List of cultural monuments in Eckersbach (Zwickau)

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The list of cultural monuments in Eckersbach (Zwickau) contains the cultural monuments in the Zwickau district of Eckersbach that are listed in the official list of monuments of the State Office for the Preservation of Monuments in Saxony .

Legend

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

Eckersbach settlement

image designation location Dating description ID
Settlement as a whole, consisting of 17 twin houses with connecting buildings and a single-family house as well as green spaces in front of it (all parts of the whole) Mülsener Strasse 13; 15; 17; 19; 21; 23; 25; 27; 29; 31; 33; 35; 37; 39; 41
(card)
1921-1922 Rows of houses of social historical and urban significance.

1. Building description and building history:

The Eckersbach miners' settlement was built in two construction phases in 1921/1922. The building owner and owner was the city of Zwickau, which created inexpensive living space for miners looking for apartments. Based on a design by the city building authority and an adaptation project by the concrete and reinforced concrete construction company Paul Kossel & Cie. A total of 18 buildings were erected, 15 of which were included in the list of monuments of the city of Zwickau as part of the collective "Miners' settlement Zwickau-Eckersbach". Three house types were created, of which only one building corresponds to house type II, a two-family house (Mülsener Str. 35). House types I and III are each four-family houses, which differ in their external appearance only by their dimensions. The two-storey plastered buildings, which were completed by hipped roofs with beaver tail covering, each included two storey outbuildings, originally stables, which were connected to the stables of the neighboring house, so that groups of houses always consisted of three houses. These groups of houses form a uniform row of houses along Mülsener Straße and Paul-Flemming-Straße (today's name), which was changed in its course at the time of construction. Another group of three houses follows on Mülsener Straße behind the bend in Paul-Flemming-Straße (no cultural monuments).

The following house type descriptions are based on the original appearance of the settlement, which can be derived from the existing building files and historical photographs.

House type I (Mülsener Str. 27, 29, 31, 35, Paul Fleming-Str. 1–5): Two-storey plastered buildings, street side six window axes, hipped roof originally with three bat hatches on the street side and a small roof pike on the garden side, plain tile roofing, garden side with central house entrance and Staircase windows, coupled windows of different sizes on both sides of the entrance, circumferential cornice, ancillary building with two doors each, connected on the gable side with the ancillary buildings of the neighboring houses. Inside the residential buildings, two-room complex with two apartments per floor, each with four-room apartments with 63.51 m², in the basement there was a laundry room and the cellar rooms for the apartments, in the attic there were attic rooms and the drying floor. Each apartment had a cellar, a stable, and an attic. The apartments consisted of a forecourt from which the toilet and pantry were separated. Three rooms and a large eat-in kitchen connected to the forecourt (hallway). It can be assumed that originally only the kitchen and living room could be heated. Rising masonry made of bricks with a cavity filled with slag for thermal insulation. Deviating from the blueprint, they obviously did without folding shutters and a passage to the garden between the stables.

House type II (Mülsener Str. 33): Two-storey plastered building with an almost square floor plan, closed by a tent roof covered with beaver tails with originally a bat hatch on the street and courtyard side, on both sides of the house a single-storey annex building with a stable each, on the street side the building has three Open the window axes, the house entrance is on the side of the courtyard. The facades were structured by a circumferential cornice. The house has a full basement. There were two cellars and a laundry room. The two three-room apartments, each 58.04 m², were arranged one above the other. The arrangement of the rooms as well as their heatability corresponds to house type I, only the forecourt (hallway) is smaller because the stairwell had to be completely accommodated in the house floor plan. The folding shutters contained in the construction plan were obviously not installed.

House type III (Mülsener Str. 13-25): two-storey plastered building with a rectangular floor plan, street facade four window axes without shutters, garden facade with a centrally located house entrance and staircase window like house type I, on both sides a group of three windows with windows of different sizes, hipped roof with plain tile covering with originally a small roof pike in the center on the garden side and two bat hatches on the street side, circumferential belt cornice, single-storey barn additions on both sides with two doors each as in house type I. The house has a full basement with originally four cellars and two wash houses. There are identical two-room apartments (a total of four apartments) on each floor. The forecourt is reduced, but these apartments seem to have a small bathroom. Obviously, in contrast to house type I, it was possible to heat all rooms. As with the other house types, the spacious eat-in kitchen of 16.34 m² was retained.

The enclosing walls of the houses of this type consisted of lightweight concrete (mixture of gravel, pumice gravel, blast furnace slag, coal slag and cement) with reinforcement. Hollow spaces were inserted into the masonry as thermal insulation by ramming in vertical wooden boxes.

Note: The external appearance of the buildings has been simplified over the course of time, also through construction work on the inside. The roof pikes and bat hatches were replaced by dormer windows, the uniform roof covering was replaced by different roof tiles of different colors, the belt cornices were partially removed and the window structure simplified. The external appearance suffered as a result. Nevertheless, the settlement still gives the image of a uniformly designed complex, because the building, largely the facade color, the roof shapes and the internal structure of the facades (the wall-opening ratio) have been retained.

09231536
 


Cottage property with shed, garden and enclosure Trillerstraße 60
(map)
1731/1732 Dendro Originally preserved half-timbered house of local and architectural significance.

Häuslerhaus: two-storey, rectangular floor plan, half-timbered upper storey, single-bar, full of struts, tenon wood connections, gable roof with slats, gable triangle boarded up, renovated in 2005, including extension at right angles, two-storey with half-timbering in the same construction as the old building Shed: one-storey, saddle roof , Truss construction.

09231290
 

Web links

Commons : Kulturdenkmale in Zwickau  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files