List of architectural monuments in Frankfurt (Oder) (outdoor areas)
In the list of architectural monuments in Frankfurt (Oder) (outdoor areas) all architectural monuments in the districts of the city of Frankfurt (Oder) are listed. The basis is the publication of the state monuments list as of December 31, 2018. The monuments in the core area of the city are listed in the list of monuments in Frankfurt (Oder) .
Legend
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
General
ID no. | location | Official name | description | image |
---|---|---|---|---|
09110294 |
( Location ) | Statute of the city of Frankfurt (Oder) on the protection of the monument area "Straßenangerdorf Hohenwalde" (monument area statute Straßenangerdorf Hohenwalde) |
Architectural monuments in the districts
Booze
ID no. | location | Official name | description | image |
---|---|---|---|---|
09110229 |
( Location ) | Bismarck column on the Great Cape Mountain | erected between 1900 and 1925 | |
09110230 |
At the memorial ( location ) |
Soviet cemetery of honor | established 1946/47 | |
09110250 |
Bahnhofsweg 3 ( location ) |
Station reception building with official apartment and toilet block | The reception building with official residence was built between 1911 and 1912. See main article Bahnhof Boossen . | |
09110082 |
Bergstrasse 14 ( location ) |
Manor house and park | built in the 2nd half of the 19th century | |
09110263 |
Berliner Strasse / Schulstrasse ( location ) |
Prussian quarter milestone | probably erected between 1800 and 1806; implemented in 1872 | |
09110179 |
Berliner Strasse 2 ( location ) |
Chausseehaus with two stable buildings | The Chausseehaus was built between 1800 and 1825. | |
09110260 |
Eduardspring 1 ( location ) |
Forest workers house | Timber-lined timber panel construction , built around 1910 | |
09110249 |
Lebuser Weg 13 ( location ) |
Resettler homestead | The resettlers homestead is a single-roof homestead of the settlement company “Eigen Scholle” from 1936. | |
09110081 |
Schulstrasse ( location ) |
Village church | The village church, built around 1250 as a fortified church , is one of the open churches in Brandenburg. The nave was added around 1370 and a church tower was added around 1480 . The sacristy was built around 1545. In the Thirty Years War , the church was destroyed except for the surrounding walls. In 1671 it was rebuilt in the Renaissance style . In the second half of the 19th century it received a new altar , a new pulpit and a gallery . A complete redesign took place in 1961. On November 11, 1962, the church was inaugurated again by General Superintendent Jacob from Cottbus . | |
09110261 |
Wulkower Strasse ( location ) |
Cemetery chapel |
Güldendorf
ID no. | location | Official name | description | image |
---|---|---|---|---|
09110248 |
Am Zwickel 6 ( location ) |
Living and mill house of the Vordermühle | Half-timbered building, mid-18th century | |
09110106 |
Güldendorfer Strasse ( location ) |
Cemetery of honor for prisoners of war and forced laborers from several nations | The Ehrenfriedhof is located at the western end of the cemetery and was created in 1975. | |
09110108 |
Kirchring 1 ( location ) |
Village church | According to current knowledge, the construction of the church dates back to the second half of the 13th century and was built in the early Gothic style on boulders . The church tower was built in the 15th century and rebuilt in 1773. Inside was the engraving of the carpenter Gast. The bells were unadorned from the Middle Ages and one from 1688, cast by George Hofmann from Frankfurt (Oder). The organ was inaugurated in 1811. A relative of the Güldendorfer Mädel family, the Berlin manufacturer Mädel, donated a mosaic painting in 1932 that depicts the blessing Christ, which was inserted into the east wall in 1933. In 1936 a cemetery hall was built. The church largely survived the hostilities of World War II in the spring of 1945. After a lightning strike in June 1945, which burned out completely with explosions from the ammunition stored there, the nave was given a new roof in 1951/52. In March 1952 the church was consecrated by the superintendent Günter Jacob. | |
09110251 |
Vineyards 53 ( location ) |
Residential building | 1930 by architect Winkler , planning 1928 |
Hohenwalde
ID no. | location | Official name | description | image |
---|---|---|---|---|
09110119 |
( Location ) | Hohenwalde street perimeter village | ||
09110255 |
Dorfstrasse 9 ( location ) |
Stable storage of a small farmer | built at the end of the 19th century | |
09110252 |
Dorfstrasse 21 ( location ) |
Stable building of a middle farm | ||
09110110 |
Dorfstrasse 32 ( location ) |
Village church | The church is a plastered rectangular building with a steeple and hipped roof. The client was Ehrentreich von Röbel. The inauguration took place in 1607. In 1784 the tower was rebuilt. With the installation of an organ from the Sauer company in 1869 , the interior of the church was redesigned. It has a richly designed Renaissance altar. | |
09110253 |
Dorfstrasse 47 ( location ) |
Two barn stores of a central farm | ||
09110254 |
Dorfstrasse 66 ( location ) |
Stable storage and field stone paving of the small farm | ||
09110256 |
Ernst-Senckel-Weg 60, 61 ( location ) |
Double house for tractor drivers | The double house was built between 1955 and 1956. | |
09110284 |
Friedhofsweg 3a ( location ) |
Grave site Ernst Friedrich Gottlieb Senckel, in the cemetery, row 8, grave 7 | Gravestone of Ernst Friedrich Gottlieb Senckel and his wife Emma Schüttge |
Kliestow
ID no. | location | Official name | description | image |
---|---|---|---|---|
09110288 |
Sandfurt ( location ) |
Brick arch bridge | In 1857 the Ostbahn line from Frankfurt to Küstrin went into operation. In Kliestow the route crossed a side valley of the Oder by means of a brick arch bridge. After the end of the Second World War, the section was dismantled, the bridge was preserved. A path runs through them today. | |
09110264 |
Berliner Chaussee ( location ) |
Prussian milestone, on the B 5 | The inscription reads: "XI MEILEN BIS BERLIN" | |
09110221 |
Berliner Chaussee 76 ( location ) |
Manor house with park | Manor house built after 1865 | |
09110262 |
Berliner Chaussee 84-85 ( location ) |
Apartment building with outbuildings for miners | ||
09110162 |
Lebuser Straße 1 ( location ) |
Parish hall and outbuildings (today residential building) | The building was built in 1913 as the parish hall of the Protestant parish of Kliestow. The design comes from the architect and church building officer Curt Steinberg . After the First World War, the community hall was used, among other things, as a village school. Living rooms for the teachers were built into the attic. After 1945 the building served as a community nurses' station and kindergarten. After 1984 it was empty and in 1993 it was reconstructed and converted into a house for the disabled. | |
09110129 |
Lebuser Straße 17 ( location ) |
Village church | The village church, the oldest building in Kliestow , was built around 1300 as a rectangular field stone building. The church tower, which is in front of the width of the nave , was only built at the end of the 15th / beginning of the 16th century. The spire dates from around 1600. After the church was stormed and plundered by the Swedes in the Thirty Years War , it was gradually rebuilt until it was damaged again in the Seven Years War in 1759 . Although the SS blew up the cemetery hall in April 1945, the church survived the Second World War relatively unscathed. | |
09110103 |
Winkelweg 2 ( location ) |
Residential stable house | built in the 1st half of the 18th century |
Lichtenberg
ID no. | location | Official name | description | image |
---|---|---|---|---|
09110267 |
Teichstrasse 11 ( location ) |
Two stables and a drive-through barn with paving of a middle farm | ||
09110130 |
Teichstrasse 17 ( location ) |
Village church (ruin) | The core of the church is an early Gothic field stone building. The nave dates from the second half of the 13th and first half of the 14th century. In 1597 the tower was rebuilt. In 1697 the church tower collapsed and was subsequently rebuilt. Around 1700 the church was redesigned in Baroque style. In the last days of World War II in 1945, the church was destroyed. In 1950 the roof structure collapsed. Its rubble was used to rebuild other houses in the village. After the church stood empty for several decades, the community of Lichtenberg has been trying to rebuild it since 2001. |
Lossow
ID no. | location | Official name | description | image |
---|---|---|---|---|
09110241 |
Burgwallstraße 8 ( location ) |
Manor granary | built in 1895 | |
09110268 |
Lindenstrasse 10 ( location ) |
Drive-through barn of a middle farmer | ||
09110132 |
Lindenstrasse 26a ( location ) |
Village church (ruin) | The church in Lossow is mentioned for the first time in the Lebuser monastery register in 1405. When it fell into disrepair in 1741, the church patron Adolph Friedrich von Beerfelde planned the construction of a new church, which was completed in 1746. In 1759, during the Seven Years' War , the church was sacked by Russian soldiers. A lightning strike on July 13, 1885 burned out the bell cage, the bells fell and broke. In the same year, work began on rebuilding the tower, which was completed in 1886. In 1924 the church received three new bells from Apolda from the manor owner, Mr. Simon. In 1945 the church was badly damaged and burned out during World War II . The first construction work began in the 1950s. Farmers donated lumber; the tower received a roof. Funding provided in 1995 for the renovation of the tower roof and part of the church wall. With a safety net that was installed over the top of the wall in 2005, the ruin is now accessible. | |
09110265 |
Unit 1 place ( location ) |
Left barn of a central farm | ||
09110266 |
Unit 5 place ( location ) |
Medium-sized farmstead, consisting of a house, barn and drive-through barn | ||
09110270 |
Platz der Einheit 12, Lindenstrasse 9 ( location ) |
Two farm workers' houses with an adjoining building at Lindenstrasse 9 |
Brandendorf
ID no. | location | Official name | description | image |
---|---|---|---|---|
09110139 |
Hasenwinkel 4 ( location ) |
Field stone house | The field stone house was built as an estate forester's house in the second half of the 19th century. | |
09110134 |
Müllroser Chaussee ( location ) |
Ice cellar in the former estate park | built in the 2nd half of the 18th century as the property's ice cellar |
rose Garden
ID no. | location | Official name | description | image |
---|---|---|---|---|
09110244 |
Pagramer Strasse ( location ) |
Bridge of the local connection road Rosengarten-Pagram over the railway | Built in 1913, supported by 5 pillars, 115 meters long, renovated in 2008 | |
09110223 |
Hauptstrasse 33a ( location ) |
Village church and monument to the fallen | The church is a neo-baroque hall church. The design came from the Berlin architect and court builder Gustav Hauer , the client and patronage was the landowner Rudolf Schulz. The church was consecrated in 1903; In the same year, the Sauer organ building workshop installed an organ with six registers . The windows of the church are made of colored lead glazing. | |
09110224 |
Lindenplatz 8, 8a ( location ) |
Dorfkrug with hall and farm yard | The Dorfkrug with hall and farm yard was built at the end of the 19th century. | |
09110140 |
Siedlerplatz 2 ( location ) |
Manor house and park | The neo-baroque manor house of the landowner Rudolf Schulz was completed in 1898. From 1946 to mid-1993 it was used as a children's home. In the absence of use and renovation, the building is falling into disrepair and is closed due to the risk of collapse. There are mainly protected English oaks in the park . |
Former architectural monuments
ID no. | location | Official name | description | image |
---|---|---|---|---|
|
Buschmühlenweg 57 ( location ) |
"Lindengarten" restaurant | The restaurant was built in the first half of the 19th century and later rebuilt. |
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 .
- City of Frankfurt (Oder) (= Monument Topography Federal Republic of Germany, Monuments in Brandenburg, Volume 3), Worms, 2003
Web links
- List of monuments of the State of Brandenburg: City of Frankfurt (Oder) (PDF) Brandenburg State Office for Monument Preservation and State Archaeological Museum
Individual evidence
- ^ Official Journal for the City of Frankfurt (Oder), 26th vol., No. 3 of April 22nd, 2015
- ↑ Die Ostbahn on the pages of Eisenbahnfreunde Frankfurt (Oder), accessed on March 24, 2014