List of architectural monuments in Neuss (1 / 500–1 / 580)
The list of architectural monuments in Neuss (1 / 500–1 / 580) 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 | City center Rheintorstrasse 16 map |
Part description:
Built around 1890; Brick / plaster facade with historicizing decorative shapes, 3-storey in 4 axes and a saddle roof. Front door and window renewed. |
Around 1890 | October 24, 2000 | 1/321 (1/500) |
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Residential building | Downtown Rheintorstrasse 16a map |
Part description.
Corner house Rheintorstrasse / Königstrasse, built in 1890, plastered facade, 3-storey in 3: 1: 6 axes, axes partially not drawn through, saddle roof; on the corner of the former shop, the house entrance set back in the left axis. Front door and window renewed. |
1890 | 01/22/2001 | 1/322 (1/501) |
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Residential building | Downtown Rheintorstraße 18 map |
Part description:
Built around 1880; 3-storey with mezzanine in 3 axes, central axis emphasized by a balcony, gable roof; Input in the right axis; Brick / plaster facade. Balcony on consoles. Residential house with high-quality facade design, important testimony to the history of urban construction, worth preserving for scientific urban planning reasons. |
around 1880 | 03/20/1996 | 1/240 (1/502) |
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Former Reuterhof | Grimlinghausen Rheinuferstraße 6 map |
Part description:
Built in 1770, formerly half-open 4-wing courtyard area; Residential building, part of the street-side farm buildings and wall with gate system preserved, other farm buildings demolished in 1975. Residential house brick, trachyte and sandstone walls; 2-storey in 7 axes with a crooked hip roof. Year of construction in anchor pins. Doors original condition. Brick stable building with sandstone blocks. Semicircular gate system with sandstone blocks. Significant evidence of local history, worth preserving, especially for urban planning and ethnographic reasons. |
1770 | 01/10/1986 | 9/001 (1/503) |
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Family crypt and Kraus tomb | Rheydter Strasse stadium district (main cemetery) Grave field no. A 79 Grave no. 6 af map |
Part description:
Crypt complex with tomb erected in 1926 for the Kraus family, artistic design by Johann Bossard (1874–1950). Rectangular grave complex with profiled ashlar surrounds, access to the cave closed with an iron lid. The expressionistically designed tomb in the center of the back. The tomb is an important testimony to the expressionist style in the design of tombs and as such is unique in the main cemetery in Neuss. It occupies an important place in the overall work of the sculptor Bossard. For reasons of local history, science and art history, there is a public interest in preservation. |
1926 | 02/21/1995 | 3/025 (1/504) |
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Angel of the Blumenkamp grave | Rheydter Strasse stadium district (main cemetery) Grave field no. A 61 Grave no. 36–38 Map |
Part description:
Engel, worked in the technique of core electroplating at the turn of the century, made by the Galvanoplastische Kunstanstalt Geislingen, manufacturer's information on the plinth of the angel. Winged angel as mediator between God and man, sitting on the stump of a pillar with a profiled base on a rectangular plinth, pointing with the left hand at the grave, in the right hand a plaque with the inscription “Goodbye” in relief. The stump of the pillar is crowned by a meander ornamental frieze, the plinth protruding over the black granite base. The angel is an example of the galvanized plastic produced in large numbers around the turn of the century, which is still rarely found today due to the effects of war or demolition. |
around 1900 | 07/01/1999 | 3/051 (1/505) |
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Old cemetery chapel in the main cemetery | Stadium district Rheydter Strasse (main cemetery) map |
Part description:
Built in 1902 according to plans by the government architect Julius Busch (1838–1912) as a foundation for the banker's widow Anna Le Hanne; original patronage according to the will of the founder: Apostle Bartholomäus and mother Anna; Dedicated since 1970 to “Our dead who rest in the distant earth” (inscription above the entrance). The cemetery chapel is an important testimony to Neo-Romanticism, built by a well-known master builder. In addition, the memory of the Le Hanne family, who made the establishment possible, is preserved in this building. There is a public interest in the preservation for local historical, scientific and architectural historical reasons. |
1902 | 04/24/2001 | 3/056 (1/506) |
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Cenotaph in the main cemetery | Stadium district Rheydter Strasse (main cemetery) map |
Part description:
Erected around 1934; Sculptor Theodor Hammers, b. 1891 in Mönchengladbach, died 1965; in the middle of the field of honor, integrated into a step system, U-shaped reinforced concrete wall, clad with shell limestone on the outside, relief on the front side (left 2 drummers, 2 flutists; in the middle, standard bearers and 2 soldiers with rifles and knapsacks and eagles, right 4 soldiers with rifle and knapsack) Inscription: We dead are not dead - we go with; Stainless steel cross added later in the middle; the names of the fallen carved on the sides; Inside of the U-shaped wall with recessed crosses. The memorial is important for human history, especially for the development of war memorials in the 1930s. The memorial is worth preserving for reasons of local history, since the lined-up of the names of the fallen conveys a direct reference to the history of the place. |
around 1934 | 04/24/2001 | 3/057 (1/507) |
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Gravesite of the Hahn-Trinner family | Rheydter Strasse stadium district (main cemetery) Grave field No. A 63 Grave No. 14 AD, 15 AD, 16 AD, and 17 A map |
Part description:
Approx. Erected in 1920 in antique forms; Ground plan of the tomb in the shape of a segment of a circle with a basaltic lava border, front and sides as a low wall, entrance and corners emphasized by small pillars; Back wall as a plate grave in an architectural structure with an accentuated center. The grave site is important for the documentation of the funeral system in the 1st half of the 20th century. |
circa 1920 | 09/20/2001 | 3/058 (1/508) |
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Old part of the main cemetery in Neuss (network of paths, avenues, older trees) | Map of the Rheydter Strasse Stadium District |
The municipal burial place was originally on today's Freithof. In 1805 it was moved to the location of today's Marienkirche and from there in 1873 to Rheydter Straße. In the 1930s it received an extension.
The old part of Neuss main cemetery is bordered by Rheydter Straße in the north, Konrad-Adenauer-Ring in the east, Glehner Weg in the south and the Eselspfad in the west. The main avenue leading from east to west is the main axis of the old cemetery, which is the connection to the western extension. Characteristic of the cemetery is the straight network of paths, an abundance of older trees, some avenues and the smaller grid of the south-east corner, the Protestant part of the cemetery. In 1902 the neo-Romanesque cemetery chapel was built as the center of a semicircular route. In the escape of the chapel, at an extended crossroads, stands the towering mission cross, surrounded by some priestly graves. The mission cross is the focal point of the two paths along which the greatest number of historically valuable tombs can be found. The old part of the main cemetery in Neuss, completed in 1873, with its straight paths typical for the time it was built, is to be regarded as a monument whose historical significance is concentrated in the area of the two intersecting paths. The cemetery is important for human history, especially the history of burial. The structure of the cemetery is worth preserving for scientific reasons. |
1805 | 02/06/2003 | 3/063 (1/509) |
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Klara Fey settlement | Stadium district Rheydter Strasse 99 - 105 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 from the architectural and urban planning as well as local and |
from 1930 | 04/09/1992 | 3/010 (1/510) |
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Kamillianerstraße settlement | Stadium district Rheydter Strasse 165 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 (1/511) |
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Gut Kallenhof | Stadium district Rheydter Strasse 301 map |
Part description:
Closed 4-wing brick courtyard with a 5th wing attached to the outside at the entrance to the courtyard, built around 1830 by Johann Gerhard Kallen; after fire damage partly renewed in 1876/77 by Franz Gerhard Kallen. In the north wing there is a 2-storey house with a gable roof. Street-side plaster facade in 7 axes. All farm buildings in exposed brick with clay tile-covered gable roofs. East wing former stables, in the south wing a large barn. The Kallenhof belongs to the chain of large courtyards on the western edge of the historic Neuss city area, of which only a few have survived undisturbed. There is a public interest in the preservation and use of the courtyard for scientific reasons, in particular building and social history. |
around 1830 | 05/15/1995 | 6/004 (1/512) |
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Residential houses | Furth Römerstrasse 50–68, 49–69, 71–79 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 Act 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. S. 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 Frankenstraße in the section between the house plots nos. 24 - 58 (north side) and the house plots nos. 31-59 (south side), - the house plots nos. 112 - 120 on Fuhrter Strasse (not the street area of Further Strasse), - Gotenstrasse, without the house plot no. 30, - Kettelerstrasse, - Kolpingstrasse, - Römerstrasse in the section between the house plots Nos. 50 - 68 (east side) or the house plots nos. 49 - 69 (west side) as well as the house plots nos. 71 - 79, - the house plots nos. 59 - 83 and 125 - 129 (not the street area) located on Weissenberger Weg of the Weissenberger Weg). 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. This task took on in Neuss u. a. joined the workers' housing cooperative eGmbH, founded in 1901, which acquired the space between Further Straße and Weissenberger Weg and built on it 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 Association - 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 (1/513) |
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Parish Church of St. Peter | Rosellen Kirchstrasse 3 map |
Part description:
Built in 1847/48 according to plans by Heinrich Johann Freyse, in place of the previous church from 1480, including the west tower from 1743; Tower helmet removed in 1939; 1962 new gable roof over the stump of the tower and raised the previously 1-storey intermediate wing to the nave, above it pointed polygonal roof turrets. In the churchyard there are grave crosses made of sandstone (17th century) and a limestone war memorial with a figure of St. George (1922). Although the church has been greatly changed in its original appearance due to the recent additions and renovations, it remains a listed building as an early example of neo-Gothic church planning and rare cast-iron window tracery. It is also an important testimony to local history. Worth preserving for scientific and urban planning reasons. |
1847/48 | 12/09/1992 | 8/012 (1/514) |
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Residential houses | Furth Saarbrückener Strasse 1–13 map |
Settlement ensemble built in 1929/30 according to plans by the architects Dominikus Heurich and Heinrich Ingerfeld by Neusser Gemeinnützigen Bauverein AG; two-storey apartment buildings made of brick masonry with towering hipped or saddle roofs; long dormers; with the exception of the houses at Viersener Strasse and Marienburger Strasse 27–31, walled front gardens; rhythmic structure of the facades through the arrangement of the windows and stairwells; Staircases emphasized vertically with windows spanning floors above the entrances with their sprawling canopies; sparingly inserted decorative details (eaves, window and door frames, front door canopies made of stone plaster; reliefs made of brick between windows and at the house entrances); Window z. Sometimes combined in pairs - also across corners through stone plaster or stone plaster and brick reliefs; Windows and doors z. T. original.
As an example of a traditionalist housing estate around 1929/30, it is worth preserving for reasons of architecture and town planning as well as local and social history. |
1929/30 | 08/19/1992 | 2/009 (1/515) |
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Residential building | Downtown Salzstrasse 18 map |
Part description:
Built around 1906. 2-storey house, eaves in a closed row, the attic storey with a very steep mansard roof facing the street. Two-storey extension on the courtyard side. Street-side facade 2-storey in 5 axes, wall surfaces yellow brick, rich plaster decorative elements in the styles of the Neo-Renaissance. Top floor slated with 3 large arched dormers. House entrance door modernly renewed. As one of the first houses on Salzstrasse, which was laid out at the turn of the century, the house at Salzstrasse 18 sets a high design standard with its palazzo-like facade. There is a public interest in the preservation and use of the house for reasons of urban history and architectural history. |
around 1906 | 07/11/1995 | 1/218 (1/516) |
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Rental housing group | Dreikönigenviertel Schillerstraße 54–74 map |
Part description:
Built between 1925 and 1930 by the Neuss workers' housing cooperative as a 3-sided perimeter block development with 27 rental houses. Brick facades with decorative bandages and partly plastering; Regular change of two different building types, both 2-storey in 3 axes, saddle roof type 1: central entrance axis, corridor window with summarizing framing and concluding cornice with pointed arch in brick, intermediate window surfaces with decorative bandage, central axis reaching into the roof gable flanked by 2 windows, gable three times stepped flat. Type 2: Entrance axis with that of the neighboring house arranged in pairs with continuous cornice, corridor window with decorative bandages, summarizing framing and cornice end at the height of the eaves, above the lower, twice stepped gable flanked by 2 dormers; on the Körnerstraße different design of the entrance axes with plastering and straight end just above the eaves; Corner building Schillerstraße / Weberstraße 3rd storey in 3: 4 axes, mansard roof, corner axis set back; on Weberstrasse large dormer window with 3 windows and triangular gables; Corner building facing Körnerstraße, also with a recessed corner axis, on the ground floor shop installation; Doors in their original condition, modernized in 1985, with new plastic windows restoring the original muntin division, extension of balconies on the inside of the block, inside e.g. T. apartments summarized. Important testimony to the history of urban construction, worth preserving, especially for urban planning reasons. |
1925-1930 | 04/29/1985 | 3/002 (1/517) |
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Residential building | Dreikönigenviertel Schorlemerstraße 61 map |
Erected around 1920 by the city of Neuss as part of a housing complex with officers' apartments for Belgian occupation troops, 2-storey corner house, hipped roof and saddle roofs, connected to the rows of houses on Schorlemannstrasse and Tywissenstrasse, in 5: 4 axes; Brick with tuff with ornamentation in the window axes; Stone portal with Doric ¾ column templates; Windows and doors renewed, wooden shutters no longer available, original roof houses replaced by skylights, characteristic front garden edging essentially no longer available.
A high-quality example of a residential area built in the traditionalist design language from the 1920s, worth preserving for architectural and urban planning as well as local and social historical reasons. |
around 1920 | 08/07/1996 | 3/034 (1/518) |
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Residential building | Dreikönigenviertel Schorlemerstraße 63 map |
Built around 1920 by the city of Neuss as part of a settlement ensemble with officers' apartments for Belgian occupation troops, 2-storey, hipped roof and saddle roof, adjoining corner house no. 61 in 3 axes + 1 axis; Brick, portal with semi-columns made of stone; Lattice windows, wooden shutters; characteristic front yard edging.
Part of a high-quality example of a residential area built in a traditionalist design language from the 1920s, worth preserving for architectural and urban planning as well as local and social-historical reasons. |
Around 1920 | 11/08/1996 | 3/035 (1/519) |
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Residential building | Dreikönigenviertel Schorlemerstraße 65 map |
Built around 1920 by the city of Neuss as part of a settlement ensemble with officers' apartments for Belgian occupation troops, 2-storey, half of a semi-detached house with extended gable, saddle roofs, brick, portal with pilasters made of stone; Lattice windows, wooden shutters; characteristic front yard edging.
Part of a high-quality example of a residential area built in a traditionalist design language from the 1920s, worthy of preservation for reasons of architecture and town planning as well as local and social history. |
around 1920 | 11/08/1996 | 3/036 (1/520) |
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Residential building | Dreikönigenviertel Schorlemerstraße 67 map |
Built around 1920 by the city of Neuss as part of a settlement ensemble with officers' apartments for Belgian occupation troops, 2-storey, half of a semi-detached house with extended gable, gable roofs, brick, portal with half-columns made of stone; Windows renewed, wooden shutters no longer available; characteristic front yard edging.
Part of a high-quality example of a residential area built in a traditionalist design language from the 1920s, worthy of preservation for reasons of architecture and town planning as well as local and social history. |
around 1920 | 05/11/1996 | 3/037 (1/521) |
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Residential building | Dreikönigenviertel Schorlemerstraße 69 map |
Built around 1920 by the city of Neuss as part of a settlement ensemble with officers' apartments for Belgian occupation troops, 2-storey, half of a semi-detached house with extended gable, saddle roofs, brick, portal with pilasters made of stone; Windows renewed, wooden shutters; characteristic front garden border partially preserved; Basement garage.
Part of a high-quality example of a residential area built in a traditionalist design language from the 1920s, worthy of preservation for reasons of architecture and town planning as well as local and social history. |
around 1920 | 11/08/1996 | 3/038 (1/522) |
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Residential building | Dreikönigenviertel Schorlemerstraße 71 map |
Built around 1920 by the city of Neuss as part of a settlement ensemble with officers' apartments for Belgian occupation troops, 2-storey, half of a semi-detached house with extended gable, saddle roofs, brick, portal with pilasters made of stone; Windows renewed, wooden shutters; characteristic front yard edging.
Part of a high-quality example of a residential area built in a traditionalist design language from the 1920s, worthy of preservation for reasons of architecture and town planning as well as local and social history. |
around 1920 | 11/08/1996 | 3/039 (1/523) |
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Residential building | Dreikönigenviertel Schorlemerstraße 73 map |
Built around 1920 by the city of Neuss as part of a housing complex with officers' apartments for Belgian occupation troops, 2-storey in 3 axes, saddle roof; Brick, portal with semi-columns made of stone; Windows renewed, wooden shutters; characteristic front yard edging.
Part of a high-quality example of a residential area built in a traditionalist design language from the 1920s, worthy of preservation for reasons of architecture and town planning as well as local and social history. |
around 1920 | 11/08/1996 | 3/040 (1/524) |
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Residential building | Dreikönigenviertel Schorlemerstraße 75 map |
Part description:
Built in 1911, 2-storey in 3 axes, gable roof, 2-axis recessed roof structure, brick facade with artificial stone structure. Staircase original, windows partially changed, partially renewed; Front garden with brick edging, entrance pillars crowned with artificial stone balls. The house is an important testimony to the history of urban construction and the way of living and living at the beginning of the 20th century. It is worth preserving for scientific, architectural, historical and urban planning reasons. |
1911 | 09/02/1999 | 3/053 (1/525) |
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Residential building | Dreikönigenviertel Schorlemerstraße 83 map |
Part description:
Built around 1910 as a counterpart to house no. 85, brick facade, plinth, walls and arbor in stone; 2-storey with basement, slate-covered saddle roof with stepped gable in the left half of the facade. Original window condition, new door. |
around 1910 | 09/23/1985 | 3/003 (1/526) |
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Residential building | Dreikönigenviertel Schorlemerstraße 85 map |
Part description:
Built around 1910 as a counterpart to house no. 83, brick facade, base, walls and arbor in stone; 2-storey with basement, slate-covered saddle roof with stepped gable in the left half of the facade. Original window condition, new door. |
around 1910 | 09/23/1985 | 3/004 (1/527) |
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Residential building | Dreikönigenviertel Schorlemerstraße 87 map |
Part description:
Built around 1910; Facade made of grouted brick with plaster elements; 3-storey with basement, saddle roof with large stepped gable; Flat arbor in the center of the facade with a balcony closure. 1956 Installation of a garage with access ramp in the basement; Windows in their original condition, door new. Important testimony to the history of urban construction, worth preserving, especially for urban planning reasons. |
around 1910 | 09/10/1985 | 3/005 (1/528) |
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Residential building | Dreikönigenviertel Schorlemerstraße 95 map |
Part description:
Built around 1910; 2-storey with a rectangular bay window over both floors, bay window in the attic designed as a balcony; large dwarf house with triangular gable; Axes not drawn through, set back entrance in the left axis; Slate roof. 1964 Installation of a basement garage, windows renewed, original front door. |
around 1910 | 12/03/2001 | 3/060 (1/529) |
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Residential building | Dreikönigenviertel Schorlemerstraße 97 map |
Built around 1920 by the city of Neuss as part of a housing complex with officers' apartments for Belgian occupation troops, architect Bernhard Roland, 2-storey in 3 axes with a forward entrance axis, gable roof; Brick, window frames and door frames made of stone with neo-baroque ornamentation; Front door and window new, front yard.
Part of a high-quality example of a residential area built in a traditionalist design language from the 1920s, worthy of preservation for reasons of architecture and town planning as well as local and social history. |
around 1920 | 11/08/1996 | 3/041 (1/530) |
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Residential building | Dreikönigenviertel Schorlemerstraße 99 map |
Built around 1920 by the city of Neuss as part of a housing complex with officers' apartments for Belgian occupation troops, architect Bernhard Roland, 2-storey in 3 axes with a forward entrance axis, gable roof; Brick, window frames and door frames made of stone with neo-baroque ornamentation; Front door and window new, front yard.
Part of a high-quality example of a residential area built in a traditionalist design language from the 1920s, worthy of preservation for reasons of architecture and town planning as well as local and social history. |
around 1920 | 11/08/1996 | 3/042 (1/531) |
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Residential building | Dreikönigenviertel Schorlemerstraße 101 map |
Built around 1920 by the city of Neuss as part of a housing complex with officers' apartments for Belgian occupation troops, architect Bernhard Roland, 2-storey in 3 axes with a forward entrance axis, gable roof; Brick, window frames and door frames made of stone with neo-baroque ornamentation; Front door and window new, front yard.
Part of a high-quality example of a residential area built in a traditionalist design language from the 1920s, worthy of preservation for reasons of architecture and town planning as well as local and social history. |
around 1920 | 11/08/1996 | 3/043 (1/532) |
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Residential building | Dreikönigenviertel Schorlemerstraße 103 map |
Part description:
Built around 1920 by the city of Neuss as part of a housing complex with officers' apartments for Belgian occupation troops, architect Bernhard Roland 2-storey corner house, hipped roof and saddle roofs, adjoining the rows of houses on Schorlemerstraße and Deutsche Straße, in 3: 4: 4: 4 axes. In the Torkeilstein the year 1922. Front door and window renewed; Front yard. Part of a high-quality example of a residential area built in a traditionalist design language from the 1920s, worthy of preservation for reasons of architecture and town planning as well as local and social history. |
around 1920 | 12/09/1996 | 3/044 (1/533) |
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Vault bridge | Augustinusviertel Selikumer Strasse map |
Part description:
1-arch vault bridge over the Obererft in the course of the old Selikumer Strasse, which was retained as a footpath after the road was relocated and the new bridge was built in 1936; Year of construction unknown, but next to the northern wing wall, ashlar with the year 1784; Vaults, parapets and elongated wing walls made of field fire bricks, vault edges and partly sandstone parapet cover, strong iron railing on bridge parapets and wing walls built in 1983. |
1784 | 08/12/1986 | 1/094 (1/534) |
Path chapel Maria Rast | Selikum Selikumer road map |
The small chapel is one of the stops on the pilgrimage route to Selikum. It was donated in 1638 by Wilhelm von Reuschenberg and his wife Anna Maria von Bentinck. It is a plastered brick building with a round arch portal, an open vestibule and a three-axis apse. A metal cross with the dates 1638–1938 is attached to the gable. Above the lattice door that separates the vestibule from the apse is the coat of arms of the builder with the year 1638. The figure of Mary inside is a copy of a 17th century Madonna, the Cologne Carmel Madonna.
The chapel is important for human history. It is a clearly preserved testimony to popular piety. Preservation is in the public interest for scientific, in particular local history and folklore reasons. |
1638 | 07/13/2007 | 4/012 (1/535) |
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St. Anthony Chapel | Rosellen St.-Antonius-Strasse 25a map |
Part description:
1635 by the pastor of Rosellen, Hieronymus Isenberg, and the prior of the Neusser Oberkloster and church lord of the Norfer church, Johannes Nauta, built on the place of the common procession station and consecrated to Maria im Rosengarten and St. Antonius. The chapel has a single nave with white lime plaster and is covered by a slate roof. Chapel restored several times, most recently in 1985. |
1635 | 07/15/1985 | 8/003 (1/536) |
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Half-timbered yard | Furth Steinhausstrasse 60 map |
Former Small farm, consisting of a residential / stable house and barn, built as timber frame buildings, probably in the 2nd half of the 18th century. Two-storey residential / stable house built as a timber frame construction with a gable roof, without a cellar; Half-timbered walls partly replaced by brick walls after 1871. The original room division has been preserved inside the house, old interior doors and (very steep) wooden stairs.
The former small farm is the last original evidence of the settlement "Auf Neusserbroich" recorded in the Tranchot map from 1804 and at the same time one of the few remaining half-timbered small farms in Neuss. The house was the residence of the well-known and popular Neuss city councilor Gottfried Schmitz called "Schmitze Frienes" (died 1943). |
2nd half of the 18th century | 04/19/1995 | 2/011 (1/537) |
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Residential building | Downtown Sternstrasse 55 map |
Part description:
The residential building at Sternstrasse 55, together with the neighboring building No. 57, is part of the earliest development on Sternstrasse. The building was erected in 1904, the rear building in 1910. It is a row house with a typical brick facade, three-storey, eaves with three vertical window axes. The rear of the house has been changed, but the brick-facing structure of the rear building has been largely intact. As a terraced house, the residential building at Sternstrasse 55 is integrated into the northeast wall of Sternstrasse with its historic building stock. Because of its clearly preserved historical form, its preservation and use are in the public interest. |
1904 | 05/11/2006 | 1/340 (1/538) |
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Residential building | Downtown Sternstrasse 57 map |
Part description:
The house at Sternstrasse 57 was probably built together with No. 55 around 1904. Structure and design are very similar to one another. It is an eaves-standing terraced house on three axes with a brick plaster facade, which is attached on both sides. Inside, the historical floor plan structure and the historical furnishings have been preserved in their original form. As a terraced house, the residential building at Sternstrasse 57 is integrated into the northeast wall of Sternstrasse with its historic building stock. Because of its clearly preserved historical form, its preservation and use are in the public interest. |
1904 | 01/22/2007 | 1/341 (1/539) |
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school | Downtown Sternstrasse 60–62 map |
Part description:
1908/10 built according to a design by Peter Behrens as a 2-storey angular building, entrance wing 1-storey and set back, chapel protruding on the left side with 3-sided apse; Rough plaster facade. 1944 badly damaged by bombs, rear part destroyed. 1952–54 reconstruction, 1974/76 demolition of the rebuilt part and incorporation of the original structure into the new school building. The building is the work of a great architect and is important for the history of journeyman's houses. There is a public interest in its preservation and use for scientific reasons, in particular for reasons of architectural history and urban development. |
1908/10 | 09/18/2002 | 1/333 (1/540) |
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Residential building | Downtown Sternstrasse 63 map |
Part description:
The building is a house built in 1904 with a brick / plaster facade with historicized decorative shapes. The house is 3-storey in 2 non-continuous axes and a developed gable roof. 1952/53 Expansion of the attic, with the gable structure of the right axis removed and a long dormer built. New door and window, numerous original interior details. |
1904 | 11/26/1999 | 1/312 (1/541) |
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Residential building | Downtown Sternstrasse 65 map |
Part description:
The building is a house built in 1900 with a brick / plaster facade with historicized decorative shapes. The house is 3-storey in 2 non-continuous axes and a developed gable roof. New door and window. |
1900 | March 13, 2000 | 1/314 (1/542) |
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Residential building | Downtown Sternstrasse 67 map |
Part description:
The building is a house built in 1905 with a plastered facade with historical and Art Nouveau decorative shapes. The house is 3-storey with an extended gable roof. Small dormers in the middle and left axis. Original windows, front door renewed. |
1905 | 06/28/1989 | 1/149 (1/543) |
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Residential building | Downtown Sternstrasse 69 map |
Part description:
The building is a house built in 1905 with a plastered and plastered facade with historicized decorative shapes. The house is 3-storey in 3 axes with a gable roof. Door in its original condition, new two-part windows without muntin division. In the ensemble this is an important testimony to the history of urban development, worth preserving in particular for urban planning reasons. |
1905 | 04/04/1985 | 1/052 (1/544) |
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Residential building | Downtown Sternstrasse 70 map |
Part description:
It is a row house built on the eaves in 1911, 2-storey in 2 axes and a developed mansard roof. Original staircase; Front door renewed, window z. T. renewed. The house is important for the history of urban construction as part of the urban expansion area "Gründerzeitviertel". It is worth preserving for urban planning reasons. |
1911 | 05/08/2003 | 1/336 (1/545) |
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Residential building | Downtown Sternstrasse 72 map |
Part description:
It is a row house built on the eaves in 1911, 2-storey with a converted roof. Street-side facade in plaster with Art Nouveau decorative shapes, the rectangular wall openings are arranged in 3 axes. The interior of the house is largely original, particularly the entrance hall with its floor, stairs and half-height wall paneling made of white and black marble. The house, together with the neighboring houses on both sides, is a high-quality testimony to the bourgeois residential architecture between Art Nouveau and New Objectivity. |
1911 | December 01, 1993 | 1/205 (1/546) |
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Residential house, facade, street-side roof area | Downtown Sternstrasse 74 map |
Part description:
Houses nos. 70–78 form a closed front of five historic residential houses from nos. 74, 76, 78 committed to the strictly factual reform architecture by Peter Behrens, nos. 70 and 72 already similar, but a little more “picturesque and moving”. For urban planning reasons, there is a public interest in maintaining the facade. |
from 1908 | 05/15/2006 | 1/342 (1/547) |
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Residential house, facade, street-side roof area | Downtown Sternstrasse 76 map |
Part description:
It is a two-storey residential house on the eaves, built in a row on both sides, three regular window axes wide, with a plastered facade over a base clad in natural stone. The entrance is on the left axis, a mirror image of the otherwise identically designed neighboring house No. 78 with the entrance on the right axis. |
from 1908 | 06/20/2006 | 1/343 (1/548) |
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Residential house, facade, street-side roof area | Downtown Sternstrasse 78 map |
Part description:
It is a two-storey residential house on the eaves, built in a row on both sides, three regular window axes wide, with a plastered facade over a base clad in natural stone. The entrance is on the left axis, a mirror image of the otherwise identically designed neighboring house No. 76 with the entrance on the left axis. There is a public interest in maintaining the facade (street-side wall and roof areas) for urban planning reasons. |
from 1908 | 06/20/2006 | 1/344 (1/549) |
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Residential house, facade, street-side roof area | Downtown Sternstrasse 84 map |
Part description:
According to its design, the residential building at Sternstrasse 84 was built in close proximity to the neighboring house 86, dated 1907. The eaves-standing two-storey residential building is attached as a row house on both sides. Its three-axis facade shows a dwelling on both floors. The entrance is raised over steps in the left axis. The attic is designed as an attic facing the street, in which modern skylights are built. There is a public interest in maintaining the facade (street-side wall and roof areas) for urban planning reasons. |
from 1908 | 06/01/2006 | 1/345 (1/550) |
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Residential building | Downtown Sternstrasse 86 map |
Part description:
Built in 1907; Plastered facade with historicizing and Art Nouveau decorative shapes; 2-storey in 3 axes with a mansard roof. 1979 modernized with interior renovation, new dormer window with 2 windows, door in its original state, new windows. |
1907 | 01/06/1986 | 1/072 (1/551) |
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Residential house, facade, street-side roof area | Downtown Sternstraße 88 map |
Part description:
According to its design, the residential building at Sternstrasse 88 was built in close proximity to the neighboring house 86, dated 1907. The eaves-standing two-storey residential building is attached as a row house on both sides. Its three-axis facade shows a dwelling on both floors. The entrance with the old front door is nested in steps in the left axis. The windows have been renewed, and a rectangular dormer window was installed over the right axis. |
from 1908 | 06/01/2006 | 1/346 (1/552) |
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Residential building facade, street-side roof area | Downtown Sternstrasse 90 map |
Part description:
Eaves three-storey terraced house, built on both sides, plaster facade with four axes. New roof surface with modern roof windows, windows and front door. As an integral part of the Sternstrasse ensemble, house No. 90 is important for the city of Neuss. |
from 1908 | 01/22/2006 | 1/347 (1/553)
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Residential building facade, street-side roof area | Downtown Sternstrasse 94 map |
Part description:
Built around 1905/10, 2-storey in non-continuous axes, expanded mansard roof, plastered and half-timbered facade in Art Nouveau forms. Rectangular door and window openings with stucco framing, high plinth, front door framing slightly pulled forward, above skylight with twin windows, window e.g. T. original, door renewed. The house at Sternstrasse No. 94 is an important testimony to the history of urban development around 1900. Its facade with the street-side roof area is worth preserving for reasons of architectural history and urban development. |
Around 1905/10 | 05/01/2004 | 1/338 (1/554) |
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Residential building | Downtown Sternstrasse 96 map |
Part description:
Built in 1906 as a 2-storey house in 4 axes with a plastered facade in historical and Art Nouveau forms and a saddle roof. Above the 3 axles to the left of the dwarf house with a crooked hip roof. In the right axis entrance portal with recessed front door, pilaster framing, above it a flat bay window with profiled gable roofing. Windows and front door new, simplified renewed balcony on the upper floor. The house at Sternstrasse No. 96 is an important testimony to the history of urban development around 1900. |
1905/07 | 03/02/2005 | 1/348 (1/555) |
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Residential building | Downtown Sternstrasse 98 map |
Part description:
It is an eaves-standing two-storey residential building, built as a row house on both sides, above a high rusticated base with separate basement access and two plastered residential floors. The roof is developed as an attic. As an integral part of the Sternstrasse ensemble, house number 98 is important for the city of Neuss. |
around 1905 | 01/22/2007 | 1/349 (1/556) |
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Residential building | Downtown Sternstrasse 100 map |
Part description:
The house was built in 1905/10 as a 2-storey building in 3 axes with a gable roof. The plaster facade is emphasized in the central axis with a gabled house made of half-timbered. The front door with skylight is located on the left axis. Dormer windows are new. T. original, door with new glass wing. The house at Sternstrasse No. 100 is an important testimony to the history of urban development around 1900. |
1905/10 | 05/01/2005 | 1/350 (1/557) |
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Residential building | Downtown Sternstrasse 102 map |
Part description:
Eaves two-storey terraced house on three axes, the structure largely of the same type as No. 100, simple plastered facade with narrow jagged pilaster strips at the corners. The house entrance with the old door is the mirror image of no. 100 in the right axis. As an integral part of the Sternstrasse ensemble, house no. 102 is important for the city of Neuss. |
1905/07 | 01/22/2007 | 1/351 (1/558) |
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Residential house with restaurant | Downtown Sternstrasse 104 map |
Part description:
Built in 1905. 3-storey corner house at Kanalstrasse / Sternstrasse with gable roofs, on the sloping corner of the building a 5-sided bay window, extended like a tower in the roof zone. The street-side facades in 3: 1: 6 partly as irregular window axes, the wall surfaces in differently structured plaster and with Art Nouveau decorative shapes. Windows and doors not original. |
1905 | 07/15/1993 | 1/203 (1/559) |
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Residential building | Dreikönigenviertel Thywissenstrasse 1 map |
Built around 1925 by the city of Neuss as part of a settlement complex with officers' apartments for Belgian occupation troops as a 2-storey end house in 3 axes with a loft and hipped roof. Brick, portal with semi-columns made of stone; Windows renewed, wooden shutters no longer available; characteristic front yard edging.
Part of a high-quality example of a residential area built in a traditionalist design language from the 1920s, worthy of preservation for reasons of architecture and town planning as well as local and social history. |
around 1925 | 07/01/1997 | 3/045 (1/560) |
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Residential building | Dreikönigenviertel Thywissenstrasse 3 map |
Built around 1925 by the city of Neuss as part of a housing complex with officers' apartments for Belgian occupation troops as a 2-storey terraced house in 3 axes with extended gables and pitched roofs; Brick, portal with semi-columns made of stone; largely original windows, but cross bars removed; wooden shutters no longer exist; characteristic front yard edging.
Part of a high-quality example of a residential area built in a traditionalist design language from the 1920s, worthy of preservation for reasons of architecture and town planning as well as local and social history. |
Around 1925 | 12/15/1996 | 3/046 (1/561) |
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Residential building | Dreikönigenviertel Thywissenstrasse 5 map |
Built around 1925 by the city of Neuss as part of a settlement complex with officers' apartments for Belgian occupation troops as a 2-storey terraced house in 3 axes with a loft, gable roof; Brick, portal with semi-columns made of stone; Windows mostly renewed; wooden shutters; characteristic front yard edging.
Part of a high-quality example of a residential area built in a traditionalist design language from the 1920s, worthy of preservation for reasons of architecture and town planning as well as local and social history. |
Around 1925 | 07/01/1997 | 3/047 (1/562) |
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Residential building | Dreikönigenviertel Thywissenstrasse 35 map |
Built around 1925 by the city of Neuss as part of a settlement ensemble with officers' apartments for Belgian occupation troops as a 2-storey corner house, hipped roof and saddle roof, adjoining the rows of houses on Deutsche Straße and Thywissenstraße, in 4: 3: 3 axes; Brick, windows and door frames made of stone with decorative shapes from the 1920s; Corner structure emphasized by a particularly pronounced roof cornice made of ashlar as well as by corner pilasters with ashlar capitals; slightly forward portal axis with rectangular window; Original front door, window renewed; Front yard.
Part of a high-quality example of a residential area built in a traditionalist design language from the 1920s, worthy of preservation for reasons of architecture and town planning as well as local and social history. |
Around 1925 | 07/01/1997 | 3/048 (1/563) |
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Residential and commercial building | Downtown Tückingstrasse 2 at the corner of Kapitelstrasse map |
Part description:
The house was built in 1910. It is an eaves 3-storey corner house in 6: 1: 3 axes with a mansard roof. The corner of Tückingstrasse and Kapitelstrasse is emphasized by a beveled 3-axis risalit. The street facade is a plaster facade in strips and rough plaster with Art Nouveau decor. In 1990 the inside of the house was rebuilt. The original wooden stairs and the red floor tiles on the ground floor have been preserved. Windows, shop windows and doors have been renewed. The house is important for the urban history of Neuss. Preservation and use of the building are in the public interest for urban planning and architectural-historical reasons. |
1910 | 03/01/2007 | 1/380 (1/564) |
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Residential building | Downtown Tückingstrasse 4 map |
Part description:
The house was built in 1909. It is an eaves-standing 2-storey plastered house in 3 axes with a slate mansard roof. A high curved gable rises above the two right axes with two arched windows, the year of construction is indicated in a cartouche framed by foliage. The house is important for the urban history of Neuss. Preservation and use of the building are in the public interest for urban planning and architectural-historical reasons. |
1909 | 03/01/2007 | 1/381 (1/565) |
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Residential building | Downtown Tückingstrasse 8 map |
Part description:
The house was built around 1910. It is an eaves-standing 2-storey house in 3 axes with a plastered facade in Art Nouveau forms, a slate-covered mansard roof and an asymmetrically arranged dwarf house over the two right axes. The entrance portal is in the left axis. The gable roof has a strong roof overhang. The house is important for the urban history of Neuss. Preservation and use of the building are in the public interest for urban planning and architectural-historical reasons. |
around 1910 | 03/01/2007 | 1/383 (1/566) |
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Former town hall and memorial | Norf Vellbrüggener Straße 29 map |
Town hall:
It is a representative, two-storey exposed brick building in 6 axes. The hipped roof with a wide slide is pan-covered. The central axis emphasizes a 4-axis roof house with a triangular gable. In the middle of the ridge sits an 8-sided, slated bell tower. Cenotaph: In front of the house entrance of the former town hall there is a memorial that was inaugurated in 1924. It shows a stone sculpture "Soldier leaning on helmet" on a stone base. The inscription reads: Built in 1924 The building is important for human history, especially the history of cities and settlements. It is important for the local and settlement history of the Norf district because, as a representative, clearly preserved administration building with high-quality details in an important urban location, it marks the administrative center of the formerly independent local area. |
1912 | 11/16/2007 | 8/016 (1/567) |
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Residential houses | Furth Viersener Strasse 28–32, 34–46 map |
Settlement ensemble built in 1929/30 according to plans by the architects Dominikus Heurich and Heinrich Ingerfeld by Neusser Gemeinnützigen Bauverein AG; two-storey apartment buildings made of brick masonry with towering hipped or saddle roofs; long dormers; with the exception of the houses at Viersener Strasse and Marienburger Strasse 27–31, walled front gardens; rhythmic structure of the facades through the arrangement of the windows and stairwells; Staircases emphasized vertically with windows spanning floors above the entrances with their sprawling canopies; sparingly inserted decorative details (eaves, window and door frames, front door canopies made of stone plaster; reliefs made of brick between windows and at the house entrances); Window z. Sometimes combined in pairs - also across corners through stone plaster or stone plaster and brick reliefs; Windows and doors z. T. original.
As an example of a traditionalist housing estate around 1929/30, it is worth preserving for reasons of architecture and town planning as well as local and social history. |
1929/30 | 08/19/1992 | 2/009 (1/568) |
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Atonement Chapel | Hoisten Villestrasse map |
Part description:
On July 28th, 1883, hosts that had been stolen from the Hoistener church were found again on Villenstrasse. A chapel was built at this point as atonement for the deed. It is a small chapel, made of yellow and red bricks with a three-sided choir, a slightly forward pointed arched entrance with a wrought iron grille. The chapel was originally surrounded by a stone wall. |
1929/30 | 09/21/1998 | 7/013 (1/569) |
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Gas station | Grimlinghausen Volmerswerther Strasse 71 map |
Part description:
Erected in 1948 by the German-American Petroleum Society (DAPG). Architect Philip Schmitz. It is a tank attendant's house with a lounge for the gas station attendant and ancillary rooms, an elliptical floor plan on a small tank island, flat-roofed, with a basement, mushroom-shaped roof supported by central supports, with a glazed Kobus between the supports that bears the neon sign "Esso". The gas station, completed in 1948, represents an early type of gas station in the post-war period and documents the progressive development in the field of transport and the auto industry in the immediate post-war period. There are scientific, in particular architectural-historical as well as urban planning reasons for the preservation and use. |
1948 | 11/22/2000 | 9/007 (1/570) |
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Residential building | Dreikönigsviertel Von-Stein-Platz 1 map |
Part description:
Built in 1912 as part of a group of three single-family houses at vom-Stein-Platz1, Lörickstrasse 2 and Lörickstrasse 4, client and architect: Adolf Gürtler. 2-storey, pitched roof and hipped roof, expanded attic, plastered facade; The house is important for the history of urban construction as part of the “Dreikönigenviertel” urban expansion area, the development of which began around 1900. |
1912 | 01/10/2003 | 3/062 (1/571) |
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Rental housing group | Dreikönigsviertel Weberstrasse 6–20 map |
Part description:
Built between 1925 and 1930 by the Neuss workers' housing cooperative as a 3-sided perimeter block development with 27 rental houses. Brick facades with decorative bandages and partly plastering; Regular change of two different building types, both 2-storey in 3 axes, gable roof Type 1: central entrance axis, corridor window with summarizing framing and concluding cornice with pointed arch in brick, intermediate window surfaces with decorative bandage, central axis reaching to the roof gable flanked by 2 windows, gable three times stepped flat. Type 2: Entrance axis with that of the neighboring house arranged in pairs with a continuous cornice, corridor window with decorative bandages, summarizing framing and cornice end at the height of the eaves, above the lower, twice stepped gable flanked by 2 dormers; on the Körnerstraße different design of the entrance axes with plastering and straight end just above the eaves; Corner building Schillerstraße / Weberstraße 3rd storey in 3: 4 axes, mansard roof, corner axis set back; on Weberstrasse large dormer window with 3 windows and triangular gables; Corner building facing Körnerstraße, also with a recessed corner axis, on the ground floor shop installation; Doors in their original condition, modernized in 1985, with new plastic windows restoring the original muntin division, extension of balconies on the inside of the block, inside e.g. T. apartments summarized. |
between 1925 and 1930 | 04/29/1985 | 3/002 (1/572) |
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school-building | Dreikönigsviertel Weingartstrasse 59 and 61 map |
Part description:
2 school buildings with connecting wing, built by the city of Neuss at different times. First elementary school, later various school uses, now commercial vocational school. Northern school building built in 1903 as a primary school. Southern school building built in 1928/29 as an elongated 3-storey main building with a high hipped roof. The school buildings are an important testimony to the development of school construction in Neuss. |
1928/29 | 12/14/1995 | 3/026 (1/573) |
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Former Waterworks | Dreikönigsviertel Weingartstrasse 60 map |
Part description:
Machine house (pumping station) and works master's house of the first Neuss waterworks, built in 1880/81 by Ing.Heinrich Scheven from Bochum in concession, taken over by the city of Neuss in 1883, shut down in 1979. Core building brick hall in 7 axes with flat gable roof on steel trusses. The Werkmeisterhaus is a free-standing brick house, 2-storey in 3: 3 axes, with a flat gable roof protruding all around. |
1880/81 | 04/14/1988 | 3/007 (1/574) |
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Residential houses | Weißenberg Weißenberger Weg 59–83, 125–129 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 Act 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. S. 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 Frankenstraße in the section between the house plots nos. 24 - 58 (north side) and the house plots nos. 31-59 (south side), - the house plots nos. 112 - 120 on Fuhrter Strasse (not the street area of Further Strasse), - Gotenstrasse, without the house plot no. 30, - Kettelerstrasse, - Kolpingstrasse, - Römerstrasse in the section between the house plots Nos. 50 - 68 (east side) or the house plots nos. 49 - 69 (west side) as well as the house plots nos. 71 - 79, - the house plots nos. 59 - 83 and 125 - 129 (not the street area) located on Weissenberger Weg of the Weissenberger Weg). 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. This task took on in Neuss u. a. joined the workers' housing cooperative eGmbH, founded in 1901, which acquired the space between Further Straße and Weissenberger Weg and built on it 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 (1/575) |
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Residential building | Dreikönigenviertel Wendersstrasse 5 map |
Part description:
Built in 1917 by Wilhelm Büsges as a 2-storey semi-detached house, half-hipped roof / saddle roof. Plastered facade on the front and side, garden side in exposed brickwork. Original window; Conversions in the 1950s and a. Installation of a basement garage, an office in the basement with entrance from the street side, new entrance stairs, new terrace. Important testimony to the history of urban construction at the beginning of the 20th century, worth preserving for scientific and architectural-historical reasons as a type of “semi-detached house as a single-family house” and for urban planning reasons. |
1917 | 09/30/1998 | 3/021 (1/576) |
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Residential building | Epiphany quarter Wenders Straße 9 Map |
Part description:
The house at Wendersstrasse 9 was built around 1905 as a kind of two-storey semi-detached house with a crooked hip and gable roof as a single-family house. Plastered facade on the front and side, the garden side in exposed brickwork. Conversions in the 1950s and a. Installation of a basement garage. Important testimony to the history of urban construction at the beginning of the 20th century, worth preserving for scientific and architectural-historical reasons as the type of “semi-detached house as a single-family house” as well as for and for urban planning reasons. |
1905 | 08/04/2009 | 3/066 (1/577) |
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Residential building | Dreikönigenviertel Wendersstrasse 18 map |
Part description
Erected in 1910 as a corner house of a building block consisting of three single-family houses (No. 18–22) with identical ridge and eaves height; 2-storey in 3 axes, hipped roof, plaster facade with Art Nouveau stucco details. Original front door and window, diamond-shaped staircase window in the side; Original interior details and front yard edging. Important testimony to the history of urban construction at the beginning of the 20th century, worth preserving for scientific and architectural-historical reasons as a type of “grouped single-family house” as well as for urban planning reasons. |
1910 | 01/10/1997 | 3/049 (1/578) |
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Residential building | Dreikönigenviertel Wendersstraße 20 map |
Part description:
Erected in 1910 as the middle house of a building block consisting of three single-family houses (No. 18–22) with identical ridge and eaves height; 2-storey in 3 axes, saddle roof, plaster facade with Art Nouveau stucco details. Front door and window renewed, front yard. Important testimony to the history of urban construction at the beginning of the 20th century, worth preserving for scientific and architectural-historical reasons as a type of “grouped single-family house” as well as for urban planning reasons. |
1910 | 01/28/1997 | 3/050 (1/579) |
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Residential house with restaurant | Downtown Zollstrasse 15 map |
Part description:
Built in the 18th century; corner house on Michaelstrasse originally consisting of 2 houses, later a restaurant built into the ground floor; Plastered facade with historicizing decorative shapes. 1984/85 Inside completely renewed while maintaining the old storey heights, new mansard roof, new windows. |
18th century | 04/04/1985 | 1/053 (1/580)
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