List of monuments in Coburg / Ketschendorf

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Coburg district Ketschendorf
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 Ketschendorf is located south of the city center.

Ketch Village

50 ° 14 '48 "  N , 10 ° 58' 37.4"  E

Street / name description photo
Ketschendorfer Strasse 71 The hipped roof house was built in 1831 as a single-storey residential building and added one storey in 1847. The half-timbered upper floor is slated. The building has eight window axes on the long side and three window axes on the front. The spacing between the windows is irregular. Coburg-Ketschendorferstr71.jpg
Ketschendorfer Strasse 77 The two-storey half-hipped roof house stands on the former Propsteihof and was built around 1800. Coburg-Ketschendorferstr77.jpg
Ketschendorfer Strasse 85 The gable of the eaves side house is in the direction of Parkstrasse on the former Kastenhof. Presumably it dates from the beginning of the 19th century. Coburg-Ketschendorferstr85.jpg
Neue Heimat 5
Neue Heimat school
(today Coburg-Ketschendorf elementary school (elementary school) )
The New Home School was built in 1901 by master builder Renner from Stöppach as a neo-renaissance building with an ornamental gable, roof turret and arbor; The construction manager was Gottlieb Rehlein from Coburg. It was opened in 1902 and was the first own school of the then still independent community of Ketschendorf. Today it is used as a primary school. Coburg-Neue-Heimat5-1.jpg
Parkstrasse 2
Ketschendorf Castle
This castle now serves as a youth hostel. The previous building was a summer palace, which was built by order of Duchess Auguste Caroline Sophie from 1804 to 1805 and which she lived in as a widow's residence after the death of her husband Franz Friedrich Anton von Sachsen-Coburg and Gotha. In addition, the castle was used as a widow's residence by Duchess Marie von Württemberg, the second wife of Ernst I. Around 1868 the little summer palace was bought by the French opera singer Victoire Noël (1815–1903), known by the stage name Rosine Stoltz . This was elevated to Baroness von Stolzenau in 1865 and Baroness von Ketschendorf in 1868. In a contract signed with the architect Georg Konrad Rothbart in 1868 , she agreed to build a new palace. The castle has been used as a youth hostel since 1956. In 1981 it was renovated and an annex was added to the south. Ketschendorf Castle 2.jpg
Parkstrasse 7 The building was constructed in 1869 by the architect Georg Konrad Rothbart . It served as a stable and coach house for the castle in Parkstrasse 2. It is built as a single-storey, eaves-sided hipped roof house made of brick; on the street side it is structured by a central dwelling. Coburg-Parkstrasse 7.jpg