List of monuments in Coburg / Neuses

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Coburg district of Neuses
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 Neuses is located northwest of the core city.

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50 ° 16 '32.3 "  N , 10 ° 56" 59.5 "  E

Street / name description photo
Auestrasse 12 At the confluence of the Sulzbach and the Lauter is one of the oldest farmhouses in Coburg. Built around 1700, as a two-storey house with a gable roof, it represents the type of the medium-sized stable house. Behind the living room at the entrance to the courtyard is the stable, while the remaining living rooms share the upper floor. The barn is built in the same line on the right. The fact that the house was originally built in an exposed half-timbered construction can be clearly seen from the windows placed directly under the eaves, despite the later plastering. Co-Neuses-Auestr12.jpg
Callenberger Strasse 65 Probably in the 18th century, the two-storey eaves hipped roof house with five on two window axes on the upper floor and three on two axes on the ground floor and a central entrance on the longer side of the house was built on the west side of Callenberger Straße . The windowing on the narrow side and the asymmetry of the eaves side indicate a larger corner space that fits in with the earlier use of the house as a restaurant. The arrangement of the windows near the eaves and the high distance between the parapets and the ground floor show that at least the upper floor of the plastered house consists of half-timbered houses. Co Callenberger Strasse 65.JPG
Callenberger Strasse 69 In 1905, the architect Ferdinand Meyer built the gable roof house with ornamental gables and corner tower for himself as a residential building in the form of a reduced historicism . The house on the eaves, which cannot be clearly determined in terms of the number of floors due to the various types of structure and the combination of solid and half-timbered construction, has a shorter eaves and a longer gable side with a roof that is drawn far down. The facade on the street side is divided into three different components: on the left there is a two-storey corner tower with a conical helmet, on the right a risalit with a curved neo-baroque gable and a five-axis flat bay in front of it. A single-storey section with a knee stick , hip foot and dormer window is inserted between these two components . The bay window and tower are divided by three-quarter Romanized columns with shield-shaped bases and capitals. The southern gable side has two storeys, similar to the eaves side, but with a half-timbered extension with a monopitch roof between the tower and the bay-free risalit. The house entrance is set in front of the north side as a flat half-timbered project with brick and branch gable . The garden side has a biaxial central risalite. Co Callenberger Strasse 69.JPG
Callenberger Strasse 70 At the intersection of the Callenberg with the Rodacher and Falkeneggstraße , Carl Grams built a single-storey house for himself out of brick and sandstone in 1892, right next to the Sulzbach flowing backwards. While the side of the house facing the stream is kept very simple, the house looks picturesque towards the streets with a sloping corner tower and the half-hipped roofs over the converted attic. The sides are emphasized by risalits, the tower is provided with a high pointed spire and a double window with segmented arch, which is repeated in the box bay of the right risalit. Between the risalits and the corner tower there are pointed gable dormers as a special accent. Two similar ones decorate the garage building with winter garden on the south side. Co Callenberger Strasse 70.JPG
Falkeneggstrasse 10
Falkenegg Castle
Falkenegg Castle was built between 1863 and 1867 by Carl Friedrich Wilhelm Streib as a composite building around an older tower from 1848 in the style of historicism with Romanizing and Gothicizing elements. The tombs of Moritz von Thümmel , Prince Christian Franz von Sachsen-Coburg-Saalfeld and Adrienne Elisabeth Countess zu Corneillan are located in the older park of the palace . Coburg-Schloss-Falkenegg.jpg
Falkeneggstrasse 12
Falkenegg Castle
The servants' house of the castle was built in 1848 as a two-storey half-timbered house with a crooked hip roof by Wilhelm Streib in the late classicist style. It was expanded in 1891 by Carl Grams. Co-Neuses-Falkeneggstr12.jpg
Falkeneggstraße 12a
Falkenegg Castle
In 1894, a brick and half-timbered machine house was built below the servants' house with two outbuildings at right angles and a double hipped roof. The machine house was enlarged in 1911. Co-Neuses-Falkenegg12a.jpg
Friedrich-Rückert-Strasse 1 In 1911 Ferdinand Meyer added a half-timbered, two-storey hall building and a single-storey one-storey building with a flat hip roof to the house described in 1867 as a residential building with hospitality to the golden crown, court rights and dung space, cattle shed, barn with pigsty and Würzgarten . The main building as a two-storey half -hipped roof structure with seven to five axes dominates the ensemble at the confluence of Friedrich-Rückert- and Rodacher Straße . The convenient location as well as the open courtyard area facing Rodacher Strasse and the size of the inn indicate its original importance as a hostel. The inn operated until the mid-1960s. After about three decades of vacancy, the Tanz Sport Club Schwarz Gelb Coburg took over the property and had it completely restored. Co Friedrich-Rückert-Strasse 1.JPG
Friedrich-Rückert-Strasse 2 Around 1800 the palace-like classicist mansard hipped roof house with a three-part facade was built. The two-storey building with seven by three window axes is emphasized towards Friedrich-Rückert-Strasse by a flat central projecting with a triangular gable with oculus, in which the house entrance is located, flanked by two windows with segmental arches. Above the door is a plaque with a festoon frame and the inscription Friede. Hope. Joy. appropriate. Corner changes frame the facade. Six dormers with triangular gables decorate the mansard roof. The shop windows on both sides of the central risalit date from more recent times. Co Friedrich-Rückert-Strasse 2.JPG
Friedrich-Rückert-Strasse 5 The two-storey saddle roof building was built around 1700 as a half-timbered construction, later partially plastered, with a massive ground floor. The house on the eaves was renamed the rectory no. III with tree garden in front of the house, barn with cattle shed and pigsty, wooden house, court rights and manure place; Grass and vegetable garden behind the house; is aptly described between Dorfstrasse and the Lauter River . The pastor lived in the house until the end of the 19th century. Co Friedrich-Rückert-Strasse 5.JPG
Friedrich-Rückert-Strasse 6 The cottage-like single-storey half-timbered house dates from the 18th century and appears in an authentic state of preservation. It is a residential stable near the Lauter , the high pitched roof of which indicates an earlier use of the warehouse. The gable side has recently been expanded for residential purposes. The framework structure shows a strictly orthogonal grid with a few slanted timbers. At the back of the house there was originally a barn in the corner, which was replaced by a modern building. Co Friedrich-Rückert-Strasse 6.JPG
Friedrich-Rückert-Strasse 7 The oldest preserved house in Neuses dates back to 1585. The two-storey gable roof building in timber framing that was later plastered bears a high roof, which points to an earlier use of the warehouse. The division into the living room on the street side and the adjoining former stable, where the brickwork is exposed, is characteristic of the time it was built, as are the two attic windows on the gable side. In 1867 the property was renamed residential building no. IV with court rights and manure place, expanded cattle and pig sty, wooden floor above, root garden. Grass garden described. Co Friedrich-Rückert-Strasse 7.JPG
Friedrich-Rückert-Strasse 8-10 The middle miller Georg Andreas Theodor Müller, there used to be an upper and lower mill in Neuses, was granted a six-year tax exemption in 1774 for the construction of his mill. In 1867 it is described as an American art mill with 4 grinding and pointed courses; Gypsum mill with storage space, flower garden in front of the house, barn with horse stable, cattle barn, pigsty, court rights and dung place, wash house and grass garden . 1902 established itself in the large estate at the confluence of Goldberg in the Friedrich-Rückert-Straße the first Thuringian washing machine factory . In the 1960s to 1970s, the property was home to a perfume atomizer factory and the Neuseser post office. The complex, which has been rebuilt several times, consists of three buildings. To the right above the Lauter is the mill, which was extended in 1902, to the left is an eaves-standing barn from the 19th century, slightly set back from the street, and the gatehouse built by Ferdinand Meyer in 1910, connecting the two buildings.

The two-storey gate building with a rusticated ground floor and a slanted upper floor is characterized by a polygonal corner bay on a column base. The arched entrance is flanked by similar passages. The barn with a high pitched roof is designed as a half-timbered construction with sloping timber and a widened gable. Behind it, to the left, a three-storey wing, the framework of which is exposed on the second floor, extends the mill building.

Co Friedrich-Rückert-Strasse 8-10.JPG
Friedrich-Rückert-Straße 11–13
Friedrich-Rückert-Haus and -Park
In 1867 Friedrich Rückert's property became residential house No. VII, a former castrum. Residential house No VI with court rights, chicken yard; Flower garden in front of the house, tree nursery, barn with wooden house, stable building, barn, vegetable garden, tree garden, park behind the house, meadow next to it, called the garden meadow, moat, meadow, called the garden meadow. described. He received it from his mother-in-law Luise Fischer in 1838, initially as a refuge and later as a retirement home. A year earlier, Rückert had set up the poet's room in the estate that could be leased to a chancellery, which was owned by the Councilor and Leibmedicus Fischer in 1818. The Rückerthaus, which is still owned by the family today, has been preserved in many of its furnishing details, but as a building that is no longer permanently habitable, its structural substance was endangered until its restoration in 1997. Rückert-Museum.jpg
Friedrich-Rückert-Strasse 15 The former village school was built in 1785/86 as a two-story church house on the southern edge of the churchyard. The core of the building is older. The schoolhouse is designed in a similar way to the medium-sized farmhouses in the Coburg area. It has a gable roof that is supported by a half-timbered upper storey. The upper floor with its six to three axes cantilevers over the ground floor facade made of sandstone blocks. On the south side, the roof is penetrated by a two-axis hip dormer. The west side has the entrance and double windows in the gable. Co Friedrich-Rückert-Strasse 15.JPG
Friedrich-Rückert-Strasse 17
Parish Church of St. Matthew
The Evangelical Lutheran parish church of St. Matthew has a choir tower that is essentially medieval. The nave was redesigned in 1785 as part of an extension to a three-axis hall church with a flat ceiling and two-storey gallery. Friedrich Rückert's tombstone is in the neighboring cemetery . Co Friedrich-Rückert-Strasse 17.JPG
Friedrich-Rückert-Strasse 17a The four-pillar arbor with a pyramid roof stands in the corner of the cemetery of the parish church of St. Matthew. It served as a morgue and used to protect the Ehrlicher family's crypt. Today there are several weathered, baroque tombs from the 17th century under it. Co Friedrich-Rückert-Strasse 17a.JPG
Friedrich-Rückert-Strasse 23 The single-storey building is the left side wing of a three-part apartment building from the early 19th century, together with house number 25, which was built on two originally separate lots. It is characterized by a hipped mansard roof with a central biaxial dormer and dormers on both sides. On the ground floor there is a separate entrance with stairs and built-in shop. A rectangular base forms the lower end. Co Friedrich-Rückert-Strasse 23.JPG
Friedrich-Rückert-Strasse 25 House no.25 consists of the right wing and the middle section of the three-part apartment building from the early 19th century, which together with house no. The middle part is designed as a flat, four-axis and two-storey risalit with a gable roof and shows the house entrance. The right wing is designed similar to house number 23, but with seven window axes and no entrance door. Co Friedrich-Rückert-Strasse 25.JPG
Friedrich-Rückert-Strasse 45 The two-story rectory was built around 1895. The brick facade with sandstone structures stands on a rectangular base and is structured by a surrounding sandstone band at the level of the window sills on the upper floor. A gable roof forms the upper end of the eaves side house. The street front is characterized by a central entrance project, which has a gable top with a small floating container of fretwork. The windows and doors on the ground floor are framed by sandstone and have a relief arch made of brick with wedge stone and beginners ( fighters ) made of sandstone. On the upper floor are the arches over the windows with spars and wedge stones and the window sills made of sandstone. Co Friedrich-Rückert-Strasse 45.JPG
Friedrich-Rückert-Strasse 47 In 1902 the communities of Neuses and Bertelsdorf had the two-storey school building built in the historicizing style according to plans by Eduard Grams. The brick facade with sandstone inclusions stands on a square base and is closed off by a hipped roof. The windows are segment-arched with wedge and shoulder stones made of sandstone, the house edges are emphasized by sandstone runners. The two-axis street front has a single-axis risalit with a stepped gable on the left and a crested dormer on the right in the roof area. On the right side of the house there is a two-axis stair tower, the access door of which has a high skylight. Co Friedrich-Rückert-Strasse 47.JPG
Friedrich-Rückert-Strasse 53 In the first half of the 19th century, the single-storey building was constructed for use as an inn at an important intersection. An increase followed in 1925. The street facade is structured on the ground floor by plastered, banded pilasters and paneled parapets. Further design elements are the entrance projecting like a risalit on the left and the three-sided bay window in the middle. The upper end is a hipped roof, the eaves of which rests on a cantilevered beam head frieze and which is penetrated by a two-axis dwarf house with a gable roof on the street front and dormer windows on the narrow sides. Co Friedrich-Rückert-Strasse 53.JPG
Glender Strasse 1 In 1930 the multi-tiered residential building was built according to plans by the architect Franz Obenauf. The basement of the two-storey building is only half underground, which means that the ground floor is designed as a raised ground floor. Four encircling brick cornices structure the plastered facade in a horizontal direction, which is closed at the top by a strongly cantilevered hipped roof. A three-sided four-step brick staircase provides access to the house entrance. Above the front door, which is framed on both sides by tile spurs and small windows, there is a triangular, three-tiered flat roof. On the left side there is a single-storey box bay window with a flat roof in a building recess. Co Glender Street 1.JPG
Glender Street 2 The late historical villa was built in 1902. The house has a basement on which the raised ground floor stands. Both floors have a brick facade with sandstone elements. On the upper floor there is a half-timbered construction behind an Eternit cladding. The street front is marked on the left by a corner projection with a three-sided, two-storey sandstone bay window and a branch gable structure. On the right-hand side there is a cross-shaped window on the ground floor. On the left is the entrance with a stair tower. On the northeast side of the house there is a corner bay window made of sandstone, which is closed off by a half French dome. Co Glender Street 2.JPG
Goldberg 1 In 1846 Friedrich Rückert commissioned the building of the garden house on the Goldberg. It served as a refuge in the last years of his life . The building is located in a small park about a kilometer north of Rückert's house. It is accessed from Neuses through a chestnut avenue. The two-story house stands on a square base and has a visible half-timbered facade on the first floor, which is boarded up on the upper floor. A terrace is set in front of the southern gable end, which is spanned by a three-arched wooden arbor and topped off by a gable roof. The main entrance is on the opposite north side. Goldberghaus 1.jpg
Rodacher Strasse The memorial of the community of Neuses for the soldiers who fell from 1914 to 1918 is located in a green area. It was created in 1921 and consists of an inscription pillar with an urn at the top. The main page has a relief with a praying soldier and inverted torches as a symbol of extinguished life. The complex was later expanded with a memorial plaque and stone crosses for those who fell from 1939 to 1945. In front of it stands a classicistic well house with the designation 1813, designed as a pillar with gable surfaces. Co Rodacher Strasse.JPG