List of cultural monuments in Engelsdorf (Leipzig)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The list of cultural monuments in Engelsdorf (Leipzig) contains the cultural monuments of the Leipzig district of Engelsdorf , which were recorded in the list of monuments by the State Office for Monument Preservation Saxony as of 2017.

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 Engelsdorf

image designation location Dating description ID
Former children's home, with fencing and gate system Althener Strasse 16
(map)
1930-1931 (children's home) Plastered facade with mansard roof, stately building by the master builder Wilhelm Günther, built as a Catholic children's home for the Carmelites, of local historical importance 08970323
 
Memorial to the fallen of World War 1 Arnoldplatz
(map)
1924 (Fallen Memorial) old location Sommerfeld, natural stone block with inscription and eagle relief, of local history 08970166
 
Dorfkirche Sommerfeld: Church (including furnishings) with sacristy annex, church square and Christoph Arnold's tombstone
More pictures
Dorfkirche Sommerfeld: Church (including furnishings) with sacristy annex, church square and Christoph Arnold's tombstone Arnoldplatz
(map)
1856-1859 (church), inscribed 1893 (tombstone), around 1700 (evangelist pictures), around 1520 (crucifix) old location Sommerfeld, neo-Gothic hall church with historical, art and cultural historical value, document of the local development, rare evidence of the reconstruction of a church after the Second World War in the GDR 08970168
 
Wikidata-logo.svg
Memorial stone for the reconstruction of the church 1952-1953 Arnoldplatz
(map)
inscribed 1953 (memorial stone) old location Sommerfeld, boulder with inscription, of local significance 08970167
 
Residential house in open development Arnoldplatz 1
(map)
1898, approved (residential building) old location Sommerfeld, plastered facade, gable roof, attractively designed building with beautiful window crowns and floating gables, of architectural significance

On October 6, 1898, the decision of the Royal Authority to hand over the building permit for the residential building applied for, as well as the wooden stable and laundry building. The building owner was the road caretaker Friedrich Hermann Mätzold in Sommerfeld, the local construction worker M. Somieski took over the execution. One apartment was planned for each floor. The free-standing building is plastered over a base made of exposed masonry and has very fine historic stucco decor, and elegant plastering until the renovation. The extended attic with a dwelling and gable closure with an open space is committed to the country house style, the two-axis central projection is only slightly protruding. As part of a renovation that began at the end of 2008 and probably ended in 2010, formerly fine plaster structures were removed and profiled window frames and plastered corner blocks were dispensed with. Unfortunately, the blinds were also removed and windows that were detrimental to the elegance of the house before the renovation were installed. The front garden is important for the effect of the house near Hauptstrasse and Leipziger Ortsausfallstrasse (Riesaer Strasse); the house entrance is on the back of the building with a lateral access path. The formerly extremely picturesque residential building in a not insignificant urban development location has a historical significance. LfD / 2017, 2019, 2020

08970248
 
Residential house in open development and fencing Arnoldplatz 3
(map)
1904-1905 (residential house) old location Sommerfeld, plastered facade, hipped roof, half-timbered in the gable, beautiful Art Nouveau window framing in the side elevation, historically important

In July 1904, the building application for a country house with brick roofing and an outbuilding was submitted, the financier was the hardware dealer Emil Seifert from Leipzig-Volkmarsdorf. One month later the "invitation to receive the building permit" was issued. Master mason Arthur Fichtner was entrusted with the execution of the work and completed it by March 1905. A vestibule was planned for the entrance, at the rear a ground-level veranda with a terrace above, the roof floor was reserved for use as floor space. In 1934, master precision mechanic Otto Hermann Kuhndt took over the property and immediately applied for the addition of a watchmaker's workshop, two years later a garage, and in 1938 the addition of a room and a bathroom in the house. The plastered structure looks unpretentious but elegant. The slightly protruding left-hand risalit with exposed framework in the gable, the tendril trellis and, formerly, the window shutters provide structure. The large Art Nouveau window in the "parlor" with plaster decorations above it catches the eye. The fencing and front garden contribute to the picturesque appearance of the property. On the edge of the magnificent Sommerfelder Dorfanger, the building, which is significant in terms of both architectural and development, was built on a small plot of land on a short connecting road to the Große Chaussee. LfD / 2016, 2017

08970249
 
Memorial plaque for Christoph Arnold, side building (front part), gate entrance and paving of a four-sided courtyard Arnoldplatz 18
(map)
End of the 19th century (side building) old location Sommerfeld, typical local courtyard, memorial plaque in memory of the farmer and astronomer Christoph Arnold (1650-1695), of importance in terms of building history and personal history 08970181
 
Former church school, now a residential building Arnoldplatz 20
(map)
around 1850 (church school) old location Sommerfeld, important building in terms of urban development in the middle of the old town square next to the church, of local history 09299641
 
Residential house, two side buildings and paving of a four-sided courtyard Arnoldplatz 22
(map)
19th century (farmhouse) old location Sommerfeld, residential building a formerly plastered half-timbered building with a crooked hip roof, well-preserved courtyard directly opposite the old church school, historically important 08970180
 
enclosure Arnoldplatz 23
(map)
around 1895 (enclosure) old location of Sommerfeld, wrought iron enclosure on rubble stone plinth of the former villa of the Daehne family, characterizing the townscape 08970196
 
House and barn of a three-sided farm Arnoldplatz 24
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century (farmhouse), marked 1883 (barn) old location Sommerfeld, residential house plastered building with crooked hip roof, parts of a farm that characterize the townscape, of architectural significance 08970179
 
Side building, barn, courtyard paving and fencing of the front yard of a farm Arnoldplatz 25
(map)
19th century (side building) old location Sommerfeld, stables plastered building with mansard roof, barn stately courtyard building with mighty mansard roof, of architectural significance 08970197
 
Residential house, two side buildings and entrance gate of a former four-sided courtyard Arnoldplatz 26
(map)
End of the 19th century (farmhouse) old location Sommerfeld, plastered house with saddle roof, typical local homestead close to the church, historically important 08970178
 
Enclosing the front yard of a farm Arnoldplatz 27
(map)
around 1895 (enclosure) old location of Sommerfeld, historicistic wrought iron enclosure, of importance for the townscape 08970198
 
Parsonage, chapel, side building and enclosure wall with gate system of a parsonage as well as manual pump with cover Arnoldplatz 28
(map)
1862 (rectory), 1951 (chapel), 1954 (hand lever pump) old location Sommerfeld, parsonage with a plastered facade typical of the time and a gable roof, birthplace of the art historian and monument conservator Paul Clemen (1866-1947), complex of local historical importance 08970173
 
Two side buildings, barn, gate pillars and paving of a four-sided courtyard as well as an enclosure wall to the neighboring property Arnoldplatz 31
(map)
Late 19th century (side building), 1911-1912 (barn) old location Sommerfeld, all yellow clinker buildings, part of the town center development from the end of the 19th century, historically important 08970199
 
Residential house, side building, gate system (with gate) and paving of a four-sided courtyard Arnoldplatz 33
(map)
1904 (farmhouse) old location Sommerfeld, residential house with plastered facade and crooked hip roof, typical local courtyard from the late 19th century, historically important 08970200
 
Side building, barn, front garden and pavement of a three-sided courtyard Arnoldplatz 34
(map)
1911-1912 (side building), end of the 19th century (barn) old location Sommerfeld, plastered buildings with a gable roof, typical local courtyards that shape the Anger, with architectural and developmental value 08970172
 
Residential house in open development, with rear building and enclosure of the front garden Arnoldplatz 37
(map)
1908-1909 (residential house) old location Sommerfeld, residential building with plastered facade and crooked hip roof, wrought-iron enclosure, stately street-defining building, of architectural significance 08970464
 
Two side buildings, gate pillars, courtyard paving and enclosure of the front gardens of a former three-sided courtyard Arnoldplatz 39
(map)
End of the 19th century (side building) old location Sommerfeld, typical local courtyard on the village green, partly built from adobe bricks, historically important 08970462
 
Residential house and side building of a four-sided courtyard as well as courtyard paving Arnoldplatz 43
(map)
19th century (farmhouse) old location Sommerfeld, residential house, plastered half-timbered building with saddle roof, homestead in the immediate vicinity of the old church school, of architectural significance 08970194
 
Residential house, farm building and courtyard paving of a city estate
Residential house, farm building and courtyard paving of a city estate Arnoldplatz 55
(map)
1880 (residential building) old location Sommerfeld, one of the council estates of the city of Leipzig, tenant house with plastered facade and half-timbered in the attic, largest villa building of the place, former residence of the commissioner Ernst Guhr, outbuilding formerly with horse stable, of local historical importance 08970170
 
Residential house, two side buildings, pull-out house, gate entrance and paving of a four-sided courtyard Arnoldplatz 57; 57a
(card)
2nd half of the 19th century (farmhouse) old location Sommerfeld, residential building with plastered facade and gable roof, well-preserved courtyard that characterizes the streetscape, of architectural significance 08970171
 
Villa, outbuildings and gate system as well as villa garden Arthur-Winkler-Strasse 4
(map)
1896 (villa) historicizing plastered building with half-timbered elements, built for the inspector Ernst Friedrich Guhr, authorized signatory of the Leipzig beer brewery zu Reudnitz Riebeck & Co., temporarily used by the Evangelical Lutheran parish as a pastor's residence, garden with old wood, stately villa with special local and architectural history value

In 1896, inspector Ernst Friedrich Guhr commissioned architect O. Meienburg (?) To build a new villa, which he himself had expanded five years later by master mason Julius Kornagel. Later, the Engelsdorf parish took over the property and the pastor moved into the plastered brick building, which achieves its architectural and urban development effect in particular through the multi-part roof landscape, a featured stair tower, visible framework in the gables and attached verandas. Splendid historical facade decoration was almost completely dispensed with, only window frames and a cornice enrich the structure. In March 1959 a building application for the installation of a community hall based on a design by civil engineer Hans-Joachim Günther was issued. The pillars of the gate system (changed today) and the former coach house on the property line have also been preserved. The property is significant for the local history, and the buildings are also of architectural value and have a special impact on urban development. LfD / 2011, 2015

08970277
 
School with a side archway to the former gym
School with a side archway to the former gym Arthur-Winkler-Strasse 6
(map)
1905-1906 (school), 1913, extension (school) Plastered construction with roof turrets, reform style architecture, of architectural and socio-historical importance 08970278
 
Multi-family houses in a residential complex and front garden Arthur-Winkler-Strasse 49; 51; 53; 55
(card)
1934-1935, number 53 (apartment building), 1934-1936, number 49 (apartment building), 1934-1935, number 51 (apartment building), 1934-1935, number 55 (apartment building) Plastered facades with clinker brick structure, typical block development of the 1930s, characterizes the street scene together with number 57/59/61, of architectural significance 08970444
 
Multi-family houses in a residential complex and front gardens Arthur-Winkler-Strasse 57; 59; 61
(map)
1931-1932, number 57 (apartment building), 1931, number 59 (apartment building), 1930, number 61 (apartment building) Plastered facades with clinker brick structure, typical block development of the 1920s / 1930s, characterizes the street scene together with number 49/51/53/55, of architectural significance 08970372
 
Apartment building in a residential complex August-Bebel-Platz 6
(map)
1928-1929 (apartment building) Sparingly decorated plastered facade, ensemble with August-Bebel-Platz 7, 8, 9 and Baumeister-Günther-Straße 13, each building in the row of houses with a different facade design, historically important, historical and documentation value as an object of social housing

In continuation of the project for the construction of small communal apartments (number 9 and Baumeister-Günther-Straße 13), three more houses were built on the square. Again based on designs by Ernst Riedel, number 8 was built in 1926-1927, number 7 in 1927 and house number 6 in the corner of Wasserturmstrasse in the 1928-1929 span. The construction of the master builder Wilhelm Günther from Engelsdorf took over the execution of the sparsely decorated plastered buildings. The fact that each building has a different facade design is remarkable. In the row buildings there were previously six apartments, in the corner house nine apartments. With the north-west development of August-Bebel-Platz an interesting ensemble of municipal housing to alleviate the housing shortage in Germany in general and Engelsdorf in particular from the 1920s has been preserved. LfD / 2006

08970374
 
Apartment building in a residential complex August-Bebel-Platz 7
(map)
1927 (apartment building) Sparsely decorated plastered facade, ensemble with August-Bebel-Platz 6, 8, 9 and Baumeister-Günther-Straße 13, each building in the row with a different facade design, historically important, historical and documentary value as an object of social housing

In continuation of the project for the construction of small communal apartments (number 9 and Baumeister-Günther-Straße 13), three more houses were built on the square. Again based on designs by Ernst Riedel, number 8 was built in 1926-1927, number 7 in 1927 and house number 6 in the corner of Wasserturmstrasse in the 1928-1929 span. The construction of the master builder Wilhelm Günther from Engelsdorf took over the execution of the sparsely decorated plastered buildings. The fact that each building has a different facade design is remarkable. In the row buildings there were previously six apartments, in the corner house nine apartments. With the north-west development of August-Bebel-Platz an interesting ensemble of municipal housing to alleviate the housing shortage in Germany in general and Engelsdorf in particular from the 1920s has been preserved. LfD / 2006

09300062
 
Apartment building in a residential complex August-Bebel-Platz 8
(map)
1926-1927 (apartment building) Sparsely decorated plastered facade, ensemble with August-Bebel-Platz 6, 7, 9 and Baumeister-Günther-Straße 13, each building in the row of houses with a different facade design, historically important, document of social housing by the Engelsdorf community in the 1920s

In continuation of the project for the construction of small communal apartments (number 9 and Baumeister-Günther-Straße 13), three more houses were built on the square. Again based on designs by Ernst Riedel, number 8 was built in 1926-1927, number 7 in 1927 and house number 6 in the corner of Wasserturmstrasse in the 1928-1929 span. The construction of the master builder Wilhelm Günther from Engelsdorf took over the execution of the sparsely decorated plastered buildings. The fact that each building has a different facade design is remarkable. In the row buildings there were previously six apartments, in the corner house nine apartments. With the north-west development of August-Bebel-Platz an interesting ensemble of municipal housing to alleviate the housing shortage in Germany in general and Engelsdorf in particular from the 1920s has been preserved. LfD / 2006

09300063
 
Apartment building in a residential complex August-Bebel-Platz 9
(map)
1921-1922 (apartment building) Sparingly decorated plastered facade, ensemble with August-Bebel-Platz 6, 7, 8 and Baumeister-Günther-Straße 13, each building in the row of houses with a different facade design, historically important, document of social housing

As part of a municipal program for the construction of small apartments, the double tenement house was built in 1921-1922 based on a design by the architect Ernst Riedel from Leipzig-Schleußig. Master builder Wilhelm Günther was responsible for the execution. An aid loan for the three-storey terraced houses applied for by the municipality of Engelsdorf from the district administration was approved as an exception because the buildings are located on a directly illuminated forecourt and each apartment should have an exit. From the point of view of the authorities, Engelsdorf was somewhere between a rural community with urban development and a village. A special feature for social housing is the rental and merging of two small apartments for the doctor Dr. Hüsgen. The simple plastered façades typical of the time are accentuated by the highlighted staircase projection to the plaza, the Baumeister-Günther-Straße 13 building has a rear entrance. The construction project with the houses August-Bebel-Platz 6-8 was not continued until 1926. LfD / 2006

09300064
 
Mill, with inscription plaque
Mill, with inscription plaque Baalsdorfer Strasse 167
(map)
inscribed 1913 (mill), inscribed 1913 (inscription panel) Plastered facade typical of the time, technical monument, landscaping near the Engelsdorf water tower, of importance in terms of urban planning and the history of local development, value for popular education 08970373
 
Apartment building in a residential complex, with a front garden Baumeister-Günther-Strasse 13
(map)
1921-1922 (tenement house) Sparsely decorated plastered facade, ensemble with August-Bebel-Platz 6, 7, 8 and 9, each building in the row of houses with a different facade design, historically important, document of social housing 09300061
 
Water tower
Water tower Engelsdorfer Strasse -
(map)
1913 (water tower) on an octagonal floor plan, with a mezzanine and a domed roof with multiple curves (access next to the farm Engelsdorfer Straße 250), a technical monument that is visible from afar and characterizes the landscape, a landmark of Engelsdorf and an important historical testimony to the development of the town

In 1913 a free-standing water tower was completed on the outskirts of the village on a small hill at the site of the Engelsdorf windmill. With a total height of almost 48 meters, it rises as a landmark above an octagonal floor plan and is made of solid construction. The light-colored plaster characterizes the building with its shaft tapering towards the top, the cantilevered part of the container and the neo-baroque shape of the roof along with a lantern and weather vane. The effect of the compactness of the technical building is softened by a pilaster structure in the middle section and a toothed cornice, but especially by the elegant curves of the top. Narrow, upright rectangular windows allow only a small amount of light to be seen inside, and platforms are inserted at heights of ten and twenty-one meters. The cylindrically riveted steel container 26 meters above ground level is designed as a suspended floor construction with a capacity of around 400 cubic meters. For the years 1949/1950, 1986 and 1991 there are documents that report on intended renovation and value maintenance work, in 1950 it was reported that the weather vane was secured after a crash. The reconstruction plans in 1986 ran as a "major repair" measure. The aim of the work in 1991 was to secure the water tank, as it was not possible to start up under full load at the time. In 2017, the Engelsdorf Tower was one of the three water towers still used by the Leipzig Waterworks in the city. Technical monument, significant in terms of the history of construction and technology, dominant urban development, weighty testimony to the development of the town in Engelsdorf. LfD / 2017

08970322
 
House and outbuildings Engelsdorfer Strasse 250
(map)
19th century (farmhouse) Single-storey house with a half-hipped roof, small 19th century homestead on the outskirts near the water tower, of importance in terms of local development 08970377
 
Residential house in open development Engelsdorfer Strasse 251
(map)
1902 (residential building) Plastered facade, half-hip roof, with a subtle historical facade design, of importance in terms of building history

Bernhard Scheffler turned to the building tradesman M. Somieski to design and build a house with an annex. The building was erected in 1902 and in 1931/1932 a shop extension was added in the front yard for the bicycle dealer Albin Scheffler. As early as 1933-1935, an application for an oriel annex and a free-standing exhibition house in the front garden followed. In 1945, plans for furnishing a small apartment under the roof were submitted; there was already a larger apartment on the other two floors. The plastered facade rises above a clinker base, which is structured by plaster grooves and artificial stone window frames as well as sills with small cast consoles. The tiled half-hip roof seems to be adapted to the rural character. As the first building on the road to Mölkau, the house marks the development of the town around 1900 in Engelsdorf, it has an architectural and development historical value, the Engelsdorf water tower and the mill are close by. LfD / 2014, 2015

08970376
 
Apartment house in a corner location and formerly closed development Engelsdorfer Strasse 276
(map)
1927-1928 (tenement house) with shop, plastered clinker facade, very interesting building in the style of Expressionism with an elaborate facade design, value in terms of building history and local development

The remarkable, interesting residential and commercial building, which was built in 1927/1928 on the site of the former poor house - which had been demolished "a long time ago" due to dilapidation, is presented in the Art Deco style. Architect Ernst Riedel from Leipzig-Schleußig sent the Engelsdorf municipal administration the plans. The locally known Wilhelm Günther was responsible for the execution of the half-open corner building. Behind the plastered facade, which is heavily structured by iron clinker brick, there are or were two apartments on each floor, a residential unit under the roof, a shop area on the ground floor and a bathroom in the basement. Renovation after the conversion of residential property in 2006. LfD / 2012, 2014

08970321
 
Apartment building in half-open development Engelsdorfer Strasse 278
(map)
1905 (tenement) with shop, clinker brick facade, at the interface between farmsteads and urban expansion area, of significance in terms of building history and the history of local development

In December 1892, the building application for a residential building and a stable with a wash house was issued by the builder Friedrich Karl Huhn, who in April 1905 also submitted the building application for a front residential building on the property. The three-storey residential and commercial building with a shop (apartment) and formerly with a gate, which was converted into "commercial rooms" in 1932. In 1951, installation of living spaces in the attic, design by master builder Wilhelm Günther on behalf of Erich Schulze. Above a plastered ground floor, brick facade with a strict rhythmic structure with artificial stone and plaster structure (unfortunately the stucco below and above the windows of the piano nobile has been lost). Very beautiful eaves with a toothed cutting ledge and stucco consoles from the Wilhelminian era, the equipment of the stairwell accessible via the courtyard has been partially preserved. LfD / 2009

08970320
 
Apartment building in open development Engelsdorfer Strasse 282
(map)
1901-1902 (tenement house) with shop, clinker brick facade, appealing historicist building as a document of local development, of importance in terms of building history

From 1901 to 1902, master baker Hermann Scheffler had a tenement house built with two apartments on each floor; instead of the initially planned gate passage, a shop that still exists today was set up. The construction company M. Somieski from the neighboring Sommerfeld took over the implementation, only a few decorative elements reveal the Art Nouveau influence. Behind the windows of the clinker brick facade over the plastered ground floor, divided by colored shaped stones and decorated with artificial stone elements, are the two living rooms. The kitchen and chamber face the courtyard, the outside toilets were probably replaced by a toilet in 1965. At the same time, a side building (not a monument) was built on the property in 1901/1902, and the slate-roofed barn built by master bricklayer Karl Ebner from 1889 to 1890 for landowner Robert Schneider was demolished in 1939 because it was dilapidated. Retained from the original equipment. Inside, the original staircase with Art Nouveau stencil painting and the apartment entrance doors have been preserved, as well as the historic shop front. LfD / 2009

08970319
 
House of a three-sided courtyard
House of a three-sided courtyard Engelsdorfer Strasse 287
(map)
19th century (farmhouse) Residential house with half-hipped roof and half-timbered upper floor, part of a typical local former courtyard, historically important 08970276
 
Barn and side building on the street side as well as front garden and remains of the paving of a four-sided courtyard Engelsdorfer Strasse 288
(map)
1872 (barn), 1865 (side building) Almost unchanged components of a typical local courtyard, historically significant, defining the image in the old location 08970318
 
Side building, barn and courtyard paving and front garden of a three-sided courtyard Engelsdorfer Strasse 291
(map)
1923 (side building), 2nd half of the 19th century (barn) Farm building brick buildings, a courtyard that characterizes the street scene with many original details, of architectural significance 08970275
 
Residential house, attached stable building, side building, barn and gate pillar of a four-sided courtyard Engelsdorfer Strasse 309
(map)
19th century (residential building) Residential house with plastered facade and half-hipped roof, closed preserved and typical local courtyard in the center of the village, of historical importance 08970274
 
Rectory and enclosure wall Engelsdorfer Strasse 310
(map)
18th century (rectory) Plastered half-timbered building with a half-hipped roof, fencing as a plastered clay wall, stately building of the original town center development near the church, worth remembering, of architectural and local significance 08970260
 
Residential house, two side buildings, barn, gate system and front gardens of a four-sided courtyard Engelsdorfer Strasse 311
(map)
19th century (farmhouse), before 1898 (side building), 1898-1900 (barn) Residential house with plastered facade and half-hipped roof, four-sided courtyard in the center of the village that has been preserved in a closed, historically important building 08970273
 
Residential house, side building, barn, gate entrance (with gate), front garden and garden pavilion of a three-sided courtyard Engelsdorfer Strasse 313
(map)
19th century (farmhouse) Residential house with plastered facade and half-hipped roof, closed preserved complex, one of the largest farms in the village, of architectural significance 08970272
 
House of a farm Engelsdorfer Strasse 314
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (farmhouse) Plastered facade with a crooked hip roof, the last well-preserved part of a courtyard, of architectural significance 08970313
 
Residential house, attached stable building, side building, barn and front gardens of a four-sided courtyard Engelsdorfer Strasse 317
(map)
around 1850 (farmhouse), 1892 (stable), 1907 reconstruction (barn) Residential house plastered construction with half-timbered upper floor and gable roof, typical four-sided courtyard, an important part of the Engelsdorf location, of architectural significance 08970271
 
Residential house in open development, with front garden Engelsdorfer Strasse 323
(map)
around 1900 (residential building) historicizing plastered facade, appealing Wilhelminian style building with decorative shapes typical of the time, document of the development of the place, of architectural significance 08970270
 
Apartment building in a corner and in open development Engelsdorfer Strasse 330
(map)
1906-1907 (tenement house) with corner shutter, historicizing plastered facade with corner bay window, corner building that characterizes the street scene, evidence of the urbanization of the village, of importance in terms of building history and the history of local development

The residential building with a powerful emphasis on the corner and shop area on the ground floor was built between summer 1906 and spring 1907 for the local councilor Paul Mattheis by the local construction business of M. Somieski as a corner house on today's Sommerlindenstrasse. In 2005, as part of the renovation, three apartments were installed in the roof area and balconies were erected on the front of the courtyard; two Art Nouveau tiled stoves were to be retained. Unfortunately, the architectural effect of the plastered facade is severely impaired by the uniform color coating, and the elegant structure through molded artificial stone parts can only be read at second glance. A spire formed the upper end of the polygonal bay window on the four-story corner, which extends over three floors. The effective corner building has a historical value and a historical value. LfD / 2014, 2015

08970311
 
Residential house, annexed side building, two barns attached to one another, further side building, gate entrance, garden pavilion and front gardens with enclosure of a four-sided courtyard Engelsdorfer Strasse 338
(map)
19th century (farmhouse) Residential house with plastered facade and half-hipped roof, single-storey side building at the entrance to the courtyard and plastered, wrought-iron front garden enclosure, closed courtyard at the former entrance to the town, of architectural significance 08970312
 
House and barn of a three-sided farm Engelsdorfer Strasse 339
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (farmhouse), before 1875 (barn), 1892-1893, extension (barn) Residential house plastered facade and half-hipped roof, upper floor half-timbered, barn plastered building with clinker brick structure, closed courtyard complex, of historical importance 08970268
 
Enclosing a front yard Engelsdorfer Strasse 340
(map)
around 1895 (enclosure) historicistic wrought iron enclosure, of importance in terms of the history of handicrafts 08970267
 
Former municipal office (without extension), with fencing Engelsdorfer Strasse 345
(map)
around 1895 (municipal office) historicizing plastered facade, attractive facade design with floating gable, of architectural and local significance 08970266
 
Double apartment building in open development, formerly with a restaurant Engelsdorfer Strasse 351; 353
(card)
1905-1906 (double tenement house) historicizing clinker brick facade, building from the turn of the century around 1900 that characterizes the street scene, of importance in terms of local development

The builder for the tenement house built between 1905 and 1906 was the Engelsdorf master carpenter Hermann Böhme. Master mason Arthur Fichtner was responsible for executing the plans made by architect Gustav Bobach. For a long time, the restaurant "Zum Böhmerwald" was set up on the ground floor. In 1908 the building application for a social hall was rejected by the city administration because it saw no need for it. Plans for an open colonnade on the property, a defeat building for storing bicycles (1909) and a dance hall building (1910) were also rejected. The last project in particular promised the construction of a spacious entertainment establishment with a large dance floor, a surrounding gallery and stage. Renowned innkeepers include Hermann Böhme, Otto Möbius and Friedrich Reupsch. In 1971 the building application for the conversion of the restaurant into a day care center for two groups of 25 children and the provision of a construction sum of around 30,000 marks was made. The apartment building itself is a very simple rental and commercial building with a yellow clinker brick facade over a plastered ground floor, artificial stone integration. The equipment is only partially preserved. LfD / 2007

08970264
 
Group of houses in open development, with front garden and pergola Engelsdorfer Strasse 352; 354; 356; 358; 360; 362
(card)
1933-1935 (tenement) Plastered facade, singular building from the 1930s with two distinctive staircase towers and multiple windows, architect: Johannes Koppe, of importance in terms of building history and site development

As one of the most interesting groups of residential buildings in Leipzig, the Engelsdorfer Strasse 352 to 362 complex originally planned with 20 houses, formerly Bahnhofstrasse and Karl-Marx-Strasse 8-18, was built between 1933 and 1935. The client was the Leipziger Speicherei- & Lager-Gesellschaft mbH, whose plans were signed with Hellriegel. The drafts were provided by the Leipzig architect Johannes Koppe, whose office also provided the static calculations that A. Kunath signed. Applications were submitted for single-family houses to be built adjacent to others, which were to be sold or temporarily rented. Thus, individual property owners will be named later. The district main team pointed out that in the area of ​​the partial development plan E open construction is to be provided with single and semi-detached houses, and terraced houses could also be permitted in individual places by way of a special permit. A two-storey structure and the installation of an apartment in the attic was possible. Floor plans of the individual floors, for example at number 352, show two cellars and a laundry room with anteroom in the basement, a room with a kitchen-living room, toilet and attic in the attic and an anteroom, kitchen, bathroom and two rooms on the two middle floors. In the second half of the 20th century, various small conversions and extensions were made, as well as one or two rear extensions. Externally, the houses appear as a structural unit, stretched between two striking, semicircular staircase towers at the corners. Two house entrances with natural stone frames typical of the time, transverse narrow ribbon windows and the folding shutters on individual windows give rhythm to the block, which is complemented by the front garden, fencing and pergolas with natural stone pillars. The plastered facades themselves without plastic decoration and plaster structure. Some of the furnishings have been preserved. LfD / 2009

08970457
 
Apartment building (structural unit with no. 361) in semi-open development Engelsdorfer Strasse 359
(map)
1906 (half of a double tenement house) with shop, yellow clinker facade, double tenement house with number 361, stately building in an important urban area, significant in terms of local development

The building application submitted in February 1906 for a double apartment building to be built was initially rejected, primarily on the grounds that the construction of both residential buildings “according to a uniform plan” was not guaranteed. In April, the postal agent and client Franz Hermann Kühnicke came back and received the building permit the following month (at that time Bahnhofstrasse 19). Master builder Wilhelm Günther took over the construction management, who was also involved in the execution in addition to the Sommerfeld construction business M. Somieski. At the same time, an outbuilding with a laundry room and wooden stables was built, and a shop was set up in the front building. On September 12, 1912, the application for a final revision was made. The clinker brick facade above the plastered ground floor is divided by molded artificial stone, the furnishings largely preserved. Renovation of the semi-detached house 359/361 probably in 2009/2010, including the conversion of the shop for residential purposes. Together with number 361, an important corner location in terms of urban planning, building and district development history as evidence of the historic expansion between the old location and the station area. LfD / 2012

08970456
 
Apartment building (structural unit with no. 359) in half-open development and in a corner location Engelsdorfer Strasse 361
(map)
1906 (half of a double tenement house) with corner shop, yellow clinker brick facade, double tenement house with number 359, residential and commercial building in an exposed corner location, of importance in terms of local development, formerly also two railroad cars on the property

As an urban focal point in the "Bahnhofsviertel", the double tenement building Bahnhofstrasse 19/21, today Engelsdorfer Strasse 359/361, designed in 1906 according to plans by architect Gustav Bobach for the Leipzig-based Gustav Adolf Dietrich (client and contractor) appears. In 1964, the VEB Kommunalewohnverwaltung Engelsdorf was granted a building permit for repair work on the inside including the installation of a toilet. The appalling and scale-breaking apartment extension in the attic of number 361 was approved for use in May 1969. Refurbishment of the house in 2009/2010, whereby two historic train cars in the garden were removed. The clinker building with plastered ground floor in half-open development and formerly a shop on the ground floor, interesting plaster and artificial stone decoration adorns the corner building, which can be seen from far. In large parts, the simple equipment has been retained. A building that characterizes the intersection and is of importance for the development of the district. LfD / 2009, 2012

09302772
 
Apartment building (structural unit with no. 367) in semi-open development and in a corner location Engelsdorfer Strasse 365
(map)
1906-1908 (tenement house) richly structured plastered facade, building that shapes the street scene with very elaborate facade design, reform style architecture, evidence of the urbanization of the village, prominent corner location, of significance in terms of building history and local development

The front building at the confluence of the street An der Grundschule is representative and unbeatably effective. It was built between 1906 and 1908 by master bricklayer and construction business owner Michael Somieski on his own behalf. The property, which was formerly under Bahnhofstraße 23, was owned by the Somiesk heirs in 1911, and in 1922 Marie Rosa married Zschau, née Zschau. Somieski from Sommerfeld named as the owner. Execution of the now no longer existing enclosure probably in 1930, the construction of a roller building in 1936 after plans made two years earlier. 1987/1988 plans for renovation and renovation as well as loft extension. Two mighty standing bay windows with balconies stretched between them and a very high roof mark the corner of the house built on an acute-angled plot. On the side fronts, an only slightly protruding bay window with a curved end and three-quarter columns placed on the two upper floors accentuates the plastered facade. A garland decoration made of molded artificial stone gives the building an almost festive character. Attention should be drawn to the rare plaster structure of the base area. Originally only floor chambers and the drying floor under the multi-sectioned, strikingly high roof. Formerly shops on Hauptstrasse, three apartments per floor on the upper floors. Decor influenced by Art Nouveau, including stucco in the entrance area, belonging to Engelsdorfer Straße 367. LfD / 2009

08970263
 
Tenement house (structural unit with no. 365) in semi-open development Engelsdorfer Strasse 367
(map)
1906-1909 (tenement house) richly structured plastered façade, high-quality residential construction in the extension area of ​​the Engelsdorf station district, reform style architecture, of architectural significance

The local building tradesman and building business owner Michael Somieski also acted as an entrepreneur and executor for the new residential building applied for in May 1906. Due to delays, the building shell inspection could not take place until the end of 1908 and completion in the first quarter of the following year by the client's heirs, represented by Anna Somieski. The plastered, elegant street front of the building in semi-open development has a slightly protruding four-axis central projection with garland decoration. The design of the tiled roof appears refined; the house is accessed through the courtyard. In March 1998, the building permit was granted for renovation, modernization, loft extensions and balcony extensions based on documents from the architect Peter Drube. The seldom found plinth plaster has been restored. Significant in terms of building history together with the neighboring corner house, testimony to the development of the Engelsdorf station district. LfD / 2014

08970262
 
Apartment building (structural unit with no. 371) in half-open development Engelsdorfer Strasse 369
(map)
1900-1901 (tenement house) historicizing plastered facade, building that shapes the street scene, double tenement house with number 371, of significance in terms of building history and the history of local development

The drawings for a house to be built were approved in October 1900, the contractor was M. Somieski from Engelsdorf. Behind the "classic" facade with an emphasis on the middle of the three floors, two apartments per floor were installed. Artificial stone molded parts structure the plaster facade, formerly also some stucco decor. In 1923 repair work was planned, however: "Nothing happens" is indicated by the records from the building file. Renovation, loft extension and balcony extension took place in 1997 and 1998 according to plans by architect Peter Drube from Leipzig. Unfortunately, partial plastering of the clinker gable, which in its original design (see number 371) is so very rare in Leipzig. The building's appearance is particularly impaired by the reduced facade design. LfD / 2013, 2014

08970455
 
Tenement house (structural unit with no. 369) in half-open development Engelsdorfer Strasse 371
(map)
1902-1904 (tenement house) historicizing plastered facade, a building from the turn of the century around 1900 that characterizes the street scene, double tenement house with number 369, of importance in terms of building history and local development

Michael Somieski from Sommerfeld was also in charge of the property, which was formerly Bahnhofstrasse 29: as financier, executor and site manager. Shortly before the turn of the year 1902/1903, the royal administration approved the construction of the apartment building and in the summer of 1904 the building authorities permitted the building to be used. Two apartments were planned per floor with two rooms, a corridor, a chamber and kitchen as well as toilets in the stairwell. In addition to the tenement house, a stable building and the wash house were built. June 1998 Approval for redevelopment to the applicant Dirk Hoffsky. The plastered facade with artificial stone elements and stucco consoles on the first upper floor. The gable front made of exposed clinker brickwork with its strict grid is seldom encountered (see number 369). Architecturally significant testimony in the station district. LfD / 2014

08970454
 
Post office, with attached rear building and side wall Engelsdorfer Strasse 379
(map)
1924-1925 (post office), 1925 (garage) Plastered facade with corner core, interesting building in Art Deco style from the mid-1920s, formerly also the residence of the Engelsdorf teacher Fritz Winter, of architectural and local significance

The Leipzig architect Ernst Riedel took on the design work, static calculations and construction management for the rental post house commissioned by the municipality of Engelsdorf, the execution of which was awarded to the local master builder Wilhelm Günther. The building application was issued on September 25, 1924, and final acceptance took place on September 22 of the following year. An emergency apartment under the roof was already set up in 1925 and a second attic apartment was installed in 1936/1937. The year 1925 must be entered for the garage building on the courtyard side. The initiator of the establishment of a post office in Engelsdorf was the Oberpostdirektion. In the building description of the application, the municipal administration first refers to the unfavorably laid out building site that determined the position of the building. The front gardens on Bahnhofstrasse had been drawn in due to the widening of the street and the main front was now in line with the building, while the gable front was set back from the edge of .... street. This created a forecourt "which takes the traffic to the post office without significantly disrupting the traffic". The move to the broken corner is described in the building file as "essential for postal technical reasons ..." as well as a better overview of the entry and exit of the Postautomobile is desired. There seemed to be detailed reasons why a corner building should not be built. From street level, a maximum of five steps after the counter room came into consideration; as a result, this public space was one step lower than the other, non-public postrooms. Apartments were planned for the upper floors. On the opposite area between Bahnhofstrasse and the future railway overpass, a municipal green area was planned. Large arched windows between blind arcades characterize the ground floor zone of the representative three-storey building, whose eaves side is bracketed at the corners by a round core and whose stately roof is accentuated by roof houses with gable ends. The building stands on a base made of natural stone blocks. The basis of the artistic design are forms of the neo-renaissance, which Riedel uses in an economical but effective way. Incidentally, the building is comparable to the post office in Leipzig-Mockau. On the courtyard side, a small garage was added in 1925 (for a post bus and post carts) and the paving in both the courtyard and the footpaths in front of the building have been preserved. The preserved enclosure wall extends to Engelsdorfer Straße 377. The great building, initiated by the community, is effective in terms of urban development, has architectural, architectural and historical significance, and as a former post office it is also rarity and memorable. LfD / 2014, 2015

08970261
 
Apartment building in a corner location and in open development, with restaurant and bowling alley (with bowling room) and outbuildings in the courtyard Ernst-Guhr-Strasse 1
(map)
1910-1911 (apartment building), 1924 (bowling alley), 1927 (restaurant rooms) Plastered facade typical of the time, reform style architecture, street-shaping construction of local historical importance

On July 5, 1910, Commissioner Ernst Guhr submitted a second building application for a corner house, designed in 1909 by the Leipzig architect and master builder Ernst Riedel. The execution was placed in the hands of the local builder Wilhelm Günther. In addition to the restoration rooms on the ground floor, the garden and front garden were also used for the bar in 1912, and applications were made for the construction of a bowling alley and a colonnade. A new building application in 1924 by the innkeeper Otto Schilde was submitted with an additional reason: "The bowling alley is to be set up as a suitable undressing and washing room for the users of the sports field, thereby helping with urgent needs". In 1927 the restaurant rooms were expanded and an apartment was installed in the attic. Bomb damage from the Second World War was probably not repaired until 1949/1950 under the innkeeper Alfred Sohr. Refurbishment of existing buildings from 2005. LfD / 2005

08970371
 
Residential house in open development, with lack of laundry in the basement and fencing Gartenstrasse 3
(map)
1928-1929 (residential house), 1928-1929 (lack of laundry) old location Sommerfeld, plastered facade with clinker brick structure, hipped roof, interesting architecture in the style of the 1930s, of importance in terms of building history and the history of local development

Wilhelm Günther and his construction company are responsible for the house with four small apartments that the municipality of Engelsdorf had built in 1928/1929. Architect Ernst Riedel contributed plans and statics. Each tenant could dispose of 70 square meters, divided into three rooms, eat-in kitchen (with exit), hallway and bathroom with toilet, for the basement the installation of a laundry room and installation of an electric laundry roller (number 11191 Seiler system) were intended. The two-storey building, set back from the street front, has a plastered facade over a higher brick base, an eaves made of exposed clinker bricks and a centrally arranged, distinctive central projection, which accommodates the house entrance and the stairwell with the window glazing from the building period and opens into a triangular gable. Renovation work took place between 2004 and 2008, and parts of the original furnishings have been preserved. The front garden and the historical enclosure belong to the ensemble. The testimony value as social communal housing from the end of the twenties of the 20th century is unaffected. The building has an architectural historical value as social housing as the first third of the last century and a document of the local development. LfD / 2016, 2017

08970447
 
Villa with front garden Gartenstrasse 15
(map)
1929-1930 (villa) old location Sommerfeld, plastered facade, half-hip roof, built for the box manufacturer Gustav Petermann, attractively designed structure with half-timbered bay, in the local style, of architectural significance

At the end of 1929, the designing architect Paul Kaldrack from Engelsdorf applied for a single-family house to be built for the Engelsdorf box manufacturer Gustav Petermann. On June 1 of the following year, the announcement "The new building is under roof" was issued and the final inspection took place a week before Christmas in 1930. Karl Fuchs is well known for statics. Gustav Petermann is later referred to as the owner of a steam sawmill (1936). For 1950/1951 the application for the extension of a garage is on record, for 1985/1986 the project of a modernization together with value preservation measures. The villa building on a corner plot of land facing Schneeballweg is characterized by a high, multifaceted roof landscape, exposed half-timbering, a striking corner bay window and a cornice made of Rochlitz porphyry tuff. Different window formats, the wooden eaves zone and a built-on vestibule as a house entrance complete the appearance of the building, which is committed to the homeland style. The front yard and fencing make a significant contribution to the pleasant overall appearance. The architecturally most interesting and sophisticated private residential building of the 1920s on Sommerfeld's corridor has architectural and artistic value. LfD / 2016, 2017

08970252
 
Factory building Gaswerksweg 3
(map)
1920s (factory) Clinker brick facade, typical industrial architecture of the 1920s, of local and architectural significance 08970465
 
Factory owner's villa Güterbahnhofstrasse 1
(map)
around 1910 (manufacturer's villa) Clinker brick facade with half-timbered bay, with numerous original details, part of the former Engelsdorf carbon dioxide plant near Leipzig, of local historical importance 08970163
 
Administration building of the railway, with rear building attached to the rear Güterbahnhofstrasse 2
(map)
around 1890 (administration building) Two-tone clinker brick facade, of importance in terms of building history and local development 08970164
 
Official residence in open development and rear building Güterbahnhofstrasse 4
(map)
after 1900 (official residence) Clinker brick facade, part of the former Engelsdorf carbon dioxide plant near Leipzig, of significance in terms of building history and site development 08970165
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement houses (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Hans-Weigel-Strasse 19; 21; 23; 25
(card)
1910-1911 (apartment building) Plastered facade, components of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance

The tenement group was commissioned by the building cooperative for railway employees in Leipzig-Engeldorf eGmbH according to plans by the Leipzig architect FW Ernst Riedel, who was also the site manager. For the semi-detached house 19/21 (residential building group B) an application was made on March 1st, 1910, for the residential building group A (number 23/25) on February 19th, the approval for use is dated March 23rd of the following year. An expert opinion was sent to the royal administration in mid-March 1910 by the Saxon Homeland Security, the regional association for the care of native nature, art and construction. For the “colony of civil servants' apartments” there is “the remark that both the floor plans and elevations as well as the entire site planning signify a very significant artistic and structural advance compared to the Wahren-Lindenthal colony based on the same conditions, and that the overall impression the Engelsdorf complex would gain even more value if the numerous petty motifs that still exist were removed in favor of a summarizing, simpler grouping ”. The light-colored plastered facades are reduced compared to the design, but appear differently for each house. The upstream staircases at 19-23 seem a bit unfortunate. Inside, numbers 19 and 21 appear as classic couples, number 25 as a corner building with three apartments and number 23 with two of them, but with modern eat-in kitchens. All houses had lawns in front of them, the course of the street was followed by rows of trees according to the design drawings. The effect of a row of trees accompanying the visible sides is still best seen today in Wasserturmstrasse, on which a facade of corner house number 25 is located. This building is in a semi-open development, as according to official requirements a ventilation gap had to be provided for the interior of the residential complex. All houses have been renovated. A building historical value has been determined for the building of social housing around 1910, it is part of a spacious settlement. LfD / 2019

08970350
 
Memorial to the fallen of World War 1 Hans-Weigel-Strasse 29 (near)
(map)
after 1918 (Monument to Fallen) Granite stone with inscription, of local historical importance 08970378
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement houses (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Harpstedter Strasse 8; 10; 12; 14
(card)
1912-1913 (apartment building) Plastered facade, with a passage, as part of the settlement of an employers' liability insurance association of particular architectural and socio-historical value 08970351
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement houses (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Harpstedter Strasse 16; 18; 20; 22; 24; 26
(card)
1913-1914, number 16-24 (apartment building), 1918-1920, number 26 (apartment building) Plastered facade, with passage, components of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 08970344
 
Motorway bridge over the A 14 Herzberger Strasse
(map)
re. 1936 (road bridge) In terms of technology and traffic history, it is of particular importance as one of the few bridge structures on the Reichsautobahn that have largely been preserved in their original state, rarity 08970325
 
Subject aggregate Friedhof Sommerfeld, with the following individual monuments: cemetery chapel and grave monuments (see also individual monument document - Obj. 08970195) and avenue as well as with the following aggregate part: enclosure wall Herzberger Strasse
(map)
Mid 19th century (cemetery), around 1900 (cemetery chapel) old location Sommerfeld, chapel a yellow clinker brick building in the arched style of the late 19th century, tombs from the 19th and 20th centuries, of architectural and local significance 09305403
 
Individual monument and aggregate: cemetery chapel and tombs (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305403) Herzberger Strasse
(map)
around 1900 (cemetery chapel), inscribed 1905 (tomb Fam. Brösel) old location Sommerfeld, chapel a yellow clinker brick building in the arched style of the late 19th century, tombs from the 19th and 20th centuries, of architectural and local significance 08970195
 
Motorway bridge over the A 14 Hirschfelder Strasse
(map)
1938-1939 (motorway bridge) Girder bridge with central support, of particular importance in terms of technology and traffic history as one of the few largely original bridge structures on the Reichsautobahn, a rarity 08970308
 
Administration building (No. 7d), factory hall (No. 7c), gate system and pavilion in the garden of a factory Hugo-Aurig-Strasse 7c; 7d
(card)
1921 (administration) Stately administrative building, a yellow brick building with a mansard hipped roof, a factory building with a yellow brick facade, a garden pavilion with an onion dome, of architectural and local importance 08970309
 
Pankratiuskirche Engelsdorf: Church (with furnishings), churchyard with enclosure wall, tombs and memorials for those who fell in World War I, as well as bells
More pictures
Pankratiuskirche Engelsdorf: Church (with furnishings), churchyard with enclosure wall, tombs and memorials for those who fell in World War I, as well as bells Kirchweg 100
(map)
1863-1870, older in core (church), 1954 (bell), 19th century (tomb), around 1900 (tomb), after 1918 (memorial for fallen soldiers) The core of the Romanesque choir tower church, remodeled in the 19th century, hard cast bells from the Protestant Kirchentag 1954, of architectural and local significance 08970259
 
Wikidata-logo.svg
The whole of the Engelsdorf railway estate, includes the following individual monuments: Hans-Weigel-Strasse 19, 21, 23, 25, tenement houses (obj. 08970350), Harpstedter Strasse 8, 10, 12, 14, tenement houses (obj. 08970350), Harpstedter Strasse 16, 18 , 20, 22, 24, 26, tenement houses (obj. 08970344), Klingerplatz (without house number), lamp with bench (obj. 08970360), Klingerplatz 1, tenement house (obj. 08970364), Klingerplatz 2, tenement house (obj. 08970363) , Klingerplatz 3, apartment building (property 09299605), Klingerplatz 4, apartment building (property 09299606), Klingerplatz 5, apartment building (property 08970359), Klingerstraße 1, apartment building (property 09299649), Klingerstraße 2, apartment building (property 08970326) , Klingerstraße 3, tenement house (obj. 08970316), Klingerstraße 4, tenement house (obj. 08970327), Klingerstrasse 5, tenement house (obj. 08970370), Klingerstraße 6, tenement house (obj. 08970328), Klingerstraße 7, tenement house (obj. 08970369) , Klingerstraße 8, tenement house (obj. 08970329), Klingerstraße 9, tenement house (obj. 08970368), Klingerstraße 10, tenement house (obj. 089703 30), Klingerstraße 11, tenement house (Obj. 08970367), Klingerstrasse 12, tenement house (obj. 08970332), Klingerstrasse 13, tenement house (obj. 08970366), Klingerstrasse 14, tenement house (obj. 08970331), Klingerstrasse 15, tenement house (obj. 08970365), Klingerstraße 16, tenement house (obj. 08970333), Klingerstrasse 17, tenement house (obj. 08970358), Klingerstrasse 18, tenement house (obj. 08970334), Klingerstrasse 19, tenement house (obj. 08970357), Klingerstrasse 20, tenement house (obj. 08970335), Klingerstraße 21, tenement house (obj. 08970356), Klingerstraße 22, tenement house (obj. 08970336), Klingerstraße 23, tenement house (obj. 08970355), Klingerstraße 24, 26, double tenement house (obj. 08970337), Klingerstraße 25, tenement house (obj. 08970354), Klingerstraße 27, tenement house ( Obj. 08970353), Klingerstraße 28, Tenement House (Obj. 08970338), Klingerstrasse 29, Tenement House (Obj. 08970352), Klingerstraße 30, Tenement House (Obj. 08970339), Klingerstraße 32, Tenement House (Obj. 08970340), Klingerstraße 34, Tenement House ( Obj. 08970341), Klingerstraße 36, tenement house (Obj. 089703) Klingerplatz 1; 2; 3; 4; 5
(card)
1910-1932 (settlement), 1910-1911 (Hans-Weigel-Str 11-17, apartment building), around 1915 (Reichsbahnerstraße 2, apartment building), 1910-1912 (Schmuckplatz) A settlement for railway workers in Leipzig-Engelsdorf built in various construction phases (from 1910 to the 1930s), the first of its kind in Saxony, of importance in terms of local development, building history and urban planning, and also important for local development in connection with the construction and expansion of the railway facilities in Engelsdorf, Klingerplatz as a public green space in the center of the facility 08970466
 
Individual monument and aggregate: jewelry space and lamp with bench (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerplatz
(map)
around 1915 (stone bench) of rarity, of architectural and horticultural significance

As a central plaza on the spacious building site of the building cooperative for railway employees in Leipzig-Engelsdorf eGmbH, groups of houses today frame Klingerplatz 3/4/5, Klingerstraße 18/20/22, Klingerplatz 1 and 2 with the corner house on Klingerstraße and Reichsbahnerstraße 7/9/11/13 the fronts. In 1925, the cooperative made six wooden benches available to the local community of Engelsdorf for re-installation, of which the community only took over four. Probably because of the houses on Reichsbahnerstraße, which were not built until 1928 and largely completed the development of the square, a new design of the square was considered sensible or necessary. A meeting minutes of the building committee on March 22, 1928 discussed three offers for lawn edging and recorded the following resolution: "Because of the redesign of the Klingerplatz, the community gardener Bräuer developed his plan on the spot, according to which the plant should go from south-east to north -West-leading path are included and prepared as a lawn, the stock of trees and shrubs are heavily thinned and the system is bordered with 40cm high bars ". Work on the square is also on record in the late spring of 1950: "Some benches are to be set up in the newly refurbished facilities on Klingerplatz", made of oak on a stone base. A street lamp with a surrounding round bench, each made of colored cast concrete, was placed in the center of the jewelry square. Even today, the public square invites you to linger under shady trees, and groups of shrubs that were planted in the 1950s set accents on the lawns. Urban planning and garden historical significance, garden monument. LfD / 2018, 2019

08970360
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerplatz 1
(map)
1912 (apartment building) Plastered facade with bay window, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance

The apartment building on Schmuckplatz was built in a closed row for the owner's own staff from 1912 to 1913, based on a design by the building manager Ernst Steinkopf. Albin and Otto Hentschel carried out the construction on behalf of the building cooperative for the Eisenbahnbediensteten eGmbH. Two rental units were built on the ground floor, three small apartments each on the two upper floors. This smaller division of the upper floors required the revision of the development plan and the creation of "larger free spaces". The reason was the request of the cooperative, "for the many unprofitable workers who only receive a daily wage of 3M, to build apartments at the cheapest possible price". A mighty-looking wooden box bay window, partly clad with slate, dominates the appearance of the simple plastered facade above a low exposed brick plinth. The windows, cornices and plastered mirrors, a profiled groove under the eaves and the simple framing of the house entrance door provide structure. The house has an architectural and socio-historical value. LfD / 2018, 2019

08970364
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerplatz 2
(map)
1912-1913 (apartment building) Plastered facade with bay window, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance

The three-in-hand car stands across the corner, financed in 1912 by the building cooperative for railway employees in Leipzig-Engelsdorf eGmbH, designed by architect Ernst Steinkopf, performed by Messrs Albin and Otto Hentschel's construction company. The plastered façade follows that of the neighboring house at Klingerplatz 1 above a low exposed clinker plinth, and is accentuated on the front of the house by a small house and a slightly more prominent front door portal with a skylight window above. On the facade facing Reichsbahnerstraße, a semicircular bay window continues over the eaves zone. The gable of the corner house is free in the Reichsbahnerstraße, renovation around 1999. As a corner building on Schmuckplatz, the house has not only a function to design urban space but also an architectural and socio-historical significance. LfD / 2018, 2019

08970363
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerplatz 3
(map)
1912-1913 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance

House III of the building application submitted in February 1912 was built as a corner house, the continuation of which never took place on the left-hand side in the escape of today's Dr.-Margarete-Blank-Straße - the gable stands expectantly free. On April 3, 1913, the permission to use is dated. Three apartments per floor were set up, initiated by the building cooperative for railway employees in Leipzig-Engelsdorf eGmbH. Messrs. Schirmer, Jahn and Wucherer were authorized to sign. Architect Ernst Steinkopf from Leipzig-Gohlis took on the design, construction management, statics and accompanied Messrs Otto and Albin Hentschel throughout the implementation work. The middle apartment was initially denied due to poor ventilation. In 1998 closures were applied for by the building authorities. The apartment building stands out due to the recessed street front, which is marked by a polygonal corner bay window over the two upper floors. The red clinker base stands in an attractive contrast to the bright plaster facade, which largely dispenses with decor: the keyword was "social housing". The new windows and the clogged skylight on the front door are not very pleasant. The house has an architectural and socio-historical value. LfD / 2018, 2019

09299605
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerplatz 4
(map)
1912 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance

Messrs Schirmer and Jahn signed the building application on February 5, 1912 for the registered building cooperative of the Engelsdorf railway employees, entrusted architect Ernst Steinkopf with the design work and the construction company Albin & Otto Hentschel with the execution; the final examination took place a few days before Christmas. Two apartments were ready to move into on each floor, each with three rooms, a kitchen, a hall and external toilets. The laundry room was installed in the basement, with a bathroom on the floor that can be used by all tenants in the house. Rear winter gardens (balconies) are from the renovation phase of 1998/1999. A plastered facade with a dark-colored clinker plinth that partially extends to the sills of the ground floor is facing the Schmuckplatz. The restrained facade decoration and a continuous cornice on the second floor also result in a uniform appearance with the neighboring houses at Klingerplatz 3 and 5, which were built around the same time. As a document of social housing in a time of great housing shortage, the building has an architectural and socio-historical value. LfD / 2018, 2019

09299606
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerplatz 5
(map)
1912 (apartment building) with shop on Klingerstraße, plastered facade with corner emphasis, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance

In a charming corner location on Klingerstraße, the bright facade shines above a red clinker base, the house was built between the planning application submitted in February 1912 and registration for the fire fund in October of the same year. The building cooperative for railway employees in Leipzig-Engelsdorf eGmbH acted as the client, represented by the undersigned Schirmer and Jahn. Otto Hentschel signed on behalf of Albin Hentschel for the execution, while architect Ernst Steinkopf signed the plans he had made. The upper floors were each available to three tenants, the ground floor had a small apartment with a living room, chamber, kitchen and an apartment with a storage room and direct access to the corner shop. A total of ten houses built around the same time on Klingerplatz and Klingerstraße formed a courtyard community, the laundry room at Klingerplatz 5 was in the basement. The most important accents of the simple facade in reform style are the polygonal standing bay set in a recessed corner and a mighty plastered gable of the dwelling. The house has an architectural and socio-historical value and is of particular urban interest as an important corner building of the settlement. LfD / 2018, 2019

08970359
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstrasse 1
(map)
1910-1911 (apartment building) with a shop, varied plastered facade, part of a settlement, in an important urban area, of architectural and socio-historical importance

As a head building in a half-open development and on the corner of today's Hans-Weigel-Straße, the residential building with sales on the gable front was built within twelve months, between July 1910 and June 1911. Architect R. Füssel was in the service of the building cooperative for railway employees in Leipzig-Engelsdorf GmbH . At the same time, seven residential and two wash buildings were applied for. A shop extension was built in 1927 according to plans by the leading architect Ernst Steinkopf. The courtyard-side balcony extension received official approval in 1999. The Saxon Heritage Protection, a state association for the care of local nature, art and construction, participated in the design of the generously-sized corner house. In addition to various tips and suggestions for the exterior, specific attention was also given to minimum requirements for interior partition walls, the number of toilets and aspects of sun protection. For example, the inclined corner break with the shop entrance should be replaced by a re-entrant corner. The plinth is unfortunately whitewashed today, in the same color as the facade, eaves, etc. This makes the architecture look boring and random. A contrast is created by the green space in front of Hans-Weigel-Straße, the light-colored plaster and the roof landscape covered with red tiles. Details of the Heimatstyle are the cripple hip and the small polygonal bay window on the gable, which were formerly also some folding shutters. In the facade area on Hans-Weigel-Strasse, the dwarf house above the slightly protruding risalit has been lost, the windows have lost the former elegance of the rung divisions. The building has a historical value. LfD / 2019

09299649
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstrasse 2
(map)
1911 (apartment building) with shop, plastered facade with corner bay window, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance

The client was the building cooperative for railway employees in Leipzig-Engelsdorf GmbH, represented by the chairman Schirmer and the cashier Miersch. In 1911, the architect Ernst Riedel drew up plans for the construction of the residential building, which were implemented after official approval by the architects Langheinrich & Riedel. Together with houses 4 and 6, number 2 belonged to the requested residential group C in block II. In the years 1961-1963, the shop was enlarged on behalf of the commission dealer Erich Gruber, who also offered stationery, books and newspapers in his photo shop. More recent renovation work took place around 1999. The three-storey construction is uncovered to the spacious square area where Ernst-Guhr-Strasse, Hans-Weigel-Strasse and Klingerstrasse converge, also with a polygonal bay spanning the corner and a subsequent high and four-axis dwelling. Above a dark, low clinker base, the light plastered facade clearly shows the intentions of the reform style architecture, the windows are framelessly cut into the walls, only dividing a few decorative panels on the bay window and the profiled eaves zone (two reliefs with satyr children blowing the flute and beating the triangle). The corner shop with two shop windows and the portal scenery of the house entrance set accents on the ground floor. In terms of urban planning, what will ultimately be a completely new residential area of ​​the railroad settlement is the fact that all houses built on the square have a shop area. Building historical value. LfD / 2019

08970326
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstraße 3
(map)
1911 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of a settlement, House 1 in Block I, of architectural and socio-historical importance

The two master builders Otto and Albin Hentschel took over the execution in 1911 on behalf of the building cooperative for railway employees in Leipzig-Engelsdorf eGmbH, legally binding letters were signed on the entrepreneur's side by Messrs. Schirmer and Schraps. Architect R. Füssel contributed the drafts, who subsequently also took over the construction management. A total of fourteen houses were built in this first block of the spacious residential complex, Klingerstraße 3 is referred to as house 1 in block I. The building permit was granted on April 1, 1999 for the rear balcony extension planned in connection with the renovation of the house. Two or three full storeys show a light plastered facade. A box bay window extending over two floors is attached to the free-standing gable on the left, the facade is offset to the right and a single-storey extension is arranged in the corner, which allows the tenants of the apartment above to exit. A grooved rubble stone base made of granite stone and brick-framed cellar windows provide a stable foundation, while the roof surfaces, which are covered with red clay roof tiles, provide a good contrast to the façade, which has no decoration. The row of tenement houses with the odd numbers is preceded by a lawn, the edge of the street is accompanied by a picturesque row of linden trees. The building has a historical value. LfD / 2019

08970316
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstraße 4
(map)
1911 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance

The building cooperative for railway employees in Leipzig-Engelsdorf GmbH, represented the chairman Schirmer and the cashier Miersch, who submitted a building application for the houses on today's Klingerstraße 2/4/6 on March 17th, 1911. Architect Riedel was involved in the project for the plan drawings and architects Langheinrich & Riedel for execution and site management. In the years 1998/1999 a winter garden on the courtyard side was to be renovated, a plan for the division of the now called "Angel Gardens" was submitted. A loft conversion falls in the period 2005-2006. In the narrow street, a two-storey construction is faked, a third full storey is partially hidden behind a steep attic with tile roofing. The dwarf house with four window axes with round arched gable closure and the framing of the house entrance door are striking. Only here are two small relief plates with flower baskets for decoration. A light plastered facade shines between the red base and the tile roof of the same color with a dark-painted eaves box. The construction equipment at least in the stairwell has largely been preserved. There is a building historical value to be noted. LfD / 2019

08970327
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstraße 5
(map)
1911 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of a housing estate, block I, house 3, of architectural and socio-historical importance 08970370
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstraße 6
(map)
1911 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance

In 1911, the architect Riedel drew the plans on behalf of the building cooperative for railway employees in Leipzig-Engelsdorf GmbH, represented here by the chairman Schirmer and the cashier Miersch. The architects Langheinrich & Riedel, based in Münzgasse in Leipzig, took over the construction management and execution. On May 10th, building permission was granted for residential building group C, which also included residential buildings number 2 and 4 on Klingerstrasse. At the end of 1998 the application for the renovation of an existing winter garden was received by the building authorities. The property was designated as belonging to the "Wohnpark am Klingerplatz". In terms of design, the narrow building is somewhere between the reform style and the style of the homeland security movement, but is more ornate than the two buildings at Klingerstrasse 2 and 4, which were built at the same time. Two of the four axes of the façade, plastered over a clinker base, protrude like a risalit from the façade on the upper floor and merge into a dwarf house with a triangular gable. To the side of each, the second floor is designed as an attic. The building has been renovated and has the original equipment at least in the entrance area and stairwell, it has a historical value. LfD / 2019

08970328
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstraße 7
(map)
1911 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of a settlement, Block I, House 5, of architectural and socio-historical importance 08970369
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstraße 8
(map)
1911 (apartment building) Plastered facade with half-timbered bay window, half-timbered in the gable, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance

For five houses in Block II, foreman Otto Jahn submitted documents to the building authorities on March 11, 1911, the plans were drawn by architect R. Füssel, and the construction was to be carried out by master builder Franz Wendt. The final acceptance of the housing project financed by the building cooperative for railway employees in Leipzig-Engelsdorf GmbH took place on September 20th of the same year. Completions fall in 1998, the following renovation and further loft extensions began in the second half of 2002. The tenement, listed in the fire register under number 207 for Engelsdorf, was built as a two-in-hand, two-storey and extended attic, as a sibling at number 10 The visible framework in the mid-house gable, on the bay window and in the roof area next to the gable is characteristic - this also differs from the group of houses on the right. The unadorned plastered surfaces, a plinth made of red clinker masonry and a cornice covered with tiles as a separation from the top floor, which is de facto a full floor, are the same. The entrance door only has a bevelled plaster frame. The building of the Engelsdorf railroad settlement has an architectural historical value. LfD / 2019

08970329
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstrasse 9
(map)
1911 (apartment building) Plastered facade with balcony, part of a housing estate, Block I, House 7, of architectural and socio-historical importance 08970368
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstraße 10
(map)
1911 (tenement) with shop, plastered facade with half-timbered bay window, half-timbered gable, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance

In 1911, architect Richard Füssel provided the designs for the residential building designated as House 4 in Block II, which can be addressed as a sibling house at Klingerstraße 8. The main difference is the classification of a shop to the left of the front door. Otherwise an extensive, mirror-image correspondence must be recorded. The builder Franz Wendt, who acted on behalf of the building cooperative for railway employees in Leipzig-Engelsdorf GmbH, was responsible for the house, which was released for occupancy in September 1911. In 1998 the clarification of the closures fall, in 2003 the application for loft conversion. Visible framework in the gable, on the bay window and in the roof area next to the gable appears to be the most distinctive design feature of the facade. The building is plastered without any further decorative decoration, has a red clinker base, an entrance door with a simple plaster frame and a cornice covered with tiles as a separation from the attic. The shop area and parts of the historical furnishings have been preserved. The construction of rental apartments has a historical significance. LfD / 2019

08970330
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstraße 11
(map)
1911 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of a housing estate, block I, house 9, of architectural and socio-historical importance 08970367
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstraße 12
(map)
1911 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 08970332
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstraße 13
(map)
1911 (apartment building) Plastered facade with bay window, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 08970366
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstraße 14
(map)
1911 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 08970331
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstraße 15
(map)
1911-1912 (apartment building) with shop, plastered facade, bay window to Klingerplatz, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 08970365
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstrasse 16
(map)
1911 (apartment building) Plastered facade, partly half-timbered gable, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 08970333
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstraße 17
(map)
1912-1914 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance

Designated as House 1, the residential building on Planstrasse J was built between November 1912 and May 2014, as one of ten houses applied for at the same time. The client was the building cooperative for railway employees in Leipzig-Engelsdorf eGmbH, represented by Messrs. Schirmer, Jahn and Wucherer. The architect and builder Ernst Steinkopf was responsible for the design and construction management, while the execution was for the builder Wilhelm Günther. Refurbishment around the year 2000. The three-storey building has a plastered facade without decorative stucco decoration, a red clinker base and the same side frames for the entrance door. A special feature is that the building line jumps back on the right edge of the building and houses II to VI of the plan group and the adjoining corner house at Klingerstraße 29, located on Harpstedter Straße, now show narrow lawns in front of them. Some plastering in the access area has been lost, the dwelling is causing a stir, the solid furnishings correspond to the average in social housing of the time. The house has an architectural value. LfD / 2019

08970358
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstraße 18
(map)
marked 1911 (apartment building) with shop, plastered facade with bay window, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 08970334
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstraße 19
(map)
1912-1914 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 08970357
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstraße 20
(map)
1911 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance

Architect Richard Füssel took over construction management and production of the planning documents on behalf of the building cooperative for railway employees in Leipzig-Engelsdorf as a registered cooperative with limited liability. On May 17, 1911, the permit was issued for the three-storey rental apartment building, which was built in Block II of the settlement, and on October 25, the notification was made that the apartments were ready for occupancy. Messrs. Schirmer (chairman), Wucherer (secretary) and Jahn (site manager) were authorized to draw on behalf of the client, Füssel was also responsible for construction management and Lämmel & Wirth was responsible for the implementation. Two apartments per floor could be given to tenants, each with two rooms, a chamber, a kitchen with a courtyard exit and privets located in the stairwell, a laundry room that could be used by all parties was set up in the basement. On Christmas Day 1948, the approval for the installation of a tiny apartment under the roof was given to the construction management of the Reichsbahn repair shop in Leipzig. Refurbishment and complete loft conversion take place in the 1998/2002 period. The base is made of rustic-looking granite rubble brick masonry, and a small canopy is attached over the door. The facade is bad because it is inappropriate, plastered. Unfortunate for the appearance are the window sills, which are no longer continuous compared to the architectural drawing, the installation of coarse windows, the removal of a roof top crowned with a tower and the simplification of plastering of the two dwelling houses. The building is of value as part of the great overall complex of the settlement and its location opposite the public jewelry square. The building has a historical value. LfD / 2019

08970335
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstraße 21
(map)
1912-1913 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 08970356
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstraße 22
(map)
1912 (apartment building) Plastered facade with balconies, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 08970336
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstrasse 23
(map)
1912-1913 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 08970355
 
Individual monument and aggregate: Part of a double tenement house with No. 26 (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstraße 24
(map)
1912 (apartment building) Plastered facade with corner emphasis, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 08970337
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstraße 25
(map)
1912-1913 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 08970354
 
Individual monument and aggregate: Part of a double tenement house with No. 24 (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstraße 26
(map)
09306959
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstraße 27
(map)
1912-1913 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 08970353
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstraße 28
(map)
1913-1914 (apartment building) with shop, plastered facade, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance

Messrs E. Lehnert, E. Schraps and O. Jahn signed the building application for "construction site 2", which was submitted on December 20, 1913 for a total of ten residential buildings. They legally represented the building cooperative for railway employees in Leipzig-Engelsdorf as a registered cooperative with limited liability. Master builder and architect Ernst Steinkopf from Gohliser Elsbethstraße 7 was under contract for the design and statics, the Liebertwolkwitzer construction business of Richard Grunert for the execution. At the end of April - at the same time as house number 8 - an application was made to start excavation, and on December 12th the application for final acceptance. In 2006/2007 an extensive roof extension took place. The main characteristic of the completely plastered and tiled building is a roof house gable, which only stands above or behind the eaves and has a triple window. Two continuous sill cornices and the coupling of three windows each in the facade zone on the left-hand side by means of plaster structures underneath the gable structure have a structuring function. On the street side, the base consists mainly of visible granite stone masonry. The background for the complete mosaic paving of the narrow area in front of the house is the shop on the ground floor that still exists today, and the entrance door has a simple frame. During the construction period, two apartments were available for rent on the two upper floors, one rental unit with an integrated business area on the ground floor. The building has a historical value. LfD / 2019

08970338
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstraße 29
(map)
1912 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance

At a fairly widened intersection area, a residential building was built in a prominent corner location in 1912 based on designs by the architect Ernst Steinkopf from Leipzig-Gohlis, who also provided plans for an emergency apartment in the attic in 1929 (not executed). Messrs Schirmer, Jahn and Wucherer signed for the owner, the building cooperative for railway employees in Leipzig-Engelsdorf GmbH. On February 5, 1913, the corner building built by Hermann Bär, known as House 8 during the construction period, on today's Harpstedter Strasse was permitted. Three apartments were set up on each of the three full floors, two of them with privets in the stairwell and one with an internal toilet. A front garden is laid out on both fronts of the house (as a lawn with a low border). The plastered facade is kept light, with three slightly protruding oriel-like projections and articulated or decorative decor. The completely plastered plinth protruding from the facade is irritating. The framing of the house entrance is also due to the verdict of thrift, the furnishings are solid and practical, but of good quality. The gable of the high gable roof is effective in the street space of the square. The building has been renovated and has a historical value. LfD / 2019

08970352
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstraße 30
(map)
1913-1915 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 08970339
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstraße 32
(map)
1913-1915 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance

Together with nine other residential buildings to be built according to plans by architect and master builder Ernst Steinkopf, house number IV was built after the building permit had been granted on March 25, 1914. On behalf of the entrepreneurs, Messrs Lehnert, Schraps and Jahn signed on behalf of the building cooperative for the railway employees in Leipzig -Engelsdorf eGmbH. The building revision protocol is dated January 5, 1915, and use was approved ten days later. In contrast to the planning draft, the house, which is renovated today, was created in a somewhat simplified form with a very simple entrance portal, light-colored plaster over a visible quarry stone base. Both upper floors have full sill cornices. Apartments with a hallway, living room, two chambers and a kitchen with a courtyard exit could be rented per floor, a bathroom was installed under the roof, the laundry room in the basement. The roof, which is covered with red tiles, and the lawn in front of the house are friendly. The paving of the access path as well as parts of the equipment from the construction period have been preserved in the original, the building is of architectural significance. LfD / 2019

08970340
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstraße 34
(map)
1913-1915 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance

Messrs Lehner, Schraps and Jahn signed a building permit for the building cooperative for railway employees in Leipzig-Engelsdorf eGmbH for the construction of ten residential houses, including Klingerstraße 34. For the building designated as House V, designed by the building architect and builder Ernst Steinkopf from Leipzig-Gohlis in 1913, approval was granted on March 25, 1914 and completed ten months later. In 1998 the closings fall, in 2005 application and approval for an attic extension. The building has a lawn as a spacing green, is plastered and shows a facade structure that is symmetrical at first glance. The three-storey house - a classic couple - clearly shows the design conception of the reform style architecture, as well as echoes of the Heimat style (here especially the visible Cyclops masonry plinth). The window sills are drawn through as cornices on both upper floors, three central window axes are coupled and are continued in a roof house. The house has been refurbished and has an architectural value inherent in it. LfD / 2019

08970341
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstraße 36
(map)
1912-1913 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance

Above the plans is “House IX” of an assembly that was designed by architect Ernst Steinkopf in 1912 for the building cooperative of railway employees in Leipzig-Engelsdorf eGmbH. First of all, the floor plans show two apartments per floor with AWC. Tekturen, submitted one month after submitting the application, justified the wish for a third rental unit: "Since we primarily have to procure the apartments for the lowest paid employees of the Royal Saxon State Railways, we can achieve this better with the construction type, because these apartments are significant are cheaper and therefore such small apartments are rented out faster than large ones ”. On February 5, 1913, the permission to use was granted. The balcony extensions to the inner courtyard date from 1998, renovation work on the building, which has meanwhile been privatized, dates from 2005/2006. The exposed base shows only a few layers of red wall, the restrained facade structure shows the plastered surfaces. An accent is set by a slightly protruding bay-like porch on the left edge of the facade and the framing of the front door with a semicircular skylight. The polygonal roof houses on the tiled roof cladding look picturesque. There is a lawn in front of the house, it continues the architectural concept of the neighboring house number 38, a corner building on Harpstedter Straße, so to speak. Both buildings are to be considered in total. A historical value has been established. LfD / 2019

08970342
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Klingerstraße 38
(map)
1912-1913 (apartment building) Plastered facade with two oriels, part of a settlement, with an urban accent due to its corner location, of architectural and socio-historical importance

At the corner of today's Harpstedter Strasse, house number X was built between June 1912 and February of the following year. Architect Ernst Steinkopf from Leipzig-Gohlis was under contract with the railway construction cooperative. The renovation and loft extensions take place in 1999/2000. Steinkopf, who had also taken over the construction management, planned three apartments with privets over the stairwell for each floor, under the roof only attic chambers, the required drying floor and here also a bathroom for the tenants. Completely committed to the reform style concept of the time, the bright plastered facade shows itself to be without any stucco decoration or figurative representations made of artificial stone. Two box oriels and a mighty dwarf house characterize the front, which features simple plaster structures and narrow cornices. The rather broad facade line on Harpstedter Straße seems to be mirrored by the facade of Klinkerstraße 36. The framed front door looks rather inconspicuous, the green of the lawn in front of it, a low clinker base and the roof covered with tiles catch the eye. The corner building, which is effective in urban planning, also has a historical value. LfD / 2019

08970343
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement houses (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Reichsbahnerstraße 7; 9; 11
(card)
1928-1929 (apartment building) Plastered facade with staircase risalite, part of a settlement, part of the closed development on Klingerplatz, historically and socially significant

The three buildings of the small group were each applied for as a "massive front house on Klingerplatz" on May 30, 1928 and subjected to the final examination at the end of September of the following year. Master builder and architect Ernst Steinkopf took on the design, construction management, statics and Wilhelm Günther carried out the execution on behalf of the registered building cooperative for railway employees in Leipzig-Engelsdorf. The brick buildings have plastered facades in the Art Deco style with a plastered cornice on the central floor, profiled window frames, a drawn eaves cornice and tiled roofs. Central projections protrude from the front and beyond the eaves, behind which the stairwells, which are illuminated by large windows, are located. Here the window frames are a little more elaborate and show reliefs, the front door entrances 7/9 are also highlighted with plaster structures, number 11 with exposed brick frame. The interior shows simple furnishings, as was typical in social housing construction of the time, two apartments per floor were furnished with two rooms grouped around an antechamber, two chambers, a kitchen with an exit, a bathroom and a sink. Restoration work was approved for house number 11 in autumn 1945, and renovation permits under monument protection law were granted for houses 7 and 9 in 2000. The renovation of the entire group of houses, however, did not take place until the years 2008 to 2010. The rear fronts with the inserted loggias are also attractive. A building historical value is to be determined. LfD / 2018, 2019

08970362
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement, former administration building (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Reichsbahnerstraße 13
(map)
1928-1932 (apartment building) Plastered facade with clinker brick elements, formerly the administrative building of the building cooperative for the railway workers in Leipzig-Engelsdorf EGMBH (founded in 1909), historically and socially significant

As a four-story corner building, a residential building with three apartments each on the upper floors, shops and business premises of a building cooperative on the ground floor was built between 1928 and 1932, opposite a public jewelery square. The master builder and architect Ernst Steinkopf provided the design and statics. The longer construction and planning phase can be explained by the fact that the authorities initially insisted on the three-storey construction to be used for the entire square, and later on there was a hanging part in the financing due to loan refusal. Ultimately, on May 7, 1932, the final examination could be recorded. The main front facing Klingerplatz looks very sparse, while the side front facing today's Dr.-Margarete-Blank-Straße is somewhat more elaborate with a porch, box bay window and gable. Worn-out plaster is predominant, with exposed clinker brickwork in the ground floor zone and the extension for the office access as well as drawn plaster strips as cornices or continuous cornices. Worth mentioning are the equally lavishly structured courtyard front, the enclosed rear house entrance, a side front garden with cut hedge and iron window bars in the Art Deco style in front of the business premises of the cooperative administration. As part of the renovation, the lettering formed by raised letters was also restored above the window zone in the administration rooms facing the Schmuckplatz. It is extremely regrettable that the courtyard front, which is architecturally characterized by particular sophistication, has been adjusted by large balconies, only the staircase projection with windows in the style of the New Building can still be represented well. Rare residential and administrative building with architectural significance. LfD / 2018, 2019

08970361
 
Motorway bridge over the A 14 as well as the former driveway towards Halle / Saale Riesaer Strasse
(map)
1935-1936 (motorway bridge) In terms of technology and traffic history, it is of outstanding importance as one of the few largely original bridge structures on the Reichsautobahn, a rarity, also due to the special design as a »gate structure« and as the end point of the Halle-Leipzig motorway before the Second World War 09304647
 
Tenement house (structural unit with No. 126) in semi-open development and in a corner location Riesaer Strasse 124
(map)
1909-1911 (tenement house) old location Sommerfeld, plastered facade, building typical of the time with original front door, historically important

In 1909/1910 the sibling house was built for Paul Linke. First plans were submitted by the architect Richard Sachse, then in 1910 new plans by the executing architect Ernst Riedel. Later changes were made by the new owner, the builder and architect Richard Müller, who also contributed static calculations. The final revision took place on September 5, 1911. Number 124 appears as a striking corner building with an extension far into the street area of ​​Chausseestrasse; both houses are plastered, had a clinker-facing base, slight facade protrusions and a lively, tiled roof landscape. The corner building, planned with three apartments each on the upper floors, initially also without an attic apartment, but with two units on the ground floor, one of which has an attached shop. House number 126 has an attic apartment added in 1947/1948. Little decor adorns the two coordinated reform style houses. Most of the furnishings have been preserved - even after the renovation applied for in 1999 and the balcony extension in 2008. Architectural historical relevance as the only sibling house of the reform style period on Sommerfeld's corridor, largely preserved in its original form. LfD / 2015

08970254
 
Tenement house (structural unit with no. 127) in half-open development Riesaer Strasse 125
(map)
1904-1905 (tenement house) old location Sommerfeld, plastered facade, hipped roof with dwarf houses, together with house number 127, forms an appealing Art Nouveau ensemble, of architectural significance

In the years 1904/1905 the undertaking to build a house on the road to Leipzig falls, with Wilhelm Zetsche acting as the client. With regard to execution and site management, the names of Arno Zschau and Paul Gebel are on record, and architect and master builder O. Born for the designs. In 1910, the innkeeper, Robert Weise, coveted the construction of a wash house and roller building and, in 1913, the installation of an apartment on the top floor. This project was not implemented and was restarted in the summer of 1918. In March 1920, the authorities approved an attic apartment for ten years. The ground floor was converted in 2011 based on a drawing by architect Gerd Rochlitzer. Together with the neighboring house number 127, the three-storey brick building is completely plastered and has structural elements made of artificial stone with preserved window frames; the two Art Nouveau stucco reliefs still preserved on the neighboring house are lost. Simplifications in the plaster structure, the uniform color coating of the facade, the street-side plinth cladding and the coarse plastic windows impair the effect of the Art Nouveau building. A (double) apartment building from the Art Nouveau period with architectural value that characterizes the street scene. LfD / 2015, 2017

08970255
 
Tenement house (structural unit with no. 124) in half-open development Riesaer Strasse 126
(map)
1909-1910 (tenement house) old location Sommerfeld, plastered facade, typical building from the period around 1915/1920 with a light plaster structure, important from an architectural point of view

In the years 1909/1910 the sibling house (today 124 and 126) was built for Paul Linke. First plans were submitted by the architect Richard Sachse, then in 1910 new plans by the executing architect Ernst Riedel. Later changes were made by the new owner, the builder and architect Richard Müller, who also contributed static calculations. The final revision took place on September 5, 1911. Number 124 appears as a striking corner building with an extension far into the street area of ​​Chausseestrasse; both houses are plastered, had a clinker-facing base, slight facade protrusions and a lively, tiled roof landscape. The corner building, planned with three apartments each on the upper floors, initially also without an attic apartment, but with two units on the ground floor, one of which has an attached shop. House number 126 has an attic apartment added in 1947/1948. Little decor adorns the two coordinated reform style houses. Most of the furnishings have been preserved - even after the renovation applied for in 1999 and the balcony extension in 2008. Architectural historical relevance as the only sibling house of the reform style period on Sommerfeld's corridor, largely preserved in its original form. LfD / 2015

08970253
 
Tenement house (structural unit with no. 125) in semi-open development Riesaer Strasse 127
(map)
marked 1903 (tenement house) old location Sommerfeld, plastered facade, hipped roof, beautiful stucco in the forms of Art Nouveau as crowning of windows, of architectural significance 08970256
 
Apartment building in open development and in a corner, with a back building and a gate pillar Riesaer Strasse 143
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) old location Sommerfeld, plastered clinker facade with half-timbered elements, representative building in a prominent location, of architectural significance

Probably around 1908, the three-storey residential building with a business area on the ground floor was built in a corner location on what was then property 82 in the Sommerfelder Flur. The documents received from the building authorities only started in 1935 with the application for the installation of a drainage system and water flushing facilities. They also report on the expansion of the consumer grocery store number 122 Engelsdorf in 1968. An expansion of the top floor for residential purposes takes place in 1998/1999. The building is still characterized by a generous storefront on the ground floor, the formerly central shop entrance is relocated to the right corner of the six-axis main show side on the main street, the extension on the left dates from GDR times. On the right, a slight bend in the axis follows the course of the street - because this is where the street Arnoldplatz joins - and a two-axis facade without a shop area is attached. Both upper floors are veneered with yellow clinker bricks, quite simple window frames made of artificial stone as well as two half-timbered half-timbered houses. The gable sides are designed with yellow clinker bricks and plastered surfaces, the courtyard front completely with yellow clinker bricks and a crowned pillar of the driveway has been preserved at the main entrance. With the neighboring property in the side street, today Arnoldplatz 1, the three- to two-storey construction method breaks off. The residential and commercial building in a corner location, which is effective in terms of urban development, has an architectural historical value. LfD / 2019

08970250
 
Residential house in open development and in a corner location Riesaer Strasse 154
(map)
around 1895 (residential building) old location Sommerfeld, with built-in shops, plastered facade with hipped roof and sandstone sills, in an important urban area

The two-story residential building was built around 1880, as well as a rear stable. An ice house for master butcher Karl Saro was added to this outbuilding in 1905/1906, which means that the building file for the property on the corner of what was then Bahnhofstrasse began. In 1930/1931, architect and master builder Paul Kaldrack took over the design and construction management for a shop fitting on behalf of the animal feed trader Curt Rosenhahn. In 1946, Margarete Pötzsch owned a grain and animal feed store on the property, which is in a prime business location, and in 1984 the renovation of the beverage sales point of Konsum Leipzig, branch area Engelsdorf, is on record. The listed residential building is plastered over a visible quarry stone clinker base, has a profiled eaves zone and window sills made of sandstone. The hipped roof is covered with tiles, the house entrance with the 11/2019 still original door is on the courtyard side. The main face is the front facing today's Sternenstrasse with a slightly protruding two-axis central projection. Completion of the last renovation work, applied for in 2015 and not particularly convincing, in 2019. The residential and commercial property effective in the street area is of architectural interest. LfD / 2019

08970247
 
Pavilion in the garden, former colonnade of an inn Riesaer Strasse 155
(map)
1908 (garden pavilion) old location Sommerfeld, wooden construction, historically important, rarity

On June 24, 1896, the approval for a new residential building and restoration building was officially issued, the innkeeper Ernst Teichmann commissioned the building specialist M. Somieski with the implementation of the plans and Robert Brähne with the static calculations. In 1902, Robert Weise is named as the restaurant owner, who in 1905 had a stable, in 1908 a colonnade and in 1926 a rear extension built to expand the guest room with plans by architect Georg Schumann. Already before 1896 the bar was officially permitted on the estate. Landowner Friedrich Ferdinand Zschocher had the previous residential building built by master carpenter Sperling from 1863 to 1864, followed by Ernst Teichmann in 1876 with a wash house and in 1882 an extension to "enlarge the tavern". Today, nothing on the renovated building reveals anything about its use as a restaurant, only the five-step platform staircase could give a hint. The plastered facade is structured by a cornice, window canopies and sills on consoles on the upper floor. The center of the two-storey house is accentuated by the central projecting with a gable-closing gable, while the newer entrance door proves to be particularly disturbing. Nevertheless, the house characterizes the arterial road in harmony with other buildings from the turn of the century, as the local chronicles report from the commercial use of the property. LfD / 2016, 2017

08970246
 
Enclosure of a property Riesaer Strasse 164
(map)
1906-1907 (enclosure) old location of Sommerfeld, historicistic wrought iron enclosure, of importance for the townscape

On the corner of today's Wiesenweg, a country house was built in 1906-1907 on behalf of the rentier Friedrich Gustav Winter (formerly Leipziger Straße 72). Construction management and execution took over the construction business M. Somieski, also based in Sommerfeld. Today the corner residential building has changed significantly. At the same time as the country house, which was characterized by the late Art Nouveau, was built an outbuilding with a laundry room, shed and two wooden stables. The listed enclosure bears the hallmarks of the town's development in the period of Historicism and Art Nouveau, it is part of the historical redesign of the Sommerfeld town hall on the important state road towards Wurzen. A wrought-iron enclosure in the style of historicism stands over the plastered base. Building historical value. LfD / 2019

08970187
 
Villa with enclosure and garden pavilion Riesaer Strasse 167
(map)
around 1895 (villa) old location Sommerfeld, historicizing plastered facade, hipped roof, well-preserved historic building, of architectural significance

The two-storey villa building built around 1890 with a wide garden area in front of the street rises effectively. The initiator for minor changes in the house in 1904 as well as the installation of a toilet was Ms. Director Lina Barth. The construction business of M. Somieski from Sommerfeld was active for this, the actors from the time of construction are not known. Work on the house for restoration, renovation and minor modifications were requested in 1969 and 1974. The facade, plastered over a high natural stone plinth, has six axes, the two in the middle belonging to a protruding risalit. Cornices and window frames are design elements for structuring the plastered house, and the eaves zone with historic stucco consoles and kymation testify to the requirements of the client and architect. The preserved fencing, the paved driveway and the garden landscape contribute to the elegant effect of the property. Above-average villa construction with architectural and architectural value. LfD / 2016, 2017

08970190
 
Rental villa with enclosure Riesaer Strasse 169
(map)
1904 (rental villa) old location Sommerfeld, plastered facade, very stately building with historicist style elements, of architectural significance 08970189
 
school Riesaer Strasse 177
(map)
1892 (school) old location Sommerfeld, historicizing plastered building with hipped roof, building of socio-historical importance 08970186
 
Enclosure of a property Riesaer Strasse 213
(map)
around 1900 (enclosure) old location Sommerfeld, quarry stone base, pillars with sandstone cover and spherical crowning, representative fencing that frames the street scene, originally part of the parish property Arnoldplatz 28, of importance for the townscape 08970201
 
villa Riesaer Strasse 214
(map)
1927-1928 (villa) old location Sommerfeld, building with plastered facade and hipped roof, singular building from the end of the 1920s with a striking facade design, historically important

Gardening owner and commercial gardener Paul Kunstmann commissioned the architect Max Schumann in 1927 to build a house that could be occupied the following year. Garages on the property were planned by master builder Karl Baum in 1946 and 1947. The compact structure, set back from the street with the front garden and parts of the existing fencing, is framed with its plastered facade in particular by fluted pilasters and has a hipped roof covered with tiles. Special architectural emphasis was placed on the formation of the (rear) south side in order to create an attractive transition from the house to the garden, which is dominated by an impressive red beech. Parts of the building's equipment have been preserved, but the newly installed windows from the last renovation phase are quite unsuitable. The house at the end of the village in the direction of Panitzsch has an architectural and historical value, documents the urbanization of the village of Sommerfeld. LfD / 2016, 2017

08970463
 
Rental villa with enclosure Sabinenstrasse 5
(map)
1902 (rental villa), 1902 (enclosure) old location Sommerfeld, building with historicizing plastered facade and hipped roof, stately villa with wrought iron fence, in a prominent urban location, of architectural significance

In 1902, a residential building as well as a stable and wash house for the Friedrich Gottsching community council in Sommerfeld was built on what appears to be a fairly spacious corner piece of land facing today's Riesaer Strasse. The construction company M. Somieski was entrusted with the execution of the two-storey building. After the installation of a heater in 1991, building approval was given in autumn 1993 for the extension of the attic. The villa looks like a gem behind deep front gardens and is surrounded by the largely original fencing, with a light plastered facade and dark tiled roof. The higher plinth has a strict ashlar and historical cellar window grilles, on the courtyard side there is yellow brickwork with corner ashlar in plaster. The central projection, which opens into a large dwelling, protrudes on the front facing Riesaer Strasse. Ashlar corner pilaster strips frame the vertical edges, lush decor in the transition from historicism to art nouveau decorates the compact building pictorially on three facades. Without jewelry, the back shows where the house entrance and stairwell are. A square exit with a historical grid is integrated into the roof. Details of the furnishings have been preserved, as well as the pillars and plinth of the yellow clinker enclosure to the neighborhood on Riesaer Strasse, and the large new paving of the courtyard appears to be a downer. The high-quality corner building is dominant in terms of urban development, it has an architectural historical value. LfD / 2019

08970182
 
Two apartment buildings in open development, with an enclosure wall and a front garden Sternenstrasse 12; 14
(card)
1930-1931 (tenement) old location Sommerfeld, building with plastered clinker facade, group of tenement houses preserved with original details, documents of social housing in Engelsdorf, of importance in terms of building history and site development

In 1930 and 1931, the two apartment buildings were built in the former Bahnhofstrasse (numbers 66 and 66a) to alleviate the urgently needed housing shortage in the town. The client was the Engelsdorf local council and the designing architect Ernst Riedel. Under his construction management, the three-storey, plastered brick buildings were also executed by the Wilhelm Günther company; dark clinker bricks were used as dividing elements. The courtyard side is more elaborate than the street facade with the staircase risalits, front door frames with corner bricks and a reinforced concrete slab as a canopy over the entrance. The furnishings are largely original: front doors with polished panes, stairwells with color and all interior doors. Small apartments were built with an eat-in kitchen and only one or two chambers. Open construction, front lawns, clinker walls and courtyard-side green areas show the effort to empathize with the expansion area. LfD / 2006

08970204
 
Tenement house (with three entrances) Sternenstrasse 18; 20; 22
(card)
marked 1938 (tenement house), 1938 (front garden) old location Sommerfeld, plastered facade typical of the time with sgraffito, built as a railway house, characteristic building from the late 1930s, of importance in terms of building history and local development

In May 1937 the building application for four residential buildings was submitted, at the same time discussions were taking place to change the planned closed construction to a group construction. From 1929 to 1930 the building at today's Sternenstrasse 26 was completed, in February 1938 its adjoining sibling at what was then Bahnhofstrasse 24. For the tenement group with three street-side entrances, the approval was only granted in mid-December 1937, the permission for use in July 1938. In November 1937, 12.9 percent of all households in Engelsdorf were looking for their own apartment, a total of 308 families. These included a large number of Reichbahn employees. Mattheis and Siegel signed the application for the small apartment and private home building cooperative eGmbH Engelsdorf based in Leipzig-Connewitz, plans were contributed by the Leipzig architect and master builder Hans Hennig. Two apartments with a hall, living room, bedroom, eat-in kitchen and toilet could be rented per floor. The facade was plastered over exposed clinker plinths and painted in a light color, the gable was to be given a special plastering work, the windows were to be framed from high-grade plaster and folding shutters on the ground floor (continuing the similar design from number 26/28). A shared bathroom was set up in the basement of each house. The area in front was laid out as a lawn with a narrow concrete border. Solid renovation of the triplet house before 2008. A building historical value can be determined for the social housing building from the 1930s. LfD / 2017, 2019

08970206
 
Apartment building in half-open development (structural unit with No. 26), with front garden Sternenstrasse 24
(map)
1937-1938 (tenement), 1938 (ancillary facility) old location in Sommerfeld, plastered facade, of importance in terms of building history and development

For a long time, the building at Sternenstrasse 26 stood in open development without a counterpart (built in 1929/1930) before a renewed attempt was made in 1937 with the support of the municipal administration to cover additional housing requirements in Engelsdorf. A total of four buildings were planned, the one discussed here should contain nine apartments. The community made the building land available cheaply, the Deutsche Reichsbahn - which was the largest employer in the community with a freight loading station and repair shops in the immediate vicinity - largely arranged the financing. The small apartment and private home building cooperative eGmbH Engelsdorf acted as the client, the plans for the turnkey house number 24, which was built by August 1938, were signed by Mr. Mattheis and Mr. Siegel. Architect Hans Hennig was entrusted with the design, statics and site management. A connection without a heel to the neighboring house, the uniform roof covering with dark red unglazed roof tiles (beaver tails), the gutter to be installed at the same height, the structure and color of the external plaster and the color of the window frames, shutters, gutters and waste pipes were prescribed. The same applies to the front garden, which was to be laid out as a green area, with a narrow concrete border and a 60cm high, living hedge. It was pointed out that this "must be constantly maintained and kept in good shape". The Bahnhofstrasse according to the building plan, which was already provided with all supply lines (development plan Sommerfeld-Südost), was a (cost) advantage for the construction of the apartment building. As a result, the two houses 24 and 26 almost appear as a double tenement house and only on closer inspection do slight differences become apparent, the house entrance is at the rear. Front yard was mandatory. Architectural and historical value. LfD / 2017, 2019

08970202
 
Apartment building in semi-open development (structural unit with No. 24), with front garden Sternenstrasse 26
(map)
1929-1930 (tenement) old location in Sommerfeld, plastered facade, of importance in terms of building history and development

On June 4, 1929, the Engelsdorf community submitted the building application for the construction of a group of five houses. Plans submitted at the same time are marked "Invalid", revised designs by the building architect Ernst Riedel from Leipzig-Schleußig were carried out by Wilhelm Günther's construction business until February 1930 (after further changes). The house at Bahnhofstrasse 76 (later 68, today Sternenstrasse 26) was intended to be the beginning of a group of houses and was built on the site between the old location of Sommerfeld and the railway tracks. Behind the plastered façade of the project, known as the construction of small apartments, two apartments with three and four rooms were built on each floor. A stepped gable on the narrow side, slightly recessed ribbon windows on the upper floors, corner ledges, the windows with folding shutters on the ground floor and the framing of the front door arranged at the rear show a subtle formulation of the Art Deco style. The building has been renovated, paving stones and the front garden area have been preserved. Building historical value. LfD / 2017, 2019

08970203
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement houses (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Wasserturmstrasse 1; 3; 5; 7; 9; 11; 13; 15; 17; 19
(card)
1920-1922, number 1-7 (apartment building), 1920-1923, number 9-11 (apartment building), 1923, number 13 (apartment building), 1923-1926, number 15, 17, 19 (apartment building) Plastered facade, with a passage, part of a settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 08970346
 
Individual monument and aggregate: tenement houses (see also aggregate document - Obj. 08970466, Klingerplatz 1-5) Wasserturmstrasse 21; 23; 25; 27; 29; 31; 33; 35
(card)
1918-1920 (apartment building) Plastered facade, with passage, part of a housing estate, number 35 in the corner of Harpstedter Straße, of architectural and socio-historical importance 08970345
 
Individual features above: former locomotive straightening hall with internal transfer platform and built-on locomotive heating shed (building 28 and 28f) and existing crane system, external transfer platform in front of the west side of the locomotive straightening hall, former boiler shop (building 23), former pipe smithy (building 23a), former Pump building I (building 46 and 46a), former pump building II (building 47), former warehouse building and later administration building (building 64), storage building (building 70), boiler house (building 1 with extensions 1a, 1b and 1d) , former TA building with associated goldfish pond (building 115, 115a, 115c), memorial for the fallen (probably 1st World War), social building dining room (building 25 and 25a), old blacksmith's forge with still existing equipment (building . 8a, 8b, 8c, 8d, 8f, 8g), water tower (building 2), former wagon hall (building 9a) - (see also general document - Obj. 09305402, Werkstättenstrasse 4-8)
Individual features above: former locomotive straightening hall with internal transfer platform and built-on locomotive heating shed (building 28 and 28f) and existing crane system, external transfer platform in front of the west side of the locomotive straightening hall, former boiler shop (building 23), former pipe smithy (building 23a), former Pump building I (building 46 and 46a), former pump building II (building 47), former warehouse building and later administration building (building 64), storage building (building 70), boiler house (building 1 with extensions 1a, 1b and 1d) , former TA building with associated goldfish pond (building 115, 115a, 115c), memorial for the fallen (probably 1st World War), social building dining room (building 25 and 25a), old blacksmith's forge with still existing equipment (building . 8a, 8b, 8c, 8d, 8f, 8g), water tower (building 2), former wagon hall (building 9a) - (see also general document - Obj. 09305402, Werkstättenstrasse 4-8) Werkstättenstrasse 4
(map)
1905 (administration, building 64), 1948-1949 (social building, building 25, 25a), 1918 (boiler and machine house), 1920 (pump building II, building 47), 1920 (pump building I, building 46, 46a ) Relatively good state of preservation of the entire facility of a Reichsbahn repair shop, the halls represent the state of development of industrial construction at the turn of the century after 1900, remarkable water tower from 1954 with a brick expressionist facade still in function, one of the relatively large facilities of this type in Germany, of importance in terms of traffic history and technology history 08970467
 
Material entity Reichsbahnausbesserungswerk (RAW) "Unity" Leipzig-Engelsdorf, with the following individual monuments: several halls, buildings and facilities of an extensive factory complex of a former Reichsbahn repair shop (see individual monument document - Obj. 08970467, Werkstättenstrasse 4), document former social building of the RAW (see individual monument - Obj. 08970704, Werkstättenstraße 6) and another social building (see individual monument document - Obj. 08970705, Werkstättenstraße 8) still with the following aggregate parts: further factory buildings, remains of the fencing of the factory premises and memorial stone for the 25th company anniversary Werkstättenstrasse 4; 6; 8
(card)
1905-1963 (railway operations facility) Relatively good state of preservation of the entire facility of a Reichsbahn repair shop, the halls represent the state of development of industrial construction at the turn of the century after 1900, remarkable water tower from 1954 with a brick expressionist facade still in function, one of the relatively large facilities of this type in Germany of importance in terms of traffic history and technology history 09305402
 
Individual monument above aggregate: social building of a former Reichsbahn repair shop (RAW), now medical center (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305402, Werkstättenstraße 4-8) Werkstättenstrasse 6
(map)
1950s (social building) Clinker brick building with emphasis on the center and simple pilaster strips, architecturally sophisticated structure, of importance in terms of building history and local history 08970704
 
Individual monument above aggregate: Social building, belonging to the former Reichsbahnausbesserungswerk (RAW) (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305402, Werkstättenstraße 4-8) Werkstättenstrasse 8
(map)
1950s (social building) Clinker brick building, of architectural and local significance 08970705
 

swell

  • State Office for the Preservation of Monuments Saxony Dynamic web application: Overview of the monuments listed in Saxony. The location "Leipzig, Stadt, Engelsdorf" 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 35), City of Leipzig, Department of Urban Development and Construction, Leipzig 2002

Web links