List of cultural monuments in Connewitz, L – Z

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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 L – Z. The cultural monuments in the streets of A-K are in the list of cultural monuments in Connewitz, A-K listed.

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, L – Z

image designation location Dating description ID
Pavement, granite curbs and pavement on both footpaths Leopoldstrasse
(map)
around 1885 (plaster) traffic history significance 09261682
 
Apartment building in closed development Leopoldstrasse 1
(map)
1888-1889 (tenement house) historicizing plastered facade with sandstone inclusions and stucco decor, of architectural significance

Three-storey tenement house, narrow with five building axes, which was built in 1888-1889 according to plans by the architect Richard Hagemann for the restaurant owner Hermann Albrecht. Plaster facade with sandstone inclusions and stucco decor. The ground floor was formerly grooved, the first floor was designated as a bel étage by roofing windows, sills and consoles. Three attic houses above the main cornice originally resting on consoles. Entrance hall and stairwell with remains of the painting. One apartment each on the floors and on the top floor.

09295831
 
Apartment building in closed development with rear building Leopoldstrasse 3
(map)
1887-1888 (tenement house) Plastered facade with sandstone inclusions and stucco decor, important from an architectural point of view

Three-storey tenement house built for Hermann Härtling in 1887-1888 according to plans by the architect Gustav Klarner. The plastered building with brick plinth, grooved ground floor, two side projections, sandstone structures and stucco decor. The windows of the first floor, designed as a bel étage, with sills and roofs on consoles, two overarching round gables on the risalits contain stucco lions holding the coat of arms. Masks with garlands over the windows of the second floor. Above a main cornice supported by consoles, five roof houses, the three middle ones standing together with two triangular and one round gable. The floors with two apartments each. In the courtyard is a two-storey rear building, formerly with a laundry room and warehouse.

09295832
 
Apartment building in closed development Leopoldstrasse 5
(map)
1888 (tenement house) Richly structured, historicizing clinker plaster facade, accentuated by a clock tower and balconies, of architectural significance

Three-storey tenement house built in 1888 for Alwin Eulenstein, the municipal executive, based on plans by the Ludwig and Hülssner architects' office. The richly structured clinker plastered building, accentuated by a clock tower attachment, stands out from the surroundings of the plastered facades and, with its graceful appearance, is a gem in the entire street. The ground floor is plastered with strong grooves, the upper floors clad in clinker with plastic stucco structures. The cornices are made of sandstone. In the central axis, framed by protruding grooved pilasters and particularly emphasized, round arched windows with figurative and ornamental stucco decoration as well as a balcony with wrought iron grille on the first floor. Above the central axis between four roof houses is the tower with a clock and a curved hood. The entrance is also in the central axis, in the hall there are ornamental tiles, walls with pilasters and a ribbed vault with belts. Ground floor, second floor and the top floor with two apartments each, while the first floor is completely occupied by Eulenstein's apartment, which is equipped with a salon.

09295833
 
Apartment building in closed development Leopoldstrasse 11
(map)
1887 (tenement house) with house passage, plastered facade with sandstone and stucco structures, of importance in terms of building history

Three-story tenement house built in 1887 for Theodor Hermann Küster according to plans by the architect Gustav Klarner. Plastered facade with sandstone and stucco structures, the ground floor as well as the two side projections grooved. Six attic houses, four of which stand together in pairs, over a main cornice with a serrated frieze. On the left side a continuous hallway, the stairwell is accessed from the rear. Originally only one apartment on the ground floor, the upper floors each with two.

09295834
 
Rental villa with enclosure and garden Leopoldstrasse 12
(map)
1887-1888 (rental villa) Typical plaster facade with a mansard roof, of architectural significance

Rental villa built for Emilie Thiele by the master carpenter F. Gustav Heine 1887-1888. Free-standing two-storey plastered building with barely protruding street-side central projection, sandstone cornices and mansard roof. The ground floor is grooved over a moderately high base zone, the stucco structure of the upper floor is only sparsely present. The entrance on the left-hand side of the gable, an apartment with a guest room and salon on the first and second floors. The villa garden originally had a fountain, borders, a winding path and two garden houses, of which the street-side wrought-iron enclosure and the trees are preserved.

09295844
 
Apartment building in closed development Leopoldstrasse 13
(map)
1887-1888 (tenement house) with house passage, plastered facade, of importance in terms of building history and district development history

1887-1888 by master bricklayer Hermann Döge for Bernhard Böhne built three-storey tenement house. The plaster facade with sandstone cornices and stucco structures, the ground floor with banding, the two side projections grooved. Two broad roof houses above the risalits and two narrow roof houses above the two central axes. The continuous hallway equipped with wooden panels on the left. LfD / 1998

09295835
 
Apartment building in closed development Leopoldstrasse 15
(map)
1887-1888 (tenement house) clinker brick facade typical of the time, of architectural significance

Three-story tenement house built by master bricklayer Robert Uhlmann 1887-1888 for brickworks owner Otto Grasshoff. The ground floor is plastered with grooves, the upper floors clad in clinker with sandstone cornices and stucco structures. To a large extent, three roof houses correspond to two pairs of window axes. Two apartments each on the floors and in the attic.

09295836
 
Double apartment building in closed development, with rear buildings and wash house in the courtyard at No. 18 Leopoldstrasse 18; 20
(card)
1891-1892 (double tenement house) Clinker-plaster facade, with gate passages, of architectural significance

Three-storey double tenement house built in 1891-1892 by master bricklayer GH Rietzschel, who was also the client. The broad twelve-axis clinker brick facade with stucco structures, the ground floor as well as the side projections containing the two gate passages plastered. Above the main cornice, eight roof houses in a close row, alternating two-axis and one-axis per building half. The stairwells, accessed from the rear through the doorways, lead to two apartments on the upper floors, while the ground floors contain one apartment in each semi-detached house. The three-storey double rear house in the courtyard also has apartments.

09295843
 
Apartment building (No. 22) in closed development and rear building (No. 22a) Leopoldstrasse 22; 22a
(card)
1889-1890 (tenement house) Front building with gate passage, plastered facade typical of the time, significant in terms of building history

Three-story tenement house built 1889-1890 for master painter Christoph Gustav Kühn. Plastered façade with stucco structure divided by cornices, the ground floor grooved. A slightly protruding side risalit on both sides. Four roof houses above a projecting main cornice, the two on the sides with flat ends, the middle with triangular gables. A gate passage to the left. Two apartments each on the floors and the top floor. Secret Annex LfD / 1998

09295840
 
Apartment building in closed development Leopoldstrasse 24
(map)
1889 (tenement house) with gate passage, historicizing plastered facade, historically important

Three-story tenement house built for Ernst Otto by master bricklayer Oscar Hochmuth in 1889. The plastered facade with grooved ground floor and stucco structures. A slightly protruding side risalit on both sides. Four roof houses above a projecting main cornice, the two on the sides with one axis and the middle with two axes. A gate passage to the left. One apartment on the ground floor, first and second floors like the top floor with two apartments each.

09295839
 
Apartment building in closed development Leopoldstrasse 25
(map)
1891-1892 (tenement house) with gate passage, clinker-plaster facade, historically important

Three-story tenement house built in 1891-1892 for the Bertram siblings according to plans by the architect Hugo Schuhknecht. Clinker brick building with sandstone cornices and stucco structures, the ground floor plastered and formerly with grooves. In the attic, two-axle and one-axle roof houses alternate. On the left side a gate passage, the floors with two apartments each. A four-storey rear residential building in the courtyard.

09295842
 
Apartment building in closed development and rear building Leopoldstrasse 29
(map)
1891 (tenement house) Front building with gate passage, plastered facade typical of the time, of architectural significance

The three-story tenement house built in 1891 by the master bricklayer Hermann Jahn, who was also the client. Plastered building with sandstone cornices and stucco structures, the ground floor originally with grooves. Four roof houses above the final cornice. On the left side a round arched gate passage, the house entrance arranged in the middle. Two apartments each on the floors and in the attic. The courtyard with a two-storey rear residential building.

09295837
 
Apartment building in closed development Leopoldstrasse 31
(map)
1888-1889 (tenement house) with gate passage, formerly wash house in the courtyard, plastered facade typical of the time, Wilhelminian style building in the formerly closed quarter, building history value and documentation value

Three-storey tenement house built between 1888 and 1889 by master bricklayers Hermann Döge and Oscar Hochmuth for lithographer Franz Hofmann. Plastered facade with sandstone cornices and stucco structures, the ground floor as well as the side projection containing a gate passage on the left with grooves. The mansard roof with three single and two-axis roof houses, the wider ones with reference to the building flanks and the axis containing the house entrance. Ground floor and first floor with two apartments each, second floor and mansard floor with three apartments each.

09295838
 
Apartment house in open development and in a corner Lippendorfer Strasse 8
(map)
1915 (tenement) Plastered facade, reform style architecture, important in terms of building history

Stately three-storey tenement house built in 1915 according to plans by the architect Richard Teichmann for the building contractor Otto Albrecht and the master glazier Bruno Kleine on the corner of Ecksteinstrasse. Plastered building with a stone base and upper floors separated from the ground floor by a sandstone cornice. The corner area with four axes to Ecksteinstraße and five to Lippendorfer Straße is one storey higher and designed as a solid structure with a tent roof attachment. It is also set apart from the other street fronts by offset plastering fields with application work under the sills on the second floor. The remains of a four-story iron veranda facing Ecksteinstrasse. Almost in the center of the front facing Lippendorfer Strasse is the entrance, with fluted pilasters and a lintel with garlands and stucco relief, sandstone-worked portal-like. The hipped roof with pike and dormer built out. Three apartments on each floor, the top floor with two attic apartments. A front garden enclosed by a low wall faces Ecksteinstrasse.

09296221
 
Double apartment building in open development, with front garden Mathildenstrasse 3; 5
(card)
1879 (double tenement house) historicizing plastered facade, of architectural significance

1879 was the first of the semi-detached houses built by Julius Mosenthin for Hermann Rose on Mathildenstrasse. Rectangular building with a hipped mansard roof and slightly protruding side projections around the corner. Emphasized horizontal structure through plaster strips on the ground floor, girdle and sill cornices as well as girdle cornice as a tooth cut frieze. The outer window axes are accentuated by roofing and stucco, the inner ones pulled together like twins. Above the risalits a roof house with ox-eye.

09295885
 
Semi-detached house in open development with front garden Mathildenstrasse 4; 6
(card)
1880 (double tenement house) historicizing plastered facade, side elevations with twin windows, wooden veranda on the back, of architectural significance

Double house, completed in 1880. Rectangular building with 4 axes each, in the side elevations twin windows with profiled central pillars. On the ground floor the horizontal storage is underlined by straight window roofing with acanthus stucco ornamentation. Profiled cornice, main cornice with consoles and tooth-cut frieze. Evenly arranged roof houses in the French roof. At number 6 the original side entrance with a flight of stairs and veranda, at number 4 the newer staircase extension and wooden veranda from 1900. The halves of the house were designed as single-family houses, the utility rooms were in the basement.

09296232
 
Semi-detached house in open development, with front garden Mathildenstrasse 8; 10
(card)
1881 (double dwelling) Plastered clinker brick facade, gable with free chevron, beautiful wooden balcony, of historical importance

The middle double residential building in the northern row of streets, completed in 1881, called a villa house by the builder, differs from the other buildings due to its livelier shape and color. The gables and attic houses decorated with free chevrons under the projecting roof (roof of number 10 removed), the beautiful wooden balcony and the colored design of the upper floor point towards country house architecture. Here, too, each half of the house was intended for only one family, with the kitchen, pantry and dining room in the basement. The number 10 is changed after partial destruction in 1944.

09295884
 
Double apartment building in open development with front garden Mathildenstrasse 12; 14
(card)
1884 (double tenement house) historicizing plastered facade with wooden verandas, of architectural significance

The last building in the western part of the street, completed at the end of 1884, has three storeys, just like the beginning on the eastern side of the street. The ten-axis semi-detached house had a very balanced horizontal and vertical structure: the horizontal bearing, emphasized by plaster bands, belt and sill cornices and straight window roofing, stood opposite the two side projections accentuated by triangular gables and corner cuboids as harmonizing vertical axes. The veranda added in 1904 on the western side elevation obscures the originally very pronounced symmetry of the facade as well as the changes to the two central window axes of number 12. Accessed through the side entrances, there was one apartment per floor in each part of the house.

09296231
 
Apartment house in a half-open area in a corner, with a front garden Mathildenstrasse 16
(map)
1888/1890 (tenement house) historicizing plastered facade, of architectural significance

The corner house on Brandstrasse was built around 1889/90 on the garden area originally belonging to number 12/14. With its three-axis corner projection, which is highlighted by the plastering and generous window design, the house now completes the four-story series on Brandstrasse. The newer large roof houses in the mansard roof disturb the overall impression of the harmoniously structured corner house.

09296230
 
Hand lever pump with well shaft and cover plate
Hand lever pump with well shaft and cover plate Meusdorfer Strasse -
(map)
1906 (hand lever pump) before number 61, pump no longer available, of local history

Well shaft and cover plate of a manual pump in front of number 61 near the corner of Bornaische Strasse.

09297155
 
Apartment building in a half-open area in a corner, with a side wall Meusdorfer Strasse 1
(map)
1930 (tenement) with shops, plastered facade with bay windows and balconies, built together with Meusdorfer Straße 3 and 5, to number 3 connecting wall formerly with two entrances, historically important

With numbers 3 and 5: the residential complex built privately by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger 1929-1930, who was also the client. Originally consisting of a free-standing apartment building (number 1), a block of flats with four entrances (numbers 3-9) and a middle-class residential building (number 11), only the western half of the complex has survived after the war damage. The two blocks in cubic shapes with fine plaster facades, protruding angular bay windows, butt against the balconies and recessed hipped roofs. Number 1 as a four-storey corner building facing Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse, towards which the main front bends slightly in order to create a striking eye-catcher with the bay window. The high base zone with and garages. Number 3-5 three-storey with a central section raised by one storey. Four garages and the house entrances in the base zone. The floors of the corner house with three apartments each, those of the apartment block with two apartments per entrance.

09295845
 
Double tenement house in a semi-open development, with a side wall Meusdorfer Strasse 3; 5
(card)
1929-1930 (double tenement house) Structural connection with Meusdorfer Straße 1, plastered facades with bay-like porches and four garage entrances, to the neighboring house Meusdorfer Straße 1 connecting wall formerly with two entrances, historically important

Meusdorfer Straße 1, 3/5 Residential complex built by F. Otto Gerstenberger under his own direction 1929-1930. Originally consisting of a free-standing tenement house (number 1), a block of flats with four entrances (numbers 3-9) and a middle-class residential building (number 11), only the western half of the complex has survived after the war damage: two blocks in cubic shapes with Noble plaster facades, protruding angular oriels, butting against the balconies and recessed hipped roofs. Number 1 as a four-storey corner building facing Wolfgang-Heinze-Straße, towards which the main front bends slightly and with the bay window forms a striking eye-catcher. The high base zone with shops and garages. Number 3-5 three-storey with a raised central section. Four garages and the house entrances in the base zone. The floors of the corner house with three apartments each, those of the apartment block with two apartments per entrance. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09295846
 
Apartment building in closed development Meusdorfer Strasse 23
(map)
1902-1903 (tenement house) Clinker plaster facade, significant in terms of building history

Three-storey building, built between 1902 and 1903 according to plans by the architect Hugo Grasemann, who was also responsible for the building. Plaster facade with a brick base and brick structure. One apartment on each floor. The roof extension with the wide four-axle roof house took place in 1924.

09295847
 
Apartment building in closed development and in a corner Meusdorfer Strasse 42
(map)
1904 (tenement) Formerly with three original shops, corner accentuated by bevelling and protruding, clinker-plaster facade, of historical importance

The four-storey corner building was built in 1904 together with the neighboring house at Biedermannstrasse 49 according to plans by the architect for the secretary Karl Döring. Simple clinker construction with alternation of rough and smooth plaster strips in the area of ​​the ground floor and stucco decorations under the sills of the upper floor windows. The chamfered corner in the ground floor zone is wider and has the original shop front, while the upper floors cantilever and are less wide. The hallway with stucco.

09295934
 
Apartment building in closed development Meusdorfer Strasse 44
(map)
1904 (tenement) Clinker brick facade with stucco structures, of importance in terms of building history

Four-storey apartment building built in 1904 according to plans by the architect Hugo Grasemann, who was also the client. Above the high basement there is a ground floor with plastered grooves, above the clinker-clad upper floor with stucco structures in the form of rough plaster fields under the window sills and offset plaster strips on the house edges, the central protruding axis and the window frames. The arched portal cut into the central axis in the ground floor and basement zone. The hallway behind it contains the original furnishings with wall tiles and a porch door.

09296377
 
Apartment building in closed development and in a corner
Apartment building in closed development and in a corner Meusdorfer Strasse 47a
(map)
1911-1912 (tenement) with restaurant, plastered facade with bay windows, hallway with original painting, reform style architecture, of architectural significance

1911-1912 on a plot of land formerly belonging to the Connewitz children's custody facility according to plans by the architect Alfred Lingner for the master painter Gustav Schönling, a four-storey apartment building on the corner of Biedermannstraße. Plastered building with plastered structure and brick-faced plinth zone, on the main front facing Meusdorfer Straße two angular protruding bay windows. The hallway with marble stairs, wall tiles, walls structured with pilasters and a barrel-vaulted ceiling painted with Art Nouveau motifs. The ground floor originally had a corner shop and two apartments, the upper floors previously contained three apartments each. 1990 conversion of the entire building into a hotel.

09295848
 
Apartment building in closed development (with daycare on the ground floor)
Apartment building in closed development (with daycare on the ground floor) Meusdorfer Strasse 47b
(map)
1911-1912, marked 1912 (children's institution) Plastered facade with gate passage, reform style architecture, of local and architectural importance

Instead of its one-storey old building from 1876, which stood away from the street on lots 47a and b, the children's detention center erected the four-storey new building in 1911-1912 after demolition and the division of the property. With the exception of the facade designed by the architect GA Geyer, the planning comes from the construction company H. Bruno Oehschlegel, who was also entrusted with the execution. Four-storey plastered building with a sandstone base, sandstone and stucco structures and plastered mirrors. To the left of the center is a three-axis risalit with a curved gable offset by the main cornice. On the right side another uniaxial risalit, which, also above the continuous main cornice, ends in a porthole. The functional distribution, kindergarten on the ground floor and apartments on the floors is recognizable in the facade by a protruding sandstone cornice with a brick covering that separates the upper floors. Underneath a stucco relief with the year 1912 and playing children as well as the inscription Kinderbewahranstalt in stucco. The ground floor with two "children's halls" and a kitchen, the access to the kindergarten on the right side, while the stairwell is accessed through a doorway on the left side. Three apartments per floor, the apartment on the right on the first floor connected to the kindergarten by a staircase.

09295849
 
Apartment building in closed development
Apartment building in closed development Meusdorfer Strasse 49
(map)
1898-1899 (tenement) with gate passage, clinker brick facade with neo-rococo decor, of architectural significance

With numbers 51 and 53: The three four-story tenement houses were built in 1898-1899 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger, number 49 for master bricklayer Hermann Engel, numbers 51 and 53 for the Freiberg and Hähnel construction company. Broadly supported nine-axis clinker brick facades with simple stucco structures, the ground floors with plastering. The windows on the first two upper floors have roofs and partially, on the lateral and central axis, round or triangular gables.

09295850
 
Apartment building in closed development Meusdorfer Strasse 51
(map)
1898 (tenement) with house passage, clinker brick facade, historically important

Meusdorfer Straße 49/51/53 built 1898-1899 according to plans by F. Otto Gerstenberger. Plain clinker brick facades above ground floors with plaster grooves. The windows on the main floors in a rhythmic alternation of straight, semicircular and triangular roofs. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09295851
 
Apartment building in closed development Meusdorfer Strasse 53
(map)
1898 (tenement) with gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important

Meusdorfer Straße 49/51/53 built 1898-1899 according to plans by F. Otto Gerstenberger. Plain clinker brick facades above ground floors with plaster grooves. The windows on the main floors in a rhythmic alternation of straight, semicircular and triangular roofs. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09295852
 
Apartment building in closed development Meusdorfer Strasse 55
(map)
1899 (tenement house) with shop, clinker brick facade, of importance in terms of building history

A four-story tenement house built in 1899 by the bricklayer David Brehme, who was also the building owner, with a plastered and formerly grooved ground floor and clinker-clad upper floors with simple stucco structure. The windows on the first and second floors with roofs and, on the side and central axis, with round and triangular gables. The ground floor with later shop installation, the two roof extensions were carried out in 1923.

09295853
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Meusdorfer Strasse 56
(map)
1902 (tenement) yellow clinker brick facade with stucco structures, of architectural significance

Four-story tenement house built in 1902 by master bricklayer Emil Theodor Pirnsch for Gustav Roßberger. Above a grooved ground floor, the clinker-clad upper floors with stucco structures. The outer axes are widened with segment-arched gables, the axis on the right slightly protruding.

09296478
 
Apartment building in closed development and wash house in the courtyard Meusdorfer Strasse 57
(map)
1898-1899 (tenement) Front building with gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important

According to plans by the bricklayer J. Gottfried Koitzsch, the master carpenter and building contractor Carl Kinne built the four-storey apartment building from 1898 to 1899. Clinker brick facade with simple stucco structures, window canopies and round and triangular gables on the first two upper floors that span the outer axes. The ground floor was originally provided with a plaster groove, the former main cornice is missing. The roof house above the central axis dates from 1934, after the installation of a journeyman's chamber for a bakery that was in the courtyard.

09295854
 
Double tenement house in closed development Meusdorfer Strasse 58; 60
(card)
1904-1905 (double tenement house) Clinker brick facade, historically important

Four-storey double tenement house built between 1904 and 1905 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the timber merchant Oscar Steinberg. Clinker brick facade with simple stucco structures, the ground floor plastered and with fine grooves that are still present at number 60. The entrances are arranged in the middle and cut into the relatively high base zone.

09295928
 
Apartment building in half-open development Meusdorfer Strasse 59
(map)
1898-1899 (tenement) Formerly with a bakery, clinker brick facade, historically important

Four-story tenement house built in 1899 for the master mason Hermann Engel according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger. Clinker brick facade with stucco structure, the ground floor plastered and previously grooved (the grooving recently restored). On the right the gable front freestanding towards a ventilation gap.

09295855
 
Double tenement house (with Bornaischer Strasse 58) in half-open development in a corner Meusdorfer Strasse 61
(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).

09296785
 
Apartment building in closed development Meusdorfer Strasse 62
(map)
1904 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important

With number 64: Two four-storey apartment buildings built in 1904 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger together with the adjacent development at Zwenkauer Strasse numbers 32 to 36 for master bricklayer Ernst Hochmuth and foreman Oskar Erhardt. Clinker brick facades with stucco structure, the number 64, which is built in a chamfered corner position, is somewhat more elaborate in its design due to cross-axis segmented arched gables with stucco decoration on the sides. The ground floors plastered with grooves over relatively high base zones.

09295927
 
Apartment building in closed development Meusdorfer Strasse 63
(map)
1901-1902 (tenement house) red clinker brick facade with stucco structure, of architectural significance

Four-story tenement house built between 1901 and 1902 according to plans by the architect Emil Franke, who was also the client. Clinker brick structure with stucco structure, embossed base zone and a plastered ground floor, which is provided with grooves imitating masonry and has segment-arched windows and entrances. On both sides the two outer axes stand together in pairs, on the upper floors with overlapping plaster arches covered with masks and parapet fields with stucco decoration. A lion mask over the gate entrance.

09296477
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Meusdorfer Strasse 64
(map)
1904 (tenement) with corner shutter, clinker-plaster facade, important in terms of building history

s. Number 62

09295926
 
Apartment building in closed development, with courtyard building Meusdorfer Strasse 65
(map)
1901-1902 (tenement house) yellow clinker brick facade with blue decorative frieze and stucco structure, important from an architectural point of view

1901-1902 by the master builder Gustav Hempel for the restaurant owner Eduard Metzner. The ground floor with plastering, the upper floors clad in brick with stucco and brick structures. A slightly protruding three-axis central projecting accentuated by triangular and round gables was originally completed in the roof area with a crowning with obelisks and a small round gable. The windows of the reserves on the first floor with masks. A roof house on both sides above the two lateral axes. In the courtyard a two-storey rear building with workshop, office and storage rooms originally used by the Alfred Körner lighting fixture factory.

09296476
 
Apartment house in open development and in a corner Meusdorfer Strasse 66
(map)
1904-1906 (tenement house) Clinker-plaster facade with corner accentuation, original equipment, of architectural significance

The company Dampfziegelei Sevin & Taubert in Zeitz submitted an application for the granting of a license on August 30, 1904. In the following year the trader Adelbert Walther took over the property, the completion of the freestanding corner house dragged on until 1906. The brick building with the plastered ground floor shows an extremely careful approach to Art Nouveau. Inside, the complete equipment including complete staircase painting and, for example, apartment entrance doors with simple overhangs and ceiling stucco in the living room of each apartment has been preserved. Of interest is the urban ensemble at the intersection of Zwenkauer Strasse and the legible transition from the closed development in the district on Bornaische Strasse to the open construction method towards the Connewitz cemetery. LfD / 2006

09300241
 
Apartment building in closed development (structural unit with Zwenkauer Straße 30) Meusdorfer Strasse 67
(map)
1902 (tenement) yellow clinker brick facade with stucco structure, see also Zwenkauer Straße 30, of architectural significance

A tenement house built in 1902 for the building contractor Ernst Strieter according to plans by master bricklayer Emil Theodor Pirnsch in a chamfered corner on Zwenkauer Strasse. The ground floor was plastered and originally grooved, the upper floors clad in clinker with simple stucco structures. (Also Zwenkauer Strasse 30).

09296475
 
Apartment building in open development Meusdorfer Strasse 68
(map)
1904-1906 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade with stucco decoration, of architectural interest

Detached three-story tenement house built between 1904 and 1906. Initially, the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger provided a design for the client Albert Hofmann, but from 1905 Karl Voigt as the building manager and the two bricklayers from Thekla, Robert Franz Richter and Gottfried Ernst Fischer were well-known. In 1919, the classic three-in-hand car received an attic apartment approved as an emergency apartment, both upper floors of the street facade with yellow clinker cladding and stucco decor, some in floral Art Nouveau forms. In the years 2004/2005 further attic expansion, renovation accompanied by monument preservation and courtyard-side balcony extension under Hildebrand & Jürgens GmbH. Significance of local building history in the closed tenement district near the Connewitz cemetery. LfD / 2011

09296222
 
Apartment building in open development and in a corner location, with a front garden facing Thierdorfer Straße Meusdorfer Strasse 70
(map)
1906-1910 (tenement house) historicizing plastered facade, of architectural significance

In the area of ​​the Leipzig-Connewitz development plan north and north-west, the free-standing, plastered residential building was built between 1906 and 1910, the lengthy construction process was owed to multiple builders: Julius Preissler, master carpenter Oswald Schubert, Sevin & Taubert and ultimately master bricklayer Friedrich Hermann Fichtner with private person Johann Heinrich Scheuer. Takeover in 1911 by brickworks owner Friedrich Paul Daeumich from Gautzsch and in 1919 office director Otto Ernst Lippold. The first draft for a historic tenement building, drawn by architect F. Otto Gerstenberger, still has a rich facade decoration, including ornate pilasters on the broken corner, stucco consoles on the eaves and corner shutters. In 1910 a three-in-hand car with a greatly simplified facade decoration was inaugurated, and in 1925 it was given an attic house on Meusdorfer Strasse for the new attic apartment to be furnished. 1993/1994 renovation and modernization along with further attic extensions by Wilhelm Braun from Würzburg. The effective corner building is an urban accent on the way to the Connewitz cemetery and is significant in terms of the development of the district. LfD / 2011

09290783
 
Individual features of the aggregate cemetery Connewitz: cemetery chapel, bell, memorial for those who fell in World War I and numerous tombs (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09303844, same address) Meusdorfer Strasse 80
(map)
around 1910 (wall grave), inscribed 1916 (bell), 1925/1930 (cemetery chapel), after 1918 (monument to fallen soldiers) Cemetery chapel as a plastered building with gothic window openings, architect: Georg Staufert, tombs above all wall places, of architectural and local significance

Connewitz cemetery, laid out in 1880 on an approximately square floor plan on the way to Thonberg, today's Meusdorfer Straße. After the Leipzig-Plagwitz connection line was moved in 1886, the cemetery grounds were expanded to the south. Regular, right-angled routes. Wall graves from the early 20th century on the longitudinal walls. The cemetery chapel on Meusdorfer Straße as a plastered building with Gothic window openings, built around 1930 according to plans by the architect Georg Staufert. Inside a sandstone relief depicting a woman kneeling in front of the cross (Maria Magdalena?), Possibly a work by the sculptor Max Alfred Brumme.

09296518
 
Totality of Connewitz cemetery, with the following individual monuments: cemetery chapel, bell, memorial for those who fell in World War I and numerous tombs (see also list of individual monuments - Obj. 09296518, same address) and horticultural cemetery Meusdorfer Strasse 80
(map)
1882 (cemetery) Regular cemetery complex with rows / alleys of linden trees, of architectural and local significance

Connewitz cemetery, laid out in 1880 on an approximately square floor plan on the way to Thonberg, today's Meusdorfer Straße. After the Leipzig-Plagwitz connection line was moved in 1886, the cemetery grounds were expanded to the south. Regular, right-angled routes. Wall graves from the early 20th century on the longitudinal walls. The cemetery chapel on Meusdorfer Straße as a plastered building with Gothic window openings, built around 1930 according to plans by the architect Georg Staufert. Inside a sandstone relief depicting a woman kneeling in front of the cross (Maria Magdalena?), Possibly a work by the sculptor Max Alfred Brumme.

09303844
 
Wikidata-logo.svg
Two farm buildings and the remains of a villa as well as the remains of the enclosure, formerly also a villa garden
Two farm buildings and the remains of a villa as well as the remains of the enclosure, formerly also a villa garden Mühlholzgasse 2
(map)
1907-1908, basement level (villa), 1906-1908 (outbuilding), 1906-1908 (garden fence) the preserved basement floor of a ruinous villa (after being destroyed in the Second World War), plus the group of villa outbuildings, reform style architecture, historically important

The mill owner's widow had a villa built by the architect Max Bösenberg in 1908 on the slightly elevated property that originally belonged to the mill, the "Playe" opposite the (now destroyed) mill building. After the destruction in 1943, only a picturesque ruin remained of the stately main building. The preserved basement with the original grilles on the entrance door and windows and the pilaster strips in relief still testify to the artistic quality of the Art Nouveau building. The outbuildings have been preserved: stable, coach house and coachman's apartment and the connecting building to the main building, which enclose a small courtyard. With their moving roof shapes, deliberately different tile shapes, the turret and wooden shutters, they originally formed a rustic contrast to the elegant Art Nouveau forms of the residential building. The villa garden is almost completely enclosed by lining walls made of natural stone Cyclopean masonry with natural stone slab cover. Along the Wolfgang-Heinze-Straße, above the wall, there is a historic ornamental mesh fence with fluted iron columns. There is a viewing point at the top of the property. At this point, Max Bösenberg's design provided for a garden house, the realization of which, however, has not yet been clarified. There is another seat above the lining wall on Wolfgang-Heinze-Straße in the northern section, which can still be seen today through four pedestals and the raised relief. There is valuable old wood in the garden.

09296224
 
Apartment building in formerly half-open development Mühlholzgasse 32
(map)
1906 (tenement house) Brick and plaster facade with diamond cuboid decoration, important in terms of building history

Number 32 and number 40: the two apartment buildings were built in 1906 and 1907 by the architect Artur Werner for master butcher Kunze (number 32) and the owner of a laundry service, Agnes Sebold. Their facades use the same decoration scheme in different versions: Above the high ground floor with plaster grooves (number 40 smoothed), two main floors, each of which has the side projections and the middle section separated from each other by different structures (plaster and brick). The decorative individual forms are also similar: a geometrically consolidated Art Nouveau in connection with historicizing forms (roofing) and the peculiar diamond blocks of the window frames. LfD / 1998

09296258
 
Apartment house designed in closed development
Apartment house designed in closed development Mühlholzgasse 40
(map)
1907 (tenement) Brick-and-plaster facade with lavish decoration, especially on the bay window, of architectural significance

Number 32 and number 40: the two apartment buildings were built in 1906 and 1907 by the architect Artur Werner for master butcher Kunze (number 32) and the owner of a laundry service, Agnes Sebold. Their facades use the same decoration scheme in different versions: Above the high ground floor with plaster grooves (number 40 smoothed), two main floors, each of which has the side projections and the middle section separated from each other by different structures (plaster and brick). The decorative individual forms are also similar: a geometrically consolidated Art Nouveau in connection with historicizing forms (roofing) and the peculiar diamond blocks of the window frames. LfD / 1998

09296259
 
Multi-family house (with three entrances) in a residential complex, with green spaces, enclosure wall, garages and paving in front of the garages
Multi-family house (with three entrances) in a residential complex, with green spaces, enclosure wall, garages and paving in front of the garages Mühlholzgasse 44; 46; 48
(card)
1935-1936 (block of flats) The plastered facade with boarded-up bay balconies, in the traditionalist style of the time, forms a residential complex together with Teichstrasse 17/19, of architectural significance

The small group of tenement houses in a corner situation was built in 1935-1936 according to a design by the OHG Fa. Bock & Paatzsch Architects on behalf of Gustav Edlichs Erben und Genossen Housing Association. Initially, four-story buildings were planned, but these were not approved. Then the houses were only built with three floors after the builders "agreed with the Leipziger Handels- und Verkehrsbank as the seller of the property that they wanted to meet us with the selling price." Five houses were built on the 1700 sqm property with 30 apartments: two on each floor with two rooms, kitchen, bathroom and forecourt. Master builder F. Herbert Heine (house on Mühlholzgasse), master builder Voigt & Böhme (Teichstrasse) and master builder Paul Grafe for the retaining wall enclosure to demarcate the property towards Roßäßlerstrasse were contracted for the execution. The houses were ready for occupancy in October and were sold to Allianz- und Stuttgarter Lebensversichungsbank AG Berlin at the end of December. 1937 Recognized as a tax-exempt small apartment building. At an intersection that is interesting in terms of urban planning, both buildings take up the lines of the two streets, and a gap enables ventilation of the acute-angled property. This creates a clear cut line to the row house settlement on the opposite side of the street in Mühlholzgasse. The plaster facades have an effect due to their structure and are set off nicely above the brown clinker plinths thanks to their light color. The completely boarded-up oriel balconies and the fully preserved furnishings are committed to contemporary taste. The garages on the side with paving in front are part of this. LfD / 2008, 2015

09302421
 
Individual monument above aggregate: apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09304096, Burgstädter Straße 2-22) Narsdorfer Strasse 1; 3; 5
(card)
marked 1939, tenement row (apartment building) Row of houses following the curved course of the street, plastered facade with sgrafittis, entrances in brick framing, in traditionalist style, part of the residential complex between Burgstädter Straße, Kohrener Straße and Probstheidaer Straße, see also Burgstädter Straße 6-8, of architectural significance 09296503
 
Individual monument above aggregate: apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09304096, Burgstädter Straße 2-22) Narsdorfer Strasse 2; 4; 6
(card)
1939-1940 and marked 1939, tenement row (apartment building) Row of houses following the curved course of the street, plastered facade with sgrafittis, entrances in brick-framed, in traditionalist style, part of the residential complex Burgstädter Straße, Kohrener Straße and Probstheidaer Straße, see also Burgstädter Straße 2-4, plastered facade, historically important 09296502
 
Individual monument above aggregate: apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09304096, Burgstädter Straße 2-22) Narsdorfer Strasse 7; 9; 11; 13
(card)
1936-1937 and inscribed 1937, block of flats (apartment building) Row of houses following the curved course of the street, plastered facade with sgrafittis, entrances in brick framing, in traditionalist style, part of the residential complex Burgstädter Strasse, Kohrener Strasse and Probstheidaer Strasse, of architectural significance 09296726
 
Individual monument above aggregate: apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09304096, Burgstädter Straße 2-22) Narsdorfer Strasse 8; 10; 12; 14; 16
(card)
1936-1937 and inscribed 1937, block of flats (apartment building) Row of houses following the curved course of the street, plastered facade with sgrafittis, entrances in brick frame, in traditionalist style, part of the residential complex Burgstädter Straße, Kohrener Straße and Probstheidaer Straße, see also Burgstädter Straße 2-4, plastered facade, historically important 09296727
 
Former country house, with garden Neudorfgasse 1
(map)
around 1820-1837 (country house) Two-storey free-standing plastered building in an approx. 1 hectare garden with an interesting tree population and path structures that are still partially recognizable, summer house of the publishing bookseller Alphons Friedrich Dürr, of architectural and local significance

In 1857 the publishing bookseller Alphons Friedrich Dürr acquired the house and garden property in Connewitz from Consul General Gustav Moritz Clauss. The country house was probably built in the first quarter of the 19th century by the Dörrien or Dufour family, the first owners of the property. Drawings from 1879 show it essentially in today's form with a protruding roof supported by carved consoles, pounded ground floor, mezzanine windows, finely profiled cornices and roofing. It thus corresponds to other garden villas built in Connewitz at the time, for example that of the banker Seyfferth on Prinz-Eugen-Strasse. Dürr, who as an art publisher promoted young painters such as Preller, Cornelius, Genelli, Schwind and Ludwig Richter, was one of the central figures in Leipzig's cultural life around the middle of the century. His summer house, which he had Friedrich Gärtner decorate with tempera paintings in 1866 (not preserved), was a meeting place for many artists. His significant collection of hand drawings came to the Museum of Fine Arts in 1909. Another villa and several outbuildings belonged to the old house, all of which were destroyed in the war. The house, which has been used several times since the 1930s (old people's home, children's home, municipal administration building), has been changed many times inside. The exterior structure has been preserved in its basic structure.

09296227
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development and rear building Neudorfgasse 4
(map)
1930 (tenement) Plastered facade with bay window, side elevation with stepped gable, tendency towards late Expressionist forms, compare Brandstrasse 3, important in terms of building history

Brandstrasse 3 and Neudorfgasse 4: built together with the corner buildings at Brandstrasse 1 (destroyed in the war) and Brandstrasse 3 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.

09295876
 
Double apartment house in closed development and rear building Neudorfgasse 6; 8
(card)
1931 (double tenement house) Plastered facade with clinker plinth, entrances with clinker brick walls, in the traditionalist style of the time, significant in terms of building history

After preliminary planning going back to 1905 and the construction of a two-storey garden house with tiny apartments in 1914, the client and architect Artur Werner had a half-timbered house from 1865 demolished in 1931 and the four-storey apartment building built in its place according to his own plans. This building, too, contained mostly tiny apartments: three out of four apartments per floor consisted of a kitchen-living room and a room. The strong vertical effect of the only seven-axis building through the five-storey central projection, which appears like a stepped gable through an attic, is softened by bright horizontal plaster strips in front of red porphyry plaster.

09295877
 
Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner Neudorfgasse 14
(map)
1911 (tenement) Plastered facade, reform style architecture, important in terms of building history

Instead of a single-storey old house built in 1911 for the widow Anna Kampf based on plans by the architect Artur Werner. Originally a very finely differentiated surface design in the style of a late Art Nouveau style with a secessionist appearance: the facade of reddish trickle plaster vertically and horizontally structured by smooth plaster strips, like pilaster strips in the central axes. The main floors combined by cornices with flat stucco decoration and colored tiles. The broad, stuccoed cornice band only summarizes the corner wing and the three adjacent axes. Behind the entrance, framed by coffered sandstone pillars with spherical tops, the furnishing of the vaulted hallway with decorative paintings from the time of construction has been preserved.

09296228
 
Apartment building in closed development and in a corner Neudorfgasse 16
(map)
1880 (tenement) historicizing plastered facade, spindle-shaped staircase, of architectural significance

Built in 1880 for Karl Rühlig after a two-storey house was demolished by master carpenter Louis Roßberger. The corner house on the narrow Mühlholzgasse marks the end of the built-up area that was bounded by the Pleißemühlgraben. The three-storey building with an extended mansard storey is clearly and cautiously structured: straight roofs over fine consoles mark the main storey, the broken corner is emphasized by a flat three-axis risalit as well as triangular and segmented arches. Bunging on the ground floor, flange and end cornice as well as flat plaster strips combine the corner building horizontally. The spindle-shaped staircase is remarkable.

09296229
 
Apartment building in closed development
Apartment building in closed development Pfeffingerstraße 17
(map)
1900-1901 (tenement house) with shop, clinker brick facade with stucco decoration, of importance in terms of building history

The four-storey tenement house built 1900-1901 according to plans by the builder Gustav Hempel and the architect Gustav Liebmann for the building contractor Carl Albin Berlepsch. The first floor was previously plastered, the upper floors clad in clinker. The three central axes of the broad front protruding slightly and emphasized by triangular gables, window canopies and a pilaster structure with stucco decoration. The top floor is set off by a cornice and provided with arched windows. In the roof area, a roof house above the two outer axes on the left creates the transition from the neighboring five-storey development on Bornaische Strasse. The shop on the ground floor was installed in 1903.

09296470
 
Double tenement house in closed development
Double tenement house in closed development Pfeffingerstrasse 19; 21
(card)
1899-1900 (double tenement house) with gate passage at number 19, clinker brick facade with stucco structures, of architectural significance

The two four-storey apartment buildings, which have the same facade design, were built between 1899 and 1900 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the contractors Hermann Freiberg and Oswald Hähnel. Clinker facades with stucco structures above a ground floor with plastering. The windows on the first and second floors with round or triangular gables and on the central axes with straight roofs, those of the uppermost floor, set off by a narrow cornice, instead have keystones in the frames. At the top there is a sturdy console cornice, above it, in the middle, four roof houses.

09296469
 
Apartment building in formerly half-open development
Apartment building in formerly half-open development Pfeffingerstraße 20
(map)
1897 (tenement) Clinker-plaster facade with stucco structures, important from an architectural point of view

Numbers 20 and 22: Two four-storey apartment buildings built between 1897 and 1898 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the managing director Carl Bock. The ground floors with plaster grooves, the keystones of the windows at number 20 with mirror cartridges, at number 22 with lion masks. The upper floors are clinker-clad. In both houses the two outer axes protrude slightly on both sides, with number 20 with plaster grooves. The upper end of the facade is designed as a strong console cornice. Number 22 with an arched gate passage.

09296471
 
Apartment building in closed development
Apartment building in closed development Pfeffingerstraße 22
(map)
1898 (tenement) with gate passage, clinker brick facade with stucco structures, of architectural significance

With Pfeffingerstraße 22: Two four-story tenement houses built between 1897 and 1898 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the managing director Carl Bock. The ground floors with plaster grooves, the keystones of the windows at number 20 with mirror cartridges, at number 22 with lion masks. The upper floors are clinker-clad. In both houses the two outer axes protrude slightly on both sides, with number 20 with plaster grooves. The upper end of the facade is designed as a strong console cornice. Number 22 with an arched gate passage.

09296472
 
Apartment building in closed development
Apartment building in closed development Pfeffingerstraße 23
(map)
1902-1903 (tenement house) with gate passage, clinker brick facade with stucco decoration, important from an architectural point of view

With numbers 25 and 27: The three four-story apartment buildings were built in 1902-1903 according to plans by the architect Emil Franke, who was also the client, with numbers 25 and 27 with the same facade design. The ground floors at number 23 formerly with plaster grouting, at numbers 25 and 27 with the plaster grouting that has been retained, the upper storeys clad in clinker with simple stucco structures. The facade of number 23 was given a relatively more elaborate design, in that the two outer axes are emphasized on both sides by balustrade-like window parapets, ornamented stucco fields and overlapping arches with stucco decoration and women's masks, and the cornice appears more strongly formed by a toothed frieze and egg stick. Women's masks can also be found at numbers 25 and 27, here as keystones at the ground floor entrances and in the triangular gables of the windows on the first floor. In the courtyard of numbers 25 and 27 a two-storey semi-detached house as a rear residential building.

09296468
 
Apartment building in closed development
Apartment building in closed development Pfeffingerstraße 24
(map)
1902 (tenement) with passage through the house, clinker brick facade with stucco structures, of architectural significance

With number 26: The two four-story apartment buildings were built in 1902 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger, number 24 for master locksmith Albert Krabbe, number 26 for master bricklayer Hermann Engel. Broad clinker facades in a simple row, the ground floor at number 26 as originally also at number 24 with plaster grooves. The upper facade closings are formed by console cornices.

09296473
 
Double apartment building in semi-open development and rear building
Double apartment building in semi-open development and rear building Pfeffingerstrasse 25; 27
(card)
1902-1903 (double tenement house) Front house number 27 with gate passage, clinker brick facade with stucco structures, of architectural significance

With number 23: The three four-storey tenement houses were built in 1902-1903 according to plans by the architect Emil Franke, who was also the client, with numbers 25 and 27 with the same facade design. The ground floors at number 23 formerly with plaster grouting, at numbers 25 and 27 with the plaster grouting that has been retained, the upper storeys clad in clinker with simple stucco structures. The facade of number 23 was given a relatively more elaborate design, in that the two outer axes are emphasized on both sides by balustrade-like window parapets, ornamented stucco fields and overlapping arches with stucco decoration and women's masks, and the cornice appears more strongly formed by a toothed frieze and egg stick. Women's masks can also be found at numbers 25 and 27, here as keystones at the ground floor entrances and in the triangular gables of the windows on the first floor. In the courtyard of numbers 25 and 27 a two-storey semi-detached house as a rear residential building.

09296467
 
Apartment building in closed development Pfeffingerstraße 26
(map)
1901-1902 (tenement house) with gate passage, clinker brick facade with stucco structures, of architectural significance

With number 26: The two four-story apartment buildings were built in 1902 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger, number 24 for master locksmith Albert Krabbe, number 26 for master bricklayer Hermann Engel. Broad clinker facades in a simple row, the ground floor at number 26 as originally also at number 24 with plaster grooves. The upper facade closings are formed by console cornices.

09296474
 
Monument protection area Prinz-Eugen-Straße in Leipzig-Connewitz (proposal) Prinz-Eugen-Strasse
(map)
mostly late 19th / early 20th century, older in the core (monument protection area) 09306027
 
Hand lever pump with well shaft and cover plate Prinz-Eugen-Strasse
(map)
around 1900 (hand lever pump) opposite number 29, next to number 25 on the former village pond Connewitz, of local historical importance

Well shaft and cover plate of a manual pump in front of number 29.

09297085
 
Hand lever pump with well shaft and cover plate Prinz-Eugen-Strasse
(map)
1891 (hand lever pump) before number 11, of local history 09292901
 
Double apartment building in open development Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 3; 3a
(card)
1914 (double tenement house) Effective residential building with representative plastered facade, reform style architecture, significant in terms of building history

The urban apartment building at the beginning of the rural Prinz-Eugen-Straße was planned as a corner building at the confluence of the 1909 extension of Hildebrandtstraße. It was built in 1914 after a farmhouse was demolished by order of the master carpenter Boche according to plans by the architect Gustav Pflaume. In its strongly plastic facade with loggias, small bay windows, turned balcony railings and windowpins, it is typical of some of the tenement houses of this time influenced by the Heimat style. LfD / 1998 Topography Southern urban expansion

09296642
 
Former country house, now a café Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 5
(map)
in the core probably 1572 (country house), remodeling 1806 (country house) Eaves-standing building, half-timbered on the upper floor (originally provided with horizontal wooden cladding), after 1800 summer house in the village of Connewitz of the Leipzig merchant family Winckler, of importance in terms of building history and local development

A summer house built in 1802 by Friedrich Daniel Winckler, a member of the family of the owner of the famous painting collection. Provided with horizontal wooden cladding until 1989. This classicistic facade design was typical for many of the summer houses built here up to the middle of the 19th century.

09296643
 
Residential stable house, residential house, side building, pigeon house and gate entrance of a former four-sided courtyard Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 7
(map)
1752 (residential stable), 1752 (Vierseithof) Older residential stable with half-timbered upper floor, street-side residential building typical of the time, plastered construction, last rural courtyard in the old village of Connewitz, of significance in terms of building history and local development

"Michels Gut", a former Franconian four-sided farm, founded in 1548. From 1752 to the middle of the 20th century, the Pferdnergut was owned by the Michel family. Demolition of the barn in 1938. Still existing today: gable-independent residential stable house, half-timbered over quarry stone ground floor, built before 1785. 1880 Schüttboden above stable converted into apartments. At the same time renovation of the old pigeon house (two-storey, with half-timbered upper storey. Instead of the lower pigsty, installation of a dry toilet). Opposite the old house, a former horse stable with groined vaults and storage hatches (around 1801, changed). Residential house from 1873 on the eaves of the street. Gate system with spherical pillars 1938. Last farm in Connewitz.

09295971
 
Villa (No. 13) with villa garden, fencing, gate entrance and paving of the driveway along with footpath and ancillary building (No. 13b, with a former employee's apartment)
Villa (No. 13) with villa garden, fencing, gate entrance and paving of the driveway along with footpath and ancillary building (No. 13b, with a former employee's apartment) Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 13; 13b
(card)
marked 1900 (villa) Villa representative clinker facade with quarry stone plinth, named after the builder businessman Heinrich Schomburgk, architect: Theodor Kösser, also called Schulbergvilla (after the neighboring old Connewitz school), in the style of historicism, also with motifs of the country house style and art nouveau, urban planning dominant villa construction in a spacious park , Historical value and memorable value, also in view of the decades of use as a maternity hospital, of interest in terms of architecture and garden history

Villa on the elevated site of the former Sorbian ramparts, northeast of the old school (Schulberg). The summer house of the Leipzig banker Küstner, which the merchant and commercial judge Heinrich Schomburgk had demolished in 1899 to build the stately villa with stables, coach house and gardener's apartment according to plans by Leipzig architect Theodor Kösser, stood here as early as the middle of the century. Located in the middle of an "English" park, the villa, a brick building with sandstone structures, is a painterly conceived building with a moving outline and roof design. It contains elements of the French Beaux-Arts architecture (representative street front and entrance side) as well as motifs of the contemporary country house style (half-timbered gables, wooden and glass verandas on the garden sides) and Art Nouveau forms (portal). After the conversion into a clinic of the Hamburg Bethanien Foundation in 1936, the formerly splendid interior was largely changed. The stable and farm buildings on the eastern boundary of the property, also originally in "English" country house architecture, have been preserved with some changes.

09296315
 
Villa with villa garden, outbuildings and fencing Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 15
(map)
1877 (villa), around 1900 (outbuilding) Typical plastered facade with fine window frames, in the Swiss house style, built for Luise Beckmann (born Limburger), of architectural significance

Number 15 and number 17: Former estate of Luise Beckmann, b. Limburger. The older house with the gable facing the street was built around 1820 as a country house for Jacob Bernhard Limburger (wool and silk trade). It was originally single-storey with a mezzanine floor and had a classical facade with horizontal plastering (board cladding?) And arched window and door openings. In 1879 it was increased by Luise Beckmann, with the second floor being given a half-timbered facade and the upper floor with wooden cladding. (Later removed and plastered.) In the same year, the side stable and coach house buildings were built, which in turn were renewed in 1902 with structural elements based on Heimatstil elements. Luise Beckmann had the villa in the background of the garden built in 1877. The wing protruding far towards the street with a large thermal bath window, which was responded by a smaller, geometrically modified form on the mezzanine floor, was impressive. The massive renovation of the front veranda, which was once open in arches and covered with vegetation, coarsen the overall impression of the heavily subdivided structure with the fine window frames that have been preserved.

09295968
 
Country house and outbuildings as well as villa garden and enclosure with gate entrance Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 17
(map)
around 1820, later redesigned (country house) Country house for the merchant Jacob Bernhard Limburger, additional storey at the end of the 19th century, farm building formerly with a stable, coach house and coachman's apartment, simple plastered facade, windows with folding shutters, of importance in terms of building history and local development

Number 15 and number 17: Former estate of Luise Beckmann, b. Limburger. The older house with the gable facing the street was built around 1820 as a country house for Jacob Bernhard Limburger (wool and silk trade). It was originally single-storey with a mezzanine floor and had a classical facade with horizontal plastering (board cladding?) And arched window and door openings. In 1879 it was increased by Luise Beckmann, with the second floor being given a half-timbered facade and the upper floor with wooden cladding. (Later removed and plastered.) In the same year, the side stable and coach house buildings were built, which in turn were renewed in 1902 with structural elements based on Heimatstil elements. Luise Beckmann had the villa in the background of the garden built in 1877. The wing protruding far towards the street with a large thermal bath window, which was responded by a smaller, geometrically modified form on the mezzanine floor, was impressive. The massive renovation of the front veranda, which was once open in arches and covered with vegetation, coarsen the overall impression of the heavily subdivided structure with the fine window frames that have been preserved.

09295967
 
Villa with villa garden, enclosure and gate entrance
Villa with villa garden, enclosure and gate entrance Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 19
(map)
before 1874 (villa) Plastered façade with exceptionally fine details such as delicate plastering fields and profiles, wooden veranda facing the street, built for the Meyer family of bankers, of architectural significance

The summer villa for the banker Max Meyer was probably built in the 1860s. This is indicated by the simple structure and the extraordinarily fine details such as delicate plaster fields and profiles, flat stucco rosettes and the style of the portrait medallion on the first floor. A later addition is the wooden veranda on the street front, and the beautiful, well-preserved iron fence was only built in 1887.

09296314
 
Hand lever pump with well shaft and cover plate
Hand lever pump with well shaft and cover plate Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 19 (near)
(map)
around 1900 (hand lever pump) on the property yard, of local history 09292413
 
Former country house, today parts of a Catholic rectory and gate Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 21
(map)
End of 18th century / beginning of 19th century (residential building), 1999 (copy building) Two-storey rural house with a mansard roof and raised central gable, built as a summer house for a Leipzig cloth manufacturer, since 1926 a Catholic parsonage, of local history

Former residential building with gate system and elongated side buildings, since 1927 parish office of the Catholic St. Bonifatius parish. In 1863 the owner at that time, Conrad Alfred Thieme dated Ä., Leipzig merchant and President of the Chamber of Commerce, also known for his art collection (1886 donation of 66 paintings by Dutch masters of the 17th century for the art museum), added to the existing late baroque summer house (approaches of the cuboid Pilaster strips still recognizable, front rooms laid out as an enfilade) Oriel porch and a kitchen extension with entresol (right gable side). In the same year, the gate system and the elongated side buildings were built according to plans by Leipzig architect Moritz Münch (executed by Julius Mosenthin). Here were the kitchen, a bath room and latrine, the stable for 4 horses, the carriage house and the coachman's apartment on the upper floor. All buildings have been preserved in their substance, even if their original facade structure has been stripped of which, with horizontal plastering, connected the main building with the gate and ancillary system to form a single unit. The iron enclosure was built in 1887 under the new owner, Consul General Rudolph Wachsmuth, co-founder of the Leipziger Immobiliengesellschaft, director of the Allgemeine Deutsche Kreditanstalt, who bought the adjacent property to the north on Biedermannstrasse, on which the Bonifatius Church was built in 1929/30.

09296312
 
Villa with enclosure and garden Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 23
(map)
around 1884 (villa) Plastered facade with clinker brick structure, gable balcony resting on carved consoles, of architectural significance

The property at the confluence with Probstheidaer Straße belonged to master mason Adolf Nolte in 1884, who in the same year built the neighboring villa at Probstheidaer Straße 1 for the university professor Braune. Despite the overall somewhat livelier design: the square building shows a tendency towards the country house style with its protruding roof, the unusual gable balcony resting on carved consoles, wooden verandas and balconies, folding shutters and circumferential profiled brick strips - the handwriting is unmistakably the same as there. The villa, which was probably built by Nolte around 1884, came into the possession of the Brandstetter family (called Degener) a little later.

09296311
 
Rectory, with garden and fencing Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 25
(map)
1875 (rectory) Plastered building on a square floor plan, flat side elevation with stepped gable, entrance with wooden arbor, of architectural and local significance

Rectory of the community of Connewitz, built in 1878 on the former village square. Simple building on a square floor plan, on the west side a two-axis flat side projection with stepped gable. Profiled belt and final cornice, the windows originally with sandstone surrounds and arches. On the south side entrance with a wooden porch. Brick wall as an enclosure in part.

09296646
 
Villa with outbuildings, garden, fencing and gate system
Villa with outbuildings, garden, fencing and gate system Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 28
(map)
1894 (villa), 1913 (stable / remise) Plastered facade, gable with ornamental framework, in country house style, built according to plans by architect Max Pommer for the banker Oscar Adolph Meyer, of significance in terms of building history and the history of local development

Country house style villa, built in 1894 according to plans by Max Pommer for the banker and commercial judge Oscar Adolph Meyer (see also Prinz-Eugen-Straße 19). Plastered building with brick-framed windows, decorative trusses (the rings a popular motif in the 1890s) and balcony loggias under the protruding roof of the north and west gables. The building, which is mainly open to the west and south by wooden terraces and pergolas, has lost some of its distinctive country house character as a result of the massive renovation of the entrance zone and the adjoining open veranda. In 1913, according to plans by Peter Dybwad , the architect of the Meyer bank at Thomaskirchhof, the two-story stable, coach house and garage building with a coachman's apartment on the mansard floor and the enclosure, from which the original pillars have been preserved.

09296313
 
Apartment building in open development as well as side gate entrance, pergola and garage Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 29
(map)
1934 (tenement) Plastered façade with bay windows, gable roof with stepped gables and close-up dormers, in the traditionalist style of the time, of importance in terms of building history

After the Klepzig property, one of the last Connewitz three-sided courtyards, was demolished, the builder Herbert Heine had a tenement house built in 1934 according to plans by the architect Ernst Riedel. With its slightly elevated structure, the stepped gables, bay windows and close-up dormers, as well as the spotty structured plaster, the building still shows typical features of the tenement architecture of the twenties. Contrasting with the plastered construction are the base, gate pillars (covered with a pergola) and the garage in the courtyard.

09295965
 
Villa with enclosure and garden Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 31
(map)
1898 (villa) historicizing plastered facade with decorative framework in the local country house style with protruding gables, built for the manufacturer Carl Richter, of architectural significance

For Carl Richter, co-owner of the gas knife factory Schirmer, Richter and Co., master bricklayer Heinrich Bruno Oelschlegel (or his son Otto Oehlschlegel) built the villa, in the place of which the gardener's house and the glass greenhouse facilities of the banker Schulz had stood until 1896. The house in the local country house style with a protruding gable on the southern face and ornamental framework in the eaves zone and the - and west gables. The ground floor with corner cuboids and the horizontal beading that is also often found here. Originally a terrace with an outside staircase and pergola in the move-in between the main building and the western porch and a wooden veranda on the garden side. Entrance on the north side. The interiors are arranged around a central hall and have been used as a daycare center since the 1960s. arranged around the central hall.

09295964
 
Forestry department with garden, fencing and gate entrance as well as two memorial plaques Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 32
(map)
1911 (forester's house), marked 1588 (Prorphyrtuff plates) Plastered facade with a crooked hip roof, pretty reform style architecture, memorial plaques made of porphyry tufa inscribed 1558, of significance in terms of both building history and local history

After the old forester's house facing the street was demolished, the city of Leipzig had the building construction department work out new plans for a forester's house in 1911. The main features of the building have been restored to their specific "forester's house" character through the reconstruction of the folding shutters and the trellises that extend up to the second floor. The long sides are a little livelier with a corner pavilion, entrance porch and gable.

09295966
 
Villa with enclosure and gate entrance Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 33
(map)
1904 (villa) Plastered facade with a polygonal porch facing the street, in Art Nouveau style, built for the widow of the governor Platzmann, of architectural significance

Villa, built in 1904 by Otto Peter for the widow of the governor Platzmann. The simple, square building with a protruding flat roof, a polygonal porch and an asymmetrically attached, originally open veranda gets its restrained elegance thanks to a few beautiful details such as the two painted friezes instead of the cornice and eaves and the Art Nouveau grilles on the outside staircase, balcony and enclosure.

09295963
 
Residential building, three side buildings and entrance gate of a former estate Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 34
(map)
around 1525 (monastery property), 1909 (tenant house), 1884 (stables) with elongated former stable buildings and baroque-style former tenant house, brick pillar entrance gate with sandstone city coat of arms, of architectural and local significance

The buildings of the former knight's and later monastery property have been renewed several times in their long history. The stables that now border the large farm yard were built in 1884. They are single-storey plastered buildings on rubble stone plinths with pilaster strips and final brick layers in a sawtooth frieze. The gate system with Leipzig city arms on the brick pillars also dates from this time. The tenant house was rebuilt around 1909. The two-storey building with a half-hipped roof and curved gable, which originally had a magnificent portal, window frames, plastered mirrors and corner pilasters, was typical of the turn to neo-baroque that can be observed in Leipzig buildings of that time.

09296650
 
Villa with enclosure Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 35
(map)
1900-1901 (villa) Clinker plaster facade, main front with loggia and round corner tower, built for Privata Constanze Tauchnitz, architect: Rudolf Vogel, Hanover, of architectural significance

Rudolf Vogel, an architect from Hanover, designed the plans for Constanze Tauchnitz's house in 1900. The basic shape of the small "ladies' villa" is pictorially designed with a corner tower and steep roof. In a certain contrast, there are the large-scale contrasts of materials and colors: over a light base, a wide strip of brick stretches around the upper third of the facade, which leaves out window and arch openings and includes part of the tower. (Unfortunately, the effect is impaired by the later "brick cladding" of the loggia.) The roof, with its various types of tiles, also displays contrasts in color and shape. The gable side takes up country house elements with wood clapboard facing, suggested narrow "half-timbered" struts and a wooden, roofed entrance porch. Like the exterior, the floor plan shows a very individual approach to the ideas of the former resident.

09295962
 
Villa (with equipment) as well as forecourt and villa garden (with connection to the neighboring garden of the Lindenhof)
More pictures
Villa (with equipment) as well as forecourt and villa garden (with connection to the neighboring garden of the Lindenhof) Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 40
(map)
inscribed 1906 (villa), 1908 (relief) representative building in the style of an English country house, with a facade made of stone masonry and half-timbering, with original furnishings, designed by architect Peter Dybwad for Martin Erich Schulz, director of Deutsche Bank in Leipzig, of architectural, art-historical and local significance

Villa, built by Peter for Martin Erich Schulz, Director of Deutsche Bank, in 1906 after the Staub property was demolished. The model of English country houses is clearly evident in the floor plan and exterior: the elongated building with three differently wide and deep risalits and transverse gables, with a moving roof landscape and a facade made of stone masonry and half-timbering, with bay windows, wooden loggia and open vestibule is extremely picturesque. The "cottage type" also corresponds to the externally recognizable separation of the living and business area, the inner connection between the two through a corridor from the vestibule and the location of the dining room on this corridor. The large hall is located at the front, with the staircase in the exterior being identified by the two-storey window bay. The vestibule with wall fountain and bronze relief by Matthieu Molitor, hall, master and dining room with coffered ceiling between beams, the master's room with wood paneling. The villa is located behind a forecourt that was once horticultural; the stable and coach house on the front line of the property was destroyed in the war. At the rear there was a more than 4000 square meter meadow and park area sloping down towards a pond, which spread out like a panorama in front of the large terrace that occupies the rear of the main building.

09296308
 
Apartment house in open development, with enclosure Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 41
(map)
1911 (tenement) Typical plaster facade of the time, reform style architecture, of architectural significance

The master bricklayer Hermann Freiberg had Otto Scharenberg, the builder of the neighboring school that Freiberg had built, draft the first plans for his apartment building. With a delicate, ornate facade, they were still in the tradition of late Art Nouveau. Otto Gerstenberger created a new project in more contemporary, simplified forms. The extensive building receives additional living space for the two differently sized apartments due to the wide projections protruding into the front garden and the extended attic. While the upper floors are combined vertically by pilaster strips, the now smooth ground floor was divided by trellises on the gable and front sides.

09296310
 
Individual features of the aggregate: mansion, outbuildings, gate entrance and residential building (so-called tower house) of a courtyard as well as inner courtyard and villa garden designed as a roundabout (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09303850, same address) Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 42
(map)
1802 (Gut), 1792 (mansion), marked 1679 (stove plates), 1792 (outbuilding), 1875-1877 (tower house / new mansion) Courtyard with a classicist mansion and a high-rise building (so-called tower house) from the Wilhelminian style, two cast-iron stove plates (marked 1679) next to the entrance to the gate at the side building, of historical and architectural importance

So-called Lindenhof, a former country estate at the end of a cul-de-sac, consisting of an old and a new manor house and stable building, arranged around a courtyard with a tree-covered rondel. Gate system with ball attachments. The two-storey building on the north-east side of the courtyard was built in 1792 as a summer house for the Leipzig publisher Friedrich Weygand, the first editor of Goethe's "Werther". The elongated building with an even row of windows and a flat hipped roof, strictly symmetrically laid out, with an accentuated floor division and a seven-axis central projection, which is in turn divided by a three-axis entrance projection, is one of the last purely classical buildings in Leipzig. After vacancy, it is threatened with decay. In the 1830s, the extensive estate came into the possession of the Leipzig banker Wilhelm Seyfferth, or his daughter Johanna (Johanna Park). His son-in-law and partner Dr. Gustav Schulz had the stable to the right of the gate system converted in 1875 and a new villa was built by master mason Steib in place of the old barn on the south side of the courtyard. The so-called tower house (attached tower on the west side) is disfigured by new plastering, removal of the tower hood and the wooden veranda on the large garden-side terrace. Two cast-iron stove plates (16th century) are built into the outer wall of the stable building. Originally, the Lindenhof belonged to a park that stretched to the railway line in the south and Bornaischen and Probstheidaer Strasse in the east and north. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296655
 
Lindenhof: mansion, ancillary building, gate entrance and residential building (so-called tower house) of a courtyard as well as inner courtyard and villa garden designed as a roundel (individual monuments, see individual monuments list - Obj. 09296655, same address) Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 42
(map)
1792 (country house), 1875-1877 (tower house) Courtyard with a classicist mansion and a high-rise building (so-called tower house) next to the entrance to the gate at the side building, two cast-iron stove plates (marked 1679), large villa garden in the Mühlpleißenaue, of architectural and local significance

So-called Lindenhof, a former country estate at the end of a cul-de-sac, consisting of an old and a new manor house and stable building, arranged around a courtyard with a tree-covered rondel. Gate system with ball attachments. The two-storey building on the north-east side of the courtyard was built in 1792 as a summer house for the Leipzig publisher Friedrich Weygand, the first editor of Goethe's "Werther". The elongated building with an even row of windows and a flat hipped roof, strictly symmetrically laid out, with an accentuated floor division and a seven-axis central projection, which is in turn divided by a three-axis entrance projection, is one of the last purely classical buildings in Leipzig. After vacancy, it is threatened with decay. In the 1830s, the extensive estate came into the possession of the Leipzig banker Wilhelm Seyfferth, or his daughter Johanna (Johanna Park). His son-in-law and partner Dr. Gustav Schulz had the stable to the right of the gate system converted in 1875 and a new villa was built by master mason Steib in place of the old barn on the south side of the courtyard. The so-called tower house (attached tower on the west side) is disfigured by new plastering, removal of the tower hood and the wooden veranda on the large garden-side terrace. Two cast iron stove plates (marked 1679) are built into the outer wall of the stable building. Originally, the Lindenhof belonged to a park that stretched to the railway line in the south and Bornaischen and Probstheidaer Strasse in the east and north. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09303850
 
Double tenement house (Bornaische Strasse 110 and Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 43) in open development with a front garden on Prinz-Eugen-Strasse Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 43
(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
 
Villa with garden, fence and gate Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 44
(map)
inscribed 1896 (villa) Clinker facade with high quarry stone plinth and tower, gable with suspension, in the style of historicism, built for the master brewer's widow E. Offenhauer, of architectural significance

The villa for the master brewer's widow E. Offenhauer was built in 1896 as the first building on the recent breakthrough to Bornaische Strasse. The architect was Otto Peter. The brick building on a high rubble stone base (with caretaker's apartment) on a square floor plan with interpenetrating risalits on each front. The entrance plan with a short tower, the servants' entrance in the southern risalit, to the right of it the utility wing. The interiors are arranged around a central hall. Verandas on the drawn-in outer fronts of the and south sides. The projecting roof in the gables with a suspension system. The iron fence between brick pegs is well preserved.

09296309
 
Residential house in open development, with garden, pergola and enclosure Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 54
(map)
1932-1933 (residential building) Cubic building with asymmetrical, slightly protruding and elevated entrance wing, flat monopitch roof, ribbon windows, in the modern style, architect: Philipp Peter, of architectural and scientific importance

With its cool objectivity and functional clarity, the residential building designed in 1932 by the architect Philipp Peter is one of the few consistently implemented residential buildings of the Bauhaus style in Leipzig. It is made up of two clearly separated functional parts: the two-storey crossbar with a covered entrance and staircase and a recessed, somewhat lower, rectangular wing that contains the living areas. The longitudinal building slopes down towards the rear like a desk and includes the eastern terrace wall. The two ribbon windows in the longitudinal wing mark the living and sleeping areas, the cubic unity of the entrance wing is only interrupted by three openings on the gable side: circle, slot, square. A pergola forms the eastern boundary of the garden, the iron mesh fence on the street front, which is divided into square fields and which underlines the structure of the house, is only preserved in the gate segments. The windows were painted the same light lime paint as the house, and the shutters were painted white.

09296660
 
Apartment building of a residential complex (structural unit with Bornaische Straße 112/114), with front garden Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 56
(map)
marked 1937 (tenement) traditionalistic plastered facade with graffiti, see also Bornaische Straße 112/114, of architectural significance

see Bornaische Strasse 112-114

09295994
 
Villa with garden Probstheidaer Strasse 1
(map)
1884 (villa) Plastered building with quarry stone base, cantilevered flat tent roof, on the courtyard side original painting on the jamb floor, in the style of historicism, of architectural significance

Two-storey villa built in the cubic shape of a southern country house style by master bricklayer Adolf Nolte in 1884 for Professor Christian Wilhelm Braune. Plastered building with sandstone and stucco structures and a high, rubble-clad base. Above the main cornice a lower attic storey with twin windows, the areas between the windows with painting that has been preserved on the back. Above it a strongly projecting tent roof with a slight incline. The entrance on the right side with outside stairs, on the back a veranda with access to the garden on a brick base. Servant's apartment, kitchen, pantry and laundry room in the basement, dining room and representative rooms on the ground floor, and the upper floor with bathroom, bedroom and study. Three more rooms on the attic floor.

09296368
 
Residential house in open development, with enclosure Probstheidaer Strasse 3
(map)
Mid 19th century (farmhouse) Plastered facade, one of the larger farmhouses near the old village center of Connewitz, of importance in terms of local development

Two-storey farmhouse built around the middle of the 19th century as a plastered eaves building with sandstone structures and a gable roof. The gable fronts with semicircular windows. A wooden packet with sandstone pegs as a fence. One of the larger of the farmhouses that were built outside of the old town center from the 1830s.

09296014
 
Apartment building in closed development Probstheidaer Strasse 7
(map)
1901 (tenement) Clinker brick facade with sandstone structures, important in terms of building history

With numbers 9 and 11: Three four-storey apartment buildings built in 1901 according to plans by the architect Heinrich Lindemann together with the adjacent development at Biedermannstraße 107-109 for the master carpenter Robert Klepzig. Clinker brick facades with sandstone cornices, stucco structures and plastered base zones. The entrances almost in the middle, in the hallways ornamental tiles and stucco decoration in Art Nouveau forms, at number 7 with well-preserved painting. Number 11 with the original shop front. Two apartments on each floor.

09296266
 
Double tenement house in closed development Probstheidaer Strasse 9; 11
(card)
1901 (double tenement house) with the original shop at number 11, clinker brick facade typical of the time, significant in terms of building history

s. Number 7

09296013
 
Two apartment buildings in a residential complex Probstheidaer Strasse 13; 15
(card)
1933-1934, number 13 (tenement), 1933-1934, number 15 (tenement) See also Bornaische Straße 90-102, plastered facade with brick plinth and brick edging of the entrances, important in terms of building history

See Bornaische Strasse 90-102, number 15 Renovation, loft extension and balcony extension 1999-2000 by arenawohnbau GmbH in Leipzig based on a draft plan by architect and structural engineer Andreas Rother from Nuremberg.

09295991
 
Individual monument and aggregate: grocery store (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09294096, Burgstädter Straße 2-22) Probstheidaer Strasse 21
(map)
1930-1931 (shop) Plastered facade with brick plinth, in the modern style, part of the residential complex Kohrener Strasse, Narsdorfer Strasse and Burgstädter Strasse, of architectural significance 09295999
 
Individual monument above aggregate: Apartment building in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09304096, Burgstädter Straße 2-22) Probstheidaer Strasse 23
(map)
1935-1936 (apartment building) Plastered facade with clinker brick structure, between modern and traditionalist style, part of the residential complex Kohrener Straße, Narsdorfer Straße, Burgstädter Straße, of historical importance 09296783
 
Individual monument above aggregate: apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09304096, Burgstädter Straße 2-22) Probstheidaer Strasse 25; 27; 29
(card)
1935-1936 and marked 1935, tenement row (apartment building) Plastered facade with clinker brick structure, between modern and traditionalist style, part of the residential complex Narsdorfer Straße, Kohrener Straße and Burgstädter Straße, of architectural importance 09296504
 
Double apartment building in a formerly closed development in a corner Probstheidaer Strasse 30; 30a
(card)
1902 (double tenement house) Clinker brick facade with simple stucco structures, important in terms of building history

Three-storey double apartment building in a chamfered corner to Klemmstrasse, built in 1902 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for master masons Julius Illge (number 30) and Johann Schinköthe (number 30a). The ground floor is plastered with grooves, the upper floors clad in clinker with simple stucco structures. The corner house number 30a with a four-flight house staircase and three apartments per floor, two apartments on each floor of number 30.

09296000
 
Double tenement house in a semi-open development Probstheidaer Strasse 34; 36
(card)
1905 (double tenement house) historicizing plastered building with splendid Art Nouveau decoration, a bay window at number 34 and a curved gable at number 36, of architectural significance

Numbers 38-40: Four three-story tenement houses built in 1904-1905 according to plans by the architect Hans Knoblauch for the art and commercial gardener Emil Damm on the former gardening site. In the original conception as a block of flats framed by corner towers with a sequence of regular clinker plaster facades, the central axes of which are elevated by segmented arched gables, only the two earlier houses number 38 and 40 were executed. In the subsequently erected, overall richer and more finely structured plastered buildings number 34 and 36, the structural concept of asymmetry predominates, in that the upper floors are vertically subdivided by wide plaster strips in the manner of a rhythmic boulevard. The resulting shift of the bay window at number 34 and the curved gable at number 36 from the central axis contrasts nicely with the arched entrances in the middle of the building. The hallways with ornamental tiles, porch door and stucco decor, at numbers 36 and 38 as picturesque stucco friezes showing girls, children and animals in a landscape, at numbers 34 and 36 as delicate stucco tendrils. Two apartments per house on the floors and in the attic.

09296274
 
Double tenement house in a semi-open development Probstheidaer Strasse 38; 40
(card)
1904-1905 (double tenement house) Original clinker plaster facade, number 40 with corner tower, significance in terms of building history

s. Number 34-36

09296273
 
Hofer Bridge; Schlachthofbrücke: Access ramp to a road bridge over a railway line and bridge arch towards the Zwickauer Straße intersection Richard-Lehmann-Strasse
(map)
1912 (road bridge) western driveway in front of Richard-Lehmann-Straße 114-116 and arch of the bridge at the entrance to the allotment garden association, built in connection with the construction of the technical fair, shell limestone cladding and railing, the sides of the driveway with the city coat of arms, the arch of the bridge with technical room in the western bridge pillar, local history and of importance in terms of traffic history 09296212
 
Residential house in open development, with garden and fence Richard-Lehmann-Strasse 8
(map)
1928-1929 (residential building) Typical plaster facade of the time, significance in terms of building history and urban district development history

Construction management, statics and design for Mathilde Mäckel's single-family house were carried out by the Raschwitz architects Fischer & Fiedler, carried out between 1928 and 1929 by the builder Curt Missbach, a company specializing in structural, civil and concrete construction. The original client, the authorized signatory Prof. Alfred Mäckel, is named on the plans. 2003 Application for renovation and new construction of a balcony with stairs to the garden. The designs for the country house construction appear compact and elegant at the same time with plastered facades, artificial stone structures, balcony railings and window shutters, accents are set by the narrow front door frame with Art Deco keystones and a semicircular protruding stand bay on the south side. A small vestibule on the ground floor gave access to the cloakroom and hallway, through which the kitchen, dining, men's and ladies' rooms were accessible, as well as the toilet and veranda. Above that, the master bedroom, room for daughter and sons, breakfast room, dressing room and bathroom. In the attic, the girls' room and two guest rooms as well as a bathroom / toilet, in the basement a room for flowers and a garage were built in. In terms of building history and, in particular, because of its location on the outskirts, it is of importance for the history of the district's development. LfD / 2012

09299389
 
Villa with garden and enclosure Richard-Lehmann-Strasse 12
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1912-1913 (villa) Plastered facade, reform style architecture, built for the sculptor Albrecht Leistner, of importance in terms of building history and personal history, rarity

For the sculptor Karl Albrecht Leistner, the “own and studio house” was built in 1912/1913 based on a design by architect Walter Gruner. Master builder and Royal Saxon building officer Otto Enke (reinforced concrete construction Leipzig) and master builder Otto Hauschild shared in the execution. A studio extension is attached to the east side of the two-story plastered corner house with a loft. Its eaves cornice with simple console stones continues as a sill cornice on the residential building, which makes it look very squat. In the workshop building, two artist rooms of different sizes in addition to the eraser room, reception room and chamber, front gardens on the street side and a garden at the back with a sloping terrain level to the south. The previously developed source materials (building files, paintings by Leistner in the holdings of the Leipzig City History Museum), which corresponded to the architectural design of the building or were to be continued in trellises on the facade, prove that the open space was taken into account during the construction period. The current state of the garden does not allow a reliable assessment of the actual degree of realization of the original intentions, relics of the earlier furnishings are some old trees. On the ground floor of the living area music, dining and ladies' room, vestibule, hall, cloakroom and exit onto a small terrace, the Upper floor with three rooms, girls' room, bathroom and dressing room. In addition to heating and a coal cellar, the basement also accommodated the laundry and platter room as well as the people's room, kitchen, sideboard and scullery. Great private and working property of an important Leipzig artist, rarity, memorial and historical value. LfD / 2012, 2015

09296900
 
Villa with garden, paving of the house entrance and enclosure wall Richard-Lehmann-Strasse 14
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1912-1914 (villa) Plastered facade with one-storey porches placed over the corner on the building edges, for the bank director and judicial advisor Dr. Paul Harrwitz built, reform style architecture, historically important

1912-1914 based on plans by the architect Heinrich Mossdorf for the bank director and counselor Dr. Paul Harrwitz built villa. Due to the death of the client, the construction project stalled in 1912 and was continued in a reduced form from 1913 on when the originally planned roof extension for his widow was omitted. The main building as a two-storey structure with a high basement, corner-mounted single-storey porches on the building edges facing Windscheidstrasse, a rounded, ornamentally decorated portal and a high hipped roof. Adjacent to the right is a one-and-a-half-storey extension with a separate apartment, at the back a single-storey, sloping porch with veranda and terrace. The basement with utility rooms. Four rooms, kitchen and sideboard, arranged around a central hall on the first floor, six rooms, dressing room, bathroom and coffee kitchen on the upper floor. The surrounding garden with old trees, the plinth and pipe of the enclosure are original. Now used as a kindergarten.

09296252
 
University building and four busts showing the builders Erwin von Steinbach, Lotter, Pöppelmann and Semper in the stairwell
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University building and four busts showing the builders Erwin von Steinbach, Lotter, Pöppelmann and Semper in the stairwell Richard-Lehmann-Strasse 32
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1913 (college) Elongated building with a central projectile, corner tower with sandstone bay window, in the reform style of the time around 1910, of architectural and local significance (for the extension see Karl-Liebknecht-Straße 132)

University of Technology, Economics and Culture, formerly the Royal Building Trade School, built in 1913 according to plans by the architect Richard Thiele on behalf of the Royal Agriculture Authority. Three-storey, two-wing school building as a plastered building with a sandstone-clad base, the elongated 27-axis main front facing Richard-Lehmann-Straße subdivided by a central projection with a raised roof attachment. On the corner of the street on Karl-Liebknecht-Straße, a corner tower with a Baroque hood and bay window dominates the urban development. The vertically structured fronts of the central risalite and the five-axis side wing facing Karl-Liebknecht-Strasse as well as the mansard roofs also have baroque echoes. On the right side of the central risalit contains a sandstone-clad, portal-like entrance with stepped walls, a highly oval skylight and a curved end in strict Art Nouveau forms, flanked by two unclothed figures symbolizing the construction industry and the client. The base area with a passage from Karl-Liebknecht-Straße, two apartments and lounges. On the floors there is a one-hip floor plan with cross-arched corridors running to the rear, on which the collection rooms, lecture and classrooms are located. The third floor of the wing facing Karl-Liebknecht-Straße originally contained the auditorium. In the stairwell four master builder busts created by the sculptor P. Pöppelmann, which show Erwin von Steinbach, Hieronymus Lotter, Matthäus Daniel Pöppelmann and Gottfried Semper. (For extension see Karl-Liebknecht-Straße 132).

09296253
 
Administration building (addresses: Karl-Liebknecht-Straße 143, Eichendorffstraße 9/11 and Richard-Lehmann-Straße 34) Richard-Lehmann-Strasse 34
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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
 
Dormitory building (with dining room annex) and green area with enclosure walls Richard-Lehmann-Strasse 36
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1931 (dormitory) Dormitory building across the street with one-room apartments on corridors, with six garages in the basement, entrance in an angled single-storey extension, in traditionalist style, designed green space with enclosing walls made of basalt, of local and architectural importance

Working home for non-profit building cooperatives, built in 1931 as a joint venture between the building association for the procurement of inexpensive apartments and the building cooperative for permanent employees based on plans by architects Walter Wiesinger, Max Schönfeld and Richard Edler. The four-storey home building with horizontal plaster bands, stone-clad base (basalt) and hipped roof, standing in a ridge to the street. In its center, the elongated structure is interrupted by a five-storey crossbar containing the staircase, followed by a single-storey casino building with a dining room to the west. Also on the west side, the front section of the building has protruding balconies that are glazed afterwards. On the back, on the gable front facing Eichendorffstrasse, a semicircular staircase porch. The interior division is two-sided with one-room apartments on a central corridor. In the base zone on the side there is a series of garages, the garage courtyard, like the designed green area on the west side, is surrounded by a basalt wall that continues the building base.

09296330
 
Row of tenement houses in a residential complex, with a green inner courtyard
Row of tenement houses in a residential complex, with a green inner courtyard Richard-Lehmann-Strasse 44; 46; 48; 50; 52
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1927 (tenement) Plastered facade in Art Deco forms, with shops in numbers 44 and 52 and gate passage between numbers 46 and 48, see also Arthur-Hoffmann-Strasse 122/124 and 130 as well as Bernhard-Göring-Strasse 125, of architectural and socio-historical importance

Between 1927 and 1937, the Bauverein built a block of four-storey plastered buildings with 393 residential units in the square Richard-Lehmann-, Bernhard-Göring-, Gustav-Freytag- and Arthur-Hoffmann-Straße for the procurement of inexpensive apartments according to plans by the architect Richard Thiele. The first line to emerge in 1927 was the row on Richard-Lehmann-Strasse with an elongated front subdivided by raised entrance axes and flanking, pointed projections. The entrance axes are closed off by gables, with every second gable covered by an openwork, straight-closing structure in Art Deco shapes. The pointed projecting risalits as well as the facades with color-contrasting geometric plaster decoration and restrained brick structures, the plinths with brick facings. On the corner of Bernhard-Göring-Straße a more massive structure (Bernhard-Göring-Straße 125), the ground floor of which contains a shopping area with arcades. Original shop fronts are also preserved in numbers 44 and 52. Between numbers 46 and 48 there is a passage that gives access to a green inner courtyard. On the back of each house a slightly protruding risalit with the kitchen exits. On the floors at each entrance there are two 86-88 sqm apartments with three rooms, a chamber, kitchen and bathroom. After the war destruction, only parts of the line along Arthur-Hoffmann-Strasse, which was completed by 1930, remain of the remaining buildings on the block. In 1995 the color version was restored according to the original findings. The change in the color scheme of the pointed projecting risalits with a sequence of two green and two blue frames appears attractive in the street space. With Arthur-Hoffmann-Strasse numbers 122-124 and 130 and Bernhard-Göring-Strasse number 125.

09296331
 
Multi-family houses in a residential complex and open space Richard-Lehmann-Strasse 54; 56
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1927-1928 (double tenement house), 1927-1928, open space (garden) together with Arthur-Hoffmann-Straße 139-155, plastered facade, of architectural significance

see Arthur-Hoffmann-Straße 139-155

09296380
 
Official residence in open development, with enclosure Richard-Lehmann-Strasse 110
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1929-1930 (official residence) Erected as an official residence for the municipal gas works II, plastered facade, stairwell risalit with balconies adjoining on both sides, in the modern style, of architectural and local significance

Four-storey civil servants 'residence of the municipal gasworks II, built between 1929 and 1930 according to plans by the architects' office Bornmüller und Arzt. Hipped roof set back from the eaves. On the back two risalits with closed verandas. Two apartments on each floor, with four rooms on the left and two rooms on the right. Another four-room apartment on the top floor. The round windows are used to light the bathrooms and bedrooms. A rear roof extension from 1938. An iron fence around the front garden on a brick base with brick posts.

09296657
 
Official residence in open development, with fencing and gate entrance Richard-Lehmann-Strasse 112
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around 1915 (tenement), 1929-1930 (enclosure) Erected as an official residence for the municipal gas works II, plastered facade with brick base, reform style architecture, of local historical importance

Official residence of the second municipal gas works, built around 1910/1915 as a free-standing two-storey plastered building with a high tile base and a steep mansard roof. The three axes on the left are raised, on the parapets small application works in baroque forms.

09296167
 
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) Richard-Lehmann-Strasse 114
(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 the area along the railroad tracks and the disposal of two of the four gas tanks, 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
 
Subject aggregate Städtisches Gaswerk II, with the following individual monuments: Gasworks (Richard-Lehmann-Straße 114) with two gas tanks (Gasometer 1 - Building No. 123 and Gasometer 2 - Building No. 125, additional address Arno-Nitzsche-Straße 35), Regulatory House with Additions for gas tank 1 (building no.116 with 114 and 115), regulation 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), car hall (building no.214), fire station (building no.217) and enclosure wall to Richard-Lehmann-Strasse (see also list of individual monuments - Obj. 09296307)
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Subject aggregate Städtisches Gaswerk II, with the following individual monuments: Gasworks (Richard-Lehmann-Straße 114) with two gas tanks (Gasometer 1 - Building No. 123 and Gasometer 2 - Building No. 125, additional address Arno-Nitzsche-Straße 35), Regulatory House with Additions for gas tank 1 (building no.116 with 114 and 115), regulation 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), car hall (building no.214), fire station (building no.217) and enclosure wall to Richard-Lehmann-Strasse (see also list of individual monuments - Obj. 09296307) Richard-Lehmann-Strasse 114
(map)
1882-1885 (gas container 1), 1900 (gas container 2) 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 09296679
 
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Cottage Roßmaesslerstrasse 2
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around 1820 (cottage), around 1860, extension (cottage) Plastered facade, with number 4 one of the two last surviving cottages in the Neudörfchen, of social and historical importance

Numbers 2 and 4, the two last surviving cottages in the new village. Both consist of an old, single-storey, gable-facing mud house, probably built around 1820, and a newer residential house built in the 1860s (at number 4: 1862), which was added to the eaves at number 2 on the street side and at number 4 on the back of the courtyard. The old houses each contain a central corridor with staircase, behind it the kitchen and on both sides a living room, from which a chamber is separated on the left. The newer building of number 4, with a dwelling, contained a hallway with stairs and kitchen on the right and a room on the left. A second entrance led into the wash house. Number 2 is vacant and in danger of decay (1995).

09295878
 
Two cottages Roßmaesslerstrasse 4
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around 1820 (cottage), 1862 (cottage) One-storey, plastered facade, with number 2 one of the last two surviving cottages in the new village, of social and historical importance

Numbers 2 and 4, the two last surviving cottages in the new village. Both consist of an old, single-storey, gable-facing mud house, probably built around 1820, and a newer residential house built in the 1860s (at number 4: 1862), which was added to the eaves at number 2 on the street side and at number 4 on the back of the courtyard. The old houses each contain a central corridor with staircase, behind it the kitchen and on both sides a living room, from which a chamber is separated on the left. The newer building of number 4, with a dwelling, contained a hallway with stairs and kitchen on the right and a room on the left. A second entrance led into the wash house. Number 2 is vacant and in danger of decay (1995).

09295879
 
Apartment house designed as a closed development and wash house in the courtyard Roßmaesslerstrasse 18
(map)
1908 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important

Built in 1908 by architect Carl Feistel for Hugo Richter. Simple facade in multi-colored brick facing, emphasized horizontally by cornice and only slight emphasis on the center. Originally with a drawer (arch stones in 3rd / 4th axis). The hallway and stairwell have been furnished with partially figurative stucco decorations and ceiling paintings. Simply beautiful door leaf.

09295882
 
Double apartment building (with Windscheidstraße 27) in a formerly closed development and in a corner location Scheffelstrasse 17
(map)
1910-1911 (double tenement house) Plastered facade with cautiously used facade decor, with bay windows and balconies, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history

The architects Johannes Keizer and Hugo Keizer took over the property in order to build a representative corner residential building according to their own designs and under their own construction management. Alfred Klingler from Lindenau and the ceiling construction business were entrusted with the execution of the project by master builders Weineck & Kayser. In September 1911 the final examination of the house applied for in June of the previous year took place. The apartments were accessed via two stairwells, a laundry room and utility passage in the basement and an apartment under the roof. From the summer of 1915 the property was in the sole ownership of the architect Johannes Berthold Keizer, later W. Grahneis, Emilie Pauline Clara Grahneis, née. Wöckler (from 1920), businessman and authorized signatory Ernst Otto Richter (1921), the company Dietze and Louis Dietze OHG fruit and vegetable trade. The building application at the end of the year 1993 was submitted by Ralf Dietze and included the extensive repair and renovation, the company was only completed in July 1996. The background to this was the greater damage caused by war destruction and consequential damage, especially the bomb-damaged two upper floors. The reconstruction project by the architect Wolfgang Lohmer in office sharing with Alfred Uttecht had already been submitted in 1957, which was followed by a renewed application for reconstruction in 1961 - both building applications were not implemented. Bay windows and a moving roof landscape characterize the effective reform style building with plastered facades and cautiously used facade decor. The base consists mostly of sandstone blocks over a granite threshold, the corner has a spacious shop fitting. House entrance doors and the equipment on the lower floors have been preserved. Effective corner building, of importance in terms of building history and the history of the district's development at the interface between closed apartment building quarters and the open development of villas and residential buildings. LfD / 2013

09296392
 
Apartment building in closed development Scheffelstrasse 18
(map)
around 1907 (tenement) Plastered facade with stucco decor and bay windows, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history

The tenement house in originally closed development, probably built around 1907 according to the asymmetrical bay pattern customary at the time and carefully furnished with building decor in art nouveau forms (wreaths, medallions, demon masks). The separation and decorative accentuation of the upper bay floor with life-size, semi-plastic female porters is unusual. The portal in red porphyry frame with stone carvings, the hallway with marble stairs, pilaster strips and five almost fully plastic putti at the base of the coffered barrel vault.

09296415
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Scheffelstrasse 21
(map)
1908 (tenement) with shop and through house, plastered facade, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history

The tenement house built in 1908 for the architect Gustav Schlieder according to plans by Martin May included the still existing courtyard building with bakery (shop in the front building). The "piano system" emerging around this time with two gables of different widths above the bay windows, one of which has a balcony, enlivened the roof landscape and provided additional living space. Similar to the neighboring building, the facade was designed with relief plaster fields and the vertical was emphasized by the corner blocks of the bay windows. This elegant facade structure is hardly effective anymore due to the painting.

09296414
 
Apartment building in closed development Scheffelstrasse 23
(map)
1909 (tenement) with shop, plastered facade with bay windows, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history

Apartment building built in 1908 by master carpenter and building contractor Franz Dietze with a generous facade typical of the time: the upper floors are combined by slender polygonal bay windows above the delicately grooved natural stone base, while smooth plaster mirrors and window frames in front of darker trickle plaster structure the facade skin. The generous floor plans of this type of house contain bathrooms in the deep and wide rear stairwell projection.

09296426
 
Apartment building in closed development Scheffelstrasse 27
(map)
1912 (tenement) Plastered facade, reform style architecture, important in terms of building history

Built in 1912 for Wilhelm Schössling according to plans by the architect Albert Hadley. The four-storey apartment building has an elevated, five-storey façade, typical of the time, and a high, rounded ground floor zone. The upper floors are combined by flat pilaster strips between the window axes. The gable and front door are decorated with an oval ox-eye.

09295892
 
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) Scheffelstrasse 30; 30a; 30b
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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 semi-open development and in a corner Scheffelstrasse 35
(map)
1899 (tenement house) Brick facing with plaster structure, corner accentuation by bay windows, of architectural significance

Erected in 1899 for the businessman Hermann König by the architect E. Eckardt. Economical and conventional facade structuring with brick facing blocks, flat corner projections and a separate upper floor. The broken corner is accentuated with a box bay window that merges into a polygonal tower structure on the upper floor (the crowning tower with tambour and slim dome removed). In the basement corner entrance to the basement workshop.

09296425
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Scheffelstrasse 36
(map)
1903-1904 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade with stucco ornamentation, historically significant apartment building in the area of ​​tension between historicism and art nouveau

Designed in 1903 for the building contractor Oskar Dossin by architect H. Heusing. A conventional facade scheme - brick over a grooved plaster base, hint of side projections, window roofing with stucco fillings and ornate accented final cornice - is transposed here by converting the individual forms into "modern", i.e. Art Nouveau. The demolition of the filigree wrought iron balconies damaged the flat and graceful facade.

09296424
 
Apartment building in half-open development Scheffelstrasse 37
(map)
1914 (tenement) Plastered facade, reform style architecture, architectural and local development value

After various plans had been rejected by the building authority, a building permit for a design by architect and builder Oscar Schade was obtained on May 13, 1914, who also took over the construction management. The builder was the master carpenter and business owner Ferdinand Laußmann, the construction of the solid ceilings above the basement and the balconies was done by the builder Otto Bergelt. The final acceptance of the tenement building took place on September 17th in the year of the application. 1948 Submission of a project for the installation of three apartments in the attic by the architect Erich Roesner. In addition to the arched portal of the house entrance, a two-storey polygonal bay window on the right and loggias with protruding parapets in the left building axis accentuate the simple plastered building in semi-open development. Little ornaments are used on the exterior, while the interior has more furnishings, three apartments per floor. LfD / 2008

09302298
 
Apartment building in half-open development Scheffelstrasse 38
(map)
marked 1903 (tenement house) Façade with lavish Art Nouveau decoration, important in terms of building history

Erected in 1903 by master masons Anton and Hans Möbius as a speculative building. Façade in the purest Art Nouveau style with flat, lush flower fillings in the parapet fields, wreaths and the well-known ribbon noodle decor as a window frame in front of a middle section set off with delicate trickle plaster. A special detail on the two outer windows of the middle section on the first floor: the parrots nibbling on the wreaths. In the deep courtyard there were originally designed tenant gardens with arbors.

09296423
 
Children's home with enclosure Scheffelstrasse 42
(map)
1901-1902 (youth home / children's home) Free-standing building, one side with a semicircular end, plastered facade, of local and architectural significance

On behalf of the "Kinderheim" association, Max Pommer created the plans for the home building to be built on urban land in 1901. The two-storey, originally only nine-axis building is accessed through a stair tower attached to the side. The greater part of the two main floors was taken up by two dormitories for 45 and 18 children, respectively, while the utility rooms were in the basement, while the care, isolation and study rooms were in the attic. The new plastering in 1938 removed the former structure of the facade: originally a plaster joint reaching to the point of the window arches emphasized the horizontal bearing of the building, which was taken up in the roof zone by the ribbon of windows on the sides of the curved gable, which was also later obscured. The eastern extension with a semicircular end took place in 1906. Since around 1960 the building has served as a children's home for the Inner Mission.

09296422
 
Apartment building (together with Gustav-Freytag-Straße 46-52) of a residential complex, with fencing and green areas Scheffelstrasse 45; 47; 47a
(card)
1935-1936 (block of flats) Plastered facade with clinker base, front door portal, artificial stone framing, of importance in terms of building history 09301280
 
Multi-family houses in a residential complex, with a front garden Scheffelstrasse 51; 53; 55; 57
(card)
1930 (block of flats) forms a residential complex together with Arthur-Hoffmann-Straße 157-173 (Arthur-Hoffmann-Straße 167/169/171 destroyed by the war), traditionalistic plastered facade, of historical importance

see Arthur-Hoffmann-Strasse 157-173

09296381
 
Plaza Selneckerstraße -
(map)
1929 (urban and settlement green) Schmuckplatz in front of the Paul-Gerhardt-Haus (Kirchgemeindehaus, Selneckerstraße 7, see object 09296413), with stairs and old trees, of importance in terms of local development and urban green history 09292452
 
Double tenement house in a semi-open development Selneckerstrasse 1; 3
(card)
1929 (double tenement house) traditionalistic plastered facade, of architectural significance

With Wolfgang-Heinze-Straße 4/6: residential complex on the corner of Selnecker / Wolfgang-Heinze-Straße, built 1928-1929 according to plans by the client, the architect Alfred Lingner. The three houses on Selnecker Straße, following the slightly uphill and at this point somewhat curvy street course, raised on a pedestal, staggered in depth towards the intersection and becoming narrower. Numbers 1 and 3 are connected by a strongly emphasized horizontal structure - originally red plaster strips against a yellowish background over a gray base. Wide box windows typical of the time with lattice bars, regularly lined up. Entrances with ridge framing, at number 3 symmetrical facade division by doubling. The five-storey corner building with a high gable dominates the square-like intersection of the "Connewitzer Kreuz". (Originally with three acute-angled blind arches in a colossal order, an even stronger height effect). The façade facing Wolfgang-Heinze Strasse is emphasized vertically with four three-story box oriels. Three narrow cornices as a restrained horizontal summary. The complex, which was created as part of the private housing construction, contained modern two, three and four-room apartments (with central heating).

09296026
 
Multi-family houses in a residential complex with a green courtyard on the street side
Multi-family houses in a residential complex with a green courtyard on the street side Selneckerstrasse 4; 6; 8th; 10; 12; 14; 16; 18
(card)
1910-1911 (tenement house) in the form of a three-wing complex, opposite the Paul-Gerhardt-Church, plastered facade with shop, with loggias, reform style architecture, historically important

Residential complex consisting of eight connected individual houses, built in 1911 according to plans by the architects Theodor Kösser and Hans Böhme for the building association for the procurement of inexpensive apartments (relief and inscription on the corner of the western side wing). In the extensive residential complex, designed in the form of a three-wing complex around a green courtyard, the effort to group in order to recognize the height and depth gradation and loosening of the street space: The central section set back from the street is opened by a front building with loggias that is staggered towards the center Staircases with columns flanked by entrances connect it to the short side wings, which are connected by a loft with the four-axis raised corner tracts that tower above the 17-axis street fronts. These street-side façades, which appear somewhat stricter overall, are also enlivened by box and polygonal bay windows of different widths and roof structures. Colored plaster strips connect three storeys of the raised corner wings in the manner of a colossal order, while the adjoining facades appear to be more fragmented, also with plastic building decoration in the bay windows and pulled down bay roofs etc. The two- and three-room apartments are large and of simple equipment, with AWC in the rear stairwell and a shared bathroom for each house on the top floor. There is a shop in the right wing of the street. The renovation in 1993 made the interrelationship of the complex obscure through partly illogical color schemes.

09296420
 
Church (with equipment) and church square with stairs to the parish hall
More pictures
Church (with equipment) and church square with stairs to the parish hall Selneckerstraße 5
(map)
1898-1900 (church), 1900 (pulpit), 1900 (lectern), 1900 (baptism), 1972/1973 (organ) Hall building with eastern tower and retracted choir, plastered building with divisions made of Rochlitz porphyry tufa, of importance in terms of architectural history and shaping the townscape

Paul Gerhardt Church. Evangelical-Lutheran parish church for Connewitz, built 1898-1900 according to plans by the Leipzig architect Julius Zeißig as a hall with a tower and recessed choir on the area of ​​the old Connewitz cemetery, which is elevated in relation to Selnecker Straße, after the one on today's Prinz-Eugen-Straße located and demolished in 1902, the old parish church had become too small. The new church was built in connection with the northern Connewitz expansion area, which was tackled in 1892, in which it is an urban dominant in its elevated position and with its tower. 1934 Named in Paul-Gerhardt-Kirche after the poet of Protestant hymns who lived in the 16th century. In the war years 1943 and 1944, damage from air raids, with loss of the glass windows and interior painting. New glazing was carried out from 1953 to 1954 based on a design by Max Alfred Brumme. 1981-1983 exterior renovation, 1986 new painting partly based on the first version. The hall church in old German-Renaissance-like forms as a plastered brick building with ashlar elements made of Rochlitz porphyry. On the eastern front side of the 60 meter high tower with a crooked hip roof, slightly tapering in the area of ​​the acoustic arcades, above which a closed lantern with a curved dome rises. The tower is flanked by two recessed staircases with side portals, above these former mosaics of the four evangelists. On the side of the tower a porch with two glass mosaics based on designs by Professor Viktor Paul Mohn: in the tympanum a representation of the inviting Christ, in the gable an Ecce Homo after Guido Reni. Above it the inscription "Christo in Ehren" and a richly ornamented stone cross. The interior is a large, pillarless hall with wooden galleries and a wooden stab cap barrel, the almost square choir is covered by a plastered star vault. Remnants of the original interior painting still exist on the wood paneling of the galleries. The interior fittings were largely made of oak by the Leipzig carver Heinrich Behr: the altar from 1900 in Byzantine shapes using a linden wood relief from 1893 showing the Last Supper, above a crucifix, the pulpit from 1890 also in Byzantine shapes, the lectern from 1900. The off Rochlitz porphyry font made in 1900 by master stonemason Hermann Hempel. Instead of the original Ladegast organ, a Schuke organ from 1973.

09296421
 
Parish hall (with furnishings, structural unit with residential building at Brandstrasse 40) and enclosure walls Selneckerstraße 7
(map)
1926-1927 (parish hall) Plastered facade, with high stepped gable, pointed arched main portal, two-storey hall building, inside Art Deco furnishings, with a green area in front and stairs to the church (see object 09296421 and object 09292452), of importance in terms of art history, building history and local history

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 and the long side set back behind a green area facing Selneckerstrasse. Connected to the higher church by a set of stairs. The rectory built on the hall gable on Brandstrasse. Here the main portal, framed with bundles of pillars on a triangular floor plan, above it in the "zigzag style". Clinker brick base and window frames. The hall building with narrow, high windows in the upper and parabolic arched windows on the ground floor. The hall entrance (with St. George's relief in the keystone) and the windows in the clinker brick base also have this parabolic arch shape, a typical transformation of the Gothic pointed arch, which indicates the sacred purpose of the building. The elongated hall building is interrupted by a transept, also with a stepped gable, which contains two small confirmation rooms and ends with a lower stage extension. In the interior of the hall, art deco - decorations on the pillars of the hall and the pilasters between the high windows. The green area with brick walls, stairs and regular hedges in the style of the twenties was preserved. Overall, the building is a very characteristic example of a tendency in Leipzig architecture of this time, which latently linked to the "Gothic" brick expressionism. The parish hall is a typical B for the twenties in Leipzig and is completed by a lower stage extension.

09296413
 
Apartment building in closed development Selneckerstraße 20
(map)
1908 (tenement) Plastered facade with bay window, reform style architecture, of architectural significance

Selneckerstraße number 20, 22, 24, 26: Closed row of apartment buildings up to the corner of Windscheidstraße, all of which were designed from March 1908 to January 1909 by the master bricklayer and carpenter Wilhelm Kother, who was the owner, site manager, contractor and probably also responsible for planning , have been executed. All houses were sold shortly after completion. Although different in the details, they are designed as a coherent series. The emphasized vertical structure of the façades with the three-storey gabled oriels is decisive for the overall impression. The facade decoration also binds the details, smooth and combed plaster surfaces, flat rhombuses, wreaths and medallions to form straight, upright rectangular shapes. The windows with skylight bars originally belonged to this delicate rectangular structure. The same straightforward decoration principle can be found in the preserved furnishings of the corridors and stairwells.

09296419
 
Apartment building in closed development Selneckerstraße 22
(map)
1908 (tenement) Plastered facade with geometric Art Nouveau decoration, with bay windows, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history

s. Number 20

09296418
 
Apartment building in closed development Selneckerstraße 24
(map)
1908 (tenement) Plastered facade with geometric Art Nouveau decoration, with bay windows, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history

s. Number 20

09296417
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development and in a corner location
Apartment building in a formerly closed development and in a corner location Selneckerstraße 26
(map)
1908 (tenement) Plastered facade, tower-like corner accentuation, with bay windows and balconies, reform style architecture, of architectural significance

s. Number 20

09296416
 
Barracks building (Windscheidstraße 48) in open development and in a corner location, with a side wing (Selneckerstraße 28), as well as front garden and driveway Selneckerstraße 28
(map)
1937 (barracks) Traditionalistic plastered facade from the 1930s, partly as stone cladding, formerly with a garage building and two officers' houses on Heilemannstrasse, of military, architectural and local significance 09296718
 
Pavement, tram tracks, curbs and mosaic pavement of the two footpaths Simildenstrasse
(map)
around 1880 (plaster) Supplement and part of the horse tram depot of the Great Leipzig Horse Railway, significance in terms of transport history 09261282
 
Apartment building (No. 1) in open development in the corner and rear building (No. 1a) Simildenstrasse 1; 1a
(card)
1877 (tenement) with shop, historicizing plastered facade, corner emphasis, historically important

The corner house with the main front facing Wolfgang-Heinze-Straße was built in 1877 according to plans by the architect Moritz for the master saddler Karl F. Michael. As the old house number Chausseestrasse number 2 attests, it was the second house on the west side of the later Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse. Similar to the other older corner houses (for example on the corner of Mathildenstrasse) it has a corner structure over a flat hipped roof and a risalit with flat grooves drawn around the corner, which is emphasized by window coverings. The upper floor with partially coupled three-pass windows ties in with the "Venetian" tradition often found in Leipzig buildings from the middle of the century. There were originally three "vaulted" shops on the ground floor, the entrance is at the rear.

09295897
 
Apartment building (with two parts of the house) in closed development and in a corner Simildenstrasse 2
(map)
1888 (tenement house) with gate passage and two original shop fronts, corner emphasis, historicizing plastered facade, historically important

The corner house on Wolfgang-Heinze-Straße was built in 1888 for Robert Müller, timber merchant and community elder from Connewitz. The wing to Simildenstraße changed by smoothing the facade, originally like the five-storey wing on the main street with two cornices and straight window roofs. The Connewitz building regulations did not stipulate any "broken corners" before the incorporation, which is why there is only a slightly rounded edge on the four-axis corner projection, flanked by square pilaster strips that originally took up the square of the ground floor. The corner part was provided with a tower-like structure. slightly rounded corner, which is made up of square pilaster strips (which originally took up the plaster square on the ground floor), is that here, within the scope of the still independent municipality of Connewitz,

09295898
 
Apartment building in half-open development Simildenstrasse 3
(map)
1892 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade, historically important

3.5: Both tenement houses, four-storey, with a dense row of attic houses in the "French" roof, were built between 1892 and 1895 based on drawings by Otto Gerstenberger for the "independent building contractor" Hermann Jahn. The simple brick façades, especially the later one of number 5, already show a departure from the strictly layered floor structure: the cornices are only slightly emphasized, while the sunken parapet areas under the windows with their shadows cast a stronger vertical emphasis.

09295896
 
Apartment building in closed development Simildenstrasse 4
(map)
1898 (tenement) historicizing plastered facade, of architectural significance

4,6: Both houses belong to the perimeter block development on the northeast side of the street designed by master bricklayer Pirnsch. The plastered building number 4 for Robert Müller, the brick building number 6 for Bernhard Thielemann, both using the same conventional facade scheme, on which only individual details such as the keystones converted into consoles at number 4 and the flat plaster frames at number 6 to the year of origin 1901 indicate.

09295891
 
Apartment building in closed development, with wash house in the courtyard Simildenstrasse 5
(map)
1895 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important

s. Number 3

09295895
 
Apartment building in closed development Simildenstrasse 6
(map)
1901 (tenement) Facade brick cladding with plaster structure, historically important

s. Number 4

09296242
 
Apartment building in closed development Simildenstrasse 7
(map)
1910 (tenement) with original shops, plastered façade typical of the time, of architectural significance

The project of the builder Kurt Bergk, who had acquired the area of ​​the gymnasium of the Connewitz gymnastics club in 1908 and started building the two neighboring tenement houses, provided for the gable-side of the hall facing the street to be retained and a cinematograph theater to be set up in it. In consideration of the otherwise too dense courtyard development, the city rejected the project and forced the client to demolish the hall in 1909. In its place, the tenement house number 7 was built in 1910 according to plans by the architect Arno Pohle. Compared to the neighboring buildings of the client himself, which were built only a little earlier, it has a more contemporary, simplified facade design. The smooth surfaces are now sparingly enlivened by the cast elements that are typical of the time.

09295894
 
Apartment building in closed development Simildenstrasse 7a
(map)
1908 (tenement) Façade yellow brick facing and plaster structure, base with green glazed bricks, Art Nouveau ornamentation, important from an architectural point of view

7a, 7b: Both apartment buildings built in 1908 next to the still existing gym of the Connewitz gymnastics club according to plans by the client Kurt Bergk. The eight-axis buildings are reversed in terms of the choice of materials: plastered central section and side projections faced with yellowish bricks in number 7a, brick-clad central portion and plastered projections in 7b. Both over green-glazed bases and finely grooved ground floor and with a slightly doughy-looking geometric decoration typical of the builder. The variety of colors, materials and plaster structures based on the tradition of Art Nouveau is just as typical. The house entrances are emphasized in contrast with the classic aedicule framing at number 7b and the amorphous grotto in number 7a. In both houses, the hallways and stairwells have been decorated to match the facade.

09295890
 
Apartment building in closed development Simildenstrasse 7b
(map)
1908 (tenement) Clinker-plaster facade, base with green glazed bricks, of architectural significance

s. Number 7a

09295889
 
Double tenement house in closed development in a corner, with restaurant Simildenstrasse 8; 10
(card)
1901-1902 (double tenement house) with corner pub, eastern corner of the junction to the church, plastered facade, of architectural significance

Number 8/10, 12,14,16: In 1901 the master bricklayer Theodor Pirnsch designed a row of 5 apartment buildings at the junction leading to the horse-drawn railway depot for various clients, all of whom were master bricklayers. Although different in some details, they correspond to the structure of the facade: horizontal stratification by cornices over the ground floor, vertical structure by triangular and segmental arch roofing, the traditional historical scheme. Only a few details point to the turn of the century. The same applies to the floor plans with a toilet on a stair landing and without a bathroom.

09296241
 
Apartment building in closed development Simildenstrasse 9
(map)
1887 (tenement house) Plastered facade with stucco structure, of importance in terms of building history

Number 9.11: Both of the three-storey houses built in 1887 are part of the earliest development on Simildenstrasse starting from Brandstrasse. Erected by master carpenters Moritz Jahn (number 11) and Friedrich Haufe according to plans by Connewitz architect August Franke, both have a symmetrical but oppositely accentuated facade structure on seven axes: it emphasizes the two outer axes in number 9 and the three central axes in number 11. Conversely, the roof houses are arranged in the weighting. Number 11 is affected by the smoothing of the ground floor, number 9 by the removal of the console cornice.

09295888
 
Apartment building in closed development Simildenstrasse 11
(map)
1887 (tenement house) Plastered facade with stucco structure, of importance in terms of building history

s. Number 9

09295887
 
Apartment building in closed development (structural unit with No. 14) Simildenstrasse 12
(map)
1901-1903 (tenement house) Plastered facade, historicism building in a closed street, of value in terms of building history and local development

Numbers 8/10, 12, 14, 16: In 1901 the master bricklayer Theodor Pirnsch designed a row of 5 apartment buildings at the junction leading to the horse-drawn railway depot for various builders, all of them master bricklayers. Although different in some details, they correspond to the structure of the facade: horizontal stratification by cornices over the ground floor, vertical structure by triangular and segmental arch roofing, the traditional historical scheme. Only a few details point to the turn of the century. The same applies to the floor plans with a toilet on a stair landing and without a bathroom.

09296239
 
Apartment building in closed development, with wash house in the courtyard Simildenstrasse 13
(map)
1887-1888 (tenement house) Plastered façade, significant in terms of development and building history

Erected in 1887/1888 in connection with the corner building at Brandstrasse 26 by master mason Otto Jaenicke for Karl-August Riehl and adjusted to this in terms of storey height and facade structure. As with the aforementioned corner building, the upper floor is only given as a mezzanine with 2.85 instead of 3.25. The five-axis house had only one common dry "private" with two small apartments per floor.

09295886
 
Apartment building in closed development (structural unit with no.12) Simildenstrasse 14
(map)
1901-1902 (tenement house) Plastered facade, historically significant tenement building in a closed ensemble

Numbers 8/10, 12, 14, 16: In 1901 the master bricklayer Theodor Pirnsch designed a row of 5 apartment buildings at the junction leading to the horse-drawn railway depot for various builders, all of them master bricklayers. Although different in some details, they correspond to the structure of the facade: horizontal stratification by cornices over the ground floor, vertical structure by triangular and segmental arch roofing, the traditional historical scheme. Only a few details point to the turn of the century. The same applies to the floor plans with a toilet on a stair landing and without a bathroom.

09296240
 
Apartment building in closed development Simildenstrasse 16
(map)
1901-1902 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade, historically important

Numbers 8/10, 12, 14, 16: In 1901 the master bricklayer Theodor Pirnsch designed a row of 5 apartment buildings at the junction leading to the horse-drawn railway depot for various builders, all of them master bricklayers. Although different in some details, they correspond to the structure of the facade: horizontal stratification by cornices over the ground floor, vertical structure by triangular and segmental arch roofing, the traditional historical scheme. Only a few details point to the turn of the century. The same applies to the floor plans with a toilet on a stair landing and without a bathroom.

09295893
 
Apartment building in closed development Simildenstrasse 18a
(map)
1912-1913 (tenement house) with gate passage, plastered construction in a closed street with particular urban development significance with regard to the UT Connewitz film theater (in the courtyard of the neighboring property), of architectural interest

Initially, a building application was submitted by Dr. Josef Petersmann with plans submitted in 1912 from the office for architecture and construction Artur Werner in Connewitz, almost three months later the property was sold to the architect Artur Werner, private man Emil Seyfarth and master plumber William Pittschaft. Master builder Otto Bergelt carried out static calculations for the reform style building, which was simple and plastered without decor and was accepted on February 4, 1913. A cinema building (later UT Connewitz) was built on the property, which at the time extended to Pegauer Strasse (today Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse), and was initially guaranteed to be accessible via Simildenstrasse. In 1925, the book printer owner Nicolaus Koppel Israel Leff in Borsdorf is the owner of the house, and he runs his company in the basement of the cinema building: Leipziger Künsterei N. Leff. On September 7, 1940, Marie Amalie was entered in the land register. Leff born Hessel-Ziehr. Renovation along with loft extension and balcony extension 1998-1999. The preserved furnishings include the white facing tiles in the passage, which refer to the former entrance to the cinema and can also be found in the passage to the movie theater via Wolfgang-Heinze-Straße 12a. Almost structurally identical three-leaf wooden entrance doors with structured glass on both apartment buildings and on the cinema building on the south side. In direct connection with the cinema building in the backyard of highlighted urban district development and architectural value. LfD / 2011

09298994
 
Apartment building in half-open development Simildenstrasse 18b
(map)
1912-1914 (tenement house) Plastered construction in the closed street, close to the Paul-Gerhardt-Church, reform style architecture, of architectural interest

The first plans for the apartment building at Connewitzer Kirchberg are drawn by Dr. Josef Petersmann in 1912 as the builder and the local architect Artur Werner before the property was sold a few months later to private person Emil Seyfarth, master plumber William Pittschaft and architect Artur Werner. The building permit was issued in March 1913 and the final building examination took place in March 1913. Construction of the house presumably by master bricklayer Gustav Kampf with the assistance of Paul Röder. The owner changed hands in 1919 to master baker Ernst Robert Mann in Borsdorf, in 1924 to architect Friedrich Karl Feistel and probably from 1930 to businessman Arthur Willy Petzsche. In the years 1996-1998 extensive renovation and further loft extensions. A new parsonage on the neighboring property on the left, designed in the plans, was not implemented. The reform style building with a decor-free plastered facade over a red clinker base and a four-axis roof house, the furnishings largely preserved. Tenement building with architectural value preserved in a closed ensemble. LfD / 2011

09299290
 
Administration building (Brandstrasse 38) and two former tram depot buildings (Simildenstrasse 20) Simildenstrasse 20
(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
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Simildenstrasse 26
(map)
1909-1911 and inscribed 1911 (tenement house) with corner shop, western corner of the junction to the church, corner building with plastered facade, reform style architecture, historical value

On the corner property at the junction of Simildenstrasse leading to the tram depot, the master carpenter Karl Nöller had architects G. Neu and Voigt build a tenement house for "cheap apartments" from 1909 to 1911. Although the architects expressly admitted to the efforts of the "Verein Sächsischer Heimatschutz", the basic character of the house with the flat plaster blocks on the ground floor, the laid-on pilaster strips with cloth-like cartouche capitals and the flat festoons over medallions seem to be more of a belated, in the direction of plait style tend to belong to the Art Nouveau variant. Only the cornice above the 3rd floor and the "barred" windows on the ground floor are reminiscent of buildings of the homeland security movement. LfD / 1998

09296236
 
Double tenement house in closed development Simildenstrasse 28; 30
(card)
1890 (double tenement house) with shop, clinker-plaster facade with sandstone structures, of importance in terms of building history

The semi-detached house with a mirror-inverted brick / plaster facade was completed in 1890 by the builder himself, the architect August Franke. Here, too, the facade is summarized by two two-axis side projections, richly adorned with decorated columns or herm pilasters, blown gables and balusters. The roof zone at number 30 destroyed.

09296235
 
Apartment building in closed development and courtyard building Simildenstrasse 32
(map)
1889 (tenement house), 1889 (outbuilding) Tenement house with gate passage and shop, both buildings with plastered facades, groin vault in the gate passage, of architectural significance

Built in 1889 by the architect August Franke for master carpenter Franz Richter. Plastered building with shop and passage, the two outer axes combined, adorned with pillar framing, capitals and stucco in the form of fittings. The first floor originally with staggered plaster blocks (see number 30).

09296234
 
Apartment building in closed development and courtyard building Simildenstrasse 34
(map)
1888-1889 (tenement house) Apartment building with gate passage, plastered facade, of architectural importance 09299821
 
Apartment building in closed development and in a corner Simildenstrasse 36
(map)
1888 (tenement house) Formerly with a corner store, historicizing plastered facade, of architectural significance

Erected in 1888 by master bricklayer Otto Jänicke for Johann Schiebold and Carl August Riehl. The corner house on Brandstrasse is very clearly linked to classic facade patterns: the strong horizontal emphasis by two belt cornices summarizes the 15-axis building, it is further emphasized by the regularly lined up windows with late classicistic round arches in the first and the strong crowning typical of the eighties ( with "ears") on the second floor. The expanded attic connects the four-story houses on the narrower Similden- with the five-story buildings on Brandstrasse. Windows on the 2nd floor with blind arches as a row of windows, strong roofing (with "ears") in the "Beletage", horizontal grooves extending to the 2nd floor and regularly lined up window axes, with the windows on the second floor appearing like arched windows with blind arches .

09296233
 
Apartment building in half-open development Stockartstrasse 4
(map)
1891-1892 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade, historically important

Erected 1891-1892 by master bricklayer Hermann Döge for Gustav Schallenberg instead of a single-storey house built shortly before 1860. Simple plastered building with mansard floor and four roof houses. From 1990-1992 the alternative Stöck-Art-Galerie, which fell victim to an arson attack, was on the first floor.

09295929
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Stockartstrasse 6
(map)
1906 (tenement house) Clinker-plaster facade, important in terms of building history

Erected in 1906 for the building contractor and master carpenter Ernst Strieter according to plans by the architect Hugo Grasemann, following the demolition of a single-storey residential building from 1860. Simple clinker brick building with simple Art Nouveau ornamentation. Entrance hall with stucco decor and stucco ceiling.

09295930
 
Residential house in a formerly closed development Stockartstrasse 10
(map)
1860 (residential building) One-storey plastered building with three roof houses, suburban workers' house, of architectural and socio-historical importance

Erected in 1860 for Friedrich August Köhler. One-storey plastered building with three roof houses and cornice with a serrated frieze. As the earliest largely unchanged residential building on Stockartstrasse with originally two apartments, a characteristic example of a suburban workers' house from around 1860.

09295932
 
Residential house in half-open development; Plaster facade Stockartstrasse 12
(map)
1862 (residential house) Plaster facade 09295933
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Stockartstrasse 13
(map)
1897 (tenement) with a shop zone, clinker-plaster facade, of architectural significance

In 1897, the master bricklayer Hermann Engel built a simple clinker brick building with chamfered corners and simple structures. The first floor contains shops on Bornaische Strasse.

09296511
 
Apartment building in half-open development (structural unit with No. 17) and rear building Stockartstrasse 15
(map)
1903-1904 (tenement house) Front building with gate passage, clinker brick facade with stucco structuring, of architectural significance

With numbers 17, 19 and 21: Four clinker buildings with wide fronts and gate passages, designed on behalf of the contractors Richard, Friedrich and Bernhard Thielemann and carried out by the Thielemann brothers. First houses 19 and 23 were built in 1903 according to plans by master bricklayer Emil Theodor Pirnsch with sparse stucco structures in Baroque and Gothic ornamentation, then followed in 1904 by houses 15 and 17 based on designs by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger, whose reduced stucco decoration suggests Art Nouveau forms. The gate passages of number 15 and number 21 with stucco. In the courtyards there are four two- or three-story rear residential buildings, each standing in pairs. Roof extensions were made at number 15 in 1912, at number 17 in 1924.

09296512
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Stockartstrasse 16
(map)
1906-1907 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade, historically important

Built 1906-1907 according to plans by the architect Hugo Grasemann for the building contractor and master carpenter Ernst Strieter, instead of a single-storey house built around 1860. Clinker brick facade with stucco decoration, Strieter's initials in the stucco fields under the window gables on the first floor.

09296479
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Stockartstrasse 16a
(map)
1907 (tenement) with a shop zone, yellow clinker brick facade with stucco decorations, corner accentuation by corner bay windows and corner tower, important from an architectural point of view

1907 residential and commercial building built on the corner of Bornaische Strasse for the building contractor and master carpenter Ernst Strieter based on plans by the architect Hugo Schuhknecht. Yellow clinker brick facade with stucco reliefs on the parapet fields. The chamfered corner has a striking effect thanks to the two-storey corner bay with balcony and the pyramid roof over the steep corner gable, which is repeated by a lower side gable on the facade facing Bornaische Strasse. The roof was massively expanded in places at the front to Stockartstrasse in 1921.

09296659
 
Apartment building in closed development (structural unit with No. 15) and rear building Stockartstrasse 17
(map)
1904 (tenement) Front building with gate passage, clinker brick facade with stucco structuring, of architectural significance

s. Number 15

09296513
 
Apartment building in closed development Stockartstrasse 18
(map)
1896 (tenement) Clinker-plaster facade, important in terms of building history

Built in 1896 together with the neighboring corner house Bornaische Straße 21 by master bricklayer Hermann Engel, who is also the building owner, and like this one, in contrast to the subsequent and somewhat later development on Stockartstraße, it has 5 floors. Simple clinker brick facade.

09295909
 
Apartment building in closed development (structural unit with No. 21) and rear building Stockartstrasse 19
(map)
1903 (tenement) with a gate passage, formerly with a shop, clinker brick facade with stucco structures, historically important

s. Number 15

09296506
 
Apartment building in closed development Stockartstrasse 20
(map)
1899-1900 (tenement house) Clinker-plaster facade, important in terms of building history

Built 1899-1900 for Marie Louise Busse according to plans by the architect August Franke. A relatively narrow clinker brick facade with seven axes. A roof house above the two left axes creates a transition from the five-storey building to the neighboring house number 18. In the hallway the original equipment with ornamental tiles, wooden panels and stucco ceiling.

09295910
 
Apartment building in closed development (structural unit with No. 19) and rear building Stockartstrasse 21
(map)
1903 (tenement) Front building with gate passage, clinker brick facade with stucco structuring, of architectural significance

s. Number 15

09296507
 
Apartment building in closed development Stockartstrasse 22
(map)
1901 (tenement) with gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important

1901 was the first of a total of six houses built by the building contractor Ernst Strieter on Stockartstrasse. Originally a four-story clinker brick building with a gate passage, the top floor was massively expanded in 1915. In the courtyard is a single-storey rear building that originally served as a horse stable, wagon shed and rolling chamber.

09295911
 
Double apartment house in closed development and with two rear buildings Stockartstrasse 23; 25
(card)
1903-1904 (double tenement house) Plastered facade with rich Art Nouveau decoration, with two gate passages, of architectural significance

1903-1904 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the building business owner August Koch built semi-detached house with two gateways. Gerstenberger, one of Leipzig's busiest architects, who was responsible for the plans of countless series residential buildings built around the turn of the century, was able to show all his design skills here. The structural elements protrude only slightly but effectively from a base area, which is formed by plastering grooves on the ground floor and horizontal comb plastering on the upper floors: tendrils resulting in cruciform structures above the ground floor windows, frames with smooth cartouches above the windows on the first floor a striking contrast to the comb plaster and a frieze of foliage over the windows of the second floor. In particular, the facade is structured by slightly emphasizing six axes on the upper floors: the two adjacent lateral axes of the semi-detached houses with arches overlying the windows on the first and second floors and the center axes of both halves resulting from their deduction, which go through a flat oscillation of the grooved cornice and the women's masks sitting underneath are particularly emphasized. Two two-storey rear residential buildings standing together in the courtyard.

09296508
 
Apartment building in closed development Stockartstrasse 24
(map)
1903 (tenement) with gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important

With number 26: Two apartment buildings that go back to the same planning by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger and only slightly varied in the facade design. Number 24 executed in 1903 for the coal merchant Oswald Freiberg, number 26 1904-1905 for the building contractor Oswald Hähnel. Clinker buildings with gateways, a two-story rear residential building in each of the courtyards.

09295912
 
Apartment building in closed development and rear building Stockartstrasse 26
(map)
1904-1905 (tenement house), 1904-1905 (rear building) Clinker brick facade, with gate passage, of architectural significance

s. Number 24

09295913
 
Apartment building in closed development and courtyard building Stockartstrasse 27
(map)
1901 (tenement), 1901-1902 (bakery) Formerly with a shop, with a gate passage, plastered facade, residential construction in a closed street, with architectural value

On March 15, 1901, master bricklayer Hermann Engel submitted the building application for an apartment building with a washhouse extension and a bakery building in the courtyard. He commissioned the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger with the design work. Six weeks later the basic building test took place, on September 21 the final revision. The following year the master baker Gustav Conrad Schumann took over the property. In 1912 a coachman's apartment was set up in the courtyard building. The four-storey building with nine axes is structured by a central projecting only slightly in the upper storeys with rich stuccoing. Behind the otherwise simple, later somewhat smoothed plaster facade is an original interior with extensive staircase stencils. LfD / 2005

09299702
 
Apartment building in closed development and courtyard building Stockartstrasse 28
(map)
1904-1905 (tenement house), 1904-1905 (courtyard building) Front building with gate passage, clinker brick facade, of architectural and district development history of importance, testimony to the expansion of the area at the time of Art Nouveau

With number 30: The two similarly designed clinker buildings according to plans by the contractor and master carpenter Ernst Strieter, who is also responsible as the client. Number 30 executed 1901-1902, number 28 with the somewhat more recent forms of the window frames and the gate passage followed 1904-1905. At the same time as the front residential building at number 28, the two-storey rear residential building. The rear building of number 30 was already there when construction began on the front building in 1901.

09295914
 
Apartment building in closed development (structural unit with No. 31) Stockartstrasse 29
(map)
1900-1901 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade, historically important

With number 31: Two clinker buildings built 1900-1901 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the master bricklayer Hermann Engel with economical structuring, number 31 in a chamfered corner to Zwenkauer Straße. In number 31, the spindle-shaped house staircase is remarkable.

09296509
 
Apartment building in half-open development Stockartstrasse 30
(map)
1901-1902 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade, historically important

s. Number 28

09295915
 
Apartment building in closed development and in a corner location (structural unit with No. 29) Stockartstrasse 31
(map)
1900 (tenement) with corner shutter, clinker brick facade with economical stucco structure, important in terms of building history

s. Number 29

09296510
 
Apartment building in half-open development Teichstrasse 2
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) historicizing plastered facade, on the edge of an area of ​​expansion, of interest in terms of local development and building history

The house, which was built by master carpenter Hermann Winkler on his own behalf between 1900 and 1901 and for which a building application was first submitted in 1896, has two apartments per floor with two rooms, corridor, kitchen and chamber. Relocation of the house entrance to the street and use of the house passage as a shop in 1912. In 1934, activation of the wash house already planned for construction in the basement, as the wash room building in the courtyard was to be converted into a workshop, 1939 new facade painting by decorative painter Wilhelm Kaiser. Two years later building application to furnish an attic apartment based on a design by master builder Erich Becker for Erna Klarner. Within twelve months 1997/1998 conversion, renovation accompanied by a balcony extension and a redesign of the attic, the shop dismantled for residential purposes. The quite unadorned historicism building, still without reference to Art Nouveau, as a plastered brick building, structured by molded artificial stone parts. At the edge of a town extension area of ​​interest in terms of site development and building history. LfD / 2012

09299059
 
Gym (and front building with caretaker's apartment) Teichstrasse 12
(map)
1907 (gym) Plastered building with two side towers, reform style architecture, urban development accent on the edge of the alluvial forest, of social and district development significance

Built in 1907 by the architect Arthur Werner for the General Connewitzer Gymnastics Club. Hall with 2 flanking stair towers and high thermal bath windows, which are interrupted at the level of the inner gallery. The three windows on the outside separated by square buttresses. The rusticated sandstone plinth in the basement of the tower and at the entrance porch is irregularly designed, giving the impression of old masonry. The front building (with cloakrooms and archive below and administrator's apartment above), strongly structured by grouping different components and a moving roof landscape, formerly with folding shutters and trellis, shows clear echoes of the Heimat style.

09295883
 
Apartment houses in a residential complex, with green areas and fencing Teichstrasse 17; 19
(card)
1935-1936 (double tenement house) traditionalistic plastered facade, bay balconies boarded up to Teichstraße, forms residential complex with Mühlholzgasse 44-48, of architectural significance

The small group of tenement houses in a corner situation was built in 1935-1936 according to a design by the OHG Fa. Bock & Paatzsch Architects on behalf of Gustav Edlichs Erben und Genossen Housing Association. Initially, four-story buildings were planned, but these were not approved. Then the houses were only built with three floors after the builders "agreed with the Leipziger Handels- und Verkehrsbank as the seller of the property that they wanted to meet us with the selling price." Five houses were built on the 1700 sqm property with 30 apartments: two on each floor with two rooms, kitchen, bathroom and forecourt. Master builder F. Herbert Heine (house on Mühlholzgasse), master builder Voigt & Böhme (Teichstrasse) and master builder Paul Grafe for the retaining wall enclosure to demarcate the property towards Roßäßlerstrasse were contracted for the execution. The houses were ready for occupancy in October and were sold to Allianz- und Stuttgarter Lebensversichungsbank AG Berlin at the end of December. 1937 Recognized as a tax-exempt small apartment building. At an intersection that is interesting in terms of urban planning, both buildings take up the lines of the two streets, and a gap enables ventilation of the acute-angled property. This creates a clear cut line to the row house settlement on the opposite side of the street in Mühlholzgasse. The plaster facades have an effect due to their structure and are set off nicely above the brown clinker plinths thanks to their light color. The completely boarded-up oriel balconies and the fully preserved furnishings are committed to contemporary taste. LfD / 2008

09302420
 
Apartment building in open development with front garden Thierbacher Strasse 4
(map)
1905 (tenement) Clinker brick facade with sandstone integration, of architectural significance

In 1905, according to plans by the architect Alban Poser for the bricklayer foreman Albert Gebhardt, three-storey detached tenement house was built as a clinker brick building with sandstone sections. The ground floor plastered and previously grooved. Stucco reliefs with wreaths under the sills of the windows on the second floor. Three apartments on each floor. A front garden with a wrought iron fence faces the street.

09296216
 
Apartment building in closed development Wiedebachstrasse 2
(map)
1899 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade with stucco structure, part of the facade facing Wiedebachplatz, of importance in terms of urban planning and building history

Four-storey tenement house built in 1899 by building contractor F. Pittschaft for master carpenter Robert Klepzig. The ground floor is plastered with grooves, the upper floors clinker clad with stucco structures. A lion mask is placed over the central arched entrance. Roof houses were originally located on both sides above the two outer axes. The floors contain two apartments each. 1910 on the back of the kitchen exits. After the roof was destroyed in the war in 1947, it was repaired with a massive roof extension over the four axes on the right side.

09296431
 
Apartment building in closed development Wiedebachstrasse 4
(map)
1901-1902 (tenement house) with gate passage, yellow clinker brick facade with stucco structure, part of the facade facing Wiedebachplatz, of importance in terms of urban planning and building history

Four-story tenement house built in 1901-1902 for the bricklayer and innkeeper Arthur Bertram according to plans by the architect Gustav Liebmann. Clinker brick building with stucco structure, the ground floor plastered with grooves. A gate passage to the left. Two apartments on the ground floor and three apartments on the upper floors. In the courtyard a two-storey rear building, originally with a workshop, horse stable and hayloft.

09296427
 
Apartment building in closed development Wiedebachstrasse 6
(map)
1902-1903 (tenement house) with gate passage, blue clinker brick facade with strong stucco structures, part of the facade facing Wiedebachplatz, of importance in terms of urban planning and building history

With numbers 8 and 10: three four-story tenement houses built between 1902 and 1903 by the building contractor Richard Thielemann according to plans by master bricklayer Ernst Theodor Pirnsch. In contrast to the broad, ten-axis fronts of numbers 8 and 10, the most recently built house number 6, which has a less uniform facade structure, has only six axes. Clinker buildings with stucco structure, the ground floors plastered with grooves. There are two apartments on the floors of all three houses, at number 8 the ground floor was originally occupied by a bakery. The courtyards with two-storey rear residential buildings.

09296428
 
Apartment building in closed development and courtyard building Wiedebachstrasse 8
(map)
1902 (tenement) Front building with gate passage, clinker brick facade with strong stucco structures, part of the facade facing Wiedebachplatz, of importance in terms of urban development and architectural history

s. Number 6

09296429
 
Apartment building in closed development and rear building Wiedebachstrasse 10
(map)
1902 (tenement) Front building with gate passage, clinker brick facade, part of the facade facing Wiedebachplatz, of importance in terms of urban planning and building history

s. Number 6

09296430
 
Apartment building in closed development Wiedebachstrasse 12
(map)
1901-1902 (tenement house) Plastered facade with bay window, part of the facade facing Wiedebachplatz, of importance in terms of urban planning and building history

Numbers 14, 16 and 18: four four-storey apartment buildings built in 1901-1902 based on an overall plan for the street designed by the architect Heinrich Lindemann for the merchants Tbodsch and Graff in 1900. Number 12 as a plastered building with plastered structure and stucco decor, the central bay of which was intended to mark the central axis of the street, while changing the original facade design for the client Wilhelm Wendt. On the other hand, at numbers 14, 16 and 18, which were built for the house owner Anna Oehlert, the original design was retained, three clinker buildings with plastered ground floors, stucco structures and lateral loggias, which originally had three mirror-symmetrical house facades on property number 6, 8 and 10 should correspond. Two apartments on each floor.

09296514
 
Apartment building in closed development Wiedebachstrasse 14
(map)
1901-1902 (tenement house) with gate passage, clinker-plaster facade with stucco decorations and loggias, compare numbers 16 and 18, part of the facade facing Wiedebachplatz, of importance in terms of town planning and building history

s. Number 12

09296436
 
Apartment building in closed development Wiedebachstrasse 16
(map)
1901-1902 (tenement house) Clinker plaster facade with geometric decorations and loggias, compare numbers 14 and 18, part of the facade facing Wiedebachplatz, of importance in terms of urban planning and architectural history

s. Number 12

09296435
 
Apartment building in closed development Wiedebachstrasse 18
(map)
1901 (tenement) Plastered facade with stucco decorations and loggias, compare numbers 14 and 16, part of the facade facing Wiedebachplatz, of importance in terms of urban planning and building history

s. Number 12

09296434
 
Apartment building in closed development Wiedebachstrasse 20
(map)
1899-1900 (tenement house) with gate passage, clinker brick facade with stucco structure, part of the facade facing Wiedebachplatz, of importance in terms of urban planning and building history

The four-storey tenement house built from 1899 to 1900 by the master carpenter and building contractor Friedrich Ernst Strieter, who was also responsible as the client. Clinker brick structure with stucco structures, a base zone clad in quarry stone and a plastered and formerly grooved ground floor. There are two apartments on each floor, and the ground floor also has a shop.

09296433
 
Apartment building in closed development and in a corner Wiedebachstrasse 22
(map)
1899-1900 (tenement house) with shop and corner bar, clinker brick facade, part of the facade facing Wiedebachplatz, of importance in terms of urban planning and building history

Four-story tenement house built between 1899 and 1900 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger together with the adjacent houses at Zwenkauer Strasse number 2 and 4 for master bricklayer Hermann Engel in a chamfered corner. The ground floor plastered and formerly grooved, the upper floors clad in clinker with stucco structure. A large corner shop and two apartments on the ground floor, while the upper floors have four apartments each.

09296432
 
Villa with garden and enclosure Windscheidstrasse 2
(map)
1911-1912 (villa) Plastered facade, reform style architecture, named after the first owner, the pharmacist Wilhelm Reinstein, of architectural significance

The building site belonging to the municipal gardening shop (former water art) was sold in 1911 to the pharmacist Wilhelm Reinstein, who had a villa built in 1912 according to plans by the Dresden architect Heinrich Tscharmann, which was rented to the tobacco dealer Elias Ormann. The cubic-looking structure is cautiously enlivened by asymmetrically arranged semicircular balcony bay windows on the street front, elegantly curved flat bulge on the south side and the northern entrance porch with an outside staircase and terrace. The stepped staircase windows and the pointed stylization of the applied plaster reliefs are reminiscent of the expressionist origins of such decorative forms that were preferred in the 1920s.

09296717
 
Apartment building of a residential complex (structural unit with Gustav-Freytag-Straße 19-23), with front garden and fencing Windscheidstrasse 17
(map)
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

with Gustav-Freytag-Straße 19-23: 1925-1926 on behalf of the non-profit civil servants building cooperative based on plans by Fritz Riemann built 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.

09296664
 
Apartment building in closed development Windscheidstrasse 19
(map)
1930 (tenement) cubic building with a profiled clinker brick plinth, in the style of modernism, architects: Jaeger & Hertel (brothers Heinz and Albrecht Jaeger with Arno Hertel), significant building history Five-storey corner house on Gustav-Freytag-Straße, 1930 by the "academic architects" Gebr. Jäger and A. Härtel built for the engineer Hans Rothmann. The matter-of-fact, cubic structure is structured by the high clinker plinth, sculpted with profiled layers, the grouping of the square windows without transverse timber and the clinker-brick framing of the corner windows. The raised square cellar windows are also typical of the period. In the basement there are garages, on the street side an elevated roof structure and massive balconies. The building contains three apartments per floor; in the corner of the wing staircase and elevator. 09296395
 
Villa with front garden, fence and gate system Windscheidstrasse 22
(map)
1910-1911 (villa) Plastered facade, remarkable reform style architecture, architect: Raymund Brachmann, named after the businessman Theodor Hartmann, co-owner of the company Th. Hartmann & Schultze sheet glass wholesaler, of architectural significance

Villa for the merchant Theodor Hartmann, completed in 1911 according to plans by Raymund Brachmann. Corresponding to the narrow and deep parcel, the extensive building develops primarily in depth. The street front with a semicircular gable is accentuated and sparingly structured by grouping windows and a small latticed balcony. High staircase porch on the north side, with vestibule and hall behind. The south and west side with the winter garden, terrace and delicate building decor was kept less strict than the facade, the elevated ground floor of which was provided with staking for tendrils.

09295907
 
Villa with enclosure, well and garage Windscheidstrasse 24
(map)
1912 (villa) Plastered facade, reform style architecture, named after the businessman Emil Krebs, owner of E. Krebs & Co., a linen and cotton goods wholesaler, of architectural significance

This villa, too, built by Curt Einert for Emil Krebs in 1912, with a narrow street front, northern entrance porch and garden-side extensions. The street front is centered with a single-storey flat bay window under the roof gable, with a wall fountain underneath. Here, too, originally a trellis in front of the high ground floor, the upper floor with folding shutters. The floor plan is similar to number 22 with a hallway and staircase to the north. The villa had a stable and coach house in the garden (later converted into a kindergarten).

09295906
 
Apartment building in closed development Windscheidstrasse 25
(map)
1896-1901 (tenement house) Plastered facade with two bay windows and balconies, of architectural significance

Windscheidstraße 25 The house, built in 1909 by the architects Hugo and Berthold Keizer for master bricklayer Hermann Freiberg, shows the "piano motif" that was popular at the time: two oriels connected by balconies, one of which ends with a balcony, the other is covered by a gable becomes. The high base zone with ashlar cladding, the beautiful house entrance with braced skylight, windows framed by aedicules on the second oriel floor form the accentuated, restrained facade decoration. The floor plan is also typical of the time with the bathroom open to the bedroom at the end of the hallway-like corridor. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296396
 
Villa with fencing, paved path and front garden Windscheidstrasse 26
(map)
1912 (villa) Plastered facade, reform style architecture, named after the senior teacher Prof. Dr. Robert Rampendahl, important in terms of building history

1912 by the architect Hermann Fischer for senior teacher Dr. Robert Rampendahl built villa-like two-family house. The structure of the external building: allocation of rectangular or semicircular components to the square core structure, makes the internal spatial structure visible. The three-axis volute gable on the street side with an ox-eye framed by ornament dominates the heavily divided roof landscape. Apart from the plastered mirrors on the bay window, the facades are unadorned. They were originally covered by a tendril trellis. The house is enclosed by a concave curved wall and wooden stakes. LfD / 1998

09295905
 
Double tenement house (with Scheffelstrasse 17) in a closed development in a corner Windscheidstrasse 27
(map)
1910-1911 (double tenement house) with shop, plastered facade with bay windows, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history

The architects Johannes Keizer and Hugo Keizer took over the property in order to build a representative corner residential building according to their own designs and under their own construction management. Alfred Klingler from Lindenau and the ceiling construction business were entrusted with the execution of the project by master builders Weineck & Kayser. In September 1911 the final examination of the house applied for in June of the previous year took place. The apartments were accessed via two stairwells, a laundry room and utility passage in the basement and an apartment under the roof. From the summer of 1915 the property was in the sole ownership of the architect Johannes Berthold Keizer, later W. Grahneis, Emilie Pauline Clara Grahneis, née. Wöckler (from 1920), businessman and authorized signatory Ernst Otto Richter (1921), the company Dietze and Louis Dietze OHG fruit and vegetable trade. The building application at the end of the year 1993 was submitted by Ralf Dietze and included the extensive repair and renovation, the company was only completed in July 1996. The background to this was the greater damage caused by war destruction and consequential damage, especially the bomb-damaged two upper floors. The reconstruction project by the architect Wolfgang Lohmer in office sharing with Alfred Uttecht had already been submitted in 1957, which was followed by a renewed application for reconstruction in 1961 - both building applications were not implemented. Bay windows and a moving roof landscape characterize the effective reform style building with plastered facades and cautiously used facade decor. The base consists mostly of sandstone blocks over a granite threshold, the corner has a spacious shop fitting. House entrance doors and the equipment on the lower floors have been preserved. Effective corner building, of importance in terms of building history and the history of the district's development at the interface between closed apartment building quarters and the open development of villas and residential buildings. LfD / 2013

09296391
 
Residential house in closed development with front garden and enclosure Windscheidstrasse 28
(map)
around 1910/1915 (residential building) Plastered facade, compare numbers 30, 32 and 34, between Art Nouveau and Reform Nouveau, according to plans by the Leipzig Werkbund architect Raymund Brachmann, of importance in terms of building history and art history

s. Number 34

09296383
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development and in a corner location Windscheidstrasse 29
(map)
1908 (tenement) Plastered facade with bay windows, corner accentuation, important in terms of building history

Corner house on Scheffelstraße, built in 1908 by the construction company Friedrich and Jahn. The clearly designed building with the elegant Art Nouveau facade suggests that the architect Adalbert Friedrich, who worked for Karl Poser until 1904, was hiding behind it. The emphasized vertical structure through slender bay windows and the merging of the window axes on all three upper floors removes any heaviness from the extensive corner building. Blind arches on the upper floor give the impression of a pilaster structure with arched ends, the bases and capitals of these mock pilasters are indicated by a filigree stucco band that simultaneously encompasses the facade. Otherwise, the delicate and flat decor is concentrated on the bay windows. From the cellar grids to the marble and stucco furnishings of the hallway and staircase, all details have been preserved.

09296393
 
Residential house in closed development, with front garden and fencing Windscheidstrasse 30
(map)
around 1910/1915 (residential building) Plastered facade, compare numbers 28, 32 and 34, between Art Nouveau and Reform Nouveau, according to plans by the Leipzig Werkbund architect Raymund Brachmann, of importance in terms of building history and art history

s. Number 34

09296379
 
Residential house in closed development, with front garden and fencing Windscheidstrasse 32
(map)
around 1910/1915 (residential building) Plastered facade, basement with colored tiles, compare numbers 28, 30 and 34, between Art Nouveau and Reform Nouveau, according to plans by the Leipzig Werkbund architect Raymund Brachmann, of importance in terms of building history and art history

s. Number 34

09296386
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Windscheidstrasse 33
(map)
1909 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered facade, two bay windows, half-timbered gable, reform style architecture, of architectural significance

Tenement house, built in 1909 for the Walter Hinrichsen company, probably, like the corner house number 29 and the (destroyed) number 31, by the company Friedrich und Jahn. The plaster facade over the natural stone plinth only in the bay windows with delicate vertical stucco decoration. The "piano motif" - here transformed into a country house style with the half-timbered gable. The gate passage led to a workshop building in the courtyard ("Physico-chemical Apparatus Institute" by Dr. Fritz Köhler)

09296394
 
Residential house in half-open development with front garden and enclosure Windscheidstrasse 34
(map)
1909-1910 (residential building) Decorative tiles and ceramic reliefs, plastered facade, compare numbers 28, 30 and 32, between Art and Reform style, according to plans by the Leipzig Werkbund architect Raymund Brachmann, of architectural and art historical importance

Numbers 28, 30, 32,34: The four three-storey single-family houses with only three to four axles, which are adjoined by narrow and deep gardens at the rear, belong to a series of originally seven connected buildings. Today the southern end building (number 36) and the two houses that close to the north are missing. The buildings were built between 1909 and 1915 according to plans by the Werkbund architect Raymund Brachmann. As the owner of the parcels, he was able to realize an architectural idea here without having to give priority to the wishes of the future buyers. Starting with number 34, a series was gradually developed whose individual facades are set apart from one another by different three-dimensional accentuation and window grouping, but are combined by an asymmetrically moving roof line. The floor plans are evidently tailored to the wishes of the future residents, whereby the utility rooms are mostly in the basement - the houses are a little below street level behind front gardens, whose original secessionist enclosure has been lost. Due to the loss of the head buildings on both sides and the later smoothing of the facade, this remarkable testimony to expressionist residential construction, whose relationship to Bremer Böttcherstraße is unmistakable despite the different materials, is today severely impaired.

09296385
 
Apartment building in closed development Windscheidstrasse 35
(map)
1910 (tenement) Plastered facade, two bay windows, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history

Designed in 1910 by the Friedrich und Jahn company based on a facade system similar to number 35 (the gable above the northern bay was destroyed). The different facade decor - here the more modern recessed decorative elements and a more elaborate portal framing with wreath-bearing putti in cast stone) - probably added by the architect HE Reichardt, who continued the construction. Preserve the stucco marble furnishings of the hallway, the cellar grilles and characteristic window shapes.

09296387
 
Apartment building in closed development Windscheidstrasse 37
(map)
1909-1912 (tenement house) Plastered facade with two bay windows and balconies, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history

First draft, 1909 for master carpenter Oskar Ponitzsch. A change to the facade plan carried out in 1912 (architects Hädrich and Albrecht) illustrates the change in taste that took place during this period: instead of the delicate-looking polygonal oriels, angular box oriels now appear on heavy consoles, instead of the delicate Art Nouveau stucco, doughy-wide, laid-on or sunk cement stucco decorations. The house entrances have heavy crowns, with wreath-bearing putti being a preferred motif.

09296388
 
Villa (No. 40) with summer house (No. 38a), enclosure and garden Windscheidstrasse 38a; 40
(card)
1911-1912 (villa) Representative plastered building, from the equipment including a safe, in the reform and Heimat style, named after the first owner, tobacco merchant Felix Reimann, of importance in terms of building history and personal history 09296384
 
Double tenement house (No. 39/41) in semi-open development and courtyard building (No. 41a / 41b)
Double tenement house (No. 39/41) in semi-open development and courtyard building (No. 41a / 41b) Windscheidstrasse 39; 41; 41a; 41b
(card)
1912 (double tenement house) Front house number 41 with gate passage, plastered facade with box core, reform style architecture, courtyard building, old factory, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history

Double tenement house, built in 1912 by master builder Curt Stengel for building contractor Theodor Berk. The two halves of the house are related to each other, but not identical. Number 39 with a wide double bay window above the entrance, number 42 with two single-axis bay windows. Each of the two inner bay windows has a balcony attachment and a recessed curved gable. Above the flat jointed ground floor, the smooth facade is only structured by corner pilasters and plastered fields on the bay windows. The windows with skylight bars, an important structural element of such slightly monumental-looking facades, have unfortunately been replaced by unprofiled plastic windows. Accentuated architectural decorations are the figural bas-reliefs next to the narrow high entrances. 1913 Construction of an elongated three-story factory building in the deep courtyard area. (Rebuilt after partial destruction in 1943). Here in addition to smaller manufacturing facilities (Graupner, bronze goods, Hiller, construction and art furniture, Liemann, Turkish tobacco and cigarette factory) the chemical factory of Ernst Colditz, purveyor to the court for perfumeries, drugstore and pharmacy supplies is located.

09296389
 
Double apartment building in open development Windscheidstrasse 47; 49
(card)
1888 (double tenement house) historicizing plastered facade, of architectural significance

Part of a semi-detached house, built in 1888 for master gardener Carl Wilhelm Müller and restaurateur Friedrich Eduard Wernicke on Brandstrasse, which was extended to the north. (The gardening grounds stretching back to Kochstrasse, located here since the early 19th century, later moved to the eastern part of The growing Siry and Lizars factory complex.) Each of the two halves of the house (number 49 changed) was, although only five-axis, carefully structured with a central projecting highlighted by corner blocks, triangular gables and pilasters, fine stucco ornamentation in the side axes, plaster strips and cornice beneath the heavily developed one french roof. The rounded corner of the building and the designed gable surface are evidence of careful execution. A first draft from 1887 was not carried out.

09296390
 
Barracks building (Windscheidstraße 48) in open development and in a corner location, with a side wing (Selneckerstraße 28), as well as front garden and driveway
Barracks building (Windscheidstraße 48) in open development and in a corner location, with a side wing (Selneckerstraße 28), as well as front garden and driveway Windscheidstrasse 48
(map)
1937 (barracks) Traditionalistic plastered facade from the 1930s, partly as stone cladding, formerly with a garage building and two officers' houses on Heilemannstrasse, of military, architectural and local significance 09296718
 
Gas knife factory Schirmer, Richter & Co. (formerly); Hall 5 eV in the Kulturfabrik Leipzig: Factory complex, consisting of several buildings Windscheidstrasse 51
(map)
1875–1907 (factory) Brick buildings, of architectural and local significance, see also Kochstrasse 132; Kochstrasse 130, 132: Today's "Werk II" was founded in 1847 by Eduard Siry and Charles Lizars as a branch of their Parisian factory for gas meter systems. Since the Leipzig plumbers' guild protested against such a factory, construction began in 1848 in Connewitz on the area of ​​two garden centers. Especially after the factory was taken over by the previous managing directors Wilhelm Schirmer and Carl Richter (Schirmer, Richter & Cie.) In 1887, extensive renovations and extensions were carried out under the direction of the master builder Otto Backhaus. In 1893 the company employed 80 workers. The factory today consists of the following buildings 1. Production hall (1886), brick building with a high central nave with ornamental gable and flatter aisles; 2nd southern courtyard side wing (1899), brick, with staircase projections and decorative entrance design (production rooms), followed by a three-storey plastered house-like building on the street with a rounded ground floor and flat hipped roof (1899, private office, engineering offices, exhibition rooms, caretaker's apartment). The opposite courtyard wing from 1907 changed more. A second brick hall was added to the rear of the factory hall in 1906, also with a characteristic ornamental gable (Windscheidstraße 51). From 1953 until it was closed in 1990, the factory was used by VEB workshop testing machines; since about 1992 the alternative culture workshop "Werk II" has been established in the halls. The factory complex originally included the factory owner's villa (no. 130), in 1878 for Alcide de Siry, Lizars and Comp. also built according to plans by Otto Backhaus. The two-storey square building, set back from the street (old building line of Connewitzer Chaussee), symmetrically laid out with a flat central projection, in front of which there was originally a semicircular veranda extension, has been changed by smoothing and new plastering. Together with the factory buildings, which have largely been preserved in their original substance, it forms a completely preserved ensemble of a Wilhelminian-era factory. 09296482
 
Connewitz cross: soft symbols and curbstones
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Connewitz cross: soft symbols and curbstones Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse
(map)
marked 1536 (soft stone) Column made of red Rochlitz porphyry tuff, sandstone top with the formerly original, weathered relief (a crucifix and a "cross", only a copy from 1997 on site, the original in the City History Museum) and original curbstones made of Rochlitz porphyry tuff, historically significant 09296321
 
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Double apartment house in closed development and in a corner Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse 4; 6
(card)
1927 (double tenement house) Corner accentuation by slightly protruding head building, plastered facade with box core, in the style of the 1920s, of architectural significance

see Selneckerstraße 1/3. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09295866
 
Apartment building in closed development Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse 8
(map)
1901 planning, 1911 execution (apartment building) with a shop zone, plastered construction, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history 09295867
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse 9
(map)
1897 (tenement) with gate passage and shop area, clinker brick facade with stucco structure, of architectural significance

After the demolition of an originally single-storey, five-axis house, which had already been raised by two storeys in 1874, in 1897 by master carpenter and bricklayer Theodor Albrecht for Dr. Hermsdorf from Plagwitz built in its current form. The simple brick facade is enhanced by very high window crowns on the main floors. Side gate to the former courtyard buildings.

09296363
 
Apartment building in closed development Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse 10
(map)
1886 (tenement house) with gate passage, with two original shops, historicizing plastered facade, historically important

Four-storey tenement house built in 1886 for master butcher Gustav Adolf Müller and GH Rietzschel by master bricklayer Richard Uhlmann with a later roof extension. Simple plaster facade between two slightly emphasized side elevations. The stores original.

09295868
 
Apartment building in closed development Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse 11
(map)
1899 (tenement house) with a shop zone, representative historicizing plastered facade, two bay windows, historically important

First plans from 1897, also by Theodor Albrecht for Ms. Hermsdorf, similar to the neighboring building number 9. In 1899, the new builder master mason Franz Dietze had the architect Eugen Horn draft new plans that now show a clear move towards Art Nouveau forms: the facade is moved by polygonal ones Bay windows, the loft extension is distinctive thanks to two structures in the form of rounded truncated cones with large thermal bath windows. Originally the tower ended with an openwork lantern. Floral stucco on the upper floor above the entrance axis, otherwise curved, rather geometrical forms. Historicist still in the neo-Gothic tracery frieze above the ground floor with the originally preserved shop window front. The shops are vaulted and have a hanging keystone, lavish Art Nouveau furnishings in the hallway and stairwell. The apartment floor plans are now more individual: with a pantry in the rear stairwell and bathroom.

09296364
 
Double tenement house in closed development as well as a movie theater building in the courtyard at No. 12a and butcher shop equipment at No. 12 Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse 12; 12a
(card)
1912 (double tenement house) Plastered facade in reform style, with a shop zone, in the courtyard of one of the oldest cinema buildings in Germany, of local and architectural importance

Instead of a two-storey house built in 1864 with dense commercial courtyard buildings, a semi-detached house was built in 1912 on Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse and Simildenstrasse (rear property boundary) by William Pittschaft, Emil Seyfarth and the architect Artur Werner. The cinema hall, "UT Connewitz" since around 1920, was built in the courtyard, in the basement of which was the Leipzig art print shop, whose owner was also the operator of the cinema. In 1927, the covered connecting passage between the side passage and the cinema was built. The facade of the front building with apartments and shops is emphatically simple, the unequal halves of the house are brought together by two cornices. Under the asymmetrically arranged gables, a four-axis central projection with the flat, somewhat doughy plaster decorations of the time and covered by a hip hip. The "UT Connewitz", after the destruction of the nearby "CT Connewitz" in Bornaische Strasse 3b, was the only cinema in the southern suburbs, and was in operation until 1992. Revival as an event location in 2001 by a newly founded association. Number 12 with very nice butcher shop fittings.

09295869
 
Apartment building in closed development Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse 13
(map)
1898 (tenement) with gate passage and with shop, clinker brick facade with stucco decoration, two bay windows, historically important

Built in 1898 by the architect Richard Füssel on behalf of Hermann Liersch. Brick facade with sandstone structure and gothic ornamental forms: three-pass windows and bar walls in the bay windows and balcony parapets, set columns in the festive walls and wall services as supports for the cornice, coupled windows combined with panels, etc. From 1898 to around 1926 Pamt on the ground floor (Phorn above the passage) , 1933 Left entrance to the shop window.

09296365
 
Apartment building in closed development Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse 14
(map)
1883-1884 (tenement house) with shop, historicizing plastered facade, apartment building in a closed quarter, of scientific and documentary value and of architectural significance

Timber merchant Robert Müller as the builder and master bricklayer Julius Mosenthin as the executor built a new residential building with a basement and slate roof along with the Niederlags building in the courtyard on the Müller commercial property from 1883-1884. A house passage on the right disappeared at the turn of the year 1900/1901 for the installation of two shops and the relocation of the house entrance from the courtyard to the street side. Private man August Carl Friedrich hereby commissioned the architects Friedrich & Poser, office for architecture and building construction (further renovation in 1911). In 1901 the apartments were divided on the 1st and 2nd floors, and in February 1902 an application was made for a househusband apartment on the top floor, to which a second apartment was added between 1946 and 1948. After transferring back and reselling the property in 1995 building application for conversion and expansion as well as modernization work, 2000 application for the creation of a new balcony on the courtyard side. The rather small and narrow rental apartment building with a plastered facade and accentuation of the window zone on the first floor in contrast to the palais-like historic buildings on the opposite side of the street. Significant in terms of district development and building history. LfD / 2012

09299375
 
Apartment building in closed development Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse 15
(map)
1898 (tenement) with gate passage and shop zone, clinker brick facade with stucco decoration, of architectural significance

Erected in 1898 by Otto Gerstenberger for building contractor Friedrich Thielemann. Flat brick facade with two suggested plastered and grooved side elevations, which end in historicizing volute gables with triangular gable crowns. In between roof houses with boarded fronts. Originally also the shop zone with plastered ashlar according to the window frame on the two main floors. The middle is emphasized, the upper floor is lighter. In addition to conventional shapes such as the gables, the proximity of Art Nouveau can be seen in the flat, sleek window frames with masks in the keystone or in the fluted consoles. In addition to the side apartments, the floor plan contains a small apartment each consisting of a room, chamber and corridor. In the courtyard the preserved outbuildings (originally a bakery, stables and workshops).

09296366
 
Apartment building in closed development and three workshop buildings in the courtyard Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse 16
(map)
1902 (tenement) Front building with gate passage and with two shops, clinker brick facade, historically important

Numbers 16,18: Both four-storey and nine-axle tenement houses with a simple brick facade with a slightly varied decoration, built 1910-1902 for master bricklayer Julius Ihme according to plans by Heinrich Lindemann. Shop window conversions from 1909, the passage from number 18 led to workshop buildings.

09295870
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse 17
(map)
marked 1912 (tenement) with shops, plastered facade in reform style, of importance in terms of building history

On the property also traded under Auerbachstrasse 1, a building application for a representative double tenement house was submitted in February 1912, whereby first the new building (today number 17) was planned and after the temporary relocation of the restaurant “Gute Quelle” then the two-storey old building on Auerbachstrasse was demolished and then this Corner house (Auerbachstrasse 1) should be built. Innkeeper Karl Paul Nebe appeared as an entrepreneur, commissioned the builder Otto Jaenicke from Connewitz with the drafts and the Dölitz master mason Hermann Nebe with the execution work. In May, the architect Alwin Hädrich took over the construction management and by June 1913 also submitted a few tectures. In addition to the two apartments per floor and an attic apartment, another apartment was added on the top floor in 1930. Renovation, reconstruction of balconies and the unsubstantial complete extension of the attic for residential use 1997-1998 by Maik Gottas from Leipzig, the plans by Dipl.-Ing. Knut Ballasus from Naumburg. The designed corner residential building was not implemented. The plastered reform style facade with a gable-closed dwarf house, shop area and artificial stone reliefs (including the depictions of children playing at the time) were quite reticent compared to the first draft. Apartment entrance doors, front door and a lead-glazed staircase window have been preserved. Architecturally important tenement building on a local exit road, testimony to the development of the district. LfD / 2012

09299268
 
Apartment building in closed development and rear building Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse 18
(map)
1902 (tenement) Front building with gate passage, with two shops, clinker brick facade, of architectural significance

s. Number 16

09295871
 
Apartment building in closed development and in a corner Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse 19
(map)
1893 (tenement house) with a shop area, sloping corner with bay window and roof structure, clinker plaster facade, of architectural significance. The corner building on Auerbachstrasse (also Auerbachstrasse 2) was built in 1893 by August Franke for the animal dealer Emil Geupel-White. Since around 1870 - behind the old single-storey residential building and far into what was then Friedrichstrasse - there were bird aviaries, stables and a monkey cage. The five-storey tenement house is mainly given by the plastered, three-axis corner projecting with pillar-supported false balconies, herms, cartouches, blown gables and Roof structure representative weight. With their clear horizontal emphasis, the brick fronts are subordinate to the dominant corner wing. 09296665
 
Apartment building in closed development Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse 21
(map)
1896 (tenement) with house passage and shop zone, clinker-plaster facade with stucco structures, of architectural significance

Built in 1896 by August Franke for Richard Thielemann in place of a two-story old house. The five-storey brick facade is emphasized horizontally, with decreasing plasticity towards the top. Vertical summary through plastered and grooved side elevations. In gable and sill fields, stucco in fittings and cartridge forms. The upper floor is richly decorated with consoles and festoons above the frieze with "running dog". The shop window front and the passage leading to the workshop buildings in the courtyard were simplified in 1907 by master plumber Gustav Wolle.

09296367
 
Apartment building in formerly half-open development and in a corner location, with a front garden facing Mathildenstrasse Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse 26
(map)
1880 (tenement) Formerly with the original shop, historicizing plastered facade, of architectural significance

The house, built in 1880 by master mason Julius Mosenthin for the horse dealer Hermann Rose, is part of the Mathildenstrasse development. As a corner house facing the wider main street, it is higher and designed as a massive, almost square structure with a flat hipped roof. Since the crossing situation through the front garden to Mathildenstrasse has been defused, the flattened corner was omitted. Like the indicated corner projections, the ground floor with the original shop fittings was also jointed horizontally. The removal of the sill and cornices above the ground floor, first and second floors obscures the originally clear floor division.

09295872
 
Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner, with a front garden facing Mathildenstrasse Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse 28
(map)
1884 (tenement) with original shop and formerly with corner restaurant, corner accentuated by bevelling and octagonal dome, historicizing plastered facade, historically important

Built in 1884 together with number 30 to the south as a corner house on Mathildenstrasse based on drawings by the architect Bechmann for Karl Munkwitz. The only three-storey building with a domed corner projectile and extended mansard storey, with an originally cuboid ground floor and banded upper floors, is structured in a way that was no longer entirely modern at the time: the fine window frames and consoles, the tooth-cut frieze under profiled roofs, rosettes, pillars with Ionic capitals and a final one Meander bands under the cornice correspond to the façade decoration in the "Hellenistic" style that was customary until around 1880. In the broken corner there was a restoration (two cast iron pillars preserved as supporting pillars), the beer garden that went with it was on Mathildenstrasse. The original furnishings of the hallway with stucco pilasters, medallions and etched glazing have been preserved.

09295873
 
Residential and commercial building in semi-open development and in a corner location (with restaurant, structural unit with Hermannstrasse 1, see there), in the neighboring »Kronengarten« remains of the enclosure wall of the former beer garden and the trees there Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse 35; 37; 39
(map)
1912-1914 (residential and commercial building) Plastered facade with bay windows, large gate passage at number 35/37, remarkable reform style architecture, interior fittings of the restaurant in the "old German style", of local and architectural importance

In 1858 Hermann Hempel opened the "Zur Krone" inn by connecting two old houses and in 1861 had a dance hall and bowling alley built in the garden on Hermannstrasse (later named after him). Bruno Ermisch, the new owner of the inn and the brewery on Biedermannstrasse founded by Hempel in 1875, had the beer garden in the hinterland between the brewery and inn with a wall and concert colonnade, and in 1896 the hall was enlarged. The large complex that exists today on the corner of Hermannstrasse was built in 1912-1914 on behalf of Ermisch's heirs according to plans by the architects K. Herrmann and PC Küster on the area of ​​the three old houses on Hauptstrasse and Hermannstrasse 1-5. It contained the Union Bank in the left side wing (number 35), and in the larger middle section (number 37/39) the inn with guest and lounges, and continued on Hermannstrasse with a single-storey connecting building and the converted hall (destroyed in 1944) . Courtyard and beer garden colonnades were redesigned (today only remains of walls and old trees). The upper floors contain apartments. The exterior, as well as the preserved furnishings of the inn, are designed in the "old German style" according to the architects' intentions - a romantic variant of the Heimat style with a relief of a "wild man" in the branches and lavish architectural decorations at the entrances spreading over the vaulted ceiling of the gateway and staircase windows loosely linked to forms of the German Renaissance. reminiscent of forms of the German Renaissance. is based on the German Renaissance. Saal and 1Ermisch, the new owner of the brewery founded by Hempel in 1875, provided the lighting on Biedermannstrasse. The two-storey building, standing side by side, has been here since 1858, the brewery owner Ermisch had this large building complex built with a restaurant, social and club rooms and a hall on Herrmannstrasse (destroyed) from 1912 to 1914. A large beer garden with concert colonnades, to which only the old trees indicate, created the connection to the Kronen Brewery in Biedermannstrasse. The exterior with its large gables, several window cores, the barrel-vaulted passage with a "wild man" on the ceiling and the wide arched windows on the ground floor, as well as the restaurant furnishings, are in the so-called old German style. The plans come from the architects K. Herrmann and PC Küster.

09295820
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse 38
(map)
1904 (tenement) with two original shops, historicizing clinker brick facade upgraded with Art Nouveau decor, hallway with original furnishings and decoration, see also number 38b and Brandstrasse 2, of architectural significance

Numbers 38 and 38b: The corner buildings number 38, 38 a and Brandstrasse 2 were built on the former site of the Dürr'schen Härtnerei in 1904 for the master carpenter Robert Klepzig according to plans by the architect Karl Wolf. The simple yellow brick buildings with shops and a restaurant on the ground floor have been upgraded with Art Nouveau decor in a conventional structure.

09295874
 
Apartment building in closed development and in a corner Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse 38b
(map)
1904 (tenement) Corner shop with pastry shop, historicizing clinker plaster facade upgraded with Art Nouveau decor, corner bay window, see also number 38 and Brandstrasse 2, of architectural significance

Numbers 38 and 38b: The corner buildings number 38, 38 a and Brandstrasse 2 were built on the former site of the Dürr'schen Härtnerei in 1904 for the master carpenter Robert Klepzig according to plans by the architect Karl Wolf. The simple yellow and red brick buildings with shops and a restaurant on the ground floor have been upgraded with Art Nouveau decor in a conventional structure.

09299216
 
Apartment building in closed development (structural unit with No. 43) Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse 41
(map)
1888 (tenement house) with gate passage, formerly with shop, historicizing plastered facade, historically important

Wolfgang-Heinze-Straße 41, 43, 45: All three (after the destruction of the northern corner house) four-storey apartment buildings between Herrmannstraße and Leopoldstraße built by Richard Hagemann 1887-1888, number 41 and 43 designed as a semi-detached house for the master carpenter Hermann Müller, that something higher corner house number 45 on Leopoldstrasse for the restaurateur Hermann Albrecht. The designs by the same architect emphasize differently: the semi-detached house with a broadly laid plastered facade, in which flat grooved pilaster strips connect the window axes of the two main floors vertically and the "bel étage" is emphasized by evenly arranged crowns over fine stucco medallions, the corner house with a brick facade, structured by side elevations on both street fronts and a risalit around the corner with a bay window, loggia, balcony and (distant) onion dome. All three buildings have the French roof typical of the 1980s with standing roof houses. There were shops and a corner restaurant on the first floors.

09296260
 
Apartment building in closed development (structural unit with No. 41) Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse 43
(map)
1888 (tenement house) with gate passage and with shops, historicizing plastered facade, historically important

Wolfgang-Heinze-Straße 41, 43, 45: All three (after the destruction of the northern corner house) four-storey apartment buildings between Herrmannstraße and Leopoldstraße built by Richard Hagemann 1887-1888, number 41 and 43 designed as a semi-detached house for the master carpenter Hermann Müller, that something higher corner house number 45 on Leopoldstrasse for the restaurateur Hermann Albrecht. The designs by the same architect emphasize differently: the semi-detached house with a broadly laid plastered facade, in which flat grooved pilaster strips connect the window axes of the two main floors vertically and the "bel étage" is emphasized by evenly arranged crowns over fine stucco medallions, the corner house with a brick facade, structured by side elevations on both street fronts and a risalit around the corner with a bay window, loggia, balcony and (distant) onion dome. All three buildings have the French roof typical of the 1980s with standing roof houses. There were shops and a corner restaurant on the first floors.

09296261
 
Apartment building in closed development and in a corner Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse 45
(map)
1888 (tenement house) with shops, historicizing clinker plaster facade, corner bay window, of architectural significance

Wolfgang-Heinze-Straße 41, 43, 45: All three (after the destruction of the northern corner house) four-storey apartment buildings between Herrmannstraße and Leopoldstraße built by Richard Hagemann 1887-1888, number 41 and 43 designed as a semi-detached house for the master carpenter Hermann Müller, that something higher corner house number 45 on Leopoldstrasse for the restaurateur Hermann Albrecht. The designs by the same architect emphasize differently: the semi-detached house with a broadly laid plastered facade, in which flat grooved pilaster strips connect the window axes of the two main floors vertically and the "bel étage" is emphasized by evenly arranged crowns over fine stucco medallions, the corner house with a brick facade, structured by side elevations on both street fronts and a risalit around the corner with a bay window, loggia, balcony and (distant) onion dome. All three buildings have the French roof typical of the 1980s with standing roof houses. There were shops and a corner restaurant on the first floors.

09296262
 
Residential house in semi-open development Wolfgang-Heinze-Strasse 53
(map)
1891 (residential house) Formerly a country house style villa, historicizing clinker brick facade, gable with open space, later heightening of the villa and connection with the new corner building on Meusdorfer Straße, of historical importance

The country-style villa built in 1891 by master builder Ernst Fritz Schade for the merchant Peter Felix after demolishing a villa built in 1867 for the family of Consul de Liagre. Originally two-storey, with a tower attached to the side, a semicircular garden salon attached to the rear, to which a two-storey polygonal winter garden in glass / iron construction and extensive greenhouses were added. Interior with a "Gothic room" and a magnificent staircase with Corinthian columns (the latter has been preserved). 1928 Acquisition by the architect Otto Gerstenberger and redesign of the entire area by building four terraced houses on the former garden area on Meusdorfer Strasse after the gardener's house, stable and coach house (from the first villa building in 1867) were torn down. Heightening of the villa and connection with the four-storey corner new building Meusdorfer Straße. 1930 single storey shop building on the street front in front of the villa. 1949 demolition of the tower. Since 1958 branch of the college for finance in Gotha. Heightening of the villa and connection with the new four-storey corner building at Meusdorfer Strasse, polygonal masonry plinth and built by master builder Fritz Schade on the side

09296225
 
Double apartment building in open development Zwenkauer Strasse 1; 3
(card)
1902-1903 (double tenement house) yellow clinker brick facade with stucco structures, of architectural significance

The four-storey double apartment building was built in 1902-1903 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger, number 1 for the building contractor Hermann Freiberg, number 3 for the master painter Wilhelm Mann. Simple clinker buildings with stucco structure, with number 3 the ground floor as with number 1 still present with plaster grooves. On the back in basement level there are two wash houses.

09296464
 
Apartment building in closed development Zwenkauer Strasse 2
(map)
1900 (tenement) Clinker-plaster facade, important in terms of building history

With number 4: The two four-story tenement houses were built in 1900 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the master bricklayer and building contractor Hermann Engel. Simple plaster facade with window frames made of red sandstone. The ground floors originally grooved. Stucco ceilings in the hallways.

09296463
 
Apartment building in closed development Zwenkauer Strasse 4
(map)
1900 (tenement) Clinker-plaster facade, important in terms of building history

s. number 2

09295916
 
Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner Zwenkauer Strasse 6
(map)
1901 (tenement) with corner shutter, clinker brick facade with stucco structuring, of architectural significance

In 1901 the four-storey corner house was built according to plans by the architect Franz Witzel for the building contractor Carl Albin Berlepsch. Simple clinker construction with stucco structure and slightly protruding lateral axes. The ground floor with plastering, the hallway has stucco decoration in the form of angel heads, flower wreaths and capitals. At the confluence with Stockartstrasse, the house stands on a plot of land that has been cut at an acute angle, so that the apartments facing Stockartstrasse required their own access with a staircase on the western gable side, which was kept free by a ventilation gap. In 1909 a single-storey wooden veranda was installed on iron supports on this gable front.

09296466
 
Apartment building in closed development Zwenkauer Strasse 8
(map)
1901 (tenement) yellow clinker brick facade with stucco structures, of architectural significance

With numbers 10, 12 and 14: The four four-story tenement houses built between 1900 and 1901 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the building contractors Oswald Hähnel and Hermann Freiberg. Simple nine-axis clinker buildings with stucco structure, ground floors with plaster grooves, three-span floor plans on the upper floors and washhouses on the back in the basement area. Number 14 in a chamfered corner to Pfeffinger Strasse, with the attic storey partially rebuilt after war damage in 1954-1956.

09296456
 
Apartment building in closed development Zwenkauer Strasse 10
(map)
1900-1901 (tenement house) with gate passage, formerly with shops, yellow clinker brick facade with stucco structures, historically important

Zwenkauer Straße 8/10/12/14 The four tenement houses built 1900-1901 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the contractors Oswald Hähnel and Hermann Freiberg. Simple nine-axis clinker buildings with stucco structures, grooved ground floors and wash houses on the back in the basement area. Number 14 in the corner of Pfeffinger Strasse with the attic storey partially rebuilt after war damage 1954-1956. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296453
 
Apartment building in closed development Zwenkauer Strasse 12
(map)
1900-1901 (tenement house) red clinker brick facade with stucco structure, of architectural significance

Zwenkauer Straße 8/10/12/14 The four tenement houses built 1900-1901 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the contractors Oswald Hähnel and Hermann Freiberg. Simple nine-axis clinker buildings with stucco structures, grooved ground floors and wash houses on the back in the basement area. Number 14 in the corner of Pfeffinger Strasse with the attic storey partially rebuilt after war damage 1954-1956. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296454
 
Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner Zwenkauer Strasse 14
(map)
1900-1901 (tenement house) yellow clinker brick facade with stucco structures, of architectural significance

Zwenkauer Straße 8/10/12/14 The four tenement houses built 1900-1901 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger for the contractors Oswald Hähnel and Hermann Freiberg. Simple nine-axis clinker buildings with stucco structures, grooved ground floors and wash houses on the back in the basement area. Number 14 in the corner of Pfeffinger Strasse with the attic storey partially rebuilt after war damage 1954-1956. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296455
 
Row of tenement houses in semi-open development and in a corner location Zwenkauer Strasse 15; 17; 19; 21; 23; 23a; 23b
(card)
1931 (row of tenements) Plastered facade, with corner bay window and stepped gable, in the style of the 1920s, of architectural significance

A residential complex consisting of a row of seven houses and built in 1931 by the architect Otto Juhrich, who was also the client, as a tax-privileged small apartment building. Four-storey plastered building with a brick base, which is accentuated in the street space by the stepped northern side front with a stepped gable and two corner bay windows. The entrance axes are slightly raised with stepped gables and are flanked by single-axis templates with thin grooves in the window area. The entrances with brick edging. Three apartments per house on the floors. After a tax-related blocking period of three years, Juhrich sold the individual sections to seven different private individuals in 1934.

09295917
 
Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner Zwenkauer Strasse 16
(map)
1902 (tenement) Clinker brick facade with stucco structures, of importance in terms of building history

With numbers 18, 20 and 22: Four four-story tenement houses built between 1902 and 1903 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger. Number 16 was built as a corner house with a chamfer facing Pfeffinger Strasse together with number 18 for the secretary Karl Döring, number 20 and number 22 for the master bricklayer Hermann Engel. Simple clinker buildings with stucco structures, ground floors with plaster grooves, three-span floor plans and washhouses on the back in the basement area. Number 18 with a somewhat more elaborate design due to the two protruding central axes, with number 22 the stucco decoration partially removed. The entrances at numbers 18 and 20 on the back, between number 16 and number 18 a ventilation gap.

09296459
 
Apartment building in half-open development Zwenkauer Strasse 18
(map)
1902-1903 (tenement house) red clinker brick facade with stucco structure, of architectural significance

Zwenkauer Strasse 16/18/20/22 Four tenement houses built between 1902 and 1903 according to plans by F. Otto Gerstenberger: Number 16 as a corner house on Pfeffinger Strasse together with number 18 for the secretary Karl Döring, number 20 and number 22 for the master bricklayer Hermann Engel . Plain clinker buildings with stucco structures, grooved ground floors and washhouses on the back. Number 18 through the flat central risalit with a somewhat more elaborate design, with number 22 the stucco decoration has been partially removed. The entrances at numbers 18 and 20 on the back. Between number 16 and number 18 a ventilation gap. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296460
 
Apartment building in closed development Zwenkauer Strasse 20
(map)
1903 (tenement) with gate passage, yellow clinker brick facade with stucco structures, of architectural significance

Zwenkauer Strasse 16/18/20/22 Four tenement houses built between 1902 and 1903 according to plans by F. Otto Gerstenberger: Number 16 as a corner house on Pfeffinger Strasse together with number 18 for the secretary Karl Döring, number 20 and number 22 for the master bricklayer Hermann Engel . Plain clinker buildings with stucco structures, grooved ground floors and washhouses on the back. Number 18 through the flat central risalit with a somewhat more elaborate design, with number 22 the stucco decoration has been partially removed. The entrances at numbers 18 and 20 on the back. Between number 16 and number 18 a ventilation gap. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296461
 
Apartment building in closed development Zwenkauer Strasse 22
(map)
1902-1903 (tenement house) with house passage, yellow clinker brick facade, historically important

Zwenkauer Strasse 16/18/20/22 Four tenement houses built between 1902 and 1903 according to plans by F. Otto Gerstenberger: Number 16 as a corner house on Pfeffinger Strasse together with number 18 for the secretary Karl Döring, number 20 and number 22 for the master bricklayer Hermann Engel . Plain clinker buildings with stucco structures, grooved ground floors and washhouses on the back. Number 18 through the flat central risalit with a somewhat more elaborate design, with number 22 the stucco decoration has been partially removed. The entrances at numbers 18 and 20 on the back. Between number 16 and number 18 a ventilation gap. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09296462
 
Apartment building in closed development Zwenkauer Strasse 24
(map)
1902-1903 (tenement house) with gate passage, yellow clinker brick facade with stucco structures, of architectural significance

1902-1903 based on plans by master bricklayer Emil Theodor Pirnsch for the building contractor Ernst Strieter. Yellow clinker brick facade with simple stucco structure, the first floor originally with plaster. Access from the back. The basement and ground floor were formerly used as a bakery with an oven, flour base, bakery and shop. The upper floors with three-horse floor plans.

09296457
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Zwenkauer Strasse 26
(map)
1902-1903, courtyard building demolished in 2002 (tenement) with gate passage and shop, red clinker brick facade with stucco structuring, historically important

Four-story tenement house built in 1902-1903 for master blacksmith Eduard Steinbrück according to plans by architect Franz Witzel. Clinker brick facade with simple stucco structure, the ground floor with plaster grooves, on both sides above the two outer axes a baroque gable. The access from the back, in the upper floors a three-horse floor plan. A wash house on the back in the basement area. In the courtyard a two-storey rear building originally used as a wheelwright workshop and defeat.

09296458
 
Apartment building in open development and rear building as well as two side gate entrances Zwenkauer Strasse 27
(map)
around 1910 (tenement) Plastered facade with brick plinth, box bay window, side entrance with brick goalposts, historically important

Around 1910, as part of the development of the quarter between Zwenkauer Strasse and the cemetery, a free-standing three-storey apartment building with a three-storey rear building. The front building, which widens towards the rear, is a plastered building with a two-axis central bay, high brick plinth and geometrically designed parapet fields, the rear building is also plastered, but its design is simpler. Two apartments per floor in both houses.

09295918
 
Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner location (structural unit with Meusdorfer Straße 67) Zwenkauer Strasse 30
(map)
1902 (tenement) yellow clinker brick facade with stucco structure, see also Meusdorfer Straße 67, of architectural significance

see Meusdorfer Straße 67

09296737
 
Apartment building in closed development Zwenkauer Strasse 32
(map)
1904 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, hallway with painting, of architectural significance

With numbers 34, 36 and 38: The row of four four-story apartment buildings was built in 1904-1905 according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger, numbers 32, 34 and 36 like the adjoining houses at Meusdorfer Straße 62 and 64 for the master bricklayer Ernst Hochmuth and the foreman Oskar Ehrhardt, number 38 for the building contractor Friedrich Bernhard Gänss. Simple clinker buildings with stucco structures, of which the broad ten-axis front of number 36 with the emphasis on the two central axes by round and triangular gables and a console cornice has the most elaborate design. Numbers 32 and 34 have the same facade. The ground floors, as with number 32, were originally plastered. On the first floor of number 36 the front of a former bakery, which included a bakery with an oven, flour chamber and baker's apartment.

09295925
 
Apartment building in closed development Zwenkauer Strasse 34
(map)
1904–1905 (tenement house) with gate passage, clinker brick facade, of architectural significance The row of four tenement houses was built in 1904-1905 according to plans by F. Otto Gerstenberger, No. 32, 34 and 36 like the adjoining houses Meusdorfer Strasse 62 and 64 for the master bricklayer Ernst Hochmuth and the foreman Oskar Ehrhardt, No. 38 for the building contractor Friedrich Bernhard Gänss. Conventional clinker buildings with stucco structure, of which the broad ten-axis front of No. 36 with the emphasis on the two central axes by gable-shaped roofs and a console cornice has the greatest degree of design. Nos. 32 and 34 with the same structure, here Art Nouveau decorations in the parapets. The ground floors with plaster. On the first floor of No. 36 originally a bakery with preserved shop front. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998) 09295924
 
School with gym, building a connection between school and gym as well as enclosing the school yard and the front yard
School with gym, building a connection between school and gym as well as enclosing the school yard and the front yard Zwenkauer Strasse 35
(map)
1913-1914 (school) Two-wing school building, sandstone plaster facade, two tower tops on the school and gymnasium, connecting building with arched gate passage, reform style architecture, of local and architectural importance

Former 5th civic school, built 1913-1914 according to plans by City Planning Officer Otto Wilhelm Scharenberg at the confluence of Zwenkauer Strasse and Hildebrandstrasse. Three-storey, two-wing plastered building with sandstone structures, high base zone and attic storey, the elongated wing facing Zwenkauer Strasse, the shorter one along Hildebrandstrasse. The road junction is dominated by a massive corner tower with a lantern attached. A train that was modern for the time of construction can be recognized by the sloping window and portal reveals. The two portals, the boys 'entrance to Zwenkauer Strasse and the girls' entrance to Hildebrandstrasse, are made of sandstone. In the extension of the wing on Hildebrandstrasse and connected to it by a three-part, basket-arched passage and a covered corridor connecting a two-storey gym building. The interior division of the school building has two sides with a central corridor, to which classrooms are connected on all floors. On the first floor there is also the director's and teaching material room, in the second sewing room, physics, collection and teachers' room, and in the third drawing room and teaching material room. A school garden was laid out in 1931 on the rear section of the school yard.

09295919
 
Apartment building in closed development Zwenkauer Strasse 36
(map)
1904-1906 (tenement house) with gate passage, formerly with the original shop, clinker brick facade, historically important

Zwenkauer Strasse 32/34/36/38 The row of four tenement houses was built in 1904-1905 according to plans by F. Otto Gerstenberger, numbers 32, 34 and 36 like the adjoining houses Meusdorfer Strasse 62 and 64 for the master bricklayer Ernst Hochmuth and the foreman Oskar Ehrhardt, number 38 for the building contractor Friedrich Bernhard Gänss. Conventional clinker brick structures with stucco structure, of which the broad ten-axis front of number 36 with the emphasis on the two central axes by gable-shaped roofs and a console cornice has the greatest degree of design. Numbers 32 and 34 with the same structure, here Art Nouveau decorations in the parapets. The ground floors with plaster. On the first floor of number 36, originally a bakery with a preserved shop front. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09295923
 
Apartment building in closed development Zwenkauer Strasse 38
(map)
1904-1905 (tenement house) Clinker-plaster facade, important in terms of building history

Zwenkauer Strasse 32/34/36/38 The row of four tenement houses was built in 1904-1905 according to plans by F. Otto Gerstenberger, numbers 32, 34 and 36 like the adjoining houses Meusdorfer Strasse 62 and 64 for the master bricklayer Ernst Hochmuth and the foreman Oskar Ehrhardt, number 38 for the building contractor Friedrich Bernhard Gänss. Conventional clinker brick structures with stucco structure, of which the broad ten-axis front of number 36 with the emphasis on the two central axes by gable-shaped roofs and a console cornice has the greatest degree of design. Numbers 32 and 34 with the same structure, here Art Nouveau decorations in the parapets. The ground floors with plaster. On the first floor of number 36, originally a bakery with a preserved shop front. (Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, monuments in Saxony, city of Leipzig, southern urban expansion, 1998)

09295922
 
Double tenement house in a semi-open development Zwenkauer Strasse 40; 42
(card)
1931 (double tenement house) Plastered facade with clinker base and clinker strips, in the style of the 1920s, of architectural significance

The broad, four-storey semi-detached house was built in 1931 by master mason Paul Schulze, who was also the client. Above a high basement zone with a brick base that accommodates the entrances, a plastered facade divided by brick strips on each floor. The upper end is formed by a mezzanine that accommodates the drying floors and is raised to a full floor in the two central axes for an attic apartment. In the division of the upper floors, the three-horse floor plan, which is characteristic of the turn-of-the-century houses in this quarter, is used twice, so that the double house contains a total of 23 small apartments.

09295921
 
Tram depot with administration building (Zwenkauer Strasse 44) and car hall (Bornaische Strasse 55)
Tram depot with administration building (Zwenkauer Strasse 44) and car hall (Bornaische Strasse 55) Zwenkauer Strasse 44
(map)
1912 (tram depot) Leipzig electric tram, Connewitz depot, important in terms of local history and technology 09295944
 

swell

  • 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 .

Web links