List of monuments in Coburg / Creidlitz

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Coburg district Creidlitz
List of monuments in Coburg :

Core city by street name: A  · B  · C  · E  · F  · G  · H  · J  · K  · L  · M  · N  · O  · P  · Q  · R  · S  · T  · U  · V  · W  · Z

Other districts: Beiersdorf  · Bertelsdorf  · Cortendorf  · Creidlitz  · Festungshof  · Ketschendorf  · Lützelbuch  · Neu- and Neershof  · Neuses  · Rögen  · Scheuerfeld  · Seidmannsdorf  · Desert maple

The Coburg district of Creidlitz is located south of the city center.

Creidlitz

50 ° 14 '4.9 "  N , 10 ° 58' 55.3"  E

Street / name description photo
Creidlitzer Strasse 91 The gabled house dates from the 19th century; next to it is a former forge. The house is at the confluence of Florianweg and Creidlitzer Straße. It is a two-storey saddle roof building, which is built in half-timbered on a solid base. As is often the case with historic farmhouses in the Coburg area, the half-timbering is slated. The slate is painted ornamentally. The house has three window axes on the gable side. The single-storey former forge joins the eaves on the right flank. The forge has a gable roof and a forecourt covered with a pulled-out towing roof on wooden stands, which served as a dry shelter for the shoeing. Towards Florianweg, in the eastern part of the property, there is a high barn, which presumably dates from the 19th century, as well as a single-storey stone extension facing the street. Photo campaign Creidlitz March 22, 2009 03.jpg
[Creidlitzer Strasse 97] [The two-story farmhouse from the first half of the 19th century has three to four window axes and a gable roof. The half-timbered house is slated all around. The half-timbered construction can be seen through the wooden floors of the windows and their position directly below the threshold above. The building was demolished in late 2010.]
Creidlitzer Strasse 134
Creidlitz station
The station building is on the southern edge of Creidlitz and was built at the end of the 19th century. It is on the Eisenach – Lichtenfels railway line . It is a two-story brick building with a half-timbered knee floor and an attic. The windows are crowned with lighter colored bricks. The lower and upper floors are separated on the facade by a cornice with a German ribbon and a parapet cornice. To the south there is a risalit-like extension with a gable hipped roof, to which a hipped roof extension is attached in the middle. In 1906, a single-storey, flat gable roof was added to the north flank, which served as the second and third class waiting room. Coburg-Bahnhof-Creidlitz1.jpg
Florianweg 3
Creidlitz School
The brick and sandstone school building with risalits and stepped gables was built in 1903. In 1903, due to the increased number of students in Niederfüllbach, the community of Creidlitz was forced to apply for a separate school for Creidlitz. H. Geiger from Scherneck submitted a design and also erected the building. The historicist building is a two-story brick building with few sandstone structures. It is on the rise of the Florianweg. On the valley side, the building is divided into three parts with a three-axis central building with a wide dormer window and two exterior projections with stepped gables. The northern risalit has two double windows on the upper floor, the southern one has three axes. The window frames are segmented and set off in two colors. In each of the two gables there is a romanizing double arcade made of sandstone between the windows and the tondi. The eaves side has no windows and is decorated with double ribbons. Photo campaign Creidlitz 22 March 2009 06.jpg
Florianweg 9/11
Dr. Martin Luther Church
The Evangelical Lutheran Parish Center with the Dr. Martin Luther Church stands on a hill above the village of Creidlitz. The church was built from 1955 to 1956 according to plans by Reinhard Claaßen ; Erwin Holzheid designed the rectory from 1962. The complex is a typical example of the application of the new principles in Protestant church building, which were decided by the Protestant Church Building Day from 1946 to 1949 and which turned against the previously valid so-called Eisenach regulation of 1861. The Dr. Martin Luther Church is designed as an octagonal building with a tent roof and a tower attached to the side, optically implementing the conceptual idea of ​​the “community tent”. Between the entrance through the tower and the sacristy adjoining the chancel, a pent roof provides a weather-protected outdoor lounge. The single-storey community room with five window axes adjoins the western side. A fresco by Günther Danco on the windowless front wall in the chancel depicts the mercy seat with the twelve apostles; Like the "Luther window" under the gallery on the sloping wall, it dates from 1956. The Schmid organ was installed in 1970. In 1996, Norbert Sattler from Scheuring installed a baptismal window and an Annunciation window in the sloping flanks of the chancel; the design came from Anita Rist-Geiger.

The rectory was built in 1962 south of the church. It is a two-story hipped roof building. It includes the pastor's apartment, pastor's office and sacristan's apartment as well as youth rooms. In 1976, a kindergarten was built by Grellmann between the church and the rectory.

Photo campaign Creidlitz March 22, 2009 15.jpg
Hambacher Weg 12 The building used to be used as a porcelain factory and later as a wicker factory. It was built in 1903 as a brick building with pilaster strips and expanded in 1908 by Johannes Köhler. In 1923 there was another expansion. From 1938 to 1940, modifications were made. The building stands on a plot of land between Hambacher Weg, Hängeleite and Rothenhügel. It was built in 1903 as a porcelain factory for Carl Siebert. The builder was E. Schneider from Steinbach-Köppelsdorf. In 1904 a northern extension was planned for the Siebert & Hertwig company, but was not carried out. For the new owner, the manufacturer Theodor Gumtau , a model shed was built west of the building in 1906. After the Gumtau company went bankrupt, the porcelain factory was taken over by Paul Kister & Co. GmbH, a manufacturer of art porcelain, which Johannes Köhler had a seven-axle extension built on the north side in 1908. During the expansion in 1923, carried out by the builder Willi Bauß from Creidlitz, a five-axis building with a second kiln was placed on the south side. Existing parts of the building were converted during the measure; A narrow extension was added to the rear of the central building. In the meantime, the building of the former porcelain factory was modernized by Franz Müller and converted into a wicker factory. The mansard roof was destroyed in a storm in 1940; it was replaced by a hipped roof.

Today the complex consists of the central four-storey building from 1903, to the north of which there are two three-storey side buildings with office space and to the south the manufacturing area dating from 1923. The office buildings have smaller windows that are framed in segments on the ground floor. The manufacturing area has larger, rectangular panel windows. Since 2001 the building has been used as a mixed living and office space. On the courtyard side, balconies and an external staircase have also been added.

Photo campaign Creidlitz March 22, 2009 19.jpg