrance hallway was separated from the stairwell on each floor to create self-contained apartments and a basement garage was added. As part of the Wilhelminian city expansion, which can be experienced here in vivid density, the house is important for the history of Neuss. It is an important testimony to the upscale residential development that emerged at the beginning of the 20th century directly on the city garden. |
1904/06 | 06/11/2007 | 1/393 (1/258) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kaiser-Friedrich-Strasse 108 map |
Part description:
The house at Kaiser-Friedrich-Straße 108 was built by Wilhelm Fasbender in 1908/09. The architect was Heinrich Greven. In 1909 a renovation took place. The eaves-standing house is 2-storey in 2 axes and has a slate-covered mansard roof with 4 almost square windows in the lower, steeper part. Inside, the historical floor plan structure and the historical furnishings are protected, insofar as they are still original. As part of the Wilhelminian city expansion, which can be experienced here in vivid density, the house is important for the history of Neuss. It is an important testimony to the upscale residential development that emerged at the beginning of the 20th century directly on the city garden. |
1908/09 | 06/11/2007 | 1/394 (1/259) |
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Street facade and roof | Downtown Kaiser-Friedrich-Strasse 110 map |
Built in 1908/09 by Wilhelm Fasbender together with house no. 112. Architect Heinrich Greven. 3-storey in 2 axes, mansard roof; Plastered and strip plastered facade; Front door in the right axis with profiled portal frame, above stucco relief; in the left axis there is a 2-storey arbor with a railing, window parapet of the 1st floor with stucco relief; above the 1st floor cornice; strong eaves on consoles; in the left axis curved, slated gable; the original narrow toilet windows to the left of the stairwell axis on each floor bricked up (still present on the mirror-image facade No. 112); Basement with a garage added later, front garden. | 1908/09 | 05/11/2006 | 1/367 (1/260) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kaiser-Friedrich-Strasse 112 map |
Built in 1908/09 by Wilhelm Fasbender together with house no. 110. Architect Heinrich Greven. Front yard; Plastered and strip plastered facade; 3-storey in 3 axes, basement with access, mansard roof; in the right axis there is a 2-storey arbor with a railing closure, a curved, slated gable above it, cornice on the 2nd floor, stucco decorations above the portal and on the arbor; Door and window division original condition. | 1908/09 | 04/04/1985 | 1/027 (1/261) |
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Residential building with office | Downtown Kaiser-Friedrich-Strasse 114 map |
Built in 1908/09 by Heinrich Greven according to his own designs. Front yard; Plastered and striped plaster facade with historicized decorative shapes; 3-storey with basement in 3 axes, mansard roof; the upper floor summarized by colossal pilasters, under the capitals putti reliefs, in the central axis a 2-storey, 3-sided arbor with balcony closure, above in the roof zone a gable with a carnation arch, flanked by 2 roof houses, in the gable field a cartouche held by putti, roof cornice with block frieze, Portal set back with arched end, door in its original state, window division z. T. received. | 1908/09 | 04/04/1985 | 1/028 (1/262) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kaiser-Friedrich-Strasse 116 map |
Built in 1907/08 by Jean Sachs, architect Heinrich Greven, front garden; 3-storey in non-continuous axes, basement with access, mansard roof; 2-storey arbor with parapet end and ornamentally connected windows, belt and console cornices, wide dormer window in the mansard roof; Door original condition, window division z. Partly preserved, 1977–80 floor plan with former atrium changed. | 1907/08 | 04/04/1985 | 1/029 (1/263) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kaiser-Friedrich-Strasse 118 map |
Part description:
1907/08 built together with houses 116, 120, 122, builder and architect Heinrich Greven; 3-storey in non-solid axes, deep floor plan with a small atrium in the center of the house, expanded attic, street side as a mansard roof, on the garden side as a flat monopitch roof; Street-side facade in plaster with Art Nouveau decorative shapes. The residential building at Kaiser-Friedrich-Straße 118 is part of the row of houses on the Stadtgarten that was built at the beginning of this century and is an important testament to the upscale residential development typical of the time. |
1907/08 | 05/16/2002 | 1/328 (1/264) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kaiser-Friedrich-Strasse 120 map |
Part description:
1907/08 built together with houses 116, 118, 122, builder Wilhelm Fasbender, architect Heinrich Greven; 3-storey in 2 axes, deep floor plan with a small atrium in the middle of the house, expanded attic, street side as a mansard roof, garden side as a flat monopitch roof, mansard roof changed when the attic floor was extended in 1965; Street-side facade in brick / plaster with economical Art Nouveau and historicizing decorative shapes, over smooth plaster EG in brick / plaster, OB in smooth plaster, basement garage built in 1965. The residential building at Kaiser-Friedrich-Straße 120, as part of the row of houses on the Stadtgarten that was built at the beginning of this century, is an important testament to the upscale residential development typical of the time. |
1907/08 | 08/12/1997 | 1/275 (1/265) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kaiser-Friedrich-Strasse 122 map |
Part description:
Built in 1907/08 together with houses 116, 118 and 120, builder Wilhelm Fasbender, architect Heinrich Greven. Detached eaves apartment house in a closed row, separated from the street by the front garden, 3-storey with a loft, on the street side as a mansard roof, on the garden side with a flat monopitch roof. Unusually deep house floor plan (approx. 27 m) with a small atrium in the middle of the house. The residential building at Kaiser-Friedrich-Straße 122, as part of the row of houses on the Stadtgarten that was built at the beginning of this century, is an important testament to the upscale residential development typical of the time. |
1907/08 | 10/21/1994 | 1/214 (1/266) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kaiser-Friedrich-Strasse 124 map |
Part description:
Built in 1908 as part of a row of houses built between 1905 and 1910 based on designs by the architect Heinrich Greven, builder Gustav Goldberg; 1926/27 changes (enlargement of the kitchen, addition of a bathroom and a veranda); 3-storey in 2 axes, deep rear building, extended attic, mansard roof, right axis raised like a risalit with its own roof; On the ground floor and first floor there is a three-part bay window on a trapezoidal floor plan, on the second floor it is crowned by a balcony on a segmented arched floor plan. Plaster facade. The residential building at Kaiser-Friedrich-Straße 124, as part of the row of houses on the Stadtgarten that was built at the beginning of this century, is an important testament to the upscale residential development typical of the time. |
1908 | 05.12.2001 | 1/323 (1/267) |
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Kamillianerstraße settlement | Stadionviertel Kamillianerstraße 1–23, 2–22 map |
1924–28 by the “Neusser Housing Cooperative for Civil Servants and Private Employees GmbH” (today Gemeinnützige Wohnungsgesellschaft eG) in an open construction with exemplary quality of the overall design; Architect Peter Dörner; Mostly semi-detached houses (only Kamillianerstraße 11–55 divided into three parts) made of brick masonry with high, hipped tile roofs; Corner houses at both ends of the street emphasized by shops (Kamillianerstraße 1 and 20/22) or cranked segmental bay windows; brick-walled front gardens; the smooth exterior walls of the house divided by cornices or pilaster strips; some of the entrances lead to staircase extensions ;; regularly arranged dormers and loggias on the back; sparingly inserted decorative details in expressionistic forms (stepped gable, surface relief made of brick); Windows and front doors z. T. original.
As a high-quality example of a traditionalist housing estate from the 1920s, it is worth preserving for reasons of architecture and town planning as well as local and social history. |
1924-28 | 04/09/1992 | 3/009 (1/268) |
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Residential building with office | Downtown Kanalstrasse 2 map |
Part description:
Built in 1863 by the notary Heinrich Knein and Mrs. Helene Clostermann on the corner of Erftstrasse, architect Carl Verhas; Plastered facade with late classical decorative shapes, ground floor rusticated, 3-storey in 5: 3 axes, hipped roof; 1932 Interior construction, passage and entrance to Erftstrasse closed, 1983–84 repair and interior renovation, loft extension with 7 new dormers, first floor window extended in the base zone, upper floor window in original condition. |
1863 | 04/04/1985 | 1/030 (1/269) |
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Facade of the office and residential building | Downtown Kanalstrasse 4 map |
Part description:
Built in 1865 by master mason Peter Bohnen, 3-storey in 4 axes, plastered facade with historicizing decorative shapes. Door and window renewed. |
1865 | 04/26/1999 | 1/319 (1/270) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kanalstrasse 5 map |
Part description:
Built around 1865 by Cornelius Reistorff, plan master mason Peter Bohnen; Extension changed in 1884/85 and 1905. 3-storey in 3 axes, saddle roof, late-classical plastered facade. Front door and window renewed. The house 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. |
Around 1865 | 04/26/1999 | 1/313 (1/271) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kanalstrasse 13 map |
Part description:
Built in 1864 by Cornelius Reistorff, architect Peter Bohnen; 3-storey in 3 axes, gable roof, late classicistic plastered facade. All wall openings with lintel arch and profile frame; 2-leaf door with skylight in stained glass and original window. |
1864 | 08/08/1986 | 1/093 (1/272) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kanalstrasse 20 map |
Part description:
Built around 1890; Brick plaster facade with historicizing decorative shapes, base zone with diamond blocks; 3-storey in 3 axes, gable roof; Entrance in the right axis, central axis accentuated by a balcony with ornamental grille and window crowning on the 1st floor and gable with coupled window, expansive eaves. |
Around 1890 | 04/04/1985 | 1/031 (1/273) |
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Residential and commercial building | Downtown Kanalstrasse 22 map |
Part description:
Built around 1890; Plaster facade with historicizing decorative shapes; 3-storey in 3 axes, mezzanine, gable roof; Base, base cornice; On the ground floor shop installation, round arched, profile-framed front door over stairs in the left axis. 1948 installation of a shop window system; Original door and window. |
Around 1890 | 07/17/1991 | 1/171 (1/274) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kanalstrasse 24 map |
Part description:
Built by Caspar Schulte before 1874, plastered facade with historicizing decorative elements; 3-storey in 3 axes, gable roof; all wall openings with lintel arch and profile frame. 1891 shop fitting. Stucco ceiling in the entrance area preserved. Door original condition, window changed. |
Before 1874 | 02/11/1986 | 1/073 (1/275) |
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Residential and commercial building | Downtown Kanalstrasse 25 map |
Part description:
Built around 1862, plastered facade with historicizing decorative elements; 3-storey in 3 axes, extended saddle roof with dormer window in the right axis; Modern shop fitting on the ground floor (1989), house entrance door set back on the left, here architect's signature (FR. Schatten / Architect) from the renovation in 1928 (establishment of a bakery). Window renewed in 1990 (wood, muntin division) front door probably from 1928. |
Around 1862 | 05/17/1990 | 1/152 (1/276) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kanalstrasse 30 map |
Part description:
Built in 1902, builder and architect Jacob Renner; 3-storey in 4 axes, gabled central axis raised like a risalit, with bay window, plastered facade with neo-Gothic decorative shapes; Gable roof, neo-Gothic roof balustrade. The house is an important testimony to the history of urban development and the way of living and living around the turn of the century. |
1902 | 04/20/1998 | 1/289 (1/277) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kanalstrasse 32 map |
Part description:
Built in 1902, builder and architect Jacob Renner; 3-storey in 4 axes, the left axis widened and gabled with an open veranda and balcony; Gable roof; Plaster facade with neo-baroque decorative shapes; Entrance door in the right axis, coupled windows in the left axis, including a modern garage installation. The house is an important testimony to the history of urban development and the way of living and living around the turn of the century. |
1902 | 04/20/1998 | 1/290 (1/278) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kanalstrasse 34 map |
Part description:
Built in 1906 by Gustav Goldbach, architect Heinrich Greven; 3-storey in 3 axes; Gable roof, plaster facade with stucco ornamentation; in the left axis entrance door with round arch; two-storey bay window with a trapezoidal floor plan and balcony at the height of the eaves. Windows renewed in style, dormer window in the left axis. |
1906 | 04/20/1998 | 1/291 (1/279) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kanalstrasse 40 map |
Part description
Built in 1906 by C. Gerritzen, Düsseldorf, architect Heinrich Greven, Neuss. 3-storey house in 3 axes with gable roof, plastered facade with historicizing decorative shapes; the left axis in the upper floor is emphasized by bay windows and a balcony with pilasters in a colossal order. Original entrance door, new balcony door and new windows without muntin division, stairwell window with leaded glazing. |
1906 | 04/18/1988 | 1/133 (1/280) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kanalstrasse 42 map |
Built in 1905 by Wilhelm Fasbender, architect Heinrich Greven, plaster facade with historicizing and Art Nouveau decorations; 3-storey in non-continuous axes, gable roof; on the ground floor 3 windows and entrance with 2 small skylight windows, the upper floor 3-axis, windows of the side axes combined ornamentally, central axis emphasized by 3-sided bay windows with a wide balcony and semicircular corner turrets with hipped roof, 2 flanking roof houses; Door in its original condition, new windows without muntin division, interior renovation in 1982/83 and 2-storey extension on the courtyard side. | 1905 | 04/04/1985 | 1/032 (1/281) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kanalstrasse 43 map |
Part description:
Built in 1876 together with the neighboring houses at Kanalstrasse 45/47 by Laurenz Nolden & Otten AG according to a plan by master mason H. Schlüssel. 3-storey house in a closed row, eaves with a gable roof. Two-storey extension on the courtyard side largely renewed after being destroyed in the war in 1950. House entrance door and window modernly renewed. As part of the uniformly designed house group 43, 45, 47, this is an important testimony to the early Wilhelminian style “upscale” residential developments along the Kanalstrasse, particularly worthy of preservation for urban planning reasons. |
1876 | 07/10/1995 | 1/228 (1/282) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kanalstrasse 44 map |
Part description:
Built in 1905 by architect H. Greven according to his own design. Plastered facade with historicizing decorative shapes, 3-storey in 3 axes. The house entrance is framed in the right-hand axis, and above it in a summarizing frame, the stairwell windows are offset higher. Despite changes in the roof area, this is an important testimony to the history of urban construction, worth preserving, especially for urban planning reasons. |
1905 | 10/25/1989 | 1/150 (1/283) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kanalstrasse 45 map |
Part description:
Built in 1876 together with the neighboring houses on both sides by Laurenz Nolden & Otten AG according to a plan by master mason H. Schlüssel. 3-storey residential building in a closed row, eaves with a gable roof, but as a middle building of the group of 3 accentuated by a street-side gable across the entire width of the house. On the courtyard side, 2-storey extension with a pent roof. Original front door and window. As the middle part of the uniformly designed house group 43–47, it is an important testimony to the early Wilhelminian style “upscale” residential development along the Kanalstrasse, which is particularly worth preserving for urban planning reasons. |
1876 | 04/26/1994 | 1/208 (1/284) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kanalstrasse 47 map |
Part description:
Built in 1876 together with the neighboring houses at Kanalstrasse 45/47 by Laurenz Nolden & Otten AG according to a plan by master mason H. Schlüssel. 3-storey in 3 axes saddle roof; courtyard-side 2-storey extension; Plastered facade with late classicist decorative shapes. Door and window renewed. As part of the uniformly designed house group 43, 45, 47, this is an important testimony to the early Wilhelminian style “upscale” residential developments along the Kanalstrasse, particularly worthy of preservation for urban planning reasons. |
1876 | 07/20/1998 | 1/311 (1/285) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kanalstrasse 49 map |
Part description:
The house was probably built around 1900 together with houses 51 and 53. It is an eaves-standing three-storey terraced house in 3 axes with a gable roof and brick / plaster facade in historicizing decorative forms. The ground floor with plaster banding was subsequently redesigned by installing a shop. The recessed entrance is in the left axis. The house is part of a closed line of original buildings from the turn of the century, which characterizes Kanalstrasse for a long distance. Preservation and use of the building are in the public interest for reasons of urban development and architectural history. |
around 1900 | 10/13/2006 | 1/369 (1/286) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kanalstrasse 61 map |
Part description:
The house at Kanalstrasse 61 was built from brick in 1903 by Leonhard Fausten. The architect was Jacob Renner. The 3-storey eaves-standing house in the row is 3 axes wide and has a pan-roofed gable roof. The back entrance is on the right axis. The neo-renaissance style facade shows plaster structures and surfaces made of smooth white glazed stones. In 1925, the ground floor windows were extended downwards for a shop installation. In 1957 the 3-storey, narrow rear building on the unplastered rear on the ground floor was extended into the garden. The house is important for the history of man as well as cities and settlements. |
1903 | 10/28/2008 | 1/397 (1/287) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kanalstrasse 63 map |
Built in 1903 by Math. Pannenbecker, architects Gebr. Pannenbecker; Brick / plaster facade with historicized decorative shapes; 3-storey in 3 axes, gable roof with 2 pointed roof houses; Girdle and sill cornice, garland frieze on the roof, crowning of windows with blown triangular gables, central window accentuated by pillars, balusters and bust in the gable and slate-covered hip roof; Door in its original condition, windows largely original. | 1903 | 04/04/1985 | 1/033 (1/288) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kanalstrasse 65 map |
1903 built together with house no. 67 by Heinrich Weyers, architect Robert Strerath; 3-storey in 3 axes, monopitch roof; Purified plaster facade, original wall openings with straight ends, house entrance set back in the right axis, windows and houses renewed; Interior fittings largely preserved in their original form, such as terrazzo flooring on the ground floor (entrance and extension), staircase, wooden floors, stucco details, doors, dining elevator in extension.
The house is part of the Wilhelmine city expansion. It is important for the history of urban development. |
1903 | 01/29/2004 | 1/353 (1/289) |
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Street facade of the residential building | Downtown Kanalstrasse 67 map |
Part description:
Built in 1903 by Heinrich Weyers, architect Robert Strerath; 3-storey in 3 axes, the two outer axes are gabled, left and right axes are slightly drawn forward, ashlar plaster with stucco ornamentation. Door and window renewed. |
1903 | 05/26/1999 | 1/318 (1/290) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kanalstrasse 73 map |
Part description:
Built in 1905 by the building contractors Pannenbecker brothers according to their own designs, 2-storey house in a closed row, eaves with an extended mansard roof. Street-side brick plaster facade in Art Nouveau design, 2-storey in three axes. The house is part of a closed line of original buildings from the turn of the century, which characterizes Kanalstrasse for a long distance. |
1905 | 08/09/1995 | 1/233 (1/291) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kanalstrasse 75 map |
Built in 1904 by the Math. And C. Pannenbecker brothers according to their own designs, brick / plastered facade with historicized decorative shapes, ground floor with ashlar plaster; 3-storey in non-continuous axes, flat roof; Entrance crowned with round window and Carnies arch; next to it 3 windows, upper floor 3-axis, central axis accentuated by a blind arch over both upper floors and ornamental gable with carnation arch and banner, girdle, sill and eaves; new door and new windows with muntin division, last changed in ground plan in 1981. | 1904 | 04/04/1985 | 1/034 (1/292) |
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Office building | Downtown Kanalstrasse 77 map |
Part description:
Built in 1904 by the Math. And C. Pannenbecker brothers based on their own designs; 3-storey in 3 axes, flat monopitch roof, plastered facade with stucco ornamentation. Front door and window renewed. The house is an important testimony to the history of urban development and the way of living and living around the turn of the century. |
1904 | 04/26/1999 | 1/315 (1/293) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kanalstrasse 81 map |
Part description:
Built in 1904 by Jean Blümlein according to his own design, 3-storey in 3 non-continuous axes, plastered facade with historicizing ornamental shapes and floral decor, saddle roof, single window, coupled or triple window; Extension from 1936. The house is an important testimony to the history of urban development and the way of living and living around the turn of the century. |
1904 | 04/29/1999 | 1/316 (1/294) |
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House Hombroich with park | Map of Holzheim Kapellener Strasse 75 |
In 1816 the married couple Peter and Gertrud de Weerth from Elberfeld built the country house for their pleasure, as a metal plate that was discovered in a fireplace in the basement of the villa suggests; In 1907 the house came to Wilhelm Lensing by inheritance; after his death in 1962, Christoph von Hennigs bought the villa and then Karl-Heinrich Müller; Today it is owned by the Insel Hombroich Foundation, it is the seat of the Hambroich Literature and Art Institute Foundation, a non-profit foundation GmbH. The country house has a simple, classical plastered facade with sparse accented stone in 3: 2: 3 axes; it has two floors and a basement; the pan-covered pyramid roof shows on all four sides a roof house with a hipped roof; the all-round cantilevered eaves adorns a cornice board that is designed with a cut-out pattern; Original windows and front door. The villa has an extension that already existed in 1858; the interior is largely in its original condition, including: doors, frames, floors, window cladding, vaulted cellar, stone floor, wall niche with inscription plaque and dating, only the stairs were changed, either during the extension or later; Photos show the exterior of the villa with a wooden balcony above the front door, which was probably built by Wilhelm Lensing around 1910; today's balcony with its baroque forms dates from the 1960s. Garden remains have been preserved in the park.
There is a public interest in the preservation of Haus Hombroich and the park. They are important for human history. The country house with its park documents the upper-class living culture of the early 19th century. The villa is worth preserving for scientific, architectural and local historical reasons, as a vividly well and originally preserved classicist country house from the early 19th century in the Erft lowland. |
1816 | 07/30/2001 | 7/014 (1/295) |
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Wayside cross | Rosellen Kapellenweg map |
Erected on June 16, 1855 by the married couple P. Jos. And Cath. J. Müller, Steinmetz J. Wolff in Cologne.
Sandstone cross in the structure typical of a baroque station cross, but with neo-Gothic decorative shapes; Metal body presumably from more recent times. Base with stonemason information, base on the front with tracery framing and engraved inscription (Bible text), on the back donor inscription, cornice with leaf-adorned console, in the middle block sacraments niche with tracery framing, capstone as a simple truncated pyramid, cross arms with beveled edges and thorn-like protrusions. The wayside cross at the entrance to Elvekum is a typical and high quality testimony to the re-establishment of sacred land monuments around the middle of the 19th century, which were often donated by wealthy parishioners. Local history, religious history and general folklore reasons exist for its preservation. |
1855 | 10/26/1992 | 8/010 (1/296) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kapitelstrasse 23 map |
Built around 1870 by W. Jores and J. Rosellen based on a design by master carpenter P. Hermkes. 3-storey house in 3 axes with gable roof; Two-storey extension on the courtyard side, probably added around 1880/90, upper floor destroyed by the war. Street side facade in plaster with rich neo-renaissance decorative shapes, rectangular wall openings, cantilevered eaves. Front door renewed, windows partly original condition.
Of the oldest residential development on Kapitelstraße, only this house has remained largely unchanged. |
Around 1870 | 04/12/1991 | 1/168 (1/297) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kapitelstrasse 29 map |
Built around 1893 by businessman Josef Perlings; Ashlar plaster facade with neo-Renaissance decorative shapes; 3-storey in 3 axes, gable roof; Base cornice, girdle and sill cornice, recessed entrance in the right axis with a keel arch and pointed gable crown, in the gable a ship held by two lions, in the first floor parapet fields with tracery and keel arch crown with nautical emblems; Except for the skylight and window crosses, the door is in its original state on the ground floor, new two-part and one-piece windows on the upper floors, two new dormers. | Around 1893 | 04/29/1985 | 1/055 (1/298) |
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Residential building | Downtown Kapitelstrasse 31 map |
The house was built in 1891/92 as a residential and commercial building by the iron merchant Johann Bährens by the architect Wilhelm Metzer, Neuss. It is an eaves-standing terraced house, three-storey with a mezzanine floor in 4 axes with a gable roof and brick / plaster facade in historicized decorative shapes. The right axis is designed as a wider double axis in accordance with the originally planned entrance gate on the ground floor. The windows have been renewed, the front door is original.
The house is part of the Wilhelminian city expansion, which can be experienced here in vivid density. Kapitelstraße follows an older path that ran between the old cemetery, now Marienkirchplatz, and the Chaussee to Gladbach. Already in the 1890s there was a relatively dense development here. |
1891/92 | 03/01/2007 | 1/372 (1/299)
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