List of monuments in Coburg / Q

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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

This part of the list of monuments in Coburg describes the listed objects in the following Coburger Straße:

Queckbrunngasse

Street description photo
Queckbrunngasse 50 ° 15 ′ 26.1 ″  N , 10 ° 58 ′ 10.5 ″  E
Queckbrunngasse lies on the slope and connects the Steintor with Leopoldstrasse. The Queckbrunnen is at the upper end of the alley (see also Steintor 17) and it originally served as a fountain drain into the Stetzenbach, which was on Leopoldstrasse. The Queckbrunnen was first mentioned in the chronicles in 1325. The name means a spring in Middle High German , literally a living well.
Queckbrunngasse 2, 3, 4 The three small houses were built in the 17th or 18th century on official loan . According to the house researcher Ernst Cyriaci, the buildings were named after their owners in 1730: Brauns-Häuslein (No. 2), Halters-Häuslein (No. 3) and Straubs-Häuslein (No. 4). House no. 2 is probably the oldest because, unlike the neighboring houses, it is described as an old, narrow house in 1730. At the end of the 19th century, some roof extensions took place.
The narrow, three-story houses each have two window axes. The plastered half-timbered constructions of the upper floors stand on the massive exterior walls of the first floor. The upper floor windows are located directly under a landing and the height is the same in all three houses. The house entrance is located on the lower ground floor. A retrofitted dormer window , a standing and a house dormer window are available in the attic.
Coburg-Queckbrunngasse1-4.jpg
Queckbrunngasse 11/12 The architect and building contractor August Berger built the group of semi-detached houses in 1907 with two floors and three floors on the slope. The traufständige double Villa is characterized by a hip roof and a three-storey central projection with Zwerchdach. In the striking risalit, the house entrances are arranged under an archway. The pillars of the basket arch are designed with bosses as corner reinforcement. A hip foot separates the slated gable surface with two flat three-sided oriels from the upper floor. The halves of the house on both sides of the risalit are characterized by asymmetries . On the right, on the upper floor, there is a tower bay window with a pyramid roof, on the left a balcony, above a dormer window, and next to it a polygonal corner bay window. On the ground floor there is an arched window on the left and a pair of rectangular windows on the right. Coburg-Queckbrunngasse11.jpg