List of architectural monuments in Bad Saarow

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The list of architectural monuments in Bad Saarow contains all listed buildings in the Brandenburg municipality of Bad Saarow and its districts. The basis is the country's heritage list by December 31, 2019. The ground monuments are in the list of ground monuments in Bad Saarow listed.

Architectural monuments in the districts

The columns contain the following information:

  • ID-No .: The number is assigned by the Brandenburg State Office for Monument Preservation . A link after the number leads to the entry about the monument in the monument database. The word Wikidata can also be found in this column ; the corresponding link leads to information on this monument at Wikidata.
  • Location: the address of the monument and the geographical coordinates.
    Link to a map view tool to set coordinates. In the map view, monuments without coordinates are shown with a red marker and can be placed on the map. Monuments without a picture are marked with a blue marker, monuments with a picture with a green marker.
  • Official designation: Designation in the official lists of the Brandenburg State Office for Monument Preservation. A link behind the name leads to the Wikipedia article about the monument.
  • Description: the description of the monument
  • Image: a picture of the monument and, if applicable, a link to further photos of the monument in the Wikimedia Commons media archive

Bad Saarow

ID no. location Official name description image
09115309
 
( Location ) Monument of the Association of Persecuted Persons of the Nazi Regime (VVN), in the forest cemetery The memorial, created by the local sculptor Kurt Schulze, was erected on Johannes-R.-Becher-Platz (today: Bahnhofsplatz) in 1947 and moved to the Waldfriedhof (memorial grove) in 1991 (other information: 1989). The memorial commemorates the victims of the “Drei Eichen” subcamp of the Sachsenhausen concentration camp , which was located near Bad Saarow. In the satellite camp about 700 prisoners were held, which were used to work for SS departments. On the front of the worked stone is a relief plate made of copper, on which the letters "KZ" form a triangle and enclose the neck of a prisoner like a barbed wire.
Monument of the Association of Persecuted Persons of the Nazi Regime (VVN), in the forest cemetery
09115137
 
Old oaks 24
( location )
barn The wooden, thatched half-timbered barn is located on the headland of the village of Saarow on the west bank of the Scharmützelsee on a property just before the Eibenhof, the former knight seat of von Löschebrands (see following entry). The building from the middle of the 18th century has a longitudinal structure in the roof structure without a chair . This construction method was only used very rarely after 1750. The framework is filled with wooden planks instead of clay pegs. This version has spread northwards from the Spreewald . As the most northerly preserved representative of this type of construction, the barn has a special architectural and folkloric value.
barn
09115432, T.
 
Old oaks 30
( location )
Eibenhof estate with manor house and park, coach house with coach house, small animal stable, horse stable, ice cellar and gate system From the end of the 15th century until 1860 there was the Loeschebrand family's " Rittergut Saarow" on the tip of the headland in Scharmützelsee - today the Bad Saarow residential area "Dorf Saarow" . In 1723 the district marshal Ernst Friedrich von Loeschebrand had the manor house , a single-storey baroque building, built in its current form. In 1860, Carl-Wilhelm von Loeschebrand, the last bearer of the noble family's name, died without male descendants. After changing owners, the spa doctor Paul Grabley had the manor house converted and expanded into the Eibenhof sanatorium in 1919/1920. In the GDR era, the Eibenhof was used as a seminar and conference location for cultural workers, especially for writers. After 2005, the Eibenhof was dismantled and converted into a place where various families could live, work and vacation in accordance with the requirements of listed buildings . In addition, the facility, in particular the newly built culture barn, is used for cultural events.
Eibenhof estate with manor house and park, coach house with coach house, small animal stable, horse stable, ice cellar and gate system
09115003
 
Bahnhofsplatz
( location )
Station complex with reception building, colonnades, side wings, forecourt and pharmacy (Bahnhofsplatz 1) The Scharmützelseebahn station was built in 1910 according to plans by the architects Emil Kopp and Siegfried Bernstein and opened in 1911. The representative, three-winged complex with half-timbered parts is kept in the so-called Heimatstil with elements of Prussian classicism . The landscape architect Ludwig Lesser explained the design concept of the square: It should be the main entrance of the whole place, like his calling card. The station square of a small but sophisticated forest and water suburb of a cosmopolitan city. A place, upon entering which the newcomer feels the subtle breath that should give this settlement its own character. Elegant, generous simplicity should be the keynote of the square. From 2004, the reception building and the colonnade with the two front buildings were renovated in accordance with the requirements of historical monuments.
Station complex with reception building, colonnades, side wings, forecourt and pharmacy (Bahnhofsplatz 1)
09115188
 
Bahnhofsplatz 10
( location )
"Bahnsches Haus" residential and commercial building The height and style of the building was originally the same as that of the railway station buildings opposite. After buying the house, the attorney Meta Bahn had it added in 1928. The mayor at the time, Karl Krücke, protested in vain against the renovation, since he saw it as a disgrace of the station square. Today (as of 2014) various boutiques, shops and medical practices are housed in the house.
"Bahnsches Haus" residential and commercial building
09115310
 
Friedrich-Engels-Damm 273
( location )
Summer house by Johannes R. Becher Johannes R. Becher's summer house in today's Bad Saarow-Strand residential area was built in 1932 as a weekend house for Hermann Schmidt (Engels & Schmidt Tonfilmgesellschaft mbH, Berlin) according to plans by the architect Adam Müller-May. In 1937 Erich Löwner, director of the Berlin Philharmonic , bought the small, low-rise building on what was then Hindenburgdamm. In 1948 Johannes R. Becher bought the property as a resting place and had the house, which has since been destroyed, rebuilt true to the original. In 1950, Becher wrote: In Saarow is my dream housing, the most wonderful, magical, etc. little house, it seems to me, […], one-story, flat roof, with a larger room facing the lake, the whole front can be opened as a door, and then three more rooms, […]. This is a workplace that I couldn't dream of any better. After Becher's death in 1958, his wife, the writer and publicist Lilly Becher , lived in the house until her death in 1978. In 1981, a Becher memorial was set up here, which was closed again in 1991 after the fall of the Berlin Wall. The house was sold. (See also below: Johannes R. Becher Monument.) BW
09115466
 
Lindenstrasse 8
( location )
"Demeter House" with pergolas The representative building on the corner of Lindenstrasse and Kirchstrasse, which has a hall, was built in 1924 according to plans by Max Werner as a residential and office building for employees of the country house colony. In 1939 Princess Franziska von Lippe (née Countess Schönborn- Buchheim) bought the house and left it to the anthroposophical Demeter movement , which had already been represented in the house with offices and a kindergarten and ran the Marienhöhe farm around 1.5 kilometers west . In 1941 the Demeter Association was dissolved by the Nazis and the house was confiscated. After the war it was first used as a residential building, then by the municipality and finally by the local administration, including as a registry office and police station. The community, which remained the owner even after the fall of the Wall, sold it to private investors in 2004. After extensive renovations, the Demeter House is mainly used as a conference venue. (Pictured: garden side.)
"Demeter House" with pergolas
09115461
 
Moorstrasse
( location )
Künstlerhaus (Thorak House) The Thorak house is located above the north-western edge of the swampy Wierichwiesen lowland on the wooded ridge of the Dudel. It was designed by the Berlin architect Harry Rosenthal as a studio house for the sculptor Josef Thorak and built between 1926 and 1929. After a renovation in the early 1930s, Thorak also used the building as a residential building. The house is characterized by a high, thatched barrel roof that swings open on the gable sides over rounded crested hips on the ridge. Almost twice as high as the actual side walls of the house, the overhanging roof determines the compact, single-storey structure. It is with its organic and functional forms all of that debate about a new architecture obliged sought an expressive harmonious relationship with nature. After 1945 the Bitterfeld lignite combine used the house as a vacation home, but it remained in the possession of the Thorak family. In 2012 a voluntary work group took care of the emergency security of the house. At the beginning of 2013 the house was sold and the main roof was renovated by the new owners in accordance with a listed building.
Künstlerhaus (Thorak House)
09115456
 
Moorstrasse 3
( location )
Künstlerhaus (Scharwenka House) In 1910, the pianist, composer and music teacher Xaver Scharwenka acquired the large property at Moorstrasse 3 and commissioned the Berlin-based Wolgaster Holzhäuser Gesellschaft to build a mountain -style villa-like building in a wood frame construction as a summer house. Blackwenka brought the idea for this type of construction with him from his many trips to the United States. The pitchpine ( pinus elliottii ) felled in the south-east of the USA , an import item that was valued at the time due to its hardness, was used as construction timber . The spacious house with a massive basement with a protruding saddle roof was ready to move into in 1912. His refuge, referred to by Scharwenka as the “muse hut”, is eloquent testimony to the cosmopolitanism of the client and the new building construction impulses of his time. After Scharwenka's death in 1924, family members lived in the house until the 1940s. After an interim use as a supply base for the social security holidaymaker's service , it served as “Peters Café and Wine Bars” from 1955 to the end of 1990. Now owned by the community, the empty house was falling into disrepair. Listed as a historical monument in 2005, it was then gradually renovated and restored by the Scharwenka Foundation and the Friends of the Bad Saarow Spa.
Künstlerhaus (Scharwenka House)
09115629
 
Pieskower Straße 31
( location )
Maxim Gorki stele, in front of the "Maxim Gorki" elementary and high school The stele was designed in 1968 by Gerhard Goßmann in cooperation with the Meissen porcelain factory . 384 tiles are attached on both sides under the theme of the song of the petrel . The poem was written by Maxim Gorky in 1901 after a student demonstration in Saint Petersburg , which ended in a massacre due to the brutal intervention of the police. The stele was added to the list of monuments in 2013.
Maxim Gorki stele, in front of the "Maxim Gorki" elementary and high school
09115422
 
Regattastrasse 4
( location )
Residential building The thatched half-timbered house and today's sailing home is located on a hill above the sailing harbor in the village of Saarow. The double room was built around 1775/76 and belonged to Gut Saarow (see above: entry to Eibenhof). Around 1900 it was inhabited by the community gardener. In 1927 the Berlin-Grünau yacht club acquired the property as its second property. A tap room and a kitchen were installed on the ground floor. After SG Bad Saarow-Pieskow was founded in 1949, their water sports enthusiasts used the property as their domicile. Since 1954 it has been owned by the Scharmützelsee e. V. (SGS), the largest sailing club in the state of Brandenburg. The Scharmützelsee water rescue station of the DLRG is also located on the site .
Residential building
09115101
 
Seestrasse
( location )
Johannes R. Becher monument Memorial to the poet, Minister of Culture and the first President of the GDR Cultural Association, Johannes R. Becher , who among other things wrote the text of the GDR national anthem . The memorial was created by Fritz Cremer in 1964. (See also above: Friedrich-Engels-Damm 107, Sommerhaus Bechers.)
Johannes R. Becher monument
09115426
 
Seestrasse 29
( location )
Country house with street-side fence, pergola and garden pavilion The country house complex typical of Bad Saarow was built in 1919/20 according to plans by Emil Kopp for the bricklayer and master carpenter Ernst Wagner. Wagner operated a steam sawmill in Spreenhagen , which he had moved to Bad Saarow in 1927. Confiscated by the Soviet military administration in 1945, the house was incorporated into the GSSD's sanatorium for air forces . Wagner lived in the chauffeur's apartment on the property until his death in 1966. In 1995 the country house was transferred back to one of Wagner's grandsons, who had it renovated in accordance with a listed building.
Country house with street-side fence, pergola and garden pavilion
09115467
 
Silberberger Strasse 7
( location )
Country house with gardens In 1928, the Jewish interior designer Moritz Hirschler (1864–1940) had the “Haus am See” or “Haus Hirschler” built as a retirement home based on plans by the architect Max Werner. The garden of the 5500 m² property stretches from Silberberger Straße to Uferstraße on Scharmützelsee . During the pogroms in 1938 , Hirschler was attacked and mistreated on November 10 in Bad Saarow. On January 3, 1940, he forcibly sold the country house to Elisabeth Möller for 80,000  marks . In 2009 the artist Gunter Demnig laid stumbling blocks for Hirschler and his wife Vilma. After the war, the house first served as a rest home for VEB Elektrokohle Berlin , then as a guest home for the GDR Council of Ministers and finally as a guest house for the Ministry of National Defense . Willi Stoph was a guest several times . After a long vacancy, it has been privately owned and renovated since the 2000s.
Country house with gardens
09115468
 
Uferstrasse 12a
( location )
Villa Parolo with street side fence In the early 1920s, the banker Paul Zeidler had the egg-shaped villa built according to plans by the Berlin architect Fritz Glantz. Zeidler chose the name PAROLO, which was emblazoned in the gable for a long time, after the first letters of his first name Paul and the first names of his son Rolf and his wife Lotte. The three-story, wood-paneled house rests on a field stone base. The unconventional roof construction was carried out by master carpenter Prömmel from Storkow with a space-saving, honeycomb board connection without rafters . In 1931 Zeidler founded the Sport-Club Bad Saarow (SCBS) at Scharmützelsee. Around 1938 the Jewish Zeidler family emigrated to Shanghai and then to the USA. The Villa Parolo was forcibly sold to the innkeeper of the Berlin zoo source Willy Seidel in the course of the Aryanization in 1939 . During the GDR era, the Elektrokohlekombinat Berlin used the villa as a company holiday home. After the fall of the Wall , the house fell to the Jewish Claims Conference , which sold it to a Berliner in the 2000s. The new owner had the house renovated.
Villa Parolo with street side fence
09115102
 
Ulmenstrasse 9
( location )
Villa "Putti" with outbuilding The house was built by the banker Landsberg in 1920 and named after his daughter's nickname. The Maxim Gorki Memorial, which was previously housed there, has not been in this house since 1997. In contrast, it is used privately, and holiday apartments are also furnished.
Villa "Putti" with outbuilding
09115630
 
Ulmenstrasse 12
( location )
Water and electricity works with a former water tower, outbuildings and property fencing When construction began on the “Saarow-Pieskow Landhaussiedlung am Scharmützelsee AG”, a deep well was drilled in 1908 and the electricity and water works were built in 1908/09 . The container on the water tower had a capacity of 1000 cubic meters of water, but was later removed. In 2008 operations were stopped. The ensemble bordering the spa park was up for sale in the 2010s . The new owners transformed it into an exclusive mini-hotel in 2015. The tower received a new top made of reinforced concrete with three and a half meter high windows.
Water and electricity works with a former water tower, outbuildings and property fencing
09115526
 
Ulmenstrasse 15
( location )
Mud bath with main path The mud bath was built from 1913 to 1914 based on a design by Emil Kopp .
Mud bath with main path
09115469
 
Ulmenstrasse 17, 17a
( location )
Post building with residential building for officials, stable building, wagon shed, street-side property fence and courtyard paving The simple, functional former post office was built according to plans by the English Post Council and put into operation in 1926. The separate residential building for middle-class civil servants is designed as a two-story, clearly structured gabled house. Both buildings are made of hard fire bricks. The self-dialing device , also installed in 1926, was one of the most modern in Germany at the time. In 2003 the postal service was stopped and the ensemble was sold. In addition to private apartments, it now houses holiday apartments and offices.
Post building with residential building for officials, stable building, wagon shed, street-side property fence and courtyard paving

Bad Saarow, Pieskow

ID no. location Official name description image
09115457
 
Dorfstrasse 13
( location )
Pieskow village church with an altarpiece by Daniel Schultz Today's village church in Pieskow was built on the foundations of the old half-timbered church , first mentioned in 1346 , and inaugurated in 1867. The graves of the von Loeschebrand estate family were located at the old church (see above: entry to the Eibenhof); the tomb was filled in. The ceiling-high, hand-carved altar in peasant baroque style has the shape of a triumphal arch and was created in 1661 by Daniel Schultz from Kolberg . The long ailing Sauer organ was re-presented with a concert after a repair in 2000. In 1902 an extensive renovation took place, the interior was redesigned. Since 1999 the church has been extensively renovated and restored.
Pieskow village church with an altarpiece by Daniel Schultz
09115470, T.
 
Hermann-Duncker-Strasse 1
( location )
Villa complex "Klein Sanssouci", consisting of a castle-like main building, ancillary building with a connecting corridor and a park-like villa garden with street-side fence The facility was built in 1912/13 (other information: 1905/06) based on the model of the Sanssouci Palace in Potsdam by the building contractor Felix Bergmann on the east bank of the Scharmützelsee. It later belonged to the Countess von Carmer-Gr. East, wife of the Chamberlain of Carmer. 1921 Acquisition by the mine director Robert Steuer, whose brother ran the brick factory in neighboring Diensdorf . Later in the possession of the actor and director of the Great Drama Theater Maximilian Sladek for a short time . 1934 military sports school of the SA , 1938 acquisition by the Reichspost and use as a rest home with an additional bed block. For the communist era the representative system served the Presidium of the FDGB as a holiday and guest house, after the turn and after transfer back to the German post office of the Telekom as an academy for their executives. Today (as of 2014) Klein Sanssouci is privately owned and has been extensively restored.
Villa complex "Klein Sanssouci", consisting of a castle-like main building, ancillary building with a connecting corridor and a park-like villa garden with street-side fence

New Golm

ID no. location Official name description image
09115348
 
Chausseestrasse 25
( location )
Village church and historical gravestones in the churchyard The church was rebuilt in 1877 from yellow bricks in neo-Gothic style in the shape of a Greek cross with an eastern polygon. The tower was preserved from the previous building that was demolished in 1867, a rectangular stone church with a semicircular east gable from the 15th century. The baptismal bowl , baptismal pot, candlestick and a bell cast in 1593 also come from the old church. The second bell dates from 1924. The altar , pulpit and baptismal font were lost during renovations in the 1970s. The altarpiece , which now stands over a new, simple altar, has been preserved. Between 1991 and 1997 the church was extensively renovated.
Village church and historical gravestones in the churchyard

Petersdorf

ID no. location Official name description image
09115532
 
Am Fuchsbau 12
( location )
"Fuchsbau" bunker system The bunker in the Rauenen Mountains was built in the early 1940s as a message center for the Waffen SS and Wehrmacht. From 1965 to 1990 she was the NVA - air forces and until their decommissioning in December 1994 by the 5th Air Division of the Bundeswehr used. The bunker was sealed from 1995 to 2005 and has been protected as a technical monument since 2006 .
"Fuchsbau" bunker system

literature

  • Georg Dehio : Handbook of the German art monuments . Founded by the Day for Monument Preservation 1900, continued by Ernst Gall , revised by the Dehio Association and the Association of State Monument Preservationists in the Federal Republic of Germany, represented by: Brandenburg State Office for Monument Preservation and State Archaeological Museum. Brandenburg: edited by Gerhard Vinken and others, reviewed by Barbara Rimpel. Deutscher Kunstverlag, Munich / Berlin 2012, ISBN 978-3-422-03123-4 .
  • Reinhard Kiesewetter: dream housing Bad Saarow. 60 houses with an eventful history in Bad Saarow-Pieskow on the “Märkisches Meer”. Ed .: Förderverein Kurort Bad Saarow e. V., Bad Saarow 2002.

Web links

Commons : Monuments in Bad Saarow  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Our Oderspree.de, Lexicon: Bad Saarow. ( Memento from March 2, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  2. The memorial is located in the “memorial grove” of the forest cemetery, which has a separate entrance just below the main entrance.
  3. Regina Scheer: Dealing with the monuments. A research in Brandenburg. Brandenburg State Center for Political Education in the Ministry of Education, Youth and Sport of the State of Brandenburg. Ed .: Brandenburg State Center for Political Education Research and Culture of the State of Brandenburg. 2003, ISBN 3-932502-36-1 , p. 32 pdf ( Memento of the original dated December 2, 2007 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. . @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.politische-bildung-brandenburg.de
  4. Angelika Grabley: Half-timbered barn old oaks. Panel in the exhibition in the SaarowCentrum: Traditional in Bad Saarow 2014. Bad Saarow YESTERDAY-TODAY. Ed .: Friends of the “Kurort Bad Saarow” e. V., 2013.
  5. ^ Berlin Brandenburg Film Commission: Hofgut / manor house on the peninsula in Bad Saarow on the Scharmützelsee .
  6. ^ Myra Warhaftig : German Jewish architects before and after 1933 - the lexicon: 500 biographies. Reimer Verlag, Berlin 2005, ISBN 3-496-01326-5 , pp. 25, 67f (online)
  7. ^ Rolf Schneider : 20 × Brandenburg. People, places, stories. be.bra Verlag, Berlin 2010, ISBN 978-3-86124-645-9 , p. 116 (online)
  8. ^ Office Scharmützelsee: Scharmützelsee with Bad Saarow and the surrounding area. ( Memento of the original from August 12, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.amt-scharmuetzelsee.de
  9. Reinhard Kiesewetter: Dream housing Bad Saarow. 60 houses with an eventful history…. Pp. 88, 90.
  10. ^ Quotation from: Wolfgang Brauer : Bechers Tarumgehäuse. ( Memento of the original from August 9, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.wolfgang-brauer.de
  11. Reinhard Kiesewetter: Dream housing Bad Saarow. 60 houses with an eventful history…. P. 24f.
  12. Rolf Harder: My dream case. Johannes R. Becher in Bad Saarow. Ed .: Kleist Museum Frankfurt (Oder). Verlag für Berlin-Brandenburg , Berlin 2012, ISBN 978-3-942476-54-6 ( publisher information )
  13. ^ Sylvia Weidemann: The Demeter House. Entry for March in: Förderverein "Kurort Bad Saarow" e. V .: Wall calendar 2013. ( Memento from March 6, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  14. Reinhard Kiesewetter: Dream housing Bad Saarow. 60 houses with an eventful history…. P. 108f.
  15. The list of monuments only mentions “Moorstraße” as the address without giving a house number. In fact, there is no numbering on the property / house. The house is the last building at the northwest end of Moorstraße in the corner of the L412 bypass road on the Dudel ridge on the northern edge of the swampy Wierichwiesen lowland on the Schmelingrundweg (see coordinates under "Location"). Reinhard Kiesewetter gives the former address in his book (see literature) on p. 104 with “Am Dudel 1”. In the meantime, this part of the street “Am Dudel” has been renamed as an extension of the already existing Moorstraße so that “No. 1 ”no longer applies, as“ Moorstrasse 1 ”is located at the opposite, southeastern end of Moorstrasse (see, for example, google-map). In a mixture of the historically correct house number and the new street name, the Brandenburg State Office for Monument Preservation and State Archaeological Museum addresses the house in its description ( Memento of the original from June 29, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked . Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. wrongly under “Moorstraße 1”. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.bldam-brandenburg.de
  16. a b Sybille Gramlich: Bad Saarow - two artist houses in Moorstrasse. ( Memento from June 29, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Brandenburg State Office for Monument Preservation and State Archaeological Museum, May 23, 2006.
  17. Reinhard Kiesewetter: Dream housing Bad Saarow. 60 houses with an eventful history…. P. 104f.
  18. Bernhard Schwiete: Praise from an appointed mouth. In: Märkische Oderzeitung (MOZ, online), April 17, 2012.
  19. Reinhard Kiesewetter: Dream housing Bad Saarow. 60 houses with an eventful history…. P. 41.
  20. Scharwenka Foundation: Foundation brochure, Bad Saarow 2008, p. 7f.
  21. Scharwenka Foundation: The Scharwenka House in Bad Saarow. April 23, 2010.
  22. Bettina Winkler: Goßmann's stele Sturmvogel became a memorial. In: Märkische Oderzeitung (MOZ-online), April 11, 2013.
  23. Reinhard Kiesewetter: Dream housing Bad Saarow. 60 houses with an eventful history…. P. 36f.
  24. SG Scharmützelsee, history. ( Memento of the original from March 4, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / sgs-segeln.de
  25. DLRG, local group Oderland, water rescue service Scharmützelsee
  26. Monika Weiß: Landhaus Wagner. Panel in the exhibition in the SaarowCentrum: Traditional in Bad Saarow 2014. Bad Saarow YESTERDAY-TODAY. Ed .: Friends of the “Kurort Bad Saarow” e. V., 2013.
  27. Reinhard Kiesewetter: Dream housing Bad Saarow. 60 houses with an eventful history…. P. 54f.
  28. Memory of Jewish Citizens. In: Märkische Oderzeitung (MOZ-online), November 13, 2009.
  29. Traces of war. Stumbling-Stones-Silberberger-Strasse 7
  30. Jörg Niendorf: The egg house. In: Berliner Morgenpost , March 23, 2008.
  31. Reinhard Kiesewetter: Dream housing Bad Saarow. 60 houses with an eventful history…. P. 46f.
  32. ^ Märkische country seats of the Berlin bourgeoisie. Dictionary. See entries on Paul Zeidler and Willy Seidel.
  33. Information sign on site, status 2014, and: Waterworks in Bad Saarow ceases operation. In: Märkische Oderzeitung (MOZ-online), June 21, 2008.
  34. Bernhard Schwiete: The old water tower is growing. In: Märkische Oderzeitung (MOZ-online), May 7, 2015, accessed on September 11, 2016.
  35. Reinhard Kiesewetter: Dream housing Bad Saarow. 60 houses with an eventful history…. P. 92f.
  36. Ursula Hallmann: Former post office. Entry for September in: "Kurort Bad Saarow" e. V .: Wall calendar 2013. ( Memento from March 6, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  37. ^ Entry on Klein-Sanssouci in the private database "Alle Burgen". Retrieved September 15, 2015.
  38. ^ House Wieynk: A stroll through the sights of Bad Saarow and Pieskow. February 7, 2012.
  39. Monika Weiss: Church Neu Golm. Entry for February in: "Kurort Bad Saarow" e. V .: Wall calendar 2013. ( Memento from March 6, 2014 in the Internet Archive )