List of cultural monuments in Connewitz, A – K

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The list of cultural monuments in Connewitz contains the cultural monuments of the Leipzig city ​​and district Connewitz , which were recorded in the list of monuments by the State Office for the Preservation of Monuments in Saxony as of 2017.

This list is divided for reasons of space. This list contains the cultural monuments in the streets beginning with the letters A – K. The cultural monuments in the streets L-Z are in the list of cultural monuments in Connewitz, L-Z lists.

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 Connewitz, A – K

image designation location Dating description ID
Deutsche Bahn AG;  Elsterflutbett-Bridge: Railway bridge over the Upper Elsterflutbett
Deutsche Bahn AG; Elsterflutbett-Bridge: Railway bridge over the Upper Elsterflutbett (Map) 1939 (railway bridge) 115.75 m long steel trough bridge as a pass-through girder over four openings of the railway line Leipzig-Plagwitz - Markkleeberg-Gaschwitz (6379, see PG), of importance in terms of traffic and technology, rarity; over the Elster flood bed 09294387
 
Eight boundary stones (subject to further ones to be found) in Connewitzer Holz (border area between Probstei and Ratsholz) (Map) marked 1535 (boundary stone), marked 1705 (boundary stone) six with city arms and designation 1705, one with city arms and designation 1535, one sunk in the ground, of regional historical importance 09296653
 
Objective aggregate component of the aggregate Elsterfloßgraben: Floßgraben (see also aggregate list, Obj. 09304747)
Objective aggregate component of the aggregate Elsterfloßgraben: Floßgraben (see also aggregate list, Obj. 09304747) (Map) 1608-1610 (raft ditch) Artificially created raft ditch adapted to the shape of the landscape with a starting section (so-called Batschke) on the Markkleeberger or Zwenkau area, in the Connewitzer Holz (southern Auewald) flowing into the Pleiße, of regional and technological significance

The Große Elsterfloßgraben is part of the Pleiße-Elster raft system, a system of artificially created ditches, which were made up of natural rivers or mill ditches, connected with weirs, overflows and rakes, and which was used from 1579 to transport wood by water. With the construction of the raft ditch, the Saxon elector pursued the goal of developing his own salt deposits in salt pans near Weißenfels (Poserna). The trench itself had a trapezoidal cross-section. It was originally 3 meters wide at the top and one meter wide at the bottom. The total length of the Pleiße-Elster raft system was 93 km and managed a difference in altitude of 25 m. This makes it the most important artificial grave system of the 16th century on the European continent. The vegetation that marks the course makes it stand out from the surrounding agricultural area. The Pleiße-Elster raft system is divided into the two main systems Großer Elsterfloßgraben and Kleiner or Leipziger Elsterfloßgraben. In the years 1578 to 1580, Elector August I of Saxony had the Great Elster raft ditch built according to plans by chief miner Martin Planer and under the construction management of Christian Kohlreiber, which, fed with water from the White Elster, should lead to the Rippach and thus enable wood rafting to Poserna . In 1610, wood was rafted for the first time for the Electoral Saxon and later Prussian salt pans. After the decline of the salt pans, the raft ditch was used to transport firewood and construction wood. In today's Saxon territory, the length of the Großer Elsterfloßgraben is 6 km. A special feature of the raft ditch are the 79 bridges, which were numbered with Roman numerals from Crossen (Thuringia). and the bridges number LIX to LXXII, some of which have been preserved in their original form. The city of Leipzig has been getting its wood from the Pleiße river since the middle of the 16th century. After the forests in the Pleiße area were exhausted, attempts were made to win the Großer Elsterfloßgraben for timber transport. In the village of Stöntzsch, a branch was made, the so-called small or Leipzig raft ditch, from the large Elster raft ditch. The raft ditch was largely created by linking and expanding the existing river and mill ditch system. The Elster itself, its arm Batschke branching off at Zwenkau and the Leipzig Pleißemühlgraben were integrated into this part of the trench system, which was first flooded with wood in 1610. The material was transshipped at the Leipzig Floßplatz, which was located directly in front of the city at the time and whose history is now remembered by the square of the same name. Until around 1820, wood was successfully rafted with the raft ditch. After that, the moat became less and less important. The expansion of the road system and, from the middle of the century, the advent of cheaper transport by rail and the increasing replacement of firewood with lignite led to the discontinuation of the Elster rafting company around 1864. In some places, the water of the raft ditch was still used to operate mills. However, the water throughput was significantly reduced. Since it has now passed through different countries (Duchy of Altenburg, Prussian Province of Saxony and Kingdom of Saxony), a joint purpose association was established for its maintenance and further operation, which existed until almost the middle of the 20th century. From 1958, sections of the Elsterfloßgraben were interrupted or drained by open-cast lignite mines. Behind the opencast mines, attempts were made to maintain its course by pumping water from the White Elster. After these open-cast mines were shut down, sections of the old raft ditch between Elstertrebnitz and Werben were rebuilt on slightly modified routes from 1992 onwards. The reconstructed Kleine Floßgraben has been carrying water since 1996 and, via the Elstermühlgraben, again connects parts of the water system originally used for the Leipzig rafting. Its monument preservation value results from its importance as a nationally significant service in surveying, hydraulic engineering and a nearly 300-year-old successful Saxon commercial enterprise in water management and transport. LfD / 2013

09296651
 
Mühlpleiße: Mühlgraben
More pictures
Mühlpleiße: Mühlgraben (Map) Middle of the 13th century (Mühlgraben) Artificially created Mühlgraben, adapted to the shape of the landscape, branching off from the Pleiße in Markkleeberg, after passing through Dölitz-Dosen, Lößnig and Connewitz in Connewitzer Holz, it flows back into the Pleiße, of local and technological importance 09296200
 
Wikidata-logo.svg
Pleißemühlgraben: Mühlgraben, with embankment walls, stairs, bridges
More pictures
Pleißemühlgraben: Mühlgraben, with embankment walls, stairs, bridges (Map) 13th century (Mühlgraben), 19th century (bank walls) Running through the districts of Connewitz, Südvorstadt, Center, Center-South and Center-West, artificially created Mühlgraben (arched around 1951), of local history 09296208
 
Wikidata-logo.svg
Residential house in open development with fencing and gate entrance Am Lindenhof 1
(map)
1933-1934 (residential house), 1938 (garage installation in the basement) plastered construction typical of the time, significance in terms of building history and urban district development history

Architect Fritz Kösser as the planner and Bauhütte Leipzig GmbH as the construction company were under contract with the dentist Franz Heinrich Karl Gustav Molitor for a single-family home, which was built in 1933-1934 and recognized as a tax-exempt home in 1935. In July 1938, lawyer Martin Pfeifer took over the property and had a garage installed in the basement of the house according to Kösser's plans. In 1949 the land register was entered as property of the people; Vacancy since 1999, renovation planned in 2005; The plastered structure is completed by a mansard roof typical of the time and accentuated by a semicircular protruding staircase to the north and a standing bay with a terrace on the south-west corner. The fencing of the property at the entrance to the Connewitz park settlement has been preserved, as has parts of the historic interior. The house is a historical testimony to private housing construction in the 1930s. LfD / 2012

09299386
 
Villa with terrace, enclosure and villa garden Am Lindenhof 22
(map)
1938-1939 (villa) Plastered facade, built as the home of the factory owner Willy Mansfeld, architecture document of private housing shortly before the beginning of the Second World War, part of the Am Lindenhof settlement, of local and district historical interest, garden as part of the older Lindenhof park of significant garden history

At the lower end of the residential street, next to the Schulz-Schomburgk property in the Am Lindenhof estate, a single-family house was built in 1938 and 1939 for the family of Willy Mansfeld, co-owners of the Chn machine factory. Mansfeld in Leipzig. The building company Emil Bödemann took over the execution of the plans of the architect Woldemar von Holy. After the war, the house was used as an apprenticeship home for the deaf vocational school, and after the political change it was used by the Connewitz Free School. The country house received light-colored plaster, window frames and conservatory porch were made of natural or artificial stone ( shell limestone ). With reference to the shortage of bricks, the roof of the hipped roof was covered with natural slate . The unobtrusively designed building with office and reception rooms on the ground floor, the family living rooms mainly on the upper floor and a shelter with gas lock and billiard room in the basement. With regard to the secluded, quiet location and the extensive garden, a reference was made to the health problems of the client and his daughter. A wooden garden house built in 1939 on a square floor plan is no longer available today. The original furnishings include the two staircases as well as wall cladding and a fireplace in the hall. In terms of local and urban history, the building is of particular interest as the home of a factory owner and architectural document of private housing shortly before the beginning of the Second World War. LfD / 2011

09303408
 
Wiedebachplatz Arno-Nitzsche-Strasse -
(map)
around 1900 (Schmuckplatz) Green area between Arno-Nitzsche-Straße, Bernhard-Göring-Straße and Wiedebachstraße, of importance in terms of local development and urban green history 09306265
 
14. Citizen School;  today Apollonia-von-Wiedebach-Schule: school and two gyms
14. Citizen School; today Apollonia-von-Wiedebach-Schule: school and two gyms Arno-Nitzsche-Strasse 7
(map)
1898 (school) Three -wing clinker brick building with a strongly protruding middle risk , significant in terms of building history and local history

Established in 1898 as the 14th public school; four-storey school building perpendicular to the street, the elongated structure with the main front facing west, divided by central and side projections; The front sides are clad in clinker, the longitudinal fronts plastered with clinker-clad window arches, three axes in each case are combined by wide vertical clinker strips. The interior is divided into two halves with central corridors on which the classrooms are located. To the west is the schoolyard, which is bordered by two gymnasiums, single-storey brick buildings with segment-arched windows and gently sloping pitched roofs. Today the school is named after Apollonia von Wiedebach .

09296317
 
Apartment building in closed development and rear building Arno-Nitzsche-Strasse 10
(map)
around 1905/1910 (tenement house) Sparsely decorated plaster facade, of architectural significance

House numbers 10 and 12: four-storey double tenement house, possibly built around 1905/1910 for the mason foreman Albert Peter; The plastered facade, horizontally subdivided by narrow cornices, shows small-scale application work on the upper floors, the relatively high basement and the ground floor are grooved. There are gateways on the sides, the entrances with Art Nouveau decor are arranged in the middle of the semi-detached houses, above each a pointed gable hatch in the roof area . Two more hatches at house number 10 were added later. The hallway in house number 12 with wall tiles, vertical stucco structure of the walls and barrel vaults . In the courtyard of house number 10 there is a two-storey rear building with a workshop and apartments.

09296318
 
Double tenement house in open development and side fencing Arno-Nitzsche-Strasse 11; 13
(card)
1902-1903 (double tenement house) Plastered facade structured by pilasters, each with two scenic reliefs, fencing with original sandstone posts in Art Nouveau forms , located on Wiedebachplatz, of importance in terms of town planning and building history

Number 11/13 and number 15/17: two free-standing double tenement houses built according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the building contractor Hermann Engel in a representative location on the north side of Wiedebachplatz; Number 11-13 from the years 1902-1903 as a plastered building, horizontally structured by cornices, with a gently sloping hipped roof. The first and second floors are combined by a pilaster-like structure, with the two inner vertical structures being continued on the top floor and forming the abutments of loft extensions with curved gables. Above the windows on the top floor, pointed stab caps with stucco female masks cut into the concave facades; on the parapets of the second floor there are four figural stucco reliefs, on number 11 research and teaching, on number 13 sculpture, drawing and painting. The semi-detached house number 15-17, which was subsequently built between 1903 and 1904, has two bay windows on stucco consoles and overlooked by segment gables with thermal bath windows . In its cubature, the house resembles the neighboring building. The facade, however, is geometrically structured and not in the historicizing forms of numbers 11-13. On the first and second floors, two axes are combined by segmental arches. The formerly rich Art Nouveau decor on parapets, segmental arches and window spaces (flat stucco reliefs with masks, suns, coats of arms and flowers) is only available in the area of ​​the ground floor and first floor. The stairwells are accessed from the rear, with two apartments per semi-detached house on each floor. In the courtyard from number 15-17 there is a three-storey double rear building with a brick base and a plastered facade designed with restrained stucco decor and rough plaster fields. There are three apartments per entrance on each floor.

09296319
 
Apartment building in closed development Arno-Nitzsche-Strasse 12
(map)
around 1905/1910 (tenement house) with gate passage, sparingly decorated plaster facade, of architectural significance

Numbers 10 and 12: four-storey double apartment building, possibly built around 1905/1910 for the mason foreman Albert Peter; The plaster facade, which is horizontally subdivided by narrow cornices, has small-scale application work on the upper floors, while the relatively high basement and the ground floor are grooved. There are gateways to the sides, the entrances with Art Nouveau decor are arranged in the middle of the semi-detached houses, above each a pointed gable hatch in the roof area. Two more hatches at number 10 were added later. The hallway at number 12 has wall tiles, vertical stucco walls and barrel vaults. In the courtyard of number 10 there is a two-storey rear building with a workshop and apartments.

09296316
 
Double tenement house (with Arno-Nitzsche-Straße 17) in open development, with lateral fencing and rear building Arno-Nitzsche-Strasse 15
(map)
1903-1904 (tenement house) Plastered facade with a base made of green glazed bricks, sandstone pillars of the enclosure with Art Nouveau decorations, located on Wiedebachplatz, of importance in terms of urban development and architectural history

s. Number 11-13

09296362
 
Double apartment building (with No. 15) in open development, with enclosure and rear building Arno-Nitzsche-Strasse 17
(map)
1903-1904 (tenement house) Plastered facade with a base made of green glazed bricks, sandstone pillars of the enclosure with Art Nouveau decorations, located on Wiedebachplatz, of importance in terms of urban development and architectural history

s. Number 11-13

09304763
 
Administration building (with three facade figures) and factory building as well as factory halls adjoining it at the rear up to Scheffelstraße and the gate entrance to Arno-Nitzsche-Straße Arno-Nitzsche-Strasse 19
(map)
1899 (factory), 1924-1926 (administration building), 1910-1911 (boiler and machine house), 1899 (three-part), 1938 (building on Scheffelstrasse) Administration building as a vertically structured plastered building with natural stone elements and three larger-than-life facade figures made of shell limestone (Merkur, Gutenberg and workers with compasses and toothed ring); Brick courtyard building; partly since 2002 also under the address Arthur-Hoffmann-Straße 175, built as a machine factory, later VEB vehicle transmission works “Joliot Curie”, of local and architectural importance 09296480
 
Apartment house in open development and in a corner Arno-Nitzsche-Strasse 20
(map)
1901-1902 (tenement house) with a shop, an indispensable head building facing Wiedebachplatz, clinker brick facade with stucco decoration, of importance for urban planning and building history

Numbers 20, 22, 26 and 28: four of a total of five, four-story tenement houses built between 1901 and 1903 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the contractor Hermann Freiberg on the south side of the street; Numbers 20 and 28 are corner buildings facing Zwenkauer Strasse and the planned but not implemented extension of Lößniger Strasse / Frohburger Strasse. Number 22, number 26 and formerly number 24, which was destroyed in the war, were built as free-standing apartment buildings surrounded by the corner buildings. All buildings have clinker brick facades, stucco structures, plastered and partially grooved ground floors as well as the flattened hipped roofs characteristic of Gerstenberger's buildings in the area around Wiedebachplatz, but with an individual design in the individual forms. Number 20 with a wide, chamfered main front, emphasized by a wrought-iron balcony and volute gable in the middle, which is directed towards Wiedebachplatz; Number 22 faced with yellow instead of red clinker bricks, number 26 with a plastered central bay window and number 28 with a plastered corner bay window; on the floors of the corner buildings three, in those of the middle houses two apartments; Number 20 on the ground floor also has three shops

09296447
 
Apartment building in open development Arno-Nitzsche-Strasse 21
(map)
marked 1903 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade with stucco structures, of importance in terms of building history

Detached four-story tenement house built in 1903 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the contractor Hermann Engel; Ground floor plastered with grooves, upper floors clad in clinker brick with stucco structure; The hallway contains ornamental tiles and a vertical wall structure with stucco decoration in Art Nouveau forms. There are two apartments on each floor.

09296446
 
Apartment building in open development and garden pavilion in the courtyard Arno-Nitzsche-Strasse 22
(map)
1902 probably (tenement house) yellow brick facade with sandstone inclusions, wooden garden pavilion, of architectural significance

Numbers 20, 22, 26 and 28: Four of a total of five, four-storey apartment buildings built between 1901 and 1903 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the contractor Hermann Freiberg on the south side of the street. Numbers 20 and 28 as corner buildings facing Zwenkauer Strasse and the projected but not implemented extension of Lößniger / Frohburger Strasse, number 22, number 26 and formerly number 24, which was destroyed in the war, as free-standing apartment buildings framed by the corner buildings. All buildings with clinker facades, stucco structures, plastered and partly grooved ground floors as well as the flattened hipped roofs characteristic of Gerstenberger's buildings in the area around Wiedebachplatz, but with an individual design in the individual forms. Number 20 with a wide beveled main front, emphasized by a wrought-iron balcony and volute gable in the middle, which faces the Wiedebachplatz. Number 22 with yellow instead of red clinker facing, number 26 with a plastered center and number 28 with a plastered corner bay window. There are three apartments on the floors of the corner buildings and two apartments in each of the middle houses. Number 20 on the ground floor also has three shops.

09296658
 
Apartment building in a formerly half-open area and rear building Arno-Nitzsche-Strasse 25
(map)
1904-1905 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade with stucco structure, important from an architectural point of view

Four-storey tenement house built as the western part of a group of three houses according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the contractor Hermann Engel. The ground floor was plastered and originally grooved, the upper floors clad in clinker with stucco structures. Staircase accessed from the rear, two apartments on each floor. The courtyard with a three-storey rear residential building.

09296443
 
Apartment building in open development Arno-Nitzsche-Strasse 26
(map)
probably 1903 (apartment building) with shop, clinker-plaster facade with bay window, with Art Nouveau stucco decorations, of architectural significance

Numbers 20, 22, 26 and 28: Four of a total of five, four-storey apartment buildings built between 1901 and 1903 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the contractor Hermann Freiberg on the south side of the street. Numbers 20 and 28 as corner buildings facing Zwenkauer Strasse and the projected but not implemented extension of Lößniger / Frohburger Strasse, number 22, number 26 and formerly number 24, which was destroyed in the war, as free-standing apartment buildings framed by the corner buildings. All buildings with clinker facades, stucco structures, plastered and partly grooved ground floors as well as the flattened hipped roofs characteristic of Gerstenberger's buildings in the area around Wiedebachplatz, but with an individual design in the individual forms. Number 20 with a wide beveled main front, emphasized by a wrought-iron balcony and volute gable in the middle, which faces the Wiedebachplatz. Number 22 with yellow instead of red clinker facing, number 26 with a plastered center and number 28 with a plastered corner bay window. There are three apartments on the floors of the corner buildings and two apartments in each of the middle houses. Number 20 on the ground floor also has three shops.

09296445
 
Apartment house in open development and in a corner Arno-Nitzsche-Strasse 28
(map)
1903 (tenement) Clinker brick facade with stucco structure, corner accentuation by corner bay windows with Art Nouveau decoration, of importance in terms of building history

Numbers 20, 22, 26 and 28: Four of a total of five, four-storey apartment buildings built between 1901 and 1903 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the contractor Hermann Freiberg on the south side of the street. Numbers 20 and 28 as corner buildings facing Zwenkauer Strasse and the projected but not implemented extension of Lößniger / Frohburger Strasse, number 22, number 26 and formerly number 24, which was destroyed in the war, as free-standing apartment buildings framed by the corner buildings. All buildings with clinker facades, stucco structures, plastered and partly grooved ground floors as well as the flattened hipped roofs characteristic of Gerstenberger's buildings in the area around Wiedebachplatz, but with an individual design in the individual forms. Number 20 with a wide beveled main front, emphasized by a wrought-iron balcony and volute gable in the middle, which faces the Wiedebachplatz. Number 22 with yellow instead of red clinker facing, number 26 with a plastered center and number 28 with a plastered corner bay window. There are three apartments on the floors of the corner buildings and two apartments in each of the middle houses. Number 20 on the ground floor also has three shops.

09296444
 
Individual features above: Gasworks (Richard-Lehmann-Straße 114) with two gas containers (Gasometer 1 - Building No. 123 and Gasometer 2 - Building No. 125, additional address Arno-Nitzsche-Straße 35), regulatory house with extensions for gas container 1 ( Building no.116 with 114 and 115), regulatory house for gas tank 2 (building no.124), administration building (building no.202), old gas cleaning (building no.218 and 220), new gas cleaning (building no.230), new Benzene plant (building no.229), transformer station (building no.227), workshop (building no.222), social building (building no.207), ammonia salt factory (building no.224), water tower (building no.105), wash house ( Building No. 213), Wagenhalle (Building No. 214), fire station (Building No. 217) and enclosure wall to Richard-Lehmann-Straße (see also material document - Obj. 09296679) Arno-Nitzsche-Strasse 35
(map)
1882-1885 (regulation house for gas container 1), 1882-1885 (old gas cleaning, building 218, 220), 1900 (regulation house for gas container 2), 1903 (ammonia salt factory, building 224), 1909-1910 (new Gas cleaning, building 230), 1941 (new benzene plant, building 229) Brick buildings, administration buildings and gas tanks with multi-colored brick facades, gas tanks as round buildings with drum domes, of importance in terms of architectural, local and industrial history

Former municipal gas works II, from 1929 municipal central gas works. In order to relieve the burden on the first gas works on Yorkstrasse, the City Council of Leipzig had been planning to build the new plant south of what was then Leipzig's corridor in Connewitz since the late 1870s. The architectural office Oechelhäuser und Klönne in Berlin, which specializes in the construction of gasworks, submitted a first draft, on the basis of which the technical inspector and later director of the municipal gas works, Georg Wunder, created the planning to be carried out. A system was planned that, when fully expanded, would have a daily maximum output of 120,000 cubic meters. It was built in four construction phases for a quarter of full capacity each in the years 1882–1885, 1888–1890, 1902–1905 and 1906–1910. Another construction phase for the construction of administration and auxiliary buildings as well as the water tower followed until 1914. In 1934 the company premises were expanded to the south, where a second entrance was created on Arno-Nitzsche-Strasse. A long strip south of today's Richard-Lehmann-Strasse along the railway line to Hof was selected as the building site. At the time the gas works was built, it was still outside the city limits, but was owned by the city. A central axis was laid out as the main traffic route; to the west, retort houses, workshops and systems for gas purification and extraction of by-products, such as benzene, were built, to the east, coal and storage sheds and degassing systems were built. Towards Richard-Lehmann-Straße, three round, brick-walled gas tanks from 1884 and 1900 formed the urban planning effective prelude to the complex. A fourth tank, which was built without a wall, was added in the years 1923–1925. The buildings were mostly made of red brick construction with a sparing structure. After the demolition of areas along the railroad tracks and the disposal of two of the four gas containers, only the western half of the site was able to preserve a large amount of historical building fabric. Due to the constant expansion of the gasworks, an independent water supply was necessary for the operation of the site. For this purpose, the Leipzig City Works Office ordered the construction of a water tower in 1912, which the Dyckerhoff and Widmann company was entrusted with. It is a skeleton structure, the load-bearing parts of which are made of reinforced concrete and filled with brickwork. The iron roof structure and the loft container were made by Berlin-Anhaltische-Maschinenbau AG. The square tower measures 31 meters to the top of the water tank. With the exception of the entrance portal crowned with two fully plastic lion sculptures and the Leipzig city coat of arms, it is unadorned and framed in white and, according to the construction plan, was formerly provided with an octagonal structure. However, this has not been preserved and has been replaced by a flat tent roof. As part of the totality of the municipal gas works II, the tower is of urban and technical historical significance. LfD / 2017

09296307
 
Row of tenement houses in a residential complex, with a green inner courtyard Arthur-Hoffmann-Strasse 122; 124
(map)
1927 (tenement) Plastered facade in Art Deco forms, the tenements Arthur-Hoffmann-Strasse 126/128 and number 132 ff. Destroyed in the war, see also Arthur-Hoffmann-Strasse 130, Richard-Lehmann-Strasse 44-52 and Bernhard-Göring-Strasse 125, of importance in terms of building history and social history 09296333
 
Apartment building in a residential complex, with a front garden and a green inner courtyard Arthur-Hoffmann-Strasse 130
(map)
1927 (tenement) Plastered facade in Art Deco forms, Arthur-Hoffmann-Strasse 126/128 and number 132 ff. Destroyed by the war, see also Arthur-Hoffmann-Strasse 122/124, Richard-Lehmann-Strasse 44-52 and Bernhard-Göring-Strasse 125, of importance in terms of building history and social history 09299395
 
Row of apartment buildings in a residential complex, front gardens in front of No. 145-149 Arthur-Hoffmann-Strasse 139; 141; 143; 145; 147; 149; 151; 153; 155
(card)
1927-1928 (block of flats) together with Richard-Lehmann-Straße 54/56, plastered facade, in the Art Deco style, of architectural significance

Two-wing residential complex with four-storey plastered fronts in a block structure on Arthur-Hoffmann- and Richard-Lehmann-Strasse, built 1927-1928 according to plans by the architect Fritz Riemann for the non-profit civil servants' building cooperative. The elongated main front facing Arthur-Hoffmann-Straße is loosened up by a sequence of two-storey bay windows with stucco ornamentation, a middle rear area raised by a wide triangular gable and two loft extensions above the entrance axes of the projecting components, which are initially located in the rear area. The front facing Richard-Lehmamm-Strasse is also divided by a wide central gable, bay window and single-axis entrance projections with Art Deco decorations. The ground floors were designed with greenery on trellises that still existed in places. The top floor is separated by a narrow cornice. A hipped roof over the main cornice. The entrances with sloping walls or in Art Deco shapes. The floors per entrance with two three- or four-room apartments, the apartment sizes are between 71 and 97 square meters. Only numbers 54 and 56 of the wing to Richard-Lehmann-Strasse are left, numbers 58-62, however, destroyed in the war.

09296382
 
Row of tenement houses in a residential complex, with front yard, garden and fence Arthur-Hoffmann-Strasse 146; 148; 150; 152; 154; 156
(map)
1935-1936 (block of flats) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09299408
 
Shop building in a residential complex Arthur-Hoffmann-Strasse 155a
(map)
1928 (shop) Small grocery store with a flat roof between two rows of houses, important in terms of building history

The small single-storey grocery store between two residential complexes of the non-profit civil servants' building cooperative, probably like this one based on plans by the architect Fritz Riemann. Flat-roofed brick building from 1928.

09296097
 
Row of tenement houses in a residential complex, front gardens in front of No. 163/165 Arthur-Hoffmann-Strasse 157; 159; 161; 163; 165; 173
(map)
1930 (block of flats) forms a residential complex together with Scheffelstrasse 51-57 (Arthur-Hoffmann-Strasse 167/169/171 destroyed by the war), traditionalistic plastered facade, of architectural significance

In 1930, a two-wing residential complex built in the block edge structure at Arthur-Hoffmann-Strasse and Scheffelstrasse, the four-storey buildings plastered with brick plinths and a high basement zone. Like the neighboring complex number 139-155, built according to plans by the architect Fritz Riemann for the non-profit civil servants' building cooperative, its main front facing Arthur-Hoffmann-Straße is designed accordingly with a middle back, protruding side parts and sloping bay windows, but in terms of design by dispensing with Art - Deco shapes simpler. But a rhythm is achieved by changing from wider house sections with and narrower ones without bay windows. The facade design is laid out horizontally with plaster bands and narrow stucco cornices. The hipped roof with massive extensions over the individual house sections. On each floor there are two apartments per entrance, in the wider sections with four, in the narrower sections with three rooms, between 63 square meters for a smaller ground floor apartment and 121 square meters for the largest of the upper floor apartments. Most residential units with approx. 73 square meters. With Scheffelstrasse number 51-57. The sections Arthur-Hoffmann-Strasse number 167-171 were destroyed by the war.

09296096
 
Apartment house in open development and in a corner Arthur-Hoffmann-Strasse 170
(map)
1900-1902 (tenement house) Plastered facade, formerly with a corner store, location: on Wiedebachplatz, of importance in terms of urban planning and building history

The construction of a corner residential building was intended in December 1900 by master mason Hermann Engel in Connewitz and placed in the hands of the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger. In March 1902 the final test of the three-in-hand car with a plastered facade took place. The formerly elegant, multi-part articulated and stucco-adorned design was largely abandoned in its execution; today a largely smooth facade has remained, in particular with artificial stone window frames. A corner tower had been denied by the building authorities at the time. Formerly a laundry room in the basement and until 1973 a shop on the broken corner. Between 1947 and 1951, bomb damage from World War II could be repaired with the reconstruction of the top floor and repairs on the third floor. Building application for renovation and modernization, expansion of the attic to a 5th attic apartment as well as for the construction of a balcony was issued in April 1999 by Noppi GmbH Immobilienbesitz KG from Wiesbaden. The free-standing corner building on the Gründerzeit Schmuckplatz with an important urban function and historical value. LfD / 2011, 2014

09296906
 
Factory building Arthur-Hoffmann-Strasse 175
(map)
1938 (factory) formerly to the factory under Arno-Nitzsche-Straße 19, reinforced concrete skeleton construction with clinker brick facade, with wide windows and rounded building edges, built as a machine factory, later VEB vehicle transmission works "Joliot Curie", of architectural and local significance

New construction of the factory for book printing machines Gustav Eduard Reinhardt, which was previously located at Arndtstrasse 6. The first plans for a three-storey brick-built factory building across the street with a shed roof hall adjoining to the west were made in 1896 by architect August Leonhardt; the implementation took place in 1899 after the plans were revised by the construction company Ohme und Bechert, which was also entrusted with the implementation. 1908 First extension of the factory building and hall by ten axes to the north, a second extension of the factory building by another four axes adjacent to the north took place in 1918. In 1921 the three-storey building was converted to one storey. A two-storey, elongated warehouse building on the right side was built in 1905-1906, also by the company Ohne and Bechert, and was converted into a dining room and cloakroom in 1922. 1910-1911 Construction of a machine house north of the factory building by Ohme and Bechert, the associated Esse from 1923. The street-side administration and factory building was built in 1924-1926 according to plans by the architect Ernst Steinkopf as a four-storey, vertically structured plastered building with natural stone structures, a grooved ground floor and two slightly protruding Side risers. On the middle of the three axes summarizing vertical structures three shell limestone figures depicting Mercury, Johannes Gutenberg and a worker with a compass and gear. The ground floor with the factory hall, which is connected to the shet roof hall from 1899 by a single-storey extension at the rear. The first and second floors contain office and storage rooms. On the top floor, divided by arched windows, there are two apartments for househusband and doorman. After the company premises were expanded to the north, a four-story factory building was built on Scheffelstrasse in 1938, again based on plans by Ernst Steinkopf. The vertically structured brick building with wide windows and a rounded building edge facing Arthur-Hoffmann-Straße contains factory rooms on all floors.

09301927
 
Apartment building in half-open development Arthur-Hoffmann-Strasse 181
(map)
1903 (tenement) Clinker-plaster facade, important in terms of building history

The three houses were built as an assembly in 1902 and 1903 by the master carpenter Robert Klepzig as builder and contractor and the architect Heinrich Lindemann, who was responsible for the design and construction management. Both the design of the facades with plastering, yellow clinker bricks and artificial stone elements as well as the furnishing of the four-storey building with stucco valleys and floor tiles in the entrance areas are uniform. Despite the slightly different building heights, the group of three houses appears uniform through its axial design and central emphasis through a three-axis risalit with a dwelling. In terms of form, the facade shows a restrained Art Nouveau style. In 1903, a garden shed was subsequently applied for and built on the property at Arthur-Hoffmann-Strasse 181; the picturesque half-timbered building with an elevated location and open hall is a rarity. LfD / 2005

09299688
 
Apartment building in closed development Arthur-Hoffmann-Strasse 183
(map)
1902-1903 (tenement house) Plaster and clinker facade, important from an architectural point of view

See under number 181

09299689
 
Apartment building in half-open development Arthur-Hoffmann-Strasse 185
(map)
1902-1903 (tenement house) Clinker-plaster facade, important in terms of building history 09299687
 
Apartment building in closed development Auerbachstrasse 2
(map)
1893 (tenement house) with a shop zone, clinker-plaster facade, of architectural significance

Five-storey tenement house built in 1893 according to plans by the architect August Franke for the animal trader's wife Amalie Geupel on the corner of Wolfgang-Heinze-Straße. Clinker brick building with stucco structure, plastered ground floor and corner area. The corner is highlighted by four-storey bay windows with columns, caryatids and stucco decoration. The ground floor facing Wolfgang-Heinze-Straße with a shop area, the upper floors with two apartments each.

09296652
 
Double tenement house in closed development
Double tenement house in closed development Auerbachstrasse 2a; 2b
(card)
1906-1907 (double tenement house) Typical plaster facade of the time, entrance area with scratch plaster, clinker base, of importance in terms of building history

Two to three-storey double tenement house, built 1906-1907 by the bricklayer foreman Otto Sachse, who was also the client. Sachse had the floor plans drawn up by the architect W. Helmholtz, the facade designs, however, come from his own hand. Plastered buildings with brick bases and stucco decor in Biedermeier Art Nouveau forms. The side panels are increased and the cubature is therefore inconsistent. The roofs over the lower two-story sections were expanded in 1922 (2a) and 1956-1957 (2b). The hallways with stucco decor, two apartments on the floors per semi-detached house.

09296515
 
Double tenement house in closed development Auerbachstrasse 4; 6
(card)
1874 (double tenement house) Clinker-plaster facade, important in terms of building history

The architect Ottomar Jummel and the building contractor Carl Friedrich Thielemann, both of whom are contractors, built a three-storey double apartment building in 1874 with an elongated brick plaster facade and sandstone cornices. The only decoration is round stucco disks under the sills on the second floor. Over the main cornice, two-axis and one-axis roof houses in close rows and rhythmic alternation. The cautiously designed facade looks very modern for the time it was built, due to the alternation of plaster and brick surfaces as well as in the segment-arched frames of the ground floor windows, as they are on the facade of the town hall in Leipzig-Eutritzsch, built in 1887-1888, for the Jummel Delivered plans, occurrences. The innovative character is also evident from the fact that it is the oldest urban-style apartment building that can be dated from the building files in the previously rural-looking development of Connewitz. The floors per semi-detached house with two corridor-type apartments each.

09296675
 
Apartment building in formerly half-open development, with side wing to the courtyard Auerbachstrasse 10
(map)
1895-1896 (tenement house), 1895-1896, side wing (rear building) Clinker brick facade, historically important

Three-storey corner building built between 1895 and 1896 according to plans by the architect Gustav Gehler together with the neighboring corner building at Biedermannstrasse 24, for which Gehler's wife Maria is the owner. In semi-open development with side wings. The first floor plastered, the upper floors clad in clinker with simple stucco structures. The floors with two apartments each.

09295814
 
Apartment building in a residential complex with a green inner courtyard Bernhard-Göring-Strasse 125
(map)
1927 (tenement) Plastered facade in Art Deco forms, with corner shutter, see also Arthur-Hoffmann-Strasse 122/124 and 130 as well as Richard-Lehmann-Strasse 44-52, of architectural and socio-historical importance

see Richard-Lehmann-Straße 44-52

09296332
 
Former orphanage
Former orphanage Bernhard-Göring-Strasse 152
(map)
1901-1902 (orphanage) Elongated building, base, portal and window frames made of Rochlitz porphyry tuff, polygonal staircase tower on the back

Former municipal orphanage, today House of Democracy, 1901-1902 based on plans by city building officer Otto Wilhelm Scharenberg. Four-storey plastered building with quarry stone plinth and divisions made of red sandstone. The broad front is subdivided by two slightly protruding bay windows supported by heavy consoles, above which were originally gable-like roof structures. To loosen up the facade, the windows are put together in pairs or in groups of three. In the center a wide arched portal, which rests on the base zone with decorated fighters. The arch, clad in natural stone, is framed by richly decorated and roughly worked beads. The interior division of the floors into two hips with a central corridor, the stairwell on the back. On the ground floor originally administration, doctor and sick room, music room, study, laundry room and caretaker's apartment. The upper floors formerly with bedrooms, lounges, bathrooms and reading rooms. 70% damaged in the war, it was rebuilt in 1952-1957.

09296452
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Bernhard-Göring-Strasse 154
(map)
1910 (tenement) Plastered facade with two bay windows and balconies, located on Wiedebachplatz, of importance in terms of urban planning and building history

Four-story tenement house built in 1910 according to plans by the architect Theodor George for the master mason Wilhelm Richter. Plastered facade with geometrizing application work, the four outer axes on the left with a broken gable that was subsequently converted into a full storey. In front of the facade there are two sloping bay windows, between which three balconies with wrought iron bars are clamped. The hallway with wall tiles and stucco pilaster strips.

09296451
 
Apartment house in open development and in a corner Bernhard-Göring-Strasse 159
(map)
1903-1904 (tenement house) with corner shop, brick and plaster facade with Art Nouveau stucco decoration and arched portal with rich relief decoration, forms part of the facade facing Wiedebachplatz, of importance in terms of town planning and building history

Four-storey, detached tenement house built between 1903-1904 according to the plans of the architect Ernst Franke, who was also the building contractor, in the corner of Arno-Nitzsche-Strasse. With bay windows, an idiosyncratic corner solution, stucco structures and stucco decor in Art Nouveau forms, richly designed brick building. The corner on the ground floor is chamfered with a bracket supporting the right-angled corner formation from the first and second floors, and from the third floor onwards a recessed polygonal corner tower. Both street fronts with three-axis oriels reduced by one axis on the third floor. The hallway with wall tiles and vertical stucco structure of the walls. Two apartments on each floor, and the ground floor also has a corner store.

09296450
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Bernhard-Göring-Strasse 162
(map)
1897-1898 (tenement house) with shop, yellow-red clinker brick facade with stucco decoration, located on Wiedebachplatz, of importance in terms of urban planning and architectural history

A four-story tenement house from 1897-1898 according to plans by the architect Erhardt Kraus for the master carpenter Robert Klepzig. The three central axes protrude slightly like a risalit. The ground floor with a plaster notch. The upper floors are faced with brick, the three central axes with red, the side axes with yellow clinker. The window frames on the first and second floors feature rich stucco decor in Rococo forms.

09296448
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development and in a corner location Bernhard-Göring-Strasse 164
(map)
1894 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade with stucco structure, located on Wiedebachplatz, of importance in terms of urban planning and building history

The five-story corner building built in 1894 for the contractor Hermann Schellenberger according to plans by the architect Otto Lehmann. A stately, but simply designed building with a chamfered corner, a first floor originally provided with a plaster groove and clinker-clad upper floors with stucco structures. Inside a remarkable three-flight house staircase.

09296449
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Biedermannstrasse 14
(map)
1903 (tenement) with gate passage, clinker brick facade with bay window, historically important

Built in 1904 by the architect Kurt Bergk, who was also the client. The defining element of the four-storey brick facade is the two-axis, strongly protruding central bay. The top floor, originally also with clinker cladding, is now smoothly plastered. On the left side of the courtyard there was a former studio building that was used by the sculptor Oskar Hänsler until 1914 and then by the sculptor and plasterer Oswald Domgall until 1931.

09295953
 
Apartment building in closed development Biedermannstrasse 16
(map)
1898 (tenement) with gate passage, historicizing plastered facade, historically important

Erected in 1898 for master mason Heinrich Walther according to plans by master bricklayer Richard Reinhold. The broad facade of the 4-storey apartment building is rhythmized by the alternation of gabled and just closed windows, the first and second floors are set off by cornices.

09295952
 
Apartment building in closed development Biedermannstrasse 18
(map)
1898-1899 (tenement) historicizing clinker plaster facade, of architectural significance

Erected 1898-1899 according to plans by the architect Otto Lehmann for the building contractor Hermann Liersch, who sold the half-finished shell to the architect Richard Füssel. Simple four-storey facade originally completely clad in clinker. After a fire in 1938, the ground floor and first floor were repaired in 1951, the second and third floors from 1952-1953.

09295951
 
Residential house in semi-open development Biedermannstrasse 19
(map)
1864 (residential building) Plastered facade with sandstone structure and a dwelling in the roof, of architectural historical importance, the street front also has an urban impact as a point de vue of the Herderstrasse leading towards it

Around 1865, like the similarly designed neighboring house number 21, two-storey house built by master carpenter GH Müller. The plastered facade with sandstone structure, the two central axes up to the roof area are solid with triangular gables. The facades changed afterwards through new plastering. The street front with the triangular gable has an urban development effect as a point de vue of the Herderstraße leading towards it.

09296777
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development, with workshop building in the courtyard and front garden Biedermannstrasse 20
(map)
1898 (tenement house), 1898 (side room) Front building with gate passage, plastered facade with stucco structure, of architectural significance

Tenement house built in 1898 by master mason Heinrich Walther. Broad four-storey plastered facade with lion heads above the ground floor windows. The gate passage with stucco ceiling. On the left side in the courtyard is a two-storey workshop building used as a carpentry shop in 1925. LfD / 1993/1998

09295950
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Biedermannstrasse 24
(map)
1896-1897 (tenement house) Corner accentuation through bevelling and tower-like roof attachment, clinker-plaster facade, formerly corner shutter, of historical importance

Erected in 1896 together with the neighboring house at Biedermannstrasse 10 according to plans by the architect Gustav Gehler, while his wife Marie is the owner. Successor building of a residential house with eaves that already existed in 1882. Three-story striking corner building with clinker brick facade, steep roof structure over the chamfered corner. Originally two balconies with baluster parapets on the corner axis. The Fritz Tiefenbach publishing house's print shop was on the ground floor until 1913.

09295949
 
Facades of a tenement house in half-open development Biedermannstrasse 30
(map)
1906 (facade) Clinker plaster facade on the street side, directly next to the Herderplatz located tenement building with street accentuating facade, significant in terms of building history and district development history

A tenement house built in 1906 for the grain merchant Louis Jacob according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger on the property of a residential building that already existed in 1881. Clinker brick facade with restrained, geometrical Art Nouveau ornamentation. In the course of the overall renovation, the building was rescued, but a new staircase was installed, no more original furnishings. LfD / 1993-1997, 2013

09295948
 
Apartment building in closed development Biedermannstrasse 49
(map)
1904 (tenement) Clinker brick facade with stucco decoration, with a wide central bay, important from an architectural point of view

1904 four-storey tenement house built according to plans by the architect Hugo Grasemann for the secretary Karl Döring. Broad clinker brick facade with a wide central bay dominating the closed street front. Two apartments on the ground floor and three apartments on the upper floors. The garage installation in the basement zone from 1927.

09296374
 
Apartment building in closed development Biedermannstrasse 51
(map)
1904 (tenement) Clinker-plaster facade, important in terms of building history

Four-storey tenement house built in 1904 for the Richard Bierbrauer factor according to plans by garrison building inspector Georg Lubowski. The clinker brick facade with simple stucco structure, the ground floor plastered and with grooves. In the central axis the entrance with a round arched portal. Two apartments on each floor.

09295935
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Biedermannstrasse 55
(map)
1904-1905 (tenement house) Plastered facade with geometric decoration in Art Nouveau forms, of importance in terms of building history

According to plans by the architect Max Todt 1904-1905 for the mason foreman and building contractor Karl Geißler built four-storey apartment building in a chamfered corner on Ecksteinstraße. The plastered facades with horizontal stripes, at the entrance and on the parapet of the windows, stucco decor in Art Nouveau forms, with the portal surrounded by two tree trunks with leaves and flowers. The main cornice is supported on the chamfer by two masks. Three apartments on each floor.

09296375
 
Apartment building in closed development Biedermannstrasse 57
(map)
1904 (tenement) Plastered facade with geometric decoration, comb, sprayed and smooth plaster, echoes of Art Nouveau, significant in terms of building history

Numbers 57, 59, 61 and 63: Four four-storey apartment buildings that were built in 1904 according to plans by the garrison building inspector Georg Lubowski on an area that was parceled out for real estate agent Albert Hoffmann the previous year. In the same type as nine- and ten-axis buildings with centrally arranged house corridors and three-span floor plan division of the upper floors, the houses vary in the design of their facades, depending on the respective buyer before construction begins: Number 57 as a plastered building with an Art Nouveau facade designed in various types of plaster and stucco decorations the building contractor's wife Clara Gödicke, number 59 as a plastered building for William Haase with a more strictly structured facade design in Art Nouveau forms by the architect Alwin Hädrich, number 61 as a conventional clinker building for the building contractor's wife Anna Wallenberger, number 63 as a simple plastered building with stucco structures for the bricklayers Karl and Richard Börner . Number 61 1994 plastered in a disfiguring manner with removal of the clinker facing.

09296376
 
Apartment building in closed development Biedermannstrasse 58
(map)
1876 ​​(tenement house) Plastered facade, stairwell window with etched glazing, of architectural significance

On the property of master baker Friedrich Johann Heisinger, the single-storey craftsman's house typical of the Leipzig suburb of Connewitz was to be demolished and replaced by a new three-storey residential building. The plan was to have a bakery on the ground floor with an adjoining apartment and shop as well as access from the street, while the house entrance was to be from the courtyard. The plans of master bricklayer Karl Steitmann did not come to fruition and instead a bakery was built into the small plastered house in 1867. In February 1876, master basket maker Friedrich Carl Beyer (also: Carl Friedrich Beyer) intended to build an apartment building over the entire width of the property on the grounds that “my house had become dilapidated”. Wilhelm Knittel from Connewitz provided the plans for the pair with an extended mansard floor, which was completed in the same year. The building, plastered over quarry stone plinth, shows as a link the structural development of the district development from the early craftsmen's houses (received number 62) to the effective apartment house facades from Historicism and Art Nouveau on the opposite side of the street, which is historically significant. LfD / 2012

09299241
 
Apartment building in closed development Biedermannstrasse 59
(map)
1904-1905 (tenement house) Plastered facade with geometric plaster decoration, stylistically between historicism and art nouveau, important in terms of building history

Numbers 57, 59, 61 and 63: Four four-storey apartment buildings that were built in 1904 according to plans by the garrison building inspector Georg Lubowski on an area that was parceled out for real estate agent Albert Hoffmann the previous year. In the same type as nine- and ten-axis buildings with centrally arranged house corridors and three-span floor plan division of the upper floors, the houses vary in the design of their facades, depending on the respective buyer before construction begins: Number 57 as a plastered building with an Art Nouveau facade designed in various types of plaster and stucco decorations the building contractor's wife Clara Gödicke, number 59 as a plastered building for William Haase with a more strictly structured facade design in Art Nouveau forms by the architect Alwin Hädrich, number 61 as a conventional clinker building for the building contractor's wife Anna Wallenberger, number 63 as a simple plastered building with stucco structures for the bricklayers Karl and Richard Börner . Number 61 1994 plastered in a disfiguring manner with removal of the clinker facing.

09296371
 
Apartment building in closed development Biedermannstrasse 61
(map)
1904 (tenement) Formerly clinker brick facade with stucco decoration (today plastered), historicizing facade, of architectural significance

Numbers 57, 59, 61 and 63: Four four-storey apartment buildings that were built in 1904 according to plans by the garrison building inspector Georg Lubowski on an area that was parceled out for real estate agent Albert Hoffmann the previous year. In the same type as nine- and ten-axis buildings with centrally arranged house corridors and three-span floor plan division of the upper floors, the houses vary in the design of their facades, depending on the respective buyer before construction begins: Number 57 as a plastered building with an Art Nouveau facade designed in various types of plaster and stucco decorations the building contractor's wife Clara Gödicke, number 59 as a plastered building for William Haase with a more strictly structured facade design in Art Nouveau forms by the architect Alwin Hädrich, number 61 as a conventional clinker building for the building contractor's wife Anna Wallenberger, number 63 as a simple plastered building with stucco structures for the bricklayers Karl and Richard Börner . Number 61 1994 plastered in a disfiguring manner with removal of the clinker facing.

09296372
 
Residential house in open development, with enclosure
Residential house in open development, with enclosure Biedermannstrasse 62
(map)
around 1860 (residential building) single-storey building with plastered facade, one of the latest farmhouses in Connewitz; Significant in terms of building history and site development

Easily built farmhouse built around 1860, plastered brick building with a crooked hip roof and roof houses, a wooden picket fence as an enclosure

09295936
 
Apartment building in closed development Biedermannstrasse 63
(map)
1904 (tenement) historicizing plastered facade with stucco decoration, of architectural significance

Numbers 57, 59, 61 and 63: Four four-storey apartment buildings that were built in 1904 according to plans by the garrison building inspector Georg Lubowski on an area that was parceled out for real estate agent Albert Hoffmann the previous year. In the same type as nine- and ten-axis buildings with centrally arranged house corridors and three-span floor plan division of the upper floors, the houses vary in the design of their facades, depending on the respective buyer before construction begins: Number 57 as a plastered building with an Art Nouveau facade designed in various types of plaster and stucco decorations the building contractor's wife Clara Gödicke, number 59 as a plastered building for William Haase with a more strictly structured facade design in Art Nouveau forms by the architect Alwin Hädrich, number 61 as a conventional clinker building for the building contractor's wife Anna Wallenberger, number 63 as a simple plastered building with stucco structures for the bricklayers Karl and Richard Börner . Number 61 1994 plastered in a disfiguring manner with removal of the clinker facing.

09296373
 
Apartment building in closed development Biedermannstrasse 68
(map)
1907 (tenement) Typical plaster facade of the time, of architectural significance

1907 four-storey tenement house built according to plans by the architect Hugo Grasemann for master bricklayer Louis Regel. Plastered facade on a high basement with grooves, stucco structures and restrained stucco decor. The upper floors at the rear between the two slightly protruding side projections with vertical structure. The hallway with stucco decorations and vestibule door, two apartments on each floor.

09295937
 
Apartment building in closed development Biedermannstrasse 70
(map)
1908 (tenement) historicizing plastered facade, of architectural significance

Four-story tenement house built in 1908 according to plans by the architect Ludwig Paul for the model maker Oswald Ferdinand Hündorf. Plastered building with stucco structure, the ground floor grooved. The facade with simplified plastering. The hallway contains ornamental tiles and a stucco ceiling, two apartments on each floor.

09295938
 
Apartment building in closed development Biedermannstrasse 72
(map)
1907 (tenement) Clinker-plaster facade, important in terms of building history

Four-story tenement house built in 1907 for the property owner Julie Kunstmann according to plans by the architect Hugo Grasemann. Above a high basement with plaster grooves and embossed edges, there is also a ground floor with plaster grooves. Above that, the clinker-clad upper floors with stucco structures and roughened plaster fields below the sills. The upper floors with two apartments each. 1924 Conversion of the doorway to a hallway through the installation of a living room in the rear part. Including a remarkable front door in curved shapes based on Art Nouveau.

09295939
 
Apartment building in half-open development Biedermannstrasse 74
(map)
1910-1911 (tenement house) Broad plastered facade, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history

1910-1911 instead of a courtyard from the 1830s according to plans by architect Ludwig Paul, who was also the client, built four-storey tenement house. The plaster facade, which is broadly supported by eleven axes, is subdivided vertically by slightly protruding side projections with grooves and the central axis that only protrudes on the upper floors. The ground floor also with grooves, the hallway with wall tiles and coffered barrel vault. Two apartments on each floor.

09295940
 
Residential house in open development Biedermannstrasse 80
(map)
Mid 19th century (farmhouse) Single-storey plastered building with a gable roof facing the street, a remarkable building as part of the old local development

Single-storey farmhouse from the middle of the 19th century with a later roof extension. Plastered brick building with a gable roof. A stable building (demolished in 2013), renovation 2014-2015, is attached to the rear gable side. LfD / 2014

09295941
 
Apartment building in closed development Biedermannstrasse 81
(map)
1929-1930 (tenement) Typical plaster clinker facade of the time, high clinker base with garages, house entrance with profiled clinker frame, two bay windows with wide profiled clinker strip, stepped gable, historically important

Three-storey apartment building, which was built in 1929-1930 according to plans by the architect Arthur Seifert for master locksmith Richard Rauber. Plastered facade with a high brick base and two oriels with wide, profiled brick bands. The two axes on the right are solid up to the roof area with a stepped gable, to the left of which a later roof extension. In the base zone the hallway and three garages, the floors as well as the top floor with two apartments each. With its cubic forms and the material justice of the brick surfaces, alternating with a high-grade plaster, it is a characteristic residential building from the late 1920s.

09296370
 
Double apartment building in closed development, with wash house in the courtyard of No. 85 Biedermannstrasse 83; 85
(card)
1912 (double tenement house) with gate passage, plastered facade, baroque reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history

Three-storey double tenement house built according to plans by the architect and builder Willy Schmidt for master butcher Oswald Walther. The plastered facade with a high grooved base zone, the horizontal structures and eaves due to the rise in Biedermannstrasse do not run across both semi-detached houses, but are mutually offset. The three abutting axes of each half up to the roof area are massive and crowned by a distinctive high triangular gable on a curved substructure, in the area of ​​the upper floors with plaster framing and small application work. The two entrances are designed as portals in Baroque forms, with a garage entrance on each side. Two apartments on each floor in each semi-detached house.

09296734
 
Hospital building with terraces
Hospital building with terraces Biedermannstrasse 84
(map)
1930-1931 (hospital complex), 1931 (mural) Two-hipped three-wing system in the horizontal type, plastered facade with brick structure, ceramic decorative wall in the stairwell, ensemble with the neighboring Bonifatius Church including the associated garden, echoes of the modern style, of importance in terms of building history and local history

St. Elisabeth Hospital, built 1930-1931 on behalf of the Catholic Church Fellowship of St. Trinity according to plans by the architect Paul Fischer from Halle on the rear part of a garden area that originally belonged to the Prinz-Eugen-Straße 21 summer villa. Due to differences between the architect and the chief physician, the former Leipzig city building officer Hubert Ritter took over the construction management after completion of the shell, who made only minor changes to Fischer's plans with regard to the interior layout of the attic. Two-storey three-wing building that forms an ensemble with the rotunda of the neighboring Bonifatiuskirche. Due to the three-winged side wings, the elongated, north-facing main front is subdivided by flanking porches. The facade with roughened scratch plaster, so-called Munich historical rough plaster, which was applied in correspondence with the Bonifatiuskirche under the influence of the architect Theo Burlage who worked there. The ribbon windows combined with clinker facings stand out from these plastered surfaces, as does the surrounding clinker base. On the fronts of the side wings, storeys and attic with sunbathing terraces, which are divided into two sections by staircase projections. The steep hipped roof, slightly bent over the eaves, with flat roof houses and massive roof extensions over the middle sections of the building fronts. Due to the two-sided interior division with a central corridor and the broad positioning of the structure, the building can be assigned to the horizontal hospital type, in which examination, treatment and care are located on the same level. The two floors therefore each contain four stations with the associated treatment rooms, laboratories and operating theaters, while the supply rooms such as laundry, kitchen, bakery, pharmacy and surgical workshop are housed in the basement and the nurses' rooms, along with other hospital rooms and storage rooms, are located in the attic. In the entrance area, a decorative ceramic wall designed by the artist Alfred Burges with scenes from the life of St. Elisabeth. In front of the main facade, the driveway designed as a spacious bricked-in terrace with a large oval border. Adjacent to the west is an associated park area with old trees. On Biedermannstrasse a porter's house with a folded tent roof, 1934 based on plans by Hubert Ritter.

09296484
 
Catholic parish church (with equipment)
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Catholic parish church (with equipment) Biedermannstrasse 86
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1929–1930 (church); 1935 (organ) Erected as a war memorial church of the Association of Catholic Commercial Associations in Germany, a central building, entrance front with a large rose window and a three-part portal, the tower on a square floor plan to the side of the choir, plastered facade with brick structure, original interior fittings including glass windows, larger-than-life crucifix, baptismal font and brick-walled passageways and baptistery with terracotta figures, architect: Theo Burlage, of importance in terms of art history, architectural history and local history

Merchant Memorial Church of St. Boniface. Roman-Catholic parish church for the south of Leipzig, built after a decision of the Association of Catholic Merchants' Associations of Germany (KKV) in 1924 to build a central memorial church in Leipzig for the 1,500 Catholic merchants who died in the First World War. As early as 1903, the Catholics in the south of Leipzig had come together to form a Hubertus Conference with the aim of building a parish church. In 1926, the KKV acquired the villa property at Prinz-Eugen-Straße 21, whose spacious garden area offered sufficient building space. From the 240 designs submitted for the 1928 competition, the KKV decided on the third place entry, the design "Two Victims" by the Osnabrück architect Theo Burlage. The execution took place in the years 1929-1930. In 1932 a fence was added to Biedermannstrasse, and between 1968 and 1969 the altar area and the memorial chapel were redesigned. Burlage's design, which placed the sacrificial death of Christ in relation to the sacrificial death of the fallen merchants, as a round building with the three-wing complex of the St. Elisabeth Hospital inaugurated in 1931, with an entrance portico and attached tower. The building made of bricks with "Munich historical rough plaster", a rough scratch plaster characteristic of the 1920s, economical clinker facing on portals and windows as well as cornices in brick shell. The roof as a self-supporting steel truss construction, the inner dome from Rabitz. Around the round main room there is a lower room layer, which contains the sacristy and parament chamber behind the altar area and chapels to the side. On the main front facing Biedermannstrasse, the ring runs up to the ridge height as a portico with three round portals and a large round window with a diameter of four meters. In the portico there is a vestibule, above it the organ gallery. Cut into the ring to the left of the altar area and, due to its curvature, positioned at an attractive incline to the portico, the approximately 27.5 meter high angular tower, the ground floor of which contains the memorial chapel for the fallen merchants. The connection between the altar zone and the chapel, the two room areas that thematize the two victims, is a passage divided by twelve-meter-high clinker pillars. On the pillars on brackets, twelve terracotta figures created by the Frankfurt artists Alfred Burges and Wolfdietrich Stein with reference to the victim theme: in in the lower zone the Old Testament models of the Eucharistic sacrifice, above four ancient church martyrs, in the upper zone four medieval and modern saints. Originally a large reclining figure of the dead warrior in the memorial chapel, which was lowered under the floor in 1967/1968. The baptistery to the right of the altar area is located in the surrounding ring with access from the main room, also subdivided by clinker supports. Above this four terracotta figures of the evangelists by the same artists. All that remains of the original colored glazing is the large round window in the portico, showing Saint Boniface, designed by Theo Maria Landmann. High altar, St. Mary's altar and the non-preserved St. Boniface altar with clinker sticks and sandstone canteens, of the Boniface altar there is a terracotta figure of the saint. Behind the high altar, which was pulled forward during the redesign, on the wall is an approx. 6.5 meter large carved wood crucifix. The brass tabernacle with a redesigned clinker brick frame was moved to the memorial chapel in 1967/1968. In the baptistery the baptismal font as a cube made of clinker on a square pament. The organ built in 1935 by the Jehmlich company was created shortly after the First World War for the Andreas Church in Dresden. Dating 1929-1930 (church), 1930 (Joseph Bell)

09296485
 
Apartment building in closed development Biedermannstrasse 87
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1912 (tenement) Plastered building with a high brick base, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history

Three-story tenement house built in 1912 for Anna Köhler according to plans by master builder Arthur Wilke. Plastered facade with high tile base, the two central axes up to the roof area are solid with triangular gables. One apartment on each floor. Kitchen exits on the back.

09296789
 
Apartment building in closed development Biedermannstrasse 89
(map)
1912-1913 (tenement house) Plastered facade, reform style architecture, important in terms of building history

Three-story tenement house built in 1912-1913 for master mason Oscar Hochmuth according to plans by the architect Karl Voigt. Plastered building with the middle section protruding slightly on the upper floors and raised side axes crowned by a triangular gable. Formerly brick-faced base zone. The hallway with stucco decor and stucco ceiling. Two apartments on each floor. Kitchen exits on the back.

09296018
 
Apartment building in closed development and wash house in the left side building Biedermannstrasse 93
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1888 (tenement house) Apartment building with a passage, historicist plastered facade, one of the first buildings of urban character in the village of Connewitz, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history

The three-storey tenement house built in 1888 by the carpenter Wilhelm Schade, who was also responsible as the client, was one of the first buildings of urban character in the southern section of Biedermannstrasse, which was still predominantly farmstead. The plastered facade with stucco structures, the ground floor grooved. The facade originally planned with a gable top containing a clock. A woman's mask over the gate passage, the passage itself with wooden panels. Two apartments on each floor. The courtyard with the wash house as the left side building.

09296017
 
Apartment building in closed development Biedermannstrasse 95
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1937-1938 (tenement) Plastered facade, formerly with clinker brick structure, echoes of the modern style, significant in terms of building history

Instead of a two-storey residential building from 1894, the builder Erich Boragk, who was also the building contractor and construction lawyer at the University Building Office in Königsberg, built the three-storey apartment building from 1937-1938. The cubic structure with a high brick base, brick-clad balconies protruding from deep loggias and a massive central roof extension. The unusual and original interior layout with two semicircular staircases, accessible from a central entrance in the base area and housed in light shafts, around which four apartments are grouped on each floor. The façade design, which is typical of the time due to the alternation of brick and plastered areas and which refers to the building opposite of the St. Elisabeth Hospital, changed in 1992/1993 through complete plastering.

09296019
 
Residential building Biedermannstrasse 105
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around 1860 (residential building) old location Connewitz, two-storey plastered building with a crooked hip roof, one of the last examples of the former village development in Connewitz, of architectural significance

House built around 1860 which, despite its small size, originally contained four apartments. In terms of cubature, roof shape, window layout and window shapes, it gives a good impression of a workers' house from the early days of industrialization.

09296016
 
Apartment building in half-open development Biedermannstrasse 107
(map)
1901-1902 (tenement house) historicizing clinker brick facade, of architectural significance

Numbers 107 and 109: Two three-storey tenement houses built between 1901-1902 and the adjacent development on Probstheidaer Straße 7-11 according to plans by architect Heinrich Lindemann for master carpenter Robert Klepzig. Number 107 is a narrow clinker brick building with an embossed base, color-contrasting decor with clinker facing and side loggias. Number 109 is a chamfered corner building with a plastered and grooved ground floor and clinker-clad upper floors with stucco structures and vertical plaster strips. The entrances to both houses are portal-like with flanking pilasters and triangular gables. In number 107 one apartment per floor, in number 109 the first floor originally with a corner store, the upper floors with three apartments each.

09296015
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Biedermannstrasse 109
(map)
1901-1902 (tenement house) with shop formerly also with corner shop, clinker brick facade, plastering on the ground floor, of importance in terms of building history

Numbers 107 and 109: Two three-storey tenement houses built between 1901-1902 and the adjacent development on Probstheidaer Straße 7-11 according to plans by architect Heinrich Lindemann for master carpenter Robert Klepzig. Number 107 is a narrow clinker brick building with an embossed base, color-contrasting decor with clinker facing and side loggias. Number 109 is a chamfered corner building with a plastered and grooved ground floor and clinker-clad upper floors with stucco structures and vertical plaster strips. The entrances to both houses are portal-like with flanking pilasters and triangular gables. In number 107 one apartment per floor, in number 109 the first floor originally with a corner store, the upper floors with three apartments each.

09296369
 
Plaza Bornaische Strasse -
(map)
around 1895 (square) Small green space between Wiedebachstraße, Bernhard-Göring-Straße and Bornaische Straße, of importance in terms of local development and urban green history 09299147
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Bornaische Strasse 1
(map)
1896 (tenement) with gate passage and shop, clinker brick facade with stucco structures, of architectural significance

Four-story tenement house built in 1896 according to plans by the architect Otto Lehmann for the contractor Hermann Schellenberger. The ground floor plastered and formerly grooved, the upper floors clad in clinker with stucco structure. On the right a two-axis side elevation with square edges, which is crowned in the roof area by a neo-renaissance gable. There is a shop and an apartment on the ground floor and two apartments on each of the upper floors.

09296345
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Bornaische Strasse 3a
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marked 1911 (tenement) with a shop zone, plastered facade with two bay windows, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history

Three-storey residential and commercial building with a plastered facade and two beveled oriels built in 1911 by the building contractor Karl Wolny. Small bas-reliefs as application work under the sills of the central window axes, and a grooved cornice to complete the facade. There are two spacious apartments with bathrooms on each of the upper floors. A two-storey workshop building that was partially destroyed during the war and rebuilt in 1946 was used by the FF Schulze & Co. OHG tool factory in 1919.

09296344
 
Apartment building in closed development Bornaische Strasse 3c
(map)
1911-1912 (tenement) with a shop zone, plastered facade with two bay windows, in the courtyard the former cinema "Centraltheater", reform style architecture, of historical importance

The four-storey residential and commercial building was built in 1911-1912 according to plans by the architect Artur Werner, who, together with the master bricklayer Hermann Kühnast, also appears as the client. The ground floor with the shop zone, the plastered facade is structured on the upper floors by two sloping bay windows with balcony and roof attachments and under the sills of the windows on the third floor by a double cornice. The four left axes are massive in the roof area and end with a curved gable. There is an attic apartment here, while the upper floors each contain two spacious apartments with bathrooms. The hallway has the original furnishings with wall tiles and a barrel vault with flat stucco bands. Since its completion in 1912, a single-storey rear building that no longer exists has contained a cinematograph theater, which, like the one that opened in the same year in Pegauer Strasse (Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse 12), was operated by UT Lichtspiele CT Connewitz. LfD / 1998

09296342
 
Hand lever pump with well shaft and cover plate
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Hand lever pump with well shaft and cover plate Bornaische Straße 3c (in front)
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1914 (manual pump) Big lion type, of local history

Cast-iron hand pump of the type Großer Löwe before number 3c. After 1910.

09296343
 
Apartment building in closed development Bornaische Strasse 3d
(map)
1911-1912 (tenement) with gate passage and shops, plastered facade emphasized in the center, reform style architecture, relevance to building history in the closed ensemble of a significant local exit road

On the property of a demolished steam sawmill, building contractor Karl Wolny from Wahren initiated the construction of a residential building and a two-storey rear building from 1911-1912 and also took on the execution, structural calculations and construction management himself. Façade and floor plan drawings by architect Willy Voigt, who designed plans for the neighboring building number 3e as a sibling house. While three apartments could be rented on each of the upper floors, but only one with a bathroom / toilet, there were two retail apartments and the passage on the ground floor. The representative reform style facade with three-axis broken gable, noble plaster and a few artificial stone molded parts. 1928 Extension of the living space in the attic under the direction of the client Otto Gogisch. 1993 Modernization and redevelopment application with the project of a further loft extension for client Brigitte Scholze. The courtyard building was translated in 1924 and was to be demolished in 1947 because of the severe damage caused by air raids. Numerous different trades on the property, including Armer & Co (Saxonia shoe polish factory), the blind factory Franz Ernst Kling, butcher shop of butcher Arthur Beschnidt, building locksmith and roller shutter factory Ernst Illing, Fa. Schuhmann & Röhl as well as Tonofax Companie and finally the consumer cooperative Leipzig -Sudated architectural historical relevance in the closed ensemble of a significant local emergency road. LfD / 2012

09292917
 
Apartment building in closed development Bornaische Strasse 3e
(map)
1911-1912 (tenement) Plastered building as a sibling house with number 3d and a shop area, reform style architecture, historically interesting rental apartment building in a closed ensemble

Four-storey residential and commercial building built between 1911 and 1912 according to plans by the architect Willy Voigt for the bricklayer foreman Albert Peter with a continuous shop area and a broad plastered facade. The dominant motif of the facade is the broken central gable, which spans the three central axes, which are massive up to the top floor. The facade has a restrained design with ornamental and figural bas-reliefs under the windows, plant-based stucco decoration in the gable, a rough plaster strip that overlaps the windows on the third floor and the raised axes are bordered by pilaster strips. The building contains three generously sized apartments with bathrooms on each upper floor. The roof extension on the right half of the building took place in 1921.

09296341
 
Apartment building in closed development and workshop building and garage in the courtyard Bornaische Strasse 5
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1897-1898 (tenement house) Front building with passage, clinker brick facade with stucco structuring, of architectural significance

The four-story tenement house was built in 1897-1898 by the carpenter Friedrich Ernst Strieder. Well-preserved clinker brick facade with a brick base and a ground floor with plaster jointing. Remarkable stucco work modeled in small pieces on the window canopies, as cartouches over the ground floor windows and as women's heads with tendrils over the windows on the first and second floors, which are also covered by brick arches. A workshop in the courtyard was used as a lithographic printing shop in 1899 and as a book printing shop in 1904.

09296340
 
Apartment building in half-open development Bornaische Strasse 6
(map)
1891 (tenement house) with shop, historicizing clinker brick facade, historically important

The four-storey apartment building was built in 1891 for the builders Emil Peters and Paul Straßberger according to plans by the architects Rudolf Hoffmann and Ludwig Taummler on a relatively narrow, as yet undeveloped parcel between the two pre-founding neighboring properties. Above the plastered ground floor a clinker brick facade with structures and a stucco garland frieze under the cornice. Each of the upper floors is occupied by an apartment.

09295974
 
Residential house in a formerly closed development Bornaische Strasse 8
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1865 (residential building) Biedermeier house, plastered facade, of importance in terms of local development and building history

Two-storey Biedermeier residential building on the eaves, which was built in 1865 by master bricklayer Gotthelf Hartung for Carl Brückner. Plastered facade with sandstone structures, the central axes up to the roof area are solid with triangular gables.

09295975
 
Apartment house in a formerly closed development in a corner Bornaische Strasse 9
(map)
1892-1893 (tenement house) with gate passage, clinker brick facade typical of the time with stucco structures, of architectural significance

The stately five-storey chamfered corner building was built in 1892-1893 according to plans by the master builder W. Kubasch for the contractor Hermann Schellenberger. Clinker brick building with simple stucco structures, the ground floor zone with shops on Bornaische Strasse and apartments on Bernhard-Göring-Strasse. In 1910 a corner shop was installed and in 1913 the older shops were lowered to street level.

09296339
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Bornaische Strasse 11
(map)
1896-1898 (tenement house) with a shop zone, brick facade with plastered corner projections, of architectural significance

Five-storey corner building built in 1896-1898 for the building contractor Otto Hartmann according to plans by the architect Richard Müller. Stately clinker brick building with chamfering, grooved ground floor and simple structures. The ground floor as a shopping area with three shops and three shop apartments, the upper floors with three apartments each on the first and second and four on the third and fourth floors. There is a remarkable three-flight house staircase in the stairwell.

09296346
 
Apartment building in closed development
Apartment building in closed development Bornaische Strasse 13
(map)
1897-1898 (tenement house) with shops, clinker brick facade with stucco structures, of importance in terms of building history

With number 15: Two four-story tenement houses built between 1897 and 1898 according to plans by the architect Albert Wolf for the wagon owner Robert Geißler. Clinker buildings with stucco structures, the two outer axes protruding on both sides like risalit. The plastered ground floor of number 13 originally with a groove, in the recessed middle section, flanking the central entrance on the right and left, there are two shops. At number 15, the ground floor has been preserved, in the left there is a gate passage. The entire first floor in number 13 is taken up by a single apartment originally occupied by the client, while the two floors above, as well as the upper floors of number 15, have the common three-span floor plan type. In the courtyard of number 15 there is a two-storey, two-winged rear building, which originally served as a stable to house 26 horses.

09296347
 
Apartment building in closed development, with two-wing courtyard building and courtyard paving
Apartment building in closed development, with two-wing courtyard building and courtyard paving Bornaische Strasse 15
(map)
1897 (tenement) Front building with gate passage, clinker brick facade with strong plastic stucco structure, rear building formerly a stable with wash house, of architectural significance

s. Number 13

09296348
 
Apartment building in closed development
Apartment building in closed development Bornaische Strasse 17
(map)
1897-1898 (tenement house) with shop area and gate passage, multi-colored clinker brick facade with stucco structure

Wide-spread four-storey apartment building, which was built in 1897-1898 for the managing director Carl Bock according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger. The ground floor, which has now been smoothed, was previously grooved, the upper floors clad in clinker. With the simple row of windows and the sleek structure, the facade is designed much more modestly than the tenement houses at Pfeffinger Strasse 20 and 22 designed by Gerstenberger for Carl Bock at the same time. Only the central axis is accentuated by an attached roof house.

09296349
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Bornaische Strasse 21
(map)
1896-1897 (tenement house) with shops, plaster clinker facade with stucco structures, of importance in terms of urban planning and building history

Four-storey corner building built in 1896-1897 by master bricklayer Hermann Engel, which, due to the acute angle at which Stockartstrasse meets Bornaische Strasse, almost looks like a front building. Above the ground floor there is an entresol, the plaster grooves of which have the same structure as the ground floor, which is now smoothly plastered. The two-axis chamfered corner, the axes flanking it and the middle compartments on both street fronts slightly protruding with plastering and rocaille-like decor, the upper floors otherwise clad in clinker brick with stucco structure. In 1905 the already existing corner shop was enlarged and three more shops were installed.

09296325
 
Apartment building in closed development and workshop building in the courtyard
Apartment building in closed development and workshop building in the courtyard Bornaische Strasse 23
(map)
1895 (tenement), 1895 (workshop) Front building with passage and shops, clinker brick facade with stucco structures and side elevations with Hermes pilasters, of architectural significance

Five-storey tenement house built in 1895 according to plans by the architect August Franke for the innkeeper Eduard Metzner. Clinker brick building with stucco structures, the two outer axes slightly protruding on both sides with Hermen pilasters, roof houses above. The first floor originally with plaster. Shop fittings were installed in 1909 and 1924. LfD / 1998

09296326
 
Apartment building in closed development Bornaische Strasse 24
(map)
1911 (tenement) with passage through the house and shop, plastered facade with two bay windows, reform style architecture, historically important

In place of a residential building presumably from the 1860s, the four-storey apartment building was built in 1911 according to plans by the architect Ludwig Paul for the master mason Louis Regel. Compared to the neighboring development to the south, it looks quite stately due to its steep roof pitch. Relatively simple plastered facade with two beveled bay windows, the front sides of which are decorated with small-format application work in stucco.

09295977
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Bornaische Strasse 25
(map)
1892-1893 (tenement house) with gate passage, clinker brick facade with stucco structures, of architectural significance

The five-story chamfered corner building was built in 1892-1893 by the master carpenter Louis Rossberger for the innkeeper Eduard Metzner. Plain clinker brick building with simple structures and plastered and grooved ground floor. The ground floor contains a restaurant that was expanded in 1900.

09296327
 
Apartment building in closed development Bornaische Strasse 26
(map)
1903-1904 (tenement house) with two shops and a gate passage, clinker-plaster facade, historically important

1903-1904 based on plans by the architect Emil Franke for the master mason Louis Regel, which extends with its elongated front over the area of ​​a residential house built in 1859 and demolished in 1903 as well as the remaining vacant property to the south. The plastered and grooved ground floor contains a shop with a shop flat on both sides of a portal-like entrance and a passage to the side. Above that, the upper floors with clinker facing and stucco divisions as well as a highlighting of the two outer axes on both sides, on the left with plaster grooves and pilaster framing, on the right with overlay arches. The floor plans of the upper floors are laid out in three parts.

09295978
 
Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner
Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner Bornaische Strasse 27
(map)
marked 1898 (tenement house) Formerly with corner shutter, clinker brick facade with stucco structure, corner accentuation through wide sloping corners with large volute gables and wrought iron balconies, used for a time by the council of the southern district, of importance in terms of town planning, building history and local history

Representative four-storey corner building, erected in the upside-down position due to the acute confluence of Stockartstrasse, which was built in 1898 for the innkeeper Eduard Metzner according to plans by the architect Gustav Franke. The main front of the clinker building faces the intersection as a four-axis bevel and is crowned by a wide renaissance gable with volutes, a coupled window, a blendoculus in the upper gable field, a coat of arms, the year and a round-arched closure pierced by a vase. On the two street fronts, two further gables in Renaissance shapes correspond to the end of the slightly protruding side compartments on the upper floors, while the roof space in between is filled by roof houses in an axial row. Originally there were two shops on the ground floor, which was provided with plastering.

09296328
 
Apartment building in closed development
Apartment building in closed development Bornaische Strasse 29
(map)
1897-1898 (tenement house) with a shop, clinker brick facade with stucco structure, important in terms of building history

1897-1898 based on plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the master bricklayer Hermann Engel, a four-storey tenement house with a plastered and formerly grooved ground floor and clinker-clad upper floors. Two slightly protruding risalits on both sides with baroque stucco structures and gables.

09296334
 
Apartment building in closed development
Apartment building in closed development Bornaische Strasse 30
(map)
1904-1905 (tenement house) with shops, plastered facade with finely divided stucco decor, important in terms of building history

After the demolition of the previous building from 1859, an eaves-facing double residential building, the building contractor Robert Laue built the four-story tenement house for the merchant Arthur Sens from 1904-1905. The plastered facade with fine stucco decoration on the second and third floors in bas-relief under the sills as well as garland and rocailles decorations on two slightly protruding compartments caught by wing masks. The ground floor, which is now tiled, was originally provided with a plaster groove. The hallway equipment with ornamental tiles, wall tiles, stucco decoration and stucco ceiling. Three-horse floor plans on the upper floors.

09295979
 
Apartment building in closed development, with workshop building in the courtyard
Apartment building in closed development, with workshop building in the courtyard Bornaische Strasse 31
(map)
1898 (tenement) Front building with gate passage and shop zone, clinker brick facade with stucco structure, courtyard building at times Galerie Eigen + Art, of local and architectural significance

The four-storey apartment building, built in 1898 by the building contractor Hermann Döge for the owner of a molding shop Hermann Lönicker, is based on the cubature and structure of the neighboring house number 29, which was started three months earlier, in particular in the use of straight gables with coupled windows above the slightly protruding sides Risalits. As there, the gables used to have attachments here, on the left with the initials of Lönickers, on the right with the year 1898. However, in contrast to the neighboring house, the use of stucco was largely dispensed with; rather, the upper floor windows were covered with brick arches Options for clinker facing are taken into account. The rear building in the courtyard is a two-storey workshop built at the same time as the front building, in which Lönicker operated his engraving shop for printing rollers and molds.

09296335
 
Apartment building in closed development, with courtyard paving
Apartment building in closed development, with courtyard paving Bornaische Strasse 33
(map)
1898-1899 (tenement) with gate passage and shop area, clinker brick facade with stucco structures, of architectural significance

Four-story tenement house built between 1898 and 1899 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the master mason Hermann Engel. The ground floor is designed as a shopping area with a gate passage and separated from the clinker-clad upper floors by a wide cornice. The separation of business and living areas is also emphasized by the fact that the three-dimensional formation of the facade by protruding middle and side compartments only occurs above the cornice that closes the shop area. Im being performed. In the roof area, on the other hand, this division is taken up in the staggering of a higher middle and two lower roof houses on each side, which are framed by two massive, richly decorated gables with coupled windows over the side compartments.

09296336
 
Apartment building in closed development and workshop building in the courtyard
Apartment building in closed development and workshop building in the courtyard Bornaische Strasse 35
(map)
1898-1899 (tenement house), 1901-1902 (workshop) Front building with shops and gate passage, clinker brick facade with stucco structures, historically important

The four-story tenement house was built in 1898-1899 for the civil engineering contractor Franz Heinrich Trommer according to plans by the architect August Franke. Clinker brick structure with stucco structure and emphasis on the center with slightly protruding two-axis center risalits with a gate entrance and Renaissance gable. The ground floor plastered and grooved, recently changed in the left half of the building by disfiguring tile cladding. In the courtyard there is a two-storey rear building with workshops, built between 1901 and 1902 according to plans by the same architect, which can be proven to have been used in 1903 for the manufacture of electrical lighting and power systems (Schubert and Co.).

09296337
 
Apartment building in closed development
Apartment building in closed development Bornaische Strasse 36
(map)
1886-1887 (tenement house) with shop, plastered facade with a strict structure, link between the pre-Wilhelminian craftsmen's houses and the apartment buildings of historicism, historically important

On a narrow, irregular plot of land, bricklayer Johann Gottlieb Beeger, in collaboration with master carpenter Wenzel, built a four-storey residential building with a passage, a flat sloping roof and a simple plastered facade with a strict structure. When it was built from 1886 to 1887, a small front garden was added to the complex. Shortly before the house was completed, bricklayer Heinrich Richard Beeger applied for a shop to be set up, which in 1904 was given a larger shop window on the initiative of hairdresser Robert Geißler. On the upper floors there are two small apartments each with a living room, kitchen and one or two chambers, in the courtyard a wash house and private building. It was not until 1938 that a lavatory was installed on the ground floor, which could be used by all tenants in the house. In 1998/1999 renovation and balcony extension by Terra Nova Grundbesitz GmbH from Mainz-Kassel. The house appears in the street section as a link between the pre-Wilhelminian craftsmen's houses and the apartment buildings from historicism and art nouveau, of importance in terms of architectural history LfD / 2012

09299270
 
Apartment building in closed development Bornaische Strasse 37
(map)
1899 (tenement house) with gate passage and shop, plastered facade, building-historical and site-historical relevant building

Design, execution and owner were in one hand for the new tenement house built in 1899 on a plot of land under the Haunstein development plan. Architect Friedrich Otto Gerstenberger was also responsible for a photographic studio in the courtyard, on which various other buildings were built in the following years. The listed front residential building with plastered facade, gate passage and a shop installation and rear entrance that were designed during the construction process. Artificial stone molded parts subdivide the plastered historicism building, which was still uninfluenced by Art Nouveau, and the slated mansard floor has been expanded today. An initially planned bay window on the 2nd floor received no approval from the building authorities. Of the furnishings, the wooden staircase and the original shop front should be mentioned. Architecturally and historically relevant apartment building at the turn of the century in a not insignificant urban location. LfD / 2012

09299594
 
Apartment building (with two house numbers) in closed development, with courtyard paving and workshop building in the courtyard Bornaische Strasse 38; 40
(card)
1888-1889 (double tenement house) Front building with gate passage and shops, historicizing plastered facade, historically important

Instead of a two-storey, gable-end residential building from 1869, the master carpenter Otto Wenzel built the four-storey double tenement house from 1888-1889. Plastered building with embossed ground floor and structure, the first and second floors with fine grooves, on the right a slightly protruding two-axis side elevation. On the ground floor there is a shop with the original front and a shop that was expanded in 1930.

09295980
 
Apartment building in half-open development
Apartment building in half-open development Bornaische Strasse 39
(map)
1898 (tenement) Wilhelminian style building, with gate passage and shop, clinker brick facade with stucco structure, of architectural significance

The four-storey apartment building was built in 1898 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger, who is also the building owner. Clinker brick building with geometrical stucco structures and two slightly protruding side projections crowned by roof houses. The middle axis is also accentuated by a roof house. The ground floor with a plaster groove has an original shop front.

09296338
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Bornaische Strasse 41
(map)
probably 1898 (tenement) with shop (pharmacy), plastered facade, historically important

Four-storey plastered building, probably erected in 1898, in a corner position with chamfering and elongated fronts facing both Bornaische and Meusdorfer Strasse. Fine stucco decoration under the sills and the roofs of the upper floor windows. The roof zone is emphasized by dense rows of roof houses.

09296352
 
Apartment building in half-open development, with courtyard building Bornaische Strasse 42
(map)
1909-1910 (tenement house) three shops, clinker-plaster facade with bay windows, formerly a bakery building in the courtyard, historically important

After the demolition of the previous building, a two-story eaves-free house built in 1860, the four-story tenement was built from 1909 to 1910 according to plans by the architect H. Heusing for the painters Emil Schmidt and Emil Jäger and the master carpenter Franz Schmidt. Broad clinker brick facade with structures and two two-storey sloping bay windows with plastering and geometrical decor. A raised roof structure with a curved gable above the central axis. The ground floor is designed as a shop zone with originally five shops that were later merged. The upper floors with three-horse floor plans. In the courtyard is a single-storey rear building, formerly used as a bakery, with a chimney.

09295981
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Bornaische Strasse 43
(map)
1904 (tenement) with shop, historicizing plastered facade, historically important

Numbers 43, 45, 47, 49 and 51: Closed line consisting of five four-storey apartment buildings between Meusdorfer Strasse and Ecksteinstrasse, which was created in 1904 for various clients according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger, number 43 for the room foreman Bernhard Gänss, number 45 for for the master bricklayer Hermann Engel, number 47 for the master bricklayer Eduard Möller, number 49 for the building contractors Otto Thier and Alwin Schütz and number 51 for the building contractor Alwin Knössin. All buildings have high brick bases and clinker-clad upper floors. The two outer houses as corner buildings with chamfering, which is highlighted at number 43 by a pilaster structure. The three middle houses with their broad ten-axis fronts and the two-axis middle compartments of the same cubature that protrude slightly on the upper floors. But only numbers 45 and 49 show the same design with curved window roofs and representational bas-reliefs on the central axes, while the facade of number 47 is more conventional. The hallway at number 45 has a stucco decoration with pictures. In the courtyard of number 47, a two-storey left side building built as a horse stable with a harness room. The roof extension at number 51 took place in 1925. At number 43, the facade has recently been disfigured by plastering the upper floors and reducing the structure.

09296353
 
Apartment building in closed development
Apartment building in closed development Bornaische Strasse 45
(map)
1904 (tenement) with a shop, clinker brick facade with stucco structure, important in terms of building history

Numbers 43, 45, 47, 49 and 51: Line consisting of five four-story apartment buildings between Meusdorfer Straße and Ecksteinstraße, built in 1904 according to plans by F. Otto Gerstenberger for various builders: master masons, room foremen and building contractors: all buildings with high brick plinths and clinker cladding Upper floor. The two outer houses as corner buildings with chamfering, which is highlighted at number 43 by a pilaster structure. The three middle houses with broad ten-axis fronts and slightly protruding two-axis middle compartments on the upper floors. But only numbers 45 and 49 show the same design with curved window roofs and figural bas-reliefs on the central axes, while the facade of number 47 is more conventional. The hall of number 45 with stucco reliefs In the courtyard of number 47 a two-storey side building constructed as a horse stable with a crockery room. The roof extension at number 51 from 1925. The facade of number 43 has recently been disfigured. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296354
 
Apartment building in closed development, with workshop building and wash house in the courtyard
Apartment building in closed development, with workshop building and wash house in the courtyard Bornaische Strasse 47
(map)
1904 (tenement) Front building with gate passage and shop, clinker brick facade with stucco structures, of architectural significance

Numbers 43, 45, 47, 49 and 51: Line consisting of five four-story apartment buildings between Meusdorfer Straße and Ecksteinstraße, built in 1904 according to plans by F. Otto Gerstenberger for various builders: master masons, room foremen and building contractors: all buildings with high brick plinths and clinker cladding Upper floor. The two outer houses as corner buildings with chamfering, which is highlighted at number 43 by a pilaster structure. The three middle houses with broad ten-axis fronts and slightly protruding two-axis middle compartments on the upper floors. But only numbers 45 and 49 show the same design with curved window roofs and figural bas-reliefs on the central axes, while the facade of number 47 is more conventional. The hall of number 45 with stucco reliefs In the courtyard of number 47 a two-storey side building constructed as a horse stable with a crockery room. The roof extension at number 51 from 1925. The facade of number 43 has recently been disfigured. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296355
 
Apartment building in closed development
Apartment building in closed development Bornaische Strasse 49
(map)
1904 (tenement) with shops, clinker brick façade with stucco structures and central projections with Art Nouveau stucco decorations, important in terms of building history

Numbers 43, 45, 47, 49 and 51: Line consisting of five four-story apartment buildings between Meusdorfer Straße and Ecksteinstraße, built in 1904 according to plans by F. Otto Gerstenberger for various builders: master masons, room foremen and building contractors: all buildings with high brick plinths and clinker cladding Upper floor. The two outer houses as corner buildings with chamfering, which is highlighted at number 43 by a pilaster structure. The three middle houses with broad ten-axis fronts and slightly protruding two-axis middle compartments on the upper floors. But only numbers 45 and 49 show the same design with curved window roofs and figural bas-reliefs on the central axes, while the facade of number 47 is more conventional. The hall of number 45 with stucco reliefs In the courtyard of number 47 a two-storey side building constructed as a horse stable with a crockery room. The roof extension at number 51 from 1925. The facade of number 43 has recently been disfigured. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296356
 
Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner Bornaische Strasse 50
(map)
1911 (tenement) with shops, plastered facade, corner accentuation by corner bay windows, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history

Numbers 50 and 52: Two four-story tenement houses built in 1911 according to plans by the architect Franz Hübler for the master carpenter Franz Harnisch and the master mason Louis Kubitzki. Before that, there was an eaves-standing residential building at number 50, which was built before 1869 and which probably served as a railway keeper's house until 1886. The new buildings from 1911 were made as plastered buildings with narrow cornices and geometric plastered mirrors under or between the windows. On the street corner, number 50 has a two-axis chamfer with a two-storey bay window and, due to its steep proportions, a distinctive broken gable. At number 52 the four right axles up to the top floor are massive. In both houses the hallways are richly decorated with wall tiles, stucco decorations, stucco reliefs showing children playing and coffered ceilings. The ground floor of number 52 as a pure shopping area with two shops, while in number 50 there is an apartment in the ground floor area in addition to two shops.

09295982
 
Apartment building in closed development and in a corner
Apartment building in closed development and in a corner Bornaische Strasse 51
(map)
1904 (tenement) with a shop, clinker brick facade with stucco structure, important in terms of building history

Numbers 43, 45, 47, 49 and 51: Line consisting of five four-story apartment buildings between Meusdorfer Straße and Ecksteinstraße, built in 1904 according to plans by F. Otto Gerstenberger for various builders: master masons, room foremen and building contractors: all buildings with high brick plinths and clinker cladding Upper floor. The two outer houses as corner buildings with chamfering, which is highlighted at number 43 by a pilaster structure. The three middle houses with broad ten-axis fronts and slightly protruding two-axis middle compartments on the upper floors. But only numbers 45 and 49 show the same design with curved window roofs and figural bas-reliefs on the central axes, while the facade of number 47 is more conventional. The hall of number 45 with stucco reliefs In the courtyard of number 47 a two-storey side building constructed as a horse stable with a crockery room. The roof extension at number 51 from 1925. The facade of number 43 has recently been disfigured. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296357
 
Apartment building in closed development
Apartment building in closed development Bornaische Strasse 52
(map)
1911 (tenement) with partly original shops, plastered façade, reform style architecture, important in terms of building history

Numbers 50 and 52: Two four-story tenement houses built in 1911 according to plans by the architect Franz Hübler for the master carpenter Franz Harnisch and the master mason Louis Kubitzki. Before that, there was an eaves-standing residential building at number 50, which was built before 1869 and which probably served as a railway keeper's house until 1886. The new buildings from 1911 were made as plastered buildings with narrow cornices and geometric plastered mirrors under or between the windows. On the street corner, number 50 has a two-axis chamfer with a two-storey bay window and, due to its steep proportions, a distinctive broken gable. At number 52 the four right axles up to the top floor are massive. In both houses the hallways are richly decorated with wall tiles, stucco decorations, stucco reliefs showing children playing and coffered ceilings. The ground floor of number 52 as a pure shopping area with two shops, while in number 50 there is an apartment in the ground floor area in addition to two shops.

09295983
 
Accumulator house with machine hall adjoining on the back, fencing and gate entrance as well as paving, formerly also front garden
Accumulator house with machine hall adjoining on the back, fencing and gate entrance as well as paving, formerly also front garden Bornaische Strasse 53
(map)
1909-1910 (substation) Yellow brick facade with green clinker ornamentation, associated administration building and civil servants' residence, see Ecksteinstrasse 40 (see object 09295945), of significance in terms of building history and technology 09296358
 
Residential and commercial building in closed development as well as rear building, factory building and former stable building in the courtyard
Residential and commercial building in closed development as well as rear building, factory building and former stable building in the courtyard Bornaische Strasse 54
(map)
1912-1913 (residential and commercial building) Front building with gate passage and shop, reform style architecture, of architectural and local importance 09295984
 
Tram depot with administration building (Zwenkauer Strasse 44) and car hall (Bornaische Strasse 55) Bornaische Strasse 55
(map)
1912 (tram depot) Leipzig electric tram, Connewitz depot, important in terms of local history and technology 09295944
 
Apartment building in closed development Bornaische Strasse 56
(map)
1901 (tenement) with restaurant and house passage, historicizing clinker plaster facade, formerly with workshop building in the courtyard, of architectural significance

Four-storey apartment building, which was built in 1901 according to plans by the architect Gustav Liebmann instead of a two-storey eaves house from 1861 for the bricklayer Arthur Bertram. The ground floor with plastering, the upper floors with colorfully decorated clinker cladding, with the two outer axes slightly protruding on both sides and resting on consoles above the ground floor. A restaurant has been on the ground floor since it was built, just like in the previous building.

09295985
 
Double house (with Meusdorfer Straße 61) in a corner
Double house (with Meusdorfer Straße 61) in a corner Bornaische Strasse 58
(map)
marked 1898 (double tenement house) with shop, corner accentuated by bevelling and neo-renaissance gable, clinker brick facade, of historical importance

Bornaische Strasse 58 / Meusdorfer Strasse 61: Four-storey corner house built in 1898 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the travel agent Carl Döring. The plastered and grooved ground floor with shop fittings, the upper floors clad in clinker with stucco structures. In the facade facing Bornaische Strasse two slightly protruding side elevations, above the right side and above the chamfered corner neo-renaissance gable, which delimit the broad street front. In between, in the roof zone above the main cornice supported by consoles, roof houses are arranged in a row based on the building axes, as well as on the front facing Meusdorfer Straße (also Meusdorfer Straße 61).

09295986
 
Apartment building in closed development
Apartment building in closed development Bornaische Strasse 68
(map)
1888 (tenement house) with gate passage and shop, historicizing plastered facade with finely divided stucco decor, of architectural significance

Between 1888 and 1891, the master carpenter Louis Roßberger built the side of his room on Bornaische Strasse between Meusdorfer Strasse and Ecksteinstrasse with four-story tenement houses. As one of the first houses, number 68 was built in 1888 according to plans by the architect S. Schreyer as a plastered building with a facade strongly structured by cornices and gables and finely divided stucco decor. The second floor is highlighted by a round gable. On both sides there are slightly protruding side elevations with pilasters that are raised up to the top floor. Above the main cornice resting on consoles, three roof houses with pyramid-like attachments in close position. In the gateway through the ridge vault, the stairwell with wooden coffered ceilings.

09295987
 
Apartment building in open development Bornaische Strasse 73
(map)
1888–1889 (tenement house) finely structured plastered facade, of importance in terms of local development 09299061
 
Nursing home, former poor house, with annex and fencing
Nursing home, former poor house, with annex and fencing Bornaische Strasse 82
(map)
1886-1887 (nursing home) Erected 1886-1887 as a poor house for the community of Connewitz, four-storey and eleven-axis building, basement and mansard floor, extension with yellow brick facade, of architectural and local significance

Connewitz nursing home, built 1886-1887 by master bricklayer GH Rietzschel for the Connewitz council as a poor house on land inherited from the community in 1881 by banker Wilhelm Seyfferth. The four-storey plastered building with sandstone structures and a single-axis central projection that accommodates the entrance. The ground floor with fine grooves, the first and second floors with narrow plaster bands, in the roof area an alternation of wide and narrow roof houses in close succession. The interior is divided into two halves with an arrangement of the rooms along a central corridor, administration rooms, kitchens and six rooms on the ground floor, upper floors and attic with thirteen rooms each. On the back a two-storey outbuilding formerly containing laundry rooms and morgues. On the right side an extension built by master bricklayer Franz Wendt in 1895-1896 as a four-storey brick building that clearly towers above the old house at the eaves level. It was used for the closed poor care and contained five work rooms and three dormitories. The park-like garden, which occupies the entire plot of land 91, was probably laid out in 1892 when the enclosure wall was erected.

09295989
 
Apartment building in closed development
Apartment building in closed development Bornaische Strasse 83
(map)
1903 (tenement) with passage through the house and shop, clinker brick facade with stucco structures, important from an architectural point of view

With numbers 85 and 87: the three three-storey apartment buildings were built in 1903 for master bricklayer Julius Illge according to plans by architect F. Otto Gerstenberger. Clinker buildings with plastered and partially grooved ground floors. Although they were created at the same time and according to plans by the same architect for the same client, they do not have a uniform design. The most elaborate is number 85, with a portal framed by women's masks, geometrical decor on the window parapets of the upper floors and two Renaissance gables. Number 87 is a corner building with a chamfer, an elongated front facing the Klemmstrasse and an ancient, massive attachment in the corner area for the time it was built.

09296359
 
Apartment building in closed development
Apartment building in closed development Bornaische Strasse 85
(map)
1903 (tenement) with shop, clinker brick facade with Art Nouveau stucco decorations, of importance in terms of building history

Bornaische Strasse 83/85/87 built in 1903 for the master bricklayer Julius Illge based on plans by F. Otto Gerstenberger. Clinker buildings with plastered and partially grooved ground floors. The facade design is not uniform: the most elaborate is number 85 with a portal framed by woman masks, geometrical decor on the window parapets of the upper floors and two Renaissance gables. The corner building number 87 with chamfered, elongated front to the Klemmstrasse and an ancient raised tower in the corner area for the time of construction. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296360
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Bornaische Strasse 87
(map)
1903 (tenement) with shop, clinker brick facade with stucco decorations, important in terms of building history

Bornaische Strasse 83/85/87 built in 1903 for the master bricklayer Julius Illge based on plans by F. Otto Gerstenberger. Clinker buildings with plastered and partially grooved ground floors. The facade design is not uniform: the most elaborate is number 85 with a portal framed by woman masks, geometrical decor on the window parapets of the upper floors and two Renaissance gables. The corner building number 87 with chamfered, elongated front to the Klemmstrasse and an ancient raised tower in the corner area for the time of construction. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296361
 
Row of apartment buildings in a residential complex, formerly with a post office at No. 90 Bornaische Strasse 90; 90a; 92; 94; 96; 98; 100; 102
(card)
1933-1934 (apartment building) with shops (grocery store at number 92, corner store at number 102, formerly a dairy shop), plastered facade with a brick base and brick edging of the entrances, corner accentuation of the row of houses in the manner of a head building facing Probstheidaer Strasse, see also Dölitzer Strasse 43a and Probstheidaer Strasse 13/15, of architectural significance

With Dölitzer Straße 43a and Probstheidaer Straße 13-15: On land gradually acquired by the municipality on Dölitzer, Probstheidaer and Bornaischer Straße in four construction phases between 1933 and 1940 by the builder F. Herbert Heine as a tax-exempt small apartment building privately built. The first construction phase from 1933-1934 includes Dölitzer Strasse 43a, according to plans by the architect Erich Heine, with a three-storey plastered facade, a high, brick-clad base zone and brick-lined bay windows, as well as Probstheidaer Strasse 13-14 and Bornaischer Strasse 100-102, three to four-storey plastered buildings with one through Massive attic storeys separated from the foot hips according to plans by the architect Ernst Riedel. The corner building Bornaische Straße 102 with an original beveled shop front cut into the corner. The subsequent elongated line, which takes up the curved course of Bornaische Strasse, is a four-story, undivided plastered building from the three other construction phases: number 94-98 1934-1935, number 92 1935-1936 and number 90 and 90a 1939-1940. The client, who is now also responsible for the design, used the plans that Riedel had worked out for number 100, but the younger houses in the row received simpler entrances. The ground floors usually have two apartments per entrance, while the upper floors have a three-span floor plan with three apartments each. The apartment sizes are between 35 and 60 square meters. Only the larger apartments were fitted with a bathroom, most of them had shared bathrooms in the basement. The facility's infrastructure included a post office at number 90 and a grocery store at number 92, while the corner store at number 102 housed a dairy shop.

09295990
 
Apartment building in half-open development Bornaische Strasse 93
(map)
1905-1906 (tenement house) with shops, clinker brick facade with stucco structures, of importance in terms of building history

With number 95: Two three-storey apartment buildings built in 1905 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the master bricklayer and coal merchant Julius Illge. The upper floors with clinker facing, the ground floors plastered and with grooves. Number 93 due to the two Renaissance gables and the centered arched portal of a similar design to Gerstenberger's house, Bornaische Strasse number 85, which was also built two years earlier for Julius Illge, but the façade is stricter due to the use of triangular gables and the lack of curved shapes in the details. The corner building number 95 opposite the Connewitz train station corresponds to the neighboring house in the rhythmic arrangement of the windows and in the height of the sills and cornices, but varies in the decor of the window frames and the height of the roofs. The dominant motif is the design of the chamfered corner with a massive roof extension, two-axis bay window and tower-like roof attachment, which looks ancient for the time it was built, similar to Gerstenberger's corner house Bornaische Straße 87, which was built for Illge in 1903. On the first floor of number 95, in the area of ​​today's restaurant, there were originally the offices and the weighing room of Illge's coal shop.

09296322
 
Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner Bornaische Strasse 95
(map)
1905 (tenement) three-storey building with corner pub, clinker brick facade with stucco structure, corner bay window, of architectural significance

Bornaische Strasse 93/95 built in 1905 according to plans by F. Otto Gerstenberger for the master bricklayer and coal merchant Julius Illge. The upper floors are clad in clinker, the ground floors with plaster. Number 93 with the two Renaissance gables and the centered arched portal of a similar design to Gerstenberger's house, Bornaische Strasse number 85, which was also built two years earlier for Julius Illge. The corner building number 95 opposite the Connewitz train station corresponds to the rhythmic arrangement of the windows and the height of the Sills and cornices to the neighboring house, but varied in window frames and roofs. The dominant motif here is the design of the chamfered corner with loft extension, bay window and roof attachment, which looks ancient for the time it was built - similar to Gerstenberger's corner house Bornaische Straße 87, which was built for Illge in 1903. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296323
 
Railway station with administration and reception building, goods shed and toilet block Bornaische Strasse 95a
(map)
1888 (station building), 1907 (platform), 1893 (platform roofing), 1907 (freight yard), 1888 (freight shed) Goods shed with ramp and protruding protective roof, as a coherent ensemble in brick construction, document of the local and transport history 09296645
 
School with gymnasium, attached caretaker's apartment, front garden, school yard and enclosure wall with portal
More pictures
School with gymnasium, attached caretaker's apartment, front garden, school yard and enclosure wall with portal Bornaische Strasse 104
(map)
1903-1904 (school) Elongated school building with clock tower, located on the back on Dölitzer Straße, historicist plastered facade, of architectural and local significance

1992-2006 Theodor-Mommsen-Gymnasium, built 1903-1904 as the 31st district school according to plans by city building officer Otto Wilhelm Scharenberg on a site on Bornaische Straße that was acquired by the school community of Connewitz in 1890. The three-wing school building as a four-storey plastered baroque building set back from the street. The elongated main wing, which is fitted into the building line of Dölitzer Straße at the rear, has a wide central projection with a central curved gable towards Bornaische Straße and, together with the short side wings, forms a courtyard situation that surrounds the schoolyard. The northern side wing is raised by a clock tower with a Baroque hood that is effective as a focal point in the street of Dölitzer Straße. In its extension to Bornaische Strasse a single-storey gym building with an adjoining two-storey caretaker's wing, both facing the street with curved gables and a central arched portal formed by pilasters and cornices. The school yard is closed off from Bornaische Strasse by a plastered brick wall with an iron fence and a three-part, segment-arched portal, which shows a large cartouche with the Leipzig city coat of arms above the central passage. The floor plan of the main building has two sides with classrooms on a central corridor.

09295997
 
Apartment building in open development, with wash house in the courtyard
Apartment building in open development, with wash house in the courtyard Bornaische Strasse 106
(map)
1908 (tenement) Formerly with two shops, clinker-plaster facade with two bay windows, historically important

Freestanding three-storey apartment building built in 1908 by master builder Arthur Riehl for building materials dealer Bruno Paukert, together with the residential building Dölitzer Strasse 45 on the back of the adjacent property at Dölitzer Strasse 45. The clinker-clad upper floors are separated from the lower, brick-clad building zone, consisting of a base and ground floor, by a cornice. On both sides a semicircular bay window divided by vertical structures and plastered fields with applied stucco decoration, the left with a balcony attachment, the right with a flat domed roof over the protruding cornices. The bay window is surmounted by a broken gable on the left. The central entrance with an oval upper floor, above it the middle window on the first floor accentuated by stucco decor. The hallway with ornamental tiles, wall tiles and a ribbed vault with belts. There are two apartments on each floor, originally only the right one of the two shops on the ground floor.

09295998
 
Apartment building in open development
Apartment building in open development Bornaische Strasse 108
(map)
1910-1911 (tenement house) with shops, plastered facade with bay windows, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history

The builder, site manager and executor for the detached tenement was master bricklayer Ernst Viereckel, who implemented a planning draft presented in October 1910 by January 1911 (two different drafts are on record), the Förster solid ceilings brought in the master builder Otto Bergelt. 2001 Building application for balcony systems. Plastered, little decorated reform style building with a round bay window on one corner of the building and a box bay window on the other side of the facade, the ground floor completely converted into a shop area. LfD / 2008

09299232
 
Double tenement house (Bornaische Strasse 110 and Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 43) in open development with a front garden on Prinz-Eugen-Strasse Bornaische Strasse 110
(map)
1935-1936 (double tenement house) Plastered construction typical of the time, corner accentuation by balcony, of architectural significance

On the corner lot, opposite the Connewitz train station, there was initially only a small sales building, probably more of a kiosk. A building project initiated in 1909 was not carried out. Even plans for small apartments submitted by architect Ernst Riedel in 1933 were not implemented. It was not until 1935-1936 that today's building came to a standstill, overseen by the aforementioned architect with a revised design and financed by R. Julius Alexander Schulz's company. The owner of the construction business Aug. Richter, master bricklayer Paul Körner, took over the execution and construction of the reinforced concrete lintels supplied by Leipzig's Westend-Betonwerk GmbH. A garage construction submitted in September 1940 was denied by the building authorities in January 1942 because of the “existing ban on new construction”. The first draft is extremely modern, with a concave broken corner, right of way for motorized vehicles and a slightly recessed upper floor. With the submitted tectures, a certain uprightness came to the fore, but not the renunciation of dignified furnishings. Among other things, ceramic tiles at the house entrances and iron clinker brick in the plinth area as well as some iron grilles structure the building. Incidentally, in 1966 a consumer sales point was mentioned in the house at 110 Bornaische Strasse. In terms of urban planning, opposite the Connewitz train station, in the immediate vicinity of the Bornaische Brücke and at the upper end of the former old village street (today Prinz-Eugen-Straße), a semi-detached house with significance for the history of the district's development. LfD / 2013

09304424
 
Two apartment buildings in a residential complex (structural unit with Prinz-Eugen-Straße 56), with a front garden
Two apartment buildings in a residential complex (structural unit with Prinz-Eugen-Straße 56), with a front garden Bornaische Strasse 112; 114
(card)
marked 1937, 1936-1937 (double tenement house) traditionalistic plastered facade, corner accentuation through rounding, graffiti and raised corner building, see also Prinz-Eugen-Straße 56, of importance in terms of building history

According to plans by the architect Woldemar von Holy 1936-1937 for Landes-Siedlungs- und Wohnungsfürsorgegesellschaft mbH "Sächsisches Heim" in Dresden, a residential complex built in a rounded corner at the confluence of Prinz-Eugen-Strasse and Bornaische Strasse. A raised four-storey central building on a curved floor plan dominates the street corner, flanked by two three-storey side wings. The facades with brick-faced plinths and rough plaster, on the centrally arranged entrance axes, ornamental plaster graffiti fields. Two three-room apartments on each floor per entrance, with four balcony porches on the back. The five-meter-deep front gardens facing Prinz-Eugen-Strasse were preserved, the half-deep ones facing Bornaische Strasse were given up in favor of widening the pavement.

09295993
 
Apartment building in closed development
Apartment building in closed development Brandstrasse 2
(map)
1904 (tenement) historicizing clinker brick facade with contemporary Art Nouveau ornamentation on the bay window, see also Wolfgang-Heinze-Straße 38 and 38b, of importance in terms of building history

Built in 1904 by the architect Carl Wolf for master carpenter Robert Klepzig. Asymmetrical brick facade with contemporary Art Nouveau ornamentation, especially on the plastered bay window. (see also Wolfgang-Heinze-Straße 38, 38b)

09296226
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Brandstrasse 3
(map)
1929-1931 (tenement house) Plastered facade with bay window, side elevation with stepped gable, tendency towards late expressionist forms, compare Neudorfgasse 4, important in terms of building history

Brandstrasse 3 and Neudorfgasse 4: built together with the corner building at Brandstrasse 1 (destroyed in the war) and Neudorfgasse 4 from 1929 to 1931 according to plans by Otto Juhrich for the Leipziger Handwerker housing association. Due to the destruction of the corner house, the connection has been torn apart today. The two "wing buildings" on Brandstrasse and Neudorfgasse are mirror images of each other: they have a five-storey, two-axis side projection that ends in a high stepped gable (with a characteristic tip and rhombic window) and a two-storey bay window that also ends with a pointed gable. A ribbon of windows in the roof zone connected the two outer buildings with the height-graded corner building. The reddish original plaster at Brandstrasse 3 has been preserved, as are the original "barred" windows and the straight-line framed entrance. Example of the tendency towards verticalism of moderate expressionism, which persisted until after 1930, which dominated the buildings of the 1920s in Leipzig.

09296025
 
Double apartment building in half-open development in a corner Brandstrasse 4; 6
(card)
1931-1938, number 4 (double tenement house) traditionalistic plastered façade with loggias, elaborate front door framing, a striking urban location at a bend in the road, of importance in terms of building history

A residential building project by Paatzsch & Adam for building contractor Liebold in 1914 did not come to fruition and so residential and stable buildings stood on the former Beckmann property (number 4) until it was demolished in 1937, when the Leipziger Handwerker housing association commissioned the architect Otto Juhrich. The building file for number 6 has probably been lost, but the basic lines of the rental apartment building on the neighboring property number 4 can be transferred. Work on number 4 began in October by Paul Arthur Friedrich, owner of a construction business employing 90 workers. Master builder J. Zuber and his company for structural engineering, civil engineering and reinforced concrete were also involved; the work was completed in June 1938. The shop on the ground floor was converted into living space in 1966. Behind the plastered facade with a strict structure, there are three apartments on each of the upper floors, each with two rooms, a chamber, a kitchen and a bathroom and toilet, each accessible from the forecourt; one apartment is located on the top floor. Unfortunately, a first design with side gables in the late Art Deco style and a bay window extending over the three upper floors was not implemented. Thus, the simple architecture testifies to economy and a renunciation of decorative design (with the exception of the house entrance door framing), the strictness that has found its way into the sense of style, an air raid shelter was set up in the basement next to the washhouse at the time of construction. The facade of number 6 is opened by loggias on the street side and appears less austere, the original wooden windows of the two houses have been preserved. Of particular interest are the brackets visible on the facade for the suspension of the overhead lines of trolleybuses that used to run here. Significant in terms of building history and urban development. LfD / 2012

09297261
 
Apartment building in closed development Brandstrasse 15
(map)
1899 (tenement house) with a shop zone and a gate passage, historicizing clinker brick facade, historically important

Simple building with the original shop front and facing brick facade, built in 1899 by the master carpenter Ernst Strieder.

09295899
 
Apartment building in formerly open development Brandstrasse 17
(map)
1875 (tenement house) historicizing plastered facade in late Biedermeier architectural style, with a gabled central projection, of architectural significance

Built in 1875 for Franz Hermann Hartmann. Residential house in late Biedermeier architectural style with a slightly protruding, gabled central projectile, delicate window frame and fine stucco in the gable field and on the straight window roofs. The ground floor grooved. The recently completed loft conversion unsuitable. The house had a wash house in the courtyard, with toilets and a small apartment. LfD / 2018

09295900
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Brandstrasse 19a
(map)
1911 (tenement) Formerly with shops, plastered facade, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history

Erected in 1911 for the milk merchant Franz Friedrich by Hugo Grasemann, architect and master builder. Conventional structuring principles, such as the combination of two main floors with window coverings, combine with contemporary individual forms such as the flat, wide pilaster strips and the rounded corner to create a building with a clear, objective attitude

09295901
 
Apartment building in closed development Brandstrasse 21
(map)
1896 (tenement) historicizing plastered facade, with business entrance in the basement, of architectural significance

The builder, master carpenter and contractor Hermann Winkler designed and executed the building in 1896. All parts of this house, which in terms of floor plan and facade structure corresponds to the widespread scheme of a simpler apartment building from the Wilhelminian era, have been preserved in their original form, including the interior furnishings of the hallway.

09295902
 
Double tenement house in closed development Brandstrasse 23; 25
(card)
1912 (double tenement house) Plastered facade, reform style architecture, important in terms of building history

Double tenement house, built in 1912 by architect and builder Willy Schmidt for master carpenter Karl Böcke. The emphatically asymmetrical facade is held together by the high, ribbon-like, grooved base and the cornice. The top three floors are structured vertically, with the two colliding side projections of the two parts of the house of different widths forming a central projection, which is again accentuated vertically on the two upper floors by pilaster strips. Example of a straightforward, brittle transition style from the time before WWI.

09295903
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner, with a front garden Brandstrasse 26
(map)
1887 (tenement house) historicizing plastered facade, of architectural significance

The corner building, together with the adjoining houses on Simildenstrasse and Brandstrasse, was designed in 1887 by master bricklayer Otto Jänicke for Karl August Riehl. In the "broken corner" there was a corner shutter, the ground floor and corner axis were provided with plaster ashlars, the corner situation was accentuated by a parapet originally crowned with vases. The three apartments on each floor had only one shared "private" available.

09296408
 
Row of tenement houses in a residential complex Brandstrasse 27; 29; 31; 33; 35; 37; 39
(map)
1926-1927 (apartment building) Plastered facade with bay windows and gables, in the style of Art Deco, of architectural significance

Housing complex, built 1926-1927 according to plans by Fritz Riemann for the non-profit civil servants' building cooperative. Row of seven houses of different front lengths with a three-dimensional increase towards the center: the middle houses each have two box oriels, the side buildings, triangular projecting bay windows and stepped gables, house number 7 is bent to the west, as this was originally an extension of the Brandstrasse opening into Selnecker Strasse was planned. The seven houses are summarized by the base cornice running at the level of the house entrances and the final 4th floor with folding shutters. House entrances with partly acute-angled skylights and the characteristic sharp-angled vine stucco of the bay window show the typical signature of Art Deco of the mid-twenties. complex consisting of seven houses

09295904
 
Apartment building in closed development Brandstrasse 30
(map)
1890 (tenement house) with gate passage and shop, clinker-plaster facade with stucco decorations, of architectural significance 09296409
 
Apartment building in closed development and rear building Brandstrasse 32
(map)
1889 (tenement house) with gate passage, clinker brick facade with stucco decorations, historically important

s. Number 30 and 34

09296410
 
Apartment building in closed development Brandstrasse 34
(map)
1898 (tenement) with gate passage, clinker brick facade with stucco decoration, important from an architectural point of view

s. Number 30

09296411
 
Apartment house in half-open development and rear building Brandstrasse 36
(map)
1889 (tenement house) with gate passage and shop, historicizing plastered facade, historically important

Erected in 1889 by Robert Gneupel as client and contractor with side and transverse wings. First floor originally with plaster ashlar. Next to the house was the entrance to the depot of the Great Leipzig tram, the track layout and the heavily modified buildings are still there.

09296412
 
Administration building (Brandstrasse 38) and two former tram depot buildings (Simildenstrasse 20) Brandstrasse 38
(map)
1891 (administration building), 1890 (tram depot) Wilhelminian-style clinker buildings on the site of the last tram depot built by the horse-drawn railway company, a passage site between Brandstrasse and Simildenstrasse, of technical and local significance 09298218
 
Residential house in semi-open development (structural unit with Selneckerstraße 7) Brandstrasse 40
(map)
1926-1927 (residential building) adjacent to the Paul-Gerhardt-Haus Selneckerstraße 7, part of the parish building, plastered facade, entrance project with stepped gable, echoes of the Art Deco style, of architectural and local importance

Parish hall of the Paul Gerhardt congregation, built 1926-1927 according to plans by the architect Richard Wagner. Hall building with a high stepped gable facing Brandstrasse, the long side set back behind a green area facing Selneckerstrasse. Connected to the higher church by a set of stairs. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296902
 
Consolidation of the Connewitz residential complex of the railway construction cooperative, with the individual monuments: Apartment buildings Burgstädter Straße 2, 4 (Obj. 09296505), Burgstädter Straße 6, 8 (Obj. 09296728), Burgstädter Straße 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22 (Obj. 09301811), Kohrener Strasse 3, 5, 7, 9, 11 (Obj. 09296786), Kohrener Strasse 13, 15, 17, 19, 21 (Obj. 09295995), Kohrener Strasse 14, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24 (Obj. 09295996), Narsdorfer Straße 1, 3, 5 (Obj. 09296503), Narsdorfer Straße 2, 4, 6 (Obj. 09296502), Narsdorfer Straße 7, 9, 11, 13 (Obj. 09296726), Narsdorfer Straße 8, 10, 12, 14, 16 (Obj. 09296727), Probstheidaer Straße 21 (Obj. 09295999), Probstheidaer Straße 23 (Obj. 09296783), Probstheidaer Straße 25, 27, 29 (Obj. 09296504) and surrounding green areas as totality parts Burgstädter Strasse 2; 4; 6; 8th; 10; 12; 14; 16; 18; 20; 22
(card)
1939-1940, marked 1939 (apartment building) striking plastered buildings, the houses of the early 1930s in the modern style, those of the late 1930s in the traditionalist style, of importance in terms of urban development and architectural history

Residential complex of the Leipzig Railway Construction Cooperative Between the two development areas east of Bornaische Strasse on Klemmstrasse and Gaschwitzer Strasse and at Connewitzer Friedhof, a large area had remained undeveloped. Here, in the immediate vicinity of the railway tracks, the Eisenbahner-Baugenossenschaft Leipzig eGmbH acquired building land in 1929. Over a relatively long period of more than ten years, one of the largest residential complexes in the south of Leipzig with 426 residential units was built in several construction phases. The new cross streets were developed from the already existing Probstheidaer Straße. The first construction phase from 1930-1931, for which the architect OM Rothmann provided the plans, included two opposing three-storey rows of five and six houses on Kohrener Strasse with raised head buildings (number 13/15/17/19/21 and number 14/16/18/20/22/24) as well as a single-storey grocery store on Probstheidaer Straße (number 21). The other construction sections on Narsdorfer and Burgstädter Straße were not built until the mid-1930s, following a construction interruption caused by the global economic crisis. With the use of hipped roofs and sgraffiti, a move away from Rothmann's buildings built in the New Objectivity style and a take-up of traditionalist tendencies can be felt in the plans of the now building manager, Alfred Uttecht. First, according to Uttecht's plans in 1934, the east side of Kohrener Straße (number 3/5/7/9/11) was completed. In 1935-1936 a corner house followed on Probstheidaer Straße, the main front of which faces Narsdorfer Straße (number 23) and a detached building group consisting of three houses (number 25/27/29). 1936–37 the subsequent blocks on Narsdorfer Straße (number 7/9/11/13 and number 8/10/12/14/16) and from 1939-1940 further building blocks, now also including the northern section of Burgstädter Straße (number 1/3/5 with Burgstädter Straße 6/8 and number 2/4/6 with Burgstädter Straße 2/4). The line, also built in 1939-1940 opposite the railway tracks on the west side of Burgstädter Straße (number 10/12/14/16/18/20/22), was rebuilt in a simplified form after more than fifty percent destruction in the war in 1951-1952. The three streets starting from Probstheidaer Straße have been laid out in accordance with the structural development, which is reflected in the data for their naming after the municipalities of the Leipziger Land: Kohrener Straße 1930, Narsdorfer Straße 1935 and Burgstädter Straße 1939. The main feature of the urban design is the curved system from Kohrener and Narsdorfer Straße. As a result, street spaces have emerged in which the gaze is caught and which increasingly appear as uniform structural ensembles. The street spaces are formed from several blocks, each with four to six houses, standing together in a closed construction. Mostly three-storey, the rows on Kohrener Strasse have solid floor floors with flat roofs and form a portal situation to Probstheidaer Strasse with four-storey head buildings. The long row of building blocks is structurally subdivided through the use of protruding round cores and narrow, rounded risalits on the building edges. The plastered facades are provided with brick bases, the entrances - alternating on the street and courtyard side - have brick frames. Loggias are embedded on the courtyard sides. Plastered facades with brick bases, brick-framed entrances and loggias on the back can also be found on the three-storey development of the later sections. By using hipped roofs instead of the massive floor floors, it generally appears lower, so that a gradation from the high head buildings up to this point is noticeable. The lines are also structured in the curved course of Narsdorfer Straße and in the northern section of Burgstädter Straße, through protruding entrance axes that protrude above the eaves, which are set off from the other wall surfaces by an irregular and heavily roughened plaster. Fields with ornamental sgraffitis sit between the stairwell windows attached here. The buildings on Probstheidaer Strasse also have plastered facades, tile bases, entrances with brick walls and hipped roofs, but the wall surfaces are less subdivided. The group, which consists of three houses, is subdivided by a wide, central roof extension. The floor plans are almost entirely three-pronged and thus correspond to the type of floor plan most frequently used in Connewitz since the 1890s. As a rule, the apartments consist of a room, living room, kitchen and bathroom as well as loggias on the side apartments. In the earlier building blocks on Kohrener Strasse, this layout was handled variably, and in some cases Rothmann also planned one- and three-room apartments. The living spaces are correspondingly different, 45 for the one-room apartments, between 52 and 67 for the two-room apartments and 77.5 square meters for the three-room apartments. The grocery store, built according to Rothmann's plans, is single-storey with large windows, brick bases, plastered wall surfaces and a strongly protruding flat roof. The overall impression of the complex is strongly influenced by the associated green spaces, lawns with tree plantings and laundry drying areas behind the elongated rows of houses and green areas in front of the houses framed by privet hedges. The street corners are marked by poplars. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09304096
 
Individual monument above aggregate: apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09304096, Burgstädter Straße 2-22) Burgstädter Strasse 2; 4
(card)
1939-1940, marked 1939 (double tenement house) traditionalistic plaster facade with sgraffiti, of architectural significance 09296505
 
Individual monument above aggregate: apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09304096, Burgstädter Straße 2-22) Burgstädter Strasse 6; 8
(card)
Number 8, 1936-1937, part of a double tenement house, number 6, 1939-1940, part of a twin tenement house traditionalistic plaster facade with sgraffiti, of architectural significance 09296728
 
Individual monument above aggregate: apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09304096, Burgstädter Straße 2-22) Burgstädter Strasse 10; 12; 14; 16; 18; 20; 22
(card)
1938-1940 (apartment block) Plastered facade, entrances framed by natural stone, in traditionalist style, two sgraffiti reliefs on the courtyard side, of architectural significance 09301811
 
Bridge over the raft ditch in the alluvial forest
Bridge over the raft ditch in the alluvial forest The line -
(map)
around 1880/1890 (bridge) cast iron bridge, of architectural significance 09296199
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Dölitzer Strasse 2
(map)
1901-1902 (tenement house) Plastered clinker facade, of importance in terms of local development

The architect Carl Heinrich Lindemann took over the construction management and execution for the building designed by Emilie Raulf, née Hauptmann commissioned building project on the corner of Meusdorfer Straße. Simple, still Wilhelminian style facade with broken corner, facing clinker bricks and plastered surfaces, use of profiled artificial stone elements without stucco decor. The tenement house from 1901-1902 with completely preserved original furnishings. LfD / 2007

09297352
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development, with a front garden Dölitzer Strasse 3
(map)
1904 (tenement) with shop, plastered facade with rich Art Nouveau decoration, important in terms of building history

A four-story tenement house built in 1904 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the master builder Otto Föhre. Brick-clad base and plaster facade, the ground floor with finely cut grooves, the upper floors with flat Art Nouveau stucco decor in the form of masks, garlands and flowers. The left half of the house is solid up to the roof area with a concluding triangular gable. On the ground floor almost in the middle is the entrance framed by a likewise flat plastered stucco decoration made of Schweifwerk with a woman's mask as a keystone.

09296289
 
Apartment building in closed development Dölitzer Strasse 4
(map)
1901-1902 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade with sandstone inclusions, of architectural significance

With numbers 6, 8 and 10: four similarly designed four-storey apartment buildings, which were built from 1901 to 1902 according to plans by the architect Heinrich Lindemann, numbers 4 and 6 for the building contractor Franz Dietze, numbers 8 and 10 for the master locksmith Max Stephan. Above the relatively high plinths clad with imitation quarry stone, the ground floors are smoothly plastered, and above them the upper floors with clinker cladding and simple sandstone and stucco structures.

09296288
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Dölitzer Strasse 5
(map)
1904 (tenement) Clinker brick facade with sandstone structure and stucco decoration, of importance in terms of building history

Number 5 and number 7: The two four-story tenement houses were built in 1904-1905 according to plans by the architect Max Todt, number 5 for the mason foreman Gustav Heyer, number 7 for the building contractor August Meinicke. Both houses with clinker brick facades, the ground floor at number 5 plastered and originally provided with a groove, which at number 7 is also clad in clinker brick. The upper floors with sandstone cornices and stucco structures. On both sides, the two outer window axes at number 5 are designed as continuous plaster axes with framed parapet fields and ornament fields under the roofs. At number 7, the ornamented parapet fields with Art Nouveau decor under the windows of the first floor and a strong console cornice are important design elements. The roof extension at number 7 dates from 1932.

09296290
 
Apartment building in closed development Dölitzer Strasse 6
(map)
1901 (tenement) Clinker brick facade with sandstone inclusions, of architectural significance

Dölitzer Straße 4/6/8/10 Four similarly designed apartment buildings, built from 1901 to 1902 according to plans by the architect Heinrich Lindemann, numbers 4 and 6 for the building contractor Franz Dietze, numbers 8 and 10 for the master locksmith Max Stephan. Above the high plinths clad with imitation quarry stone, the ground floors are smoothly plastered, above them the upper floors with clinker cladding and simple sandstone and stucco structures. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296287
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Dölitzer Strasse 7
(map)
1904 (tenement) Clinker brick facade with sandstone inclusions and Art Nouveau decoration, important in terms of building history

Number 5 and number 7: built 1904-1905 according to plans by the architect Max Todt: Number 5 for the bricklayer foreman Gustav Heyer, number 7 for the building contractor August Meinicke. Both houses with clinker facades, the first floor at number 5 plastered and originally grooved. The upper floors with sandstone cornices and stucco structures. On both sides the outer window axes at number 5 are designed as continuous plaster axes with framed parapet fields and ornament fields under the roofs. At number 7, the ornamented parapet fields with Art Nouveau decor and a strong console cornice are the most important design elements. The roof extension at number 7 dates from 1932. LfD / 1998 (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, City of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296291
 
Apartment building in closed development Dölitzer Strasse 8
(map)
1901 (tenement) Clinker brick facade with sandstone inclusions, of architectural significance

Dölitzer Straße 4/6/8/10 Four similarly designed apartment buildings, built from 1901 to 1902 according to plans by the architect Heinrich Lindemann, numbers 4 and 6 for the building contractor Franz Dietze, numbers 8 and 10 for the master locksmith Max Stephan. Above the high plinths clad with imitation quarry stone, the ground floors are smoothly plastered, above them the upper floors with clinker cladding and simple sandstone and stucco structures. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296286
 
Apartment building in closed development Dölitzer Strasse 10
(map)
1901-1902 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade with sandstone inclusions, of architectural significance

Dölitzer Straße 4/6/8/10 Four similarly designed apartment buildings, built from 1901 to 1902 according to plans by the architect Heinrich Lindemann, numbers 4 and 6 for the building contractor Franz Dietze, numbers 8 and 10 for the master locksmith Max Stephan. Above the high plinths clad with imitation quarry stone, the ground floors are smoothly plastered, above them the upper floors with clinker cladding and simple sandstone and stucco structures. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296285
 
Apartment building in closed development and corner location Dölitzer Strasse 12
(map)
1901-1902 (tenement house) historicizing clinker brick facade with sandstone integration and Art Nouveau decoration, of architectural significance

Numbers 12 and 14: The two four-storey corner buildings facing each other at the intersection with Ecksteinstrasse were built with the same facade design 1901-1902 (number 12) and 1902-1903 (number 14) according to plans by the architect Heinrich Lindemann for the building contractor Franz Dietze. The upper floors clinker clad with sandstone cornices and stucco structures, these are more representative in comparison to those of the neighboring houses number 4-10 built by the same architect at the same time due to the use of round and triangular gables. The wide, biaxially chamfered edges as well as the axes flanking them on the street fronts are framed by pilaster strips with stucco tendril decoration. In number 14, a restaurant with a shop was installed on the ground floor; the roof extension on Dölitzer Strasse dates from 1927.

09296297
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development and corner location Dölitzer Strasse 14
(map)
1902-1903 (tenement house) historicizing clinker brick facade with sandstone integration and Art Nouveau decoration, of architectural significance

Dölitzer Straße 12/14 The two four-story corner buildings facing each other at the intersection with Ecksteinstraße were built with the same facade design 1901-1902 (number 12) and 1902-1903 (number 14) according to plans by the architect Heinrich Lindemann for the building contractor Franz Dietze. The upper floors are clad in clinker with sandstone cornices and - in comparison to number 4-10 more conspicuous due to the use of gable-shaped roofs - stucco structures. The wide biaxially beveled corner projections are framed by vertical structures with stucco tendril decoration. The roof extension to Dölitzer Straße from 1927. Dölitzer Straße 18/20. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296296
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development and rear building Dölitzer Strasse 18
(map)
1902 (tenement) Front building with gate passage, clinker brick facade with sandstone integration, historically important

Numbers 18 and 20: Two four-storey apartment buildings built according to plans by the architect Heinrich Lindemann for the building contractor Franz Dietze. The ground floor at number 20, as was formerly also at number 18, with delicate plaster grooves, the upper floors clad with stucco and sandstone, the sills of the windows of the third floor at number 18 and also the second at number 20 forming a continuous cornice and the round and triangular gable structuring the axis sequences. The upper end of both facades is marked by two strong console cornices. Both houses have single-storey rear buildings erected as defeats, and in the courtyard of number 20 there is also a small tiled roof. The middle roof extensions at number 20 were made in 1919 and 1921.

09296295
 
Apartment building in closed development, with rear building and garden pavilion in the courtyard Dölitzer Strasse 20
(map)
1902 (tenement) Front building with gate passage, clinker brick facade with sandstone structure and stucco decoration, pavilion on the property line at number 18, of architectural significance

Dölitzer Straße 18/20 built in 1902 for the building contractor Franz Dietze according to plans by the architect Heinrich Lindemann. The first floor at number 20, as it was previously at number 18, with thin plaster grooves, the upper floors clinker-clad with stucco and sandstone structures. The sills partially form a continuous cornice, while gable-shaped roofs accentuate the axis sequence. Two strong console cornices mark the end of both facades. Both houses have single-storey rear buildings erected as defeats, and in the courtyard of number 20 there is also a small tiled roof. The roof extensions at number 20 from 1919 and 1921. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296294
 
Apartment building in closed development Dölitzer Strasse 22
(map)
1902 (tenement) yellow clinker brick facade with green glazed decorative ribbons and stucco structure, important from an architectural point of view

Four-story tenement house built in 1902 with a clinker brick facade and simple stucco structure. The ground floor is plastered with grooves, the parapets of the windows recessed into the ground floor zone are designed as plaster fields with ornamental incised motifs.

09296293
 
Double apartment building in closed development with front garden Dölitzer Strasse 23; 25
(card)
1910-1911 (double tenement house) Plastered facade, reform style architecture, important in terms of building history

Three-storey double tenement house built between 1910 and 1911 according to plans by the architect Hugo Grasemann for the master builder Otto Bergelt. The plastered facade in the area of ​​the upper floors with pilaster structure, plastered mirrors and geometrizing application work, curved rhombuses in ovals. The six central axes were originally raised by a broad, broken gable. The two street-side entrances have over-portals similar to thermal windows. The effect of the semi-detached house is permanently disturbed by the war destruction of the roof and the gable half at number 7 as well as by a new plastering of the facade of number 5 with the omission of the ornamentation there.

09296301
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Dölitzer Strasse 27
(map)
1911 (tenement) Plastered facade, reform style architecture, important in terms of building history

Numbers 27 and 29: The two apartment buildings built in 1911, corresponding in mirror symmetry, are based on the overall planning of the bricklayer foreman Robert Rödiger, who is ultimately responsible for number 27 only. Individual deviations in the facade design at number 29 can be traced back to a revision of Rödiger's design by the architect Moritz H. Eulitz for the carpenter Bernhard Mätzschker. Both houses have three-storey plastered facades and four axles each, including the roof area, with a curved gable at number 27 and broken gable at number 29. The window axes are summarized in the upper storeys by plaster frames, between the windows there are plaster mirrors. The two entrances in the middle of the house front, the entrance at number 27 with a three-part overhang.

09296303
 
Aggregate housing complex Dölitzer Straße of the building association for the procurement of inexpensive apartments, with the following individual monuments: multi-family houses (see also individual monument document - Obj. 09295957) and front gardens Dölitzer Strasse 28; 30; 32; 34; 36; 38; 40; 42; 44; 44a; 44b
(card)
1928-1929 (apartment building) in line form with partly original shops (at number 30, number 44 and number 44a), plastered facade, relief of the building association above the front door of number 38, in the traditionalist style, of architectural and social historical importance 09304095
 
Individual features above aggregate: apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09304095, same address) Dölitzer Strasse 28; 30; 32; 34; 36; 38; 40; 42; 44; 44a; 44b
(card)
1928-1929 (apartment building) in line form with partly original shops (at number 30, number 44 and number 44a), plastered facade, relief of the building association above the front door of number 38, in the traditionalist style, of architectural and social historical importance

The wide-spread residential complex stretching over eleven parcels was built in 1928-1929 according to plans by the architect Walther R. Beyer for the building association for the procurement of inexpensive apartments in Leipzig eGmbH. Five houses form the recessed four-story central wing with a raised five-story central section and hipped roof; it is flanked by two protruding side wings made up of three houses each. The three building blocks are subdivided by the protruding entrance axes, the entrances themselves are designed by vertical banding. The ivy vegetation is decisive for the character of the otherwise undivided plastered facades. The complex contains two small apartments per entrance and floor, each with two rooms, a kitchen and a bathroom. The infrastructure included a butcher's shop in number 30, a bakery and confectioner's shop in number 44 with an associated bakery in number 42 as well as a dairy shop in number 44a, five laundry rooms and two rolling rooms. The front gardens with kerbstones, low privet hedges and lawns.

09295957
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Dölitzer Strasse 29
(map)
1911 (tenement) Plastered facade, reform style architecture, important in terms of building history

Numbers 27 and 29: The two mirror-image apartment buildings built in 1911 go back to the overall planning of the bricklayer foreman Robert Rödiger. Both houses with three-storey plastered facades and four axes each raised up to the roof area, number 27 with a curved gable, number 29 with a broken gable. The window axes are summarized in the upper storeys by plaster frames, between the windows there are plaster mirrors. The two entrances in the middle of the house front, the entrance at number 27 with a three-part overhang.

09296304
 
Tenement house (with three house numbers) in closed development with a front garden Dölitzer Strasse 31; 31a; 33
(card)
1926-1927 (tenement house) Plastered facade, emphasized by the middle gable, in the Art Deco style, of architectural significance

The three-storey residential complex built privately by the builder F. Herbert Heine was built between 1926 and 1927. The plastered facade is only structured by the three slightly protruding entrance axes, the brick frame of the entrances and the profiled cornice, while the roof landscape is more varied with the wide, stepped central gable, the two smaller, equally stepped gables above the two side entrance axes and the mansard roof with one close succession of straight dormers. In the middle gable there is a jagged window cut in Art Deco style.

09296305
 
Double tenement house in closed development, with front garden and enclosure Dölitzer Strasse 35; 37
(card)
1912-1913 (double tenement house) Hallways with original equipment and painting, plastered facade, reform style architecture, front garden with original fence posts, of importance in terms of building history

Three-storey double apartment building, which was built in 1912-1913 according to plans by the architect Richard Teichmann for the bricklayer foreman Karl Richter and the building contractor Otto Albrecht. Broad plastered facade, the eight central axes of which are solid in the roof area and end with a hipped roof. Small plastered mirrors on the window parapets of the central axes, otherwise the only facade structure are two cornices at the sill height of the windows on the ground floor and the first floor. The two aedicule-like house entrances are decorated with a bouquet of flowers in the pediment, as well as ornamental fields and grimacing masks on the side pots. The original features of the hallways with wall tiles and a painting in number 37, as well as the cement pegs and, in number 37, the front garden fence, have been preserved. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296298
 
Double tenement house in closed development, with front garden and enclosure Dölitzer Strasse 39; 41
(card)
1911-1912 (double tenement house) Plastered facade, reform style architecture, important in terms of building history

The three-storey double apartment building was built in 1911-1912, possibly according to plans by the building contractor Wilhelm Kother, number 39 for the building contractor's wife Selma Albrecht, number 41 for Eduard Feichtinger and Ernst Hoppe. Broad plastered façade, the eight central axes with a concluding hipped roof up to the top floor are solid and have a structure on the upper floors with plaster strips and small-scale application work under the top windows. In the basement zone a vertical ridge plaster, the ground floor with a thinly cut into the rough plaster over the entire width of the semi-detached house and the two pilaster-framed house entrances with tile roofing. The hallway furnishings are originally available with wall tiles, flat stucco strips and figural stucco reliefs showing women pouring out water.

09296299
 
Apartment building in closed development Dölitzer Strasse 43
(map)
1911-1912 (tenement) formerly with a shop, plastered facade, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history

Three-storey tenement, built between 1911 and 1912, probably based on plans by the building contractor Wilhelm Kother, for the bricklayer foreman Richard Hänseroth and the room foreman Otto Hänseroth. Plastered facade with plastered mirrors and small-scale application work under the windows of the second floor. The high broken gable above the four axes on the left determines the shape of the house. In the central axis sits the portal with grooved pods and a triangular gable, the gable field of which contains stucco decoration. Reliefs showing women pouring water in the hallway.

09296300
 
Apartment building in a residential complex Dölitzer Strasse 43a
(map)
1928-1931 (tenement) Plastered facade with clinker brick structure, several box oriels, stylistically between traditionalism and modernity, see also Bornaische Straße 90-102 and Probstheidaer Straße 13/15, of importance in terms of building history

see Bornaische Strasse 90-102

09295992
 
Apartment building in open development, with front yard and enclosure Dölitzer Strasse 45
(map)
1908-1909 (tenement house) Representative building, plastered facade with a three-storey sloping porch, on the right in the facade loggias, reform style architecture, of historical importance

Free-standing three-storey apartment building built in 1908-1909 by master builder Arthur Riehl for building materials dealer Bruno Paukert on the adjoining plot of land at Bornaische Strasse 106 at the rear. Plastered facade with cornice and flat stucco decorations. In front of the slightly protruding central projectile with a broken gable reaching into the roof area, a three-storey sloping porch is asymmetrically offset. On the right in the facade there are loggias and rounded balconies with wrought iron bars. On the left-hand side of the gable is a single-storey wooden vestibule with an outside staircase, adjoining it a barely protruding staircase projection with a polygonal tower top that was formerly crowned by a curved dome. The three apartments, each of which occupies one floor, have a stately layout. The wrought-iron enclosure with plastered brick plinth and posts belongs to the house.

09295961
 
Apartment building in half-open development with a front garden, fence and side gate and rear building Dölitzer Strasse 46
(map)
1909 (tenement) Typical plastered facade with two bay windows, reform style architecture, of architectural significance

The three-storey detached tenement house was built in 1909 according to plans by the architect Hugo Grasemann for the stone setting master Edwin Berger. On the broad plastered facade, two oriels with simple pilaster strips, the three axes on the left up to the top floor are raised with a half-hip gable. The left side of the gable has a slightly protruding risalit and a half-timbered gable. In the middle building axis a Baroque style portal with pilasters, the hallway with wall tiles, arched vault and porch door. In the courtyard a two-storey rear building, formerly with a stable, feed floor and coachman's apartment. A picket fence with plastered brick bases and pillars was used as a front garden fence.

09295958
 
Apartment building in half-open development and corner location, with front yard and enclosure Dölitzer Strasse 48
(map)
1911-1912 (tenement) Plastered facade, the second floor with a circular pilaster structure, rounded corner of the house as a dominant design motif, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history

Three-storey corner building built between 1911 and 1912 according to plans by the architect G. George for the master bricklayer Wilhelm Richter with a rounded corner as a dominant design motif. The first floor of the plastered facade with grooves running across both street fronts and the corner rounding, the second upper floor, set off by a cornice, with circumferential pilasters. On each of the two street fronts there are two slightly protruding risalits that protrude on the upper floors, the two inner ones with small hipped roof extensions, while massive roof extensions are located above the two outer ones. The hallway with wall tiles, pilasters, stucco cornice and a barrel vault with stucco belts.

09295959
 
Apartment building (with three house numbers) in open development, with front garden Dölitzer Strasse 52; 54; 56
(map)
1911-1912 (tenement) distinctive plastered facade, reform style architecture, of architectural significance

1911-1912, based on plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for master bricklayer Hermann Freiberg, three-storey apartment block with three entrances. The wide 22-axis plastered facade is given a representative character by two slightly protruding middle compartments, raised by triangular gables, which are flanked by two outer protruding risalits with massive roof attachments. Basement and ground floor on the protruding parts with thinly incised grooves, the wall sections between the double windows on the ground floor at the height of the lintels with cornice and stucco band decorated with vegetal ornaments. Stucco decor of the same style is also used as a border on the high oval skylight above the entrance to number 54 and in the triangular gables. The hallway of number 54 with wall tiling, pilaster strips and barrel vaulting with stucco belts.

09295960
 
Villa with terrace, enclosure and villa garden Dölitzer Strasse 58
(map)
1905 (villa) Plastered facade, in Reform and Heimat style, architect: Paul Würzler-Klopsch, built for Johanna Schiele-Berdux, the wife of the Munich administrative director Fritz Schiele, of architectural and art historical importance

In 1905 a single-storey villa with an extended mansard and a large adjacent garden was built in 1905 according to plans by the architect Paul Würzler-Klopsch for Johanna Schiele-Berdux, the wife of the Munich administrative director Fritz Schiele. The exterior is determined by the contrasting separation of the high, darkly slated roof from the white-painted rough plaster of the wall surfaces and the windows, cornices, gutters and downpipes, which are also white. Towards Dölitzer Strasse there is a semicircular porch extending into the attic, which accommodates the entrance and is provided with a glare framework in the roof zone. On the south side facing the garden as well as on the north side there is a slightly protruding central projectile with a half-hipped gable, on the back another semicircular porch, single-storey with balcony. The mansard roof, which includes the street-side porch and loft extensions, gives the building a compact character. The roof and gable shapes as well as the glare framework and the shutters assign the small villa to the Heimat style. A high hall with the stairwell can be reached via the semicircular entrance porch and a small anteroom, followed by the living room, dining room, kitchen and sideboard. The mansard floor contains a living room with rounded windows above the entrance project, three bedrooms and the bathroom. Changes that did not affect the overall impression were made in 1919 by adding a single-storey extension next to the northern risalit, in 1920 by building a terrace with cellar rooms in front of the south side and in 1924 by installing two garages in the rooms under the terrace.

09296306
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Ecksteinstrasse 29
(map)
1905 (tenement) with a shop zone, corner accentuation by corner bay windows, clinker-plaster facade with stucco structures, important from an architectural point of view

Numbers 29 and 31: Two four-storey apartment buildings built between 1904 and 1905 according to plans by the architect Hugo Grasemann, who was also the client. Number 29 in the corner of Biedermannstraße with the ground floor chamfered in the corner area and provided with plaster grooves, above that the upper floors protruding at right angles and with corner pillars clad in clinker brick with stucco structures. On the outer axes to both street fronts, high loggias closing in a segmental arc with protruding wrought-iron balconies. The two shops on the ground floor with original fronts, two apartments on each floor. The roof extension on Ecksteinstrasse from 1926. Number 31 with a strongly formed front made of raw brick facing. The lateral axes with wide arched and glazed loggias, whose protruding parapets suggest balconies, while the windows of the central axes are segmented arches with profiled walls and parapets with rough plastering. The hallway with ornamental tiles, wall tiles and barrel vaults, two apartments on each floor. The top floor originally contained a shared bathroom.

09296378
 
Apartment building in closed development Ecksteinstrasse 31
(map)
1904-1905 (tenement house) Brick facade with plastered fields, the lateral axes with wide glazed loggias, of architectural significance

Numbers 29 and 31: Two four-storey apartment buildings built between 1904 and 1905 according to plans by the architect Hugo Grasemann, who was also the client. Number 29 in the corner of Biedermannstraße with the ground floor chamfered in the corner area and provided with plaster grooves, above that the upper floors protruding at right angles and with corner pillars clad in clinker brick with stucco structures. On the outer axes to both street fronts, high loggias closing in a segmental arc with protruding wrought-iron balconies. The two shops on the ground floor with original fronts, two apartments on each floor. The roof extension on Ecksteinstrasse from 1926. Number 31 with a strongly formed front made of raw brick facing. The lateral axes with wide arched and glazed loggias, whose protruding parapets suggest balconies, while the windows of the central axes are segmented arches with profiled walls and parapets with rough plastering. The hallway with ornamental tiles, wall tiles and barrel vaults, two apartments on each floor. The top floor originally contained a shared bathroom.

09296275
 
Apartment building in closed development Ecksteinstrasse 32
(map)
1904-1905 (tenement house) Plaster facade with geometric plaster decoration, of importance in terms of building history

Four-story tenement house built between 1904 and 1905 according to plans by the architect Max Todt for the building contractor and bricklayer foreman Karl Geissler. The plaster facade on the upper floors with pronounced vertical structure, to which the horizontal plaster stripes on the ground floor as well as the plaster stripes laid back between the windows as a continuation of the sills are in tension. On the parapets of the two outer axes stucco work with heraldic shields surrounded by wreaths. The main cornice, with a toothed frieze, rests on consoles covered with masks. The hallway is arranged almost in the middle, with two apartments on each floor.

09296278
 
Apartment building in closed development Ecksteinstrasse 33
(map)
1901-1902 (tenement house) yellow clinker brick facade with sandstone inclusions, of architectural significance

Four-storey tenement house built by master bricklayer Otto Gruner 1901-1902 for bricklayer foreman Hermann Gruner. The ground floor was plastered and originally grooved, the upper floors clad in clinker with stucco structures. Art Nouveau stucco decorations in the hallway, two apartments per floor.

09296276
 
Apartment building in closed development Ecksteinstrasse 34
(map)
1902 (tenement) Clinker brick facade with sandstone inclusions, of architectural significance

The four-story tenement house built in 1902 by the bricklayer foreman Wilhelm Billig, who was also the client. The ground floor is plastered with grooves, the upper floors clinker clad with stucco structures. The hallway, which is arranged almost in the middle, with ornamental tiles and four oil paintings inserted into stucco frames showing landscapes. Two apartments on each floor.

09296277
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Ecksteinstrasse 35
(map)
1904-1905 (tenement house) Formerly with a shop, clinker brick facade with sandstone structures, historically important

Numbers 35 and 37: Two four-storey apartment buildings built between 1904 and 1905 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the master bricklayer Eduard Möller as clinker buildings with plastered ground floors, stucco structures and rich stucco decoration on window frames, gable fields, parapets and roofs, including coats of arms and garlands and the edges of the chamfer of number 35, which is in the corner of Dölitzer Strasse. In front of number 35 on Dölitzer Strasse, a front garden with a wrought-iron enclosure, a ventilation gap between the two houses. On the ground floor there are two shops with an office and shop apartments, on the upper floors there are three apartments of different sizes. At number 37 the hallway with painting and stucco, the floors with two apartments each.

09296279
 
Apartment building in half-open development Ecksteinstrasse 37
(map)
1904-1905 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade with richly decorated window frames and gable fields, hallway with painting, of architectural significance

Numbers 35 and 37: Two four-storey apartment buildings built between 1904 and 1905 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the master bricklayer Eduard Möller as clinker buildings with plastered ground floors, stucco structures and rich stucco decoration on window frames, gable fields, parapets and roofs, including coats of arms and garlands and the edges of the chamfer of number 35, which is in the corner of Dölitzer Strasse. In front of number 35 on Dölitzer Strasse, a front garden with a wrought-iron enclosure, a ventilation gap between the two houses. On the ground floor there are two shops with an office and shop apartments, on the upper floors there are three apartments of different sizes. At number 37 the hallway with painting and stucco, the floors with two apartments each.

09296280
 
Apartment building in closed development Ecksteinstrasse 39
(map)
1904-1905 (tenement house) Plastered facade with Art Nouveau decoration, important in terms of building history

With number 41: Two four-storey apartment buildings built between 1904 and 1905 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the building contractors Alwin Knösing (number 39), Otto Thier and Alwin Schütze (number 41). Above high plinth areas, the plaster facades, designed with art nouveau shapes and decorations. In number 41, emphasis is placed on the center with two central axes protruding slightly on the upper floors with triangular gables and stucco mask. The windows at number 39 in a simple row, but here, too, the center of the building is accentuated by two sculptural stucco masks. The hallways almost in the middle, two apartments on each floor. 1955-1956 Reconstruction of the war-destroyed third floor and roof at number 39.

09296281
 
Residential and administrative building in half-open development, with side gate entrance Ecksteinstrasse 40
(map)
1909-1910 (residential and office building) Former administration building and official residence of the municipal energy supply, yellow brick facade with green clinker ornamentation, associated substation see Bornaische Strasse 53 (see object 09296358), of importance in terms of building history and site development 09295945
 
Apartment building in closed development Ecksteinstrasse 41
(map)
1904-1905, marked 1904 (tenement house) Plastered facade with Art Nouveau decoration, important in terms of building history

s. Number 39

09296282
 
Apartment building in closed development Ecksteinstrasse 42
(map)
1908-1909 (tenement house) Plastered facade, between Reform and Art Nouveau, important in terms of building history

1908-1909 four-story tenement house built to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the contractor's wife Auguste Engel. The plastered facade appears lively due to the pronounced vertical structure of the upper floors, encompassing the window axes in a segmental arc, and the alternation of rough and smooth plastered surfaces on the base zone, ground floor and the parapet areas of the upper floors. The smoothly plastered vertical structures in the upper area with parallel stripes characteristic of an Art Nouveau decoration. The central hallway with wall tiles, walls structured by pilasters and a basket-arched barrel. Two apartments on the ground floor and three apartments on the upper floors.

09295946
 
Apartment building in closed development Ecksteinstrasse 43
(map)
1904 (tenement) Clinker brick facade with sandstone inclusions, of architectural significance

With number 45: Two four-story clinker brick buildings with simple stucco structures built between 1904 and 1905 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the contractors Otto Thier and Alwin Schütze. The relatively high plinth and the ground floors plastered. Number 45 in a chamfered corner to Zwenkauer Strasse. The hallways almost in the middle, the entrance area in number 43 with stucco decor in Art Nouveau forms. There are two apartments on each of the floors of number 43 and three apartments on each of those of number 45.

09296283
 
Apartment building in closed development and in a corner Ecksteinstrasse 45
(map)
1904-1905 (tenement house) Formerly with a corner store, clinker brick facade with sandstone structure, of importance in terms of building history

s. Number 43

09296284
 
Apartment house in open development in a corner, with a front garden Ecksteinstrasse 46
(map)
1938 (tenement) Plastered facade, in the traditionalist style of the time, of architectural significance 09299213
 
Apartment house in open development in a corner Ecksteinstrasse 50
(map)
1914-1915 (tenement) Plastered facade, corner emphasis by corner bay windows with turrets, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history

According to plans by the architect Arthur Nagel, who was also the building contractor, a three-storey apartment building built largely between 1914 and 1915 on the corner of Frohburger Strasse. Plastered building with a brick base. On both street fronts, balconies and broken gables with sparse stucco decor, the parapet areas with plastered mirrors. The corner is highlighted by a polygonal bay window with a curved hood and a solid attic that connects the two gables with the corner bay window. Kitchen exits on the back. Three apartments on each floor. It was not completed until 1919 due to the First World War.

09296217
 
Apartment building in open development with front garden Ecksteinstrasse 52
(map)
1929-1930 (tenement) Plastered facade, front door walls made of sandstone, large, centrally arranged loggias facing the street, of architectural significance

In 1929/1930, the “last project on the whole street” was the outdated-looking tenement building with a mansard hipped roof and a gray high-quality plaster facade over yellow clinker facing. Paul Schulze took over the implementation of the project in personal union with his building business for civil engineering based in Bornaische Strasse 49. Plans presumably by the academic architects Jaeger & Hertel. The street facade of the free-standing building is severely broken by large, centrally arranged loggias, less sensitive loggias up to the top floor. Lengthy discussions with the building police concerned the expansion of the attic, bomb damage on December 4, 1943, and efforts to rebuild the damaged areas in the 1960s. In 1996 transition from public property to private ownership. There are three apartments on each floor with three rooms, a kitchen, a balcony and a bathroom with an indoor closet. "The painting work [also of the stairwell] was done in a simple, tasteful manner" and the laundry room and two car storage rooms were housed in the basement. Architecturally of interest as the last completed construction project in a tenement district in a Connewitz expansion area. LfD / 2012

09299060
 
Double apartment building in open development, with fencing and front garden Ecksteinstrasse 53; 55
(card)
1913-1914 (double tenement house) Plastered facade, reform style architecture, important in terms of building history

Three-storey detached double apartment building built between 1913 and 1914 according to plans by the architect Richard Teichmann for the master plumber Hermann Ackermann. The broad plastered building on its main front with two projections terminating by pointed gables, adjoining two even more prominent verandas on the side. The gable fronts each have a central projection closed off by a hipped roof. A circumferential brick cornice with a tooth cut was used on the decorative shapes and plastered mirrors on the risalits. The hallways with wall tiles, three apartments on the floors per semi-detached house.

09296220
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Eichendorffstrasse 3
(map)
1902 (tenement) Clinker brick facade with stucco structures, of importance in terms of building history

The four-story tenement house built in 1902 by the master carpenter and building contractor, who was also the client. The base zone and first floor plastered and originally grooved, the upper floors clinker clad with stucco. Slightly protruding central projection, which stands out from the clinker facade through plastered surfaces and structures. The hallway, which is almost in the middle, with ornamental tiles, wooden panels and stucco decoration in Art Nouveau forms. Two apartments per floor.

09296407
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Eichendorffstrasse 6
(map)
1913 (tenement) Plastered facade, reform style architecture, important in terms of building history

Eichendorffstraße 6 built in 1913 by the architect Alfred Lingner, who is also the building owner. Plastered building with a high, sandstone-faced base. The ground floor with vertical corrugated plaster, from which the upper floors are separated by a cornice. The four axes on the right above the main cornice were raised, the others in the roof area were subsequently massively expanded. Two flat risalites with square vertical structures, plastering levels and concluding tooth-cut friezes frame the centrally arranged sandstone-framed entrance, over whose skylight a man's mask is attached. There are more masks on the risalits below the main cornice. The hallway with wall tiles and barrel vaults. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296406
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Eichendorffstrasse 7
(map)
1902-1903 (tenement house) with shop, clinker-plaster facade with stucco structures, two bay windows, of architectural significance

Four-storey tenement house built by master builder Kurt Bergk 1902-1903 for master locksmith Theodor Bergk. With two significantly protruding angular bay windows and strong stucco structures, the clinker-plaster facade appears to be very three-dimensional, which rises from the ground floor, which is designed by plastered plastered surfaces, to the top floor with its finer Art Nouveau ornamentation. A roof extension from 1936 above the projecting main cornice. The hallway almost in the middle with wooden panels pilaster strips and flat wall and ceiling stucco. The ground floor formerly with a shop, a small shop apartment and another apartment, the upper floors with two apartments each.

09296405
 
Administration building (addresses: Karl-Liebknecht-Straße 143, Eichendorffstraße 9/11 and Richard-Lehmann-Straße 34) Eichendorffstrasse 9; 11
(card)
1913-1915 (administration building) Elongated, representative building with a semicircular risalit, facade with ashlar cladding and figural reliefs, architects: Gustav Hänichen and Heinrich Tscharmann , Dresden, in the reform style of the time around 1910, of architectural, art-historical and local significance

Former Teutonia insurance, built 1913-1915 according to plans by the architects Gustav Hänichen and Richard Tscharmann for the Teutonia insurance company in Leipzig. Three-wing administration building with an elongated front facing Karl-Liebknecht-Straße. Above the ashlar base zone a vertically structured ashlar facade with an attic storey and a semicircular projecting central projection, which contains the portal accessible via an external staircase. The portal with an antique portrait head in half profile. The central risalit is highlighted by pilasters, animal masks and windows decorated with decorative arched fields, and medallions above the ground floor windows of the main wing showing handicraft activities. The two side wings on Richard-Lehmann-Straße and Eichendorffstraße are less well designed and the roof area has been expanded to accommodate apartments. At the back of the main wing, analogous to the risalits on the front, a rounded staircase porch with marble stairs. The interior division of the floors is double-hipped with central corridors, the central projection on the ground floor contains an oval vestibule. In the original use, the ground floor had offices and a telephone exchange, while the side wings each contained an apartment. The first floor with offices, bookkeeping and doctors 'rooms as well as a conference room flanked by two directors' rooms in the central risalit. Second upper floor and attic floor with open-plan offices and one apartment each. Two further apartments and archive rooms on the top floor. The accessibility of the floors was ensured by four electric elevators next to the stairwell. 1923 Sale of the building to the Reich Finance Administration, then used as a state tax office. LfD / 1998

09296654
 
Lipsius-Bau: Administration building (Addresses: Karl-Liebknecht-Straße 145, Eichendorffstraße 10 and Gustav-Freytag-Straße 41) Eichendorffstrasse 10
(map)
1922-1926 (administration building) Elongated building with a seven-axis central projection, in it six set columns with capitals in serrated decor, three stone reliefs over entrance doors with iron bars, architect: Postbaurat Willibald Seckt, of importance in terms of building history, the history of the town and the townscape

Former Leipzig post office, built 1922-1926 according to plans by the post office building councilor Willibald Seckt. Four-storey plastered building with a side wing facing Eichendorffstrasse and an elongated main front facing Karl-Liebknecht-Strasse, from which emerges a seven-axis, portico-like central projection with set, beveled columns, mezzanine floor and projecting main cornice. The capitals of the columns with jagged decoration. The three central axes of the risalite with the entrances, above three expressionist stone reliefs with dramatically moving figures, made by the sculptor Wilhelm Andreas based on designs by the sculptor Alfred Thiele. The windows of the lateral central risalit axes as well as those of the recessed fronts up to the second floor are grouped together axis by axis by narrow templates. Vestibule and stairwell with ceramic fittings and fountain by the ceramist Kurt Feuerriegel, on the back a double staircase. The interior division of the floors is two-sided with central corridors on which the offices are located.

09296320
 
Functional construction of telecommunications Eichendorffstrasse 12
(map)
around 1925 (functional building telecommunications) Plastered facade, see also Gustav-Freytag-Straße 43/45 and Eichendorfstraße 14, of local significance 09296905
 
Several university buildings (with original furnishings, addresses: Gustav-Freytag-Straße 43/45 and Eichendorffstraße 14), with front gardens and inner courtyard at the main entrance, gates on Eichendorffstraße and in the courtyard arcade at building Eichendorffstraße 14 Eichendorffstrasse 14
(map)
1952-1955 (university) Plastered facades in the style of the national building tradition of the 1950s, northern functional building see Eichendorffstrasse 12, of local and architectural importance 09298251
 
Villa with side fence and gate system Fockestrasse 75
(map)
1925-1926 (villa) Plastered facade with Art Deco decor, built for the private school director Prof. Hermann Schuster (born 1858), architect: Richard Wagner, Leipzig, of architectural significance

A quarter of a year later, the building permit for the request for a two-storey country house coveted in February 1925 was given to Prof. Dr. phil Hermann Emil Schuster. This had hired the architect and building attorney Richard Wagner, who a few years later designed the Protestant parish hall in Connewitz. In February 1926, the construction company Carl Brömme, which had branches in Leipzig and Chemnitz, reported that the product was ready for occupancy. The designs show neo-baroque facade decor, which has been largely replaced by formative Art Deco jewelry. Lime-cement plaster in the sprayed manner covered the facade, the pilasters, profiles and the base were made of granite plaster, the effective high mansard roof with beavertail double roofing and representative roof house. Some of the built-in double-frame sliding windows and the box windows as well as some interior details have been preserved. Formative Art Deco building in the villa quarter, historically significant. LfD / 2012

09299269
 
Residential house in open development Fockestrasse 79
(map)
1930 (residential building) in the Bauhaus style, plastered facade with flat roof, architect: Georg Staufert, important in terms of building history

Architect Georg Staufert provided two drafts for the two-family house to be built on the 850 square meter property on behalf of Mrs. Maria Mühlberg. Despite the building permit issued in October 1929, new drawings were submitted in March 1930, which, after the building authorities' signature, served the Paul George construction company as the basis for the construction of the modern house. Two months later, construction management passed into the hands of the architects Fischer and Fiedler from Raschwitz, who again submitted changes to the facade as tectures. A few clinker strips structure the smoothly plastered, rather compact-looking structure with partially attached mezzanine and flat roof. A dining room, living room, bedroom and master’s room, a girl’s room as well as kitchen and sanitary rooms were previously planned on both floors, and in the basement there was a garage and a south-facing apartment for the chauffeur and housekeeper. The few original pieces of equipment include the apartment entrance doors with ventilation sash and grilles as well as Solnhofen natural stone slabs in the entrance area. One of the few buildings influenced by the Bauhaus in the south of Leipzig - architectural significance. LfD / 2012

09299329
 
Apartment building in open development Frohburger Strasse 33
(map)
around 1901/1902 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade with stucco decoration, important in terms of building history

Three-story, detached tenement house, probably built in 1901 or 1902. Above the plastered ground floor, which was originally grooved, the clinker-clad upper floors with colored tile decor. The strongly plastic stucco structures in the area of ​​the first floor, triangular gables on the central and outer window axes, which are seated on combatant consoles, give the facade a look back and historicizing for the time after the turn of the century.

09296437
 
Double apartment building in open development Frohburger Strasse 34; 36
(card)
1903-1904 (double tenement house) yellow clinker brick facade with green glazed decorative ribbons and stucco structures, important from an architectural point of view

Four-storey free-standing double building with a broad front, built in 1903-1904 according to plans by the builder Julius Richard Porsche for Minna Gerhardt, the wife of the contractor Curt Gerhardt. The first floor plastered and grooved, the upper floors clinker clad with stucco structures. The window frames are designed by alternating yellow facing stones with green glazed clinker bricks. On both sides of both semi-detached houses, the two outer axes protrude slightly and are accentuated by curved roofs on the first and second floors that combine the windows.

09296438
 
Triple rental house in open development Frohburger Strasse 35; 37; 39
(map)
1901 (tenement) Clinker brick facade with stucco structure and decorative friezes made of colored glazed bricks, built for the »consumer association Leipzig-Connewitz and the surrounding area«, of architectural significance

In 1901, based on plans by the architect Bruno Richter for the Consumverein Leipzig-Connewitz and the surrounding area, an assembly with three tenement houses. The broad, 21-axis clinker brick facade with decorative arches and friezes made of colored glazed bricks dominates the entire side of the street. In the rear area was the sports hall of the gymnastics club Vorwärts Leipzig-Südatiert from 1904-1908. The Connewitzer Konsumverein, which was merged with the Leipzig-Plagwitz consumer club and the surrounding area in 1905, set up its butcher's department in the courtyard of number 33 and built it on the site of number 35. 1909, after the gymnasium was demolished, a machine and boiler house.

09296439
 
Double apartment building in open development and rear building at No. 38 Frohburger Strasse 38; 40
(card)
1903-1905, marked 1904 (tenement house), 1903-1904, number 38 (tenement house), 1903-1905 (rear building) with shop, yellow clinker brick facade, historicizing with Art Nouveau stucco decorations, of architectural significance

1903-1905 according to plans by Curt Zweck for the building contractor and master locksmith Gustav Busch built free-standing double apartment building. The base with quarry stone imitation, above the ground floor formerly with a groove, the upper floors clinker clad with stucco structures. On both halves of the semi-detached house, the two inner axes protrude slightly, with pilasters in the area of ​​the first floor, curved arched motifs enclosing the second and third floors and final gables. In the arched motifs, the wall surfaces are decoratively designed, as rough plaster mirrors below, above as stucco fields with lush swings, the year and the owner's initials and above as trees, with the tree trunks between the windows of the third floor and leafy crowns spreading out over the lintels. Similar lavish Art Nouveau decorations can also be found at number 38 as wrought iron bars and carvings on the house and apartment doors and, also with the client's monogram, as stucco work on the wall structures of the hallways. In the courtyard of number 38 a single-storey side building, originally also used as a househusband's apartment. Refurbishment 1995-1997, no fencing left. LfD / 1993/1998, 2015

09296440
 
Apartment building in open development, with courtyard paving and courtyard building Frohburger Strasse 41
(map)
1902-1903 (tenement house) Clinker-plaster facade with stucco structure, important from an architectural point of view

Four-storey detached tenement house built between 1902 and 1903 by the mason foreman Hermann Reuss. The ground floor and the two outer axes on both sides plastered and originally provided with grooves, the upper floors otherwise clad in clinker with stucco structure. Access at the back. In the courtyard a single-storey rear building originally used as a horse stable and defeat.

09296441
 
Apartment house in open development and in a corner Frohburger Strasse 43
(map)
1903 (tenement) Formerly with a corner shop, clinker brick facade with stucco decoration, of importance in terms of building history

The free-standing four-story chamfered corner building was built in 1903 according to plans by the architect Gustav Liebmann for the bricklayer and innkeeper Arthur Bertram and the bricklayer foreman Hermann Reuss. The ground floor with a plaster groove was added later at the corner axis. The upper floors clinker clad with stucco structures, while the third floor is set off by a cornice. The chamfered corner is crowned by a windowed pointed gable.

09296442
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Gaschwitzer Strasse 2
(map)
1885 (tenement house) with passage through the house, plastered facade typical of the time, iron canopy on the courtyard side, of architectural significance

A building application for a residential house and ancillary building was issued in June 1885 and was carried out by the construction company Hermann Döge for Carl Franz Schulze by September of the same year. The wooden barn, wash house and two toilets were housed in the courtyard building, and two small apartments per floor were set up in the house itself. Water flushing toilets were only installed in the front building in 1938 by the Paul Randel construction company. An application for termination, which was initially rejected, was approved by the Leipzig regional council in 2005 (applicant Roland Golmick from Markkleeberg), but not carried out. The three-storey plastered building with restrained facade decoration, narrow house passage and flat sloping pent roof represents the type of house in the Leipzig suburbs that represent a link between the late classicist craftsman's houses on the approach streets and the larger historicist and art nouveau tenement houses. As one of the few surviving examples of the simpler apartment buildings in the outskirts of the urban expansion areas, it is of significance in terms of the history of the development of the district. LfD / 2012

09299100
 
Apartment house in a formerly closed development and courtyard building Gaschwitzer Strasse 6
(map)
1901-1902 (tenement house) clinker brick facade typical of the time, of architectural significance

1901-1902 based on plans by the architect Heinrich Lindemann for the master bricklayer Julius Ihme, three-storey apartment building. A simple clinker brick facade with structures above a relatively high basement.

09296009
 
Apartment building in half-open development Gaschwitzer Strasse 7
(map)
1903 (tenement) historicizing clinker brick facade, of architectural significance

Numbers 7, 9 and 11: The three apartment buildings built according to plans by the architect Heinrich Lindemann for the building contractor and bricklayer Karl Bielig were built in 1903-1904 in connection with the development of Klemmstrasse. As there, Lindemann also used the same type of three-storey nine-axis apartment building with a slightly protruding central projectile and three apartments on each upper floor, but the facade designs are widely varied. Number 7 is designed as a yellow clinker brick facade with sandstone structure and color changing tile strips, number 9 with red clinker and sandstone structure. The most elaborate design was given to number 11 with a varied plastered facade: the ground floor with a plaster joint imitating work stone, the upper floors with a finely fluted horizontal comb plaster and mirrors in geometric Art Nouveau shapes under the sills, the protruding axes with a rich decoration of stucco garlands. The hallways in all three houses are fitted with stucco decorations and ceilings. In number 11 there are also wall and ceiling paintings by the academic painter Albert Ihle, who lived here around 1920, depicting Connewitz motifs on the walls of the house.

09296011
 
Apartment building in closed development Gaschwitzer Strasse 9
(map)
1903 (tenement) historicizing clinker brick facade, of architectural significance

Gaschwitzer Straße 7/9/11 The three apartment buildings built according to plans by the architect Heinrich Lindemann for the building contractor and bricklayer Karl Bielig were built between 1903 and 1904 in connection with the development of Klemmstraße. As there, Lindemann also used the same type of three-story, nine-axis apartment building with a flat central projection and three apartments on each upper floor, but the facade designs are varied. Numbers 7 and 9 are designed as yellow and red brick facades, adorned with colored decorative friezes or straight plaster frames on the windows. Both are simple but designed with the sure taste culture of the Art Nouveau era. On the other hand, the elegant Art Nouveau facade of number 11 in the narrow suburban street is surprising: starting from the entrance, the typical "ribbon noodle" decor winds around the windows and under the sole benches over the flat central projection. The upper floors above the strip cornice are enlivened by fine comb plaster on which flat, shield-like smooth plaster fields are laid. All three houses with beautiful portals and door leaves, in the corridors Art Nouveau stucco decorations, in number 11 there are wall and ceiling paintings by the academic painter Albert Ihle, who lived here around 1920, including depictions from Alt-Connewitz. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296012
 
Apartment building in closed development and memorial plaque for R. Reinhardt Gaschwitzer Strasse 10
(map)
1904 (tenement) historicizing plaster facade, long-term residence of the veterinarian Prof. Dr. Dr. Richard Reinhardt, important in terms of building history and personal history

With number 12: The two three-story tenement houses were built in 1903-1904 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the master mason Julius Illge. Although number 10 has a plastered facade and number 12 has a clinker brick facade, both houses have the same simple structures as well as equally high basements. Keystones with women's masks above both house entrances. Until 1967, Prof. Dr. Dr. Richard Reinhardt, a co-founder of modern veterinary medicine.

09296008
 
Apartment building in closed development Gaschwitzer Strasse 11
(map)
1903-1904 (tenement house), around 1920 (wall painting) Formerly with the original shop, plastered facade with lavish Art Nouveau decoration, hallway with ceiling painting, of architectural significance

s. Number 7

09296265
 
Apartment building in closed development Gaschwitzer Strasse 12
(map)
1903-1904 (tenement house) historicizing clinker brick facade, of architectural significance

Gaschwitzer Straße 10/12 The two three-story tenement houses were built in 1903-1904 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the master bricklayer Julius Illge. Although number 10 has a plastered facade and number 12 a clinker brick facade, both houses have the same simple and for the time conventional structure. Keystones with women's masks above both house entrances. Until 1967, Prof. Dr. Dr. Richard Reinhardt, a co-founder of modern veterinary medicine. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296007
 
Apartment building in closed development Gustav-Freytag-Strasse 18
(map)
1913 (tenement) Plastered facade with two box cores connected by balconies, hallway with original furnishings and painting, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history

1913 by the architect Albert Misslitz as client, site manager, contractor and a rental house built according to his own plans. With the two bay windows connected by balconies with a loft extension or balcony closure and the doughy-floral decoration inserted in a rectangular pattern, the building corresponds to the forms typical of the time. The arched entrance with an engineered stone frame inserted into the high stone base. In the back of the stairwell the girls' rooms. Particularly noteworthy is the completely preserved decorative painting in the staircase and hallway (1992).

09296403
 
Row of tenement houses in closed development Gustav-Freytag-Strasse 18a; 18b; 18c
(card)
1936-1937 (tenement) Plastered facade, triangular protruding staircases above the entrances, rhombic motifs in the door jambs, Leipzig building traditions from the 1902s continued, significant in terms of building history

On behalf of the master builder Albin Neumann, who drew as an entrepreneur and executor, the architect Ernst Steinkopf designed the plans for a contiguous row of 3 apartment buildings completed in 1937. Although five stories high, the row takes up the main cornice of the neighboring older houses. The facades in tinted high-grade plaster over granite wash plaster bases have triangular protruding staircases, a shape that, like the rhombus motifs in the door walls and the fielded colored glazing of the staircase windows, continues Leipzig building traditions of the twenties. The houses contain two and three room apartments per floor. In order to make better use of space, the continuous staircase was abandoned; the kitchen, flanked by balconies, is located in the "staircase" projection on the back.

09296404
 
Three apartment buildings in a residential complex (structural unit with Windscheidstrasse 17), with a front garden and fence in front of No. 23 Gustav-Freytag-Strasse 19; 21; 23
(card)
1925-1926, marked 1925 (tenement) Small residential complex, front garden with a low artificial stone wall as a border, plastered facade in the Art Deco style, of historical importance

1925-1926 on behalf of the non-profit civil servants building cooperative based on plans by Fritz Riemann built three-wing system on the corner of Windscheidstrasse. The central building with two entrances to Gustav-Freytag-Straße is four-story, with a wide dwarf building over a hip, the side wings, which enclose an inner courtyard, three-story with an extended mansard. The entire system was designed as a group building with a height graduation towards the middle and a lively roof landscape. The central building is flanked by a polygonal stand core. Staircases and corner projections also protrude from the front. Horizontal connection through a narrow cornice. Entrances and bay windows with building decor in Art Deco style, windows on the ground floor with arched panels. On the mansard floor facing Windscheidstrasse, two life-size cast stone female figures. Loggias facing the courtyard. Contains a total of 33 rather small three or four room apartments. Originally with a front yard and fencing.

09296397
 
Apartment building in closed development (structural unit with No. 22) and rear building Gustav-Freytag-Strasse 20
(map)
1914-1915 (tenement) Plastered facade, part of the Gustav-Freytag-Straße 20-28 series, of remarkable architectural cohesion, shows the solid and strong forms of the early Werkbund period, in the reform style, of architectural significance

With numbers 22,24,26,28: 1914 the architect Gustav Pflaume applied for the construction of six terraced houses and three double garden houses for his brother-in-law, the bookseller Adolf Weigel and comrades. Of the buildings completed in 1915, five front and four rear buildings have been preserved. The project - a family business that distanced itself from speculative housing construction - met the need for small apartments, especially with the garden sheds. It provided for 78 residential units: two-room apartments in the rear buildings, three-room apartments in the front building, which had the typical bathroom at the end of the corridor, a girls' room in the rear stairwell and a built-in toilet accessible through the kitchen balcony at the rear of the building. In the street front, laid out according to a uniform plan, a six-axis gable accentuates the center, while twin gables above the outer houses combine the series (incomplete on the side after the destruction of number 30, of which only the garden house is present). Ionic pilasters and slightly convex balcony baskets in front of the three-part, arched windows of the outer axes as well as the differently decorated portals characterize the individual houses within the series of remarkable architectural unity in the simple and strong forms of the early Werkbund period.

09296402
 
Apartment building in closed development (structural unit with No. 20) and rear building Gustav-Freytag-Strasse 22
(map)
1914-1915 (tenement) Plastered facade, part of the Gustav-Freytag-Straße 20-28 series, of remarkable architectural cohesion, shows the solid and strong forms of the early Werkbund period, in the reform style, of architectural significance

Gustav-Freytag-Straße 20/22/24/26/28 In 1914 the architect Gustav Pflaume applied for the construction of six terraced houses and three twin garden houses for his brother-in-law, the bookseller Adolf Weigel and comrades. Of the buildings completed in 1915, five front and four rear buildings have been preserved. The project - a family business that distanced itself from speculative housing construction - met the need for small apartments, especially with the garden houses. It provided for 78 residential units: two-room apartments in the rear buildings and three-room apartments in the front building, which had the bathroom typical of the time at the end of the corridor, a girls' room in the rear stairwell risalit and a built-in toilet at the back of the building accessible through the kitchen balcony. In the street front, laid out according to a uniform plan, a six-axis gable accentuates the center, while twin gables above the respective outer houses combine the series (incomplete on the east side after the destruction of number 30, of which only the garden house is present). Ionic pilasters and slightly curved balcony baskets in front of the three-part, basket-arched windows on the outer axes as well as differently decorated portals characterize the individual houses. The series of remarkable architectural cohesion shows the solid and strong forms of the early Werkbund period. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296401
 
Apartment building in closed development (structural unit with No. 26) and rear building Gustav-Freytag-Strasse 24
(map)
1914-1915 (tenement) Plastered facade, part of the Gustav-Freytag-Straße 20-28 series, of remarkable architectural cohesion, shows the solid and strong forms of the early Werkbund period, in the reform style, of architectural significance

Gustav-Freytag-Straße 20/22/24/26/28 In 1914 the architect Gustav Pflaume applied for the construction of six terraced houses and three twin garden houses for his brother-in-law, the bookseller Adolf Weigel and comrades. Of the buildings completed in 1915, five front and four rear buildings have been preserved. The project - a family business that distanced itself from speculative housing construction - met the need for small apartments, especially with the garden houses. It provided for 78 residential units: two-room apartments in the rear buildings and three-room apartments in the front building, which had the bathroom typical of the time at the end of the corridor, a girls' room in the rear stairwell risalit and a built-in toilet at the back of the building accessible through the kitchen balcony. In the street front, laid out according to a uniform plan, a six-axis gable accentuates the center, while twin gables above the respective outer houses combine the series (incomplete on the east side after the destruction of number 30, of which only the garden house is present). Ionic pilasters and slightly curved balcony baskets in front of the three-part, basket-arched windows on the outer axes as well as differently decorated portals characterize the individual houses. The series of remarkable architectural cohesion shows the solid and strong forms of the early Werkbund period. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296400
 
Apartment building in closed development (structural unit with No. 24) Gustav-Freytag-Strasse 26
(map)
1914-1915 (tenement) Plastered facade, part of the Gustav-Freytag-Straße 20-28 series, of remarkable architectural cohesion, shows the solid and strong forms of the early Werkbund period, in the reform style, of architectural significance

Gustav-Freytag-Straße 20/22/24/26/28 In 1914 the architect Gustav Pflaume applied for the construction of six terraced houses and three twin garden houses for his brother-in-law, the bookseller Adolf Weigel and comrades. Of the buildings completed in 1915, five front and four rear buildings have been preserved. The project - a family business that distanced itself from speculative housing construction - primarily met the need for small apartments with the garden houses. It provided for 78 residential units: two-room apartments in the rear buildings and three-room apartments in the front building, which, as was typical of the time, had a bathroom at the end of the corridor, a girls' room in the rear stairwell risalit and a built-in toilet at the back of the building accessible through the kitchen balcony. In the street front, laid out according to a uniform plan, a six-axis gable accentuates the center, while twin gables above the respective outer houses combine the series (incomplete on the east side after the destruction of number 30, of which only the garden house is present). Ionic pilasters and slightly curved balcony baskets in front of the three-part, basket-arched windows on the outer axes as well as differently decorated portals characterize the individual houses. The series of remarkable architectural cohesion shows the solid and strong forms of the early Werkbund period. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296399
 
Apartment building in half-open development Gustav-Freytag-Strasse 28
(map)
1914-1915 (tenement) Plastered facade, part of the Gustav-Freytag-Straße 20-28 series, formerly formed a structural unit with number 30 (this house was destroyed in the war), of remarkable architectural cohesion, shows the solid and strong forms of the early Werkbund period, in the reform style, of architectural significance

Gustav-Freytag-Straße 20/22/24/26/28 In 1914 the architect Gustav Pflaume applied for the construction of six terraced houses and three twin garden houses for his brother-in-law, the bookseller Adolf Weigel and comrades. Of the buildings completed in 1915, five front and four rear buildings have been preserved. The project - a family business that distanced itself from speculative housing construction - met the need for small apartments, especially with the garden houses. It provided for 78 residential units: two-room apartments in the rear buildings and three-room apartments in the front building, which had the bathroom typical of the time at the end of the corridor, a girls' room in the rear stairwell risalit and a built-in toilet at the back of the building accessible through the kitchen balcony. In the street front, laid out according to a uniform plan, a six-axis gable accentuates the center, while twin gables above the respective outer houses combine the series (incomplete on the east side after the destruction of number 30, of which only the garden house is present). Ionic pilasters and slightly curved balcony baskets in front of the three-part, basket-arched windows on the outer axes as well as differently decorated portals characterize the individual houses. The series of remarkable architectural cohesion shows the solid and strong forms of the early Werkbund period. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296398
 
Administration building (addresses: Karl-Liebknecht-Straße 145, Eichendorffstraße 10 and Gustav-Freytag-Straße 41) Gustav-Freytag-Strasse 41
(map)
1922-1926 (administration building) Elongated building with a seven-axis central projection, in it six set columns with capitals in serrated decor, three stone reliefs over entrance doors with iron bars, architect: Postbaurat Willibald Seckt, of importance in terms of building history, the history of the town and the townscape

Former Leipzig post office, built 1922-1926 according to plans by the post office building councilor Willibald Seckt. Four-storey plastered building with a side wing facing Eichendorffstrasse and an elongated main front facing Karl-Liebknecht-Strasse, from which emerges a seven-axis, portico-like central projection with set, beveled columns, mezzanine floor and projecting main cornice. The capitals of the columns with jagged decoration. The three central axes of the risalite with the entrances, above three expressionist stone reliefs with dramatically moving figures, made by the sculptor Wilhelm Andreas based on designs by the sculptor Alfred Thiele. The windows of the lateral central risalit axes as well as those of the recessed fronts up to the second floor are grouped together axis by axis by narrow templates. Vestibule and stairwell with ceramic fittings and fountain by the ceramist Kurt Feuerriegel, on the back a double staircase. The interior division of the floors is two-sided with central corridors on which the offices are located.

09296320
 
School building, with a low connection to the neighboring building
More pictures
School building, with a low connection to the neighboring building Gustav-Freytag-Strasse 42
(map)
1907 (college) Elongated three-storey plastered building with a stone base, in the reform style of the time around 1910, of architectural and local significance

Northern side wing of the former teachers' college, which was destroyed in the war, built in 1907 according to plans by the Saxon State Building Office in Dresden. The main building of the seminar intended for the training of elementary school teachers was on today's Bernhard-Göring-Straße, the two side wings on Gustav-Freytag- and Scheffelstraße (here the garden fence is still preserved) contained the dining room, drawing room, library, physics and music room and the like. The part still preserved today with a semicircular stairwell and arched portal in relief is used by the University of Technology, Business and Culture.

09296501
 
Rosa Luxemburg monument Gustav-Freytag-Straße 43 (in front)
(map)
around 1956 (monument) in memory of the social democratic and communist politician Rosa Luxemburg (1871-1919), artistically important; The monument was unveiled on the 101st anniversary of the existence of the Engineering School for Post and Telecommunications in 1971, after it had been given the name Rosa Luxemburg the year before. The memorial is placed in the narrow green strip in front of the building's longitudinal front on Gustav-Freytag-Straße. In the immediate vicinity is the main entrance to the university building, which was newly built between 1952 and 1953 (today Leipzig University of Telecommunications [HtfL]). A pedestal made of polished red granite with the lettering Rosa Luxemburg rises up just over a meter and a half above a slab pedestal that protrudes only slightly above the lawn, and above it a (too) narrow square slab made of the same material and the bronze bust. The sculptor Hans Eickworth, who was born in Gablenz in 1930 and had studied with Walter Arnold at the Dresden University of Fine Arts (specializing in sculpture) and the German Academy of Arts with Fritz Cremer, was commissioned with the design and execution. The monument has an artistic meaning. LfD / 2018 09306656
 
Several university buildings (with original furnishings, addresses: Gustav-Freytag-Straße 43/45 and Eichendorffstraße 14), with front gardens and inner courtyard at the main entrance, gates on Eichendorffstraße and in the courtyard arcade at building Eichendorffstraße 14 Gustav-Freytag-Strasse 43; 45
(card)
1952-1955 (university) Plastered facades in the style of the national building tradition of the 1950s, northern functional building see Eichendorffstrasse 12, of local and architectural importance 09298251
 
Multi-family house (together with Scheffelstrasse 45, 47, 47a) in a residential complex, with fencing, front garden and green areas Gustav-Freytag-Strasse 46; 48; 50; 52
(card)
1935-1936 (block of flats) Plastered facade with clinker brick structure, in the traditionalist style, of importance in terms of building history 09301279
 
Residential house in semi-open development Hammerstrasse 3
(map)
1861-1862 (residential house) Single-storey plastered building with roof houses, compare residential buildings number 5 and 7, of social and historical importance

With numbers 5 and 7: three single-storey houses built in 1861 by master bricklayer Laibe on the north side of Hammerstrasse, which was parceled out by master bricklayer Johann August Strasser. The six-axis plastered buildings with a saddle roof extended by two attic houses, each with four apartments - two on the ground floor and two on the top floor - embody the first type of workers' house in the earliest Connewitz expansion area between Bornaischer and Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse. At number 3 already around 1930 the window cut and floor plan were changed in favor of two less cramped apartments comprising the ground floor and attic, another disfiguring change through thermal insulation took place in 1993. On the back of numbers 5 and 7 single-storey side buildings originally containing stables.

09295859
 
Semi-open residential building and workshop building in the courtyard Hammerstrasse 5
(map)
1861 (residential building) Single-storey plastered building with roof houses, compare residential buildings number 3 and 7, socially important

s. Number 3

09295858
 
Semi-open residential building and workshop building in the courtyard Hammerstrasse 7
(map)
1861 (residential building) Single-storey plastered building with roof houses, compare residential buildings number 3 and 5, of social and historical importance

s. Number 3

09295857
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Hammerstrasse 10
(map)
1897 (tenement) Plastered facade with brick structure, important from an architectural point of view

Instead of a single-storey residential building from 1862, a three-storey tenement house built in 1897 by Emil Jänig, who was also the building contractor. Plastered construction with a brick base, brick and stucco structures. Two apartments on each floor.

09295860
 
Gym of the Connewitz gymnastics club in 1858; today sports hall Biedermannstraße: gymnasium (with extension) in open development Hammerstrasse 11
(map)
1890s (gym) In the rear of the property, in the extension, the former changing room and caretaker's apartment, clinker brick facade, wall structure alternating between red and yellow bricks, of local and architectural significance

A gymnasium with changing room and caretaker's apartment was built in 1905 on the property of a two-storey residential building built in 1866. Brick building with large arched windows and a wall structure resulting from the alternation of red and yellow bricks.

09296707
 
Apartment building in closed development and wash house in the courtyard Hammerstrasse 12
(map)
1905-1906 (tenement house) historicizing clinker brick facade, of architectural significance

1905-1906 according to plans by the construction technician Paul Marx for the mason foreman Friedrich August Marx and the carpenter Friedrich Wilhelm Marx instead of a single-storey house built in 1862, three-storey apartment building. Clinker brick facade with stucco structure, the ground floor plastered and formerly grooved. The hallway with ornamental tiles and stucco, two apartments on each floor.

09295861
 
Apartment house in half-open development and wash house in the courtyard Hammerstrasse 14
(map)
1905 (tenement) with house passage, historicizing clinker brick facade, historically important

Instead of a single-storey house built in 1862, a three-storey apartment building built in 1905 according to plans by the architect Emil Franke for the master upholsterer August Klunkert. Clinker brick building with plastered and formerly grooved ground floor, each storey with two apartments. With a later roof extension.

09295862
 
Semi-open residential building and workshop building in the courtyard Hammerstrasse 16
(map)
1863 (residential house) Plastered facade, top floor expanded by a wide roof house with triangular gable, of importance in terms of local development

Two-storey house built in 1863 for Gustav Senke by master carpenter Carl Gottlob Rossing. The attic was expanded by a wide triaxial porthole with a triangular gable and a semicircular window. On each floor with one apartment. At the back left in the courtyard is a rolling chamber from 1877.

09295863
 
Residential house in a formerly closed development, with an annex on the left in the courtyard Hammerstrasse 18
(map)
1866-1867 (residential house) Plastered facade, three little roof houses in the saddle roof, of importance in terms of local development

One of the first three-story residential buildings in the early Connewitz expansion area between Bornaischer and Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse, built in 1866-1867 by the master carpenter Carl Gottlob Rossing for Johann Gottlob Göpner. Plastered building with sandstone cornices, sills and sills, the roof with three roof houses. Two apartments on each floor. In the courtyard on the left is a two-storey side building with apartments from 1864.

09295864
 
Apartment building in half-open development Hammerstrasse 19
(map)
1903 (tenement) with gate passage, clinker brick facade typical of the time, of architectural significance

Three-storey apartment house built in 1903 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the bottled beer dealer Hermann Nitzschke instead of a single-storey apartment building from the early 1860s. Clinker brick facade with stucco structure, the ground floor plastered with grooves. A two-axle porthole over the central axes. The ground floor with two apartments, the upper floors with three apartments each. Left in the courtyard is a single-storey side building built in 1904 as a wash house and horse stable for Nitzschke's bottled beer shop. The roof extension to the right of the front building took place in 1921.

09295856
 
villa Heilemannstrasse 1
(map)
1913-1914 (villa) Monumental plastered facade typical of the time with fluted corner pilasters, built for the factory owner Anton Loeffler, of architectural significance

Villa for the factory owner Anton Loeffler, built 1913-1914 according to plans by Emil Voigt. Massive building on a square floor plan with a stair tower-like extension on the side (servants' entrance), large semicircular terrace with wall fountain on the south side and a small polygonal bay porch in the east. The main entrance on the street side leads to the central hall. This main facade, which was formerly decorated with plastic architectural decorations, has been smoothed after war damage, only the wide, fluted corner pilasters with "capitals" summarize the massive structure.

09295908
 
Residential house in open development (with equipment), today kindergarten, as well as garden, garage and enclosure Heilemannstrasse 19
(map)
1937-1938 (residential building) Plastered facade, in the local style of the 1930s, built for the lawyer Rudolf Blüthner-Haessler, of architectural significance

The lawyer Dr. Rudolf Blüthner-Haessler commissioned the architect Curt Schiemichen with the development of plans for a new country house building on the corner property on Scheffelweg and submitted the building application on February 25, 1937. The construction company Rost und Marx was entrusted with the execution . The façade openings and color-treated shutters in particular accentuate the simple, single-storey house. The appearance was formerly characterized by rough, colored white lime mortar plaster and a natural brown beaver tail roof covered with a crown . In the second half of 1937, an equally simple, time-typical garage building with two parking spaces as well as a laundry room and ironing room was built on the property. Another loft extension took place in 1950, and since 1961 the house has been used as a kindergarten with around 60 places. The enclosure has been preserved. LfD / 2006

09299684
 
Hand lever pump with well shaft and cover plate
Hand lever pump with well shaft and cover plate Herderstrasse -
(map)
1915 (manual pump) in the corner of Biedermannstrasse, on Herderplatz, of local history

A well shaft with a cover plate for a manual pump pump located near the confluence with Biedermannstrasse.

09296302
 
Apartment building in closed development and in a corner Herderstrasse 1
(map)
1903 (tenement) with partly original shops, plastered facade, Art Nouveau decoration, of importance in terms of building history

Numbers 1, 3 and 5: Three tenement houses built between 1903 and 1904 by the builders Anton and Hans Möbius with different facade designs, the common feature of which is the imaginative figural stucco decorations. Number 1 as a plastered building in a chamfered corner to Wolfgang-Heinze-Straße, to this four-story, to Herderstraße three-story. The facade with sandstone elements and Art Nouveau decor, a gable with a large lion mask above the broken corner, the entrance with a woman's mask, floral decoration and the inscription "Salve". The narrow, six-axis facade of number 3 is completely clad in clinker with sandstone and stucco structures. Triangular gables above the front door and window, stucco decor with rising suns in the gable fields. The most elaborate is the stucco work on the otherwise poorly structured, wide nine-axis plaster facade of number 5. The house entrance and windows are framed by masks, trailing structures and flame-breathing structures. The lateral window axes each stand together in pairs, on the left with overarching garlands, some of which include symbols of craft activities such as hammer and pliers, on the right with parapet panels that are designed as a peacock or with a woman's mask and the inscription "Mein Haus Meine Welt". The hallways with stucco and partly with ornamental tiles. In number 1 the ground floor as a shopping area, the first and second floors each with three apartments, the third with two apartments. Number 3 contains one apartment per floor, number 5 has two on the ground floor and three on the upper floors.

09295819
 
Apartment building in closed development
Apartment building in closed development Herderstrasse 3
(map)
1903 (tenement) clinker brick facade typical of the time, of architectural significance

s. number 1

09295815
 
Apartment building in closed development Herderstrasse 5
(map)
1903-1904 (tenement house) Plastered facade with rich Art Nouveau decor, of architectural significance

s. number 1

09295816
 
Double apartment building in a formerly closed development Herderstrasse 7; 9
(card)
1906-1907, marked 1906 (double tenement house) Plastered facade in Art Nouveau and Neo-Rococo forms, of importance in terms of building history

Instead of an older rural development, built in 1906-1907 according to plans by the architect Curt Einert for the master locksmith Theodor Bergk, a three-storey double apartment building. The plastered facade with restrained stucco decoration in the form of a Rococo Art Nouveau, also the central projections of the semi-detached houses with a curved portal and gable in rococo shapes. On the inner axes a slate-clad roof house. The hallways are richly furnished with wooden panels, stucco decor and murals, with two apartments per house on each floor. Number 7 with considerable war damage, the ground floor and a large part of the surrounding walls and partition walls have been preserved in their original form. After securing in 1957, it was rebuilt from 1959 to 1963, smoothing the facade and massive expansion of the attic.

09295817
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Herderstrasse 13
(map)
1882 (tenement house) Plastered facade with stucco structure, of importance in terms of building history

Three-story tenement house built in 1882 according to plans by master bricklayer Emil Theodor Pirnsch for bricklayer foreman Carl Riehl. Plastered facade with stucco structure, the first floor originally grooved. There are two apartments on each of the floors and the mansard floor, and the ground floor also previously had a shop. 1906 Translation of the roof structure with a steeper loft.

09296792
 
Residential house in semi-open development (with restaurant extension, structural unit with Wolfgang-Heinze-Straße 35-39) Hermannstrasse 1
(map)
1912-1914 (residential building) Plastered facade, lead glass windows, stairwell painting (marked 1930), remarkable reform style architecture, of local and architectural importance

see Wolfgang-Heinze-Straße 35-39

09295821
 
Apartment building in closed development Hermannstrasse 4
(map)
1889-1890 (tenement house) Clinker-plaster facade with elaborate stucco structures, with a store, of architectural significance

With numbers 6, 8 and 10: four three-story tenement houses built in 1889-1890 according to plans by master bricklayer G. Rietzschel, number 4 for the painter Friedrich Barth, numbers 6, 8 and 10 for Rietzschel's father, master mason GH Rietzschel, in his hands also the execution of the line lay. Number 4, with its eight-axis clinker / plaster facade, has the most elaborate design. A clinker-clad middle rear layer on the upper floors is framed by the plastered and stucco-structured surfaces of the ground floor and the side projections, as well as by an expansive main cornice resting on consoles. The other houses each only have five axes, number 6 as a plastered building with pilaster-structured upper floors, numbers 8 and 10 as mirror-inverted simple clinker buildings with plastered lateral axes protruding slightly in the upper floors. Roof houses arranged in close rows on all houses. Despite their narrow width, houses 6 to 10 each contain two apartments on the upper floors and in the attic, like house number 4. In the four courtyards there are two to three-story rear buildings, at number 4 with two apartments per floor, on the other properties on the ground floors with a workshop, and on the upper floors with one apartment each.

09295830
 
Apartment building in closed development and rear building Hermannstrasse 6
(map)
1889-1890 (tenement house) Front building with gate passage, historicizing plastered facade, historically important

s. Number 4

09295829
 
Double apartment building in half-open development with two rear buildings Hermannstrasse 8; 10
(card)
1890 (double tenement house) Front houses with gate passages, clinker plaster facades typical of the time, of architectural significance

s. Number 4

09295828
 
Apartment building in closed development Hermannstrasse 14
(map)
1886 (tenement house) with gate passage, historicizing plastered facade, historically important

With number 16: two three-storey apartment buildings built for master baker Hermann Henrici. Number 14, like the lost number 18, eight-axis built in 1886 by master mason Oscar Hochmuth, number 16 built in 1888 by building contractor Hermann Döge five-axis in the remaining space. The plastered facades with stucco structures, delicately crafted stucco decor and consoles typical of the time, the ground floors as well as the building flanks at number 14 with grooves. The roof houses, crowned by triangular gables, mostly refer to two building axes each. At number 14 the ground floor formerly with two shops and two shop zones, two apartments each on the upper floors and in the attic. In number 16, the ground floor was originally occupied by Henrici's bakery shop, while the basement was home to the oven and parlor. The upper floors and the attic with one apartment each. In the courtyards, three-storey rear residential buildings, which were built in 1887 by the building contractor Hermann Döge.

09295826
 
Apartment building in closed development Hermannstrasse 16
(map)
1887 (tenement house) with gate passage, historicizing plastered facade, historically important

s. Number 14

09295825
 
Office building of a former factory Hermannstrasse 20
(map)
1896 (office building) Clinker brick facade, interesting in the urban fabric as a factory building, of importance in terms of building history and local development

The first building on the connecting path, on field and garden land and near a sand pit, was a two-story residential building for Louis Hempel based on a design by master carpenter Gottlieb Hermann Müller. The six-axle building was expanded on the courtyard side in 1871, a toilet was added in 1916, and was demolished in the 1980s after a permit issued in 1971 due to its poor state of preservation. The front residential building was one of those pre-Wilhelminian-era buildings that were erected on the eaves as residential buildings along the street and did not have the dwarf house typical of the period around 1865 with a concluding triangular gable. The so-called office building of the Hänse cucumber factory, which was built on the right-hand property boundary in 1896 for the wagon owner Friedrich Louis Kätze, has been preserved. In 1912, private man Alfred Hugo Wetzig and innkeeper Ernst Paul Wetzig took over the property (belonging to Leopoldstrasse 21/23), in 1915 the former is named as the sole owner and wagon owner. The property with the motor vehicle yard and repair shop came into the possession of businessman Franz Richard Hänse, owner of a company for pickling sauerkraut and cucumber, herring and fish marinades in 1927. Between 2003 and 2005, the two-storey building was renovated for Rüdiger Belk and Sybille Reschke based on plans by architect Stefan Mehner. The facade of the house with red and yellow facing bricks, the iron girder above the former garage entrance and standing dormers in the expanded mansard roof. As a testimony to the development of the area and the prosperity of commercial activity in Connewitz, the building is of architectural and local historical value. LfD / 2012

09295050
 
Apartment building in closed development and in a corner Hildebrandstrasse 28
(map)
1927 (tenement) Plastered facade with red banding, with two bay windows and stepped gables, in the traditionalist style of the time, of importance in terms of building history

A tenement house built in 1927 according to plans by the architects A. Bohmer and Erich Heiser for master locksmith Richard Rauber on the corner of Biedermannstrasse. Three-storey plastered building with a high base zone and a loft. Stepped gables on both street fronts. The main front with two bay windows facing Hildebrandstrasse, instead loggias facing Biedermannstrasse. On the street corner, the base and ground floor are chamfered, the upper floors stepping forward in a rounded manner. A vertical red plaster band at the level of the sills on the ground floor and the second floor. Two apartments on each of the floors and on the top floor.

09296020
 
Apartment building in closed development Hildebrandstrasse 30
(map)
1914-1915 (tenement) Plastered facade, reform style architecture, important in terms of building history

With number 32: Two three-story tenement houses built in 1914-1915 for the construction business owner Otto Zacher according to plans by the master carpenter Karl Zacher. The plastered facades with high base zones. The adjacent axles, three for number 30, four for number 32, are solid in the roof area. Application work made of stucco as decorative elements, for number 30 in the form of wreaths, for number 32 as small-format masks and on both houses as garlands. The entrances have different designs, number 30 with two putti holding garlands on pegs, number 32 with an ornamentally decorated round arch. The floor plan also varies, with the stairwell at number 30 facing the street and at number 32 facing the courtyard. Both houses contain two apartments on each floor. The hallway at number 32 with wall tiles, a barrel ceiling with stitch caps and straps and a coffered ceiling.

09296021
 
Apartment building in closed development Hildebrandstrasse 32
(map)
1914-1915 (tenement) Plastered facade, reform style architecture, important in terms of building history

s. Number 30

09296022
 
Apartment building in closed development Hildebrandstrasse 33
(map)
1905-1906 (tenement house) historicizing clinker brick facade, of architectural significance

Four-storey tenement house built between 1905 and 1906 by the building contractor and carpenter Emil Mai, who was also the client. The ground floor was plastered and previously grooved, the upper floors clinkered with simple stucco structures. Centrally arranged round arched entrance, above it on the upper floors the central axis emphasized by round and triangular gables. The hallway with stucco ceiling. Two apartments on the ground floor and three on each of the upper floors.

09295942
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Hildebrandstrasse 34
(map)
1915-1916, completed in 1919 (apartment building) Emphasis on corners through raised corner building with tent roof, plaster facade, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history

Three-story tenement house, largely built between 1915 and 1916 according to plans by the architect Emil Richter for the master carpenter Otto Zacher, on the corner of Dölitzer Strasse. As a result of the builder's call to war, the building remained unfinished for years and could only be completed in 1919 after a foreclosure auction. Stately plastered building with elongated fronts to both streets, only subdivided by grooves on the ground floor and narrow cornices. The dominant motif is a slightly protruding corner building with a tent roof, triaxial on both sides and one storey higher. The only decorative ornament on it was small application work on the window parapets. Three apartments on each floor.

09296023
 
Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner Hildebrandstrasse 36
(map)
1912-1913 (tenement house) Corner shop, plastered facade, reform style architecture, important in terms of building history

Three-storey tenement house built in a corner position between 1912 and 1913 by the builder Otto Bergelt, who was also the client. Opposite the neighboring buildings on Dölitzer Strasse, the plastered building protrudes along the street and is rounded at the street corner. Slightly protruding middle risalits on both street fronts with application work on the parapet fields of the upper floor windows, the risalit to Hildebrandstraße with a rounded entrance. The roof expanded like a pike. The hallway with wall tiles and stucco ceiling, two apartments on the ground floor and three apartments on the upper floors.

09296024
 
Four rows of houses across the street and three connecting buildings in between, around three green inner courtyards
Four rows of houses across the street and three connecting buildings in between, around three green inner courtyards Hildebrandstrasse 39a; 39b; 39c; 41a; 41b; 41c; 43a; 43b; 43c; 45a; 45b; 45c
(card)
1927 (residential building) Connecting buildings with driveways and side shutters, rows of houses facing the street designed as head buildings with tower-like risalits, plastered facade with dividing elements and cladding of the risalites made of colored molded artificial stone, important in terms of building history and urban planning

Housing complex built in 1927 according to plans by the architect Georg Wünschmann for the non-profit building and settlement stock corporation Heimat Berlin-Zehlendorf. Four four-story rows in a crest to the street with wider street-side head buildings and low connecting structures around three green inner courtyards. The end structures are presented in the form of tower-like porches that extend up into the roof area and, initially with four axes, taper on two axes from the second floor onwards. The fronts are plastered with structures made of Rochlitz porphyry, which form a grid-like structure on the front and connecting structures. Projecting hip roofs that slightly buckle above the eaves. The rows contain five apartments of different sizes per floor, three with two, one with three and one with four rooms. In the connecting buildings in the middle of the passageways to the inner courtyards, with shops to the side. Of the three courtyards, the middle one was formerly designed as a decorative courtyard with a hall at the back, benches and a pergola. In the two outer ones, used as drying areas, there were formerly semicircular covered gambling halls on the back.

09295943
 
Extension of a technical university, with relief and mosaic at the entrance areas
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Extension of a technical university, with relief and mosaic at the entrance areas Karl-Liebknecht-Strasse 132
(map)
1958-1960 (university) Extension to Richard-Lehmann-Straße 32, brick building with sandstone-clad facade, lecture hall wing in reinforced concrete skeleton construction, in the style of post-war modernism, of architectural significance

Extension of the University of Technology, Economy and Culture (former University of Construction, Richard-Lehmann-Straße 32), 1958-1960 according to plans by the architect Hans Pape. The sandstone-clad structure, which extends the side wing of the old building, consists of two staggered panes. The front pane is five storeys high with a strict window grid that emphasizes the vertical. The rear one, raised by one storey, has an unstructured wall surface facing Karl-Liebknecht-Strasse, while the side front protruding on pillars facing Eichendorffstrasse has a vertically structured grid with large windows that illuminate the corridors and the southern staircase. The main entrance with outside staircase and vestibule, vestibule and vestibule, located at the connection to the old building, contain two mosaics based on designs by the painter Gerhard Eichhorn. To the left of the southern entrance accessible from the corner of Eichendorffstrasse is a large sandstone relief created by the sculptor Waldemar Grzimek.

09296779
 
Administration building (addresses: Karl-Liebknecht-Straße 143, Eichendorffstraße 9/11 and Richard-Lehmann-Straße 34)
Administration building (addresses: Karl-Liebknecht-Straße 143, Eichendorffstraße 9/11 and Richard-Lehmann-Straße 34) Karl-Liebknecht-Strasse 143
(map)
1913-1915 (administration building) Elongated, representative building with a semicircular risalit, facade with ashlar cladding and figural reliefs, architects: Gustav Hänichen and Heinrich Tscharmann, Dresden, in the reform style of the time around 1910, of architectural, art-historical and local significance

Former Teutonia insurance, built 1913-1915 according to plans by the architects Gustav Hänichen and Richard Tscharmann for the Teutonia insurance company in Leipzig. Three-wing administration building with an elongated front facing Karl-Liebknecht-Straße. Above the ashlar base zone a vertically structured ashlar facade with an attic storey and a semicircular projecting central projection, which contains the portal accessible via an external staircase. The portal with an antique portrait head in half profile. The central risalit is highlighted by pilasters, animal masks and windows decorated with decorative arched fields, and medallions above the ground floor windows of the main wing showing handicraft activities. The two side wings on Richard-Lehmann-Straße and Eichendorffstraße are less well designed and the roof area has been expanded to accommodate apartments. At the back of the main wing, analogous to the risalits on the front, a rounded staircase porch with marble stairs. The interior division of the floors is double-hipped with central corridors, the central projection on the ground floor contains an oval vestibule. In the original use, the ground floor had offices and a telephone exchange, while the side wings each contained an apartment. The first floor with offices, bookkeeping and doctors 'rooms as well as a conference room flanked by two directors' rooms in the central risalit. Second upper floor and attic floor with open-plan offices and one apartment each. Two further apartments and archive rooms on the top floor. The accessibility of the floors was ensured by four electric elevators next to the stairwell. 1923 Sale of the building to the Reich Finance Administration, then used as a state tax office. LfD / 1998

09296654
 
Administration building (addresses: Karl-Liebknecht-Straße 145, Eichendorffstraße 10 and Gustav-Freytag-Straße 41)
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Administration building (addresses: Karl-Liebknecht-Straße 145, Eichendorffstraße 10 and Gustav-Freytag-Straße 41) Karl-Liebknecht-Strasse 145
(map)
1922-1926 (administration building) Elongated building with a seven-axis central projection, in it six set columns with capitals in serrated decor, three stone reliefs over entrance doors with iron bars, architect: Postbaurat Willibald Seckt, of importance in terms of building history, the history of the town and the townscape

Former Leipzig post office, built 1922-1926 according to plans by the post office building councilor Willibald Seckt. Four-storey plastered building with a side wing facing Eichendorffstrasse and an elongated main front facing Karl-Liebknecht-Strasse, from which emerges a seven-axis, portico-like central projection with set, beveled columns, mezzanine floor and projecting main cornice. The capitals of the columns with jagged decoration. The three central axes of the risalite with the entrances, above three expressionist stone reliefs with dramatically moving figures, made by the sculptor Wilhelm Andreas based on designs by the sculptor Alfred Thiele. The windows of the lateral central risalit axes as well as those of the recessed fronts up to the second floor are grouped together axis by axis by narrow templates. Vestibule and stairwell with ceramic fittings and fountain by the ceramist Kurt Feuerriegel, on the back a double staircase. The interior division of the floors is two-sided with central corridors on which the offices are located.

09296320
 
Apartment building in closed development Karl-Liebknecht-Strasse 151
(map)
1914-1915 (tenement) with doorway and shops, plastered facade, original furnishings, scaled, generous reform style building at Connewitzer Kreuz , documentation value, significant building history

In March 1914, the builders Alfred Johannes Wetzold & Karl Hermann Beyer took over construction site 4 on Südstrasse, between today's Scheffel and Gustav-Freytag-Strasse, from the municipal authorities. According to a uniform plan, you as the executor should create a group of tenement houses according to a uniform plan, the architects Crawfurd-Jensen and Edler (Burgstrasse 1-5) provided designs for this. Static calculations come from master builder Otto Bergelt. On June 15, 1915, the final acceptance took place today under number 151, which is now sandwiched between a savings bank and commercial building built in the 1990s in the corner of Scheffelstrasse and a new library and media building for the HTWK that was inaugurated in 2010 as a result of the war destruction of the neighboring buildings. As early as autumn 1914, the consumer association Leipzig-Plagwitz und Umgebung eGmbH rented a building, and from July 1, 1934 it was owned by Felix Hartmann. After neglect and especially moisture damage on the upper floors, renovation and renovation was carried out between 2006 and 2008 by Sebastian Piper, conwert Dresden Invest GmbH, with the involvement of Dipl.-Ing. Conrad Marggraf for submitting plans and site management. Unfortunately, the most generous apartment floor plans have been removed and four instead of two apartments have been set up on three floors above the ground floor and three instead of two apartments on the top floor. The representative, axially symmetrically designed show facade with a mighty Neurenaissanche stepped gable, reform style decorative panels and the special feature of a recess of the facade above the ground floor was restored. The passage is closed with an ornate wrought iron grille. Of interest is the historically reconstructed shop front with small shop areas according to the design concept with four business units. The reform style building with testimony value and significance in terms of building history. LfD / 2012

09296219
 
Former bathing establishment, today a restaurant Karl-Liebknecht-Strasse 154
(map)
1898 (bathing establishment) square building with hipped roof and central turret, of architectural and local importance

Shower bath on the cross. A public shower bath built in a green area in 1898. Cubic structure with hipped roof. The roof attachment with ventilation slats. The green space, which is at the same time in the corner of Koch- and Karl-Liebknecht-Straße, has old trees. today restaurant Südbrause

09296640
 
Plaza Karl-Liebknecht-Strasse 154 (near)
(map)
around 1898 (urban and settlement green) triangular jewelery square between Karl-Liebknecht-Straße, Kochstraße and Scheffelstraße, with old trees and with the old shower bath (see Karl-Liebknecht-Straße 154), of importance in terms of local development and urban green history 09264633
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Karl-Liebknecht-Strasse 167
(map)
1896-1897 (tenement house) with shops, clinker brick facade with stucco structures, of importance in terms of building history

Four-story tenement house built between 1896 and 1897 according to plans by the architect Otto Lehmann for the contractor Hermann Schellenberger. The ground floor plastered and formerly grooved, the upper floors clad in clinker with stucco structures and clad brick arches. The two outer axes on both sides are highlighted by square vertical structures and open into Renaissance gables in the roof area. As an accent in the roof area that emphasizes the center, a small roof house with a half-hip gable. The ground floor with two shops, the shop fronts are new. In the center is the arched entrance. Two apartments on each of the upper floors.

09296641
 
Apartment building in closed development Klemmstrasse 2
(map)
1903-1904 (tenement house) Plastered facade with geometric plaster decorations, important in terms of building history

With numbers 4, 6, 8 and 10: The western side of the Klemmstrasse was built from 1902-1904 according to plans by the architect Heinrich Lindemanns, numbers 2, 4 and 6 for the bricklayer and master builder Otto Föhre, numbers 8 and 10 for the carpenter and Building contractor Otto Fiedler. The houses number 2 to 8 show the same nine-axis type with slightly protruding three-axis central projections, while in number 10, which is shortened by one axis, the windows are arranged in a simple row. Compared to the simple clinker facades with sandstone structures, the facade design of the most recently built house number 2 stands out, above a plaster joint with inserted rough plaster fields on the ground floor, the upper floors are provided with a horizontal comb plaster, from which the smooth plastered middle compartment and the Art Nouveau curved plaster mirror stand out.

09296267
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Klemmstrasse 3
(map)
1903-1904 (tenement house) historicizing clinker brick facade, of architectural significance

With numbers 5, 7, 9 and 11: The closed side of Klemmstrasse was built in the years 1903-1904 according to plans by the architect Heinrich Lindemann, numbers 3 and 5 for the bricklayer Richard Hochmuth, number 7 for the carpentry business owners Otto Winkler and Friedrich Vieweg , Numbers 9 and 11 for the master builder and bricklayer Franz Bettzieche. With the exception of number 11, which concludes the street, these are nine-axis buildings of the same type with a slightly protruding central projectile and clinker facades, which are only varied in the design of the ground floor with clinker cladding or plastering, the cornices and the window canopies. House number 11 with a wider facade, more spacious apartments and a wooden veranda facing the train tracks. The hallways of all five houses with stucco and ceilings.

09296001
 
Apartment building in closed development Klemmstrasse 4
(map)
1903 (tenement) Clinker brick facade with sandstone inclusions, of architectural significance

Klemmstrasse 2/4/6/8/10 The western side of Klemmstrasse was built in 1902-1904 according to plans by the architect Heinrich Lindemann: Numbers 2, 4 and 6 for the bricklayer and master builder Otto Föhre, numbers 8 and 10 for the carpenter and Building contractor Otto Fiedler. The houses number 2 to 8 show the same nine-axis type with flat three-axis central projections, while in number 10 the windows are arranged in a simple row. Compared to the simple clinker brick facades with sandstone structures, number 2 stands out, whose beautiful Art Nouveau facade is a simplified version of the house at Gaschwitzer Strasse 11, built by the same architect. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296268
 
Apartment building in closed development Klemmstrasse 5
(map)
1903 (tenement) historicizing clinker brick facade, of architectural significance

Klemmstrasse 3/5/7/9/11 The east side of Klemmstrasse was also built in the years 1903-1904 according to plans by the architect Heinrich Lindemann; the builders were masons and carpenters. With the exception of number 11, which concludes the street, these are nine-axis buildings of the same type with a flat central projectile and clinker facades, which are only varied in the design of the ground floor with clinker cladding or plastering, the cornices and the window canopies. House number 11 with a wider facade, more spacious apartments and a wooden veranda on the gable side. The hallways of all five houses with stucco fittings. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296002
 
Apartment building in closed development Klemmstrasse 6
(map)
1902-1903 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade with sandstone inclusions, of architectural significance

Klemmstrasse 2/4/6/8/10 The western side of Klemmstrasse was built in 1902-1904 according to plans by the architect Heinrich Lindemann: Numbers 2, 4 and 6 for the bricklayer and master builder Otto Föhre, numbers 8 and 10 for the carpenter and Building contractor Otto Fiedler. The houses number 2 to 8 show the same nine-axis type with flat three-axis central projections, while in number 10 the windows are arranged in a simple row. Compared to the simple clinker brick facades with sandstone structures, number 2 stands out, whose beautiful Art Nouveau facade is a simplified version of the house at Gaschwitzer Strasse 11, built by the same architect. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296269
 
Apartment building in closed development Klemmstrasse 7
(map)
1903 (tenement) historicizing clinker plaster facade, of architectural significance

Klemmstrasse 3/5/7/9/11 The east side of Klemmstrasse was also built in the years 1903-1904 according to plans by the architect Heinrich Lindemann; the builders were masons and carpenters. With the exception of number 11, which concludes the street, these are nine-axis buildings of the same type with a flat central projectile and clinker facades, which are only varied in the design of the ground floor with clinker cladding or plastering, the cornices and the window canopies. House number 11 with a wider facade, more spacious apartments and a wooden veranda on the gable side. The hallways of all five houses with stucco fittings. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296003
 
Apartment building in closed development Klemmstrasse 8
(map)
1902-1903 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade with sandstone inclusions, of architectural significance

Klemmstrasse 2/4/6/8/10 The western side of Klemmstrasse was built in 1902-1904 according to plans by the architect Heinrich Lindemann: Numbers 2, 4 and 6 for the bricklayer and master builder Otto Föhre, numbers 8 and 10 for the carpenter and Building contractor Otto Fiedler. The houses number 2 to 8 show the same nine-axis type with flat three-axis central projections, while in number 10 the windows are arranged in a simple row. Compared to the simple clinker brick facades with sandstone structures, number 2 stands out, whose beautiful Art Nouveau facade is a simplified version of the house at Gaschwitzer Strasse 11, built by the same architect. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296270
 
Apartment building in closed development Klemmstrasse 9
(map)
1903 (tenement) historicizing clinker brick facade, of architectural significance

Klemmstrasse 3/5/7/9/11 The east side of Klemmstrasse was also built in the years 1903-1904 according to plans by the architect Heinrich Lindemann; the builders were masons and carpenters. With the exception of number 11, which concludes the street, these are nine-axis buildings of the same type with a flat central projectile and clinker facades, which are only varied in the design of the ground floor with clinker cladding or plastering, the cornices and the window canopies. House number 11 with a wider facade, more spacious apartments and a wooden veranda on the gable side. The hallways of all five houses with stucco fittings. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296004
 
Apartment building in closed development Klemmstrasse 10
(map)
1903 (tenement) Clinker brick facade with sandstone inclusions, of architectural significance

Klemmstrasse 2/4/6/8/10 The western side of Klemmstrasse was built in 1902-1904 according to plans by the architect Heinrich Lindemann: Numbers 2, 4 and 6 for the bricklayer and master builder Otto Föhre, numbers 8 and 10 for the carpenter and Building contractor Otto Fiedler. The houses number 2 to 8 show the same nine-axis type with flat three-axis central projections, while in number 10 the windows are arranged in a simple row. Compared to the simple clinker brick facades with sandstone structures, number 2 stands out, whose beautiful Art Nouveau facade is a simplified version of the house at Gaschwitzer Strasse 11, built by the same architect. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296271
 
Apartment building in half-open development Klemmstrasse 11
(map)
1903 (tenement) historicizing clinker brick facade, wooden veranda on the gable side, historically important

Klemmstrasse 3/5/7/9/11 The east side of Klemmstrasse was also built in the years 1903-1904 according to plans by the architect Heinrich Lindemann; the builders were masons and carpenters. With the exception of number 11, which concludes the street, these are nine-axis buildings of the same type with a flat central projectile and clinker facades, which are only varied in the design of the ground floor with clinker cladding or plastering, the cornices and the window canopies. House number 11 with a wider facade, more spacious apartments and a wooden veranda on the gable side. The hallways of all five houses with stucco fittings. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296005
 
Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner Klemmstrasse 14
(map)
1903-1904 (tenement house) Façade with geometric plaster decoration, important in terms of building history

In the corner of Gaschwitzer Strasse, a three-story tenement house built in 1903-1904 according to plans by the architect Hans Knoblauch for the carpenter and building contractor Otto Fiedler. The corner area as a slightly protruding head building with chamfering, while the beveled edge is accentuated by barely recessed loggias with protruding wrought-iron balcony grilles and a segmented arch gable. The facade is designed in Art Nouveau forms with smooth and rough plastered surfaces, plastered mirrors and stucco strips. The first floor originally contained a shop in the front building, otherwise two apartments, the upper floors each with three apartments.

09296272
 
Apartment building in closed development and in a corner Klemmstrasse 16
(map)
1902-1903 (tenement house) historicizing clinker brick facade with Art Nouveau decoration, corner building at the turning loop of the tram, of importance in terms of building history and local development

Three-storey apartment building built between 1902 and 1903 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for master bricklayer Julius Illge in a chamfered corner on Gaschwitzer Straße. Clinker brick building with simple stucco structures, the ground floor plastered with grooves over a brick base. Three apartments on each floor.

09296006
 
Residential house (No. 1) in open development and hall (No. 3) in the courtyard, relief plaque for Erich Zeigner and former ice cellar Koburger Strasse 1; 3
(card)
1873 (residential house) Residential house with stucco structure, formerly part of the excursion restaurant »Eiskeller«, relief for Mayor Erich Zeigner (1886-1949), before the Second World War one of the popular excursion restaurants with concerts, today an alternative youth center, of local history

Built in 1873 as a farm building for the newly built garden restaurant "Eiskeller", it contained a horse stable, coach house and people's room. In 1887 Julius Mosenthin added a rear wing to the building and converted it into a residential building. The "Eiskeller", initially a cold store with the ice obtained from the Mühlpleiße, converted into a garden restaurant since 1873 and one of the popular excursion restaurants with concerts until before the war, has been changed through renovations and is now an alternative youth center.

09296648
 
Restaurant, with parts of the equipment, ceramic fountain, ceramic column, pond, as well as open space design with terraces and stairs, lawns, groups of bushes and trees as well as woody vegetation typical of alluvial forests Koburger Strasse 12
(map)
1976-1978 (excursion restaurant), 1978 (fountain), 1911, Hakenteich (pond), marked 1980 (ceramic column) Pond from 1911 and restaurant from 1976-1978, rarity, memorable, significant building and city history, artistic value

The decision of the Leipzig city council to (further) expand the Connewitz wildlife park dates from 1972, implementation documents for the "Gaststätte Wildpark Leipzig" from 1977. The local recreation directorate at the City Council of Leipzig (1976-1978), the property was located owned by the people. In addition to funds from the state budget, lottery funds were also used for financing. It was about a "realization of the Leipzig wildlife park by the 30th anniversary of the GDR", with the wildlife park restaurant playing a special role: "The building is classified as a dominant location in the undeveloped area as a destination and a sophisticated restaurant in the wildlife park". In doing so, 'optimal conditions for the cardinal points, visual relationships from and to the object in harmony with the use of the existing developments and the forest as well as a subordination and primacy of the natural environment should be established. The planners 'focus was on the interaction of animal enclosures, forest, water and meadow areas on the one hand and the setting of the restaurant on the other, which should increase the attractiveness and recreational value of the entire wildlife park'. Initially, it was planned to classify the building on the east bank of the Hakenteich, which was built in 1911, and later the current location was considered more favorable in many ways. Senior site manager Roland took over the implementation documents from the Seifert / Volker Sieg project planning collective, the foundation planning from the foundation engineer Schmidt, and Winfried Sziegoleit also worked with him. Work on the house began in 1977, although the test report had not yet been issued. A single-storey solid building with a wooden roof structure and a mezzanine floor just above the kitchen wing was created. At the request of the client, the shape and design of the restaurant were based on the feed racks in the wildlife park. The tied wooden roof structure including the wide roof overhangs had to be manufactured with dowel or bolt connections. Due to the risk of flooding on the site, a cellar was dispensed with. Large areas of the exposed sides are generously windowed and clad with wood above natural stone plinths (gable sides as architecture-related works by the wood sculptor Friedemann Lenk, one of the most famous wood designers in the GDR). Solid wood was mainly used in the interior, as ribbed wall and ceiling cladding with 2000 hand-forged decorative nails from the PGH Kunst- und Balockerhandwerk Leipzig or decorative painting and as rustic wooden furniture - stained in a natural tone or gray-green. "Artists who are mainly active in artistic woodworking should set design accents," says wood designer Günt (h) er Schumann with the arrangement of three wooden wagon wheels as room dividers. PGH Glasgestaltung Magdeburg took over the decorative window panes in the interior. The indirect lighting with spotlights and the lack of decorative lamps added to the charm of the spacious dining room with 120 to 136 seats. A small dance floor is recessed in a central position, framed with flower boxes and railings. Additional catering spaces offered separate rooms on the so-called mezzanine, with 16 and 30 seats, the decorative design of which was also to be done with eight commissioned small sculptures. Great importance was also attached to a spacious terrace area (60-80 seats), which was connected to the catering trade via self-service counters on the western gable side; almost half of the almost 500 square meter area was covered. In addition, a barbecue area with concrete slab surfaces was set up in the immediate vicinity of a large oak tree, which was intended for planting in the west and south. In addition to the design of the open space, there are traffic routes, stairs and flower boxes as well as the paved paths towards the wild boar enclosure and on both sides of the hooked pond. For the terraces, as in the guest room, large polished granite slabs were planned, flat natural stone walls, flat step systems with blocks and small paving, and four plant basins made of exposed concrete. The existing forest areas, especially in the north, were skilfully included and supplemented in the planning, the view of the main front looks extremely cleverly set in scene by the pond (with island) and the meadow in front of it. In the spirit of a classic landscape park, there are visual connections from the park access road (main path branches off from Koburger Straße) and are created with a drinking fountain and an artistically designed column with animal motifs - both mainly made of ceramic - adventure areas at the main entrances, as well as a resting place with benches. The "Kühler Conni" drinking fountain from 1979 is reminiscent of the coolness of the Connewitz Forest. The column dated 1980 by the same artist Bruno Kubas was put up in 1981. 'A six-and-a-half meter wide strip of roses should direct visitors to the highlight "restaurant" in front of the restaurant terrace'. Individual trees were intended to loosen up the planting, while the eastern meadow areas were accented by plants typical of alluvial forests. A total of 3,000 bushes and trees and 7,500 ground cover were ordered for the entire area to be designed. In addition to its equipment and the surrounding, high-quality open space design, the wildlife park restaurant has a high architectural, historical and artistic value. LfD / 2019

09305727
 
villa Koburger Strasse 13
(map)
1874 (villa) in the country house style, brick and plaster facade with wooden balcony and half-timbered gables, built by master mason Julius Mosenthin for his own family, of architectural significance

Villa, built for his own family in 1874 by master mason Julius Mosenthin, who in the last third of the century created most of the more sophisticated buildings in Connewitz, Lößnig and Dölitz. With the alternation of brick and plaster layers, rich carvings on the four gables, balconies and veranda, the building, which was designed in a picturesque way, corresponded to the most modern country house style of the time.

09296649
 
Boathouse on the Pleiße, with forecourt Koburger Strasse 17
(map)
1921 (boathouse) Former boathouse of the Aegir Leipzig canoe club, plastered construction, evidence of Leipzig sports history, rarity

Kurt Rost and Hans Hilbert drew for the canoe club "Aegir", which wanted to have a boathouse built on March 5, 1921 on the Pleiße, above the Raschwitz bridge. The registered association was a member of the German Canoe Association and contracted engineer G. Heuschild for the execution and the static calculations. Since "serving and food for club members and their 'introduced guests'" was also intended, the construction of a small farm building was necessary. The final test for "the newly built two-storey clubhouse plus boathouse extension and the one-storey farm building" takes place on August 24th. Elektro-Union GmbH Leipzig provides the connection to the power grid. In 1924, the new building of the now no longer preserved boat hall and an open play shed was applied for and carried out. In 1945 the request was issued to hand over the assets of the association and in 1951 the forestry office took over the management of the property in connection with the entry in the land register as property of the people. As early as January 1949, a rent estimate was made for the househusband's flat on the ground floor; it was inhabited by the Thordsen couple, who later left the GDR. Thus the property had not been used since 1947 and came under the administration of GST, used by their Teckel group. In 2006 application for a preliminary decision for the repair and use as a boat rental station with snacks and the construction of a floating jetty. The formerly very beautiful enclosure to the Pleiße no longer exists, the boathouse and sleeping area are under monument protection. After the renovation from 2009 to 2013, the plastered building is again very effective in the course of the Pleisse River with generously windowed gable front and red tile roof, the lower boathouse with a very flat roof has also been preserved. Mario Krafft is responsible for the meritorious safeguarding and maintenance of an original structural certificate of German canoeing. The club is also linked to a canoe pioneer, the canoeist and writer Herbert Rittlinger, who was born in Leipzig in 1909. As one of the few originally preserved canoeing boathouses of rarity, thus significant in terms of building history and architectural history, memorable as a sports and excursion site. LfD / 2013

09299243
 
Two apartment buildings in a residential complex Kochstrasse 84; 86
(card)
1926 (twin house) Part of the residential complex Kochstraße 84-100, plastered facade, document of social housing construction in the 1920s, of architectural and social historical importance, characterizing the street space

Urban residential complex built as part of the housing construction program in 1926, consisting of three sub-assemblies that take up the curved course of Kochstrasse. An elongated central group with five entrances, built according to plans by the architect M. Krämer, is flanked by two semi-detached houses, for which the architect G. Steinert supplied the plans. The three groups as plastered buildings with brick plinths, narrow brick cornices and hipped roofs, the entrances with sloping reveals. In the middle group, which is somewhat more elaborate in terms of its design, the brick band of the plinth zone is led around the entrances, above it the window axes on the first floor slightly protruding with pointed gable frames. The middle house number 92 with a four-axis central projection reaching to the top floor. The floors per house with two apartments each according to the type floor plans of the 1926 building program developed by the building construction department of the city of Leipzig, one of them according to type 1/1926 with a bathroom, small kitchen, chamber and two rooms, the other according to type 2/1926 with a bathroom, one larger kitchen, two chambers and two parlors. A studio was set up in the massive attic of number 92. Between the middle and side groups, two single-storey grocery stores as simple plastered buildings with a brick base, also in 1926 based on plans by G. Steinert.

09296254
 
Row of tenement houses in a residential complex, with side shutters Kochstrasse 88; 90; 92; 94; 96
(card)
1926-1927 (apartment building) Central group of the residential complex Kochstrasse 84-100, plastered facade, entrances in clinker brick frame, with pointed gable window frames on the first floor, shops as single-storey connecting buildings to the side groups, document of social housing construction in the 1920 years, of architectural and socio-historical importance, characterizing the street space

Urban residential complex built as part of the housing construction program in 1926, consisting of three sub-assemblies that take up the curved course of Kochstrasse. An elongated central group with five entrances, built according to plans by the architect M. Krämer, is flanked by two semi-detached houses, for which the architect G. Steinert supplied the plans. The three groups as plastered buildings with brick plinths, narrow brick cornices and hipped roofs, the entrances with sloping reveals. In the middle group, which is somewhat more elaborate in terms of its design, the brick band of the plinth zone is led around the entrances, above it the window axes on the first floor slightly protruding with pointed gable frames. The middle house number 92 with a four-axis central projection reaching to the top floor. The floors per house with two apartments each according to the type floor plans of the 1926 building program developed by the building construction department of the city of Leipzig, one of them according to type 1/1926 with a bathroom, small kitchen, chamber and two rooms, the other according to type 2/1926 with a bathroom, one larger kitchen, two chambers and two parlors. A studio was set up in the massive attic of number 92. Between the middle and side groups, two single-storey grocery stores as simple plastered buildings with a brick base, also in 1926 based on plans by G. Steinert.

09296255
 
Two apartment buildings in a residential complex Kochstrasse 98; 100
(card)
1926 (double tenement house) Part of the residential complex Kochstraße 84-100, plastered facade, document of social housing construction in the 1920s, of architectural and social historical importance, characterizing the street space

Urban residential complex built as part of the housing construction program in 1926, consisting of three sub-assemblies that take up the curved course of Kochstrasse. An elongated central group with five entrances, built according to plans by the architect M. Krämer, is flanked by two semi-detached houses, for which the architect G. Steinert supplied the plans. The three groups as plastered buildings with brick plinths, narrow brick cornices and hipped roofs, the entrances with sloping reveals. In the middle group, which is somewhat more elaborate in terms of its design, the brick band of the plinth zone is led around the entrances, above it the window axes on the first floor slightly protruding with pointed gable frames. The middle house number 92 with a four-axis central projection reaching to the top floor. The floors per house with two apartments each according to the type floor plans of the 1926 building program developed by the building construction department of the city of Leipzig, one of them according to type 1/1926 with a bathroom, small kitchen, chamber and two rooms, the other according to type 2/1926 with a bathroom, one larger kitchen, two chambers and two parlors. A studio was set up in the massive attic of number 92. Between the middle and side groups, two single-storey grocery stores as simple plastered buildings with a brick base, also in 1926 based on plans by G. Steinert.

09296256
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Kochstrasse 109
(map)
1911 (tenement) Plastered facade with two bay windows and balconies, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history

109/111: In 1909 the master builder Kurt Bergk acquired both parcels from the municipality and designed the plans for two apartment buildings, number 109 was subsequently acquired by the building contractor Karl Kriegsmann. In the tradition of the late Art Nouveau, Bergk designed the facades with elegant window frames and using decorative plaster structures. Both were rejected by the urban planning inspector Strobel and corrections in the sense of a modern facade design were requested. This reduced variant with suggested pilaster strips and plastered mirrors corresponded to the type of building represented here with two oriels covered by unequal gables. Decorative accents are only set by the high gabled entrances. The number 11, which was created a year earlier, is even more beautiful.

09296257
 
Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner Kochstrasse 110
(map)
1897 (tenement) Corner accentuation through bevelling, balconies and gable structures, brick facade with plaster structure, of importance in terms of building history

The corner house on Gustav-Freytag-Strasse was built in 1897 by architect and master bricklayer Bruno Rückardt for the building contractor August Zimmermann. In the massive brick building, only the corner wing with square plaster pilaster strips and a gable-crowned attic are decoratively highlighted. Originally the entrance to a corner shop in the broken corner, with shop windows on both sides. The neo-baroque hallway furnishings with stucco medallions etc. and the spindle-shaped staircase have been preserved.

09296250
 
Apartment building in closed development Kochstrasse 111
(map)
1911 (tenement) Plastered facade, two bay windows and balconies, facade structure by pilaster strips with ceramic plates, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history

s. Number 109

09296249
 
Apartment building in closed development Kochstrasse 112
(map)
1893 (tenement house) historicizing plastered facade, of architectural significance

Erected in 1892 by master mason Ernst Louis Regel. The five-storey plastered building laid out symmetrically, carefully balanced horizontally and vertically on the square ground floor by cornices, accentuation of the external axes with pilasters and overlapping window crowns. Finely divided stucco in parapets and consoles. Facade end with a magnificent festoon frieze. Behind the sophisticated façade, distinctly small people - apartments, additional small apartments (living room, chamber, kitchen) in the front.

09296251
 
Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner Kochstrasse 118
(map)
1897 (tenement) multi-colored brick facade with plaster structure, corner emphasis, of architectural significance

The corner house on Scheffelstraße is a variant of the corner building on Gustav-Freytag-Straße (number 110) built by the same architect Bruno Rückert in the same year 1897. The facade is enhanced by multi-colored bricks and pilaster strips between the window axes.

09296247
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Kochstrasse 121
(map)
1898 (tenement) with a shop in the plinth area, clinker brick facade with sandstone structure elements, bay windows above the entrance on a triangular floor plan, of historical importance

Kochstraße 121 The apartment building as part of the formerly closed perimeter block development, built in 1898 according to plans by the architect Otto Lehmann for master masons Köhler and Uhlig. The facade deliberately relies on the contrast of red brick facing and light sandstone structures. Additional three-dimensional accentuation by two flat side projections and a bay window, the floor plan of which takes up the striking triangular roofing of the central entrance. The roof zone is also enlivened by pointed eaves and gable structures. Small workshops in the high basement as in the neighboring houses (around 1900 shoemaker's workshop) (monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296246
 
Factory building at the rear (Scheffelstrasse 30a / 30b) and another factory building in the courtyard (Scheffelstrasse 30, on an angular floor plan) and courtyard paving (Kochstrasse 122)
Factory building at the rear (Scheffelstrasse 30a / 30b) and another factory building in the courtyard (Scheffelstrasse 30, on an angular floor plan) and courtyard paving (Kochstrasse 122) Kochstrasse 122
(map)
1910-1911 (factory building), 1910-1911 (factory building) Factory buildings with clinker brick facades typical of the time, buildings of what is probably the most important German company for healthy eating and clothing, of importance in terms of building history and company history

In the building files, the merchant Hermann Sand and Otto Friedrich Dürr are known as the owners of the property on the corner of Scheffelstrasse. On June 2, 1906, August Leo Maximilian Montag (Max Montag) from Borsdorf submitted a preliminary project for a residential house and factory - designed by the Leutzsch architect and master builder Kurt Sennewald. Using this preliminary project, a building application will be submitted on March 19th by the new owner Paul Erich Garms - owner of Deutsche Reformwaren-Werke Thalysia. Born in East Prussia, Garms was interested in a natural way of life and healthy nutrition, developed his sales operations into the respectable health food company Thalysia and founded his own publishing house, which published manuals and guides on healthy living for advertising purposes. Thus, Paul Erich Garms, together with his equally busy wife Amalie, can be considered a pioneer of the health food movement and today's eco-industry. A company sheet of the company founded in 1888 advertises with twelve health food stores of its own in major German cities, 35 affiliate health food stores, 60 sole agencies and foreign activities in various European countries and Argentina. Initially rejection of the factory building draft drawn by master builder and architect Max Lorenz, submission of modified plans in May 1910. Building permit granted on July 28 of that year for two front residential buildings, a factory building and a stable building. The company Eisenbeton-Konstruktionen and Beton-Brunnen Johann Odorico from Dresden is responsible for the design and execution of the column foundations. The elevator by the well-known company Unruh & Liebig, the wrought-iron stairs by the company Münch & Richter. Completion of the factory building in May 1911. In March 1912, the final acceptance of the four-story residential building on Kochstrasse, which, with the exception of the basement rooms and the ground floor, were destroyed in the war. The effective tenement houses with uniform facade design, large passage to serve the factory building at the rear and office rooms on the ground floor (move from Peterskirchhof 7). Responsible architect also here Max Lorenz, architecture and engineering office Leipzig, Bayerschestrasse 102. The effective yellow brick building of the factory was built entirely as a reinforced concrete structure, the thick reinforcement bars used show parallels to the cinema, which was built only a little later in today's Wolfgang-Heinze- Street 12a (UT Connewitz). The reinforced concrete ceilings are approx. 24 centimeters thick, and the solid support structures allow generous exposure through large window areas. The middle wing, both with the front facade and the rear, is set back around a window axis and has four floors, including the usable basement, while the side wings, each with three full floors, snuggle together. Inclined skylights enabled good manufacturing conditions in the roof area as well. LfD / 2008

09301892
 
Apartment building in closed development, with rear building and factory building in the courtyard Kochstrasse 124
(map)
1906-1908 (apartment building), 1906-1908 (rear building), 1911 (factory building) Front building with gate passage, facade with plaster decoration in Art Nouveau and Reform Style forms, two box oriels, in the courtyard the former factory building of the Leipzig essence factories Dr. Helff & Co., of importance in terms of local history and building history

The master builder Emil Jänig had a new front building and courtyard building built in place of the Connewitz nurseries and two-storey houses located here. The facade of the front building, in continuation of Art Nouveau traditions, relies on the aesthetic effect of various materials and structures: stencil plaster decorations over ashlar natural stone plinths and slated oriels on the upper floors. Like the beautiful door leaf, the hallway fittings with wall tiles and ceiling stucco have been preserved. In 1911 a three-storey factory building was built in the courtyard behind the residential and office building (Leipziger Essenzfabriken Dr. Helff and Co).

09296248
 
Apartment building in half-open development with a rear building Kochstrasse 126
(map)
marked 1904 (tenement house) Clinker-plaster facade, bay windows with rich Art Nouveau decoration, balconies with wrought-iron grilles, of architectural significance

The Connewitz architect Emil Franke had his apartment building built in 1904 as the first building in the new street alignment. Here, too, the deliberately used variety of materials combined with the different window shapes and fine details on the walls and bay brackets give the building a picturesque character. In the portal gable, architects' insignia indicate the occupation of the client. In addition to the beautiful door leaf, the high-quality hallway furnishings have also been preserved. The two-storey courtyard building that was created at the same time contains small apartments.

09296243
 
Apartment building in semi-open development with a front garden Kochstrasse 128
(map)
around 1830 (tenement) Typical plaster facade of the time, of architectural significance

The last of the Connewitz gardener's houses built around 1830, the site of which extended to Brandstrasse, has been preserved in the building, which was raised by one storey by the builder Richard Hofmann and provided with a new facade. Set back from the street behind a wide front garden, it marks the old building line of the former Leipziger Straße. Originally, the center of the facade was emphasized by a veranda on iron columns up to the bel étage.

09296244
 
Former factory owner's villa, with enclosure and front garden Kochstrasse 130
(map)
1878 (manufacturer's villa) two-storey rectangular building with a central projection and flat hipped roof, manufacturer's villa of the gas apparatus factory Schirmer, Richter u. Co. (see Kochstrasse 132), of local and architectural importance

s. Number 132

09296245
 
Factory complex, consisting of several buildings and courtyard paving Kochstrasse 132
(map)
1886-1907 (factory), 1907 (north wing, kitchen, canteen, lounges), 1906 (western extension), 1886 (production hall and side halls), 1897 (behind the villa) brick and plastered buildings typical of the time, of architectural and local significance, see also Windscheidstraße 51 and Kochstraße 130 09296481
 
Tenement house (with two house numbers) in closed development Kochstrasse 134; 136
(card)
marked 1900 (double tenement house) with gate passage and with shops, large central gable with ornamental framework, clinker plaster facade, of historical importance

134/136: The practically five-storey semi-detached house at "Connewitzer Kreuz" completes the development on Kochstrasse. The front set back from the street indicates the location of an older two-story house at this point, which was demolished in 1899 before the new building was erected. The Weitgas iron foundry had been in the hinterland since 1863, later a mustard factory, the building of which was expanded in 1889 for the Fischer paper stucco factory (some of which still exist). After 1900 a tool factory, electrical apparatus construction, a Rhenish sparkling wine cellar and the Goldmann wood and upholstery factory, which was expropriated as Jewish property in 1941, were located here. The front building with the central passage to the factory courtyard was designed in 1898 for the factory owner Guido Fischer by the architects Richard Hahn (Hahn in the coat of arms to the right of the passage) and Julius Zeißig. The high plastered building on a brick base is slightly asymmetrical, dominated by the four-axis central gable with ornamental framework, which, like the wood-paneled skylights in the mansard roof and the ground floor bay window in the form of a "choir", brings the building closer to the homeland style.

09296483
 
Individual monument above aggregate: apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09304096, Burgstädter Straße 2-22) Kohrener Strasse 3; 5; 7; 9; 11
(card)
1934, block of flats (apartment building) Plastered facade with graffiti, brick-framed entrances, in traditionalist style, part of the Narsdorfer-, Burgstädter- and Probstheidaer Straße residential complex, of architectural significance 09296786
 
Individual monument above aggregate: Apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj 09304096, Burgstädter Straße 2-22) Kohrener Strasse 13; 15; 17; 19; 21
(card)
1930-1931 (apartment building) Row of houses curved in the street, plastered facade with a brick base, in the modern style, part of the Narsdorfer-, Burgstädter- and Probstheidaer Straße residential complex, of architectural significance 09295995
 
Individual monument above aggregate: apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09304096, Burgstädter Straße 2-22)
Individual monument above aggregate: apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09304096, Burgstädter Straße 2-22) Kohrener Strasse 14; 16; 18; 20; 22; 24
(card)
1930 (apartment building) Row of houses curved in the street, plastered facade with a brick base, in the modern style, part of the Narsdorfer-, Burgstädter- and Probstheidaer Straße residential complex, of architectural significance 09295996
 

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  • State Office for the Preservation of Monuments Saxony Dynamic web application: Overview of the monuments listed in Saxony. The location "Leipzig, Stadt, Connewitz" must be selected in the dialog box, after which an address-specific selection is made. Alternatively, the ID can also be used. As soon as a selection has been made, further information about the selected object can be displayed and other monuments can be selected via the interactive map.
  • Thomas Noack, Thomas Trajkovits, Norbert Baron, Peter Leonhardt: Cultural monuments of the city of Leipzig. (= Contributions to Urban Development , Volume 35.) City of Leipzig, Department Urban Development and Construction, Leipzig 2002.
  • Christoph Kühn, Brunhilde Rothbauer (arr.): City of Leipzig, Volume 1: Southern urban expansion. (= Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany , monuments in Saxony. ) Verlag für Bauwesen, Berlin 1998, ISBN 3-345-00628-6 .

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