List of cultural monuments in Annaberg (A – K)

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The list of cultural monuments in Annaberg contains the cultural monuments of the Annaberg district of the Saxon city of Annaberg-Buchholz , which were recorded in the list of monuments by the State Office for Monument Preservation Saxony as of November 24, 2010.

This list is a partial list of the list of cultural monuments in Saxony .

The list is divided according to the first letters of the address. Due to the large number of cultural monuments, the list is divided into the

Legend

  • Image: shows a picture of the cultural monument and, if applicable, a link to further photos of the cultural monument in the Wikimedia Commons media archive
  • Designation: Name, designation or the type of cultural monument
  • Location: If available, street name and house number of the cultural monument; The list is basically sorted according to this address. The map link leads to various map displays and gives the coordinates of the cultural monument.
Map view to set coordinates. In this map view, cultural monuments are shown without coordinates with a red marker and can be placed on the map. Cultural monuments without a picture are marked with a blue marker, cultural monuments with a picture are marked with a green marker.
  • Dating: indicates the year of completion or the date of the first mention or the period of construction
  • Description: structural and historical details of the cultural monument, preferably the monument properties
  • ID: is awarded by the State Office for the Preservation of Monuments in Saxony. It clearly identifies the cultural monument. The link leads to a PDF document from the State Office for the Preservation of Monuments in Saxony, which summarizes the information on the monument, contains a map sketch and often a detailed description. For former cultural monuments sometimes no ID is given, if one is given, this is the former ID. The corresponding link leads to an empty document at the state office. The following icon can also be found in the ID column Notification-icon-Wikidata-logo.svg; this leads to information on this cultural monument at Wikidata .

List of cultural monuments in Annaberg (A – K)

image designation location Dating description ID
Old town Annaberg monument protection area
Old town Annaberg monument protection area (Map) Old town Annaberg monument protection area (proposal) 09229163
 
Triangulation stone
Triangulation stone Near the Pöhlberg accommodation facility
(map)
1865 (triangulation stone) Second order station, significant testimony to geodesy of the 19th century, of significance in terms of surveying history.

Inscription: “Station Pöhlberg of the Royal Saxons. Triangulation 1865, restored in 1989 "

The station 130-Pöhlberg was built on the highest point of the Pöhlberg under the responsibility of Weisbach. The town of Annaberg, as the property owner, subsequently gave its consent to this on January 15, 1866.

The type and shape of the column corresponds to stations 129, 131, 132 and 133, which are all made of Greifenstein granite and which were built between September 1864 and August 1865. It can be assumed that the columns were made by the same stonemason and possibly also erected. The construction manager was the Markscheider Weiß and the graduation assistant Helmert.

In the period from 1862 to 1890, a land survey was carried out in the Kingdom of Saxony, in which two triangular networks were formed. On the one hand, there is the network for grade measurement in the Kingdom of Saxony (network I. class / order) with 36 points and the royal Saxon triangulation (network II. Class / order) with 122 points. This national survey was led by Prof. Christian August Nagel, according to which the triangulation columns are also referred to as "Nagelsche columns". This surveying system was one of the most modern layer networks in Germany. The surveying columns set for this purpose remained almost entirely in their original locations. They are an impressive testimony to the history of land surveying in Germany and in Saxony. The system of surveying columns of both orders is in its entirety a cultural monument of supraregional importance.

09229162
 
Residential house or town house in open development Adam-Ries-Strasse 1
(map)
around 1860 Little changed late classicist house with partly original furnishings and significance in terms of architectural history and urban development. The two-storey, plastered house in open development has a rectangular floor plan and a saddle roof with bitumen shingle and small skylights. The facade facing Adam-Ries-Straße is four-axis, on the gable side two-axis. The window walls on the first and second floors are profiled and each show a console-like decoration; In the ground floor area there are additional mirrors underneath the sills. The historic, wooden entrance door has been preserved. Below the eaves made of tooth cut and decorative frieze there is decorative jewelry with leaf motifs. At the verge at the height of the eaves on the southwest side of the residential building, decorated, lanceolate stone has been installed. The stairwell is designed in the manner of an atrium; doors, profiles, fluted pillars, railings, etc. have been preserved from the original furnishings. 09228534
 


Former St. Trinity Hospital; Rectory Adam-Ries-Strasse 2
(map)
1827–1829 (rectory) Part of the Trinitatis ensemble at the St. Trinitatis Hospital Church (Adam-Ries-Straße 6), building and local history as well as urban development significance in the symmetrical construction typical of the late Classicist period.

The two-storey rectory with the identical hospital building on Geyersdorfer Straße 1 forms the entrance to the St. Trinity Church and the associated cemetery. The plastered facade with five axes has a risalit in the central axis, which is crowned by a "Greek" gable. The access to the house, the door and a window above it with a flat triangular crown and toothed frieze are also in the axis. The double window in the gable triangle facing Adam-Ries-Strasse is similar. The gable side is divided into three axes, all windows show simple, color-contrasting frames and small-scale sprouting. On the cemetery side there is a smaller portal with segmental arch and apex stone, in the left axis there is a large gate-like opening with segmented arch. The hipped roof is slated with five or two ogival dormers in two rows.

09228546
 


Former St. Trinity Hospital;  Hospital Church, Trinity Church, Cemetery Church
Former St. Trinity Hospital; Hospital Church , Trinity Church , Cemetery Church Adam-Ries-Strasse 6
(map)
1526–1529 (Hospital Church) Hall church with outer pulpit, part of the ensemble of the former St. Trinity Hospital, significance in terms of building history, local history and urban development.

Originally built outside the city wall in 1526–29, the small hall church was destroyed by the fire of 1604. The reconstruction took place in 1683-85 in the same place and using remains of the previous building. After another fire in 1826, a simplified reconstruction with raised outer walls took place in 1828-30. It is a plastered quarry stone building with a choir closed on three sides. The free pulpit from 1685 on the north side of the building facing the cemetery is remarkable.

The high hipped roof with slated roof turret, which probably reflects the earlier appearance of the tower of the Annenkirche, which burned down in 1813. The interior with a flat ceiling and simple galleries on three sides. 1864 Installation of the Gotthilf Bärmig organ. A last supper relief (1685) and an altar cross around 1510 (probably from the Franciscan monastery, in the Hospital Church since 1966) have been preserved from the early interior. With the secularization of the adjacent cemetery, the church lost its main function, which caused a slow decline: 2006 emergency security, since 2009 without use. The hospital church is the heart of the Trinity ensemble, which, in addition to the remains of the cemetery, also includes the parish and hospital buildings that were built in the late classical period. The church not only has architectural and local historical value, but as part of the ensemble also has particular urban quality.

09228545
 


Golden Sun Adam-Ries-Strasse 11
(map)
1850-1880 historical and cultural value.

Three-storey plastered historic building in a half-open area and corner location. The facade facing Adam-Ries-Straße with eight axes, the corner beveled with a window on each floor. Window walls on the ground floor with a slight arch and decorative keystone, those on the upper floors are rectangular with simple profiles, straight window canopies and a profiled sill with console-like decoration. Three windows on the first floor are highlighted by triangular window canopies. The canopy over the entrance and the vertical lettering “Hotel” on the corner of the house refer to the use of the building as the “Goldene Sonne” hotel. The mansard roof with slate covering and extended mansard, above a row of standing dormers. The inn has been demonstrable at this location since 1855, and since 1887 there has also been a break for carters, probably historic in the courtyard. Get stables. From the 1920s, the owner Thomas Bsteh from Vienna is said to have brought the charm of Viennese gastronomy to the Ore Mountains. The building has retained its typical historic design and is therefore of architectural and cultural-historical value.

09228535
 


Apartment building with shop in closed development Adam-Ries-Strasse 15
(map)
Around 1885 with shop, architectural and urban significance.

Four-storey historical tenement house with five axes in closed development. The plastered facade of the building begins on a very narrow natural stone base. The entrance is in the left axis through a two-wing historical entrance door, this with a simply profiled wall and triangular roof. Then a shop with access and a shop window. The upper floors reserved for residential use begin above a narrow plaster strip. The windows here with the architectural decoration typical of historicism: straight, segment-arch-shaped and triangular roofs alternate, all windows have stucco decoration below their strong sills. Overall, the degree of decoration decreases from bottom to top. The windows partly with profiled, partly with smooth walls, all with T-frame. The gable roof with five smaller standing dormers. The tenement house, typical of the last quarter of the 19th century, is located relatively close - outside - of Annaberg's city wall, which was completely abandoned a few years earlier, and is therefore an example of the city expansion that has taken place. It is not only significant in terms of building history, but also urban planning.

09228536
 


Apartment building in half-open development Adam-Ries-Strasse 17
(map)
around 1885 with shops, architectural and urban significance.

Three-storey historic tenement house with six axes in half-open development. This relatively simple plastered building has two shops on the outside on the ground floor: both have an access-shop window combination, with the door slightly offset inwards. The entrance to the house is also located in the third axis. The windows on the upper floors are arranged in pairs, which is particularly evident on the 1st floor due to the straight roofs, here also angular sills with small ornamental consoles, the windows on the 2nd floor with simple framing. All windows with T-floor. The center of the house is emphasized by a roof structure similar to a dwelling, this one with a triangular gable, two windows and an oculus. To the side of each a standing dormer window in the slate-covered gable roof.

The tenement house typical of the last quarter of the 19th century, albeit a restrained design, is located relatively close - outside - of Annaberg's city wall, which was completely abandoned a few years earlier, and is therefore an example of the city expansion that has taken place. It is not only significant in terms of building history, but also urban planning.

09228537
 


Former B-hospital and boiler house
Former B-hospital and boiler house Adam-Ries-Strasse 18
(map)
around 1900 (linen factory) Significance in terms of building history and local history.

Mighty three-storey structure in open development. Its historic clinker brick facade with 14 to three axes is particularly striking. Above a base zone, a small cornice suspected of being glazed green leads to the upper floors, and another ledge between the 1st and 2nd floors. The windows facing the street on the left side are individually linked with segmental arches and on the right side in pairs. The right axes are particularly emphasized: here on the ground floor there are large windows with a slightly ogival shape that extend over two axes, and on the first floor there are double windows with segmented arches. The openings on both floors are connected by a shallow niche that ends in a kind of cloverleaf arch. There and between the floors there are stucco reliefs with floral motifs, coats of arms and faces. On the gable side there is a more irregular division of the openings, whereby the central axis is emphasized by larger openings. A striking feature here is the entrance (single-leaf wooden door with a skylight) crowned with a Tudor arch and two-in-one snow, flanked by three-part high arched openings or blind arches. In the gable field also blind arches as building decoration, this backed with lighter stones. The high hipped roof is covered with slate and later changed on both long sides by installing a long haulm.

The striking clinker brick building was erected around 1900 as a men's underwear factory Hahn & Fromhold, from the mid-20th century at the latest the building served as a hospital before it was converted into a special needs school in 2000. It not only has architectural and urban significance with its characteristic facade that characterizes the street space, but also has economic and social historical value.

09228540
 


Double apartment building with rear building and enclosure Adam-Ries-Strasse 25, 27
(map)
1898 architectural significance.

Three-storey historical double apartment building with six or five axes in open development. Only the two adjacent, separate entrances to the houses indicate the two-part structure of the building. Otherwise the design of both parts of the house is the same. The facade material is orange-yellow clinker brick, which is structured by horizontal bands. Entrances and windows on the ground floor each have a round arch and have massive walls with rough decorations. The same in the material, but also different in the design, the frames, roofs and mirrors on the windows of the upper floors. The corner areas are given special emphasis by means of triangular roofs. The main cornice with an equally massive tooth cut is very bulky. The gable roof is covered with slate and is crowned at the corner with a dome-like roof structure, otherwise standing dormer windows for the attic that has been converted into living space. A rear building, also with a clinker brick facade, has been preserved, the visual eye-catcher here is the accentuation of the corner through plastered pillars with fluting. Parts of the original enclosure exist. This tenement house, built around 1900, shows design elements between historicism and the beginning of the reform phase. Almost unchanged, together with the rear building and the enclosure, it is an example of the city expansion at the turn of the century and has architectural significance.

09228538
 


So-called Feilerhäuser Adam-Ries-Strasse 26, 28, 30
(map)
1930-1931 architectural and architectural history (type construction) as well as urban planning significance.

This building ensemble is made up of three massive, offset cube houses with three floors each. They were created between 1930 and 1931 as a reaction to the need to create a lot of living space with as little financial investment as possible. First, the city built number 26 as a tenement house with 12 apartments. After lengthy discussions in the city council, the decision was made in favor of a type house designed by the architect Curt Feiler from Reichenbach i. V. This is characterized by economical material consumption and almost identically designed small apartments: there are always two entrances on the platforms, so that the apartments on opposite sides are each offset by one floor. The originally completely plastered facade is deliberately kept factual, the individual windows are optically connected by different colored plaster in strips. Typical for the time is the flat roof in order to have the least possible loss of space. Building number 28 was built almost at the same time, this time from the “Gewoge” (non-profit housing association Annaberg), which had been thinking of building a Feilerhaus for a long time (originally planned on Jungfernstieg). A 14-family house with apartment sizes between approx. 35 and 45 m², which consisted of a kitchen-living room, bedroom, anteroom and a chamber in the attic, was implemented. The development took place analogously to number 26. The last of the three cube houses was built in 1931 by the same carrier and in the same design.

With this building ensemble - here due to the need to save - the building idea of ​​the New Objectivity found its way into Annaberg. Although the buildings have not been renovated in accordance with historical monuments (windows, doors, facade cladding), this ensemble is of great importance both in terms of architectural history (idea of ​​the type of construction) and in terms of local history and urban development.

09228914
 


Former Friedrich shirt factory Adam-Ries-Strasse 47, 49
(map)
1899 original building (factory), after 1900 (manufacturer's villa) of importance in terms of building history and economic history.

Three-storey, elongated factory building from 1899/1902 in open development with plastered facade and mansard roof. The windows are linked in pairs by a pilaster structure, each supporting a round arch. This gives the facade its strict rhythm. The windows themselves are segment-arch-shaped on the lower two floors and round-arched on the third floor, whereby the arches are accentuated with a crown stone. In the area of ​​the eaves and the roof, both the corners and a wide central zone on the long side are highlighted. Here, among other things, you will find round arch friezes as well as dwarf-like structures, also with round arches. In contrast to most of the factory buildings that were built in Annaberg around the turn of the century, this example has an Art Nouveau facade.

This building was originally built in 1899 as a two-storey string factory for Emil Schmiedel, who, however, had to file for bankruptcy. His successor was Robert Friedrich, who set up his cardboard box factory here and added an additional floor in 1902. This building is a typical example of the industrial architecture in Annaberg during its heyday at the turn of the century. It was built and expanded by FJ Götze, one of the most renowned architects of the time in Annaberg. Some smaller-scale additions were added in 1910 and 1940. The building has not only historical, but also economic and scientific and documentary value.

09228539
 


Apartment house in a corner and open development Adam-Ries-Strasse 51
(map)
Marked 1905 architectural and urban significance.

Three-storey historic tenement house in a corner (with five to four axes) in open development. The facade of this building has light beige clinker cladding on all floors. The entrance to the house is on the right-hand axis of Adam-Ries-Straße and is drawn far into the facade. On the upper floors, the arrangement of narrow balconies with decorative grilles on massive consoles. The windows are all rectangular and T-shaped. Building decor, especially on the windows of the 1st floor with straight roofs and stucco mirrors below the sills. The rounded corner, which continues into the roof and is crowned with a turret, is particularly emphasized. Also stucco surfaces in the corner area, here marked “1905” and “LB”. A horizontal band as well as stucco fields and consoles adorn the eaves area. The slate-covered mansard roof is also used for residential purposes. The building has fire walls on both sides, which indicates a planned continuation of the development. Despite the year of construction in 1905, this example still shows an astonishingly close connection to the design of historicism; hardly changed, it is of architectural and urban significance for the history of urban expansion.

09228996
 


Apartment building in open development Adam-Ries-Strasse 55
(map)
Around 1905 architectural significance.

Three-storey apartment building in open development, which was also designed as a free-standing structure. This is unusual in Annaberg, as most of the tenement houses built at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th century were built as perimeter blocks. The access to the building and stairwell is from the side and has a small porch. The windows on the ground floor are rectangular in segment-arch-shaped niches, as a design element also arched plaster grooves in the arched area. The facade on the upper floor is plastered and simple. Architectural decoration here in the form of richly structured window canopies facing the street. A characteristic design feature of this building is the central bay window between the 1st and 2nd floors, which is additionally decorated with stucco decoration. In the middle field the designation "LB". The emphasis on the center is also continued in the slate-covered mansard roof by the arrangement of a dwelling with a curved gable. Here two windows in the area of ​​the inhabited roof and a high oval ocular. As an example of the Annaberg urban development towards the northeast, the building is of architectural and urban significance.

09228995
 


Former manufacturer's villa Annenstrasse 7
(map)
1912 importance in terms of building history and economic history.

Two-storey former factory owner's villa in open development, which was built in 1912 by the factory owner of the plant in the northeast. The size, layout and layout were designed for a wealthy family with employees, children and guests. The most representative rooms were on the ground floor with the segmental arched windows and the glazed veranda facing the garden. The entrance was on the left in a small annex. The enclosure, the stairway to the house and probably parts of the original garden design have also been preserved. It is a typical building project for Annaberg around 1900, as numerous factory owners took advantage of the economic boom and had a house built in the immediate vicinity of their factory. This object is of particular importance in terms of building and economic history.

09228984
 
Residential house in closed development; Cross vault Bachgasse 1
(map)
18th century (after 1731) 09228675
 


Residential house with restaurant on the ground floor in half-open development; Cross vault Bachgasse 6
(map)
18th century (after 1731) 09228676
 


Lower station;  former state train station (DABU 06575 II);  Railway line Annaberg-Buchholz lower station - Flöha;  Zschopautalbahn (AF 6644)
More pictures
Lower station; former state train station (DABU 06575 II); Railway line Annaberg-Buchholz lower station - Flöha ; Zschopautalbahn (AF 6644) Bahnhofsplatz
(map)
before 1866, opening 02/01/1866 Of importance in terms of traffic and local history.

Large station complex consisting of several parts around / from 1866 (opening 02/01/1866). The reception building is in three parts, as two gable components are connected to an eaves. The entire reception building as well as the residential building on the side are three-storey with a plastered facade and evenly structured windows. The reception building has a flat central projection facing the station forecourt, which is crowned by a triangular gable. This and the three gable surfaces of the houses in the direction of the railway line give the complex its special character. The windows on the ground floor as well as in the central risalit are slightly ogival and create a stylistic reference to the Tudor Gothic. The reception building and residential building are connected on the ground floor by a single-storey component. The platform roofing that has been preserved extends over the entire length of the building, even if it is not used today as there are no longer any tracks. The trains run exclusively on the middle rails. The gable roofs are slated.

When Annaberg was connected to the railway network (Annaberg-Chemnitz) in 1866, this meant an enormous economic boom for the city. As a structural testimony to this development, the lower station of Annaberg is not only important in terms of architectural history, but above all in terms of traffic engineering and local history.

09229141
 


Villa with remains of the enclosure Bahnhofstrasse 21
(map)
around 1880 Built for the Metzner family of manufacturers, significant in terms of building history.

Two-storey historical factory owner's villa in open development, massive with plastered facade. The building is accessed from the side via a small porch. The street view is characterized by the formation of a central risalit that extends to the top floor and ends with a triangular gable, here floral stucco as a frieze and in the triangular surface. The ground floor begins with decorative plastering above a base made of quarry stone. A ledge at the level of the sills of the windows on the 1st floor optically separates the upper floor, the facade here smoothly plastered. All windows are rectangular with architectural decorations (roofs, consoles, etc.) typical of the time they were built in the last quarter of the 19th century. The emphasis on the corners of the building is also decorative, on the one hand through colored contrasting, but also through capital-like closures in the eaves area. The roof is designed as a slate-covered gable roof, a pair of windows and small round windows in the gable triangle. Probably built as a manufacturer's villa, this building has both architectural and urban significance.

09228844
 


turntable Bahnhofstrasse 25
(map)
1st half of the 19th century 09228845
 


Residential house in open development Bahnhofstrasse 27
(map)
re. 1909 Heimatstil, architectural significance.

Small single-storey house in open development. The plastered facade begins above a base made of quarry stone, here a marked plaque “1909 CR”. The building has ornamental frameworks below the eaves and in the area of ​​a dwelling. A special feature, however, is the arched portal with a decorative frieze that forms the entrance to the house. The stairwell is on the right-hand side, which not only shows the course of the plinth and the wide arched window offset by half a storey, but also the attached roof. The entire roof area is developed with three large windows in the mid-house. The actual gable roof, covered with slate, appears to be broken several times by the addition of the staircase and the dwelling, as it was often used in the Heimatschutz style. As a representative of the ideas of the Heimatschutz style, a rare example in Annaberg, this small residential building is primarily of architectural significance.

09228846
 


Factory building Bambergstrasse 9
(map)
Marked 1900 importance in terms of building history and economic history.

Three-story, elongated factory building in open development with a yellow brick facade and mansard roof. The two central axes and the outer axis are only slightly emphasized in terms of space and optically separated by red clinker bricks. The facade is given a rhythm by an alternation of wider individual windows and pairs of windows, which lie in flat niches and are spanned by flat round arches on the upper floor. The windows themselves are segmental arches on the ground floor and rectangular on the upper floor. The building is also given restrained decoration through the use of green glazed clinker bricks that partially frame the fields below the sills. Red clinker bricks - used like a tooth cut - form the eaves cornice. The mansard roof with a few standing dormer windows. Subsequent changes can mainly be found in the basement, where various larger openings were made. In the central axis between the ground floor and the first floor there is an inscription "built PD 1900". This refers to the owner of the property, Paul Diersch, who had a trimmings factory built here. After various other uses such as a sweet cider factory or warehouse, the building was renovated in 1991/92 and continued to be used as a theater workshop and fund. It has not only architectural, but also economic historical value. Due to its location on the slope, it is visible from afar and is therefore also of relevance for urban planning.

09228776
 


Rental villa Bambergstrasse 11
(map)
Marked 1912 historical and urban significance.

Mighty, massive Art Nouveau rental villa in open development in the green hillside area between the city wall and the train station. The access to the plastered building and the stairwell are in a side extension. On the valley side, the house has three full floors and the converted attic. Mainly rectangular windows with typical, small-scale skylights and different crowns. As accents, stucco decor on the wall surfaces of the bay windows, between the floors and in the gable fields. The steep roof has a slate covering. This high-quality and detailed Art Nouveau villa was built in 1912 by the architect Max Beer and has architectural significance, and due to its location on the slope, also urban planning importance.

09228778
 


Former AEG switch factory Barbara-Uthmann-Platz 5
(map)
1907-1908 Modern skeleton construction from the turn of the century with art nouveau ornamentation, significance in terms of building history and industrial development.

Three-storey factory building in a modern frame construction and clinker facade for the time after the turn of the century. The yellow clinker masonry adjoins a quarry stone plinth, which has flat pilaster strips between the large windows. The windows on the ground floor and 2nd floor with a slight arched arch, on the 1st floor almost square. Today, unfortunately, a simplified, not listed window sprouting. The upper floor and the first floor are visually separated by a sill made of ashlar, little facade decoration in the form of terracotta panels in the upper area of ​​the pilaster strips and frieze-like on the first floor. Clear accentuation of the entrance axis by building ornamentation influenced by Art Nouveau, here the window on the 2nd floor with a triangular decorative roof. The sheet metal mansard roof with large flat dormer windows. Some of the original furnishings such as banisters have been preserved inside.

The planning of this building was associated with some effort: At the beginning of 1907, the client Arthur Hänel submitted the first drawings (builder Otto Siegel in historical design language) for the large factory building in the area characterized by small residential buildings. Protest by neighbors, among other things, but also other parameters such as excessive use of the property or too great a height prevented implementation. New designs followed, of which A. Mairich from Chemnitz finally approved in August 1907 despite further objections. In 1908 the "factory of cardboard coffin fittings and coffin fringes, mint with steam operation" was put into operation. AEG has owned the building since 1942 at the latest, and FJ Götze converted the factory to use it in order to gain additional jobs. In the 1950s, a wholesale grocery store was located here.

As a testimony to the development of industrial culture in Annaberg, the building is of architectural and economic value.

09228818
 


Retaining walls Benediktplatz
(map)
18./19. Century Quarry stone wall, significance in terms of local history and the image of the place.

Retaining wall made of unplastered quarry stone with a height of three to four meters below the Bergkirche and Münzgasse, covered with stone slabs in the upper area and provided with a metal fence. Later installation of a garage at space level. Retaining walls are characteristic of the townscape of Annaberg due to the sloping terrain, but they are partly also the result of overburden storage from early mining in the urban area. They have a significant impact on the townscape and history.

09228665
 


Residential house in open development Benediktplatz 1
(map)
18th century 09228666
 


Residential house in semi-open development Benediktplatz 2
(map)
1791 of architectural and urban significance.

Two-storey plastered solid building for residential use in the immediate vicinity of the mountain church. The structure of the seven-axis facade is very simple with a color-contrasting base, plastered window walls and a profiled eaves cornice. The eye-catcher is the sandstone door jamb with a subtly decorated lintel and massive steps in front of it. The rectangular building has a gable roof covered with slate, inside two rows of dormers. When a cellar was recorded in 1996/97, it was found that there is a historic stone sluice in the barrel-vaulted cellar of this house.

The residential building, preserved in its historical design, is typical of the late 18th century and therefore of architectural historical importance and, due to its proximity to the mountain church, also of urban planning importance.

09228635
 


Stadtbad Benediktplatz 3
(map)
Marked 1895, inaugurated in 1906 cultural-historical and architectural significance.

The Annaberger Stadtbad, inaugurated in 1906 with Art Nouveau shapes, with a swimming pool, sauna, steam baths, showers and bathtubs, was one of the most renowned baths in Saxony at the time.

It is an approximately 70 m long building, which consists of several parts and follows the arched course of the street. The massive plastered building is characterized by its arched openings, which in the area of ​​the indoor pool are reminiscent of thermal bath architecture. Semicircular windows with two vertical pillars - also called the Diocletian window - were the typical window for illuminating Roman thermal baths. The entrance building is three-story, both side parts of the building are two-story, each with gable roofs. The entrance with a staircase in front is set back in a wide niche with a round arch. Above that, on the facade, the writing “Stadt-Bad” in typical Art Nouveau letters. Above that, on the 2nd floor, another semicircular window as a reference to the pool architecture and the designation MDCCCCV.

Due to the course of the terrain, the building has two basement floors in which shower baths, technology, etc. were housed. At the time it was built, the Stadtbad had particularly advanced technical equipment (ventilation and humidification system, heat exchanger system, heated corridors in the barefoot area). Today, parts of the original furnishings have been preserved inside, especially in the foyer (ticket booth, colored glass windows, doors, floors). The swimming pool (8 m × 17 m) with a gallery that is typical for baths of this time. Here originally figurative gargoyles and a ceiling painting rooted in antiquity. This probably no longer preserved, as in 1975 the existing Rabitz ceiling was replaced by a new suspended ceiling construction. Also changes to the facade: Originally exit on the upper floor from the swimming pool to the terrace, which was provided with a balustrade here, in the middle part according to plan documents a curved gable with a coat of arms and the semicircular window that is still present today, in the right part there were towed in the roof Gaupen and an exhaust air attachment, which was designed as a roof ridge. In 1999 it was abandoned and has been vacant since then.

Due to its former importance as well as its largely authentic state of preservation, this building is of great cultural-historical and architectural significance.

09228664
 


Apartment building in open development Benkertberg 2
(map)
1911 Testimony to the reform style, significance in terms of building history.

Three-story tenement house from 1911 with an extended mansard floor in open development. The front of the building faces the valley and is crowned by a large, four-axis roof structure with a mighty curved gable (here two oculi with stucco garlands). The entrance to the house, which is drawn into the facade, is also on this side. The ground floor with plastering and rectangular windows. A plaster cornice visually separates the upper floors, the facade of which is given a rhythm by different colors: darker "pilaster strips" lead into the design of the roof structure. Otherwise economical building decor in the fields between the windows of the 1st and 2nd floors. The windows on the outer axes and on the front of the house are wider on all floors. On the slope side, the stairwell pulled out from the building, with wooden verandas to the side. This residential building was the prelude to the development on Benkertbergstrasse, which was supposed to continue to Pestalozzistrasse, but was not realized in this form. In terms of its architectural design, it is a typical house by the architect Max Beer and has architectural significance.

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City fortifications Bruno-Matthes-Strasse
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around 1510 (city wall Wolkensteiner Strasse) City wall made of solid, unplastered quarry stone masonry, significance in terms of local history, urban development and the local image.

A 2.5 km long city wall (partially with a ditch in front) completely surrounded the town of Annaberg, which was founded in the 16th century on an almost circular area. Construction began in 1502 and was completed around 1540. The city fortifications had five gates (Bohemian Gate, Wolkenstein Gate, Buchholzer Gate, Mühltor and Frohnauer Gate), two gates and 19 towers. Some parts of the wall collapsed as early as the 17th century, all gates and some parts of the wall were abandoned in the middle of the 19th century in the course of the city's expansion. Around a quarter of the original complex has been preserved today, most of which are remnants of the wall in the north and south-west of the city and have been restored.

This section of the city wall accompanies Bruno-Matthes-Straße in the north-west of Annaberg. The wall has been preserved here at a great height and considerable length. On the inner side, there are buildings, often with a subordinate function, as well as the so-called theater barn. The city fortification is an urban development with a characteristic effect and a high monument value. It is also structural evidence of the history of mining and settlement in the Ore Mountains.

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Rental villa with enclosure
Rental villa with enclosure Bruno-Matthes-Strasse 2
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Around 1900 architectural significance.

Three-storey, massive tenement house, probably built after 1900, in open development on one of the main roads along the former city wall of Annaberg. The main view is characterized by the mighty triangular gable in the roof, with a second smaller one in front of it. This area has a decorative framework that contrasts decoratively with the otherwise plain plastered facade. The entrance to the building is approximately in the middle and has a double-leaf wooden door, the smooth plaster frame with a three-pass crown made of stucco and red clinker. The visually indicated relief arches above the windows are also made of red clinker bricks. Both outer axes of the main view are designed differently: the left side consists of two narrow windows on the ground floor and first floor, and a wide segmental arched window on the second floor, they are all connected in one axis with stucco reliefs. The axis on the right, below the ornamental framework starting on the 2nd floor, has a double window, a segmented arched window and also a stucco relief. Despite the unsuccessful installation of new windows, this is an example of a high-quality apartment building with architectural significance that has already overcome historicism.

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Villa with terrace and garden Bruno-Matthes-Strasse 18
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Around 1890 architectural significance.

Representative villa (late 19th century) with a large terrace and garden in open development on one of the main roads along the former city wall of Annaberg. The building was erected on the wooded slope above the train station and has one storey due to the steep slope to the street, but three storeys on the garden side. It is a massive building with orange-yellow brickwork, the corners of which are accentuated with sandstone rustics. The portal to the small entrance hall on the street side as well as all the window frames are also made of sandstone. The south side of the building has a central projection that continues into the roof and a gable roof connected to the slate-covered mansard roof of the main house. In addition, a large, green terrace was added to the building on this side. The valley side of the house is oriented towards the garden and is representative with a bay window.

Hardly changed, this villa is a high-quality example of the residential development of the upper class at the end of the 19th century. The fact that a location so close to the train station was chosen shows the builders' awareness of progress at the time. It is a building of architectural and historical interest.

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Residential and commercial building in a corner Buchholzer Strasse 1 Marked with 1907 Corner position to the market, urban, architectural and economic significance.

Four-storey dominant building on the south corner of the market as a prelude to the main shopping street Annabergs (Buchholzer Straße). The building is characterized by the open design of the two lower floors, here a glazed skeleton structure with natural stone clad frames and subtly decorated in the “capital area” (seven to three wide axes). Facade structure facing Buchholzer Straße with a mezzanine floor between the ground floor and the first floor. In the upper two floors and in the roof, residential use, the facade here in a play of plastered surfaces and decorative stone areas. Emphasis on the corner (inscription: "Built in 1907 v. Baumstrasse FJ Götze") through the formation of a turret with a curved hood. On both sides of the street there are ornamental gables in the roof, which illustrate the influence of both the reform style and the art nouveau. This also includes the formation of the wooden loggia in the roof area to the Große Kirchgasse.

This commercial building is of particular monumental value for the city of Annaberg, as it clearly shows the great economic and trading position in the first years of the 20th century. In terms of structure and design, the building resembles trading houses in major Saxon cities and is therefore both in terms of architectural history and urban planning of economic historical importance.

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Ore hammer house; former hotel, now a museum Buchholzer Strasse 2 In the core 16th - 18th century Former hotel building in a corner and in a closed development, with a rear hall extension; Corner location on the market square, characterizing the townscape, architectural and cultural-historical importance.

Monument text:

The building in the dominant position of the city today has 4 storeys and a slate-covered saddle roof with long dormer windows. Its simply decorated facade (with six to four axes) appears classicistic due to the cuboid plaster grooves and the formation of a frieze in the eaves area. Window frames cleaned up; Windows with historical lattice structure. Ground floor zone changed in favor of commercial use. At Buchholzer Strasse and Münzgasse extension with a hall from the 19th century. The use of the hall can be seen on the facade through high, arched, closed windows; this component with a flat roof and raised parapet. Located directly on the market square, it is one of the city's outstanding building sites. After 1500 there was a first development at this point, which was acquired by Barbara Uthmann's father in 1519. Remnants of the original building may have been preserved; In 1819 it was taken over by the Annaberg Museum Society and supplemented with a hall extension; One and a half storeys added in 1851, used as a hotel (museum) since 1863; Modifications in 1908 and in the 1920s. From 1948 used as a clubhouse by the Wismut; hence the name "Erzhammerhaus"; later culture house. After extensive renovation, it is now part of the “Manufactory of Dreams” (adventure museum). This building is one of the most important evidence of urban development not only in terms of architectural history and urban development, but also in terms of cultural history.

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Tenement house with a shop area, in a closed area Buchholzer Strasse 3 around 1885 with a shopping area, urban planning and architectural significance.

The four-storey building with a plastered facade is part of the closed development on Annaberg business street. Built in the last quarter of the 19th century, the building shows the typical design of apartment buildings with shops on the ground floor. The shop fitting on the ground floor from the construction period largely preserved with remains of an earlier stone rustic design. six window axes on the residential floors with simple walls, but decoratively designed window roofs on consoles, two of the windows with triangular roofing highlighted. Slate-covered mansard roof with later expansion for residential purposes.

The design of the tenement house illustrates a typical building task of the late 19th century. Due to its location and its authentic preservation, it is important both in terms of architectural history and, as part of the commercial street designed at that time, urban development.

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Apartment building with a shopping area, in a corner and semi-open development Buchholzer Strasse 4 1892 with shopping area, architectural and urban significance.

The four-storey historicist building with a decorative clinker brick facade is part of the closed development on Annaberg business street. Created in 1892, the building shows the typical structure of apartment buildings with shops on the ground floor. On the ground floor between the shop window pillars with plaster grooves and a capital-like finish, above as a transition to the residential floors plaster tape with decorative brackets. The three residential floors with red clinker cladding, interrupted by horizontal plaster strips. Emphasis on the sloping corner up to the roof area. Various shapes of the window walls: straight roofs as well as blown round arch and triangular gables to emphasize corners. As a counterpart to the decorated mirror surfaces laid out below the windows on the 1st floor, heavily decorated eaves (tooth cut, consoles, floral decorations) below the large roof overhang. Residential use also in the expanded mansard roof with standing dormer windows.

The design of the tenement house illustrates a typical building task of the late 19th century. Due to its location and its authentic preservation, it is important both in terms of architectural history and, as part of the commercial street designed at that time, urban development.

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Tenement house with shops, in closed development Buchholzer Strasse 5 around 1885 with a shopping area, urban planning and architectural significance.

The three-storey historicist building with a plastered facade is part of the closed development on Annaberg business street. Built in the last quarter of the 19th century, the building shows the typical design of apartment buildings with shops on the ground floor. Only the vertical elements of the shop window structure remain from the original design of the ground floor. The passage-like entrance in Art Nouveau style with the installation of shop windows also in the former corridor area of ​​the building suggest a renovation at the beginning of the 20th century, here the bars above the entrance, showcases and staircase door are still preserved.

The two upper floors with residential use and seven axes have a simple design: rhythmic alternation of flat and triangular window roofing on consoles on the 1st floor, windows on the 2nd floor stand on colored plaster tape with straight roofs. The eaves decorated with a serration support the essentially horizontal design of the facade. During an investigation of the cellars in 1996/97, the existence of a historical cultivation for water drainage was found, which indicates an early development of the property.

The design of the tenement house illustrates a typical building task of the late 19th century, a special feature is the redesign of the ground floor after the turn of the century in line with the emerging arcade shops in the big cities. Due to its location and its largely authentic state of preservation, it has both architectural and urban significance as part of the commercial street designed at that time.

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Residential and commercial building Buchholzer Strasse 6 1st quarter of the 19th century historical and urban significance.

As part of the structural development of Annaberg's main shopping street that began in the last quarter of the 19th century, this three-story building with its plastered facade (plaster and light natural stone) clearly shows design forms from the beginning of the 20th century. Erected as a residential and commercial building, both uses can be clearly seen on the facade. The ground floor and first floor are emphasized by large openings and a vertical structure; this zoning anticipates the design of the trading houses built later (in the 1910s and 20s). The second floor is visually separated by a horizontal ledge - this is where the residential use begins and continues in the attic. The window structure of the 6-axis facade comes from historicism, while in addition to the design of the business zone, the two dormitory-like roof structures with the curved roofs clearly show the design language of contemporary Art Nouveau, the metal railing in between comes from a more recent renovation. Also in the building decor, both historicist forms (consoles under the sills of the windows on the 2nd floor) and the beginning Art Nouveau (decoration of the capital-like endings of the pilaster strips on the 1st floor).

The design of the residential and commercial building represents a link between the typical building task of a tenement house from the late 19th century and the commercial buildings of the early 20th century. For this reason and the largely authentic preservation, it has both architectural and urban significance .

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Tenement house with shops, in closed development Buchholzer Strasse 7 around 1895 with shopping area, architectural and urban significance.

The three-storey building with a decorative clinker brick facade is part of the closed development on Annaberg business street. Created in the last quarter of the 19th century, the building shows the typical structure of the apartment buildings with shops on the ground floor. The large openings in the shop zone are separated from one another by plastered pillars, these with a capital-like finish. The subsequent plaster tape is limited on the two outer sides by decorative fields. The upper floors with residential use have a yellow clinker brick facade, from which the 6 richly decorated window axes stand out, as decorations here straight and triangular window canopies, relief arches that can be read in the clinker brickwork with apex stones above the windows, floral stucco decor and diamond-like shapes. Removed mansard roof with slate roofing.

The tenement house is a typical example of this construction project at the end of the 19th century and is of monumental value in terms of building history and urban development.

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Residential building with shop, in a closed area Buchholzer Strasse 9 Middle of the 19th century, probably older 09228754
 


Gloria palace
Gloria palace Buchholzer Strasse 10 1928 Typical cinema building of the 1920s, hall cubature preserved with rank, some furnishings, of particular importance in terms of building and cinema history.

This three-storey plastered solid structure, built in 1928, combines the functions of living, retail and cinema, which can each be read on the facade, but form a design unit. The ground floor zone has six openings with simple console arches (2 on the left to the shop, then the house entrance, the right to the foyer of the cinema), simple display cases for film advertising. The facade on the upper floor is extremely simple: it is structured by four flat pilaster strips and three horizontal plaster strips that visually connect the four central windows. The facade is dominated by the lettering "Gloria-Palast" between the 1st and 2nd floors (this has been at least since the 1960s). The actual cinema is located in a rear annex, which can be clearly seen in the street area (widening of Johannisgasse). Parts of the original furnishings have been preserved in the foyer and staircase, such as the pointed arched passage and the colored glass windows. What is rare is the fact that the cubature of the cinema is largely preserved, with its curved tier typical of the 1920s and the vaulted ceiling in the middle. However, the perception of the hall is impaired by the subsequent addition of two small halls in the rear tier, which, however, is a typical phenomenon of the cinema development of the 1990s in the new federal states.

In the rear area towards Johannisgasse, the view of the hall extension has been preserved almost unaltered, a floor plastered over a natural stone plinth with four window openings (here Carlfriedrich Claus's place of work). The stage of the cinema protrudes from the facade, the design feature of the 1920s is the shape of the eaves.

Overall, this is a monument with architectural and cinematic historical significance, which, due to its state of preservation, has a rarity value for the film theater building type.

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Apartment building with shop, in a semi-open development Buchholzer Strasse 11 around 1895 with shopping area, architectural and urban significance.

Three-storey, massive building with a plastered facade in a corner and half-open development. Its facade with seven to four axes is strikingly simple, with a shop area on the ground floor and residential use on the 1st and 2nd floors. The entrance to the house is off-center, drawn in, with a historic front door and skylight. The shop on the left side of the building in its shop window arrangement from the 19th century with the typical, narrow, decorated walkways between the shop windows and the shop entrance. A cornice visually separates the upper floor. Windows here with simple framing, profiled sill and T-bar. The roof covered with slate with roof houses and standing dormer windows.

The apartment building is part of the most important shopping street in Annaberg and, despite its simplicity, has architectural and urban significance.

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Residential and commercial building
More pictures
Residential and commercial building Buchholzer Strasse 12 in the core 1505, later changed with a shop, at its core an old town house, significance in terms of building history and local history.

This two-storey plastered building is a rarity in the closed development on Buchholzer Straße, which was essentially built around 1900. A town house from the 18th century has been preserved here, with some older furnishings from the 16th century (cellar and Vault). The cubature of the house is typical of the time it was built in the mid-18th century. The upper floor with seven window axes, the center is emphasized. The mansard roof with dormitories, above it a row of standing dormers, slate roofing. In the course of the structural development of the area, at the end of the 19th century / beginning of the 20th century, the ground floor was remodeled and a shop area was set up, which has been authentically preserved, including the historic door with garments (marked 1905). The rear area towards Johannisgasse, unlike the neighboring buildings, is not built over.

The building, which is relatively low compared to the surrounding area, has a rarity value, as a house from an older time has been preserved in a changed environment. Adjustments to new uses (shop fitting) can be read off easily. It has both architectural and urban significance as well as testimony to the change in the streetscape around the turn of the 20th century.

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City palace (based on the Palais Oppenheim in Dresden) with rear building Buchholzer Strasse 14 Marked 1884 representative sandstone facade, in the neo-renaissance style (based on the Palais Oppenheim, Dresden), built for the merchant and later national liberal politician Karl Crüwell, local historical, architectural and urban importance.

Three-storey building on an almost square base in the form of Italian palace architecture of the Renaissance. The facade with five axes is evenly and symmetrically structured. The ground floor rusticated with deep, arched window openings. Entrances drawn in on the sides, framed by half-columns. A triglyph cornice forms the upper end of the ground floor. The windows on the upper floor are framed by an aedicule, which consists of a low column balustrade, half-columns on both sides with Ionic capitals and entablature with triangular gables. Up to this area, the building follows its model (Palais Oppenheim), unlike in Dresden, the 2nd floor here is designed as a full floor with simpler window frames. Above it is a wide frieze with floral hangings and medallions. A serrated frieze forms the transition to the eaves. Roof flat in Italian style, hardly noticeable because of the roof overhang, with three dormers. Inscription on the facade: "Carl Crüwell, built 1884". The simple Merkur head above the right entrance refers to the purpose of the building as a business and trading seat. Some original fittings have been preserved in the stairwell. The rear building with an Art Nouveau facade design towards Johannisgasse is also interestingly structured. Particularly noteworthy here are the large six-part arched windows on the 2nd floor and the high gate entrance on the ground floor. Built for the merchant Karl Gottlob Crüwell, co-owner of the CG Flor company, a trimmings material store.

Due to its structural characteristics and its clear reference to the lost Dresden model, this building has a high testimony value, especially in terms of architectural history.

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Residential and commercial building in a corner
Residential and commercial building in a corner Buchholzer Strasse 15a Around 1895 historical and urban significance.

The four-storey building with a decorative clinker brick facade is part of the closed development on Annaberger business street on the corner of Siebenhäusergasse. The corner, as was common at the time, was broken polygonally. Built after 1900, the building shows forms borrowed from both historicism and art nouveau. The ground floor is open over a large area with slim vertical profiles to separate the large shop windows, supporting structure on the inside. The orange-red brick facade begins above a wide horizontal plaster strip. The windows on the 1st floor are large and wide with flat basket arches, slightly profiled walls and apex stones, here also commercial use. The two upper floors as well as the extended mansard floor with living rooms, the windows here individually or in pairs coupled with basket or segment arches. The decor of the facade, which visually draws the window axes of the 2nd and 3rd floors together, is unusual here: the transition from historicism (triangular gable as roofing, consoles) to Art Nouveau (decor of the plastered mirror) is clear here. The eaves cornice is also lavishly decorated.

This tenement house is of monumental value not only because of its urban significance and its authentic state of preservation, but it also highlights the further development of the facade design on this type of building from historicism to art nouveau.

09228761
 


Apartment building with a shop area, in closed development;  Back labeled
Apartment building with a shop area, in closed development; Back labeled Buchholzer Strasse 16 Marked 1900 with shopping area, architectural and urban significance.

The four-storey building with a decorative clinker brick facade is part of the closed development on Annaberg business street. Built around 1900, the building shows the structure of the apartment buildings typical of historicism, with shops on the ground floor. The 7-axis building, which extends over a wide plot, is symmetrically structured. On the ground floor in the middle of the entrance, shops on both sides, the rusticated pillars with a capital-like upper border are crowned by coat of arms-like, colored decorations in the plaster band above, followed by a strong cornice with a tooth cut. All other floors are for residential use: the opulence of the decoration within the perforated facade diminishes from bottom to top: on the ground floor there are triangular and segmental arch roofs, below the sills mirror surfaces with rich stucco. A Merkur head in the mirror of the central axis above the entrance door indicates commercial use. Due to the rich stucco as well as the narrow horizontal plaster strips on all floors, the otherwise typical two-dimensional effect of the clinker facade is subordinate in favor of a strong liveliness. The decorative clinker bricks in different colors also contribute to this. The eaves cornice is also heavily decorated with tooth cuts and consoles. Mansard roof with slate covering and dormer windows, each with paired windows.

The tenement house is a typical example of this construction project around 1900 and is of monumental value in terms of architectural history and urban development.

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Rear building, extension of Buchholzer Straße 18 Buchholzer Strasse 18 End of the 19th century Front building with shop area, significance in terms of building history and urban development.

The four-storey tenement house with only 4 axles was built on a relatively narrow lot, next to which a small alley runs. It shows the typical breakdown of this type of building at the end of the 19th century in the ground floor zone with store use and residential use on the upper floors. The design of the entrance portal with a massive looking portal is striking (simple pillars support an embossed arch with a diamond-like crown stone). The design of the upper floors has a neo-baroque style, including a repetition of the Bossen diamond apex motif above the windows on the 1st floor, windows on the 3rd floor with a rounded arch. The eaves cornice is heavily toothed and has a frieze underneath, this one with floral stucco hangings. Two dormers with paired windows in the slate roof. The rear building also has 4 floors, with an interplay of clinker and plastered surfaces on the facade. The two large arches, glazed over two floors, dominate here.

The building is a typical representative of this construction task and, due to its balanced design and authentic preservation, has architectural and urban significance.

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Tenement house with a shop area, in a closed area Buchholzer Strasse 19 Around 1895 with shopping area, architectural and urban significance.

The four-storey building with a decorative clinker brick facade is part of the closed development on Annaberg business street. Built in the last decade of the 19th century, the building shows the structure of the apartment buildings typical of historicism, with shops on the ground floor and living on the following floors. The seven-axis building, which extends over a wide plot, is symmetrically structured. The entrance in the middle of a high niche framed by half-columns with simple capitals, elaborately designed, historicist front door with high skylight, shops on both sides. As with most of these buildings, a wide horizontal band shows the transition to the brick-built residential floor zone. The rich décor on the floors varies: below the windows on the ground floor balustrades, triangular roofs as well as blown triangular gables on the outer paired windows, on the 1st floor the relief arches are made decoratively in clinker brickwork with apex stones, the windows on the 2nd floor with round arch roofing. Since the light-colored stucco decorations of the individual axes merge across floors, the remaining red clinker masonry looks like a pilaster strip. This tenement house has the typical structure of this building type, but a rather unusual facade design. It is of architectural and urban significance.

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Tenement house with shop, in closed development
Tenement house with shop, in closed development Buchholzer Strasse 22 Around 1895 with shop, architectural and urban significance.

This narrow tenement house with only four axes is part of the lower 3-storey building on Buchholzer Strasse in this area. In the last quarter of the 19th century this was converted into a shopping street with the apartment buildings typical of historicism with shops on the ground floor. Such a structure also shows this plastered massive building. The facade of the upper floors has a relatively restrained but balanced decor: on the 1st floor plaster grooves and triangular roofs above the windows, on the 2nd floor round arched windows with apex stones in the simply profiled walls, slightly set back in a rectangular plaster niche. Profiled eaves cornice to the roof, this expanded for residential use with an attic.

This tenement house is a successful example with a restrained decor for the implementation of the building task on a small plot and with a lower height. It has architectural and urban value.

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Tenement house with shop, in closed development
Tenement house with shop, in closed development Buchholzer Strasse 24 Around 1880 (according to the old list at the beginning of the 19th century) with shop, of importance in terms of building history.

The tenement house with a shop in a closed development, built around 1880, is a structural component of Buchholzer Strasse, which was given urban character towards the end of the 19th century. Above the ground floor with a contemporary shop front rise two upper floors with a very simple facade, separated by a narrow band, which then end in a very rich eaves cornice with floral ornamentation and heads. The flat gable roof has two slightly oversized dormers. The house has architectural and urban significance.

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Residential building with a shop area, in a closed area Buchholzer Strasse 25 Around 1885, probably older in the core with a shop zone, of importance in terms of building history and urban planning.

Within the closed development on Buchholzer Straße, this only two-storey building is one of the few objects that originated from the development before the mid-19th century. This building was, however, remodeled during the historicist era, in 1887 the master builders Horn & Uhlig carried out the renovation: the four-axle building has the typical shop zone design on the ground floor, the entrance to the house is framed by columnar wall templates, slightly drawn in with steps in front . Grooved plastered surfaces on the ground floor, plastered mirrors in the zone to the upper floor. The windows on the upper floor were also decorated with a period decor in the 19th century (plaster strips and simple window canopies). The gable roof has two standing dormers that were added later. During an examination of the barrel vaulted cellar in 1996/97, the existence of a historical cultivation for water drainage was found, which indicates an early development of the property.

This building is a rarity, as it documents the handling of older building fabric during the expansion of the shopping street in the context of urban development; it is of architectural and local significance.

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Tenement house with shop, in closed development Buchholzer Strasse 28 19th century with shop, architectural and local historical significance.

This narrow apartment building with only four axes is part of the lower, three-story development on Buchholzer Straße in this area. This was expanded into a shopping street in the last quarter of the 19th century. While almost exclusively new buildings were built in the vicinity of the market, some of the older building fabric was remodeled in this section. On the ground floor, this property shows the typical 19th century shop area (first installation in 1885), which, in its simplicity, is the result of more recent renovations. The facade of the two upper floors with residential use shows a neo-baroque structure, but in the details of the flat, color-contrasting plaster ornamentation, it is already committed to the design language of Art Nouveau. Simply profiled eaves cornice to the roof, this expanded for residential use with an attic, above a row of standing dormers. It was not until 1912 that the building had its third floor and the mansard roof (instead of the previous saddle roof), and the ground floor was changed in 1924. Between 1908 and 1939, the bandagist Julius Dittert, for whom various builders worked, acted as the builder.

This building is a testament to the structural and creative handling of older building fabric when Buchholzer Strasse was expanded into a commercial street. Despite the current appearance of the ground floor, it has a special architectural and local historical value.

09228765
 


Residential building with a shop area, in a closed area Buchholzer Strasse 29 Around 1885, in essence probably older 09228767
 


Residential and commercial building Buchholzer Strasse 31 Around 1895 with shopping area, architectural and urban significance.

The four-storey building is part of the closed development on Annaberg business street and towers over the surrounding buildings by one floor. The entrance to the house on the left with a two-wing historical front door and high skylight, the area next to it as a shop with the narrow walkways that separate the large openings, which is typical of the 19th century. The first floor was probably also used for commercial purposes, as the facade is designed differently here than on the residential floors: decorative plastering instead of the clinker cladding on the second and third floors. The windows of the 5-axis building are combined in pairs on the outside, on the 1st floor they have a round arch with decorated fighters, apex stones and half columns (between the coupled windows), on the 2nd floor they are basket-shaped and on the 3rd floor they are segmented. The window axes of the two floors of the apartment are visually drawn together thanks to their decorative design with mirrors, crowns and profiled walls. The eaves cornice with decorative brackets, the roof covered with slate and expanded with a wide structure for residential purposes. During an investigation of the cellars in 1996/97, the existence of a mined cellar (a rarity for Annaberg) was found, which indicates an early development of the property.

This residential and commercial building therefore has architectural, local and mining historical and urban significance.

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Commercial building
Commercial building Buchholzer Strasse 32 1900 historical and urban significance.

Four-storey residential and commercial building as part of the closed development on Annaberg's main shopping street at the junction with Johannisgasse. In contrast to the surrounding buildings with several residential floors, commercial use dominated here (3 floors), which can be clearly seen on the facade. On the ground floor to the left is the entrance to the house, next to it is a shopping area with large shop windows. Above are two business floors with four narrow windows each, which are combined into four groups. Narrow webs between the windows and pilaster strips with lion-headed capitals between the groups of four give the facade a strong vertical emphasis. This ends at a sturdy cornice with a toothed frieze. Then the 4th floor and top floor with residential use. Here white clinker brick as the facade material and a completely different design: 6 rectangular windows with curtain arches and half-columns, below the eaves stucco reliefs. The middle two axes are emphasized by a roof structure with a triangular gable, each flanked by a small turret.

The mix of architectural styles (Art Nouveau in the commercial part and historicism in the residential floors) reflects the building's historical development: In 1900, the architect Wenzel Bürger from Chemnitz realized a residential and commercial building (similar to Wolkensteiner Straße 2a) with a lush decor, the so-called. "Arnold Frank department store". After a fire in 1911, repairs had to be carried out, whereby the 2nd floor was also used for commercial purposes and the facade on the lower floors was redesigned accordingly. It was also at this point that the close structural connection with the Johannisgasse 1 building began by creating a large, commercially used room from the two ground floors. During a comprehensive change of use in 1936 when the department store (initially Arnold Frank, then Krell & Co and finally department store Schmitt) was converted into a residential building, the facade design was hardly changed. With its eventful building history and excellent design quality, the property is important in terms of building and economic history as well as urban planning.

Since 2015 only the facade (and the stairwell) of the building, which is important in terms of urban development and architectural history, has been a cultural monument, as the rest of the building structure had to be abandoned in the course of conversion measures.

09228773
 


today Café Excellent Buchholzer Strasse 33 Around 1885 Formerly with a café on the ground floor, significance in terms of building history.

The three-storey building adjoins the closed development of Annaberg's main shopping street from the 19th and early 20th centuries on the market side. Out of town, however, there is a narrow gap between the neighboring buildings, here the formation of a fire wall without openings. The five-axis plastered solid building differs from the surrounding buildings in that its ground floor is not open as a large shop, but has arched window openings due to its earlier use as a café, the entrance also arched, grooved plaster surfaces. The two floors adjoining the upper floor have a simple, but typically historical design: Windows on the 1st floor with simple plastered mirrors below the sills and the straight roofs, the central axis highlighted by a triangular roof. Windows on the 2nd floor are unadorned except for profiled sills with consoles. Simple eaves cornice, slate mansard roof with dormer windows.

Due to its urban location and its structural design, it is an individual monument of architectural and urban value.

09228769
 


Tenement house with a shop area, in a closed area
Tenement house with a shop area, in a closed area Buchholzer Strasse 34 Around 1890 with shopping area, architectural and urban significance.

In the last decade of the 19th century, this four-storey apartment building was built within the closed development on Annaberg's main shopping street. The 7-axis plastered building is constructed symmetrically and has the shop zone common for this type of building on the ground floor, while the middle axis protrudes flat over the entire building like a risk. Here also the slightly indented entrance, which, like the outer pillar-like wall sections on the ground floor, is optically highlighted by plastering, the ground floor is contrasted in color from the upper floors. On the upper floors, various decorations on the windows: including straight and triangular window canopies, arched surfaces with floral stucco decor over the openings, horizontal colored plaster strips, the central axis particularly emphasized: here additional decorative plaster grooves. Eaves cornice with consoles and garland decorations, slate-covered mansard roof with 5 dormers.

The design of the tenement house illustrates the implementation of this typical building task of the late 19th century with the demand for more living space. Due to its location and its largely authentic preservation, it has both architectural significance and, as part of the commercial street designed at that time, urban planning importance.

09228772
 


City fortifications, Buchholzer Tor Buchholzer Strasse 36
(map)
Probably 1508 (part of the city fortifications and aggregate) later rebuilt for residential purposes, significance in terms of building history and local development.

The large round tower as part of the earlier city fortifications at the Buchholzer Tor consists of solid rubble stone masonry. It was built as a corner tower in 1508/09, but is said to have been ruinous as early as the 18th century. In 1846 the ruin of the tower was sold, which was expanded in 1853 for residential purposes and merged with a newly built house on Buchholzer Strasse. Since then, the exterior of the tower has been characterized by the many small segment arched window openings that are arranged in pairs. In total, the tower has 5 floors on the valley side and a conical roof. During an examination of the cellars in 1996/97, the presence of a monastery vault and three barrel vaults were found, which indicates an early development of the property.

As part of Annaberg's earlier fortifications, this tower with its new use is of great architectural and local historical interest.

09228774
 


Residential and commercial building
Residential and commercial building Buchholzer Strasse 37 Marked 1904 historical and urban significance.

The four-storey massive building is part of Annaberg's main shopping street. Unlike the surrounding buildings with predominantly plastered or clinker facades, this building has an ashlar facade. The structure of the facade is also special: the two lower floors are visually connected to one another by the formation of three large, slightly ogival, glazed openings. The pillars of the arches continue like pilasters on the upper floors, with an obelisk-like decoration placed in the area of ​​the fighter. The optical coupling of the ground floor and first floor illustrates the commercial use of the two levels, while the subsequent floors and the top floor are reserved for residential use. On the 2nd floor three pairs of windows with half columns, on the 3rd floor round arched windows, in the middle as a pair, outside as a group of three. The gable roof with two outer arched dormers above a sturdy eaves cornice. The central zone is dominant, where the facade continues in the roof level and ends in a pointed cloverleaf gable.

This building was erected in 1904 by one of the most renowned architects Annaberg (Goetze) and is one of the few buildings with a complete ashlar facade. As an early example of a residential and commercial building with a clear emphasis on the commercial area, it has great architectural and urban value.

09228770
 


Apartment building with shop, in a semi-open development
Apartment building with shop, in a semi-open development Buchholzer Strasse 39 Around 1880 with shop, architectural and urban significance.

Coming from the outside, the four-story building forms the prelude to Annaberg's main shopping street (within the former city wall). The massive, plastered structure with six to four axes and the steep mansard roof looks almost palais-like, as the ground floor is not open to large areas like many neighboring buildings, but has a perforated facade. Ground floor above a plinth (basement window) rusticated with rectangular windows, the entrance to the shop has been drawn in with a step system in front and pillars with a decorated, capital-like closure. The entrance to the house on the left is also drawn in, but has a simpler design with a historical, two-winged door. The central axis of the residential floors is emphasized and laterally delimited by fluted, flat, pillar-like wall templates with capitals. The middle windows with segment-arched roofing and decoration with aesculapian staff (connection to medical or pharmaceutical use). All windows with profiled sills on decorative brackets, T-bars and changing crowns. The emphasis on the center continues with a wide dormer window (group of 3 windows) with a triangular gable in the roof: there, to the side and to the narrow side of the house.

With its palais-like architecture, this tenement has a special architectural and urban monument value.

09228771
 


Apartment building in closed development Buchholzer Strasse 49 around 1885 historical and urban significance.

The three-storey tenement house, built around 1885, is part of the closed development on the part of Buchholzer Strasse that was formerly in front of the city wall. The six-axis facade has a uniform, rather flat design. The entrance is in the left axis and is set into the building line. The facade of the ground floor with plastered rustics and rectangular windows in a simple frame. The first floor adjoining above a cornice has most of the architectural decoration: the windows here with straight roofs, consoles and stucco surfaces as well as angular sills with stucco mirrors. The window frames on the 2nd floor are similar, but a little simpler in detail. The slate-covered saddle roof with three roof houses (double windows).

The tenement house, which was probably built in the 1880s, shows a barely changed, restrained facade design and is of architectural and urban significance due to its authentic state of preservation.

09228829
 


Apartment building in closed development Buchholzer Strasse 51 Around 1885 historical and urban significance.

The three-storey tenement house, built around 1885, is part of the closed development on the part of Buchholzer Strasse that was formerly in front of the city wall. The seven-axis facade is emphasized by a flat central projection over three axes. This one on the ground floor with a ribbon structure on the pillars between the rectangular windows and a tooth-cut frieze at the transition to the upper floor. The three central windows of each of the upper floors are arched with a crown stone and integrated into a pilaster structure. These outside with Ionic capitals and, as a creative enhancement, caryatid-like figures on the middle two pilaster strips. There is a blind balustrade below each window. This emphasis on the center continues a little narrower in the attic, where three coupled arched windows in a kind of dwarf house. The slate-covered mansard roof has two more dormer windows with double windows. The two outer axes of the plastered solid building are designed less elaborately: the windows here are rectangular with different building decor on the floors (triangular roofing, sill with brackets, etc.) The access to the house is drawn in, in the left axis with a historic front door. With its representative facade design, this residential building stands out from the average tenement house of that time.

In addition to its urban significance as part of the closed development in the course of the Annaberg city expansion in the 19th century, it also has a special architectural and historical significance.

09228830
 


Apartment building in closed development Buchholzer Strasse 53 Around 1885 09228831
 


Apartment building in closed development Buchholzer Strasse 55 Around 1885 09228832
 


Apartment building with modern shop fittings, in closed development Buchholzer Strasse 63
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Around 1890 with modern shop fittings, urban significance.

The four-story massive tenement house is part of the closed development of the part of Buchholzer Strasse that was formerly in front of the city wall. Except for changes on the ground floor in the course of the modernization of the shops, the building presents itself as a typical building from the late 19th century. The ground floor with deep plaster grooves and a retracted entrance. The upper floors are smoothly plastered with rectangular openings on the 1st and 2nd floors and arched windows on the 3rd floor. The two outer axes of the seven-axis facade are drawn slightly forward. All windows with building decor typical of the time, such as triangular or straight roofs, decorative brackets on the sills and crown stones. The emphasis on the outer axes can also be seen in the roof area, where there are decorative roof structures with three windows and segmented arched gables.

As a typical example of a tenement house from this period, the property has architectural value. In addition, as part of the closed development in the course of the Annaberg city expansion in the 19th century, it is of urban significance.

09228833
 


Apartment building with modern shop fittings, in closed development Buchholzer Strasse 65
(map)
Around 1890 with modern shop fitting, architectural and urban significance.

The four-storey, massive tenement house, built around 1890, forms the end of the closed development on Buchholzer Strasse and is located in the immediate vicinity of the Annaberg Theater. The building with six axes is plastered and its design is largely shaped by the formation of horizontal bands. These separate both the ground floor with the modern shop fittings and the deeply drawn-in entrance from the upper floor, as well as the upper floors from one another, as the window roofs are coupled with one another. The two outer axes are emphasized in each case: these are slightly pulled out of the building line and have a segmented arched gable on the 1st floor. All windows are rectangular with a T-bar. A strong frieze with decorative consoles emphasizes the eaves. The top floor is dominated by a striking roof structure over four axes with a wide triangular gable. This makes it stand out from its neighboring buildings in terms of design, but is basically a typical example of an apartment building of this time with architectural value. In addition, as part of the closed development in the course of the Annaberg city expansion in the 19th century, it is of urban significance.

09228834
 


Eduard-von-Winterstein-Theater
More pictures
Eduard-von-Winterstein-Theater Buchholzer Strasse 67
(map)
1891-1893 architectural and cultural-historical importance.

The two-storey theater building with a rectangular floor plan was created in 1891-93 with funds from the Theater Building Association. Architect Bernhard Schreiber (including Alberttheater Dresden) provided the design with an elaborate façade in the neo-renaissance style facing Buchholzer Straße: the ground floor with three arched entrances is rusticated, the central projection is emphasized by a portico. A colossal structure with Ionic capitals surrounds the upper floor with the three large round-arched windows with apex stones and balustrades as well as a mezzanine floor with small double windows. In the gable triangle there are lyre, lions and masks that indicate the use of the building as a theater. The auditorium consists of parquet and a tier and at the opening had 685 seats and 200 standing places. Well-known modernization work was the installation of electrical lighting in 1911, renovation work in 1951/52 and extensive refurbishment with new stage technology from 1976–1981 (including mobile orchestra recess, lighting bridge, recessed person), extension with a boiler room, restaurant and studio stage and modernization of the auditorium. The last extensive construction work was carried out in 1993, so that the theater has had 295 seats and 57 seats in the studio stage since then. On the side of the main building there is an extension with four small windows on the upper floor as well as further functional buildings in the rear property.

The Eduard-von-Winterstein-Theater is a theater building typical of the 19th century. It is one of the smaller examples in Saxony, but is nonetheless important in terms of building, cultural history and urban planning.

09228835
 


Representative villa (probably manufacturer's villa) Buchholzer Strasse 75
(map)
Around 1910, essentially 1863 Villa of silk cord manufacturer Carl Schmidt, significance in terms of architectural history and urban development.

Three-storey, massive Art Nouveau rental villa with an extended mansard roof in an open development at the end of Buchholzer Strasse above Theaterplatz. The building rises above a rectangular floor plan, but both the entrance component and a central projection protrude from the building line. On the city side, an extension with verandas and balcony. The plastered facade on a natural stone plinth, with plaster grooves on the ground floor. The arched entrance with a staircase in front and a door from the building period. The windows in different formats and decorations, the eye-catcher is the design of the central risalit with high gable. Here building decor of Art Nouveau: lateral pilaster strips with fields with geometric patterns, color-contrasting coat of arms-like decorations between the windows of the 2nd floor. The roof is slated and expanded for residential use. In the gable area on the outskirts of the city ornamental framework, in a gable tip a cartridge marked "S". This refers to the builder Carl August Schmidt. He had taken over both the neighboring factory (Heisen & Co) and the house, then in the Swiss style. After several minor structural changes, the house was comprehensively changed and expanded in 1907/08, the ground floor and upper floor of the previous building were integrated into the redesign. The renowned builder Götze from Annaberg was responsible. The building has been largely preserved in this design, so that it is essentially a high-quality Art Nouveau villa with architectural and urban value.

09228861
 


Cast iron railings and lanterns Buchholzer Strasse and Theaterplatz Around 1900, re. 1905 multi-part staircase with cast iron railing, urban significance.

Multi-part staircase that connects Buchholzer with Rathenaustraße right next to the theater. This facility was built in 1905 as a so-called theater staircase instead of the earlier Benkertberg footpath. The outside staircase is 3.50 m wide and consists of 214 steps. It has cast iron railings on the sides and decorative lanterns. At the upper end there is a small fountain with a lion's head as a gargoyle on the retaining wall of the uppermost section of the stairs. At this point the stairs split and lead up to Rathenaustraße with two arms. This open staircase represents an important pedestrian connection between the two parallel streets and is primarily of importance for urban planning, but also for the history of local development.

09228843
 
Rondel with the remaining tombstones from the destroyed Jewish cemetery Chemnitzer Strasse before 1945 historical meaning.

In 1938 the Jewish cemetery on Chemnitzer Strasse was desecrated and leveled in 1940. The cemetery hall was blown up. 17 preserved tombstones from the cemetery were moved to the city's new cemetery in 1956. They were placed in a roundabout around a high memorial stone for the Jews murdered during the Nazi era.

09229030
 
door Emil-Finck-Strasse 3
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Around 1885 09228531
 


door Emil-Finck-Strasse 5
(map)
Around 1885 09228532
 


Apartment building in closed development Emil-Finck-Strasse 9
(map)
Around 1885 Rusting facade, architectural and urban significance.

Three-storey tenement house just outside the historic center of Annaberg, in the area of ​​a city expansion in the 19th century. Massive plastered building with a perforated facade, ground and 1st floor with decorative plastering. The entrance is slightly drawn in with a step system in front, the walls are simply profiled. Window walls with restrained profiling, on the 1st floor with straight roofing, sills on the upper floors profiled with decorative brackets. The two middle windows of the 6-axis facade are highlighted by mirrors with flat stucco decorations below the sill and above the vestments on the 2nd floor. Slate-covered gable roof with standing dormers.

This tenement house is of monumental value from an architectural and urban planning point of view, but through its authentic preservation it shows the design requirements that were placed on the residential buildings in the second half of the 19th century, also outside the major streets of the city.

09228530
 


Apartment building with shop, in a corner and closed development Emil-Finck-Strasse 13
(map)
09228528
 


Apartment building in half-open development Emil-Finck-Strasse 25
(map)
Marked 1904 historical and urban significance.

Four-storey, massive tenement house in semi-open development as the city-side prelude to a perimeter block development consisting of five similar buildings. The entrance to the residential building is on the left in the six-axis facade. He has moved deep into the house and has a staircase made up of four steps and a double-leaf door. It is emphasized by a portal with a segmented arched gable in Art Nouveau decor, here the designation "1904". The windows of the plastered street view are rectangular, with a T-shaped sprout and a uniform, decorative sandstone frame with a curved roof, only the windows on the 3rd floor are slightly differentiated. Due to the uniform design and the lack of prominent protrusions and recesses, the facade appears quite flat. Lt. According to the architectural drawing, the building originally had a different appearance: an expanded mansard roof instead of the 3rd floor and a staggered round arched gable as a central gable over two axes. The documents do not indicate when the facade was changed.

This residential building is of architectural significance and, especially in the ensemble with the neighboring buildings, of great urban value. All objects on this line were created by the builder Friedrich Nestler, who owned the land. Some of the objects remained in his possession, some were sold after completion. Together they form an interesting example of the Annaberg city expansion after 1900 in a north-easterly direction.

09228526
 


Apartment building in closed development Emil-Finck-Strasse 27
(map)
Marked 1905 historical and urban significance.

Four-storey, massive apartment building in closed development as part of a perimeter block development consisting of five similar buildings. The entrance to the residential building is in the middle of the seven-axis facade. He has moved deep into the house and has a staircase made up of four steps and a two-leaf contemporary door. It is emphasized by an Art Nouveau portal, here the designation "1905". The windows of the plastered street view are mostly rectangular, with T-bars and a decorative sandstone frame. This varies greatly, including curved roofs, curtain arches and three-pass-like designs, all in the expression of Art Nouveau. The two outer axes are emphasized and end in the attic as a triangular gable. Above the middle of the slate roof is a wide dormer window over four axes. There are some changes compared to the building files: the gables above the side axes were curved with segmental arches, the ground floor had plaster grooves and there were horizontal bands between the windows on the upper floor, which made the view less flat. The documents do not reveal when a change was made to the facade.

This residential building with Art Nouveau elements has architectural significance and, especially in the ensemble with the neighboring buildings, it is of great urban value. All objects on this line were created by the builder Friedrich Nestler, who owned the land. Some of the objects remained in his possession, some were sold after completion. Together they form an interesting example of the Annaberg city expansion after 1900 in a north-easterly direction.

09228525
 


Apartment building in closed development Emil-Finck-Strasse 29
(map)
Inscribed 1909 historical and urban significance.

Four-storey, massive apartment building in closed development as part of a perimeter block development consisting of five similar buildings. The entrance to the residential building is on the left in the six-axis facade. He has moved deep into the house and has a staircase made up of five steps and a double-leaf door. It is emphasized by a flat-looking Art Nouveau portal with a curved gable. Below this is an unusual decoration that can be associated with textile lace design. The windows of the plastered street view are rectangular, with T-shaped bars and decorative framing. This varies greatly, including curtain arches, round-arch frieze-like and shoulder-arched designs, all in the expression of Art Nouveau. In addition, the facade is richly provided with stucco surfaces, friezes and various roofs. The center of this building is emphasized by the formation of a dwelling above the two central axes, this with a curved gable end, here the designation "1909". At the side two roof houses with double windows in the slate-covered gable roof.

There are some differences compared to the construction drawing, especially in terms of decor and roof structure. The documents do not indicate when the facade was changed.

This residential building with influences from Art Nouveau is of architectural significance and, especially in the ensemble with the neighboring buildings, of great urban value. All objects on this line were created by the builder Friedrich Nestler, who owned the land. Some of the objects remained in his possession, some were sold after completion. Together they form an interesting example of the Annaberg city expansion after 1900 in a north-easterly direction.

09228524
 


Apartment building in closed development Emil-Finck-Strasse 31
(map)
Around 1907 09228523
 


Apartment building in half-open development Emil-Finck-Strasse 33
(map)
1910 historical and urban significance.

Three-story, massive tenement house with an extended mansard in a corner and half-open development as part of a perimeter block development consisting of five similar buildings. This property on the corner of Felix-Weisse-Straße forms the prelude to this ensemble of buildings out of town. The corner house has five to five axes and a beveled corner with another window axis. The arched entrance with a rather simple portal and the original door with skylight is designed much more restrained than in the neighboring buildings. The windows of the plastered facade on the ground floor are arched, otherwise rectangular with a T-bar. The view is dominated by the two mighty curved gables on both sides of the street. A flat, arched bay window is also formed in the middle of Emil-Finck-Straße from the 1st floor. This motif is repeated on the corner between the 1st and 2nd floor. The windows on the upper floors have a frieze-like frame that extends like a ribbon between the windows on top of each other and thus forms tracks. A small decorative element on the enclosed area, the whole area in contrasting color. The mansard roof is provided with a slate roof. In comparison with the construction drawings, it is noticeable that the building was planned with more architectural decor (including pilaster strips with decorative capitals, friezes in the round arches of the openings on the ground floor). When the facade was changed cannot be taken from the documents. This residential building with influences from Art Nouveau and its distinctive gables is of architectural significance and, especially in the ensemble with the neighboring buildings, of great urban value. All objects on this line were created by the builder Friedrich Nestler, who owned the land. Some of the objects remained in his possession, some were sold after completion. Together they form an interesting example of the Annaberg city expansion after 1900 in a north-easterly direction.

09228522
 


Evangelical Methodist Church Emilienberg 10
(map)
1926 (church) Erected as an ensemble, expressionistic design, architectural and social historical significance.

Church building in open development as an ensemble with the parsonage belonging to it, erected in 1926 in an expressionist style. The church as a cubic, plastered structure with a natural stone base on a rectangular floor plan. The hall extends over two floors, which is evident from the elongated, high-rectangular windows on the facade. The north-east side was designed as the show side and emphasized by the central tower, this with a square floor plan, small windows in the shaft and a larger ogival window on the top floor. The conclusion is formed by a flat tent roof with a simple cross. The transition from the facade surface to the tower wall is designed as a stepped gable-like shape. Below the tower is the main entrance to the church, which consists of a double-leaf wooden door with an expressionist. Decor, bordered on the sides by two widening natural stone pillars that support the entablature-like roof. On each side of the entrance two small barred square windows, the facade otherwise without openings. The building has a slate hipped roof with a large overhang. Inside, a prayer room with a gallery was set up as the centerpiece, several function rooms and a small caretaker's apartment on the basement level facing the garden. The ensemble also includes the rectory that was built at the same time, this two-storey on an approximately square floor plan, base and plaster design analogous to the church building, small porch as entrance, tent roof with slate covering.

Both houses were built by the Annaberg master builder Götze, who primarily realized objects characterized by Art Nouveau. This building ensemble, however, shows a high-quality implementation of expressionist forms of architectural significance.

The community of this faith, which has existed in Annaberg since 1888, was finally able to build its own house in 1926, so that it is also of value in terms of social and church history. In 1951 the hall received a Jehmlich organ.

09228847
 


Pöhlberg Tower
Pöhlberg Tower Ernst-Roch-Strasse
(map)
Marked 1896 Landmarks of historical and landscape significance.

The 35 m high tower was built in connection with a hotel and excursion restaurant on the occasion of the 400th anniversary of the founding of the city of Annaberg and opened on July 12, 1897.

The observation tower with a square floor plan was originally made of clinker brickwork with colored bands, the viewing area was open and provided with a parapet. Today the tower is presented in white with a wood-clad structure for the viewing area. The actual entrance is via a single-storey entrance in front of the tower. Overall, the tower has a four-zone structure, the uppermost area of ​​which is the wood-clad viewing floor with a five-part horizontal ribbon of windows on each side. The mountain hotel that was built at the same time has a simple, cubic structure on a rectangular floor plan with a hipped roof. This, too, was originally made of exposed masonry, but now has wooden cladding. Initiated by various associations and finally commissioned by the city through a building fund, the Pöhlberg Tower is not just a visual landmark of the city. It has both architectural and local significance.

09229033
 


Apartment building in closed development Ernst-Roch-Strasse 1
(map)
1912, 1914-1916 Parts of the original furnishings have been preserved in the hallway and stairwell, significance in terms of building history and urban development.

The three-storey building within a closed development exclusively with tenement houses is an example of the reform architecture in Annaberg at the beginning of the 20th century. Located on an irregular, flat-angled corner plot, its high facade with five to six axes looks monumental. This effect is further supported by the tall, dormitory-like roof structures on both views (one with a triangular gable, the other with a curved shape typical of the time). The three plastered residential floors with simple windows (T-floor) without cladding above a colored base. The simple facade with a few horizontal bands is dominated by three bay-like additions on the 2nd and 3rd floors, here and on the roof gables, subtle decorative plaster reliefs. The slate-covered mansard roof expanded for residential use. Essential elements have been retained from the furnishings: porch door with colored glass and cut glass, ceiling stucco, tiles, doors, banisters with candelabra on the mezzanine floor, colored glass windows, floor, handles and doorknobs. It was built in 1914 by the architect Max Beer within the newly developed residential area (originally the Steigerhaus, cable car and the municipal building yard were located here). Despite the beginning of the First World War, the first purchase permits were issued in 1916. The residents were well-off citizens such as the factory owner Martin Berthold (Schubert & Berthold, mechanical hemp spinning mill). This building is an important testimony to the implementation of new architectural ideas at the beginning of the 20th century, both in terms of its external design and the preservation of its original features. With the turning away from historicism towards reform architecture, this example shows the reflection on the objective and functional in connection with reduced forms and simple decor. It thus has documentary value and in terms of monument protection, architectural and urban significance.

09228981
 


Apartment building in closed development Ernst-Roch-Strasse 3
(map)
Around 1914 Fully preserved furnishings in the hallway and stairwell, significance in terms of building history and urban development.

The three-storey apartment building is part of the residential area (Lindenstrasse, Ernst-Roch-Strasse, Schillerstrasse), which was built almost at the same time as the building, with closed buildings at the beginning of the 20th century. The relatively simple facade with eight axes (window openings directly from the surface) with two horizontal bands is enlivened by the two differently designed oriels. The mansard roof used for residential purposes is accentuated by a dwelling with a high triangular gable. Essential elements of the furnishings have probably been preserved: doors, door handles, wall and ceiling stucco, floors, tiles, colored glass windows with cut glass, railings with a candelabra-like structure. The last renovation is disadvantageous in terms of the original appearance, mainly due to the unhistorical window structure and the extensive glazing of the gable. Nevertheless, due to its equipment and as part of the building ensemble, this building has an important architectural and urban significance.

09228951
 
Residential house in semi-open development Farbegasse 1
(map)
After 1731 Cross vaults in the hallway and stairwell, significance in terms of local history and building history.

Two-storey, massive residential building on a rectangular floor plan, built in half-open development in downtown Annaberg after the city fire of 1731. The eaves side with six window axes, walls only indicated in color, historically adapted lattice windows, the entrance with a slight segmental arch, a narrow cornice between the ground floor and the upper floor. Gable side with two windows per storey (one of which is atypical for the construction period and has a square shape). Eaves cornice cleaned and simply profiled with a half rod. The hipped roof is covered with slate with two rows of standing dormers facing the Farbegasse, with two dormer windows at the back and small roof windows lying flat. Cross vaults in the hallway and stairwell. A renovation took place in 2003-2005. During an investigation of the cellars in 1996/97, the existence of a historical sluice for water drainage and the formation of the rock as a platform (storage of barrels) were found. This building is a typical representative of the residential development of the 18th century in Annaberg. Due to the preservation of the structure including the vault, it is relevant to the preservation of historical monuments due to its architectural and local historical significance.

09228921
 


Entrance door inside Farbegasse 2
(map)
Around 1900, after 1731? historical and urban significance.

Two-storey, massive residential building on a rectangular floor plan in semi-open development, which was built after the city fire of 1731. The 7-axis facade (two axes in the gable) above a base made of quarry stone, with the entrance in the middle with a step system in front. The windows simply without cladding, with cross bars and partly winter windows. Profiled eaves cornice, the hipped roof with clapboard and two rows of vertical dormer windows. During an examination of the cellars in 1996/97, a walled-in corridor was found and a historical cultivation for water drainage was suspected, which points to an early development of the property. The building files reveal that there was a dye works in this building. The extension to Mandelgasse was increased by one floor in 1910. A special vestibule door is said to have been preserved inside, which refers to a renovation around 1900. The building belongs to the typical development of the 18th century in the Annaberg city center and is of architectural and urban value.

09228922
 


Residential house with Gothic keel arch, in closed development Farbegasse 4
(map)
16th century and later 09228920
 


Residential complex with extension Feldgasse 9, 11, 13
(map)
Around 1908 09228516
 


Former judicial officer residential building Felix-Weise-Strasse 9
(map)
1906 09229155
 


Apartment house in a corner and closed development Fichtestrasse 1
(map)
Around 1900 urban significance.

Elongated four-storey tenement house (historicism) in a corner and closed development. While the ground floor of the solid construction is plastered, the orange-yellow brick facade of the upper floors begins above a cornice. Red clinker bricks were used decoratively as horizontal bands as well as to emphasize the segmental arches above the windows on the 1st floor and the relief arches of the windows on the 2nd floor. The windows themselves on the ground floor and first floor are segmented arches, on the two upper floors they are rectangular. The eye-catcher of the quite flat facade design are the windows on the 2nd floor with their stucco surfaces and profiled sills. To Fichtestrasse in the roof area a large roof house with double windows. Taken individually, the building from 1900 appears relatively inconspicuous in combination with the neighboring buildings, which have similarly designed clinker brick facades. Above all, it has an urban development value.

09228985
 


Apartment house in a corner Fichtestrasse 9
(map)
Marked 1904 Apartment house in corner position and half-open development; historical and urban significance.

Unusual four-storey apartment building with a converted mansard storey in a corner and half-open development. The angled building was erected at the confluence of Fichtestrasse and Lindenstrasse and thus has three fronts, the design of which has Art Nouveau influences. The view of Fichtestrasse with its 7 even axes resembles that of other apartment buildings: the entrance is retracted and slightly off-center with a massive portal. Lateral pillars with a boss-like decoration carry a segmental arched gable that appears to be "blown up", in whose now enlarged inner field there is an oval window and the name "1904". The façade of the upper floors adjoins a base zone made of porphyry stone, where plastered surfaces alternate with white clinker bricks. The axis given by the entrance extends to the top floor, where it ends as a small dwelling with a curved gable. Much more interesting, however, is the corner solution facing Lindenstrasse: from the 2nd floor onwards, there is a very slightly protruding component that stretches into the sky like a ship's bow or an arrowhead. A large part of the facade facing Lindenstrasse is closed and has decorative braided clinker bricks. Compared to the numerous residential buildings built at the same time as part of Annaberg's urban expansion after 1900, this building has a particularly individual facade detail. The building is therefore primarily of architectural and urban significance.

09228989
 


Residential building in closed development Fleischergasse 1
(map)
After 1731, 1932 (shop fitting) Remains of a baroque painting visible on the facade, architectural significance.

Two-storey, massive residential building on a rectangular plot in a closed development in Annaberg's old town, built after the city fire of 1731. On the ground floor entrance with a basket arch portal and an unmarked apex, the door not original, to the side a shop fitting (1932) with a door and a narrow shop window. On the upper floor four windows with T-partitions and exposed walls. Remains of the earlier baroque-style painting are visible below the profiled eaves: this consists of three-dimensional mirrors above the windows and a painted pilaster strip on the outermost edge of the facade with a capital-like finish. The simple saddle roof with three standing dormers. The small house belongs to the Annaberg residential development of the 18th century. A special feature is the preservation of the facade painting with an illusionistic architectural structure. The building has documentary value as well as architectural and local historical significance.

09228582
 


Residential building in closed development Fleischergasse 2
(map)
2nd half of the 18th century / 1st. Half of the 19th century 09228568
 


Single-storey house in a corner and closed development Fleischergasse 4
(map)
2nd half of the 18th century to the 1st half of the 19th century single-storey building, significance in terms of local history and building history.

Single-storey, massive residential building in a corner and half-open development. The plastered facade facing Fleischergasse with five windows (cross-section) and plastered, narrow walls over a colored base. Simply profiled eaves cornice to the slate-covered mansard hipped roof, here three standing dormers, the two outer ones each with a double window. On the gable side of the Schmiedegasse entrance, here you can see the great depth of the building, a later extension follows. The simple house from the 18th century is a structural component of Annaberg's core development of architectural value.

09228569
 


Farmhouse with gate entrance Fleischergasse 6
(map)
2nd half of the 18th century to the 1st half of the 19th century importance in terms of local history and building history.

Two-storey house from the 2nd half of the 18th century in a corner position on an almost square floor plan (five to four axes). The ground floor with a colored pedestal, the entrance in a simply profiled portal, the two windows on the left in their original size and division, the two on the right later expanded. The upper floor in plastered half-timbering with four typical box windows, also four windows on the gable side. The steep gable roof with three standing dormers, the middle one wider with double windows. A special feature of this house is the laterally arranged round arched gate passage in a suspected section of the wall, which suggests an agricultural use. This means that the building has not only a historical, but also a social and local historical value.

09228581
 


Residential house in semi-open development Fleischergasse 8
(map)
2nd half of the 18th century / 1st. Half of the 19th century Residential house in half-open development; Classicist door frame, significance in terms of building history.

Two-storey plastered house from the 2nd half of the 18th century in half-open buildings in downtown Annaberg. The facade has 5 axes; on the ground floor a classicistic portal with a historical door; Window with wooden louvre boxes. Window on the first floor with a cross and painted walls. The steep gable roof with a small dormer on each side, in the middle a wide dormer-like roof extension over three axes. Roof and dormers completely covered with bitumen felt. This is a typical 18th century house, the facade of which was probably remodeled in the second half of the 19th century. It has architectural value.

09228580
 


Residential building in closed development Fleischergasse 10
(map)
18th century Cross vaults inside, classicist door frame, significance in terms of building history

Seven-axis, two-storey house from the 18th century on a wide plot in closed development. The entrance with three seven-axis steps and a subsequent portal in classicist design is arranged in the middle of the ground floor. The plastered facade is otherwise free of decor, the windows with histor. Rung division, the garments painted on and set off in color. Simply profiled eaves cornice, the steep slate-covered saddle roof with simple skylights, without superstructures.

This building is a stately, largely originally preserved residential building with architectural and urban value.

09228578
 


Residential house (craftsman's house) with a seating niche portal Fleischergasse 12
(map)
Around 1600 With seating niche portal from the Renaissance period (rarity), cross vaults inside, significance in terms of building history and local history.

Two-storey stately house in a corner and half-open development. The most characteristic feature of this building is the centrally arranged round arched seating niche portal from the 16th century. This was revised by a later owner in a baroque design (coat of arms marked 1708, AH). Four block steps in front of the entrance to the street. The facade is otherwise unadorned, the windows with narrow walls and histor. Rung division. Profiled eaves cornice to the steep pitched roof without roof structures. Cross vaults have been preserved inside.

This building is a rarity due to its seat niche portal, which, according to Dehio, represents the last Renaissance portal in the city that remained in situ. The importance of the portal was recognized as early as 1937 when it was added to the partial list of the state monument list of Saxony. In the 1930s, it was discussed whether it could be moved to a central building. During an examination of the cellars in 1996/97, the existence of a historical stone sluice for water drainage was found, which refers to the early development of the property.

This building has architectural and local historical significance.

09228577
 


Residential building in closed development Fleischergasse 15
(map)
18th century Residential house in closed development; Mansard roof, cross vaults inside, architectural significance.

Solid two-storey house in closed development on a rectangular floor plan. The narrow 4-axis building with an entrance in a simply profiled wall, to the right of it a large window opening with wooden shutters. The facade unadorned; Windows with atypical division and painted walls. The mansard roof is slated and expanded with three large dormers, each with double windows; overlying skylights. It is a typical 18th century house, the roof of which was probably changed by a later expansion. It has architectural and urban significance.

09228576
 


Residential building in closed development Fleischergasse 16
(map)
18th century Residential house in closed development; historical and urban significance.

Two-storey house from the 18th century in closed development on a rectangular floor plan. The wide facade with seven axes plastered and without decoration. Only the entrance is visually highlighted: the angular structure is simply profiled with an offset, straight roof. The actual entrance moved in; due to the difference in level, arrangement of three steps in the area of ​​the wall level. The windows with a cross and a narrow painted frame. The gable roof with slate covering and five standing dormers with triangular ends. This building is a typical example of residential building from the 18th century, the facade / roof structure of which was changed at a later date. It has architectural and urban significance.

09228574
 


Residential house in semi-open development Fleischergasse 17
(map)
18th century historical and urban significance.

Two-storey residential house typical of the 18th century in a semi-open development in downtown Annaberg. The plastered façade has five axes, the windows with crossbeams and plastered smooth walls. The entrance with natural stone walls and a simple, unmarked apex stone, the historic door has been preserved. The steep, slate-covered saddle roof with two rows of vertical dormer windows (triangular end), of which the lower in the middle is wider with double windows.

The residential building, which has been refurbished in accordance with the listed building standards, has architectural and urban value.

09228575
 


Former Hussstift Fleischergasse 18
(map)
18th century Residential house in half-open development; Legacy foundation of the Huss siblings from February 17, 1847, cross vaults inside, significance in terms of local history, architectural history and social history.

Two-storey residential building from the 18th century in a semi-open building in downtown Annaberg. The plastered facade on the eaves side with 9 window axes, on the gable side without openings. The entrance with simple walls and segmental arch-shaped end, on the apex stone "530" (old house numbering Annaberg), drawn in, to compensate for the difference in level to the street stairs with 5 stairs. inside the building, histor. Door not received. The windows with T-bars and plastered walls; no further facade decor. The eaves cornice is profiled. On the back the original saddle roof, extended to the street as an attic with five standing dormers (three of which have double windows). Inside cross vault. The stately residential building housed the legacy foundation of the Huss siblings from February 17, 1847 and is therefore not only relevant in terms of architectural history, but also of social and cultural significance.

09228573
 


Residential house with shop, in corner location and closed development Frohnauer Gasse 1a
(map)
Around 1890 House in corner position and closed development; with shop, architectural and urban significance.

Two-storey solid house from the end of the 18th or beginning of the 19th century on an irregular floor plan in a corner location and closed development. On the ground floor the entrance to the house as well as a subsequently built-in shop with a large opening as a shop window-entrance combination and a second corner shop window. The upper floor with three to seven axes; the windows with painted walls and simple vertical division. Above a smoothly plastered, differently colored plinth that extended over both floors, a somewhat idiosyncratic facade design with classicistic plastering. The slate-covered gable roof with standing dormers, these partly quite large with a three-part window. This building has an architectural and urban development value and, due to its proximity to the market, local historical value.

09228618
 


Apartment house in a corner and closed development
Apartment house in a corner and closed development Frohnauer Gasse 2
(map)
Around 1895 historical and urban significance.

This three-story historicist residential and commercial building forms the prelude to the otherwise much lower development on Frohnauer Gasse. Erected at the end of the 19th century, its structure and facade design reflect this type of building in a historical style. The corner of the building is angled and emphasized with a bay-like component, this tower-like closed with a curved hood. Directly below the hood there is a relief with a representation of Mercury to refer to the relationship to the economy and trade. Three-quarter columns with decorative Corinthian capitals at the corner of the ground floor, otherwise the ground floor with a perforated facade and plastering. The windows of the upper floors with T-division, profiled walls, straight and triangular roofs. On the 2nd floor design of the roofs as shoulder arches, this rather unusual for the Annaberg examples. The profiled eaves cornice with tooth cut and consoles, the mansard floor slated and expanded for residential use, for this purpose both smaller segmental arch-shaped dormers as well as large dormers on both sides for a double window framed by three-quarter pillars that carry a segmented arched gable with stucco decoration. This building is of monumental value for historical and urban planning reasons.

09228606
 


Residential building in closed development Frohnauer Gasse 3
(map)
2nd half of the 18th century to the 1st half of the 19th century Residential house in closed development; Single-storey miner's house with emphasis on the center, significance in terms of architectural and local history.

This small single-storey miner's house is a typical residential building for Annaberg around 1800. The six-axis ground floor with a simple entrance, which is preceded by two steps. In spite of the asymmetrical arrangement of the door, the facade is strongly centered by the facade area that extends into the attic and is crowned with a triangular gable. The two windows here as well as the one on the ground floor with simple, plastered walls and cross-shaped sprouting. The slate-covered gable roof with an additional dormer window next to the triangular gable. The object has architectural historical value as well as significance in terms of local development, as it is part of Annaberg's mining history.

09228636
 


Residential building in closed development Frohnauer Gasse 5
(map)
2nd half of the 18th century / 1st. Half of the 19th century Residential house in closed development; architectural significance.

Two-storey, narrow residential building from the late 18th or early 19th century in closed development. The building plastered; the side entrance in profiled walls with a crown stone without a name, the historical door has not been preserved. 3 window axes; all windows with straight, plastered walls and historical muntin. Profiled eaves cornice and steep slate-covered gable roof; this with two roof houses and a standing dormer window. The house, which is typical for its construction period at the end of the 18th / beginning of the 19th century, has architectural significance.

09228637
 


Residential building in closed development Frohnauer Gasse 7
(map)
1791 and 1st half of the 19th century around 1800 architectural significance.

This residential building, which was built around 1800, is a two-story building in closed development on a narrow plot. The entrance is drawn in and highlighted by a simple natural stone wall, the door frame with a crown stone without a name. Inside the building line in the entrance a staircase with 3 inclines. The arrangement of the entrance directly on the building boundary is unusual. The plastered facade triaxially without decoration, the windows with straight walls and T-shaped bars. In the steep, slate roof, there are three standing dormers with triangular ends.

As a typical residential house of its construction time, this building has architectural significance.

09228638
 


Residential house in a formerly closed development Frohnauer Gasse 12
(map)
1st half of the 19th century 09228647
 


Residential building in closed development Frohnauer Gasse 14
(map)
1st half of the 19th century historical door, architectural significance.

This residential house is an unrenovated two-storey building in closed development on a narrow plot of land that was built in the 1st half of the 19th century. The three-axis facade is asymmetrical, the entrance with natural stone walls and simple straight roofing, the historic front door is there. The two windows on the ground floor with histor. Sprout and a narrow frame highlighted in the plaster. In contrast to this, the openings on the upper floor have natural stone walls and a profiled straight roofing, while the windows have a T-bar. The saddle roof unadulterated without later superstructures. A comprehensive structural intervention took place in 1872, when the upper floor was added and the facade with a horizon. Belt between the floors has been redesigned. Despite this measure, the house is a typical representative of an inner-city residential building after 1800 with architectural significance.

09228646
 


Former factory building and gate
Former factory building and gate Frohnauer Gasse 15
(map)
Around 1900, mainly in the first half of the 19th century. importance in terms of building history and economic history.

Imposing four-story former factory building from 1899 in a semi-open development. Due to the gradient of the street, the elongated structure has 3 floors next to the neighboring development, but 4 floors and a basement on the valley side. This basement is designed as a base with bosses, followed by the rusticated ground floor with arched window openings. Above a plaster cornice, the beginning of the yellow brick facade that characterizes the building. Pilaster strips each bundle two window axes into pairs, which are spanned by flat segmental arches on the 3rd floor. Building decor made of ashlar and green clinker in the form of crowns, capitals and friezes. The eaves cornice is emphasized by such a frieze made of green clinker brick. The two outer fields are particularly emphasized by a small triangular gable made of ashlar with a coat of arms. The slate-covered mansard roof was expanded with roof-house-like structures. The gate system from the construction period is also of architectural interest. This building was set up in 1899 as a trimmings factory with large work rooms and was used successively by two companies (first Krahl, then Schreiber) before it was primarily used as an administration building. Although the facade suggests a uniform structure, parts of the former house number 15 have been integrated into the new building. Except for the dismantling of the decorative roof structures on the outer axes, the façade has remained almost unchanged. As a typical industrial building of the trimmings industry that flourished around 1900, this building is of architectural and economic historical relevance.

09228640
 


Residential building with shop, in a closed area Frohnauer Gasse 16
(map)
1st half of the 19th century, around 1800 (shop) with shop, architectural and socio-historical significance.

Two-storey massive house (around 1800) in closed development on a narrow lot. The three-axis plastered facade was originally asymmetrical until a symmetrical shop with a central door was installed on the ground floor in 1885. From this, the basic design, typical for that time, can still be read, even if a new building measure has changed the earlier shop windows to smaller ones. The use of natural stone is interesting, since similar shop fittings were otherwise often made in wood. The entrance is slightly drawn in with steps in front. A plaster cornice visually separates the first and second floors. On the upper floor 3 windows with a cross and painted frame. Two standing dormers in the slate-covered gable roof, which were erected in 1886.

The typical residential building, originally from around 1800, is of architectural significance; the unusual but architecturally successful shop fitting from the 19th century is a special feature for this quarter.

09228645
 


Residential building in closed development Frohnauer Gasse 18
(map)
1867 Residential house in closed development; architectural significance.

Two-storey, symmetrically structured residential building in a closed development; the solid, plastered structure with seven axes on a wide plot with a rectangular floor plan. The entrance is drawn in with a staircase within the building line; The walls of the entrance and the frames of the windows are colored and set off in the plaster. The facade without decor. The slate roof with three large roof houses, the middle one of which has existed since 1890. The barrel vault has been preserved in the cellar. The building was renovated in 1993. It is a typical 19th century house with architectural value.

09228644
 


Residential building in closed development Frohnauer Gasse 22
(map)
1882 09228642
 


Frohnauer Stüb'l Frohnauer Gasse 24
(map)
1881 09228641
 
Residential complex Gartenstrasse 2, 4, 6, 8
(map)
1931, No. 4 marked 1930 Residential complex consisting of four houses; Residential complex of the »Wettin« building association, significance in terms of building history and local development.

Two-storey residential complex consisting of four houses outside the city center in the residential area of ​​Annaberg, which is characterized by single-family and semi-detached houses. In the external appearance with the plastered facades, clinker brick frames of the openings, the central entrances and extended slate-roofed mansard floors, the houses appear as if they were built at the same time, although they are between the first front building and the last six years. First of all, house no. 8 on the corner of Damaschkestrasse was built in 1930 by the “Wettin” building association as a massive 6-family house with a basement. Two apartments with internal sanitary facilities were located on each floor and each had a garden part for management. In the continuation of the development in 1931 with the two middle buildings slightly set back from the building line, the housing emergency (emergency ordinance) had to be taken into account, so that 9 small and very small apartments were built in both buildings as so-called simple apartments with the simplest equipment. Here the toilets were on the landing, which can also be seen in the facade design with the small windows. The other head building was only supplemented in 1936 with six apartments, similar to the first. This residential complex, which had to be built with minimal financial outlay, in order to meet the housing shortage prevailing in the 1930s, has both architectural and urban significance as well as relevance to the history of local development in its implementation, which is based on the Heimatschutz style.

09228994
 


Old cemetery (individual monuments)
Old cemetery (individual monuments) Geyersdorfer Strasse
(map)
Individual monument belonging to the old cemetery: two memorials of the anti-fascist resistance fighters and victims of fascism, Adam Ries monument, Barbara Uthmann tomb, crypt houses and enclosure wall (see group 09304782, Geyersdorfer Straße 1); importance in terms of local development and social history.

The site of the former municipal cemetery in front of the city gates has been occupied since 1517 and has been expanded several times. Coming from the city center, an avenue of lime trees leads between the hospital and the rectory, directly to the Trinity Church. The cemetery grounds stretched beyond it. In the 1950s this was closed and parts of it were built over with the new bus station. The rest of the facility has been converted into a park. Only a few remains of the former ornate tombs from the 16th and 17th centuries and of the earlier round-arched niches (the so-called Schwibögen) have been preserved. Noteworthy are some cast-iron plates, the monuments to Barbara Uthmann (by Franz Pettrich) and Adam Ries (by R. Henze). The almost 500-year-old resurrection linden tree and the memorial of the anti-fascist resistance fighters are also known. Although the original use of the cemetery has been abandoned and valuable equipment has been lost, the old cemetery is still of importance in terms of local development and social history.

09228544
 


Soviet cemetery of honor Geyersdorfer Strasse
(map)
1947/1948 Individual features of the population of the old cemetery: Soviet cemetery of honor with memorial, tombstones and enclosure wall on the cemetery grounds (see population 09304782, Geyersdorfer Straße 1); local historical and social historical significance.

The Soviet Cemetery of Honor is a separate area of ​​the Old Annaberg Cemetery (Obj.-Nr. 09228544). An unknown number of prisoners of war and forced laborers from various countries as well as soldiers of the Soviet Army who died after 1945 rest here. The common graves have uniformly designed tombstones with honorable text. In the center of these graves is a monument erected in 1947/48. This consists of a two-tier platform and a stele on a square floor plan with a front inscription plaque. The approximately 5.5 m high complex is crowned by a Soviet star. This cemetery of honor refers to the history of Annaberg during the Second World War and is therefore of local and social significance.

09228543
 


Former St. Trinitatis Hospital Geyersdorfer Strasse 1
(map)
1827–1829 (hospital) Part of the ensemble at the St. Trinitatis Hospital Church (Adam-Ries-Straße 6), significance in terms of building history and local history.

The two-storey classicist hospital building and the almost identical parsonage on Adam-Ries-Straße 2 (see 09228546) form the entrance to the St. Trinity Church and the associated cemetery. The plastered facade with five axes has a risalit in the central axis, which is crowned by a "Greek" gable. In the axis there is also the access to the house, the door and the window above with a flat triangular crown and a toothed frieze decor. The gable side with three axes, all windows with simple color-contrasting framing and small-piece muntin. On the cemetery side a smaller portal with segmental arch and apex stone, in the right axis a large gate-like opening with segmented arch. The hipped roof is slated with five ogival dormers.

As part of the St. Trinity ensemble, which was built from 1827, the property is not only significant in terms of architectural and local history, but also, in the symmetrical layout typical of the time it was built, above all in terms of urban development.

09229154
 


Apartment building in closed development Geyersdorfer Strasse 2
(map)
Around 1900 historical and urban significance.

Four-storey historic tenement house on a wide plot with nine axes in closed development. While the ground floor of the solid construction is plastered, the orange-yellow brick facade of the upper floors begins above a cornice. The building is constructed symmetrically and has a central axis that protrudes slightly from the building line. Here is the entrance, which is typical of Annaberg, deep in a round arch niche with steps in front. The design of the windows varies from floor to floor: segmented arched windows on the ground floor and rectangular ones on the first floor, each with decorative crowning stones. The windows on the 2nd floor are most lavishly decorated with stucco and roofs, the windows on the top floor are again more plain with smaller stucco surfaces and prominent sills. This window design, which contrasts brightly with the orange clinker brick, is typical of late historic buildings. Due to the large width of the facade and the similar design of the neighboring buildings, this building front appears almost monumental. It is therefore important in terms of building history, but above all in terms of urban planning.

09228986
 


Apartment house in a corner and closed development Geyersdorfer Strasse 4
(map)
Around 1900 historical and urban significance.

Four-storey historic tenement house with five axes in a corner and closed development. While the ground floor of the solid construction is plastered, the orange-yellow brick facade of the upper floors begins above a cornice. The entrance is located on the right axis and, as is typical for Annaberg, is drawn deep into a segmented arch niche with steps in front. The windows of the ground floor, which is simplified in its design, are arched segments. The light-colored walls and the building decor of the rectangular upper floor openings contrast with the darker clinker brick - a design element typical of late historic buildings. There are stucco surfaces, segmented arched gables and apex stones, but what is unusual is the type of flat decoration that some windows on the 1st floor alternate between. The importance of this building results primarily from the effect it has on the similarly designed neighboring buildings, so that it primarily has an urban development value.

09228987
 


Rental villa Geyersdorfer Strasse 8
(map)
re. 1903 historical and urban significance.

Three-storey rental villa in open development opposite the entrance area to the former St. Trinity cemetery, directly in front of the old city limits. It is one of the few tenement houses built in connection with the city expansion around 1900 that is designed to be free-standing, as otherwise it was usually built as a block edge to better utilize space. The rental villa with five axes and a plastered facade (except for a natural stone base) has a representative center, characterized by a bay-like component. The shape of the window and the building decor differ from floor to floor, with the first floor being the most lavishly furnished with stucco surfaces. The accentuated center continues into the attic, here with a double arched window and a hipped gable roof. The entrance to the building is from the side, protected by a column-supported porch. The prestigious facade of the building, partly with Art Nouveau decor, takes into account the special location close to the city and the square. As a tenement house in open development, which is rare in Annaberg, it is particularly important for urban planning, but also for architectural history.

09229000
 


factory Geyersdorfer Strasse 9
(map)
Around 1910 Cord manufacturer, remarkable colored glass windows in the stairwell, significance in terms of building history and economic development.

Elongated, two-storey factory building (manufacturer of cord goods) with a high mansard roof from 1924 in open development. The plastered facade begins with ten to two axes above a basement level with natural stone cladding. The windows in it are rectangular and grouped in strips by means of plastering and color design. The middle four axes are also bounded by fluted pilaster strips, a design that continues into the large roof structure. Here, too, four windows and a polygonally broken gable end. This dwarf-like structure in the mighty slate roof is the most characteristic design element of this clearly structured factory building. Probably remarkable colored glass windows in the stairwell. Established in 1924 and again slightly changed in 1927, it is one of the late industrial plants that were built in Annaberg due to the economic boom from the end of the 19th century. The comparison with the construction documents shows that the external appearance has hardly changed except for the absence of a roof turret with a clock. It has both architectural and economic significance.

09228542
 


Apartment house in a corner and closed development Geyersdorfer Strasse 10
(map)
around 1900 historical and urban significance.

Three-storey historic tenement house with five to three axes in a corner and closed development. The ground floor of the massive building is plastered and provided with horizontal grooves, the entrance to Geyerstraße is, as is typical for Annaberg, drawn deep into the building line. Windows and doors on the ground floor with profiled walls and decorative crowning stone. Above a cornice and a broader band with stucco mirrors under the windows of the 1st floor, the red brick clad facade of the upper floors begins, only the area of ​​the sloping corner is executed as a contrast in orange clinker. This emphasis on the corners is also evident in the increased use of building decor with stucco surfaces, triangular roofs and consoles and continues through to the attic with a dormitory-like roof structure. At the sides, two pilaster strips made of orange and red clinker brick separate the corner area from the rest of the facade. The openings there are a little less decorated with, among other things, straight roofs and relief arches highlighted in orange clinker. All windows with T-bars. A decorative frieze emphasizes the profiled eaves cornice, and the slate-covered mansard roof has been expanded for residential use. This tenement house, which was built around 1900, with its facade design typical of the time, forms the prelude to the similar perimeter block development along Lindenstrasse and is a testament to Annaberg's urban expansion in this direction. It has both architectural and urban significance.

09228999
 


Apartment house in a corner and semi-open development Geyersdorfer Strasse 11
(map)
Around 1905 09228993
 


Apartment building in half-open development Geyersdorfer Strasse 12
(map)
Around 1900 historical and urban significance.

Three-storey historic tenement house with six axes in half-open development, but the fire gable shows that a continuation of the development was planned. The design of the building is based on the neighboring corner house (number 10): The ground floor of the solid building is plastered and provided with horizontal grooves, the entrance, as is typical for Annaberg, drawn deep into the building line. Windows and doors on the ground floor with profiled walls and decorative crowning stone. Above a cornice and a wider band with stucco mirrors below the two middle windows on the 1st floor, the red brick clad facade of the upper floors begins, only the area of ​​the two middle axes is executed as a contrast in orange clinker. This emphasis on the center is also shown by the increased use of building decor with stucco surfaces, triangular roofs and consoles and continues through a mid-roof structure to the top floor. This is crowned by a triangular gable with three small turrets. At the sides, two bright, plastered pilaster strips separate the central area from the rest of the facade. The openings there are a little less decorated. All windows with T-bars. A decorative frieze emphasizes the profiled eaves cornice, and the slate-covered gable roof with standing dormer windows has been expanded for residential use.

This tenement house, which was built around 1900, with its façade design typical of the time, with the neighboring corner house, forms the prelude to the similar perimeter block development along Lindenstrasse and is evidence of Annaberg's urban expansion in this direction. It has both architectural and urban significance.

09228998
 


Apartment building in half-open development Geyersdorfer Strasse 13
(map)
Marked 1906 with shop, clinker brick facade typical of the time, architectural and urban significance.

Three-storey historic tenement house with six axes in half-open development. The ground floor of the solid building is plastered and provided with horizontal grooves, here three large openings as shop windows and access for the use of the shops. The orange clinker clad facade of the upper floors begins above a narrow cornice. The middle two axes of the building are designed as a flat risalit, which continues as a dwelling to the attic and ends with a curved gable. There the date 1906 in a stucco medallion. The windows on the 1st floor are arched in the shape of a basket and on the 2nd floor are arched, each with sandstone walls. Building decor in the form of various roofs and stucco elements. A wide stucco frieze on each side of the central projection below the eaves. The entire stucco is set in an ocher beige, so that the contrast to the surrounding clinker is significantly reduced. The slate-covered gable roof with two roof houses and double windows expanded for residential use.

This apartment building, which was built in 1906, was supposed to form the prelude to a block perimeter development with the neighboring corner house, but this was not implemented. Quite a long way from the city center, however, it shows the ambitious plans to expand Annaberg in this direction. It has both architectural and urban significance.

09228992
 


Administration building of a factory Geyersdorfer Strasse 30
(map)
Inscribed 1927–1928 Remarkable colored glass windows in the stairwell, historical and economic significance.

Three-storey, massive building from 1927 on a rectangular floor plan in open development (architect: Alfred Keilhau). The natural stone-clad basement with its arched windows is striking. In the center of Geyersdorfer Straße is the arched entrance, with double doors and a stucco field in a semicircle, here the name (VZ 1927–1928). The entrance and stair zone is pulled out from the building line and ends in a tent roof, in the stairwell remarkable colored glass windows. The plastered facade of the building is otherwise relatively plain, the window openings are only set off with a narrow frame and on the first floor with an angular sill. A narrow ledge between the 1st and 2nd floors. The slate hipped roof with small standing dormers. The pillars and walls of the enclosure are made in the same stone material as the basement, with the entrance gate and access to the building. Parts of the basement and the ground floor served as manufacturing and business premises, while two apartments were set up on the upper floor. Mainly through the interplay of plaster and rough natural stone surfaces, the property reflects the typical construction of the late 1920s. In combination with its enclosure, it has both architectural and urban significance as well as economic historical value.

09228997
 


Schreiber Villa Geyersdorfer Strasse 50
(map)
Around 1910 Elaborate, albeit overgrown design with rare species, one of the last villa gardens in Annaberg, garden monument 09228991
 

Memorial text

Residential building in closed development Große Kartengasse 1
(map)
18th century (after 1731), built around 1570 according to the old list Cross vaults inside, significance in terms of building history and urban development.

Two-storey massive residential building, which was built after the city fire of 1731 with closed development and corner location on an irregular floor plan. The plastered facade without decoration with six to four axes and the indented entrance typical of Annaberg houses with a staircase in front of the house that is mostly within the line of the house. The three windows on the ground floor to the left of the entrance later enlarged. All other windows with narrow framing in the plaster and T-floor. The roof is covered with slate with a row of standing dormer windows as a mansard hipped roof. Inside cross vault.

This building, which was built in the 18th century, may still contain older material in its core and is of architectural and local significance.

09228690
 


Residential building in closed development Große Kartengasse 3
(map)
Around 1750 historical and urban significance.

Two-storey massive residential building in closed development. The facade with five axes and an eccentric entrance, this one with a simply profiled wall, segmental arch-shaped end and an unmarked apex. Smooth window frames on the ground floor are cleaned up, on the upper floor only contrasted in color. Plaster tape in the area of ​​the sills on the 1st floor. Simply profiled eaves cornice, above a slate hipped roof with two rows of standing dormers. During an investigation of the cellars in 1996/97, the presence of a historical (but now walled up) cultivation for water drainage was found, which indicates an early development of the property. This building is a typical residential building from the 18th century with architectural and urban significance.

09228691
 


door Große Kartengasse 5
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century 09228692
 


Apartment building in closed development Grosse Kartengasse 7
(map)
Around 1905 historical and urban significance.

Three-story, massive tenement house built around 1905, the top floor expanded and integrated into the facade in such a way that it appears as the 4th floor, dominant effect, as the buildings that adjoin the city center are only two-story. The façade is symmetrically structured with seven axes, the recessed entrance with stairs not only emphasized in color, but also by two flanking windows with segmented arches. All other windows straight without cladding or framing, T-bar. On the 2nd floor the outer windows to form a group of three, on the 3rd floor the middle windows are combined to form a group of four. A profiled cornice visually separates the 2nd from the 3rd floor. The center of the facade is clearly emphasized by a large triangular gable with a semicircular window in the roof. Simple building decor below the windows with ovals or stylized angular balusters in the plaster mirrors as well as decorations on the walkways between the window groups refer to the construction time of the building at the beginning of the 20th century after the end of historicism.

09228695
 


Apartment building in closed development Große Kartengasse 8
(map)
Around 1880 Clinker facade, historical and urban significance.

Three-storey historic tenement house with six axes in closed development. The plastered ground floor is rusticated above a cellar zone. The entrance has been drawn in, the staircase in front of the building in order to overcome the level difference to the street, the door from the construction period preserved. Basement window, entrance and window on the ground floor with segmental arches. After a wide plaster cornice, the yellow clinker cladding begins on the upper floors. The windows are straight here, on the 1st floor with roofs (the middle two triangular), on the 2nd floor with decorative clinker brick relief arch with keystone. All windows with T-floor structure. Over a simply profiled eaves cornice, the slate roof with 3 standing dormers, each with double windows. It is a typical tenement house from the last quarter of the 19th century. It is of architectural and local historical importance, as it shows at this point the change in living in Annaberg in the surrounding area, which is still characterized by lower buildings in the city.

09228689
 


Apartment building in closed development Große Kartengasse 9
(map)
around 1910 historical and urban significance.

Three-storey tenement house built around 1910 with a wide facade of nine to four axes in a half-open development and corner location. Above the basement, which appears as a plinth, with windows, the ground floor is a raised ground floor. The entire facade has a symmetrical structure: in the middle the retracted entrance with stairs and a door from the building period. Plaster groove on the ground floor, smooth plaster above. The facade is rhythmized on the long side by two very slightly bulged areas with a group of three windows per storey. The bridges between these windows are continued as pilaster strips in the space between them, so that between the 1st and 2nd floors there are fields with decorative decorations: among other things, a vase with fruit in the middle. These two axes formed in the facade continue into the roof, here large roof structures with curved, almost semicircular gable ends. This complete design axis can also be found on the narrow side. All windows have a T-shaped sprout as well as the small sprout of the skylight typical of the time after 1900. Between the remaining windows and the bay-like axes described, there are pilaster strips and simple plastered mirrors under the windows to structure the facade. The mansard roof with incised window openings instead of dormers so as not to disturb the effect of the large roof structures.

The entire object appears almost monumental due to its size and simple design language and can be assigned to the reform style, architectural and urban significance.

09228696
 


Residential building in closed development Grosse Kartengasse 10
(map)
18th century or older Significance in terms of building history and local history, rarity in terms of mining history.

Two-storey massive residential building with a plastered facade in a closed development. The simple facade without building decor with five axes, the windows with a color-contrasting frame. Entrance on the side. The slate-covered saddle roof with three standing dormer windows, eaves cornice without profiling. This inconspicuous building has a rarity in terms of mining history: here in the basement is the “St. Dorothea uffn Keller ”. During an examination of the cellars in 1996/97, the old day shaft that had been kept in custody was documented. This points to the early use of the property.

The current building, which probably dates from the 18th century, is mainly surrounded by large apartment buildings from the 19th century. As a testimony to a previous time, it is of importance in terms of building history, the history of local development and mining history.

09228693
 


Apartment house in a corner Große Kartengasse 11
(map)
after 1900 simple reform style architecture, significance in terms of building history and urban development.

Three-storey, massive tenement house built after 1900 in a semi-open development and corner location. The corner situation is emphasized by the formation of an oriel with a 5/8 cross-section and a final turret with a curved hood. The facade with seven to five axes is given a rhythm by means of contrasting colored pilaster strips. A cornice all around between the ground floor and the first floor. The design of the facade facing Kleine Kartengasse is slightly emphasized: here the triangular roofing of the windows on the 1st floor is contrasted in color and the plaster mirror between the windows on the 1st and 2nd floors. Some of the windows are original with their typical, small-scale protrusion in the roof light. The two-winged front door is also original, with a pilaster-shaped frame supporting a broken triangular gable, with a wide vertical stripe as decoration. The mansard roof with dormers expanded for residential use. The building has architectural and urban value because its design reflects the ideas of reform architecture in a place that is effective in the street scene, albeit in a cautious manner.

09228753
 


Apartment building in closed development Große Kartengasse 12
(map)
Around 1880 09228694
 


Apartment building with modern shop fittings in closed development Grosse Kartengasse 38
(map)
Around 1885 historical and urban significance.

Three-storey, massive tenement house with five axes in closed development. The building is characterized by its design typical of the historicism. The central entrance is drawn deep into the facade, to the right of it is a shop, this one with access and a shop window. All openings on the ground floor with the same design of their sandstone walls, the ground floor with decorative plaster and some sandstone decorations. The plastered upper floors connect above a cornice. The windows with sandstone walls and straight crowns, which vary slightly between the 1st and 2nd floor. Plaster grooves in the form of mirrors and ribbons between the windows give the facade a geometric structure. The slate roof with three roof houses, the middle one wide with a window of three.

This well-proportioned house from the late 19th century has architectural and urban significance.

09229026
 


Mining Authority Große Kirchgasse 2
(map)
probably 1731 (mining office) Three-storey building, baroque facade painting, today a house and restaurant, of importance in terms of urban development and economic history.

The former Bergamt Annaberg is a three-storey building in closed development that was probably built after the city fire of 1731. The facade with five axes, the ground floor with plaster grooves, set off from the upper floors. This rustic decoration has been provable since a renovation in 1870. The two entrances with segmental arches, as well as the two right windows, the left window straight, all openings with simple framing. The two upper floors have a baroque facade painting with illusionistic pilaster strips, ledges, mirrors and window frames. A profiled eaves cornice as a transition to the slate-covered gable roof with a row of standing dormers. The “Bergamt” restaurant has existed here since 1927 at the latest, which at that time had a vault in the dining room. From 1974 the Annaberg school restaurant was housed here (with the addition of the former "Zentrum" cinema as a dining room). Due to its baroque facade painting, which is rather rare for Annaberg, as well as its historical use, this building is a rarity for structural and economic reasons, and it is also relevant to the local history.

09228726
 


Apartment building in closed development Große Kirchgasse 4
(map)
around 1880 with shop, architectural and urban significance.

Four-storey, massive historic tenement house with shop fittings on the ground floor in a closed development. The facade with four axes, each formed by a pair of windows. The ground floor with plastered rustics that particularly emphasize the arched entrance between the shop windows. In its skylight a rosette-like glass division. Above a cornice, mirrors stuccoed below the pairs of windows. All windows with noticeably strong sills and lateral lugs, T-bar. The two middle pairs of windows on the first floor are particularly emphasized by the roofing of windows with broken triangular gables. To the side a mirror with stucco reliefs between the outer pairs of windows on the 1st and 2nd floors. The eaves cornice with a strong serrated frieze, above the slate roof with a row of standing dormers. The design of the facade refers to a construction period at the end of the 19th century, and remnants of a previous building may have been integrated. At this location, the building is not only important in terms of architectural history, but also urban planning.

09228727
 


Residential house or town house in closed development Große Kirchgasse 4a
(map)
Early 19th century with shops, cross vaults inside, significance in terms of building history and urban development.

Two-storey massive building in a corner and half-open development. The building with a typical appearance for the beginning of the 19th century has a seven-axis façade facing Kirchgasse with a dominant emphasis on the center, as the middle three axes in the attic are designed as a dwelling with a triangular gable. On the ground floor two shops each with a shop window and access, the entrance to the house and three further windows. All openings, including those from the first floor and the dwelling, have a smooth, colored frame. The plastered facade is unadorned. Profiled eaves cornice to the slate-covered hip roof with standing dormer windows. Inside, probably cross vaults, which may indicate an older core, of architectural and urban significance.

09228728
 


Former trading house Grosse Kirchgasse 5
(map)
Around 1800, later reshaped with shop fitting, former trading house of the Bamberg and Co. (after 1833), significance in terms of building history and economic history.

Three-storey massive building in a closed development. The building, which was probably built around 1800, was extended and reshaped in the 19th century, but today the view is simplified to a simple six-axis facade. The house entrance is on the right with a profiled wall, next to it a subsequent shop installation. This since 1901, at that time, however, a different facade design, today's structure since 1913. The windows of the upper floors with narrow walls and cross-floor division. The slate-covered gable roof is dominated by a broad roof structure on the street side with a high emphasis on the center. As simple as the building looks today, as the former trading house of the well-known Annaberg-based company Bamberg & Co, it is important in terms of economic and architectural history.

09228729
 


Residential building in closed development
Residential building in closed development Grosse Kirchgasse 6
(map)
After 1731, after 1900 the facade was overmolded. 1698 door frame with shop, cross vault and door frame dated 1698, significance in terms of building history and urban development.

Three-storey building, presumably from the 17th century, on a wide parcel in closed development. The plastered, later designed facade with seven axes divided into three zones according to the storeys. The ground floor with shop and restaurant, the indented entrance in the middle with profiled natural stone walls, this is marked 1698. Above the cornice, the window axes on the first floor are separated from each other by flat, plastered pilaster strips with simple capitals. The windows are also in flat arched niches, each with a simple, contrasting color and an oval plaster mirror below the window. On the 2nd floor, the motif is repeated in a simplified manner, here also oval shape and window frame, but only designed in a painterly manner. All windows with cross-frame and historical muntin. In the roof area there are two accentuating triangular gables that are not referred to in the storeys. Inside cross vault. Due to its width, the building is a special feature in the neighborhood, which is otherwise largely built on narrow parcels, and it is a rare representative of the development from around 1700. It is therefore not only important in terms of architectural history and urban development, but also has a special age value.

09228739
 


Residential building with shop, in a closed area
Residential building with shop, in a closed area Große Kirchgasse 7
(map)
Increased and reshaped in the middle of the 19th century, in the core around 1800 with shop, cross vault, architectural and urban significance.

Three-story massive building with five axes in closed development. Erected around 1800 or earlier, the building was redesigned in the 19th century. From this time the shop fitting on the ground floor: here plastering as well as highlighting of the shops and the entrance with flat pilaster strips fluted in the upper part. This finished with small capitals, in between a frieze depicting a running dog. Above a wide plastered area, the cornice with a fine tooth cut. The original layout of the openings on the ground floor, however, has recently been negatively affected. The facade of the upper floors without decoration, the windows with colored frames and T-floor. The slate roof with standing dormers. Inside cross vault. In terms of location, structure and design, the building has architectural and urban significance.

09228730
 


Residential house with shops, in closed development Große Kirchgasse 8
(map)
The facade was redesigned around 1880 with shops, cross vaults inside, significance in terms of building history and urban development.

Two-storey, massive residential building with seven axes in closed development. The ground floor is characterized by the change of window-door-window (four windows and three doors), all with simply profiled natural stone walls, the entrances drawn in. The upper floor with seven openings above a cornice, these with smooth walls and cross-frame windows with historical sprouting. The slate-covered gable roof with four standing dormers, three of which have double windows. Inside cross vault. This building was probably erected in the 18th century and slightly modified in the later 19th century by the shop fittings. Unlike many other buildings of that time, however, it was not increased in this context, but has retained its cubature. It is therefore a rare object that was built before 1800 and is of architectural and urban significance.

09228740
 


Baroque core of the house Grosse Kirchgasse 9
(map)
in the core of the 18th century with shop, facade design from 1926, architectural and urban significance.

Three-storey, massive residential building with six axes in closed development. Originated in the 18th century, the building today probably only has substance from this period in its core. Since the last quarter of the 19th century at the latest, this building was used by the “Sächsische Bank zu Annaberg”, for which a storey was added in 1884. The house was given the 2nd floor, which is still present today, as well as a saddle roof with a lower slope than the previous one. The facade is determined by the ground floor, which was redesigned in 1926 (architect Philipp Wunderlich, Dresden): The hallway was moved to the edge of the building in order to expand the bank business premises. In this area, the façade was given a new structure of the opening consisting of three groups of three tall rectangular windows as well as the natural stone cladding made of roughly processed Elbe sandstone. The entrance is accentuated by a straight beam with a spiral-shaped top, over which a rectangular skylight. Above the ground floor the lettering "Das Lichterhaus". The two upper floors with simple openings, colored frames and T-shaped windows.

Due to the time it was built, but above all the fact that the facade design from 1926 was rarely preserved, this building is of architectural and urban significance.

09228756
 


Residential building with a small shop fitting, in a closed development Grosse Kirchgasse 10
(map)
Marked 1733 (house), around 1805 (shop) formerly with shop fitting, architectural and urban significance.

Three-storey solid residential building in closed development with a plastered facade. Retrofitting of shops on the ground floor, with large openings being dispensed with here. Original the natural stone walls of the three windows and one portal, this one marked with 1733. Another portal marked 2009. Both upper floors without decoration with six window axes, colored frames and T-bar. The second floor presumably the result of an increase in storeys in the 19th century. Inside, groin vaults in various ground floor rooms as well as simple Renaissance garments on the doors. Lt. According to historical tradition, Barbara Uthmann acquired the property in 1565 and presumably lived here until her death in 1575, so it can be assumed that the core of the building is older than 1733.

In addition to its obvious architectural and urban significance, this property also has economic and social historical value.

09228741
 


Residential house or town house with shop, in closed development
Residential house or town house with shop, in closed development Große Kirchgasse 11
(map)
Marked with 1734 with shop, cell star vault, architectural and urban significance.

Narrow two-storey residential building in closed development after the city fire of 1731. The facade with five axes plastered, on the ground floor all openings with segmental arches, here retrospective shop installation, but without large windows, the simple portal wall with a crown stone (marked 1734). Above the door panel with the lettering of the shop. On the upper floor, the windows with simple framing and T-bars. A saddle roof with standing dormers over a profiled eaves cornice. Cell star vaults inside. This simple building has a historical and urban value and is also of art historical importance due to the vault.

09228733
 


Apartment building in closed development
Apartment building in closed development Große Kirchgasse 12
(map)
around 1885 with shop, historic tenement house, architectural and urban significance.

Massive three-story historic tenement house in a closed development. The ground floor is rusticated over a base made of quarry stone. A shop takes up almost the entire ground floor facing the street: a combination of a retracted door and shop window as well as four simple additional windows. The entrance to the house on the far left with profiled walls and a beautiful historic door, one step in front. The smooth plastered upper storeys with seven axes and symmetrical structure above a cornice, the middle window each with a greater distance to the neighboring ones and highlighted by means of its roofing (1st floor triangle, 2nd floor straight). The remaining windows on the 1st floor with distinctive sills and straight roofing, the windows on the 2nd floor with simply profiled framing. The slate-covered gable roof with three roof houses, each with a double window.

Due to its location close to St. Anne's Church and as part of the closed development on Kirchgasse, this property has urban significance, the significance of the building history is evident.

09228742
 


Residential house with modern shop fittings, in closed development
Residential house with modern shop fittings, in closed development Große Kirchgasse 13
(map)
After 1731, essentially late medieval (16th century) with modern shop fittings, cross vaults, architectural and urban significance.

Two-storey, massive residential building, mainly built after the city fire of 1731, in closed development. The facade with five axes plastered, on the ground floor retrofitting of shops with shop windows, but these are not room-high, with the shop entrance in between with two steps. The access to the house has also moved in with a staircase in front and a historic front door. Frames painted on all openings, the windows on the upper floor with small mulch. Above the profiled eaves cornice, the attic floor, which was subsequently expanded for residential purposes, with a mansard roof-like structure with 3 double windows. Inside probably cross vaults. During an investigation of the cellars in 1996/97, a backfilled stretch (old mine) and a stone sluice were documented, which points to an early development of the property. Despite the massive roof renovation, the building is of architectural and urban significance, as parts of the late Middle Ages have probably been preserved in the core.

09228734
 


Residential house with modern shop area, in open development
Residential house with modern shop area, in open development Grosse Kirchgasse 14
(map)
after 1731 With a modern shop zone, architectural and urban significance.

Two-storey, massive residential house built after the city fire of 1731 in closed development. The plastered facade with five axes is optically dominated by a shop installation on the ground floor that was carried out after 2000. Above a narrow base made of quarry stone, there are three large segment-arched openings as shop windows and access. The windows on the upper floor have a simple cross-frame. The eaves cornice is profiled, the slate roof is designed as a mansard roof with a central emphasis: here wide dormer windows with triangular roofing. When the cellars were examined in 1996/97, a partially filled stretch (old mine) and a stone sluice were documented, which indicates that the property was built on at an early stage. Despite the extensive intervention in the structure of the ground floor, this house has architectural and urban significance.

09228743
 


Residential building with shop, in a closed area
Residential building with shop, in a closed area Große Kirchgasse 15
(map)
After 1731, essentially late medieval (16th century) with shop, architectural and urban significance.

Narrow two-storey residential building in a closed development. The facade with four axes plastered, a small shop on the ground floor. Here the entrance, one larger and two smaller windows in their original dimensions - the installation of large shop windows was dispensed with in favor of the building. All windows with simple, painter-like framing and T-bars. The slate-covered gable roof expanded, here three larger dormers, the two outer ones each with double windows. This simple building has an architectural and urban value due to its location and time of construction.

09228735
 


Ore Mountains Museum
Ore Mountains Museum Grosse Kirchgasse 16
(map)
1732 Museum since 1891, of architectural, cultural and urban significance.

Originally built for the finder Michael Schönleben in a corner and semi-open development. Evidence of development at this point goes back to 1521. The current structure is essentially baroque (dated 1732): a stately two-story building. This consists of the main building and a short extension. The plastered solid building has its entrance to the Kirchgasse with a basket arch-shaped portal and designed natural stone walls. The window openings on the ground floor are arranged irregularly. The facade on the upper floor with eleven window axes to Große Kirchgasse and six window axes towards the former Eisenstuckplatz (three of them in the main building, three in the extension). Most of the windows are arranged in groups of three, all with smooth walls and diamond-shaped bars. The mighty slate-covered hip roof of the main building with two rows of standing dormers, the slightly lower gable roof of the extension with skylights. Museum has been here since 1891. During construction work in the 1990s, a mining gallery from the early days of Annaberg silver mining from 1497–1510 was discovered. Since 1995, parts of this tunnel system can be viewed from the farm as the “Im Gößner” visitor mine.

Due to its substance, but also its history of use, this building is of architectural and urban significance as well as of cultural and local historical value.

09228744
 


Two boundary stones of the electoral-ducal border Grosse Kirchgasse 16
(map)
first installation around 1537 historical evidence of the development in the Ore Mountains, of regional historical importance.

Two boundary stones (1537) of the electoral-ducal border, historical evidence of the development in the Ore Mountains, of regional historical importance. You are on the premises of the Ore Mountains Museum. The border existed since the division of Leipzig in 1485. The definition by stones was necessary here in order to avoid all disputes that might arise during ore mining from the outset.

08985178
 


Residential building in closed development Große Kirchgasse 17
(map)
16th century and later with a shop, inside late medieval vaults and wooden beam ceiling, significance in terms of building history and urban planning.

Two-storey massive residential building in closed development. The plastered facade with six axes, all openings on the ground floor with profiled walls, segmental arches and small roofs. A small shop installation with a combined shop window and access, the drawn-in entrance to the residential building with a staircase in front of the building, followed by three windows. The presence of shutters in front of the openings on the ground floor is unusual. The six windows on the upper floor with simple plaster walls and a cross frame. The slate-covered roof was expanded with three little roof houses, each with a double window with small sprouts. Inside, groin and cell star vaults as well as a wooden beam ceiling with nave coves. During an investigation of the cellars in 1996/97 the existence of a historical cultivation (kept) for water drainage was found, which indicates an early development of the property. Due to the preserved interior, this building is one of the few objects in Annaberg that was able to preserve substance from the 16th century despite the many city fires.

In addition to its architectural and urban development significance, it also has a rarity value.

09228736
 


Residential house in a corner and closed development
Residential house in a corner and closed development Große Kirchgasse 19
(map)
after 1731 historical and urban significance.

Stately, massive residential building in a corner location with closed development in a dominant location in terms of urban development. The two-storey building directly opposite the Annenkirche with a smooth plastered facade (six to four axes) without any architectural decoration. The entrance on Kirchgasse is deeply drawn in, all windows on the ground floor and first floor with simple framing and historical sprouting. The slate-covered high hip roof with enlarged dormers (4, 3 and double windows). A three-storey extension with five axes and a saddle roof from the 19th century to the lower church square. Due to its location and baroque design, this building is relevant to urban planning as well as to the history of construction and development.

09228737
 


Anne's Church
More pictures
Anne's Church Große Kirchgasse 21
(map)
1499–1525 (church) late-Gothic hall church, tower on the southwest corner, excellent art-historical value, special architectural and urban significance, decisively shapes the townscape.

Late Gothic three-aisled hall church with an impact on the cityscape. The foundation stone for this huge building with a length of 66 m and a width of 40 m was laid in 1499, immediately after the city was founded. Complete completion is dated to 1525. The builders named include Peter Ulrich from Pirna, Erasmus and Jacob Halmann from Schweinfurt. Dominant and clearly visible from everywhere is the asymmetrical, 78 m high tower on the south-west corner on a square floor plan (1513), on top of which is a massive octagonal tower structure (1532), the hood was put on in a different shape after the city fire in 1813. The exterior of the church is determined by the simple quarry stone masonry - gneiss - (originally plastered and painted), almost without decoration except for the tracery of the windows. Two-lane windows on the long sides are arranged on two floors, the choir closure is like a chapel and the ogival west portal (instead of a porch built in the 19th century, previously one from 1548) with an upstream staircase from 1929. Further portals at the 2nd and 5th yoke each with small porches. The roof was originally in the shape of a keel arch with copper covering, but was renewed as a steep gable roof as early as 1607/08 after it was destroyed by fire. Today in natural slate cover with hips and lantern.

The interior with a vertex height of 28 m is characterized by the slightly domed loop-star vault on eight-sided pillars (other vault approaches indicate a change in plan to the vault) and the painting in the version from 1525. The central nave is significantly wider than the side aisles. The stone galleries are stretched between the inwardly drawn buttress arches of the side aisle walls, in the 6th yoke transverse house-like widening, these below are separated from the church as a chapel-like, above as open galleries. Particularly rich and of rare completeness are the furnishings with various altars, pulpit and gallery reliefs (Franz Maidburg), the beautiful door (Hans Witten, taken from the Franciscan monastery), epitaphs and the Walcker organ from 1884.

Church renovation in the sense of the 19th century (1833/34), with loss of the exterior plaster, colored windows, fittings etc. Between 1974 and 2003 extensive construction and restoration measures to restore the appearance of the 16th century.

This church has great architectural, artistic and urban significance, as the building is the main representative of the “Upper Saxon hall church” type, and its scientific significance is evident.

09228738
 


Former Latin school
Former Latin school Große Kirchgasse 23
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1795 Former Latin school, today part of the Adam Ries Education Center, mighty cubature, significance in terms of architectural and local history as well as urban development.

The former Latin school consists of a mighty two-storey massive building of 16 to nine axes with a mansard roof in the immediate vicinity of the Church of St. Anne. A Latin school has been in use in Annaberg since 1498. A stone building at this location has been proven to have existed since 1549, but it was destroyed in the fire in 1604. The year 1795 found in the basement refers to the date of construction of the current building, the cubage and roof on the side facing the church are clearly baroque, the portal is marked in 1938 and documents the extensive construction work in the 20th century, which included an additional floor covering the roof and presumably also an increase in the number of windows, grooved wooden windows, architectural and urban significance and, as a secondary school, particular relevance to local history. (From 1835, this building first housed a grammar school, then a secondary school and a community school. Around 1900 the house became a children's home as well as a cooking and household school, with the latest renovation, the Adam-Ries education center was created in connection with the neighboring school buildings on Kleine Kirchgasse) . During an investigation of the cellars in 1996/97, the existence of a historical cultivation for water drainage was found, which also points to an early development of the property.

08986190
 


So-called master house
So-called master house Große Kirchgasse 24
(map)
End of the 18th century; 1887 facade, essentially older Former master's house of the trimmings guild, later an inn, inside cross vaults, significance in terms of architectural and economic history.

Two-storey solid construction in closed development with a smooth plastered facade. The main building with five axes to Kirchgasse, in the middle the portal with drapery and classicist. acting gable (according to drawing 1887 of this round arched), as well as a small upstream staircase. The windows on the ground floor have had a segmental arch-shaped end since 1997, one of which was extended as a shop window. The windows on the upper floor, on the narrow side of the house and in the extension with simple framing and T-floor. The roof with slate and small standing dormers. Inside cross vault. This simple house is known as the master's house because the trimmings guild has been here since at least 1825. From 1928 at the latest, it was known as the “Meisterhaus” inn with club rooms on the upper floor. In addition, from 1940 part of the house was used for the production of cosmetic chemical products. The building, with its diverse history of use, is therefore not only significant in terms of architectural and urban development, but is also relevant in terms of economic and cultural history.

09228898
 


Former foundation building Noethig and Useful Grosse Kirchgasse 25
(map)
Marked 1796 Architectural and urban significance, as a former foundation building of socio-historical value.

Two-storey, massive town house on an unusually wide lot in a closed development, right next to the former Latin school. The view of the street with six axes, plastered facade above a broken stone base. "Noethig and useful" lettering applied between the ground floor and first floor. The portal in the 3rd axis with simply profiled natural stone walls, arched end and apex stone marked 1796. The entrance drawn in with a staircase in front, this partly within the building line, partly in the sidewalk area, histor. Door received. Another wide arched opening with natural stone walls and a simple keystone, today with a glazed door element on the right side of the house, originally probably a passage. All windows on the ground floor and first floor with simple natural stone walls and wooden windows with histor. Sprout. Above a profiled eaves cornice, the mighty slate-covered gable roof with three rows of small standing dormers, only the two middle ones in the lower row are larger with double windows. An apartment on the top floor was installed in 1950.

This building is a particularly stately town house from the end of the 18th century with architectural and urban significance. As a former foundation building, it also has local and social historical value.

09228745
 


Iron stucco house;  Rectory parish of St. Annen
Iron stucco house; Rectory parish of St. Annen Große Kirchgasse 26
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End of 18th century / beginning of 19th century Birthplace of the businessman and politician Jacob Bernhard Eisenstuck (1805–1871, Second Vice President of the Frankfurt National Assembly), significance in terms of architectural history, urban development and social history.

Two-storey massive building with five axes in closed development. The ground floor with a central entrance is located above a base (now color-matched) This with a simple frame made of natural stone (porphyry), the roofing of which is integrated into the cornice made of the same material. The entrance with a historical two-wing door and skylight, stairs in front.

Next to the entrance a plate with the inscription: “Birthplace of the businessman and economist / Jacob Bernhard Eisenstuck / 2nd Vice President of the Frankfurt National Assembly / born. September 20th, 1805 Annaberg - died April 5th, 1871 Dresden / April 8th, 1871 Annaberg ". All windows on the ground floor and first floor with smooth natural stone walls (porphyry) and wooden windows with histor. Sprout. The slate-covered gable roof with small standing dormers. This house with its balanced facade design is a building from the late 18th century, which hardly any major renovations are to be expected. During an investigation of the cellars in 1996/97, the existence of a historical cultivation for water drainage was found, which indicates an early development of the property.

The famous Eisenstuck shop for lace and trimmings is documented at this location from 1747 to 1894. In addition, as the inscription suggests, it is the house where Jacob Bernhard Eisenstuck was born. It is therefore not only an object of architectural and urban value, but also has social and economic significance.

09228899
 


Residential building in closed development Grosse Kirchgasse 30
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Around 1880; 18th century, later changed with shop, architectural and urban significance.

Three-storey massive residential building in closed development. The facade with seven axes is smoothly plastered without any architectural decoration. A shop built in 1881 on the left on the ground floor. This forms a design unit with the house entrance, shop access and shop window through the joint profiled roof and the steps in front, the house entrance with histor. Door. The windows on all floors with simple walls and somewhat widened sills, the windows themselves not designed in accordance with listed buildings. In contrast to the surrounding buildings, there is not only a second floor, but also an extended mansard roof. On the street side, this has a high roof structure crowned by a triangular gable with slate cladding and three windows. Both the storey extension and the roof structure and interior changes to the stairwell are the result of modernization measures in 1915 (architect: Goetze). The two-storey building, originally built in the second half of the 18th century, now shows the result of several renovation and expansion measures. It is therefore not only of architectural historical importance, but also shows the urban development around 1900, which was characterized by floor extensions and roof extensions.

09228907
 


Residential building in closed development
Residential building in closed development Große Kirchgasse 32
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After 1731 with shop, vault in the hallway, significance in terms of building history and urban development.

Two-storey massive residential building in closed development. The building with seven axes, plastered smoothly above a quarry stone base, was changed several times on the ground floor. The house entrance with its simple walls and (later) segment arch-shaped end has a front staircase, to the left of it a wider shop window, also with segment arch. On the right side of the building another shop with two enlarged window openings and a retracted entrance with a staircase in front. The windows on the upper floor are all framed in different colors, none of the windows in the building are made in accordance with listed buildings. The former gable roof over the entire width of the house was expanded like a mansard and covered with slate. Inside still histor. Vault approaches in the hallway. Despite the extensive changes to this building, which probably dates from the 18th century, it has architectural and urban value.

09228900
 


Residential building with shop, in a closed area
Residential building with shop, in a closed area Große Kirchgasse 34
(map)
1st half of the 19th century, shop around 1890 with shop, architectural and urban significance.

Two-storey massive residential building in closed development. The facade with six axes is smoothly plastered without any architectural decoration. A shop built in at the end of the 19th century on the ground floor: a design unit consisting of a shop window and an entrance, next to it the house entrance with histor. Door, both openings with profiled framing and stairs in front. Above the front door and the shop area, a plaster ledge as a roof. All other windows of the building with colored frames and T-division of the windows. Above a profiled eaves cornice is the steep gable roof with slate covering and standing dormer windows in three rows, the lower three are designed as later roof houses with double windows. While the facade was mainly changed by the subsequent installation of the shop, the steep roof testifies to the time the house was built in the 18th century.

The house is a monument for architectural and urban planning reasons.

09228901
 


Residential building in closed development
Residential building in closed development Grosse Kirchgasse 36
(map)
after 1837 historical and urban significance.

Two-storey massive residential building with seven axes in closed development. The entrance in the central axis, drawn in with a staircase in front. Emphasis on the access through a profiled wall (porphyry) including a decorated crown. The ground floor with plaster grooves over a colored plinth. The windows with profiled walls and T-bars analogous to the entrance, the skylight divided by a bar. A cornice between the ground floor and first floor. The windows on the upper floor are the same as those on the ground floor, but below the sills Knaggen and stucco garlands as facade decoration. Plaster grooves between the openings. Above a strongly profiled eaves cornice a slate-covered gable roof with four standing dormers, the two in the middle as a roof house with double windows.

The building erected after the city fire of 1837 with its facade design typical of the middle of the 19th century has architectural and urban significance.

09228902
 


Residential building in closed development
Residential building in closed development Große Kirchgasse 38, 40
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Marked 1925–1927 Original equipment in the hallway and stairwell, architectural and urban significance.

Residential and factory building in a corner and closed development. The facade of the building appears relatively unadorned, as the windows (T-muntin) are only separated from the plastered surface by a narrow frame, a narrow plaster strip between the 2nd and 3rd floors. The axis given by the entrance is emphasized: the entrance is slightly funnel-shaped with a massive cubic frame, the door in a historicist shape. Above this opening on the 1st floor plaster groove between two windows, on the 2nd floor between five windows, which are also connected to one another by a cornice. Above a profiled eaves cornice is the slate-covered mansard roof with standing dormer windows. In the entrance axis formation of a wide dormer window with triangular gable, here three windows and in the gable field the designation: "Built CS 1925-27". The interior still has original furnishings, especially in the stairwell (banisters, doors, ceiling lamp, lamp on the flight of stairs). The initials refer to the builder Carl E. Schreyer, who had this building built from 1925 as a residential and factory building (trimmings and cord factory). The work rooms were in the side building facing Pfortengasse, while the main building had an office and sample room on the ground floor and business premises on the 2nd floor and the top floor. The first floor was reserved for residential use. After various uses as an administration building, the property now serves entirely as a residential building. As one of the few new buildings in Annaberg from the 1920s, this building has architectural and urban significance.

09228903
 


Residential building in closed development
Residential building in closed development Grosse Kirchgasse 42
(map)
around 1840-1880 with shop fitting, architectural and urban significance.

Two-storey, massive residential building with a core of the 1st half of the 19th century, which has probably been rebuilt several times, in a corner location and closed development with a three-storey extension in Pfortengasse (this one is not worth a monument). The main building and the ancillary building from 1887 were used by various business sectors (Mehner Cartonagenfabrik, Holzperlenfabrik Weißflug & Leitert, etc.), with the workrooms extending over both parts of the building. The eaves side to Kirchgasse with five even axes. On the ground floor the entrance to the house and a shop fitting, the entrance to which has a staircase in front, the associated windows have received their original proportions. The windows on the upper floor with smooth, plastered walls. The steep gable roof with slate cover and standing dormers. The simple window openings on the gable side refer to the structure of the extension.

Despite the later installation of the shop and the inconspicuous appearance, this property has building and economic historical significance. As part of the development of Kirchgasse between Pforten- and Mariengasse, which is presumably almost uniformly built, it also has urban value.

09228904
 


Residential building in closed development
Residential building in closed development Grosse Kirchgasse 44
(map)
around 1850 historical and urban significance.

Two-story massive residential building with five window axes in a closed development. Above a colored base with two basement windows is the plastered ground floor. Here on the outer right edge of the house entrance, slightly drawn in with a simply profiled wall and staircase in front, the historicist door with skylight. A small roof above the door is integrated into a plaster strip separating the ground floor and first floor. All windows on both floors with walls analogous to the entrance and T-bar. Between the sills and the lintels, there are horizontal plaster strips to structure the facade. The slate-covered gable roof has been removed, and today there is a mansard roof-like structure with six windows. Like the neighboring building (number 42), this property also had a large rear building from 1898 onwards, which was used by the Mehner Cartonagen factory. It is thus also an example of the intensive industrial use of the buildings within Annaberg city center. As part of the development of the Kirchgasse between Pforten- and Mariengasse, which was presumably almost uniformly built, the building has architectural and urban value.

09228897
 


Residential building in closed development
Residential building in closed development Grosse Kirchgasse 46
(map)
Marked 1847 with shop, architectural and urban significance.

Two-story massive residential building with six window axes in a closed development. The ground floor zone is determined by the installation of two shops (1916 and 1925) on both sides of the house entrance. The house entrance in the 3rd axis with two steps in front has a simple plaster frame with a side upstand and an overlying field, in this the inscription "1847 FachwerkB". The shops each have a separate entrance and a shop window. All of these openings and the windows on the upper floor have the same frame as the front door. The windows with cross-frame, the facade with smooth plaster without building decoration. The slate roof has three roof houses. As part of the development of the Kirchgasse between Pforten- and Mariengasse, which was presumably almost uniformly built, the building has architectural and urban value.

09228905
 


Residential building in closed development
Residential building in closed development Große Kirchgasse 48
(map)
Around 1880 historical and urban significance.

Two-storey, massive residential building on a relatively wide plot with eight window axes in closed development. The plastered, unadorned facade is attached above a colored pedestal. The entrance to the house is on the 4th axis and has a door frame in a classicist shape with a small tooth-cut frieze on the entablature. The door itself has a single leaf and is from historic times. Two steps are in front of the footpath. The windows simply with plastered, smooth walls, the windows not classified as a monument without division. The slate-covered gable roof with six standing dormers, each alternating with one or two windows. In 1886 the building was extensively rebuilt, including relocating the staircase, so that the structure that is still preserved today was created. The richly decorated facade is now very simplified.

As part of the development of the Kirchgasse between Pforten- and Mariengasse, which was presumably almost uniformly built, the building has architectural and urban value.

09228906
 


Holy Cross Church;  St. Joseph v.  Calasanza
More pictures
Holy Cross Church ; St. Joseph v. Calasanza Große Kirchgasse 51
(map)
1843-1844 Hall church with apse and large roof turret, in the arched style of the 19th century, significance in terms of architectural, cultural and urban planning.

The small hall church in the arched style was built in 1843/44 directly in front of the then just abandoned city wall on the old town side, probably as a result of a foundation by the apostolic vicar and bishop Ignatius Bernhard, who died in 1841. It is a simple plastered building with corner rustics and three large round arched windows on each side, these since 1943 after the replacement of the originally unadorned ones as colored glass windows. Access is on the south-west side, next to the main entrance there are two niches that were actually intended to accommodate figures of saints. However, since the consecration of the altar in 1844 caused the so-called Annaberg church dispute, these remained empty from the start. The portal with a roof and an extension of the step area was redesigned in 1981. The round colored glass window dates from 1986. On the northeast side the attached apse with 5/8 end and a hexagonal sacristy extension from 1978/79, which replaced the original one from 1911/12. The gable roof is covered with slate, the initially small roof turret was redesigned in 1920 and given a bell, its current shape comes from the 1950s.

Inside, the furnishings have largely been preserved: the altarpiece depicting Saint Joseph von Calasanza was made by the Dresden court painter Prof. Karl Christian Vogel von Vogelstein (1788–1868). It was restored by the LfD Sachsen and was given a new frame in 1981. Some changes in the interior took place in the course of modernization and following instructions from the Second Vatican Council, especially in 1981 (e.g. the chancel was changed in terms of design and construction, the floor was renewed with Sandetzky marble slabs and the wooden columns under the gallery were replaced with a wood-clad steel construction). The church has had a Jehmlich organ since 1992.

This church building has cultural and architectural value, its urban significance results primarily from its location in relation to the historic city wall, as this was abandoned in the middle of the 19th century (i.e. at the time the property was built) in the course of the city's expansion.

09228746
 


Residential house in a corner and closed development
Residential house in a corner and closed development Grosse Kirchgasse 52
(map)
Mid 19th century with shop, architectural and urban significance.

Two-storey massive residential building in a corner and closed development with six to six axes. The facade on both sides plastered and unadorned. The entrance to the house has a door frame in a classical form with a small tooth-cut frieze and a crown on the entablature. The door has a single leaf and is from a later time. To the right of this is a subsequent shop installation (1910) with an entrance and the shop window immediately next to it. The windows on the ground floor are not in the axes of the upper floor. All the windows are plain with smooth walls, the windows are not classified as a monument without division. The slate-covered hip roof with wide pike dormers (1932).

Located on the corner of Mariengasse, this building marks the beginning of what is presumably the almost uniformly built development on Kirchgasse between Pforten- and Mariengasse and has architectural and urban value.

09228896
 


Apartment building in closed development
Apartment building in closed development Große Kirchgasse 54
(map)
1903 Clinker brick facade, reform architecture, significance in terms of building history and urban development.

Solid four-story tenement house in closed development, built in 1903 according to plans by Goetzes for the trimmings manufacturer Ottomar Claus. Above a base zone made of quarry stone masonry, the ground floor is connected, which is dominated by its four large round-arched openings, three of which are designed as windows (behind, presumably a unit room for fabrication) and one as a house entrance. The original front door, two-winged with skylight. Above the arches, decorative vertical plaster stripes alternate with the red brick of the facade. The entire ground floor and 2/3 of the 1st floor are made of this material. There is white clinker brick up to the eaves cornice, which creates a clear contrast of colors on the facade with the same material. The windows on the 1st and 2nd floors are rectangular, on the 3rd floor with a segmental arch. The windows axially with frames, partially plastered mirrors and other cubic decorations in the fighter area. Only two windows each on the 1st and 2nd floor, almost unadorned, as there were originally wooden balconies here, which were later demolished. Above the two right round arches, particular emphasis is placed on the design: a half-timbered area begins here on the third floor and extends as a gable-like extension into the attic. This is plastered with a dark contrasting decorative framework. The adjoining gable roof is covered with slate with towers. The design of the 1903 building (architect: Goetze) stands out from the surrounding historic buildings. It shows elements of both Art Nouveau and reform architecture. The house at Mariengasse 23 is similar in Annaberg. It is therefore of architectural and urban value.

09228908
 


Representative tenement house in closed development Große Kirchgasse 56
(map)
Marked 1906 Clinker facade, historical and urban significance.

Representative four-storey, massive tenement house with eight window axes in a closed development. This apartment building, built for the trimmings manufacturer Ottomar Claus according to plans by Paul Frisch, has a base made of bossed masonry with cellar window openings, above which the clinker brick facade of the building is connected to a cornice. The facade is characterized by the mix of red and yellow clinker bricks as well as light-colored plaster and stucco surfaces. The entrance to the house is on the 4th axis and has a plaster frame that also surrounds the kidney-shaped skylight, there a medallion with the designation "1906". The door itself is simple and has two leaves. The windows on the ground floor with a frame and a medallion like the door, three horizontal bands between each window. Between the ground floor and the first floor there is a decorative ribbon made of yellow clinker and white-green clinker “flowers”. The window design on the 1st and 2nd floors is the same: ornate decorations in Art Nouveau forms, decorative highlighting of the relief arches in yellow clinker. The framing of the windows on the top floor is a bit simpler. All windows are rectangular and t-shaped, two windows are always coupled in pairs in the two outer axes. These outer axes are optically separated from the center of the facade. For this purpose, pilaster strips made of yellow clinker are formed here and on the outside of the building, which are provided with a kind of capital and lead over to the two arched roof structures. Here a pair of windows with round arches and a decorative curved and designed mirror surface below the sills. The facade of this building looks very lively, especially due to the change in material, the Art Nouveau decorations make it a successful example of construction at the beginning of the 20th century, so that it is of architectural and urban significance.

09228948
 


Apartment building in closed development Grosse Kirchgasse 62
(map)
Around 1914 Parts of the original furnishings in the hallway and stairwell, significance in terms of building history and urban development.

Three-storey, massive tenement house in closed development, built in 1914 for the construction business owner Georg Häsler according to plans by Ernst Siegel. The plastered, symmetrically constructed facade of the building is attached above a natural stone plinth. The entrance to the house is particularly emphasized: two strong three-quarter columns with a smooth shaft and a simple capital slab support an entablature with a tooth cut, inside the double-leaf wooden door, above the semicircular skylight. On each side there are three rectangular windows in a slightly recessed plastered area, which is framed by a pilaster-like plaster decor. The wide bay window dominating the facade with four windows and a steep galvanized roof forms the middle of the 1st floor. The two adjoining windows on each side form lanes with the windows on the floor above, a circular decoration in the colored field between the floors. The mansard roof has a roof structure with triangular gable and two windows on each of the outer axes, and two windows are cut into the roof surface in the middle of the building. Inside, the original furnishings such as railings, doors and ceiling paintings have been preserved. With its design (especially entrance, bay window and roof structures) the building shows ideas of reform architecture and neoclassicism and thus reflects the time it was built. For this reason it has both architectural and urban significance.

09228949
 


Apartment building in half-open development Grosse Kirchgasse 64
(map)
Around 1910 historical and urban significance.

Three-storey, massive tenement house, built in 1921 according to Ernst Siegel's plans, in a closed development with six regular window axes. A natural stone plinth visually balances the ground level so that the overlying ground floor with its pilaster-like decoration can begin at the same height. These pilaster strips optically carry the cornice to the upper floors. The entrance to the building is slightly drawn in and is framed by two pillar-like walls, above it a widening stepped beam, the double-winged door made of wood with a skylight. The windows on the upper floors are rectangular with a T-storey and small-scale protrusion in the skylight, between the window axes brightly contrasted plastered surfaces so that the openings have a strip-like character. The facade is otherwise without decoration (originally there was a small decoration on the plastered surfaces and the entrance had a more noticeable attachment). The mansard roof with standing dormers at the side, in the middle a wider roof structure over two axes with a curved gable. The facade of this building looks as if it had been subsequently simplified. Nevertheless, it is a testimony to building at the beginning of the 20th century and is of architectural and urban significance.

09228950
 


Single-storey house with a high pitched roof in a closed development Big summer line 21
(card)
1st half of the 19th century 09229257
 


Small single storey house Big summer line 27
(card)
1st half of the 19th century 09228926
 


Small single storey house Big summer line 43
(card)
1st half of the 19th century 09228929
 


Small single-storey house with gable and two rows of dormer windows, in closed development Big summer line 53
(card)
Marked with 1803 Craftsman's or miner's house, with segmental arch portal, significance in terms of building history and local development.

Small single-storey massive residential building in closed development. The seven-axis building has a symmetrical structure: in the middle the house entrance with natural stone walls and a keystone (marked 1803). The door with a glazed, arched skylight. The smooth plastered facade with six rectangular windows above a base. Like the front door, these have a simple structure made of natural stone and cross-shaped sprouting. Above the profiled eaves cornice is the steep, slate-covered gable roof with a gable and two standing dormers. During an investigation of the cellars in 1996/97, the existence of a historical cultivation for water drainage was found, which indicates an early development of the property. This type of building is typical of the craftsmen's or miners' houses in the Ore Mountains at the beginning of the 19th century, for this reason it is not only important in terms of architectural history, but also in terms of local development and economic history.

09229020
 


Remnants of the original basalt plaster Large Summer Line and Small Summer Line
(map)
16th Century 09228923
 
Villa with garage
Villa with garage Hermannstrasse 7
(map)
1913 Reform style architecture, architectural and urban significance.

Two-storey villa with an extended attic in an open development directly on the former city limits. Due to the steep slope of the terrain, the house on the 1st floor is accessed from the street via a small bridge. The front door is protected in a round-arched vestibule, the roof area of ​​which is used as a balcony on the floor above. The facades with regularly arranged window openings, these with histor. small-scale shoot. The attic was expanded like a mansard roof, each spanned with a flat segmented arch gable. The actual roof is designed as a hipped roof. The main orientation of the building is probably down the valley, away from the street. It is a typical villa building from the early 20th century for the bourgeois upper class, who at that time built villas near the city on the hillside along Paulus-Jenisius-Straße, Hermannstraße and Bruno-Matthes-Straße. It has architectural and urban significance.

09228587
 


villa
villa Hermannstrasse 9
(map)
1913 historical and urban significance.

Four-storey villa in open development on the former city limits. Due to the steep slope of the terrain, the house on the upper floor is accessed from the street via a wide flight of stairs with a terrace. Otherwise, an access path leads to the valley-side entrance in the basement. The front faces the street, where the arched door and two windows are flanked by fluted half-columns. This design is continued in a roof structure that is spanned by a flat segmented arch gable. The facade in the basement with natural stone cladding, then plastered with even openings, these on the lower floors are quite large, on the top floor they are arched like the entrance door here. The slate roof with small standing dormers.

It is a typical villa building from the early 20th century for the bourgeois upper class, who at that time built villas near the city on the hillside along Paulus-Jenisius-Straße, Hermannstraße and Bruno-Matthes-Straße. It has architectural and urban significance.

09228586
 


City fortifications Hermannstrasse and Paulus-Jenisius-Strasse
(map)
Before 1540 09228585
 


Three candle arches, basalt paving and curbstones Hopfengasse
(map)
probably 17th century urban development and historical significance.

Between the buildings in Wolkensteiner Straße 33 and 35 is the narrow Hopfengasse leading to Untere Schmiedegasse. Three candle arches were erected between the buildings along the narrow street to dissipate forces. These arches are basket arch-shaped, straight at the top and are now provided with a steep sheet metal cover for reasons of weather protection. In this almost traffic-free street, the historic basalt pavement that originally covered large parts of the urban traffic areas has also been preserved.

The combination of pavement and candle arches is therefore a rarity for Annaberg of urban and developmental value that needs to be preserved.

09228554
 


Vorstadtscheune (part of the Ackerbürgerhaus Pfarrgasse 15) Hüttengrundstrasse 2nd half of the 18th century / 1st. Half of the 19th century Significance in terms of building history, local history and economic history

Barn on a rectangular floor plan in open development, far outside Annaberg, close to the railway line and the Sehma river. The building is characterized by a large gate entrance on both long sides. Only very small rectangular openings on the upper floor. The steep pitched roof with bitumen shingle covering without dormers or windows. It is a suburban barn, formerly probably for the Ackerbürgerhaus Pfarrgasse 15. Due to its typical, authentically traditional design, the property has both architectural and local historical significance as well as economic historical relevance.

09229031
 
Apartment building with a modern shop area, in a closed area
Apartment building with a modern shop area, in a closed area Johannisgasse 1
(map)
around 1890 Facade of the tenement house in closed development; With a modern shop zone, of importance in terms of building history and urban planning. 09228779
 


Tenement house with shops, in closed development
Tenement house with shops, in closed development Johannisgasse 3
(map)
around 1890 with shop, architectural and urban significance.

Four-storey, massive tenement house with five axes in closed development. In terms of design, the facade is divided into two areas: the ground floor and 1st floor have rusticated plastering, while the 2nd and 3rd floors are made of yellow clinker. The entrance to the house on the far right is drawn in with a wooden door and a semicircular skylight, the opening has a profiled arched wall with an ornamental stone. The ground floor facing the street is completely used for the shop with two large shop windows and the shop entrance. The windows on the 1st floor with a segmental arch, the same profiled frame and crown stone as the house entrance. The second section of the facade begins above a cornice: the windows here are rectangular and have alternating straight and triangular roofs on the second floor. Plaster mirrors with a stucco element are located below the sills. The windows on the 3rd floor are more simply decorated with a straight roof and a diamond-shaped element on each side below the sills. A decorative frieze made of red and yellow bricks completes the facade at the top. Above the profiled eaves cornice is the slate roof with standing dormers. The different formation of the ground floor and first floor to the other upper floors suggests that the two lower floors were originally used for commercial purposes.

Located in the immediate vicinity of Buchholzer Straße and thus Annaberg's main shopping street, this building also shows the typical development from the end of the 19th century and thus has a historical and urban value.

09228780
 


Tenement house with shop, in closed development
Tenement house with shop, in closed development Johannisgasse 5
(map)
around 1890 with shop, architectural and urban significance.

Three-storey, massive tenement house with five axes in closed development. In terms of design, the facade is divided into two areas: the ground floor and first floor have plastering, while the third floor is made of yellow clinker brick. The house entrance on the far left is slightly drawn in and has its original wooden door, the rectangular opening with a simply profiled wall. The ground floor facing the street is completely used for the shop with two large shop windows and the shop entrance. A smooth plastered surface with the name of the shop is arranged above the shop window. The windows on the 1st floor are rectangular with a color-contrasting frame, without decor in the facade surface with the classicistic plastering. The second section of the facade begins above a cornice: the windows here are also rectangular and have alternating straight and triangular roofs, the strong sills have designed lugs and plastered mirrors in between. A corner rustication is formed on the facade edge on the 2nd floor. Above the eaves cornice with a serrated frieze is the slate mansard roof used for residential purposes. The different design of the facade suggests that the two lower floors were originally used for commercial purposes. Located in the immediate vicinity of Buchholzer Straße and thus Annaberg's main shopping street, this building also shows the typical development from the end of the 19th century and thus has a historical and urban value.

09228781
 


Residential and commercial building Johannisgasse 5a
(map)
re. 1912 (residential and factory building) Reform style building, historical and urban significance.

Three-storey, massive residential and factory building (architect: Goetze) on a wide plot in open development, the facade of which follows the slightly bent course of the street. The ground floor has a red natural stone cladding (porphyry). In the middle area there are three large arched windows with two natural stone bars each to divide the windows. On the left and right edge of the building there is an entrance: the right one with a round arched portal with an egg stick-like frieze and a column-supported small porch, in the keystone the date 1912, the original wooden door with skylight is present. On the left side a second, subordinate entrance, also arched and drawn in, but without a porch. The facade of the upper storeys appears to be moving due to flat, wave-like bay windows with three tall rectangular windows each between the pilaster-like vertical elements. In the kink area of ​​the facade, open exits with an asymmetrical design are designed as mediators and eye-catchers. Original typical windows and plaster decorations have been preserved. The high mansard roof is clad in sheet metal with a dormitory-like structure corresponding to the facade axes. Due to the sloping location, two basement floors were created, which were illuminated from the rear and partly also served as work rooms. In the first basement and on the ground floor, these workrooms extended completely across the main building and the extension. Large apartments were on the 2nd floor and the attic. In 1919, for example, the object was used as a stamping and stamping facility with up to 70 workers.

This building is a highly authentic, high-quality example of a residential and factory building in the reform style, still with Art Nouveau elements, with architectural and urban value.

09228782
 


Baroque house, garage installation Johannisgasse 13
(map)
18th century 09228785
 


Residential house and extension, in semi-open development; today textile wholesaler Müller Johannisgasse 17
(map)
Around 1875, before 1860? historical and urban significance.

Three-storey, massive residential building with five window axes and a two-storey extension with four axes built in 1886 in open development. The facade design of the house and extension form a unit. The ground floor is connected via a base zone with basement windows, the windows here with simply profiled walls, an entrance each on the left and right. The right one is representative: framing of fluted pilasters that support an entablature, this merges into the serrated cornice between the ground floor and the first floor. The entrance itself has been drawn in with a staircase in front of the building, an original historicist door available. The left entrance is a bit simpler. The element of pilaster beams on the 1st floor is repeated: here both above the right and above the left entrance (each with a plastered mirror with stucco decoration), with a double pilaster position on the gable side of the extension, a field for advertising is framed. The capitals of the upper floors are not stylized as on the ground floor, but in a Corinthian shape. The windows of the 1st and 2nd floor each with roofing, on the extension these are also provided with cleats. The house has a gable roof with vertical dormers, while the annex with a sloping corner has a flat roof. At the end of the 19th century, this building was used by the factory of trimmings and lace Gebrüder Richter & Co, for which the entire ground floor of both parts of the building and the upper floor of the extension were available. The house is a typical 19th century building to which a commercial extension was added. With the facade design, an attempt was made to visually enhance the purely practical extension. The gable side of the upper floor was prepared for advertising purposes and the orientation towards the street widening located here was used. The property has architectural and urban significance.

09228786
 


Villa Clara Johannisgasse 19
(map)
Marked 1879 historical and urban significance.

Two-storey massive villa in open development in the area of ​​the square-like widening of Johannisgasse. The facade with influences of late classicism designed with a slightly protruding central projection. This one on both floors with three windows linked by their framing. The middle one on the ground floor is highlighted by a triangular roof. The word “Villa Clara” is written on the surrounding eaves cornice as a wide strip. Two window axes on each side of the risalit. Access to the building is via a two-storey extension on the side, the arched entrance is drawn in with a staircase in front, as the ground floor is designed as a mezzanine floor. Above the door, adorned with a classicist garment, the name “MDCCLXXIX”. The slate roof is designed as a hipped roof and is crowned by an ornamental grille. This building was probably where Arthur Wirth, a painter's “noble studio and painting school” originally was. In addition, it was in the 1920s to the general. Electricity company Annaberg leased. As a free-standing villa with restrained late-classical decor, this property is of architectural and urban significance.

09228787
 


Residential house in half-open development, classicist door frame Johannisgasse 21
(map)
Mid-19th century, probably older in the core Classicist door frame (subsequently referred to as 1864), significance in terms of building history and urban development.

Two-storey building in a half-open structure with 9 window axes. Since the surrounding area is inclined, the basement acts as an additional storey on the narrow side. Main entrance to the square-like widening of Johannisgasse with a door frame in a classicistic design language, this is marked with "1864 RM 1995", the lower parts of the garment are not complemented with other natural stone material in accordance with the monument. The entrance is reached by a staircase in front. All openings with simple natural stone walls (analogous to the door) and small window bars. The facade is otherwise unadorned. The steep hipped roof covered with slate and two rows of standing dormers. With the exception of a few changes to the gable, the residential building looks like it did on the building plans from the 19th century. As an authentic example of bourgeois construction, the property has architectural and urban significance.

09228788
 


Adam Ries House
Adam Ries House Johannisgasse 23
(map)
1496–1497, later changed Significance in terms of building history, cultural history and the history of science.

Small two-storey house with 4 window axes in closed development at the beginning of the square-like widening of Johannisgasse. The smoothly plastered, unadorned facade above a colored base. On the ground floor there is a squat portal with a segmental arch and a two-winged wooden door. The window frames are simple and contrasting in color, the windows with small protrusions. The hipped roof has a slate covering and three standing dormers, of which the middle one has a double window. The sign “Adam-Ries-Haus” is located between the ground floor and the first floor.

From 1523/25 to 1559 this was the house / arithmetic school of Adam Ries, the electoral Saxon court arithmetic and most important arithmetic master of the 16th century. The still preserved cellar vault indicates that the building was built shortly after the city was founded, so that it belongs to the belonged to the first houses of the so-called Münzviertel. In 1542 the extension, the so-called Schreiberstüblein, was built under Adam Ries. The city fire of 1604 destroyed large parts of the building (according to building findings, the upper floor should have consisted of half-timbered houses and was closed off by a tent roof). The shape of the massive building with hipped roof that is visible today, probably around 1733. The structural enlargement of the neighboring buildings took place in the second half of the 19th century, so that the Rieshaus appears as a relic of another time. After various uses as a wine store, resettler's house and warehouse, the first renovation work began in 1958 due to the poor state of construction (replacement of the window and door frames in Hilbersdorfer Porphyry). The building was extensively restored from 1981-83 and has since housed a museum dedicated to Adam Ries.

In addition to its architectural and urban significance, it also has a cultural and scientific historical value.

09228667
 
Apartment building in closed development Karlsplatz 2
(map)
around 1900 historical and urban significance.

Two-storey, massive tenement house with five axes in a closed development in downtown Annaberg. The plastered façade adjoins the basement level with raised sandstone masonry. On the far right is the entrance to the building with a round arched portal adorned by a cord with a floral pattern, a coat of arms with "RF" in the decorated apex. The actual door is drawn in deeply so that a small hall is formed with the staircase in front. The windows are rectangular with a profiled sandstone frame, the two left-hand windows are each coupled. The eye-catcher of the building is the central axis with the bay window on the upper floor, which is crowned by a turret in the attic. The mansard roof is slated. This building, which was probably built around 1900, has both architectural significance and, as part of the façade of the square, urban planning significance.

09228662
 


Two grouped houses (two entrances) in half-open development Karlsplatz 3, 4
(map)
1785-1790 historical and urban significance.

Two-story massive residential building with five axes in a closed development in downtown Annaberg. The entrance to the building in the middle with a simple segment arched door frame and an unlabeled apex. The plastered facade on the ground floor with light plaster grooves. All windows with narrow walls in contrasting colors and wooden windows with histor. Sprout. The slate-covered mansard roof with small standing dormer windows in two rows. This unadorned house, which is typical for the time it was built at the end of the 18th century, has architectural significance and, above all, in combination with its neighboring house and as part of the façade of the square, it is also relevant to urban planning.

09228661
 


Apartment building in half-open development Kleine Kartengasse 1
(map)
Around 1900 historical and urban significance.

Three-storey, massive tenement house with six axes in half-open development. The facade of the building is characterized by the red and white contrast of clinker brickwork and light window frames. Yellow clinker brick and a few natural stone elements are also used as building decor. The house entrance is slightly off-center and is drawn in in the manner typical of Annaberg with a staircase in front. A fairly high basement forms the base of the house. The mansard roof is covered with slate and has another floor. This property is a typical tenement house for the end of the 19th century with its historic facade design and structure. In its environment, which is characterized by smaller buildings, it has both architectural and urban significance.

09228932
 


Apartment house in a corner and closed development Kleine Kartengasse 8
(map)
Around 1890 historical buildings

The three-storey, plastered tenement house in a semi-open development with five axes was built towards the end of the 19th century; its historicist decor has preserved window canopies on the 1st floor, a cornice between the ground floor and 1st floor and a profiled eaves cornice, the rather flat gable roof shows four standing dormers, in addition to the relevance of the building history, the building's testimony to the contemporary transformation of the cityscape should be mentioned.

09228936
 


Apartment building in formerly half-open development Kleine Kartengasse 12
(map)
Around 1890 09228938
 


Apartment building in closed development Kleine Kartengasse 15
(map)
Around 1890 architectural significance.

The three-storey apartment building in closed development is architectural evidence of its time (around 1890) and, together with its neighboring buildings, forms a row of houses of urban relevance, which stands for the transformation process of the city at the end of the 19th century. The three-storey solid plastered building with six axes, centered by a two-axis flat central projectile, still has a largely original relationship between opening and wall, only two oversized dormers on both sides of the roof house, which heightened the central projecting, indicate a later intervention, the floors are each made of simple plaster cornices Visually separated, the only additional decorations to be mentioned on the 1st floor are straight window canopies and a central triangular crown.

09228939
 


Apartment building in closed development Kleine Kartengasse 17
(map)
around 1890 architectural significance.

The apartment building in closed development, which was built towards the end of the 19th century, is a building-historical witness of its time, which was characterized by historicist facade vocabulary, and together with its neighboring buildings forms a picture-defining row of houses of urban relevance. The ground floor of the five-axis facade has grooved, gray-colored plaster, and another front door has been added to the right of the central, drawn-in entrance. A strong strip of plaster separates the ground floor from the two upper floors, which are tiled in brown and yellow and partly set off with red clinker bricks. The windows on the 1st floor are provided with floral stucco fields above and below, the eaves are adorned with stucco studs. The gable roof is determined by a central roof house crowned with a triangular gable, next to which 2 standing dormers have placed themselves.

09228940
 


Apartment building in closed development Kleine Kartengasse 21
(map)
Around 1885 09228941
 


Residential house in a corner and closed development Kleine Kartengasse 25
(map)
Around 1860 09229025
 


Former prison Kleine Kirchgasse 1
(map)
Late 18th century With a shop, probably a former prison right next to the town hall, significance in terms of architectural history, the history of local development and urban development.

Two-story massive building on an irregular plot of land near the market and town hall. Due to the sloping terrain, the Wolkensteiner Strasse facade is three-story. On the lower floors there are now various shops with different shop window designs: at the corner of Wolkensteiner Strasse, a restaurant with segmental arched openings, at the corner of Kirchgasse, a shop with access on the corner and large shop windows as well as two other shops (1895) on Kirchgasse, which have theirs for the end 19th century typical design of shop windows and shop entrances. In this area, the ground floor facade has a horizontal plaster groove. Otherwise, the facade is unadorned: the windows with different formats have a colored frame and small window bars. Over the profiled eaves cornice, the hipped roof is covered with slate with standing dormer windows. During an investigation of the cellars in Annaberg city center in 1996/97 it was found that the only closed vault (over an oval base) in this building is in the investigation area. There is no longer any visual indication of its historical use as a prison, but its special location right next to the town hall suggests that this property was used for the public. It is therefore of particular importance in terms of the history of building and development, as well as of particular urban development.

09228713
 


Residential house with shop fitting, in closed development Kleine Kirchgasse 2
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century (residential house), around 1885 (shop) 09228725
 


Residential house in semi-open development, butcher shop on the ground floor Kleine Kirchgasse 3
(map)
Marked 1732 (or 1752), 1814 (Fleischer) re. 1732 with shop fitting, historical and special urban significance.

Two-storey massive building in half-open development, the eaves side of which is smaller than the gable side. Attached to the former Annaberg prison (Kleine Kirchgasse 1), its gable side is free to widen the Kleine Kirchgasse. The house has four window axes to the street. On the ground floor, next to the window on the far left, there is the house entrance, a shop entrance and a shop window (1862), these three large openings each with segmental arches. The gable side with five window axes, also here on the ground floor a shop window (two of which are walled up) and an entrance on the far right. The entire ground floor on the street side and half on the gable side was covered with ceramic cladding. Some of the windows on the ground floor with porphyry walls, all others on the house with a colored frame, the windows themselves are not listed. The gable roof is hipped on the gable side, here is a large loading hatch for using the roof as a storage area. Three standing dormers are arranged on the eaves side. The building, which was built in the first half of the 18th century, has a striking location, as the otherwise narrow Kirchgasse widens like a square. Not only the shop windows, but also the loading hatch on the top floor indicate intensive commercial use. The building is therefore not only of particular importance in terms of urban development, but also in terms of building and economic history.

09228712
 


Apartment building in closed development Kleine Kirchgasse 4
(map)
18th century 09228711
 


Residential building in closed development Kleine Kirchgasse 5
(map)
Marked 1735 Baroque portal, inside cross vaults, architectural and urban significance.

Three-storey, massive residential building with five axes in closed development. In the middle of the ground floor is the house entrance with a baroque door frame, the keystone is marked “1735”. To the right of it an additional garage door, to the left two windows. These windows, as well as those on the 1st floor, have a simple frame, the window frames of the 2nd upper floor, which was subsequently added (1904), are more ornate in the upper area, with the sills also profiled. All windows of the house with T-floor. The facade of the building is smoothly plastered and has no building decor. The gable roof with slate covering and standing dormers. Inside probably cross vaults. On the lower two floors, the building has substance from the time it was built in the 18th century, but it was remodeled and raised, which is typical of the 19th century. As an inner-city example of a baroque building with later extensive structural changes, it has both architectural and urban significance.

09228709
 


Apartment building in closed development Kleine Kirchgasse 6
(map)
1877 with shop, architectural and urban significance.

Three-storey, massive tenement house with five axes in closed development. The ground floor is completely reserved for shop use: on the far left is the entrance to the house with the original door, followed by alternating door and shop window. The openings are all provided with a simply profiled wall. The two residential floors connect above a cornice. Their windows with a more elaborate design: on the 1st floor angular sills and straight roofing, decorative, simple plastered mirrors, on the 2nd floor on the sills there are also console-like decorations on the outside. The slate-covered gable roof has standing dormers in two rows. This building is a typical tenement house from the 19th century, which, although some of the architectural decor has already been removed, has been preserved in a relatively authentic condition. It has architectural and urban value.

09228710
 


Apartment building in closed development Kleine Kirchgasse 7
(map)
18th century (after 1731) 09228708
 


Residential building in closed development Kleine Kirchgasse 8
(map)
18th century (after 1731), later reshaped Cross vaults inside, significance in terms of building history and urban development.

Massive building on a wide plot, which also extends deep into the property along Mittelgasse. Due to the inclined street, it is two-story in the upper part and three-story in the lower part. The different arrangement of the windows on the 1st floor and the fire wall visible in the roof roughly in the middle of the building show that two separate buildings have been combined here. In 1899 an extensive construction work was carried out in which the right component was increased by one storey and both houses were combined under a common mansard roof with double dormer windows. The windows with smooth, plastered bottles, in different formats and designs (partly with winter windows), some openings on the ground floor are walled up, including the two openings on the left corner that belonged to an earlier shop fitting. The unrenovated facade is smoothly plastered. Cross vaulting probably still exists inside. Despite its inconspicuous exterior, this building has architectural and urban value.

09228705
 


Residential building in closed development Kleine Kirchgasse 9
(map)
after 1731, later reshaped Cross vaults inside, significance in terms of building history and urban development.

Two-storey residential building with five axes in closed development. The facade is unadorned except for the door frame of the house entrance, which is arranged in the middle, made of natural stone in baroque form with segmented arch and keystone, one step in front. Unsightly, the plaster protruding over the stone after the last renovation. All windows with small muntins, the window frames are only offset by the painters. Expansion of the slate-covered mansard roof for intensive use in two floors, each with 3 dormers and double windows. Cross vaults have been preserved inside.

This building dates from the 18th century and has been adapted to changing usage requirements over time. It has architectural and urban value.

09228707
 


Residential building in closed development Kleine Kirchgasse 10
(map)
Essentially the 18th century Cross vaults inside, significance in terms of building history and urban development.

Two-storey solid residential building in a corner (four to four axes) and closed development. The access to the building in the 2nd axis on the eaves side with a door frame from the 18th century (segment arch and crown stone) refers to the time the house was built; the door itself is a successful example of historicism. To the left of it is a somewhat enlarged window, also with a segmented arch, which suggests that this side of the house is used for commercial purposes. All other windows show a structural change from 1892 in their design: strong sills, on the ground floor with cleats, on the upper floor with plastered mirrors below and decor above the lintel. On the other hand, the ground floor with horizontal plastering, the upper floor adjoining a cornice has large plastered mirrors with a central stucco decoration between the window openings. In a simplified form, the facade design was also continued on the extension to the Mittelgasse. Inside probably cross vaults. The steep, slate-covered hipped roof has a total of three roof house-like structures, each with a double window. The building's time of construction as well as its high-quality structural changes can be read off, which means that it has architectural and urban significance.

09228704
 


Residential building in closed development Kleine Kirchgasse 11
(map)
18th century (after 1731) with a shop, cross vaults inside, significance in terms of building history and urban development.

Two-story massive residential building with five axes in closed development. In the middle of the ground floor the slightly drawn-in house entrance, door not original, to the left of it a shop fitting with a shop window and door, on the right side the two windows in their original size. All openings on the ground floor and first floor are set off in color with smooth cleaning flasks. The facade is otherwise unadorned. Above the profiled eaves cornice, the steep, slate-covered gable roof starts, the lower level of which has been extended and is illuminated by four roof-house-like structures. Inside probably cross vaults.

This building dates from the 18th century and has not been structurally changed except for the shop. It is a monument with architectural significance and, as part of the street-side development in Annaberg city center, urban development.

09228706
 


Residential building in closed development Kleine Kirchgasse 13
(map)
Marked with 1734 Cross vaults inside, significance in terms of building history and urban development.

Two-storey massive house with four axes in closed development. The house entrance with its historic door has a baroque natural stone wall with a basket arch and crown stone, which is labeled "1734". Next to it is a large rectangular opening that presumably served as a shop window at times. All other windows have been preserved in their original proportions. They are set off with a colored frame to the wall surface and have a cross section. Above the profiled cornice is the subsequently modified mansard roof with slate covering, which is suitable for better residential use. Here a total of six windows with the same division. Cross vaults inside. The simple house from the 18th century has architectural and urban value and with the roof change clearly shows its adaptation to the changed usage requirements of the 19th century.

09228703
 


Residential building in closed development Kleine Kirchgasse 14
(map)
Late 18th century Cross vaults inside, significance in terms of building history and urban development.

Two-storey, massive residential building with six axes on a relatively wide plot in closed development. The house entrance off-center with a baroque door frame (segment arch and apex), slightly raised to the level of the street with two steps in front. The door itself has two leaves, not originally. On the left is a garage entrance with a segmental arch. The three windows to the right of the entrance have been preserved in their original proportions. These, as well as the windows on the upper floor, are set off from the wall surface with a colored frame, windows are not listed. The two left windows on the upper floor above the garage entrance are coupled. The slate roof facing the street is not in its original condition, but has been expanded into a mansard roof. Inside probably cross vaults.

It is a typical house of the 18th century and later remodeling with architectural and urban significance.

09228701
 


Tenement house with shop, in closed development Kleine Kirchgasse 16
(map)
18th century with shop, architectural and urban significance.

Narrow three-story tenement house with three axes in closed development. The two upper floors with residential use are connected above the ground floor with access to the house and store use (shop window). The light facade here with horizontal plastering, emphasizing the windows in terms of design: strong sills with narrow plaster mirrors underneath, simply profiled window walls and above the windows on the 1st floor straight roofs. The windows themselves with small muntins. The gable roof has been developed for residential purposes and has a broad structure, similar to a dwelling. Due to the addition of storeys to the building around 1888 and the installation of a shop on the ground floor as early as 1883, the building looks like a typical 19th century apartment building in its present-day appearance, although its core is probably still older. It is a monument with architectural and urban value.

09228700
 


Residential building in closed development Kleine Kirchgasse 17
(map)
18th century (after 1731) Cross vaults inside, significance in terms of building history and urban development.

Two-storey massive residential building with five axes in a closed development. The house entrance in the 2nd axis from the left is slightly drawn in with a staircase in front of the building. Simple door frame with straight roof. All windows have a smooth wall, which is brightly set off from the surrounding plaster, window division as a cross. The facade is unadorned. Above the profiled eaves cornice is the roof designed as a mansard roof with 3 dormers (double windows) facing the street. Cross vaults have been preserved inside. Except for the presumably changed roof, a bourgeois house from the 18th century has been preserved here without extensive structural changes. It therefore has both architectural and urban significance, as it is part of the dense development in Annaberg city center between the market and the Annenkirche.

09228702
 


Apartment building in closed development Kleine Kirchgasse 19
(map)
18th century 09228699
 


Residential building in closed development
Residential building in closed development Kleine Kirchgasse 22
(map)
Late 18th century with shop fittings, architectural and urban significance.

Two-storey massive solid building with eleven to four axes and an extension with three axes in closed development. The location is characterized by its location in the immediate vicinity of St. Anne's Church on Untere Kirchplatz. There are two historical entrances with cautiously designed door frames (straight roof), one to the square, the other to Kirchgasse. This is drawn in with a staircase in front to compensate for the great difference in level with the street. A shop was subsequently added to the corner of the building and the window was slightly enlarged as a shop window. The windows on the upper floor are relatively high, which suggests public or civil use. All openings with simple, color-contrasting framing, the windows with cross-muntings. The smooth plastered facade is unadorned, except for inscriptions on today's use. The mighty slate-covered hipped roof with standing dormer windows connects to a profiled eaves cornice, and a gable roof over the extension. There is an undated colored drawing of this building that shows an earlier state: symmetrical layout with eleven axes and a central axis accentuated by a wide segmental arch portal with apex stone, the portal was followed by a hall extending over three axes with lush staircases, cross vaults, narrow side wings with another flight of stairs.

Due to its location, building dimensions and the time it was built in the 18th century, this is a monument of particular architectural, historical and urban development value.

09228698
 


Superintendent
More pictures
Superintendent Kleine Kirchgasse 23
(map)
1731, in the core 1538 Town house with a remarkable portal, significance in terms of building history, local history and urban development.

Two-storey former town house with 11 window axes in semi-open development in the immediate vicinity of St. Anne's Church. The eye-catcher on the ground floor is the asymmetrically arranged, elaborate portal with a heraldic cartouche in the apex stone, triangular gable roofing with pine cones and the eye of God in the gable, strongly colored frame. The windows with brightly contrasting frames and a decorative upper finish, bright horizontal bands above the lintels on the ground floor and first floor as well as between the two floors. Corner rustics also used as a brightly contrasting decor. The central emphasis of the building is given by the large central dwelling with triangular gable and oculus as well as three windows, also here corner rustics. All windows with cross-frame and small muntins. The roof is designed as a slate mansard roof and has two standing dormers on both sides of the dwelling. The outer wall to the Gasse Kirchberg has no openings.

The so-called Kaspar-Kürschner-Haus was built in 1538 by the mayor and Fundgrübner Kürschner and at that time extended over four pieces of land. It was acquired by the city in 1576 and has since been used as a superintendent. The building was affected by the city fires in 1604, 1630 and 1731, so that the roof, portal and window decorations, among other things, had to be renewed. Inside, the arched arched archive room on the ground floor ("whose excellent stucco decorations, cupboards and artistic locks belong to the year 1678") and simple stucco ceilings on the first floor have been preserved. This building is one of the most outstanding monuments in the city of Annaberg with local and architectural significance.

Narrow rear annex along the Kirchberg lane, with an irregular floor plan, two-storey quarry stone building (gneiss) with thick walls, possibly originally built as a utility area, but turned into living space on both storeys in the 2nd half of the 18th century (both storeys stucco ceiling, ground floor with baroque curved chimney) - could have housed the church school, which is indicated by the six axes openings on the courtyard side, and no openings towards the Kirchberg.

09228697
 


Residential building in closed development
Residential building in closed development Kleine Kirchgasse 28
(map)
1st half of the 19th century the windows with colored frames and a T-bar. The coupled window on the right on the ground floor was created in 1903 when the segment-arched gate that had been there up to that point was removed. The slate-covered saddle roof has had vertical dormers since the renovation work in 1903. The house, which is typical for the time it was built, including its later changes due to adaptations to its use, has architectural and urban significance. 09229148
 


Apartment building in closed development
Apartment building in closed development Kleine Kirchgasse 30
(map)
Around 1905 Reform style architecture, architectural and urban significance.

Three-storey, massive tenement house with seven window axes in a closed development. Above a base made of natural stone, the plastered symmetrical facade is attached, which is geometrically structured by various cornices and surfaces. The central entrance, which is emphasized by a mighty portico, is an eye-catcher. This has sturdy wall templates and a curly gable. The transition to the door is stepped, the gable top is unadorned. The windows are cut directly into the plastered surface, the sill is only emphasized in some, all windows with historical division including the small-scale sprouting of the skylights. Above each of the three outer axes there are two houses with triangular gables, which visually give the building more height; the mansard roof is covered with slate. Compared to the predominantly lower development on Kirchgasse towards the city center, this is geographically the first large apartment building out of town. Its facade is simple but well-balanced. The construction documents show that parts of the previous building were integrated into the new building in the basement and ground floor. In addition, the original design was more detailed, especially in the plastered mirrors and the portal gable. This object is a single monument with architectural and site development historical value.

09228752
 


Apartment building in closed development
Apartment building in closed development Kleine Kirchgasse 32
(map)
1904, older in essence historical and urban significance.

Three-storey, massive tenement house with seven window axes in a closed development. The light-colored, plastered, symmetrical facade is attached above a base. The house entrance in the middle, drawn in in the manner typical of Annaberg and with a small staircase in front. The door frame is slightly profiled with a straight, slightly offset crown. All windows are rectangular and have a greatly simplified, not listed T-bar, partly with decoratively emphasized relief arch, partly with a straight crown. Colored plaster mirror in the window axes between the floors. The eaves cornice is emphasized by a serrated frieze. The slate-covered mansard roof has a number of vertical dormers in the area of ​​the pitched roof. This apartment building was built in its current form in 1904, when the previous residential building was expanded and raised; according to the building documents, the ground floor and upper floor are essentially remnants of the previous residential buildings, the other floors and the staircase were rebuilt. This building is an example of the adaptation of an older substance to new living requirements and its basic design has been retained. It has architectural and urban significance.

09228751
 


Apartment house in a corner and closed development
Apartment house in a corner and closed development Kleine Kirchgasse 34
(map)
Designated 1904 (built 1904–1905) historical and urban significance.

Three-storey, massive tenement house (three to five axes) with clinker brick facade in a corner and closed development. The corner of the building is sloping, with a window axis and is emphasized by a small roof attachment with a triangular gable. The entrance is on Quergasse at the very side of the building, it is drawn in with a staircase in front and a segment-arched end. The windows on the ground floor also have the same shape; this has a plaster design with horizontal grooves and emphasis on the segmental arches above the openings. Above the cornice, the cladding of the 1st and 2nd floors consists of yellow bricks. The windows here are rectangular with simple walls and a sill, the relief arches above the windows are decoratively emphasized with colored clinker bricks. The eaves cornice strong and without decoration, the mansard roof covered with slate. This building is a typical tenement building for the time it was built around 1900, which has apparently hardly been structurally changed and thus has architectural and urban significance.

09228750
 


Residential building in closed development
Residential building in closed development Kleine Kirchgasse 37
(map)
around 1800, in essence probably older historical and urban significance.

Two-storey massive residential building with seven axes in closed development. The ground floor of the plastered house with four segment-arched openings: on the left a former gate passage with a crown stone, next to it a door with a step in front, then a wide shop window and finally another, wide entrance with a crown stone. Provide all openings with non-listed door and window elements. The windows of the upper floor in an irregular arrangement, rectangular with a T-bar. The gable roof with a profiled eaves cornice and small skylights. This building is a typical house from around 1800, the core of which may still have older material. During an investigation of the cellars in 1996/97, the existence of a historical cultivation for water drainage was found, which suggests an early development of the site. As a striking building in this part of the important old town of Annaberg and as a largely original structure (the completely unsuitable door and gate elements on the ground floor can be removed again without great effort) from around 1800, Kleine Kirchgasse 37 is of local history and scientific- documentary value. In addition, with its simple but characteristic facade design and its location on the upper church square, it is also important for the townscape.

09229332
 


Residential building in closed development
Residential building in closed development Kleine Kirchgasse 43
(map)
09229149
 


Residential building in closed development
Residential building in closed development Kleine Kirchgasse 45
(map)
Late 18th century historical and urban significance.

Two-storey massive residential building with five axes in a closed development. The house is now accessed through a relatively small rectangular doorway on the right side of the building. In addition, however, the natural stone walls of the original segment arched entrance have been preserved; half of this is now blocked and serves as a window. The windows on the ground floor and first floor are in their original proportions, only emphasized by angular sills. The unrenovated facade is otherwise unadorned. The structure of the facade is the result of a renovation carried out in 1903 when the upper floor, which originally consisted of half-timbered construction, was replaced with solid masonry. However, the blocked input has already existed at this point in time. The saddle roof is covered with slate and has three towers, which are quite rare in Annaberg. This building from the 18th century has remained largely authentic, apart from the changes mentioned, and is of architectural and urban significance.

09229153
 


Residential building in closed development Kleine Kirchgasse 67
(map)
09229147
 


Residential building in closed development
Residential building in closed development Kleine Kirchgasse 73, 75
(map)
around 1880 historical and urban significance.

Three-storey, massive tenement house with eight axes in closed development. The most striking thing about the view of this building is that all openings are arched, only the entrance on the right-hand side of the facade is formed by an angular niche, in the depth of which the arched entrance door is located. All windows on the ground floor with a stucco decoration in the apex, the left window a little larger than the others. The windows on the first floor are richly decorated with crowns, stucco reliefs and straight and triangular roofs. The uppermost windows are again more simple with keystones and straight ends. A decorative frieze is formed below the eaves cornice. The slate-covered gable roof has been expanded and has three roof-house-like structures with double windows for exposure. All windows with T-bars. This tenement house from the last quarter of the 19th century, as a typical representative of this building task, has architectural and urban significance.

09229027
 


Representative tenement house in closed development Kleine Sommerleite 2
(card)
Around 1900 historical and urban significance.

Representative three-storey apartment building with eight to three axes in a corner and semi-open development. Since the building is located on the sloping part of the Sommerleite, a further floor will be constructed as a natural stone base, starting on the valley side. The corner of the building is beveled and its design is particularly emphasized: an entrance directly on the sloping surface in the basement and a window on all floors, the two windows on both sides of the street are coupled as double windows, on the first floor these are the only ones with triangular roofing . The ground floor with horizontal plastering, the house entrance with a front staircase and original door with high skylight. The design of the openings, where the upper corners are rounded, is interesting. The part of the facade clad in yellow clinker begins above the cornice. The windows here with designed garments, stucco décor as well as a strong sill and straight roof, each with consoles. A similar design on the 2nd floor, with the relief arches of the windows decoratively highlighted with green clinker bricks and apex stones. The slate-covered mansard roof has been expanded for residential use. Inside there should be an original banister. In its basic design, this building is a typical example of tenement construction, but impresses with its unusual window design. It has architectural and urban value.

09228924
 


Art Nouveau door Kleine Sommerleite 5
(card)
Around 1900 around 1900 Art Nouveau door, craftsmanship and art historical importance.

The wooden door is located in the entrance of a tenement house, which is drawn into the facade. It is single-leaf with a fixed part on the left and right. The ample upper half is glazed with a transverse oval as a conclusion, the lower area in decorative wood design, original door handle. This door is an example worthy of protection from the Art Nouveau period with technical and art historical significance.

09228927
 


Residential building in closed development Kleine Sommerleite 6
(card)
Marked 1850 Craftsman's or miner's house, significance in terms of local history and building history.

Single-storey, massive house with a plastered facade in a corner and half-open development. The view with six regular windows and a central entrance, this one drawn in, with a staircase in front and a simple door frame, labeled "1850". On the gable side one window on the ground floor and two in the attic. The gable roof is hipped with three small standing dormers. This building is a typical craftsman's or miner's house from the 19th century, which apparently has not changed much structurally. In its urban environment it is (together with its neighboring house) a relic from earlier times with local and architectural significance.

09228928
 


Residential building in closed development Kleine Sommerleite 8
(card)
Marked 1850 Craftsman's or miner's house, significance in terms of local history and building history.

Single-storey, massive house with a plastered facade in a corner and half-open development. The view with six regular windows and a central entrance, this one drawn in, with a staircase in front and a simple door frame. Due to its location on the slope, the basement also has openings on the valley side: here another window and a low door. All openings have smooth porphyry walls, the windows with historical, small-scale window bars. The building has windows on the gable side only in the attic. The gable roof is covered with slate with 5 small standing dormers in two rows. This building is a typical craftsman's or miner's house from the 19th century, which apparently has not changed much structurally. In its urban environment it is (together with its neighboring house) a relic from earlier times with local and architectural significance.

09228925
 


Apartment building in closed development Kleine Sommerleite 10
(card)
around 1905 historical and urban significance.

Three-storey, massive tenement house with six axes in closed development. The facade consists of yellow clinker brickwork, which is at the level of the sills of the ground floor windows directly above a base zone. The entrance is accentuated by a door frame that is wider at the top and has a triangular gable; the door is very simple with a high skylight. The windows with light walls and histor. Division of the skylights with small rung structure. Decorative ornament in the central axis of the facade with two reliefs between the 2nd and 3rd floors, emphasizing the two central axes and extending them into the attic like a dormitory, the sides of the roof structure curved. Inside, the Art Nouveau painting in the hallway and staircase should be preserved. This apartment building from the early 20th century has an unusual facade design and has apparently hardly been changed. It has architectural and urban value.

09229820
 


Single-storey residential building (craftsman's or miner's house) Kleine Sommerleite 13
(card)
Marked 1847 Single-storey craftsman's or miner's house, significance in terms of building history. 09229018
 


door Kleine Sommerleite 19
(card)
Around 1870 09229019
 


City fortifications, executioner's tower Kleine Sommerleite 31
(card)
After 1500 (1507) Significance in terms of building history and local history.

The semicircular tower and part of the former city wall made of solid quarry stone masonry are integrated into a two-storey residential building with a mansard roof. The tower was built in 1507 as one of four half-towers on Annaberg's city wall. It is documented as early as 1716 that the place of residence of the executioner Fischer was here. The use of the defense towers was mainly due to a lack of housing, in 1880 the burned down house was rebuilt and received its present shape in 1908 with a roof conversion. The slate-clad tower top with the three windows also comes from this period. The tower is part of the house and is mainly used as living space.

The building, primarily the tower, is of great architectural and local historical interest due to its history and its existence.

09229010
 


Door and door frame Kleine Sommerleite 33
(card)
Marked 1867 (door frame) and around 1890 (door) historicizing door, architectural and stylistic significance.

Single-leaf wooden door in the drawn-in entrance of a residential building. The decoration of the door is detailed and laboriously worked. In the upper part it has a tall rectangular window with a rounded arch. In the lower area there is a stepped cassette field, the side frame is formed by narrow carved columns with Ionic capitals. It is a very well-preserved example of a richly decorated house entrance door of historicism with architectural and style-historical value.

09229015
 


City fortifications, butcher's tower Kleine Sommerleite 57
(card)
After 1500 Significance in terms of building history and local history.

The round tower and part of the former city wall made of solid quarry stone masonry are part of the side of a two-story residential building with a gable roof. The tower is one of four half-towers that were erected on Annaberg's city wall after 1500. Shown as a ruin in 1759, there is evidence that the tower was expanded in 1850; in 1886 the tower and house were added and expanded in their current form. The tower received a slate-covered conical roof and has been inhabited on all floors since then. This part of the earlier fortification of Annaberg with its new use is of great architectural and local historical interest.

09229021
 


Apartment house in a corner and closed development Kleinrückerswalder Strasse 1
(map)
Around 1890 historical and urban significance.

Four-storey tenement house with six to six axes in a corner and closed development. The corner of the building is bevelled on the ground floor and designed as an eye-catcher on the other floors. The access on Kleinrückerswalder Straße is clearly highlighted by being framed by two columns that support a round arch with a crown and gable. The facade of yellow clinker masonry rises above a base zone with the basement windows. Here, the windows on all floors are lavishly decorated with stucco, gable roofing, apex stones and profiled walls in a historicist manner. In addition, the facade, especially on the ground floor, has horizontal bands for a high-contrast structure. All windows rectangular with T-floor, the upper corners of the windows on the ground floor rounded. To the Köselitzplatz on the 1st - 3rd floor there is a balcony resting on massive cantilever consoles. The eaves cornice is characterized by a frieze and small decorative consoles. The corner emphasis with three windows extends to the top floor. This typical historic tenement house is in a dominant position in the cityscape (immediately outside the city wall, part of Annaberg's urban expansion) and has hardly been structurally changed. It has architectural and urban significance.

09228895
 


Hut house of the St. Michaelis treasure trove Kleinrückerswalder Strasse 2
(map)
18th century Significance in terms of building history and mining history.

Small, single-storey building with a plastered facade in open development. To the south-east a central projection, in which the house entrance is located. The emphasis on the center continues as a two-axis gable. The windows are rectangular with historically small mantelpiece. The slate-covered gable roof with a profiled eaves cornice and two rows of dormers. The property has a long retaining wall facing the Am Michaelisstollen street. According to an information board in front of the house, this building is said to be the St. Michaelis Bergschmiede . This was built in 1858 after the pit was reused in 1857. The location of the building is not based on the course of the road, but presumably reacts to the situation of the tunnel. Possibly. the house was also used as a hut house.

The building, which is now used as a residential building, is of particular importance in terms of mining history, but also in terms of architectural history.

09228885
 


Apartment building in closed development Kleinrückerswalder Strasse 3
(map)
around 1890 with shop, architectural and urban significance.

Four-storey tenement house with seven axes in closed development. Except for a small shop on the left with an entrance and a shop window, this building is used exclusively for residential use. The house entrance as a simple angular opening is arranged in the middle, drawn in and has a staircase in front. It has the same simply profiled walls as the windows on the ground floor. The facade made of red clinker brickwork adjoins the natural stone plinth with the cellar windows. Above a cornice, the design of the windows on the 1st floor is particularly rich: here below the window balusters or stucco reliefs, as well as alternating straight and triangular roofs. The windows on the two upper floors are simply analogous to those on the ground floor. All windows have a T-floor. It is a tenement house, typical of the last quarter of the 19th century, which has hardly been structurally changed and therefore has architectural and urban value. It is part of the Annaberg city expansion immediately in front of the former city wall.

09228894
 


Apartment building in closed development Kleinrückerswalder Strasse 5
(map)
Around 1900 historical and urban significance.

Three-storey, massive tenement house with eight axes in closed development. The facade of this building is divided into four zones through the use of different materials: the basement with its openings, the relief arches of which are accentuated by red clinker bricks, consists of rubble masonry, followed by the plastered ground floor, which has a decorative plaster groove, the windows here with segmental arches, followed by the yellow clinker cladding on the 1st and 2nd floors. Here the windows are rectangular, on the 1st floor with decorative roofing, on the 2nd floor with decorative crowning stone and decorative consoles on the sills, the fourth zone adjoins the eaves, as the roof here is designed like a mansard and covered with slate. All windows of the building with six-part muntin. The entrance to the house is a bit off-center, is drawn in and provided with a staircase in front, the histor. double-leaf door with high skylight has been preserved. This property is part of the urban expansion in the last quarter of the 19th century. It has hardly been structurally changed and is therefore of interest in terms of architectural history and urban development.

09228893
 


Apartment building in closed development Kleinrückerswalder Strasse 5a
(map)
Around 1900 clinker brick facade typical of the time, architectural and urban significance.

Four-storey tenement house with six axes in closed development. The house entrance as a simple angular opening is arranged slightly off-center, drawn in and has a staircase in front. It has the same simply profiled garment with a small decorative stone as the windows on the ground floor. The facade made of red brickwork connects to the natural stone plinth with the cellar windows. The design of the windows in this building is relatively simple with decorative relief arches made of yellow clinker bricks and an indicated apex. Only below the sills of the windows on the 1st floor are stucco reliefs. A cornice separates the 3rd floor, which was probably created by adding storeys to the roof. Below the eaves is a frieze made of yellow clinker bricks. All windows with T-floor. It is a tenement house, typical of the last quarter of the 19th century, which was built directly in front of the former city wall as part of Annaberg's urban expansion. It has architectural and urban value.

09228892
 


Apartment house in a corner and closed development
Apartment house in a corner and closed development Kleinrückerswalder Strasse 7
(map)
Around 1900 09228891
 


Semi-open residential building Kleinrückerswalder Strasse 19, 21
(map)
Mid 19th century 09228884
 


Apartment building in closed development Kleinrückerswalder Strasse 20
(map)
Around 1880 09228882
 


Apartment building in closed development Kleinrückerswalder Strasse 22
(map)
Around 1880 09228881
 


Apartment building in closed development Kleinrückerswalder Strasse 24
(map)
Around 1880 09228880
 


Apartment building in closed development Kleinrückerswalder Strasse 26
(map)
Around 1880 09228879
 


Residential and commercial building (today Bayerische Vereinsbank)
Residential and commercial building (today Bayerische Vereinsbank) Klosterstrasse 1
(map)
Around 1910 location on the market dominating the square, architectural and urban significance.

Four-storey solid residential and commercial building in closed development on the north corner of Annaberg's market square. Both the ground floor and the first floor were and still serve commercial use, which can be clearly seen in the large open facade with three roughly square openings per side and floor, and an additional narrow window axis facing Klosterstrasse, in which the house entrance is also located . The two upper floors and the top floor were reserved for residential use, with the narrow, high-rectangular windows arranged in groups of three in recessed plastered fields. The middle zone facing the market square is designed as a slightly protruding bay window. A strong eaves cornice with a massive decor reminiscent of a toothed frieze leads over to the expanded slate-covered mansard roof. The central axes of both sides each have a diaphragm-like structure with a high triangular gable, the motif of the tooth section is repeated. This building (reform style) erected around 1910 is the tallest property directly on the market square and, with its corner location, leads over into Klosterstrasse as a shopping street. It has architectural and urban significance.

09228609
 


Apartment building with shop, in a corner and closed development
Apartment building with shop, in a corner and closed development Klosterstrasse 2
(map)
Around 1880, essentially much older with shop fitting, architectural and urban significance.

Three-storey, massive tenement house in a corner and closed development in the immediate vicinity of the Annaberg market square. The design of the sloping corner, which is designed as an eye-catcher on all floors, is also geared towards this: on the ground floor there is a shop with the one for the end of the 19th century. Century-typical formation of the walkways between the entrance and the shop windows, in the upper floor here three coupled windows that repeat the motif of the walkways, crowned with a segmented arched gable on the second floor. The house is accessed from Klosterstrasse through a profiled natural stone portal with a segmented arch, above which another decorative profile on small consoles. A second shop on the left-hand side of the ground floor. The windows on the upper floor with straight roofs, sturdy sills and historical muntin, the facade smoothly plastered. The slate-covered saddle roof with standing dormers and roof houses.

This building, with its design from the late 19th century, reflects the structural development of Annaberg and is an object of architectural and urban significance.

09228593
 


Residential building in closed development Klosterstrasse 3
(map)
In the core 15./16. Century (1497), later changed with shop, cross vaults inside, significance in terms of architectural history and urban development.

Three-story massive residential building in closed development in the immediate vicinity of the Annaberg market square. The entire ground floor is dominated by the shop zone designed in 1886: two shops with deeply drawn-in entrances and the house entrance on the far left are framed by a decorative pillar and beam design. Parts of the original lush building decor have been preserved. The two upper floors with six axes are smoothly plastered, the windows with narrow, smooth walls and historic window bars. The top floor has been expanded for residential use with a large recessed attic. Until 1949 this building was two-story, only after the consequences of a roof fire in 1955 led to the addition of another floor and the renovation of the roof.

The residential building with an old core (cross vaults) in the immediate city center of Annaberg has both architectural and urban value.

09228608
 


Residential building in closed development
Residential building in closed development Klosterstrasse 4
(map)
Core 18th century historical and urban significance.

Two-storey, massive residential building with seven axes in a closed development near the Annaberg market square. The rich facade design was created around 1910 and appears to be broadly supported by the base, a wide profiled cornice between the floors, horizontal meander strips and grooves as well as the strongly profiled eaves cornice. The windows on the ground floor are rectangular with a semicircular stucco decoration as a crown. In the same design also the narrow central entrance to the house with profiled walls, here in a semicircle a medallion with the Aesculapian staff. The windows on the upper floor are also rectangular with alternating semicircular and triangular crowns. All windows with T-bars. The slate-covered mansard roof with a roof structure with a flat triangular gable over the central three axes. Here fluted pilaster strips that frame the openings and an oculus in the gable field. Inside, wood paneling in the hallway, commercial use of the ground floor.

This inner-city building, which dates back to the 18th century, has architectural and urban significance as a typical residential building of its time, the facade of which was adapted to changing taste requirements.

09228592
 


Golden goose
Golden goose Klosterstrasse 5
(map)
In the core 15./16. Century (1497, 1508), later reshaped Pointed arch portal, several net and cell star vaults, significance in terms of building history, local history and personal history, rarity.

Three-storey massive building with an irregular floor plan in corner position and closed development. The entrance is via a wide, slightly ogival late Gothic entrance portal, the massive facade with six to seven axes is unadorned: the windows with color-contrasting frames and wooden windows with historical sprouting. The decorative element is the frieze-like design using cleats and stucco fields below the profiled eaves cornice. The slate-covered hip roof with standing dormer windows in two rows. A special feature of this building is the preservation of the interior layout with the entrance hall, which was previously used as a passage, the staircase adjoining to the side, the doors framed by interlocking frameworks and, above all, cell and star vaults as well as a wooden beam ceiling with a ship's collar beam on the ground floor. There is historical evidence of a large stone building with rich cell vaults at this location around 1500 by Hans Struntz, and from 1508 by finder Lorenz Pflock. The third floor was added after 1847. The inn "Goldene Gans", later known for centuries, was converted into a library in 1935, and since the last renovation in 2003/04, the expanded attic has been used for this purpose. During an investigation of the cellars in 1996/97 it was found that barrel vaults abut here (formation of stab caps), which is unusual for Annaberg and that there is cultivation for water drainage, which underlines the early development of the property. This building is one of the few properties in Annaberg that, despite the many city fires, was able to preserve the building fabric from the time the city was built. The preservation of the interior fittings, especially the vaults, makes it a rare monument. It is one of the historically most important buildings in the area and has architectural, local and personal historical significance as well as urban planning relevance.

09228607
 


Post office
Post office Klosterstrasse 6, 8, 10
(map)
Marked 1880 architectural, economic and urban significance.

Stately two-storey building complex that, including its rear extensions, takes up almost an entire inner-city block. The façade facing Klosterstrasse, which is predominantly made of yellow brick, is richly decorated and follows the bent course of the street. The sandstone elements include gables, reliefs, horizontal bands and profiled walls. Access is via a large arched portal, the two-winged historical door with a large semicircular skylight. A large, arched window on the other side of the facade is similar. The portal and arched windows provide two axes, which are highlighted in terms of design up to the top floor (there as a dormitory) and decorated in a historicist manner (pillars, capitals, serrations, medallions, etc.). In alternation, there are two further axes that are formed by bay windows that also extend to the top floor. The mansard roof is slated. This main building was designed by Postbaurat Zopff and built in 1880. Due to the intensive use of mail, especially by the trimmings industry, an expansion took place in 1907. In this context, the rear buildings were erected in the direction of Magazingasse. These have the same clinker cladding, but are only one story. At the front side is the former parcel acceptance and delivery area: two outside stairs lead to the arched entrances with sandstone walls. The façades of the extensions with arched windows are rhythmized by means of flat wall templates. This building with its typical historic design diversity is not only important in terms of architectural history and urban development, but also illustrates the great importance of the post office at the end of the 19th century, which had this monumental building built due to the high demand in the city center.

09228590
 


Former Royal Main Customs Office
Former Royal Main Customs Office Klosterstrasse 7
(map)
1907-1908 importance in terms of building history and economic history.

Three-storey monumental administration building that was built in 1907 as the main royal customs office. The plastered building with seven axes to Klosterstrasse is a work of neo-baroque with some art nouveau forms. The three right axes form a very flat risalit, which is crowned by a curved gable in the attic, and two oculi in the gable field. Flat wall templates with horizontal grooves give this component a rhythm. The main entrance to the building is off-center: a double-leaf door with a separate skylight is crowned by a segment-arched portal structure with a crown stone. The other part of the facade is simpler, with plastered rustics and large, arched windows on the ground floor, a strong cornice and smooth wall templates between the windows on the upper floors. The slate roof is constructed like a mansard. This stately building used to be an important public building in the city center, reflecting the temporary wealth of the city's industrial development. Hardly changed from the outside, it is of particular importance in terms of building and economic history. Inscription: Providentiae Memor

09228605
 


Residential building with shop, in a closed area
Residential building with shop, in a closed area Klosterstrasse 11
(map)
Marked 1791 with shop, architectural and urban significance.

Two-storey, massive residential building with seven axes in corner position and closed development. The house entrance with profiled walls, segmental arch and straight roofing is on the gable side in Franziskanergasse, the keystone is marked “CCM 1791”. On the left side of the ground floor there is a small shop with access and a shop window. All openings have a colored frame, only on the upper floor are the three middle windows optically highlighted. These are segmental arch-shaped, the middle one with a simple roof. The slate-covered, mighty mansard roof has been developed for residential purposes and is illuminated by standing dormer windows. Here, too, a slight emphasis on the center thanks to a wider dormer window with double windows. In an environment that is characterized by tall buildings that were built around 1900 towards the market, this little changed residential building from the late 18th century is a specialty with architectural and local history interest.

09228604
 


Franciscan monastery (entity) Klosterstrasse 12
(map)
1502–1515 (north and east wall) Plant of special architectural and local historical importance.

The mendicant order monastery was started in 1502, consecrated in 1512 and completely finished in 1515. In 1512, the "Beautiful Door" was also built here, which is now in the Annenkirche. Typical of the monastery is its location on the outskirts, on the city wall. After the Reformation, the brothers left the monastery in 1540, which was converted into a mint, mountain court, silver chamber and mining office. In 1604 the complex fell victim to the great fire of the city, and finally to the fire of 1731. The silk factory of Thilo und Röhling (today's district court) was built on the site in 1836 and the Kgl to the north in 1887. District tax collection (today's police). The above-mentioned cellar vault was exposed in 1999, as was the northeast corner of the former cloister.

09300644
 


Franciscan monastery (entity) Klosterstrasse 12
(map)
1502–1515 (monastery) Plant of particular importance in terms of building history, local history and mining history.

The whole of the Annaberg Franciscan Monastery and Bergmagazin, consisting of the individual monuments: Choir ruins of the monastery church (Magazingasse 16, Parcel 147) and the former Bergmagazin (Magazingasse 16, Parcel 147) and garden pavilion (at Magazingasse 16, Parcel 146/1) - (see individual monument 092270 .87 16), north and east wall as well as cellar vaults (Klosterstraße 12, parcel 148/3) - (see individual monument 09228614, Klosterstraße 12) and as an aggregate part: remains of retaining walls of the former monastery garden; Plant of particular importance in terms of building history, local history and mining history

09228614
 


Court tavern
Court tavern Klosterstrasse 13
(map)
18th century 18th century historical and urban significance.

Two-story massive residential building with seven axes in closed development. The entrance to the house with an adjacent wider window in a flat angular alcove in the middle of the building. The entrance itself moved in with a staircase in front. Windows and door not listed, openings only with colored frames. The plastered facade is unadorned, between the ground floor and the upper floor in large block letters: "Court-tavern". The gable roof with 5 small standing dormers in two rows. An examination of the cellars revealed the presence of a backfilled cultivation which was previously used for drainage. In an environment that, apart from the neighboring house in the direction of the market, is characterized by tall buildings that were built around 1900, this 18th century house has architectural and urban significance despite its subsequent changes.

09228603
 


Apartment building in closed development
Apartment building in closed development Klosterstrasse 15
(map)
1910-1911 Art Nouveau and Reform Nouveau architecture, architectural and artistic significance.

Representative four-storey residential and commercial building in distinctive Art Nouveau forms with eight axes in closed development. The facade is visually divided into two areas by a sheet-metal clad, narrow roof (between the ground floor and first floor). In the lower part first the plinth with cellar windows and on the far right a larger opening, above that the ground floor with seven large, rectangular barred windows. The entrance to the building is on the far left. This is slightly drawn in, with a staircase in front and is framed by two half-columns patterned with medallion-like shapes. In the area of ​​the entablature the inscription "Albrecht Bonitz". The original single-leaf wooden door in Art Nouveau design has been preserved. Off-center, the building has a bay window on the 1st and 2nd floors on a semi-oval floor plan. Most dominant, however, is the high triangular gable, which extends over six window axes on the right side of the house. In the gable field three windows in the Palladi motif. The windows on all floors are combined into different groups, some of which are in flat plaster niches. Overall, the facade looks very open, as the windows are so large that only narrow plaster bars remain between them. Lush in the top of the gable and on the bay window, otherwise sparsely distributed stucco reliefs of various sizes in Art Nouveau design. In addition to the original windows with small protrusions in the skylights, a large part of the original equipment has also been preserved inside: these include doors, stucco, lamps, heating panels and banisters. This Art Nouveau building, built in 1911 by the Dresden architect Georg Heinsius von Mayenburg, is of particular architectural and artistic importance not only because of its high-quality design, but also because of its authentic state of preservation. It is a successful example of the residential and commercial building project, which was particularly important around 1900.

09228602
 


Former Royal District Tax Revenue
Former Royal District Tax Revenue Klosterstrasse 16
(map)
1881–1886, designated 1881 used today as a police building, architectural and economic significance.

Three-storey, massive administration building in open development, which was built at the end of the 19th century as a royal district tax collection. It is made up of a transverse main building with an extension, which was later extended further into the depth of the property. The main facade has an only slightly protruding central projection with a pair of windows. The basement with natural stone cladding, the rest of the building plastered, the corners including those on the risalit are emphasized by their formation in sandstone ashlar masonry. The cautiously decorated window frames on all floors are also made of sandstone. There are 6 windows on the main facade and 2 windows on the narrow side of the main building. In the area of ​​the risalit, the openings are most elaborately designed: the support between the windows below with an Ionic capital, at the top more plain, bears a resemblance to the design of the main axes of the Annaberg post office, the strong sills with consoles, the window on the upper floor with a straight roof. The emphasis on the central axis continues as a dwelling up to the top floor, here the designation "1887". Access to the building is via the side. Like the corners of the building, the eaves cornice is made of sandstone and is adorned with a circumferential serrated frieze. The flat slate hipped roof has 4 roof houses of recent date. Erected as a typical administrative building at the end of the 19th century, the building originally housed the Königl in addition to the district tax collection. Forestry office as well as building management and surveyor's office, today it is used as a police building. As a result, it is not only significant in terms of building history, but also economic history.

09228589
 


Franciscan monastery (entity) Klosterstraße 16 (main address Klosterstraße 12)
(map)
1502-1515
 


Residential and commercial building
Residential and commercial building Klosterstrasse 17
(map)
Marked 1904 architectural significance.

Four-storey, massive residential and commercial building with six axes in closed development. The two functions combined in this property can be clearly seen in the facade design: the ground floor and first floor were for commercial use, the upper floors for living. The cladding of the lower part is made of natural stone, which encloses the large window openings, which are angular on the ground floor and round-arched on the upper floor, and emphasizes the round arches. The entrance is on the right axis, is drawn in and has a staircase. The two-wing Art Nouveau door with skylight has been preserved. The opening in the facade is cut out without a cladding, but has a woman's face as the apex stone, surrounded by a floral pattern in the upwardly curved entablature. From the two upper floors, the center of the building is emphasized by means of a bay window. The bud-like start-up with leaf-like decoration arises from a bearded male face. On the bay window there is also a mercury-like head between the upper floors, on the side, among other things, an aesculap decor, which creates a reference to pharmacy and medicine. The facade material of the upper floors is white clinker brick with sandstone on the bay window, the windows decorated in an Art Nouveau style and on the eaves, this with a strong tooth cut. The emphasis in the center continues into the attic as a dwelling with a curved gable, here the designation "1904" as well as another bearded head in the uppermost part. The slate-covered roof was subsequently added to the dwelling-like mansard on both sides of the dwelling. Overall, the variety of details and high-quality design of this residential and commercial building testify to the high economic power in Annaberg at the beginning of the 20th century. It is an example of a residential and commercial building with Art Nouveau influences of architectural value.

09228601
 


Apartment building in closed development Klosterstrasse 19
(map)
Around 1850 historical and urban significance.

Three-storey, massive tenement house with six axes in closed development. This plastered building is characterized by a simple facade design, which was created in 1928 when a storey was added. A simple cornice separates the ground floor from the upper floors. On all floors, two of the six axes are framed by flat wall templates, only the windows on the ground floor and first floor have angular sills, some of which extend over both openings. The entrance in the right axis is drawn in with a staircase in front. The two-wing historicist front door with beautiful latticework in front of the glazing has been preserved. The slate-covered mansard roof is used for residential purposes. The building, with its two decisive construction phases (those of the early 19th and early 20th century), has both architectural and urban significance.

09228600
 


Apartment building in closed development Klosterstrasse 21
(map)
Around 1790 (baroque core) historical and urban significance.

Two-storey house with eight window axes in a closed development. Presumably still baroque at the core, the lush facade decor of this house shows a later structural revision. The third and sixth axes are emphasized, here a rustic plaster design, coat of arms-like decor and window roofing. In the other axes, half rosettes and stucco mirrors above the windows, small rosettes on plaster mirrors between the floors. The windows, however, without a monument-compliant muntin. The entrance with a high-quality double-leaf door is on the second axis on the left. The mansard roof is slated with two rows of standing dormers. In terms of its cubature, the building corresponds to the development of the street in the 18th century. In contrast to its neighboring buildings, it was neither demolished nor extended in the 19th and 20th centuries, only its facade was historically transformed in the taste of the time. It is therefore an important building in terms of architectural history and urban development.

09228599
 


Apartment building in closed development
Apartment building in closed development Klosterstrasse 23
(map)
1791 (baroque core), later redesigned historical and urban significance.

Two-storey, massive tenement house in a corner and half-open development. Looking towards the city, this building is located at the beginning of the closed development on Klosterstrasse, which leads directly to the market square and is the address of important public buildings. It is a five-achisges tenement house, the facade of which was transformed into a simple neo-renaissance design at the end of the 19th century. The central axis is highlighted by a hint of rustication and ends in the roof with a small curved dwarf house. The window on the ground floor here with triangular roofing. All other windows have the same design for the walls, the sill and the straight roof with brackets. On the upper floor, this roof also represents part of the eaves cornice. The high mansard roof has small standing dormers. The building is accessed from the rear through a courtyard entrance on Steinweg. In addition, the ensemble includes a back building on Münzgasse, which is simple with plastered mirrors in the axes between the floors and an extended roof. The cubature of the building, like that of the neighboring house, suggests it was built at the end of the 18th century, while the facade was changed at the end of the 19th century. Due to its history and location, this is a building of architectural and urban interest.

09228598
 


Schwibbogen Korngasse
(map)
around 1800 urban development and townscape-defining significance.

Between the buildings at Klosterstrasse 2 and Markt 13, a flying buttress was erected over the narrow Korngasse to dissipate forces. This arch is in the shape of a basket arch, straight at the top and, for reasons of weather protection, is now provided with a steep, sloped roof. Candle arches are also in Annaberg a relic from the old days of urban planning and townscape-defining value, which must be preserved.

09228591
 


Saxon post mile pillars (totality)
Saxon post mile pillars (totality) Köselitzplatz
(map)
Marked 1727 Copy of a distance column, important in terms of traffic history.

Copy of a Saxon distance column, gate column, marked 1727, near the original location, at the Bohemian Gate, which only bears distance inscriptions on two sides, Annaberg “1727” and post horn mark on the other sides, light granite from the Greifenstein area, coat of arms sandstone. It is a post-mile column consisting of a pedestal, an obelisk with a coat of arms and a tip, and is made of granite.

This column is one of more than 1000 signposts erected between 1726 and 1765, which were set up along the most important roads and trade routes in Saxony based on measurements by Land and Border Commissioner Adam Friedrich Zürner. They were commissioned by Elector Friedrich August II of Saxony, while the design probably goes back to MD Pöppelmann. A pair of coats of arms placed across the corner forms the main decoration. The column erected here comes from the former Bohemian Gate, through which the Poststrasse led via Oberwiesenthal to Karlsbad.

A special feature is the shape of the shaft, which does not taper evenly on all sides towards the tip, but only on both sides without any distance information. The other two sides are vertical. In addition, the column bears only one double coat of arms, instead of two. It is located on the approaching sides of the shaft and pointed to the side facing away from the street. In connection with the demolition of the Annaberg city fortifications, the column was also removed and built.

In 1938 the written parts were stored in the Ore Mountains Museum Annaberg. The research group Post Mile Columns initiated the search for the remaining parts in 1968. The base and profile plates could be found, the coat of arms and the tip remained lost. The sculptor Kurt Wagler (Mildenau) restored the column using the original parts. The missing pieces of coat of arms were made from Elbe sandstone, the other missing pieces from Zschorlauer granite. In 1980 the column was set up within what is now the Köselitzplatz green area.

09228909
 


Two-storey town house Köselitzplatz 1
(map)
re. 1814 Remarkable classical building, also the residence of the Annaberg merchant family Köselitz, from which the writer Heinrich Köselitz (1854–1918) and the painter Rudolf Köselitz (1861–1948) originate, architectural and local historical significance.

Two-storey representative town house with a conspicuous central projection in half-open development. The elongated building has nine axes, the outer one originally containing a round-arched passage on the ground floor. The entrance to the building is in the middle and has a crown stone with a golden post horn and the designation "1814" in the simple walls. The window openings on both storeys with the same simple, color-contrasting frame, are slightly ogival and have windows that are made in small pieces. The emphasis on the corner of the building with its colossal three-quarter columns is unusual. The mighty hipped roof is covered with slate with small standing dormers in two rows. The so-called Köselitzhaus is one of the earliest classical buildings in Annaberg. It is attributed to the Erzgebirge master builder Johann Traugott Lohse, although the core is certainly older than 1814. The location of the building is significant, as here at the former Bohemian Gate was the passage of the post road into the Bohemian region to Karlsbad. The post horn certainly indicates a connection to these travel routes. There is also a sign on the building stating “Hermann Köselitz (1822–1910), father of Rudolf and Heinrich Köselitz”. (Both sons are well-known personalities: Heinrich Köselitz as a writer and composer and Rudolf Köselitz as a painter and illustrator.)

This house is not only a valuable building in terms of building history and urban development, but it is also important in terms of the history of people and the development of the area.

09228945
 


Homestead Köselitzplatz 2, 3
(map)
18th century Significance in terms of building history and local history.

Stately homestead, which includes the two-storey main building, the side archway, outbuildings and barn. The main building with its simple facade points in the direction of Köselitzplatz. The entrance with simple cladding and slightly cantilevered roofing on consoles off-center in the nine-axis street view, all windows with smooth, colored cladding. Above the eaves cornice of the slate-thatched half-hip roof with an elongated pike dormer. The large arch-shaped gate passage connects to the side in the direction of Köselitzhaus, and the outbuildings on the other side. This 18th century homestead is an exception in today's urban context. Originally located directly in front of the city wall at the Bohemian Gate, it has a special urban development location. It is also of great interest in terms of construction and local history.

09228946
 


Apartment building in closed development Kupferstrasse 2
(map)
Around 1895 09228789
 


Residential building in closed development Kupferstrasse 4
(map)
Early 19th century Cross vaults inside, significance in terms of building history and urban development.

Two-storey, massive residential building with six axes in closed development. The plastered facade of the building is unadorned, only the openings have smooth window frames in contrasting colors. The door opening is off-center without a historically interesting door, the windows are not listed. The slate-covered gable roof with standing dormers in two rows. Inside probably cross vaults. This building is an example of urban residential development at the beginning of the 19th century. It is of architectural and urban value.

09228791
 


Residential building in closed development Kupferstrasse 6
(map)
09228792
 


Residential house in semi-open development
Residential house in semi-open development Kupferstrasse 8
(map)
16./17. Century Inside, star vaults, groin vaults and renaissance ceilings, significance in terms of architectural history, art history and urban development.

Two-storey house with seven to four axes in a corner and semi-open development. The plastered building looks very simple on the outside: the windows only with narrow, colored frames, the entrance with a simple wall and round-arch-shaped attachment. The only special features are the four left-hand windows on the upper floor, which are linked in two pairs and have colored glazing, and there is also a small, arched porphyry portal on the back of the building. Gable roof with standing dormers. That this is an early building from the Renaissance can only be seen inside, where the star vaults, groin vaults and a Renaissance ceiling are said to have been preserved. Since Annaberg lost most of the buildings from before 1731 and 1604 due to the many city fires, this is an object of particular architectural and art historical importance.

09229151
 


Double house in closed development Kupferstrasse 12a, 12
(map)
Marked 1798 Cross vaults inside, significance in terms of building history and urban development.

Two-storey massive residential building with five axes in a closed development. The access to the building is in the central axis. It has moved in, with a staircase in front, and has a beautiful historic single-wing door with a skylight. Due to the steep slope of the street, the basement has a cellar window and a small entrance on the right side of the building. All openings in the facade have smooth walls, otherwise the house, which is partly made of quarry stone masonry, is unadorned, and the windows are not listed. The gable roof with 3 standing dormers, each with a double window. During an examination of the cellars in 1996/97, the presence of a historical, open cultivation was found, which suggests that the property was built on early. Today's building, like its neighbor, dates from around 1800 and, as a typical residential building of that time, has architectural and urban significance.

09228913
 


Baroque house in semi-open development Kupferstrasse 14
(map)
After 1731 inside cross vault, beautiful baroque portal, architectural and urban significance.

Two-storey house made of quarry stone masonry with seven axes in a closed development. The facade is currently not plastered. The portal is located in the central axis and has a natural stone wall with a basket arch, crown stone and lateral floral decoration (hanging pegs). The double-leaf wooden door with a narrow, curved skylight. The central window above the door is also highlighted by a curved, profiled wall. All other windows with smooth natural stone walls. Upstairs the histor. Grooved windows including winter windows have been preserved, double-leaf wooden shutters on the ground floor. The gable roof with two rows of standing dormers. Inside probably cross vaults. Due to the lack of plaster of this typical baroque house, the construction of the buildings of this time can be seen very well. Hardly changed, this object has architectural and urban significance, but also important information content about the development of the place.

09228912
 


Former Marian pen Kupferstrasse 20
(map)
after 1731 Stately plastered building with segmented arch portal and mansard roof, inside cross vaults, significance in terms of building history and social history.

Two-storey, plastered house with seven axes in closed development. The portal is located in the central axis and has a profiled wall, this with a basket arch and crown stone, the door is single-winged with a skylight. The emphasis on the center is achieved by a cornice between the ground floor and the upper floor that extends over the three central axes, but above all by the creative emphasis of the three central windows: these with walls analogous to the portal design, strong sill and straight roofing. Instead of the apex, here in the middle a heraldic cartouche, on each side a medallion-like decoration. All other windows with smooth walls and histor. grooved windows. Above the profiled eaves cornice is the large slate mansard roof with standing dormer windows in two rows. Inside cross vault. It is a typical residential or town house from the 18th century, in which a home for disabled children was set up in 1850. Thus, the building, which has apparently hardly changed, not only has architectural significance, but is also of social historical interest.

09228911
 

Remarks

  1. The list may not correspond to the current status of the official list of monuments. This can be viewed by the responsible authorities. Therefore, the presence or absence of a structure or ensemble on this list does not guarantee that it is or is not a registered monument at the present time. The State Office for the Preservation of Monuments in Saxony provides binding information .

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