List of cultural monuments in Briesnitz (Dresden)

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The list of cultural monuments in Briesnitz includes all cultural monuments of the Dresden district of Briesnitz . Completely in the district is the town reserve settlement Briesnitz (entered into force on 21 January 2000).

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 Briesnitz

image designation location Dating description ID
Briesnitz-Dresden residential estate protected monument area (Map) The settlement also includes the subsequent multi-storey apartment building up to the street Am Lehmberg, one of the earliest examples of the implementation of the garden city idea. For historical, artistic, urban planning and landscaping reasons there is a special public interest in preservation 09305957
 
Gasthof Briesnitz: Inn (formerly) with ballroom
Gasthof Briesnitz: Inn (formerly) with ballroom Altbriesnitz 2a
(map)
1892 (inn) Plastered building with historicizing simple facades over an irregular floor plan, various uses as an entertainment venue with a ballroom, cinema, school and currently a concert hall, of architectural and local importance

The Briesnitz inn was built in 1892 for the innkeeper A. Birnbaum by the builder Heinrich Kühne based on designs by Gustav Pietzsch. In 1896 the three-storey inn was expanded to include a two-storey corner building with a shop on Meißner Landstrasse. After many years of use for balls and dancing, the hall of the former inn was run as the “Film-Eck Briesnitz” cinema (until the 1980s), and now operated as the “Beatpol” concert hall and disco (formerly “Star Club”). Lt. In the meantime, the building was partly used as a school (approx. 1957–1982). The building, which rises above an irregular floor plan, is exposed to plaster (plaster divisions not preserved) and covered with hipped roofs. Today the facade is simple, narrow webbing over the ground floor and framed windows, most of which have a rounded lintel. The corner entrance of the extension on Alte Meißner Straße was previously crowned by a tall, urban-planning roof turret. The former Gasthof Briesnitz with its ballroom is historically important for the town of Briesnitz, which was still independent until 1921.

09210879
 
Bennogut: gatehouse, two side wing extensions (No. 4) and free-standing former residential stable (No. 4d) of a former four-sided courtyard
Bennogut: gatehouse, two side wing extensions (No. 4) and free-standing former residential stable (No. 4d) of a former four-sided courtyard Altbriesnitz 4; 4d
(card)
1769 (farm) Stately complex, the two wings largely reconstructed, remarkable and historically significant farmhouse of great picturesque charm, partly half-timbered on the upper floor, the gatehouse with tail hood visible from afar, the most representative rural property of Briesnitz, significant in terms of architectural and local history and unique

The former episcopal Vorwerk in Altbriesnitz, which emerged from two systems, was converted into a stately four-wing system by the Saxon country wine master Heinrich Roos after a fire in 1769. The three-storey gatehouse with four-sided curved roof and dormer as well as the adjoining two-storey, largely reconstructed wings (number 4), some with half-timbering on the upper floor, have been preserved on the remarkable estate, which is furnished with great picturesque charm. The southern wing is bent following the course of the property. Access to the courtyard is through the three-storey gatehouse, the roof turret of which bears a weather vane dated 1995 (date presumably stands for the renovation after 1991). Today the estate is privately owned and is being converted for residential purposes. The two-storey former stable house (number 4d) stands at right angles to the northern wing building and is provided with a one-storey extension to this. The house is plastered and has a gable roof. The barn, dated 1827, is no longer preserved. The historically significant "Bennogut", named after the Meißner Bishop Benno , is unique as the most representative rural property in Briesnitz in terms of architecture and local history.

09210874
 
Residential stable house and later extension of a former farm
Residential stable house and later extension of a former farm Altbriesnitz 5
(map)
around 1800 (stable house) Hakenhof with buildings with pitched roofs, the residential stable house with half-timbering on the upper floor and solid ground floor, as a testimony to the historic village structure of Briesnitz, of architectural and local significance

At the two-sided courtyard Altbriesnitz 5 there is a stable house and a transverse extension. The two-storey main building made of massive, squat half-timbered houses faces the street on the gable side. The gable is clad except for the slightly protruding ground floor. The windows on the ground floor are framed with sandstone. The rear, massive transverse building has higher storeys, with the roof ridge matching that of the main building. Both buildings with pitched roofs, the residential building with an extended roof. The former farm is a testament to the historic village structure of Briesnitz and is of architectural and local importance.

09210873
 
Residential house with gate and enclosure
Residential house with gate and enclosure Altbriesnitz 9
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (residential building) Stately rural house with plastered facade and natural stone elements, developed saddle roof, as a testimony to rural architecture and construction and part of the historic village center of Briesnitz, significant in terms of building history and local history

The stately rural house, presumably from the first half of the 19th century, is now only enclosed by the remains of the historical enclosure (massive wall, gate system). The elongated, two-storey building has a saddle roof, later roof extension through wide dormers on both roof surfaces. The facade is plastered, window and door openings are framed with sandstone, in the street-side gable the twin windows typical of the region. Also striking are the mighty, profiled ceiling beams, which cantilever at the eaves with the roof construction resting on them form a small roof overhang. The residential building Altbriesnitz 9 is a testament to rural architecture and construction and is part of the historic village center of Briesnitz in terms of architecture and local history.

09218555
 
House and stable of a farm
House and stable of a farm Altbriesnitz 10
(map)
19th century (farmhouse) Residential house with plastered facade, natural stone walls and saddle roof, stable building with half-timbering, as a testimony to rural architecture and construction and part of the historic village center of Briesnitz, historically significant

The Altbriesnitz 10 farm, which dates back to the 19th century, today consists of a residential building and a former stable building. The two-storey residential building is plastered, the window openings are framed with natural stone, some with simple roofs. Round, ornate ventilating stones sit all around at about the level of the eaves, emphasized by a rising, karny-like component. On both gables the typical regional arched window (here as a triple window, middle window opening closed). A gable dormer on both sides of the gable roof. The smaller stable building with a gable roof is a two-story building with three axes at right angles to the house. Driveways on the ground floor, small window openings on the upper floor (half-timbered). The former Altbriesnitz farm 10 is a testament to rural architecture and construction and is part of the historic village center of Briesnitz in terms of architecture and local history.

09210870
 
Residential house with portal and inscription plaque
Residential house with portal and inscription plaque Altbriesnitz 11
(map)
marked 1855 (residential building) Simple two-storey plastered building with a gable roof, remarkable house entrance portal with inscription plaque, as part of the historic Briesnitz village center of architectural and local significance

The two-storey, simple residential building at Altbriesnitz 11 lies to the side in front of the gate of the Briesnitz rectory and has a remarkable entrance portal with an inscription plaque on it, among other things, "Built by CG Fleischer in 1855" (the previous residential building destroyed by fire). The saddle roof building stands over a rectangular floor plan and, due to its hillside location on the Pfarrberg, has a basement exposed to the north. The facades only with simple window frames, in the gable round arched windows. On the gable roof, single and double dormers with gable roofs. As part of the historic Briesnitz village center, the house is of architectural and local significance.

09210872
 
Apartment building in open development
Apartment building in open development Alte Meißner Landstrasse 23
(map)
marked 1896 (tenement house) Detailed historicizing clinker stone facade, expanded mansard roof with gable, exemplary example of residential development around the turn of the 20th century, significant in terms of building history and urban development history

Around 1900 Briesnitz was no longer an actual village, the structures became increasingly urban. The Dresden tram ran to the border of the town, which was only incorporated in 1921. In order to meet the rapidly increasing demand for housing, new residential buildings were built on Alte Meißner Landstrasse, among other places. One of them is the two-story tenement house described here, marked 1896. It can be assumed that the initials “PM” in the gable of the central projecting accentuating the street front stand for the Briesnitz-based architect Paul Mähler. A mansard roof sits above the historicist clinker-stone facade, which is partly rich in detail, with the central axis emphasized by a gable. The ornate ridge and hip tiles are striking. As an exemplary example of housing development at the turn of the 20th century, the residential building at Alte Meißner Landstrasse 23 is significant in terms of building and urban development history.

09210886
 
Residential and commercial building in open development
Residential and commercial building in open development Alte Meißner Landstrasse 24
(map)
1914–1915 (residential and commercial building) four-storey building, plastered facade structured by natural stone elements and risalits, original furnishings partially preserved, stylistic references to Art Nouveau and reformed architecture, of importance in terms of urban development and architectural history

The mighty residential and commercial building at Alte Meißner Landstrasse 24, built in 1914/15 for master plumber Georg Walther, is now in open development. The planning was the responsibility of the architect Max Ludloff. According to earlier drafts by Ludloff, the building was to be part of a large group of residential and commercial buildings, also extending over lots 26 and 28 (parcel 3 and 4, respectively). Even if this plan was never implemented, it can be an example of the tenement houses and commercial operations that were built in Briesnitz around the turn of the century, which increasingly pushed agriculture and village structures back. The four-storey building is designed on two fronts by risalits on the first floor, which are summarized by a balcony running around the corner of the building. Furthermore, the hipped roof moved by high, gabled roof structures and loggias towards the Elbe. The plastered façades with only a few decorative and structural elements rise above the ground floor, which is partially covered with natural stone (shop fittings). Some of these are still historicizing but can also be assigned to Art Nouveau (balcony railings). The original furnishings include house entrance doors with skylights, handrails, wooden stairs with railings, apartment entrance doors and colored glass windows in the stairwell. The residential and commercial building is important in terms of urban development and architectural history for the style described and, due to the aforementioned explanations, despite its fragmentary design in relation to the overall planning.

09210878
 
Farmhouse with enclosure, gate entrance and gate
Farmhouse with enclosure, gate entrance and gate Alte Meißner Landstrasse 26
(map)
marked 1822 (farmhouse) striking rural property, as a testimony to village architecture and construction and part of the historic town center of Briesnitz, significant in terms of building history and local history

The farmhouse, now called “Pension Altbriesnitz” (designated 1822) with massive fencing and entrance gate, stands safely on the old stretch of the Meißner Landstrasse, which has been divided since 1938, on the area of ​​an originally older farm. A renovation in 1863 is known for the two-storey, plastered house (street-side gable partially boarded up, ground-floor windows framed with natural stone) with a gable roof and crooked hip. On the street side, the courtyard is surrounded by a high natural stone wall, in which, in addition to an open, wooden fence field, a gate entrance and a gate (both with solid pillars with cover plates, gate entrance with massive curbstones) are integrated. The striking, formerly rural property at Alte Meißner Landstrasse 26 is a testament to village architecture and construction and is part of the historic center of Briesnitz in terms of architecture and local history.

09210877
 
Tenement with a gate entrance
Tenement with a gate entrance Alte Meißner Landstrasse 27
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) striking suburban Wilhelminian style building with largely originally preserved clinker stone facade, exemplary testimony to residential construction in Briesnitz around 1900, significant in terms of building history and urban development history

The three-story tenement house built for Hermann Schwenke in 1896/97 is a striking suburban Wilhelminian-style building with a largely originally preserved clinker stone facade on Alte Meißner Landstrasse. Above the plastered ground floor, on the rising storeys, there is a comparatively elaborate decoration in the area of ​​the sloping building corner with two balconies and on the first floor (window frames, roofs and cornices). A hipped roof over a wide cornice today without roof superstructures, but formerly according to plan drawings in the Dresden City Archives with pointed, high roofs over the corner of the building and triangular gable over the two-axis risalit on Gottfried-Keller-Straße. Only three gate pillars with cover plates, made alternately of natural stone and clinker, remain of the gate system and enclosure. The apartment building at Alte Meißner Landstrasse 27 is an exemplary testimony to housing construction in Briesnitz before 1900 and is therefore significant in terms of building and urban development history.

09218742
 
Residential house with front garden and fencing in open development
Residential house with front garden and fencing in open development Alte Meißner Landstrasse 28
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (residential building) simple, but decidedly noble classical building, one of the highest quality residential buildings in Dresden from the first half of the 19th century, historically and arguably also artistically significant

The house at Alte Meißner Landstraße 28 is one of the most high-quality residential buildings in Dresden from the first half of the 19th century and, in a broader sense, is a testament to the architecture of Saxon classicism. The two-story building with a half-hipped roof has a clearly structured, noble facade that has largely been preserved in its original state. The five-axis side of the street is dominated by fine, only flat window frames. The central axis is emphasized by the entrance portal and arched opening. The flush lattice windows (probably winter windows) are also noteworthy in terms of design. The pleasantly simple and yet sophisticated building is enriched by a matching pergola, a designed front garden and a wrought iron fence, which form a harmonious unit with the house. The Alte Meißner Landstrasse 28 is a cultural monument due to its architectural-historical and artistic importance.

09210876
 
Parsonage, diaconate, outbuildings, gate entrance and enclosing or retaining walls with gates of a parsonage
Parsonage, diaconate, outbuildings, gate entrance and enclosing or retaining walls with gates of a parsonage Old Meißner Landstrasse 30; 30a; 32
(card)
1889 (rectory), 1889 (diaconate), 1st half of the 19th century (outbuilding) the three two-storey buildings as simple historicizing buildings in the style of the neo-renaissance, as material witnesses of local history and building history of the 19th century of importance

In the parsonage the evangelical-luth. Briesnitz parish, elevated above Meißner Landstrasse, which has been divided since 1938, three two-story buildings are loosely grouped around a tree-lined courtyard. The older building (1st half of the 19th century, house number 30a) elongated with a gable roof, above the door in the central axis the dating of a conversion MDCCCLXVIII (1868). The old parsonage was demolished in 1888 and the two current parsonage houses were built on the old parish grounds. The simple, villa-like plastered buildings in the neo-renaissance style were created according to designs from 1889 on a square floor plan with flat, cantilevered hip roofs:

  • Rectory (number 30): 5/3 axes, original plaster structures and stucco ornaments not preserved, rectangular windows in protruding architraved sandstone surrounds with straight cornices, sills in front of the ground floor windows, cornice between the floors, the central house entrance framed and gabled. The single-storey, wooden extension in the garden probably used to be an open loggia. Interior fittings (flooring, interior doors, banisters, etc.)
  • Diaconate (number 32): 3/3 axes, original plaster structures and stucco ornaments not preserved, rectangular windows in protruding architraved sandstone surrounds with straight cornices, sills in front of the ground floor windows, cornice between the floors. The framed house entrance can be reached from the side via a few steps.

The parish grounds are bordered by a high retaining wall that partially intercepts the land ridge in two steps and is accessed from the east through a gate system with mighty gate pillars, and from the west via a staircase. The Briesnitz parsonage is a material testimony to the local and architectural history of the 19th century, as well as in its overall complex from an urban planning perspective.

09210871
 
Village smithy (former)
Village smithy (former) Alte Meißner Landstrasse 36
(map)
marked 1820 (forge) Today used as a residential house or restaurant, half-timbered building with a massive basement, of architectural and technical history as well as being part of the historic Briesnitz village center, of particular importance in terms of local history

The old village smithy with the address Alte Meißner Landstrasse 36, already occupied in the 16th century, is now used as a residential building, and since 1994 also as the “Alte Schmiede” restaurant. After its last renovation, the two-storey building with a rectangular floor plan and a gable roof has a visible half-timbered construction above the massive ground floor. The keystone of the entrance portal on the long side of the building, which has meanwhile been reopened, shows a monogram (ILB), the former house number of the courtyard, the date (1820) and a horseshoe as a craft mark. The keystone above the door next to it (formerly a window opening), based on the historical stone, shows a running horse. The forge itself changed in part. The Briesnitz village smithy is of architectural and technical history as well as being part of the historic Briesnitz village center, above all of local history.

09210880
 
barn
barn Alte Meißner Landstrasse 38
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (barn) The last barn in Briesnitz made of plan stones, of architectural and local significance, meanwhile unique for Briesnitz

The last barn from Briesnitz, built in the first half of the 19th century, from the plan stones typical of the southern Elbe Valley zone around Dresden, is located at the merging of the important historical traffic connection, which has been divided into Alte Meißner Landstrasse and Meißner Landstrasse since 1938. The building was rebuilt in 1993/2005 as a workshop, studio and residential building; the large pitched roof areas were heavily interfered with by installing a loggia and light strips. In addition to the gate entrances, the building, which is situated over a rectangular floor plan, has only a few narrow ventilation openings and a typical regional, arched twin window on each gable end. A circumferential cornice above the gates, a second one merging into the eaves cornice. Ornate round fan stones between the two structural members. On the side wall of the building, above a locked doorway, there are three natural stone panels with inscriptions and dates. The barn (Alte Meißner Landstraße 38) is of architectural and local significance and is now unique for Briesnitz.

09210892
 
Group of houses in corner location and open development
Group of houses in corner location and open development Alte Meißner Landstrasse 39; 41; 43
(map)
around 1910 (residential building) with shops, three-storey plastered building with extended, moving mansard roof, consisting of three house parts, revitalization through balconies, bay windows, ornamental half-timbered gables and decor, partially preserved furnishings, in the reform style of the time around 1910, striking evidence of the urbanization of the town of Briesnitz at the beginning of the 20th century. Century, exemplary example of the regional reform architecture of this time, architectural and local significance, also shaping the square

Around 1900 Briesnitz was no longer an actual village, the structures became increasingly urban. The Dresden tram ran to the border of the town, which was only incorporated in 1921. In order to meet the rapidly increasing demand for housing, the imposing, elongated group of residential buildings at Alte Meißner Landstrasse 39–43 was built on the corner of Am Lehmberg. The three-storey plastered building with an extended, moving mansard roof consists of three parts of the house, with some shop fittings on the high ground floor, which is partly covered with natural stone. The facades are enlivened by loggias and bay windows as well as half-timbered structures in the attic. The windows, portals and corner structures are of high quality. On the simple plastered facades, there are individual forms of jewelry typical of the period (fruit baskets, cartouches, medallions) in a functional design language. The preserved interior includes colored glass windows (e.g. in stairwell number 41). The residential and commercial building built around 1910 is a striking testimony to the urbanization of the town of Briesnitz at the beginning of the 20th century and is considered an exemplary example of regional reform architecture of this time, which is the reason for its building and local history. Furthermore, due to its exposed location, it is important for urban planning.

09210875
 
Old school: School (formerly) with side building, small extension and retaining walls
Old school: School (formerly) with side building, small extension and retaining walls Alte Meißner Landstrasse 67
(map)
1695 (school) Complex on massive substructure, side building on the upper floor with half-timbered and saddle roof, courtyard of the complex facing the cemetery with retaining wall and closed arched door, use as a school, local prison and residential building, one of the oldest, authentically preserved country schools in Saxony, historically important, historically significant and through exposed location also has a high urban value

As the ecclesiastical center, Briesnitz was also a school location for numerous villages in the area, the first schoolmaster is mentioned here as early as 1511. The so-called "old school", built in 1695 by the master builder Matthäus Schumann , leans against the Kirchberg above it , is a two-wing complex consisting of the actual school building and a side building arranged at right angles to it. The three-storey school with a high, striking basement and hipped roof stands on a massive substructure. Almost regular axes (7/3) structure the façades of the main house, which is built on a rectangular floor plan. The seven-axle side to the Meißner Landstrasse forms the main view. Facing the church is the smaller side building with a gable roof, which is partly made of half-timbered houses on the upper floor. The courtyard is closed by walls in which there is also a closed arched door to the cemetery. It was converted into a residential building around 1880. In addition to the local prison, which has been preserved, there has been a small exhibition on the Briesnitz school history in the building for several years. The remaining rooms serve as the owner's studio and apartment. Alte Meißner Straße 67 is one of the oldest, authentically preserved rural schools in Saxony and is therefore of national importance in terms of building history. Due to its exposed location, the building has a high urban value in addition to its local history.

09210884
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement Am Lehmberg 6; 8
(card)
1927 (twin house) In the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house from the 1920s, settlement architecturally and urbanistically significant evidence of cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The Briesnitz-Dresden residential estate, which extends over a large area at an attractive altitude, goes back to the land reform and garden city movement of the late 19th century. As one of the early implementations of the garden city idea in Germany, a total of 138 apartments were built in single-family, semi-detached and terraced houses between 1912 and 1914. The development plan for the area to the west of the old village center as well as the designs and plans for numerous buildings were drawn up by the architects Rudolf Max Ludloff (Kassel) and Hugo Stieger (Hildesheim). After the incorporation of the place Briesnitz, the settlement was expanded in the years 1924–1939. Initially, a few more private homes were built by the Dresden architect Curt Herfurth through redensification. After 1927, however, one switched entirely to apartment building. In 1928 the architect Karl Willy Grunert was assigned the further planning. In 1939, construction ended in the settlement, which now stretched between Wolfszug, Merbitzer Straße, Schulberg, Am Lehmberg, Borngraben and Marktweg and now offered space for around 2700 residents (more than half of the entire Briesnitz population) in 364 houses. The change of different building types on relatively generous plot areas, the creation of square-like street extensions and a partially curved street course, as already provided for in the development plan, still create a "rural character" today, with private gardens (formerly used for self-sufficiency) and public green spaces the well-designed overall system complete. The architectural and creative development of the high-quality ensemble combines the formal language of Expressionism with traditional elements of Dresden's building history. It impresses with a uniform, simple overall effect of great balance. The Briesnitz settlement, which is clearly characterized in particular by the different building types and development phases - from “home” to rental housing - is a nationally significant testimony to the cooperative housing construction of the first half of the 20th century, both architecturally and in terms of urban development. Furthermore, the complex is socially and historically significant due to its housing reform concepts and of great importance for the local history of Briesnitz. The semi-detached house Am Lehmberg 6/8 is part of the Briesnitz residential estate. The multi-storey building with two shop fittings was built around 1925 under the architect Curt Herfurth and, with its location, which is also striking in terms of urban development, closes the settlement off to the south-west. An undeveloped hipped roof (individual triangular dormers) lies over the three-storey plastered building with a rectangular floor plan. The simple perforated facade is emphasized towards the green area by a wide risalit (over 6 axes, including the outer 2 entrances / stairwells) with a flat, staggered finish. As a characteristic small apartment and housing estate from the 1920s / 30s, the residential building is historically significant and, as an originally preserved example of a semi-detached house in the Briesnitz residential estate, is a listed building, in particular because of its historical significance.

09210898
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: group of terraced houses in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: group of terraced houses in a settlement On the own 32; 34; 36; 38
(card)
1927 (row house) In the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house from the 1920s, settlement architecturally and urbanistically significant evidence of cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The row house Auf dem Eigen 32–38 is part of the Briesnitz residential estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The residential building is one of the housing developments that were built in the second construction phase between 1919 and 1923. According to this, the rectangular, simple structure goes back to the architect Curt Herfurth (1880–1942). The building is one of the few examples still originally preserved in the core area of ​​the residential estate. A hipped roof with triangular dormers, a typical architectural feature of the 1920s, rises above plastered, two-storey façades. The four houses are accessed via entrances with small outside stairs. The lintels with brackets, folding shutters and the partially preserved lattice windows are the only decorations on the seven-axis side of the street. The whole thing is complemented by an original picket fence. The house Auf dem Eigen 32–38 is an originally preserved example of a row house in the Briesnitz residential estate, which is a listed building, particularly because of its historical significance.

09218935
 
Residential house in open development and facade decoration
Residential house in open development and facade decoration On disc 12
(card)
marked 1936 (residential building) Plastered facade with Olympia'36 motif, animal reliefs made of terracotta and colorful tiles in the area of ​​the windows, simple and attractively designed house, especially important due to its facade design from an artistic and architectural point of view

The cube-shaped, three-storey house was built around 1936 on an almost square floor plan in open development. What is striking about the building, which is kept very sober in terms of design and cubature, is the street-side facade with animal reliefs made of terracotta (MH Fritz) and three window axes with colorful decorative tiles. On the house entrance side, the staircase axis is contrasted in color and raised like a risk. There are pictures on the subject of "Olympia'36" (torchbearers, Olympic rings with the year, group of figures with children). The windows with a horizontal lattice division are only framed by a narrow, color-contrasting cleaning area. The eaves are emphasized by a clinker cornice. In the hipped roof (no roof overhang) there is a small dormer on the street side and a broad roof structure to the south. The attractively designed residential building Auf der Scheibe 12 is of particular artistic and architectural significance due to its unusual facade design.

09210863
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: residential building in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: residential building in a settlement Borngraben 1
(map)
1913–1914 (single-family house) in the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house after 1910, settlement architecturally and town-planning significant testimony to cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The Borngraben 1 residential building is part of the Briesnitz residential estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The single-family house at the intersection of Borngraben and Hammeraue was built around 1913 under the architects Ludloff and Stieger. The single-storey plastered building with an expanded, hipped mansard roof has an acute-angled dwelling on the street side with a bay window and balcony in front of it, as well as a single-storey extension. The enclosure, typical of the construction period, with picket fence fields between massive posts. The distinctive single-family house, stylistically based on Expressionist forms, is a characteristic small apartment and housing estate from the beginning of the 20th century, and is a listed building as an exemplary example of the free-standing homes of the Briesnitz estate, especially because of its historical significance.

09218519
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement Borngraben 2; 4
(card)
1924–1926 (twin house) In the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house from the 1920s, settlement architecturally and urbanistically significant evidence of cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The twin house Borngraben 2/4 is part of the Briesnitz residential estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The two-storey plastered building with a moving roof is divided into two parts, the main building emphasized by a gabled mid-house, bay window and dormers with an extended mansard roof and shop fitting on the ground floor and an adjoining, somewhat recessed, simple wing of the building with a hipped roof. The double house was built around 1925, presumably under the architect Curt Herfurth. The residential building, designed in a functional design language, is significant in terms of architectural history as a characteristic small apartment and housing estate from the 1920s and, as an originally preserved example of a semi-detached house with residential and commercial use in the Briesnitz residential estate, is a listed building, especially because of its significance in the history of the settlement.

09218510
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement Borngraben 6; 8
(card)
1924–1926 (twin house) In the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house from the 1920s, settlement architecturally and urbanistically significant evidence of cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The semi-detached house Borngraben 6/8 is part of the Briesnitz residential estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The elongated, two-storey residential building with an undeveloped hipped roof has a simple plastered facade that is only partially provided with folding shutters on the ground floor and frames the windows with narrow plastering flaps. On the street side, the outer two of the total of 10 window axes protrude slightly. The double house was built around 1925, presumably under the architect Curt Herfurth. The residential building, designed in a functional design language, is a characteristic small apartment and housing estate from the 1920s and is historically significant and, as an originally preserved example of multi-storey apartment construction in the Briesnitz residential estate, is also a listed building because of its significance in the history of the settlement.

09218511
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement Borngraben 10; 12
(card)
1924–1926 (twin house) In the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house from the 1920s, settlement architecturally and urbanistically significant evidence of cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The semi-detached house Borngraben 10/12 is part of the Briesnitz residential estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The two-storey residential building, the central part of which is raised by one storey and expanded for residential purposes, has a simple plastered facade that is only partially provided with folding shutters on the ground floor. The house with hipped roofs was probably built around 1925 under the architect Curt Herfurth. The residential building, designed in a functional design language, is a characteristic small apartment and housing estate from the 1920s and is historically significant and, as an originally preserved example of a semi-detached house in the Briesnitz residential estate, is a listed building, in particular due to its historical significance.

09218512
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement Borngraben 14; 16
(card)
1924–1926 (twin house) In the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house from the 1920s, settlement architecturally and urbanistically significant evidence of cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The twin house Borngraben 14/16 is part of the Briesnitz residential estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The elongated, two-storey residential building with an undeveloped hipped roof has a simple plastered facade that is only partially provided with folding shutters on the ground floor and frames the windows with narrow plastering flaps. On the street side, the outer two of the total of 10 window axes protrude slightly. The double house was built around 1925, presumably under the architect Curt Herfurth. The residential building, designed in a functional design language, is a characteristic small apartment and housing estate from the 1920s and is historically significant and, as an originally preserved example of multi-storey apartment construction in the Briesnitz residential estate, is also a listed building because of its significance in the history of the settlement.

09218513
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: residential building in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: residential building in a settlement Borngraben 18
(map)
1924–1926 (apartment building) In the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house from the 1920s, settlement architecturally and urbanistically significant evidence of cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The Borngraben 18 residential building is part of the Briesnitz residential estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The free-standing, two-storey residential building with an undeveloped hipped roof has a simple plastered façade, only partially populated with folding shutters on the ground floor, and the windows framed by narrow plaster strips. The house was probably built around 1925 under the architect Curt Herfurth. The residential building, designed in a functional design language, is significant in terms of architectural history as a characteristic small apartment and housing estate from the 1920s and, as an originally preserved example of a free-standing apartment building in the residential complex of Briesnitz, is a listed building, especially due to its significance in the history of the settlement.

09218514
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement Borngraben 20; 22
(card)
1924–1926 (twin house) with gate passage, in the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", gatehouse with roof turret, forms the design focus of a uniform row of residential buildings on the south side of the Borngraben, the settlement is architecturally and urbanistically significant evidence of cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also in terms of social and local history significant

The Borngraben 20/22 residential building is part of the Briesnitz residential estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The gatehouse with a roof turret and tower clock forms the creative center of the nearly symmetrical row of settlement houses on the south side of the Borngraben. The two-storey residential building, whose central building is raised by one storey above the doorway accented by natural stone and used for residential purposes, has a simple plastered facade that is only partially animated by folding shutters on the ground floor. The corners of the central building protruding like a bay window and with an expressionistically shaped roof. The house, roofed by hipped roofs with bat dormers, was built around 1925 under the architect Curt Herfurth. The distinctive gatehouse, as a characteristic small apartment and settlement building from the 1920s, is historically significant and, as an originally preserved example of a multi-storey residential building in the Briesnitz residential estate, is a listed building, in particular due to its historical significance. In addition, the gatehouse in particular is of major importance for the townscape of Briesnitz.

09210859
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: residential building in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: residential building in a settlement Borngraben 24
(map)
1924–1926 (apartment building) In the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house from the 1920s, settlement architecturally and urbanistically significant evidence of cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The Borngraben 24 residential building is part of the Briesnitz residential estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The free-standing, two-storey residential building with a closed hipped roof has a simple plastered façade, only partially lively on the ground floor with folding shutters, framed by narrow plastering bezels for the windows. The house was probably built around 1925 under the architect Curt Herfurth. The residential building, designed in a functional design language, is significant in terms of architectural history as a characteristic small apartment and housing estate from the 1920s and, as an originally preserved example of a free-standing apartment building in the residential complex of Briesnitz, is a listed building, especially due to its significance in the history of the settlement.

09218515
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement Borngraben 26; 28
(card)
1924–1926 (twin house) In the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house from the 1920s, settlement architecturally and urbanistically significant evidence of cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The twin house Borngraben 26/28 is part of the Briesnitz residential estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The elongated, two-storey residential building with an undeveloped hipped roof has a simple plastered facade that is only partially provided with folding shutters on the ground floor and frames the windows with narrow plastering flaps. On the street side, the outer two of the total of 10 window axes protrude slightly. The double house was built around 1925, presumably under the architect Carl Herfurth. The residential building with its functional design language is significant in terms of architectural history as a characteristic small apartment and housing estate from the 1920s and, as an originally preserved example of multi-storey apartment construction in the Briesnitz residential estate, is also a listed building due to its importance in the history of the settlement.

09218516
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement Borngraben 30; 32
(card)
1924–1926 (twin house) In the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house from the 1920s, settlement architecturally and urbanistically significant evidence of cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The semi-detached house Borngraben 30/32 is part of the Briesnitz residential estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The two-storey residential building, the central part of which is raised by one storey and expanded for residential purposes, has a simple plastered facade that is only partially provided with folding shutters on the ground floor. The house with hipped roofs was probably built around 1925 under the architect Carl Herfurth. The residential building, designed in a functional design language, is a characteristic small apartment and housing estate from the 1920s and is historically significant and, as an originally preserved example of a semi-detached house in the Briesnitz residential estate, is a listed building, in particular due to its historical significance.

09218517
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement Borngraben 34; 36
(card)
1924–1926 (twin house) In the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house from the 1920s, settlement architecturally and urbanistically significant evidence of cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The twin house Borngraben 34/36 is part of the Briesnitz residential estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The elongated, two-storey residential building with an undeveloped hipped roof has a simple plastered facade that is only partially provided with folding shutters on the ground floor and frames the windows with narrow plastering flaps. On the street side, the outer two of the total of 10 window axes protrude slightly. The double house was built around 1925, presumably under the architect Curt Herfurth. The residential building with its functional design language is significant in terms of architectural history as a characteristic small apartment and housing estate from the 1920s and, as an originally preserved example of multi-storey apartment construction in the Briesnitz residential estate, is also a listed building due to its importance in the history of the settlement.

09218518
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement Own hooves 14; 16
(card)
1912–1913 (twin house) in the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house after 1910, settlement architecturally and town-planning significant testimony to cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The semi-detached house is part of the Briesnitz residential estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The house was built in 1912/13 under the architects Ludloff and Stieger. The hipped mansard roof is located above a ground floor with a wide, covered bay window on the street side. The top floor has been expanded, the mansard floor is exposed to light through windows in the gable and street-side, risalit-like porch in the middle of the house, above curved dormers. The appealing design effect of the building is created solely through the harmonious proportions of the components and surfaces, without any architectural decoration. The property is completed by a picket fence typical of the construction period. As an exemplary example of semi-detached houses in the Briesnitz residential estate, Eigenhufe 14 is significant in terms of building history and is a listed building, in particular because of its importance in the history of the settlement.

09218520
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Single-family house in a group of terraced houses in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Single-family house in a group of terraced houses in a settlement Own hooves 28
(card)
1912–1913 (residential building) in the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house after 1910, settlement architecturally and town-planning significant testimony to cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The row house Eigenhufe 28 is part of the Briesnitz housing estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). In 1912/13 it was built as an end-row house under the architects Ludloff and Stieger. The single-family house is one of the few examples still originally preserved in the core area of ​​the residential estate. The narrow row house is plastered, the facade is only enlivened with folding shutters. The main roof as an extended mansard roof (with a crooked hip), a large roof structure with a gable facing the street. The property is completed by a picket fence typical of the construction period. As an exemplary example of row houses in the Briesnitz residential estate, Eigenhufe 28 is significant in terms of architectural history and is a listed building due to its historical settlement value.

09218521
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Single-family house in a group of terraced houses in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Single-family house in a group of terraced houses in a settlement Own hooves 36
(card)
1912–1913 (row house) in the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house after 1910, settlement architecturally and town-planning significant testimony to cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The middle row house Eigenhufe 36 is part of the Briesnitz housing estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The row house complex was built in 1912/13 under the architects Ludloff and Stieger. The house half number 36 is one of the few examples still originally preserved in the core area of ​​the residential estate. The narrow row house is plastered and provided with a dormer (half-timbered) on the street side in the expanded mansard roof. The window on the ground floor with shutters. As an exemplary example of terraced houses in the Briesnitz residential estate, Eigenhufe 36 is significant in terms of architectural history and is a listed building, in particular because of its historical settlement value.

09218522
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Row of houses (with six entrances) of a settlement
More pictures
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Row of houses (with six entrances) of a settlement Gottfried-Keller-Platz 1; 2; 3; 4; 5; 6
(card)
1930 (apartment building) Rationalistic housing construction around 1930, "Briesnitz settlement" architecturally and town-planning significant testimony to cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The residential building Gottfried-Keller-Platz 1–6 is part of the Briesnitz housing estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The striking round house, which consists of six houses, was built in 1930 under the architect Karl Willy Grunert. The plastered flat roof construction with perforated facades in the rationalistic style has four residential floors (plus usable areas in the base and top floor) and a passage to Felix-Dahn-Weg. The residential building is now part of the railway housing cooperative. As an exceptional example of a residential building in the Briesnitz residential estate that has a particular impact on the space, the Gottfried-Keller-Platz 1–6 round house is historically significant and continues to be a listed building because of its historical settlement value.

09210896
 
Wikidata-logo.svg
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Row of houses (with five entrances) of a settlement
More pictures
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Row of houses (with five entrances) of a settlement Gottfried-Keller-Platz 8; 9; 10; 11; 12
(card)
1935–1940 (apartment building) Characteristic housing construction after 1930, the settlement architecturally and urbanistically significant testimony to the cooperative housing construction of the first half of the 20th century, also significant in terms of social and local history

The residential building Gottfried-Keller-Platz 8–12 is part of the Briesnitz residential estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The distinctive round house with a ground floor shop, consisting of five houses, was built after 1935 under the architect Karl Willy Grunert. The three-storey plastered building with perforated facades has a pitched roof, in contrast to the flat round house opposite it. The building entrance and staircase axes are emphasized in terms of design. The residential building is now part of the railway housing cooperative. As an exceptional example of a residential building in the Briesnitz residential estate that has a particular impact on the space, the Gottfried-Keller-Platz 8-12 round house is historically significant and is still a listed building because of its historical settlement value.

09210895
 
Municipal office (former) in open development, with gate entrance
Municipal office (former) in open development, with gate entrance Gottfried-Keller-Strasse 2
(map)
before 1900 (municipal office) Striking building in a corner location with historicizing facade, municipal office from 1900 to 1905, of architectural and, above all, local history

From 1900 to 1905 the Briesnitz municipal office was located in the striking, three-story plastered building on the former Kirchstrasse. The historic facade of the apartment building, which was built in open development, is mainly characterized by the wooden balconies presented. The architectural decoration, which was still on the right, raised building corner until after 1990, is missing today. The flat hipped roof is barely visible from the pedestrian perspective behind the wide eaves cornice. New galvanized extension balconies on the back. The elaborately designed, wrought-iron gate system is still preserved from the construction period. The striking tenement building at Gottfried-Keller-Strasse 2 is of particular importance in terms of local history in its former function as Briesnitz municipal office.

09210885
 
Apartment house in open development with fencing
Apartment house in open development with fencing Gottfried-Keller-Strasse 12
(map)
around 1894 (tenement) With a representative historicizing clinker brick facade, sophisticatedly designed residential building, exemplary for the late historic residential development around 1900, significant in terms of building history

The tenement building at Gottfried-Keller-Straße 12, which was built around 1895 in open development, has representative, symmetrical street fronts in clinker brick and ashlar. The middle two window axes of the building (6/3 axes) lie on a gabled central projection, which is adorned with a wide balcony on the upper floor. The attic, which sits on a wide eaves cornice, has been extended and has single and double dormers. On the street facade there are historicizing elements such as window canopies, frames and cornices, the side facades are designed similarly. The rear wooden verandas were probably added in the middle of the 20th century, later bridged by an additional steel structure. The massive gate and fence posts of the enclosure are discreetly designed, with wrought iron fence panels and gate leaves in between. The sophisticated design of the residential building is significant in terms of building history due to its exemplary statement for the late historic residential development around 1900.

09210894
 


Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Single-family house in a group of terraced houses in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Single-family house in a group of terraced houses in a settlement Hammeraue 10
(map)
1912–1913 (row house) in the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house after 1910, settlement architecturally and town-planning significant testimony to cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The mid-terrace house Hammeraue 10 is part of the Briesnitz residential estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The row house complex was built in 1912/13 under the architects Ludloff and Stieger. House half number 10 is one of the few examples still originally preserved in the core area of ​​the residential estate. The narrow row house is plastered, the extended mansard roof is provided with a dormer (half-timbered). House entrance with skylight, window on the ground floor with folding shutters. As an exemplary example of the terraced houses in the Briesnitz residential estate, Hammeraue 10 is significant in terms of building history and is a listed building due to its historical settlement value.

09218523
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: triple dwelling in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: triple dwelling in a settlement Hammeraue 20; 22; 24
(card)
1912–1913 (single-family house) in the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house after 1910, settlement architecturally and town-planning significant testimony to cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The terraced house Hammeraue 20–24 is part of the Briesnitz residential estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The terraced house consisting of three houses, which can only be distinguished from a single-family house on closer inspection, was built in 1912/13 under the architects Ludloff and Stieger. Above the plastered ground floor lies a lively, expanded mansard storey (narrow dwarf house behind a false roof, dormer window with half-timbered structure, wide dwarf house with upper-storey bay window and crooked hip). Diverse window formats, noticeable the street-side windows above the single-storey, roofed bay windows. Stylistic elements of traditional residential construction are linked to the functional and objective demands of reform architecture at the beginning of the 20th century. Between massive posts, the property is partly closed by picket fence fields typical of the period. The Hammeraue 20-24 residential building is a characteristic small apartment and settlement house from the beginning of the 20th century and is a listed building as an originally preserved example of a row house in the Briesnitz residential estate, also because of its historical significance.

09210904
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: triple dwelling in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: triple dwelling in a settlement Hammer groove 32; 34; 36
(card)
1912–1913 (single-family house) in the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house after 1910, settlement architecturally and town-planning significant testimony to cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The terraced house Hammeraue 32–36 is part of the Briesnitz residential estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The terraced house consisting of three houses, which can only be distinguished from a single-family house on closer inspection, was built in 1912/13 under the architects Ludloff and Stieger. Above the plastered ground floor lies a lively, expanded mansard storey (narrow dwarf house behind a false roof, dormer window with half-timbered structure, wide dwarf house with upper-storey bay window and crooked hip). Diverse window formats, single-storey roofed bay windows on the street side. Stylistic elements of traditional residential construction are linked to the functional and objective demands of reform architecture at the beginning of the 20th century. Between massive posts, the property is partly closed by picket fence fields typical of the period. The Hammeraue 32-36 residential building is a characteristic small apartment and settlement house from the beginning of the 20th century and is a listed building as an originally preserved example of a row house in the Briesnitz residential estate, also because of its historical significance.

09210905
 
Residential house in open development with painting
Residential house in open development with painting Heroldstrasse 18
(map)
around 1906 (residential building) Outwardly simple construction of the architecture after 1900, in the stairwell unique, two-dimensional and originally preserved Art Nouveau painting as decorative painting, of architectural and artistic importance

The three-storey residential building was built around 1906 on a rectangular floor plan and in open development. The outwardly simple, plastered residential building has a remarkable Art Nouveau painting from the time it was built in the stairwell. Such decorative painting is extremely rare and in the case of the object to be assessed here from the ground floor to the second floor is unadulterated and originally preserved. None of the motifs in the medallions are alike and the leaf and flower arrangements are always different. The street front with 6 window axes (the middle 4 combined) and the side fronts with 5 or 3 axes, between the windows of the 1st and 2nd floor, plain plaster mirror in contrasting colors. All windows framed with natural stone. In 2013 the building was renovated, in the course of which new galvanized extension balconies were erected both on the street side and on the rear. The prestigious residential building at Heroldstraße 18 is of architectural importance and, thanks to its unique, two-dimensional and original Art Nouveau painting, is also of artistic importance.

09302687
 
Apartment building in open development
Apartment building in open development Herweghstrasse 1
(map)
1898 (residential building) Plastered, historicizing facade, striking testimony to the structural development of Briesnitz in the years around 1900, of importance in terms of building history and urban development history

Paul Mähler, master builder from Briesnitz, prepared the plans for the construction of a tenement house on Herweghstrasse for Mrs. Henriette married Schlösser in 1895. In December 1898, the stately, three-story, open-plan residential building was completed. The nine-axis, wide street front is plastered and bears historicizing elements above the cornice delimiting the ground floor on both upper floors (partially detailed window roofing, wide cornices and plastered mirrors). Above it a simple hipped roof, the roof structure above the central risalit, presumably changed later, probably earlier bearing the initials of the builder. The rear entrance is between the two short side wings. The residential building at Herweghstrasse 1 is a striking testimony to the structural development of Briesnitz in the years around 1900 and is therefore of importance in terms of both building and urban development.

09210860
 
Private home settlement Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Residential house group of 3 multi-family houses with connecting tracts and enclosure of a settlement
Private home settlement Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Residential house group of 3 multi-family houses with connecting tracts and enclosure of a settlement Marktweg 2; 4; 6
(card)
1920–1923 (apartment building) In the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house from the 1920s, settlement architecturally and urbanistically significant evidence of cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The Marktweg 2-6 residential complex is part of the Briesnitz residential estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The striking ensemble, which was built between 1919 and 1923, consists of three two-story residential buildings with extended hipped roofs, which are connected by two single-story intermediate structures (passageways). The plastered facades, which are only partially provided with folding shutters on the ground floor, are simple with discreet window frames. The office of the cooperative was temporarily located in house number 4. The urban development, which is located on the widened street space, is significant in terms of architectural history as a characteristic small apartment and housing estate from the 1920s and, as an originally preserved example of a residential complex in the Briesnitz residential estate, is a listed building, especially because of its historical significance.

09218533
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: residential building in a settlement Max-Sachs-Strasse 1
(map)
1913–1914 (apartment building) in the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house after 1910, settlement architecturally and town-planning significant testimony to cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant 09306654
 
Villa with garden, stairs and enclosure
Villa with garden, stairs and enclosure Meißner Landstrasse 77
(map)
inscribed 1899 (villa) Today the “Villa Reiche” guesthouse, a representative clinker-stone facade, impressively illustrates the inseparable design unity of the villa building type with the surrounding garden, which is significant in terms of architectural history

The villa, built in 1899 (dating in the weather vane), high above the Meißner Landstrasse with a view of the Elbe, is now operated as a guesthouse under the name "Villa Reiche". The representative villa survived both World Wars unscathed, but later fell into an almost ruinous state. The building has been gradually renovated since around 1990. The two-storey residential building, standing over an irregular floor plan, has a ground floor made of natural stone and above it a clinker stone facade typical of the period. The varied roof area consists of gable roofs with gables on the access side and on the bay porch facing the Elbe, a hipped roof over the rear part of the building and the high tower structure to the east. In addition, a round bay window in sandstone and other additions, some in wood. The roof structure in the protruding roof overhangs, especially in the verge area, is decorated. The property closes along the street with a comparatively elaborate enclosure consisting of a base, massive goal posts and curved metal fence panels, some of which are colored. The villa building at Meißner Landstrasse 77 impressively illustrates the inseparable design unity of the villa building type with the surrounding garden and is therefore significant in terms of architectural history. In connection with the other large villa plots along Meißner Landstrasse, the property is also of importance from an urban planning perspective.

09210869
 
Ernst's Heim: Villa with garden, stairs and enclosure
Ernst's Heim: Villa with garden, stairs and enclosure Meißner Landstrasse 81
(map)
inscribed 1891 (villa) extremely representative property of the late 19th century, clinker-sandstone facades dominated by the corner tower and gabled risalits, elaborate wooden decorations also on the back, in the so-called "Old German style", significant in terms of building history and artistically

The villa with the name "Ernst's Heim" was built in 1891 (dating in the weather vane) on the slope of the Elbe in Briesnitz. From around 1850, more and more houses were added to Altbriesnitz and the houses by the church on Meißner Landstrasse. The clinker-sandstone façade above a massive base floor is dominated by a corner tower facing southeast and gabled risalits. Elaborate wooden decorations (roofs, entrance roofing, winter garden) in the so-called "Old German style" also on the back of the residential building, partly half-timbered. The enclosure of walls and strikingly designed massive posts with fence panels and gate system made of metal closes the property off from the Meißner Landstrasse. The villa building, accessible from the street via a wide staircase, is used today by the state guild association of the roofing trade of Saxony and for residential purposes. The villa building impressively illustrates the inseparable design unity of the villa building type with the surrounding garden. The extremely representative property at Meißner Landstrasse 81 from the end of the 19th century is of architectural and artistic importance. In connection with the other large villa plots along Meißner Landstrasse, the complex is also of importance in terms of urban development.

09210867
 
Rental villa
Rental villa Meißner Landstrasse 83
(map)
1909 (rental villa) limited to the street by a hedge, simple, historicizing plastered building with bay windows and extended mansard roof, characteristic example of the architectural development in rental housing construction at the beginning of the 20th century, significant in terms of building history

With a building permit from 1909, the master builder Paul Mähler from Briesnitz built the mighty rental villa on the border to Kemnitz as construction manager and executor for the private status of Mr. Gustav Sachse. The plastered building has two representative floors above a slightly lower basement floor, and the mansard roof has also been removed. The decoration and structure of the facade are limited to window frames with plaster cuts, individual window canopies and varying window formats with gaps. The octagonal, raised bay window to the north, decorated with relief-like plaster mirrors, is particularly effective in urban planning. A flat bay window with a roof structure above it also on the street front to Meißner Landstrasse. According to the existing plan drawings, the roof was formerly provided with a high ridge, which is no longer there today. Roof structures used to be located in the area of ​​the current skylights. Only remnants (gate posts) remain of the original enclosure. The distinctive villa building at Meißner Landstrasse 83 is a characteristic example of the architectural development in rental apartment construction at the beginning of the 20th century and is therefore significant in terms of building history. In connection with the other large villa plots along Meißner Landstrasse, the complex is also of importance in terms of urban development.

09210866
 
St. Marien Church Briesnitz: Church with furnishings
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St. Marien Church Briesnitz: Church with furnishings Merbitzer Strasse 2
(map)
First mentioned in 1273 (church), 17th-18th centuries. Century (epitaph), around 1510 (remains of the former St. Mary's altar), 1595 (baptism), inscribed 1648 (parishioners) Single-nave, essentially late-Gothic church with a high tower in the southwest, neo-Gothic reconstruction, especially of the interior and the tower, evidence of church architecture from the Middle Ages to the 19th century, significant in terms of building history, art and landscape design

As the oldest sacred structure in the western part of the city, the now Protestant village church of St. Mary in Briesnitz rises on a lime hill above the Elbe. The church was first mentioned in 1273 and in 1474 it was converted into a flat-roofed hall building with a west tower. In 1881/82 the church underwent a massive renovation in neo-Gothic style based on plans by Gotthilf Ludwig Möckel (1838–1915). It succeeded in drawing a vault into the ship despite its actually insufficient height. The 76 m high, neo-Gothic tower end with corner towers and arched gallery was built against the resistance of the architect. The single-nave church is a quarry stone building with a retracted choir with 5/8 end, gable roof and two riders. The tower with arched curtain windows was built on a late Gothic substructure in 1602. To the south of the church is a vestibule from the late Gothic period with a groin vault and portal. The interior of the church and the liturgical objects (altar, pulpit etc.) and interior parts received a uniform, historicizing design during the renovation in 1881/82, so that a coherent overall picture was achieved. The colored glass windows in the choir were executed by H. Bähr in 1883 according to Möckel's design. Restorations are documented for the years 1979–83 and 1995. As a testimony to the art of church architecture from the Middle Ages to the 19th century, St. Mary's is significant in terms of building history, artistry and, in connection with the surrounding cemetery, also landscape design. As part of the historic village center of Briesnitz, it is also of local historical value.

09210893
 
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Individual features of the totality of the inner Briesnitz cemetery: celebration hall, monumental graves, two war memorials, as well as enclosure walls and enclosure fences including gates, gates and ornamental grilles (see also Obj. 09305080)
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Individual features of the totality of the inner Briesnitz cemetery: celebration hall, monumental graves, two war memorials, as well as enclosure walls and enclosure fences including gates, gates and ornamental grilles (see also Obj. 09305080) Merbitzer Strasse 2
(map)
1895 (celebration hall), marked 1921 (war memorial 1st World War), 1933 (war memorial 2nd World War) Vivid evidence of the sepulchral architecture, especially of the 19th and 20th centuries, some graves remind of important personalities of the place, slightly elevated complex with Briesnitz church visible from afar, significant in terms of building history, landscape design and local history

The burial site on Merbitzer Strasse, which is usually referred to as the “Innerer Briesnitz Cemetery” today, emerged from the old churchyard around St. Mary's Church. The deceased parishioners of the entire Briesnitz Parish, consisting of 26 places, were buried here. Colloquial path names such as Oberer Leichenweg and Ockerwitzer Leichenweg remind of the need to transport the dead from the surrounding villages. The cemetery complex was enlarged several times and wall plans were added. Today, the approximately 1.8 hectare site is enclosed by enclosure walls and fences, including four entrance gates and ornamental grilles. It is worth mentioning the extension to the north around 1910, in which there is a war memorial for those who fell in World War I. The "Inner Briesnitz Cemetery", protected as a whole, is in its grown functional and design unit with the celebration hall (1896), the grave fields A - K2, numerous monumental graves and two war memorials (the younger, monumental complex with enclosing walls, staircases, hedges and rows of trees) Significant building and local history. With its structured system of paths, the structure and space-defining planting and interesting views of the Elbe landscape, the cemetery also has garden and landscape design value.

09218508
 
Material entirety Inner Briesnitz cemetery, cemetery in its grown functional and design unit with the following individual monuments: the celebration hall, the monumental graves, two war memorials as well as enclosure walls and fencing including gates, gates and grills (see Obj. 09218508), the specially designed grave fields (Totality parts), furthermore cemetery design (garden monument)
More pictures
Material entirety Inner Briesnitz cemetery, cemetery in its grown functional and design unit with the following individual monuments: the celebration hall, the monumental graves, two war memorials as well as enclosure walls and fencing including gates, gates and grills (see Obj. 09218508), the specially designed grave fields (Totality parts), furthermore cemetery design (garden monument) Merbitzer Strasse 2
(map)
around 1273 (cemetery) Vivid testimony to the sepulchral architecture, especially of the 19th and 20th centuries, with a structured system of paths, structure and space-creating planting and views of the Elbe landscape, slightly elevated complex with Briesnitz Church visible from afar, some graves are reminiscent of significant personalities of the place, in terms of architectural history, garden art, Important in terms of landscape design and local history

The burial site on Merbitzer Strasse, which is usually referred to as the “Innerer Briesnitz Cemetery” today, emerged from the old churchyard around St. Mary's Church. The deceased parishioners of the entire Briesnitz Parish, consisting of 26 places, were buried here. Colloquial path names such as Oberer Leichenweg and Ockerwitzer Leichenweg remind of the need to transport the dead from the surrounding villages. The cemetery complex was enlarged several times and wall plans were added. Today, the approximately 1.8 hectare site is enclosed by enclosure walls and fences, including four entrance gates and ornamental grilles. It is worth mentioning the extension to the north around 1910, in which there is a war memorial for those who fell in World War I. The "Inner Briesnitz Cemetery", protected as a whole, is in its grown functional and design unit with the celebration hall (1896), the grave fields A - K2, numerous monumental graves and two war memorials (the younger, monumental complex with enclosing walls, staircases, hedges and rows of trees) Significant building and local history. With its structured system of paths, the structure and space-defining planting and interesting views of the Elbe landscape, the cemetery also has garden and landscape design value.

09305080
 
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Apartment house in a corner and open development
Apartment house in a corner and open development Merbitzer Strasse 2a
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Typical clinker stone facade with historicizing decorative and structural elements, expanded mansard roof, significant in terms of building history

The two-story tenement house, built around 1900, is in a corner and open development at the foot of the Briesnitz Kirchberg. The building, which is provided with a clinker stone facade typical of the time, has an extended mansard roof. The intersection of Merbitzer Strasse and Alte Meißner Landstrasse is emphasized above the flattened corner of the building with balconies by a massive roof structure made of clinker stone and a high hipped roof. Numerous characteristic, historicizing decorative and structural elements can be found on the facade. On the upper floor, the windows are provided with window sills and round-arched, red brickwork stone accents, over the window openings on the ground floor there are basket-arched brickwork stone lintels. Floor separations by cornices, on the upper floor in connection with a deep eaves cornice. The Merbitzer Straße 2a apartment building is important in terms of architectural history and, due to its corner location at the beginning of Merbitzer Straße, also in terms of urban development

09210891
 
Rectory (former) with enclosure and retaining wall
Rectory (former) with enclosure and retaining wall Merbitzer Strasse 4
(map)
marked 1818 (rectory) at the inner Briesnitz cemetery, today a residential building, upper floor partly with half-timbering, an example of upscale rural architecture from the 1st half of the 18th century, significant in terms of building history and local history

The elongated residential building, designated 1818, is located, in accordance with its original function as a parsonage, in open development directly on the “Inner Briesnitz Cemetery”. The natural stone enclosure walls support the Kirchberg along Merbitzer Straße. The upper floor, which is partly built in half-timbered construction, lies above a massive ground floor. The gable roof with a crooked hip is developed for residential purposes. In addition to the half-timbered structure, two arched windows typical of the region in the gable and the simple window frames contribute to the external design of the imposing building. The house entrance has a keystone. As an example of upscale rural architecture from the first half of the 18th century, the residential building at Merbitzer Strasse 4 is significant in terms of architectural history and, not least because of its function as a former parsonage, also has local historical value.

09210881
 
Apartment building in open development
Apartment building in open development Merbitzer Strasse 5
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) Plastered building with neoclassical features, material evidence of representative housing construction of the late 19th century, of architectural historical value

The striking, three-storey apartment building was probably built around 1890 in a heterogeneous environment on Merbitzer Straße. Due to the stylistic devices used, the building has neoclassical features. The strict, symmetrical plastered facade consisting of six window axes, two of them in a central risalit, is designed by individual historicizing decorative and structural elements (cornice over the ground floor, window frames and roofing on the first floor, plaster ashlar at the corners of the building). In the flat hipped roof in the middle of the street front is a decorated dormer. The side facades are simpler with only two window axes, the stairwell on the rear side of the building is slightly disengaged. As a tangible testimony to representative residential construction at the end of the 19th century, the Merbitzer Strasse 5 apartment building is of architectural value.

09210882
 
New School Briesnitz;  76. Elementary and middle school: complex of two school buildings, gymnasium and retaining wall
New School Briesnitz; 76. Elementary and middle school: complex of two school buildings, gymnasium and retaining wall Merbitzer Strasse 9
(map)
marked 1880 (school), 1908–1909 (school), 1903 (school gym) School building from 1880, expanded 1893–1894 and 1898, as well as another building from 1908–1909, expanded 1993–1994, simple buildings with plaster ashlars and stucco reliefs, the school complex clearly shows the historical development of a historical school location from the late 19th century to the present day Time, building history and local history of importance

As the ecclesiastical center, Briesnitz was also a school location for numerous villages in the area. Up until the second half of the 19th century, today's house on Meißner Landstrasse 67 served as a school building. On Merbitzer Strasse, Briesnitz built a new schoolhouse in 1880 (today 76th elementary and middle school), which, due to the steady population growth, was expanded several times in the following years, most recently in 1908–1909, by an independent building. The original, two-storey old school building with plaster as well as simple window frames (dated in the keystone above the main entrance in the gabled central projection) was enlarged by a wing with further classrooms (on Merbitzer Straße) as early as 1893-1894. Just 10 years later, the similarly designed garden wing followed under master builder Mähler. The single-storey gym with a half-hip roof, also built under Mähler, was inaugurated in August 1903. 1908-09, according to plans by the Kiessling brothers from Radebeul-Kötzschenbroda, another school building, which was very modern for the time, was built with seven classrooms, a drawing room, cooking school and bath tub. The three-storey hipped roof building, extended to the south from 1993–1994, has a striking, somewhat squat-looking entrance porch on both sides with figurative or ornamental stucco reliefs. The school complex clearly shows the architectural development of a historical school location from the end of the 19th century to the present day. The school buildings are therefore important in terms of building and local history.

09210883
 
Apartment house in a corner and open development
Apartment house in a corner and open development Merbitzer Strasse 11
(map)
marked 1909 (tenement house) simple plastered building with historicizing design elements, of architectural significance

The tenement house marked 1909 and the initials GM stands at the intersection of Merbitzer Strasse and Schulberg. The two-storey residential building, located above an angled floor plan, has a developed mansard roof with single and double dormers. According to the urban situation, the corner of the building is raised like a tower and emphasized by a tent roof. Individual historicizing design elements (window canopies, cornices, plastered mirrors, cornices) occupy the relatively simple plastered facade. The tenement at Merbitzer Straße 11 is of architectural significance and, due to its corner location, also of urban development importance.

09210856
 
Tenement house with enclosure in open development
Tenement house with enclosure in open development Merbitzer Strasse 14
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Clinker brick building with a flat hipped roof, characteristic and largely originally preserved testimony to the late historic rental housing construction around 1900, of architectural significance

The tenement house at Merbitzer Strasse 14 is a two-storey clinker brick building with an approximately square floor plan with a flat hipped roof. Decorative stones on the roof ridges decorate the roof surface. The staggered street front consisting of four window axes is emphasized in the area of ​​the two central window axes by a dormer also profiled on the roof structure. Relatively simple, historicizing building decorations (window frames and roofing) as well as individual ashlar on the building corners structure the facades. The side entrance to the house is provided with a wooden porch. The high, detailed metal fence set back from the street, partly on a solid base and on the two-wing gate system with solid goal posts, is functionally and creatively related to the residential building. The rental building is a characteristic and largely originally preserved testimony to the late historical rental housing construction around 1900 and is therefore of importance in terms of building history.

09210858
 
Cemetery chapel
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Cemetery chapel Merbitzer Strasse 21
(map)
around 1890 (cemetery chapel) forms the prelude and the creative center of the Outer Briesnitz cemetery, plastered building with high triangular gable in the arched style of the 19th century with forms of classicism, historically of regional importance, as historical evidence of Briesnitz also significant in terms of local history

Around the middle of the 19th century, the number of inhabitants of Briesnitz and the other parish villages increased sharply. There was not enough space for graves in the old cemetery at the Briesnitz church of St. Mary, so in 1879 a new cemetery was created on Merbitzer Strasse. The so-called “Äussere Briesnitz cemetery” received a cemetery chapel around 1890, which, due to its location, forms both the prelude and the creative center of the cemetery. The single-storey plastered building with a high triangular gable is flanked by two lower side wings. The cubature of the building is symmetrical and stylistically combines the arched style of the 19th century with forms of classicism. Natural stone-framed garments on the window and door openings, pilaster-like column positions on the central building and the use of colored glass reinforce the representative character of the chapel. As a characteristic example of the architectural style described, the chapel of the Evangelical Lutheran cemetery in Briesnitz is of regional architectural value. As a historical testimony to Briesnitz, it is also significant in terms of local history.

09210903
 
Own home settlement Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Residential house group of 3 multi-family houses in a settlement
Own home settlement Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Residential house group of 3 multi-family houses in a settlement Roquettestrasse 47; 49; 51
(card)
1924–1927 (apartment building) Characteristic small apartment house and settlement house from the 1920s, settlement architecturally and urbanistically significant evidence of cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The residential complex Roquettestrasse 47–51 is part of the Briesnitz residential estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The striking residential building, built in 1924-27, has a three-story main structure and two two-story wings over a U-shaped floor plan. The central staircase axis is emphasized by a striking risalit with a flat end. The grooved windows are combined to form ribbon windows by intervening clinker brick areas, clinker brick areas also emphasize the house entrance, the rest of the facade is plastered. The hipped roofs, presumably not developed, have some expressionistic, triangular dormers. The distinctive residential complex is a characteristic small apartment and housing estate from the 1920s, and is a listed building as an originally preserved example of a residential complex in the Briesnitz residential estate, in particular because of its historical significance.

09210901
 
Rental villa
Rental villa Roquettestrasse 53
(map)
marked 1899 (rental villa) Historicizing and representative rental villa construction from the end of the 19th century, plastered facade with Art Nouveau elements, revitalized view through corner bay, loggia, balcony and dormers, largely preserved from the construction period, exemplary structural evidence of the architecture around 1900, of architectural historical importance

On the three front sides, various, differently designed risalits adorn the rental villa built in 1899 (dating of the weather vane) on Roquettestrasse. The moving cubature is still achieved through various additions and superstructures (two-storey bay window over the corner, loggia with a mighty column and a balcony above, bay window with a pointed tent roof on the upper floor, dormers). In its facade structure and design, the building combines stylistic forms of Art Nouveau with historicizing elements. Various window formats in the plastered facade, the window frames and cornices a bit simpler. Apparently some of the windows from the construction period are still preserved, some with noticeable gaps in the skylight. An equally creative enclosure made of solid base and posts as well as (presumably renewed) metal fence panels closes the property off from the street. As a largely originally preserved and exemplary structural testimony to the architecture around 1900 in Dresden, the apartment building at Roquettestrasse 53 is of architectural significance.

09210899
 
Tenement house with enclosure in open development
Tenement house with enclosure in open development Roquettestrasse 68
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Historicizing plastered building from the turn of the century, characterized by central projections and wooden loggias, largely preserved during the construction period, exemplary structural evidence of the architecture around 1900, of architectural historical importance

The three-storey apartment building, which looks cube-shaped due to its striking wooden loggias, was built around 1900 in open development. The street front, apart from the finely designed, open loggias with colored glazing only on the short side as wind protection, is determined by a central, gabled risalit over two window axes. The plastered facades are simple, with the exception of some historicizing elements (window frames, cornices, belt and eaves cornices), only individual window openings are accentuated by red brick arches. The flat hipped roof is probably not developed. The relatively lavishly designed enclosure made of a solid base and posts profiled at the head with wrought iron fence panels has largely been preserved and forms a design unit with the residential building. The high-quality rental villa Roquettestrasse 68 is of architectural importance.

09210900
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement Schulberg 1; 3
(card)
1927 (twin house) In the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house from the 1920s, settlement architecturally and urbanistically significant evidence of cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The Schulberg 1/3 semi-detached house is part of the Briesnitz residential estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The elongated house with a rectangular floor plan was built around 1930 under the architect Karl Willy Grunert and, together with its neighboring buildings, accompanies the course of the street following the topography. A closed hipped roof with individual triangular dormers is located above the three-storey central building (6 axes, including the two outer staircases), which protrudes slightly on the street side. Laterally, lower two-storey sashes over two window axes, also above an undeveloped hipped roof. The windows are framed by narrow, color-contrasting plastering bottles, the simple plastered facade is otherwise enlivened by individual folding shutters and natural stone surfaces on the plinths, and the house entrances are emphasized with eye-catching, staggered canopies made of natural stone. The characteristic small apartment and settlement house from the 1920s / 30s is significant in terms of architectural history and, as an originally preserved example of a semi-detached house in the residential complex of Briesnitz, is also under monument protection because of its significance in terms of settlement history.

09210897
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement Schulberg 5; 7
(card)
1927 (twin house) In the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house from the 1920s, settlement architecturally and urbanistically significant evidence of cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant 09218506
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement Schulberg 9; 11
(card)
1927 (twin house) In the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house from the 1920s, settlement architecturally and urbanistically significant evidence of cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant 09218535
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement Schulberg 13; 15
(card)
1927 (twin house) In the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house from the 1920s, settlement architecturally and urbanistically significant evidence of cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The semi-detached house Schulberg 13/15 is part of the Briesnitz residential estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The elongated house with a rectangular floor plan was built around 1930 under the architect Karl Willy Grunert and, together with its neighboring buildings, accompanies the course of the street following the topography. A closed hipped roof with bat dormers lies over the two-storey semi-detached houses, which are staggered in height, with the two outer window axes protruding slightly. The windows are framed by narrow, color-contrasting plastering flasks, the simple plastered facade is otherwise only enlivened by individual folding shutters and natural stone surfaces on the plinths, the house entrances are emphasized with striking, staggered roofs made of natural stone. The characteristic small apartment and settlement house from the 1920s / 30s is significant in terms of architectural history and, as an originally preserved example of a semi-detached house in the residential complex of Briesnitz, is also under monument protection because of its significance in terms of settlement history. with Jehmlich organ

09210890
 
Villa with veranda extension and back building as well as fencing
Villa with veranda extension and back building as well as fencing Seusslitzer Strasse 3; 3a
(card)
around 1900 (villa) red clinker facade structured and accentuated by yellow and white clinker brick divisions, elaborately designed historicizing window frames and roofing, striking appearance thanks to the three-storey tower and veranda extension, in its design form as a unique testimony to the villa construction after 1890 in Dresden, of architectural historical importance

The Villa Seusslitzer Straße 3 has a striking appearance due to its three-story tower. The otherwise two-storey building has a simple, plastered ground floor. The red clinker brick facade of the first floor and the tower is accentuated by yellow and white clinker brick structures, in addition to the sometimes elaborately designed historicizing window frames and roofing. Apart from the hipped roof of the tower, the building has a gable roof with two gables to the northeast and southeast (the latter completely plastered), and arched single and double dormers in the roof. The single-storey extension with a flat roof has colored clinker bricks in the infill of its ornate wooden structure. The two-storey, massive rear building (number 3a) is now also used for residential purposes. Enclosure made of clinker walls, massive posts as well as fence panels and gate system made of metal. The date 1892 can be found in four fence fields of the fencing during the construction period, the initials "FF" are listed in the gate wings. The villa is a very striking testimony to the construction of villas after 1890 in Dresden, which can be described as a singular example in its design, and is therefore of importance in terms of architectural history.

09210887
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Single-family house in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Single-family house in a settlement Sunrest 1
(card)
1915–1916 (single-family house) in the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house after 1910, settlement architecturally and town-planning significant testimony to cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The Sonnenlehne 1 residential building is part of the Briesnitz residential estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The single-family house standing at the gable facing the Sonnenlehne was probably built in the years 1916–18 as part of the redensification of the already completed streets. The single-storey plastered building with an expanded, hipped mansard roof has a two-storey, gabled oriel on the eaves side facing the Borngraben. The simple façades are only enlivened by individual folding shutters, and a noticeable sham roof at eaves height on the sun armrest. The single-family house, as a characteristic small apartment and settlement construction from the beginning of the 20th century, is historically significant and, as an exemplary example of the free-standing homes of the Briesnitz settlement, is a listed building, especially because of its significance for the settlement history.

09218556
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Single-family house in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Single-family house in a settlement Sunrest 3
(card)
1912–1913 (single-family house) in the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house after 1910, settlement architecturally and town-planning significant testimony to cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The Sonnenlehne 3 residential building is part of the Briesnitz residential estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The single-family house was built in 1912/13 under the architects Ludloff and Stieger. Due to the large side houses, designed similar to the main building, the gable of the plastered residential building is hardly noticeable. Expanded mansard floor above the ground floor, which was expanded by a corner bay window. The simple facade is only enlivened by folding shutters. The single-family house, as a characteristic small apartment and settlement construction from the beginning of the 20th century, is historically significant and, as an exemplary example of the free-standing homes of the Briesnitz settlement, is a listed building, especially because of its significance in terms of settlement history.

09218509
 
Apartment building in open development and enclosure
Apartment building in open development and enclosure Weistropper Strasse 9
(map)
Early 20th century (tenement house) Plastered building with Art Nouveau motifs, important in terms of building history

The three-storey apartment building was built in the early 20th century on Weistropper Straße in open development. In addition to a circumferential strap and window frames on all sides of the building on the street front, the plastered building has Art Nouveau motifs (plaster mirror with floral motifs). The color-contrasting structure in a coarse plaster structure also extends over the south-eastern side front. Four of the six window axes are grouped together on the street side in a central projectile with a rounded end, including a round-arched triple window. Parts of the fencing system (metal), which was designed in harmony with the residential building, and the massive goal posts have been preserved. The building history of the tenement at Weistropper Straße 9 is important for the city of Dresden.

09210864
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Single-family house in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Single-family house in a settlement Wolf procession 1
(map)
1912–1913 (single-family house) in the monument protection area »Siedlung Briesnitz«, with shop, characteristic small apartment and settlement house after 1910, settlement architecturally and town-planning significant evidence of cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The Wolfszug 1 residential building is part of the Briesnitz residential estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The single-family house with shop was built in 1912/13 under the architects Ludloff and Stieger. The single-storey plastered building, which is conspicuously located at the intersection of Wolfszug and Hammeraue, has an extended mansard roof, interrupted on both sides by dormitories with saddle and hip roofs. A single-storey bay window to the Hammeraue, above it a balcony. The simple facade is only enlivened by folding shutters. The shop, which is lit by two large arched windows, can be reached from the street corner via a few steps. The single-family house, as a characteristic small apartment and settlement construction from the beginning of the 20th century, is historically significant and, as an exemplary example of the free-standing homes of the Briesnitz settlement, is a listed building, especially because of its significance in terms of settlement history.

09210906
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement Wolf train 7; 9
(card)
1912–1913 (twin house) in the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house after 1910, settlement architecturally and town-planning significant testimony to cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The semi-detached house Wolfszug 7/9 is part of the Briesnitz residential estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). With the construction of the three semi-detached houses on Wolfszug, the first construction phase of the Briesnitz estate, carried out by the architects Ludloff and Stieger, ended in 1914. The single-storey plastered building, which looks more like a single-family house, has a developed mansard roof with a hip above number 9, and a mansard roof at right angles on number 7 that is interrupted by a saddle roof structure (number 7 also rear, later extension). The window formats are varied, some are emphasized by folding shutters. Stylistic elements of traditional residential construction are linked with the functional and objective demands of reform architecture at the beginning of the 20th century. As a characteristic small apartment and housing estate from the beginning of the 20th century, the residential building is historically significant and, as an exemplary example of the free-standing homes of the Briesnitz settlement, is a listed building, especially because of its historical significance.

09218536
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: house inscription
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: house inscription Zschonerallee 1
(map)
around 1930 (inscription panel) In the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", on a characteristic small apartment and settlement house around 1930, settlement architecturally and urbanistically significant evidence of cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The inscription on the Zschonerallee 1/3 residential building refers to the Briesnitz residential estate (see Am Lemberg 6/8).

09218538
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement Zschonerallee 2; 4
(card)
1927 (twin house) In the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house from the 1920s, settlement architecturally and urbanistically significant evidence of cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The semi-detached houses along the Zschonerallee belong to the Briesnitz-Dresden residential estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The development on Zschonerallee, designed by the architect Curt Herfurth, was probably built between 1926 and 1927. In contrast to many buildings in the core settlement, the houses have largely been preserved in their original state. With their rectangular structures, gable roofs, straight top structures, traditional design motifs such as folding shutters, lattice windows and bat dormers, they fit harmoniously into what has already been built. In addition, the broadly staggered multi-family houses on the curved Zschonerallee create a special urban accent. The triangular dormers of the loft extensions are reminiscent of expressionist forms. The residential building Zschonerallee 2/4 and its largely identical neighboring houses are under monument protection as structural evidence of the garden city movement and the housing development of the 1920s, closely linked to the well-known Dresden architect Curt Herfurth.

09218539
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement Zschonerallee 6; 8
(card)
1927 (twin house) In the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house from the 1920s, settlement architecturally and urbanistically significant evidence of cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The semi-detached houses along the Zschonerallee belong to the Briesnitz-Dresden residential estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The development on Zschonerallee, designed by the architect Curt Herfurth, was probably built between 1926 and 1927. In contrast to many buildings in the core settlement, the houses have largely been preserved in their original state. With their rectangular structures, gable roofs, straight top structures, traditional design motifs such as folding shutters, lattice windows and bat dormers, they fit harmoniously into what has already been built. In addition, the broadly staggered multi-family houses on the curved Zschonerallee create a special urban accent. The triangular dormers of the loft extensions are reminiscent of expressionist forms. The residential building Zschonerallee 6/8 and its largely identical neighboring houses are under monument protection as structural evidence of the garden city movement and the housing development of the 1920s, closely linked to the well-known Dresden architect Curt Herfurth.

09218541
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement Zschonerallee 10; 12
(card)
1927 (twin house) In the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house from the 1920s, settlement architecturally and urbanistically significant evidence of cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The semi-detached houses along the Zschonerallee belong to the Briesnitz-Dresden residential estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The development on Zschonerallee, designed by the architect Curt Herfurth, was probably built between 1926 and 1927. In contrast to many buildings in the core settlement, the houses have largely been preserved in their original state. With their rectangular structures, gable roofs, straight top structures, traditional design motifs such as folding shutters, lattice windows and bat dormers, they fit harmoniously into what has already been built. In addition, the broadly staggered multi-family houses on the curved Zschonerallee create a special urban accent. The triangular dormers of the loft extensions are reminiscent of expressionist forms. The residential building Zschonerallee 10/12 and its largely identical neighboring houses are under monument protection as structural evidence of the garden city movement and the settlement construction of the 1920s, closely linked to the well-known Dresden architect Curt Herfurth.

09218540
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement Zschonerallee 14; 16
(card)
1927 (twin house) In the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house from the 1920s, settlement architecturally and urbanistically significant evidence of cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The semi-detached houses along the Zschonerallee belong to the Briesnitz-Dresden residential estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The development on Zschonerallee, designed by the architect Curt Herfurth, was probably built between 1926 and 1927. In contrast to many buildings in the core settlement, the houses have largely been preserved in their original state. With their rectangular structures, gable roofs, straight top structures, traditional design motifs such as folding shutters, lattice windows and bat dormers, they fit harmoniously into what has already been built. In addition, the broadly staggered multi-family houses on the curved Zschonerallee create a special urban accent. The triangular dormers of the loft extensions are reminiscent of expressionist forms. The residential building Zschonerallee 14/16 and its largely identical neighboring houses are under monument protection as structural evidence of the garden city movement and the housing development of the 1920s, closely connected with the well-known Dresden architect Curt Herfurth, for reasons of settlement history and architectural history.

09218542
 
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement
Eigenheimsiedlung Briesnitz-Dresden eGmbH: Double house in a settlement Zschonerallee 18; 20
(card)
1927 (twin house) In the monument protection area "Siedlung Briesnitz", characteristic small apartment and settlement house from the 1920s, settlement architecturally and urbanistically significant evidence of cooperative housing construction in the first half of the 20th century, also socially and locally significant

The semi-detached houses along the Zschonerallee belong to the Briesnitz-Dresden residential estate (see Am Lehmberg 6/8). The development on Zschonerallee, designed by the architect Curt Herfurth, was probably built between 1926 and 1927. In contrast to many buildings in the core settlement, the houses have largely been preserved in their original state. With their rectangular structures, gable roofs, straight top structures, traditional design motifs such as folding shutters, lattice windows and bat dormers, they fit harmoniously into what has already been built. In addition, the broadly staggered multi-family houses on the curved Zschonerallee create a special urban accent. The triangular dormers of the loft extensions are reminiscent of expressionist forms. The residential building Zschonerallee 18/10 and its largely identical neighboring houses are under monument protection as structural evidence of the garden city movement and the settlement construction of the 1920s, closely connected with the well-known Dresden architect Curt Herfurth.

09218543
 

Former cultural monuments

image designation location Dating description ID
Belvedere ruin
Belvedere ruin Meißner Landstrasse 18
(map)
Part of the ruin of a belvedere
 
Workshop
Workshop Warthaer Strasse 34
(map)
09210505
 

Web links

Commons : Cultural heritage monuments in Briesnitz  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Monument protection areas on the Dresden themed city map