List of cultural monuments in Buchholz

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

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

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

image designation location Dating description ID
Apartment building in open development Am Graben 5
(map)
Around 1885 09229134
 


Katharinenkirche
Katharinenkirche At the Katharinenkirche
(map)
After 1504 Gothic hall church, neo-Gothic remodeled in the 19th century, significance in terms of architectural and local history and art history, characterizing the cityscape.

The three-aisled hall church was started in 1506 and, contrary to the original plan (vault), was provided with a wooden ceiling in 1523. The vaulting, the gallery installation and the tower extension were not carried out until 1875–77 by Möckel in the neo-Gothic style. In 1945 almost complete destruction except for the surrounding walls, reconstruction from 1964 to 1981.
The church made of unplastered quarry stone masonry with retracted choir and 3/8 end, buttresses and pointed arched windows. A defensive-looking tower with a tented roof and four small corner turrets in the northeast corner, on the side between the nave and the choir. The interior is now flat again, steel supports instead of pillars. On the north side of the choir a lower sacristy with a ribbed vault. The most important interior decoration is the high altar from the former Franciscan monastery from 1594, as well as the St. Wolfgang altar from the Buchholz cemetery church and the baroque pulpit from the monastery church in Grimma. Several baroque tombstones on the outside wall of the church.
Due to the location on the slope, the church building is very characteristic of the cityscape, it has both architectural and local historical significance as well as art historical relevance.

09229064
 


Rectory At the Katharinenkirche 2
(map)
Inscribed with 1906–1907 Art Nouveau colored glass windows, significance in terms of building history.

Two-storey, massive parsonage built in 1906/07 in an open development right next to St. Catherine's Church. The simple facade plastered over a quarry stone base. Towards the church square there is a centrally raised stairwell protruding slightly from the facade with a very beautiful Art Nouveau colored glass window in the triangular gable, here also the slightly ogival entrance. Elevated central areas with triangular gables also to the east and south. On the valley side (east) a bay window on the 2nd floor and a wide segmented arched window with colored glazing on the 1st floor on the left. The windows are usually rectangular with a T-bar, all with sandstone walls. The slate roof with standing dormers, their gable roofs with a large roof overhang. The rectory built at the beginning of the 20th century with some Art Nouveau details borders the church square to the south and is of architectural and local historical importance.

09229089
 


Factory building At the mill 6
(map)
Around 1900 architectural, economic and urban significance.

Elongated, massive, factory building (marked 1905, architect: Wilhelm Peschke, Buchholz) with four axes in semi-open development. Strikingly decorative, orange-yellow clinker brick facade with colored clinker bricks as friezes, patterns and ribbons. Two window axes of the four-storey view are grouped together by clinker strips, these with a decorative upper end. The windows predominantly rectangular, with some segmental arches as accents. The ground floor with large, segmented arched openings (accentuated apex stones) is plastered with decorative grooves, in the right arch there is an entrance, some arches closed and plastered, in others double windows. Below the eaves cornice a wide decorative frieze made of colored clinker brick, in the slate-covered roof three roof houses (1939 instead of the previous 7 roof structures). In the east of the building, the decorative gate pillars with clinker brickwork have been preserved from the original enclosure. This cardboard box factory, in which production is still carried out today, has a design that is basically typical for the period around 1900: elongated clinker brick facades with pronounced two-way axes. However, this example is more richly decorated than usual with colored clinker brickwork and, thanks to its location in town, also has a long-distance effect. At first there had been a factory extension for Georg Adler at this point since 1874, which was then replaced by the current stock (building drawings 1902). With the exception of a few areas, especially on the ground floor (change of entrances) and the attic (roof structures), much of the original substance has been preserved. In addition to its architectural and economic significance, industrial construction also has urban value.

09229122
 


Boot mill At the mill 7
(map)
Middle of the 18th century; 1520 Significance in terms of building history, economic history and local history.

In 1520, right next to the electoral. The smelter was built by the Buchholzer Bergvogt Matthes Busch, the so-called Vordere Mühle (later Naumannmühle), which was electoral property and leased after the Bergvogt's death. It was a water-powered mill with two gears and a mill ditch. A fire is known from 1703, but it probably caused little damage. Boot mill since 1888 (owner Heinrich Bernhard Stiefel from Dittersdorf), who sold it in the 1930s. A bakery was set up and operation continued until 1960.
Elongated, two-storey mill building with half-timbered upper floor and a bakery on the ground floor. Slate-covered, hipped gable roof with few openings. The complex includes an extension and a farm building. This mill on the Sehma has a local tradition that goes back almost to the founding of the city. It is therefore not only of importance in terms of building and economic history, but also of relevance for local development.

09229076
 


Residential house in semi-open development At the mill 10
(map)
Marked 1720 With a valuable baroque door, architectural and urban planning and craft history significance.

Two-storey, baroque house with six axes in semi-open development. The facade plastered, with the upper floor possibly. still consists of plastered half-timbering. The window openings are rectangular, the windows without partitions are not listed. On the left side later installation of a garage. The entrance is off-center, the apex of the rectangular door frame is labeled "DK 1720" with a separate, flat skylight. A special feature of the house is its two-winged, baroque entrance door, which is covered with metal plates and a historical handle set. The high, slate-hipped roof with standing dormer windows in two rows, the upper ones with ogival arches. The residential building is of architectural and urban significance, and the front door is also of commercial historical value.

09229118
 


professional school Bärensteiner Strasse 2
(map)
Marked with 1907 and 1908; 1888 architectural, economic and urban significance.

Elongated, massive factory building (today a school) with 20 axes in semi-open development, which was built in 1888 as a trimmings factory. The ground floor with smaller window openings is separated from the upper floors by a strong cornice and painted in a uniform color. The four-story facade on the upper floor with a uniform structure of segment-arched windows, the arches of which stand out from the plastered facade with colored clinker bricks. The very slight risalit (9th – 12th axis) originally emphasized in the roof with a decorated gable and lettering. This structure was removed during the renovation in 1935, otherwise some changes in the interior at that time. In addition to the accentuated segmental arches, the decorative use of red and orange clinker bricks to create friezes between the 2nd and 3rd floors and below the eaves, but also to emphasize the corners of the building. These friezes continued on the gable side, the verge of the gable roof also emphasized with clinker. In the roof today there are dormers facing the street, on the courtyard side the top floor has been expanded as a full floor. Since the conversion to the school center in 1993, a glass connecting building has been attached to the north side. This building shows the typical functional structure of a factory building from the late 19th century paired with a few decorative details that have been preserved even after the latest conversion. It has both architectural and economic significance as well as urban planning relevance.

09228859
 


Apartment building in open development Bärensteiner Strasse 5
(map)
Around 1895 two-tone clinker facade, significance in terms of building history.

Three-storey tenement house built at the end of the 19th century. The view of the mighty massive building is characterized by red and yellow clinker cladding: yellow are the components protruding from the facade such as the three-axis central projection on the street side or the entrance axis on the north side of the building. In contrast, sandstone in the form of corner rustication, blind balustrades, walls and window crowns. The design of the facade in a historicist way as a neo-renaissance. Access is via a flight of stairs on the north side, the entrance is segmented arched with a beautiful historic front door. The free-standing tenement house has not been renovated, is characterized by its high-quality facade design and has architectural significance.

09228862
 


Apartment building in open development Bärensteiner Strasse 46
(map)
Around 1910 architectural significance.

Two-storey, massive rental villa southeast of Buchholz in an area characterized by loose residential developments. The plastered facade of the building is accentuated by ornamental frameworks in the gable and eaves areas and is otherwise unadorned. The windows are rectangular with small sprouting of the skylights. On the front side the formation of a high gable with a wood-paneled gable triangle. The half-hip roof used as a full storey. This building was erected at the beginning of the 20th century and, as a representative of the homeland security style, has architectural significance.

09229042
 


Representative villa Beckenweg 2
(map)
Around 1910 representative building, reform style architecture, significance in terms of building history.

Two-storey massive villa on a hillside property surrounded by forest in the Sehmatal. The large villa set back from the street with a plastered facade above a high basement floor made of quarry stone. The building volume is loosened up by various extensions and gable structures. The windows are mostly rectangular with the typical, small-scale sprouting of the skylights. High, slate-covered, crippled hip roof. The villa in an exclusive location has a large garden and is enclosed by an enclosure. As an example of representative living at the beginning of the 20th century, this building is of architectural significance.

09229068
 


Residential house in open development Bergstrasse 2
(map)
1st half of the 19th century architectural significance 09229051
 


Apartment building in half-open development Brauhausstrasse 35
(map)
Around 1885 09229135
 


Apartment building in closed development Brauhausstrasse 37
(map)
Around 1885 09229136
 


Apartment building in half-open development Brauhausstrasse 41
(map)
Around 1885 09229137
 


Garden shed Brüdergasse, opposite No. 11
(map)
Around 1900 09229088
 


Apartment building in half-open development Buchenstrasse 15
(map)
Around 1900 09229057
 


Apartment building in open development Buchenstrasse 46
(map)
1902 architectural significance.

Three-storey, massive tenement house built in 1902 (client and site manager Oswald Meyer) with six axes in open development on the western outskirts of Buchholz. The ground floor is plastered with horizontal plaster grooves and off-center access. The upper floors with red clinker cladding and decorative orange clinker brick to accentuate the relief arches, sandstone as walls, sills, consoles and reliefs. The window openings are rectangular with different designs of the windows: most of them are not listed, only with a separate skylight, on the ground floor on the left there are probably three original windows including the winter windows. The specialty of this otherwise typical tenement house facade is the design of the two-axis, central roof structure. This as well as the two lateral dormers with ornamental framework, large roof overhang and carvings. This design is typical of the Swiss style, a type of copy of Alpine building tradition that was particularly popular in historicism. More common in villas, this decoration is not very typical for apartment buildings. The building therefore has architectural significance.

09229058
 


Single storey house with a raised middle section Christian-Melzer-Strasse 8
(map)
Around 1810 Single-storey miner's house, significance in terms of building history and local history.

Single-storey residential building with seven axes in open development from the first half of the 19th century. The small building is characterized by its slightly eccentric façade section with a triangular gable, raised to the top floor. The access in the central axis with a segmented arch, the windows rectangular with smooth walls, the plastered facade unadorned. The gable roof with bitumen shingles and standing dormers. This house is probably a former miner's house, as it was typical for the townscape at the end of the 18th / beginning of the 19th century. In addition to its architectural significance, it also has a testimony value for the local development history of Buchholz.

09229108
 


Residential house in open development Christian-Melzer-Strasse 13
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Single-storey miner's house, significance in terms of building history and local history.

Single-storey residential house with four axes in open development from the 1st half of the 19th century. The small building with a plastered facade and an off-center entrance, this one with steps in front and a double-leaf front door with skylight. The windows are rectangular with six-part muntin, two of them with large shutters. The hipped roof with two standing dormers. This former miners' house, preserved in its authentic, simple form and design, is a relic of rarity. In addition to its architectural significance, it is also relevant to the history of the local development of Buchholz.

09229107
 


Residential house in open development Fischerstrasse 6
(map)
Around 1800 09229094
 


Apartment building in open development Fischerstrasse 8
(map)
around 1885 architectural significance.

Two-storey, massive rental house with seven to four axes in open development. The plastered facade over a natural stone plinth with cellar windows, the access off-center, drawn deep into the building line with a staircase in front and a two-leaf, historicist front door (beautiful ornamental grille in front of the glazing), on the right a garage door. The facade with the decor typical of the time it was built: windows on the ground floor with profiled frames, on the upper floor with sturdy sills on decorative consoles and straight roofs. The corners of the building are highlighted by plastered rustication, the profiled eaves cornice is like a capital to the rustic areas around the corners. The slate-roofed gable roof with four roof houses. This house is a small, but in its design typical tenement house from the end of the 19th century. It is of architectural significance.

09229093
 


Buchholz cemetery Friedensstrasse
(map)
probably before 1920 (Kunze tomb) importance in terms of local history and building history.

Large forest cemetery on the slope of Buchholz, which was laid out in terraces due to the terrain. Access is on the slope side via Friedensstraße, here also the cemetery church built in 1935. This is mainly used for funerals and concerts; services were also held here during the destruction of the Katharinenkirche. At the foot of the complex are the remains of the former hospital church. The most important historical tombs of art-historical value include:
1. Kunze tomb: Round temple with column structure, rear part closed, there structure by pilasters, the inscription "Kunze" in the entablature and two identical reliefs with garland-bearing angels, in the temple Christ statue (stone) with Enclosure and garden design
2. Huss grave site: massive round building, flattened face, there expressionistically influenced relief gable (“medieval” saints and animal capitals), artistic value
3. P. Bauer tomb: platform with pergola and amphora
4. Brauer tomb: Latin cross in housing made of polished stone with a round arch, dated 1912, (Kommerzienrat Brauer (1834–1912), founder of the cardboard embossing industry)
5. Prussian tomb: Egyptian temple facade with urn relief, dated 1928
6. Nicolai tomb (Rudolf Nicolai (1895–1970), senior teacher , Reform pedagogue, creator and long-time chairman of the German school camp movement )
This The cemetery, located on the southern edge of Buchholz, is designated as a garden monument and has a character that shapes the landscape, is of cultural and personal historical importance and, due to some valuable tombs, is also relevant to art history.

09229091
 


Apartment building in open development Friedensstrasse 6
(map)
Around 1900 Significance in terms of building history and local history.

A massive open-plan structure consisting of two opposing building parts, which was built in 1899 as the Buchholz municipal hospital (architect: Peschke). The house is characterized by its red clinker brick facade above a basement made of quarry stone. House corners and segmental arches of the windows are highlighted in a different shade of red. The entrance in the northern, gable-facing part of the building and there in the flat central projection with triangular gable. In the histor. This gable and the gable facing the street were richly decorated with architectural drawings, whereas today the façades are rather reserved in terms of design. The roofs as hip or saddle roofs with slate cover and standing dormer windows. When it was in use, the hospital had 22 beds and state-of-the-art equipment. But the building has been used as a kindergarten since at least 1951. The large garden belonging to the property is also designed for their needs. This was laid out in 1903 by the landscape gardener Nauk. This house has architectural and local historical significance.

09229092
 


Residential house with Heiste, in open development Froebelstrasse 6
(map)
around 1860 Significance in terms of building history and local history.

Single-storey, massive house with four to four axes in open development. This probably former miners' house was built around 1860. Its plastered façade with rectangular window openings and slightly profiled walls, historical windows including winter windows with cross-cut or six-part muntin have been preserved in some windows. A simple, slate-covered gable roof with standing dormers. Due to the steep road gradient, a strong retaining wall was built. As a relic of the past that has hardly changed, this small workers' house has architectural and local historical significance.

09229090
 


Mining monuments Annaberg Geschwister-Scholl-Weg, via Teichstrasse
(map)
after 1947 Mining and local history significance.

The double cone heap above Buchholz, which characterizes the site and was created by the uranium ore mining company SAG / SDAG Wismut. The dismantling in Annaberg-Buchholz took place between 1947 and 1958. The Doppelkegelhalde is a technical monument with mining and local historical significance.

09229161
 


Annaberg-Buchholz-Mitte station
Annaberg-Buchholz-Mitte station Hans-Hesse-Strasse
(map)
1902 Significance in terms of traffic engineering and building history.

Small station building with canopies as platform roofing, which was built in 1902 in the homeland security style. The formation of a half-timbered facade towards the tracks is unusual, but clinker cladding over a rubble stone base on the side facing away from the track. Large, round-arched openings indicate the station hall on both sides, the other windows predominantly also round-arched, but smaller, with a T-bar. The platform roof as a wooden structure, extended to the south of the station building as an open hall. The Annaberg-Buchholz Mitte stop was created due to the demands of the citizens of Buchholz for a train station closer to the city. From 1905 to 1945 it had two tracks, today only a single track. The connection to the railway network represented a step forward, as a structural testimony to this, the small station is not only significant in terms of architectural history, but above all in terms of traffic engineering and local history.

09229129
 


Double tenement house in a semi-open development Hans-Hesse-Strasse 9, 11
(map)
Around 1890 09229130
 


Apartment building in half-open development Hans-Hesse-Strasse 13
(map)
Around 1890 09229131
 


Apartment house in a corner and closed development Hans-Sachs-Strasse 6
(map)
Around 1880 09229055
 


Apartment building in closed development Hans-Sachs-Strasse 10
(map)
around 1880 historical and urban significance.

Two-storey tenement house built around 1880 with seven axes in closed development. Above a plinth area, the ground floor joins with decorative plaster grooves, followed by a profiled cornice and the smoothly plastered upper floor. The access off-center, only slightly drawn in with a segmental arched opening. The windows on the ground floor also have segmental arches with profiled walls and a strong sill. On the far left an additional garage door. The windows of the upper floor are rectangular with a T-shaped sprout and typical building decor for historicism: profiled sills and roofs, consoles and reliefs. The building gets its character from a broad roof structure that extends the three central facade axes and ends in a triangular gable. Here a triple window coupled by a strong framework. The slate-covered gable roof with standing dormers. This historicist tenement house, which is typical for the time it was built, is of architectural and urban significance.

09229056
 


Representative tenement house in closed development Hans-Witten-Strasse 1
(map)
Around 1905 representative villa-like house, elaborate art nouveau and reform style facade, architectural, art historical and urban significance

Three-storey, massive tenement house with an elaborate Art Nouveau facade in a closed development. The bent course of the building line that mediates between the Peschke house on the corner and the adjoining factory building is interesting. The facade of this five-axis building is characterized by its diverse, high-quality design with bay windows, gables, turrets, reliefs and friezes. The entrance in the left axis has an ashlar portal with a curved end, it is drawn in with three steps in front and a very beautiful, wide Art Nouveau door with a high, round-arched skylight. Large, arched window openings on the ground floor, suggesting commercial use of this level. The two upper floors and the attic, however, are for residential use: here two asymmetrically arranged bay windows with lots of sandstone decor. The left one as an accent to the high, polygonally broken gable, the right one ending in a turret. Both with separate windows in the storeys and rich ornamentation. The roof with slate covering. Inside, parts of the original furnishings have been preserved (colored glass windows, hallway painting, banisters, lamps, etc.) This building, built in 1907 by Paul Hempel for the trimmings manufacturer Paul Süß, is characterized by its authentically preserved variety of details. It has architectural and urban significance.

09228850
 


Factory and administration building Hans-Witten-Strasse 3
(map)
Around 1900 importance in terms of building history and economic history.

Elongated, three-story factory building with 15 axes in semi-open development. This historicist building, created in 1900 by W. Peschke for Paul Süß, is characterized by its elaborate clinker brick facade: the yellow clinker cladding adjoins a natural stone base and a plastered ground floor. The two outer axes are emphasized as slightly protruding risalites with a gable crown in the attic. Otherwise, the facade is constructed in the same way: the yellow clinker areas between the openings are designed as pilaster strips, which optically support a continuous row of colored clinker arches above the windows on the 2nd floor. Colored clinker brick is also unusual, but has been used successfully in the sample fields between the lintels on the 1st floor and the sills on the 2nd floor. The entrance is off-center in the fourth axis, has been drawn in with a historic front door and high skylight. The attic, which has been expanded with a continuous structure, represents a subsequent change to the original individual dormers. On the far right, the entrance gate to the former factory site has been attached to the house facade since 1909. In terms of volume and structure, it is a typical factory building around 1900, which, however, has been significantly upgraded due to its facade design. The object is of architectural and economic significance.

09228849
 


Former Annaberger Täschnerwaren GmbH Hans-Witten-Strasse 9
(map)
around 1900 importance in terms of building history and economic history.

This three-storey castle-like building complex of a former factory is characterized by its red clinker facade above plastered ground floors. The facades have rich architectural décor typical of historicism in the form of profiled walls, stucco reliefs, consoles, apex stones and capitals. In addition, there are colored clinker bricks, for example above the segment arches of the windows or to highlight building edges. The corner building is particularly detailed, the corner of which is crowned with a tower-like roof structure. In this axis there is also an entrance with a double-leaf, original door. Due to the different facade design of the individual objects, a continuous expansion of the system can be assumed. Inner-city industrial buildings, with their sometimes lavishly designed facades, shaped the cityscapes of Annaberg and Buchholz around 1900. This example is one of them and has architectural and economic significance.

09229140
 


Factory owner's villa with extension (production building) Hans-Witten-Strasse 17
(map)
1885 Villa-like building, built for the locally active architect and master builder Wilhelm Peschke, significance in terms of building history and economic history, relevance to the history of people.

Representative, two-storey residential building with an elaborate clinker brick facade in open development. This property, built in 1885 by Wilhelm Peschke, consists of a residential house on a rectangular floor plan (planned for 3 families) with an elongated extension (1887 Peschke office with model warehouse, building clerk, etc.). Both parts of the building have yellow clinker cladding, which is characterized by the decorative use of red clinker as a frieze, window border or to emphasize the building corners. The gable design of the residential building with a high clinker arch in yellow and red and subsequent ashlar tracery in the gable triangle is impressive. The window here based on the Palladio motif, but with a pointed central window. The building was carefully renovated so that the details come into their own in their authentic form. This high-quality building is of architectural and economic significance as well as being the place of residence and work of the most famous Buchholz architect.

09229139
 


Apartment building in closed development Hans-Witten-Strasse 29
(map)
re. 1901 historical and urban significance.

Three-storey, massive tenement house with six axes in closed development. The 1901 building with a striking, red clinker brick facade has an unusually high base. This with plaster grooves and rectangular windows, here also the ground floor entrance with a segmental arched overhang as a stucco relief, is called "OS 1901". The three residential floors with rectangular, segment-arched windows on the 3rd floor, in which the relief arch is decoratively executed in colored clinker brick, emphasized apex stone. This revitalization of the facade with colored stones is typical for Annaberg-Buchholz apartment buildings. The two central axes in the attic are continued like a dormitory with triangular gables, here and below the eaves, rich ornamentation, mainly in the form of friezes, made of colored clinker bricks. The slate-covered gable roof with standing dormers. As a striking building on Hans-Witten-Strasse, which is characterized by historic buildings, this tenement house has architectural value.

09229138
 


Former trimmings factory Hans-Witten-Strasse 33
(map)
1895 09229757
 


Country style villa Hans-Witten-Strasse 41
(map)
Around 1890, marked 1901 in the country house style, historically important.

Single-storey villa built in 1901 for August Starke by Bruno Vogelsang (Schlettau) on the eastern slope of the Sehma Valley. The small, striking building was erected in a country house style: the facade is made of red clinker brickwork, the corners of the building emphasized as corner rustics. The windows are rectangular, with simple walls, partly strong sills on ornamental consoles. A central projection extends into the attic with a triangular gable and characterizes the main view. This in the gable triangle of the roof overhang with wood carving (marked "1901") and decorative ends of the rafters, which supports the rural character of the house. The gable roof with two standing dormer windows in the slate covering typical of Annaberg-Buchholz. This small villa adapts in its design to the natural surroundings, it has architectural historical testimony value.

09229127
 


Villa with wooden veranda Hans-Witten-Strasse 43
(map)
Around 1910 Plastered construction with wooden veranda, significance in terms of building history.

Single-storey, massive villa on the eastern Sehmahang opposite the city center of Buchholz. This building with a plastered facade, created in 1910 for the dye works owner Franz Blume by Peschke, shows a typical design with a wide gable emphasized by the mighty mansard roof, side extensions and a wooden, ornate veranda. The valley-side main view with a small bay window and windows with different formats, but all with a decorative frame still influenced by Art Nouveau and small-scale sprouting of the skylights. A stucco-framed oval window in the gable triangle. The mansard roof covered with slate without superstructures, the extensions each with their own hipped mansard roofs. At the same time, the enclosure, consisting of a wooden fence on a wall, which is still in place in parts. This villa, largely preserved in its authentic state, is very well adapted to the rural character of the area. Its high-quality design between Art Nouveau and Heimatschutzstil makes it an object worthy of protection and of architectural interest.

09229128
 


Villa (wood and timber) Hans-Witten-Strasse 53
(map)
1908 picturesque wooden architecture, built for book printer owner Friedrich Georg Seidel, historical significance and long-distance effect.

Two-storey villa on the eastern slope of the Sehma Valley, opposite the city center of Buchholz. While the building is secluded in a wooded area at the end of the access road, it is very easy to see from the city side and shape the slope. It was launched in 1908 as an “interimist. Accommodation house in the park ”. It has largely been preserved in its original design, only a few changes such as the conversion of the once open veranda were made when the house was used more intensively. As early as 1934, three families lived here. The ground floor is provided with a kind of surrounding structure, the other facade surfaces with wood paneling. This villa adapts very well to the rural character of the location. The building has a rectangular floor plan, but the large volume is enlivened by bay windows, veranda and extensions. The windows are relatively small without division (not historically), only larger formats in the special rooms in the corners of the building. The steep hipped roof with a valley side, crowned by a turret, middle roof structure, which is flanked by caterpillars - rare for Annaberg-Buchholz. This villa, which is connected to the Heimatschutz style, has testimony value, especially in terms of architectural history, but also urban planning relevance due to its long-distance effect.

09229146
 


retaining wall Hutmachergasse 18./19. century 09229133
 


Residential house in open development Hutmachergasse 11 re. 1846 with a classicistic door frame, of architectural significance.

Two-storey, simple plastered building with six axes in open development. The entrance is slightly off-center with a classicist door frame (this is labeled "1846") and steps in front. The front door with two leaves as a panel door with a separate skylight. The windows are rectangular with smooth walls and T-bars. The crooked hip roof is covered with slate with a profiled eaves cornice and a standing dormer window. Few openings in the gable end. This small house, which is still characterized by rural shapes, has retained its building design typical of the time it was built in the mid-19th century and is therefore of scientific, documentary and architectural value.

09229132
 


Holy Trinity Karlsbader Strasse 16th century (?), Renewed in 1638, 1496–1497 of historical importance.

Remnants of the wall of the “Holy Trinity” burial chapel, which was probably built in the 16th century, was renewed in 1638 and destroyed in a bomb attack in 1945, the largely misshapen stone remains, which tower up to three meters, are traces of a sacred building of age that is relevant to local history. It is said to have housed a winged altar, which had probably stood in the Katharinenkirche until 1594, composed of a predella painting: a handkerchief of the Veronica and a central shrine: a seated figure of St. Wolfgang - the latter probably originating from the name of the building as "Wolfgang's Chapel". In terms of architectural history, the building probably didn't mean too much, even if it was intact. Steche mentions it in 1885 as having a single aisle with a wooden ceiling and ridge turret and "completely devoid of architecture", historical relevance.

09221432
 


Former Adler cardboard factory Karlsbader Strasse 1
(map)
Around 1820 Factory owner's house in arched style, significance in terms of building history, personal history and economic history.

Two-storey, massive residential building with seven to six axes in semi-open development. This building, which was built around 1850, is characterized by its round-arched openings: the round-arch style is a typical German architectural style for this period and an early example of historicism. Here, too, the facade is structured in a simple, strictly ordered form: while all windows on the ground floor are arched, the central axes of the views are emphasized by arched windows on the upper floor / attic. In the central axis of the street side, the entrance with a profiled wall and a beautiful, historicist door with a round-arched skylight. Another entrance in the central axis of the northern gable side, here a star-shaped window in the gable triangle. The slate-covered gable roof with a profiled eaves cornice and four roof houses. The owner of the Georg Adler house is the founder of the Buchholz cardboard industry (1846). This means that this object not only has scientific, documentary and architectural value as an example of the round arch style, which is rare for Annaberg-Buchholz, but also has personal and economic significance.

09229077
 


villa Karlsbader Strasse 3
(map)
Around 1885 09229078
 


Residential house in open development Karlsbader Strasse 8
(map)
around 1840 architectural significance.

Two-storey, massive residential building with nine to four axes in open development. Its structural design as well as the classicist door frame point to a time of origin in the early 19th century. The entrance to the plastered building is off-center, the windows are all rectangular with smooth walls or painted frames, without muntin division. The slate-covered hipped roof with 4 slightly ogival dormers. With its elongated structure and simple facade, this building is a typical example of a classicist residential building on the outskirts of the city. It has architectural significance.

09229082
 


Secret Annex on Katharinenstrasse Karlsbader Strasse 13
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century Classical facade, architectural and urban significance.

Three-storey, massive auxiliary building with four axes in closed development. While there are four openings of different sizes (garage, entrance, window, side door) on the ground floor due to the street gradient and different functions, the upper floors are characterized by a uniform design. Segmented arched window openings, the plastered facade with a classicistic grooving and the central roof structure with triangular gable characterize the view of this annex. The historical windows including the curtained winter windows with 6-part muntin have been preserved. The slate-covered gable roof, each with a standing dormer window next to the roof attachment. This extension was built in 1907 to be used as a shop on the ground floor and living on the upper floors. At this point in time, the facade of the main house and the new extension were designed in the same way: above a plinth, the plaster rustics only from the upper floor, a tooth-cut frieze below the eaves above both parts of the building, none of which has survived today. Nevertheless, the building is of architectural and urban significance.

09229121
 


Adler pharmacy Karlsbader Strasse 18
(map)
Around 1885–1889, core probably older ornate front door, architectural and urban significance.

Four-storey, massive residential and commercial building with eight axes in closed development. A pharmacy has been occupied at this location since 1819, but the current appearance of the building mainly dates from 1889, when the building was rebuilt and the roof changed after it was partially destroyed by fire. In 1957 the two shops on the ground floor were connected and a former entrance was closed. The ground floor today with decorative plastering and segmented arched openings: on the left the pharmacy entrance, then two wide and one narrow shop windows (former shop entrance) and on the right the house entrance. This one with an ornate, double-leaf front door. Above a cornice, the beginning of the plastered upper floor facade, the windows here rectangular with a design typical of historicism (profiled walls, straight roofs, decorative consoles and strong sills). Another, narrow cornice to the top, low floor: its windows small and with their lintels at eaves height, decorative decoration between the openings. The eaves are emphasized by decorative consoles. This historicism building, which is typical in its design, stands out from the surrounding development with its 4th floor. It is part of the Buchholz inner city, which is characterized by buildings from the Wilhelminian era, and has architectural and urban significance.

09229079
 


Apartment building with shop, in a corner and closed development Karlsbader Strasse 19
(map)
1st half of the 19th century with shop, architectural and urban significance.

In 1885 the former "Gasthaus zum Deutschen Haus" was rebuilt by the trimmings manufacturer Roscher in order to set up a butcher shop and a bakery on the ground floor for his two sons. The unusual store design with diamond-like attachments on fluted pilaster strips framing the openings is largely preserved today. The building underwent a major change in 1904 when it was rebuilt after a fire (architect: Peschke). A second floor was added and the roof was rebuilt, which can easily be seen on the facade, a cornice shows the change in the times of construction. Since then, the corner of the building has been particularly emphasized with a curved, bent Art Nouveau gable. In addition, the windows with stucco decor only on the 2nd floor, otherwise simpler walls, all windows with T-shaped bars. On the corner of the building a cartridge labeled “Geb. R “(the builders, Roscher Brothers). The corner facade of the building is plastered with nine to six axes, the access is off-center, drawn in and with a staircase in front and a straight crown of the opening. The slate-covered gable roof with standing single dormers. This apartment building with its distinctive corner design on the upper floor characterizes the urban space at the confluence with Marktstrasse. The different construction phases can be clearly distinguished, as each was built in the style of the time. It therefore has both architectural and urban significance.

09229083
 


Residential and commercial building Karlsbader Strasse 20
(map)
Around 1800 09229080
 


Residential and commercial building Karlsbader Strasse 22
(map)
around 1870 with shop, architectural and urban significance.

Three-storey, massive tenement house with seven axes in closed development. This building, created around 1870, is characterized by a lush facade design in the neo-renaissance style. Haller & Berthold's pearl, silk and yarn store is known to be used since 1871. The ground floor with strong plastering, on the far left the house entrance with a historicist door (beautiful grid in front of the glazing). The third axis is the entrance to the shop, all other openings on the ground floor as windows. The façade of the upper floors is plastered, and the two outer axes are highlighted in terms of design: here there is plenty of stucco decor, consoles, crowns and a border of the decorative zone with strong beams in the eaves area. The axes in the attic are also emphasized by a decorated attic house. The slate-covered mansard roof with residential use. This apartment building with its lavish decor stands out from the surrounding, much more simply designed buildings. Preserved almost unchanged, it has architectural and urban significance for Buchholz's city center, which is characterized by historic buildings.

09229081
 


Tenement house with shop, in closed development Karlsbader Strasse 29
(map)
Around 1900 09229095
 


Apartment house in a corner and closed development Karlsbader Strasse 30
(map)
Marked 1887 with restaurant, architectural and urban significance (see also Schlettauer Straße 1, object 09229084).

Three-storey tenement house built in 1887 with five axes in semi-open development. The ground floor of the house is used by a restaurant, but the entrance and three windows in an unusual design. But structural remains of the historicist shop design are still there: for example the narrow, decorative walkways that once separated the openings and end at a profiled beam that extends across the width of the facade. In addition, on the far left on the corner of the building, a wall template with a capital as a lateral end of the ground floor facade design. The two axes on the left emerge somewhat out of alignment on all floors. The windows here on the 1st floor with segmental arched crowns, the others on this floor with triangular ones, all with lush stucco decoration below the sills. The windows on the 2nd floor are simpler with a straight roof and a sturdy sill on decorative consoles. The structure and design of the facade correspond to that of the neighboring house (Schlettauer Straße 1). Both buildings were created as a single unit and form the corner of the square below the Katharinenkirche and the confluence with Karlsbader Straße. The roof was subsequently changed. The typical, historic tenement house on the main shopping street in Buchholz with its originally elaborate ground floor structure is important in terms of urban planning, but also relevant to the history of the building.

09229085
 


Apartment building in closed development Karlsbader Strasse 31
(map)
Around 1900 09229096
 


Residential house in semi-open development Karlsbader Strasse 32
(map)
Marked 1790 09228804
 


Apartment building in closed development Karlsbader Strasse 33
(map)
re. 1906 with shop, architectural significance.

Three-storey tenement house built in 1906 with a shop fitting in a semi-open development. The ground floor of the plastered building with plastering and large shop window openings, the access to the house off-center in the axis emphasized by the bay window on the upper floors. Adjacent to the shop window area is a grooved plaster-like area with grooved plaster decoration, before the color-contrasting upper floor facade begins. The eye-catcher here is the bay window and the wide, segment-arched windows in the left axis, the windows otherwise rectangular, on the 2nd floor with a simple decor. The slate-covered saddle roof with roof house, the bay axis continued here by a roof attachment with a small spire. In the gable triangle the designation "K 1906". The building on Buchholz's main shopping street, which was built after the turn of the century, shows a transition from historicism to reform style in its restrained design and is of architectural significance.

09229097
 


Apartment building in a formerly closed development Karlsbader Strasse 40
(map)
Around 1890 09229110
 


Apartment building in closed development Karlsbader Strasse 42
(map)
Around 1890 09229111
 


Apartment building in closed development Karlsbader Strasse 43
(map)
Around 1890 09229112
 


Two connected residential and commercial buildings Karlsbader Strasse 45, 47
(map)
re. 1890 coherently designed double apartment building with a shopping area, significance in terms of architectural history and urban development.

Two connected apartment buildings, which with their 16 axes characterize the street space at the widening of Karlsbader Straße at the confluence of Hutmachergasse. These buildings, erected in 1890, are characterized, among other things, by the representative design of the ground floors: here the house entrance in the middle, flanked by the entrances for the shops on the left and right. The three openings in the facade are set back and emphasized by a three-arched position with two pillars (the pillars as a later change, originally pillars.) The side shop windows in the facade, which is characterized by strong rustication of the plastered surface, with a basket-arched end. The design of the two upper floors in the manner typical of historicism in Annaberg-Buchholz in yellow clinker with decorative sandstone elements and different colored clinker as an ornate contrast. However, the design of the four central axes on both buildings is outstanding: especially the colored patterns below the windows on the 2nd floor and above them between the accentuated apex stones. A frieze below the eaves cornice is made in a similar way. The central axis is emphasized by a decorative roof house. These formerly very richly decorated little roof houses with an attachment were dismantled and in 1983 the individual dormers between them were removed in favor of the continuous roof structure. This measure was an urban development requirement of the time to eliminate sloping ceilings in the attic apartments and affected several houses. Despite this massive intervention, this double apartment building on the main shopping street in Buchholz is exceptional in terms of its quality and has both urban and architectural significance.

09229109
 


Classicist door frame of a residential building Karlsbader Strasse 51
(map)
Marked 1845 09229101
 


Apartment building in closed development Karlsbader Strasse 58
(map)
Around 1895 with shop, architectural and urban significance.

Three-storey tenement house built around 1895 on a wide plot with nine axes in closed development. The building is characterized by its representative facade with design elements typical of the period of historicism in Annaberg-Buchholz. The ground floor with strong rustication of the plastered surface on the pillars between the shop windows. The house entrance on the right side is relatively simple with a rectangular opening. The two upper floors with yellow clinker cladding and decorative sandstone elements in the form of cloaks, sills, decorative consoles and crowns. The facade gets its character, however, mainly from the formation of the two bay windows, these made of sandstone with a lush design. The axis they emphasized is also continued in the attic by a richly decorated attic house with a segmented arched gable. The frieze below the eaves, consisting of decorative consoles, is also decorative. The gable roof with individual dormers, which are characterized by their pointed roofs. This historic tenement house on the main shopping street in Buchholz is of high quality and is of importance in terms of urban development and architectural history.

09229098
 


Apartment building in half-open development Karlsbader Strasse 59
(map)
Around 1885 09229102
 


Apartment building in closed development Karlsbader Strasse 60
(map)
around 1900 with shop, architectural and urban significance.

Three-storey tenement house built after 1900 with eight axes in closed development. The facade with its reserved Art Nouveau design is symmetrical. In the central axis, the house entrance is slightly set back with two steps in front, the arched opening with the original, two-leaf Art Nouveau door. On the side the arched entrances to the shops and then the large, arched shop window openings. The ground floor with rusticated facade and highlighted apex stones of the openings. The execution of the base zone in granite-like material is a retrospective and not very suitable. The upper floors with yellow clinker cladding, the two central axes protruding slightly as a risalit and continuing as a dwelling in the attic. Here a triangular gable and the formation of a large, arched window. The other windows with T-shaped bars and decorative sandstone frames in Art Nouveau decor. The slate-covered gable roof with the typical standing dormers and roof houses. In the zoning (plaster on the ground floor, yellow clinker brick on the upper floor), the building follows the large part of the development that makes up the inner cities of Annaberg and Buchholz. While historicist designs predominate, this apartment building also shows simple Art Nouveau elements. As part of the main shopping street in Buchholz, it is of urban and architectural significance.

09229099
 


Residential house in open development Karlsbader Strasse 65
(map)
Marked 1844 09229104
 


door Karlsbader Strasse 66
(map)
Around 1890 09229100
 


Residential house in semi-open development Karlsbader Strasse 78
(map)
Around 1800 09229103
 


Apartment building in closed development Karlsbader Strasse 83
(map)
Around 1885 09229144
 


Apartment building in closed development Karlsbader Strasse 85
(map)
Around 1900 09229143
 


Apartment building in half-open development Karlsbader Strasse 87
(map)
Around 1900 09229142
 


Apartment house in a corner and closed development Karlsbader Strasse 88
(map)
Around 1890 09229150
 


Apartment house in a corner and semi-open development Karlsbader Strasse 90
(map)
Marked 1893 09229105
 


Apartment building in open development Katharinenstrasse 9
(map)
Around 1885 09229059
 


Residential house in open development Katharinenstrasse 26
(map)
1st half of the 19th century architectural significance.

Single-storey residential house from the 1st half of the 19th century in open development with central emphasis and a hipped mansard roof. The house entrance in the plastered facade is slightly off-center with a basket-arched door frame. The windows on the ground floor are also rectangular on the gable side with an eight-part muntin. The raised central part is crowned by a triangular gable with a round window. The slate-covered mansard roof with small standing dormer windows. A workshop extension was added on the eastern gable side. This house has retained much of its original construction from the beginning of the 19th century. As an example of urban living at this time, it has architectural significance.

09229060
 


Representative rental villa Lange Gasse 1
(map)
re. 1878 representative building, neo-Gothic elements, built for the politician Gustav Slesina, architectural significance.

Representative building erected in 1878 in open development at the confluence of Langen Gasse and Karlsbader Strasse. The house was built as a residential and commercial building and has two floors facing the street (slope side), while it has four floors on the valley side due to the steep terrain. The basement to Langen Gasse is covered in porphyry with a pair of window openings, otherwise the facade is plastered, the corners of the building emphasized by porphyry rustics. The two lavishly designed entrances to the house are located in the building offset on the north-west side: pillars carry three passes that crown the door openings, the original double-leaf doors with a great variety of details. The rich design of the building's facades is striking: the windows are each connected to each other axially through the use of sandstone as a frame and eye-catching decor. The greatest variety of design can be found in the gable fields with ogival arcades into which the windows are integrated. The roof, consisting of slate roofs that are joined together, has a large overhang and a decorated wooden structure. In this building, which is unique for Annaberg-Buchholz, echoes of the Gothic are predominant, but other styles are also taken up, so that an eclectic image with a high level of detail is created. This building with its equipment such as the entrance doors has a rarity and importance in terms of architectural history.

09229106
 


Reconstruction house Marktstrasse 1
(map)
1955, partly older Reconstruction house after the bombs were destroyed in 1954/55, elaborate baroque style portal, importance in terms of building history and local history, rarity.

This building is now a simple, two-story, eaves-standing house with six axes and a gable roof with vertical dormers. The only striking design element is the portal, which is arranged almost in the middle. This component with decorated pillars, a basket arch opening with an accentuated apex and a separate skylight with a scroll decoration on the side above the entablature. It is not known where the historical portal, which does not belong to this location, comes from. The portal is almost certainly not a historical portal, but comes from the reconstruction time in 1955 and is a typical design of this time, still influenced by the style of the national building tradition of the early GDR years.
Interesting is the inscription “This house was destroyed by bombs at the end of the unfortunate Second World War in 1945. In the fifth year of the first five-year plan, it was rebuilt peacefully. ”Originally, a three-story house with a mansard roof had stood here, with the Fritz Langer trimmings factory, founded in 1847, on the rear property. The building served mainly as an office building for them. The house was largely destroyed in the Second World War, only a few outer walls and part of the basement walls remained. The owner at the time tried unsuccessfully since 1946 to obtain a permit for the reconstruction. Since he had been living in West Germany since the early 1950s at the latest, the city took over the management of the property and ordered the reconstruction as a residential building with a central staircase. Although the building could not be classified as an individual monument due to its design alone, it has architectural and local historical significance due to its history. As an example of a reconstruction project that has been preserved unchanged, it is a rarity for Annaberg-Buchholz.

09229120
 


Square design with retaining walls Rathausplatz
(map)
around 1900 Design of the square with retaining walls, stairs, paving and rows of trees made of winter lime trees, significance in terms of local history and urban development.

Design of the square in front of the town hall, for which the sloping terrain was supported by retaining walls (quarry stone) on the valley side, so that a flat surface was created. These are divided into fields with different paving. At the edge narrow green strips with benches and rows of winter linden trees. This design of the Buchholz town hall square is of interest for the local history and has urban significance.

09229119
 


Monument to Frederick the Wise
Monument to Frederick the Wise Rathausplatz
(map)
re. 1901 Art-historical and local historical significance.

On the occasion of 400 years of town charter, the citizens of Buchholz had this monument erected in 1901 in one unit with the town hall built in the same year. As a free-standing monument on a wide stepped base and high pedestal, it shows the city's founder, Friedrich the Wise. He is depicted as a bronze statue in contemporary costume with a folding cap and ermine coat, holding the Bible in his left hand and the sword in his right. It is one of the first works by the Dresden sculptor August Streitmüller. The monument is of importance in terms of art history and local history.

09229116
 


Former town hall of Buchholz Rathausplatz 1
(map)
1841, re. 1900, older in essence Stately plastered building with ridge turrets, architectural and local history as well as urban significance.

From 1841 the city administration was at this location, the property of the former mining office in the so-called electoral house. This was rebuilt until 1901 by Friedrich Wilhelm Peschke (most important architect in the cityscape, Buchholz) in the form of the neo-renaissance. One floor was added and the two-storey ornamental gable with the mighty roof turret was created. This prestigious building took into account the growing importance of Buchholz as an industrial city with a higher need for recognition and thus administrative expenses.
The three-storey administration building has rustication on the lower two storeys that emphasizes the simple window openings. Two arched entrances on the ground floor, one of which is accentuated with a portal made of bossed masonry, with two half-columns and two narrow flanking windows. The accentuated top stone with relief and inscribed "1900". The 2nd floor and especially the two-storey decorative gable with a rich facade structure. The slate-roofed tent roof rises above this central part with a clock bay, on top of which the ridge turret with lantern and curved hood. With the merger of Annaberg and Buchholz, the building lost its actual function and has served as an administration building ever since. It is important from a building and local history perspective as well as urban planning.

09229115
 


Residential building in closed development Rathausplatz 2
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (1905, core older) historical and urban significance.

Three-storey, massive residential building with seven axes in closed development. This building has existed since at least the 1st half of the 19th century and was known as a two-storey residential building for the Leibelt construction and machine fitter. It got its current appearance in 1905 through the renovation and expansion to expand the office and storage rooms of the neighboring trimmings factory Langer & Co. The architect W. Peschke, who had rebuilt the town hall next door, was responsible for the construction work. The appearance of this residential building was based on the design of the facade with rustication on all floors. The building was also given a second floor and a mansard roof, both rooms without partition walls as storage or manufacturing space. In 1933 the 2nd floor was changed into two apartments. The roof, which was destroyed in World War II, was renewed in 1946, albeit in its current form as a gable roof, the garage was installed on the right-hand side of the ground floor in 1948. This building is now used again as a residential building, the entrance in the middle with a historic, single-winged front door with a high Skylight. The windows with smooth natural stone walls, the division not in accordance with monument protection. On the facade, a cornice between the 1st and 2nd floors refers to the subsequent addition of the upper floor. The residential building, with its temporary use as an office, factory and warehouse, is of architectural and economic historical importance as well as urban planning.

09229072
 


Rental villa Schlachthofstrasse Around 1900 importance in terms of building history and economic history.

Two-storey, massive factory owner's villa (formerly the slaughterhouse area, later TRAWA textile processing plant in Buchholz). This industrial plant had a direct rail connection, the railway line runs directly behind the house. This was built shortly after 1900 and shows a facade clad in red clinker. The light building decor sets itself apart from this in rich contrasts, in the form of window walls, sills and horizontal bands that encompass the building. The windows in different designs and sizes. The stairwell in a component protruding from the center of the building with a large window and etched glass. The house entrance is protected by a wooden porch in the recess on the side. The design of the gable surfaces with dark decorative framework on a light background, the beam heads decoratively protruding, is striking. The slate-roofed gable roofs with a small crippled hip. The design element half-timbered in this form was often used in buildings from the early 20th century and classifies the former factory owner's villa between Art Nouveau and Heimatschutzstil. It is not only important in terms of building history, but as part of the factory is also relevant in terms of economic history.

09229046
 


Apartment building in open development Schlachthofstrasse 4
(map)
09229047
 


Apartment house in a corner and closed development Schlettauer Strasse 1
(map)
Marked 1887 with a restaurant, architectural and urban significance (see also Karlsbader Straße 30, object 09229085).

Three-storey tenement house built in 1887 in a corner and closed development. This plastered building is designed in the manner typical of historicism in Annaberg-Buchholz.
A special feature, however, is the development: due to the steep road gradient, the ground floor is only facing Karlsbader Straße, with a shop entrance on the corner. The house itself has its entrance in the right axis of the Schlettauer Strasse view on the 1st floor. The entrance is drawn far into the facade with a staircase in front that compensates for the difference in level from the street to the first floor. The opening is accentuated by a segmental arch crown with a stucco field. The three axes that form the sloping corner of the building are designed in the same way. Otherwise triangular roofs on the 1st floor, straight on the 2nd floor, all windows with sturdy sills and decorative consoles, T-shaped sprouts. The facade of the corner area continues with three axes to the top floor and has a steep roof. This rental house and the house at Karlsbader Straße 30 were built as a single unit and form the corner of the square below the Katharinenkirche and the confluence with Karlsbader Straße. The tenement house is part of the predominantly historicist development that characterizes downtown Buchholz. It is important in terms of urban development, but also relevant to the history of the building.

09229084
 


Buchholz volunteer fire department Schlettauer Strasse 3
(map)
Around 1935 Significance in terms of building history and local history.

Elongated fire brigade building with five gate entrances on the long side in open development and in the immediate vicinity of the Katharinenkirche. The high basement with the large driveways and the slightly pointed arched windows on the narrow side is made of quarry stone and is the most striking element of this building, which was built in the 1930s. Not all of the gates were originally designed because, for example, a fifth gate was installed in 2009 for another garage. The upper floor is plastered, on one side (east side) the facade with large windows shows the use of the upper floor as a gym. On the west side two-story window structure with simple openings for secondary functions on two floors, here two arched entrances to the upper floor. This served as a gym for the neighboring school for a long time, but was converted into a “multifunctional center” in 2003/04. The building, with its deliberate use of large rubble stone surfaces on the façades typical of the construction period in the 1930s, has architectural significance and, due to its use as a fire brigade and gymnasium, is also relevant to the local history.

09229063
 


Apartment house in a corner and open development Schlettauer Strasse 6
(map)
09229065
 


Pestalozzi School Schlettauer Strasse 7
(map)
Before 1837 and around 1900 (re. 1883) architectural and cultural-historical importance.

Three-storey, massive school building, partly in renaissance forms, with a high basement on an approximately U-shaped floor plan in open development on the slope of Buchholz city center. Due to the steep slope, the house stands on a level-level, platform-like plateau with stone walls. The building is plastered and structured by cornices between the floors. The windows are usually segment-arched with a cross-shaped protrusion. In the side wing to Schlettauer Straße, high, decorated arched windows indicate the use of the hall, while the opposite side wing in this area is not only three-story, but four-story. Several extensions have been added to the slope side (courtyard). This building of the school, which has existed since 1837, was inaugurated in 1883 and was built by the renowned Buchholz architect Peschke. Various additions such as the south wing followed in 1893/94. Since 1927 called Pestalozzi School, 1944/45 reserve hospital. The school building, which is typical for the time it was built, is of architectural and cultural significance.

09229062
 


Residential house with Heiste, in semi-open development Schlettauer Strasse 20
(map)
09229086
 


Residential house with Heiste, in open development Schlettauer Strasse 21
(map)
Marked 1843 Classicist lintel, significance in terms of building history and mining history.

Two-storey, massive residential building with six to four axes in open development on the outskirts of Buchholz. This building, erected in 1843, was probably a mountain officials' house. It is accessed from the street via a Heiste, the entrance is slightly off-center and has a classicist door frame with a serrated frieze (marked "1843"), the single-leaf door is not original. The facade of the house is smoothly plastered without building decoration, the windows are rectangular with smooth walls and a simplified T-bar. The slate-covered hip roof with five standing dormers in two rows. This well-proportioned house is an example of bourgeois living in the first half of the 19th century. Not significantly changed, it is of architectural and probably mining historical significance.

09229053
 


Residential house with Heiste, in open development Schlettauer Strasse 22
(map)
1792 09229087
 


Apartment building in half-open development Schneeberger Strasse 1
(map)
1907 neo-Gothic echoes, architectural and urban significance.

Three-storey, massive tenement house from 1907 with a representative clinker brick facade in a semi-open development. The almost round shape of the building corner, which is also emphasized in terms of design, is striking. The historicist facade shows the recourse to the Gothic with pointed arched window formats and crowns, the arrangement of head busts below the windows on the first floor is unusual. The corner design is continued by a tower-like attachment in the attic and crowned by a dome-like roof. In the corner area, the shop windows and the earlier, side shop entrance are walled up; when the building was built, there was a bakery here with the bakery in the basement. The longitudinal facades of the house are more modest than the corner area: the brownish clinker cladding begins above the quarry stone base, which is separated by cornices on each floor. The windows on the individual floors are designed differently, with the building decor of the walls and relief surfaces indicating the time the house was built. Some of the original windows with their characteristic muntin have been preserved. The mansard roof expanded for residential use. The building, which is vacant today, has an unusual design in Annaberg-Buchholz with a mix of styles between neo-Gothic and Art Nouveau, which makes it important in terms of architectural history. Its structural reaction to the location on the busy Schneeberger Straße also makes it interesting in terms of urban planning.

09229048
 


Residential house in open development (only the front part) Silberstrasse 6
(map)
re. 1791 architectural significance.

Two-storey house with a plastered facade in a corner and open development. The structure of this 18th century building was changed by adding an annex on the north side that is not worth protecting. The original development took place on the eaves side, here still the remains of the baroque door frame (marked "1791"), the opening of which was reduced to a window, and the street level on this side was also raised. The entrance today on the gable side in a segmented arched opening, drawn deep into the building line, with a staircase in front - a design that was not common in the 18th century, but the buildings in Annaberg-Buchholz from the 2nd half of the 19th century . shapes. The rectangular windows with smooth walls, partly changed or walled up. The hipped roof with three standing dormers in two rows. Despite the extensive structural interventions, the house is of architectural significance as it is one of the oldest preserved buildings in Buchholz.

09229052
 


Apartment building with shop fitting and extension, in half-open development Unit 5 Street
(Map)
around 1880 Late Classicist-looking building, with a shop, behind it a manufacturing facility that was built a little later, marked 1896, significant in terms of building history, social and economic history and as a testimony to the first urban expansion.

Apartment building with built-in shop installation in half-open development, built in the course of the first, architecturally demanding city expansion from around 1880, behind it a manufacturing building that was built a little later is called 1896, which housed a building trade and indicates the still close coexistence of living and production, residential building with three-storey plastered construction Plaster grooves and arched openings, the two upper floors optically defined by cornices, the corner pilasters and the extensions of the rather flat gable roof also have a creative effect. Deep building typical of the late classicism of the early years. Basement and roof structure typical of the construction period. Significance in terms of building history, social and economic history and urban planning.

09228858
 


Representative double tenement house with shop, in closed development Unit 7 Street, 9
(map)
Marked 1893 with shops, with representative clinker brick facades, significance in terms of building history and urban development.

Two coherently designed, four-story apartment buildings in closed development, which shape the street space with their representative clinker brick facades and a total of 11 axes. These buildings, erected in 1893, are characterized above all by the special design of the central axes: here the entrances in segmented arched niches on the right and left on the ground floor. The entrance is drawn in, as is typical for Annaberg-Buchholz, with a staircase in front; the original, double-leaf house doors with separate skylights have been preserved in both buildings. In these axes there are open loggias on the upper floors - a design element that is rare for this city. Both ground floors with plaster grooves and boss masonry, the openings for the shutters from the construction period are arched. The decorative execution of the three upper floors in red clinker masonry with different colored clinker and some sandstone elements as a decorative contrast. The colored patterns between the windows of the second upper floors and the friezes made of colored terracottas below the eaves (comparable to Karlsbader Straße 45/47) are outstanding. The slate-covered gable roof with standing dormers. With its high design quality, this historicist double apartment building fits into the majority of the buildings on this street, which are characterized by great architectural demands. They reflect the increased demands of the wealthy bourgeoisie on housing. These houses have both urban and architectural significance.

09228854
 


Representative tenement house with shop, in closed development Unit 11 Street
(Map)
around 1885 with shop, architectural and urban significance.

Representative four-storey tenement house with eight axes on a wide plot in closed development. The building, which was built around 1885, is characterized by its detailed red brick facade, in which the middle two axes are particularly emphasized as a risalit. This area ends with a semicircular gable field, here lavish decorations and stucco around a small round window. The cladding of the ground floor with natural stone is unusual for Annaberg-Buchholz, as these are usually plastered, with capitals on the wall pillars. On the right-hand side a shop from the period of construction with a shop window and an adjacent entrance, this one in the execution of the narrow walkway between the openings typical for the end of the 19th century. The central entrance with the original, two-winged front door in a segmented arched opening, this area with reliefs, apex stone and console stones designed in a very similar way to number 7/9. The facade of the upper floors is rich in building decor, made of red and black clinker bricks and sandstone elements that contrast with the orange-red clinker cladding. Below the eaves cornice a round arch frieze made of white and red stones. With its high design quality, this historicist apartment building is one of the buildings on this street, which are mostly characterized by great architectural demands. It reflects the increased demands of the wealthy bourgeoisie on housing. The building has both urban and architectural significance.

09228853
 


Residential and commercial building in a corner Unit 13 Street
(Map)
Marked with 1902 representative building, remarkable staircase, architectural and urban significance.

Probably one of the most representative residential and commercial buildings in Annaberg-Buchholz, which not only characterizes the immediate street space through its location on a sharp curve, but is also widely visible in the cityscape through a high tower structure. This building was constructed in 1902 by the renowned Buchholz architect Peschke, who himself was the client. The ground floor and mezzanine were originally designated as shops, warehouses and offices, while spacious apartments were furnished on the upper floors. The two lower floors show their unit of use through a two-storey arched structure that surrounds the shop windows on the ground floor and the double arched windows on the mezzanine. The motif of the round arches is also repeated on the three upper floors for one window axis each. The design focus is on the corner area of ​​the building, the three axes of which protrude like risalit and end in a curved gable. This area is crowned by a high dome with a lantern. In the middle part of the risalit, a bay window is formed over two storeys, the adjacent gusset areas are used as balconies. The facade is plastered, with different designs as smooth and rough plaster as well as rustication. Lush sandstone decoration as reliefs, garments, columns, friezes, etc. contribute to the representative character of the house. The residential and commercial building is now partly empty and dilapidated. Its high design quality marks the beginning of the buildings on this street, which are largely characterized by high architectural standards. It reflects the economic wealth of the Buchholz bourgeoisie around 1900 and shows the increased demands on living and working. The building has both urban and architectural significance.

09228851
 


Apartment building in closed development Südstrasse 1
(map)
09229049
 


Apartment building in half-open development Südstrasse 2
(map)
09229050
 


Apartment building in open development Talstrasse 41
(map)
Marked 1893 09229125
 


Waldschlößchen Waldschlösschenpark 1 [wrong address in monument list]
(map)
End of the 19th century Plastered construction with half-timbered gable, in the Swiss style, architectural and local significance.

Two-storey hotel building (end of the 19th century) in the wooded area of ​​the western Sehmatal valley. The main building on a rectangular floor plan with a protruding component in which the entrance was located, today a large, glazed winter garden in front of it. This building axis is also specially designed on the upper floor and the attic, here an ornamental framework and a separate, steep gable roof with a large roof overhang. The gable triangle with the board carving typical of the Swiss style. The plastered facade of the house with colored corner rustics, the frames around the rectangular windows are also colored. The slate-covered hipped roof with small standing dormers. In addition to a large (not worthy of protection) extension, an elongated, single-storey component and a wine cellar are part of the inventory to be preserved on the northern side.

09229067
 


Residential house in open development Waldschlößchenstrasse 2
(map)
1878 in the country house style, architectural significance.

Single storey house in the wooded area of ​​the western Sehmatal valley. The building with the plastered facade is characterized by its roof design, in which the structural parts of the large roof overhang decoratively shape the view. The building gables are particularly ornate, but the eaves area and the roof of the risalit of the entrance axis are also highlighted in this form. The arched entrance with a beautiful, original two-winged front door, all building edges with corner rustics. The windows predominantly with smooth natural stone walls and T-bars. Due to the hillside location, a high basement is designed to face the garden. For Annaberg-Buchholz atypical is the roof covering with dark roof tiles instead of the otherwise predominant slate. This country house style house blends in very well with its natural surroundings. Similar buildings can hardly be found in the vicinity. It has architectural significance.

09229066
 


Factory building Waldschlößchenstrasse 8 After 1900 09229071
 


Former Waldschlößchen restaurant Waldschlößchenstrasse 17
(map)
09229069
 


Residential house in open development Waldschlößchenstrasse 27
(map)
Around 1900 09229070
 

Remarks

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

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