List of cultural monuments in Eutritzsch (A – J)
The list of cultural monuments in Eutritzsch contains the cultural monuments of the Leipzig district of Eutritzsch , which were recorded in the list of monuments by the State Office for Monument Preservation Saxony as of 2017. This list is divided for reasons of space. This list contains the cultural monuments in the streets beginning with the letters A – J. The cultural monuments in the streets K – Z are listed in the list of cultural monuments in Eutritzsch (K – Z) .
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 ; this leads to information on this cultural monument at Wikidata .
List of cultural monuments in Eutritzsch
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
school | Anhalter Strasse 1 (map) |
1908–1910 (school) | Plastered facade, central projecting to the schoolyard and small house with clock, reform style architecture, of architectural significance |
09262966 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Anhalter Strasse 3 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | historicizing clinker brick facade, stucco and wooden panels in the entrance area, of architectural significance |
09262827 |
|
Multi-family houses in a residential complex | Anhalter Strasse 4; 6; 8th; 10; 12 (card) |
1936–1938 (apartment building) | Plastered facade, house entrances with roofs on consoles, significance in terms of local development and architectural history, see also Bernburger Strasse 2/4 |
08966353 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Anhalter Strasse 5 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | historicizing plastered facade, wooden panels in the entrance area, historically important |
09264862 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Anhalter Strasse 7 (map) |
marked 1904 (tenement house) | historicizing plastered facade with plastered structure, wooden panels in the entrance area, of architectural significance |
09262826 |
|
Apartment building in a residential complex with a green inner courtyard | Anhalter Strasse 9 (map) |
1912 (apartment building) | Plastered facade with plaster and artificial stone integration, reform style architecture, of social and historical importance, see also Schiebestraße 45–49 |
09291197 |
|
Multi-family houses in a residential complex | Anhalter Strasse 11; 13 (card) |
1926 (apartment building) | Plastered facades, entrance portals in clinker construction, in the traditionalist style, of architectural and socio-historical importance, see also Gedikestrasse 20–28 |
09294388 |
|
Individual monument and aggregate: apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305684, Anhalter Straße 15, 17, 17a) | Anhalter Strasse 15; 17; 17a (card) |
1931 (apartment building) | Part of a closed, preserved civil servant housing complex of the time, in the traditionalist style, plastered facade, loggias, distinctive colored facade design, of architectural and urban significance, see also Gedikestrasse 1-7 and Heinickestrasse 6/8 |
09294426 |
|
Subject aggregation of the Eutritzsch residential complex of the non-profit civil servants building cooperative, with the following individual monuments: Apartment buildings Anhalter Straße 15, 17, 17a (Obj. 09294426), Bonhoefferstraße 1, 3, 5, 7 (Obj. 09294429), Bonhoefferstraße 2, 4, 6, 8 ( Obj. 09294452), Gedikestraße 1, 3 (Obj. 09263800), Gedikestraße 5 (Obj. 09263799), Gedikestraße 7 (Obj. 09263798), Heinickestraße 2, 4 (Obj. 09263797), Heinickestraße 6 (Obj. 09294453), Heinickestraße 8 (Obj. 09263796), Paul-Schneider-Straße 1, 3, 5, 7 (Obj. 09294482), Paul-Schneider-Straße 2, 4, 6, 8 (Obj. 09294539) and Wittenberger Straße 44, 46, 48 , 50 (Obj. 09294527), furthermore with the totality parts: store extension (Gedikestraße 7a), front gardens on Bonhoefferstraße, Gedikestraße and Paul-Schneider-Straße as well as green inner courtyards | Anhalter Strasse 15; 17; 17a (card) |
1928–1931 (residential complex) | Closed, preserved civil servants' housing complex of the time, in the traditionalist style, striking colored facade design, of architectural and urban significance |
09305684 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Anhalter Strasse 19 (map) |
around 1915 (tenement) | Plastered facade with a varied plaster structure, clinker base, large roof house, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history |
09263753 |
|
Individual monument above aggregate: apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305679, Dessauer Straße 31–37) | Arthur-Hausmann-Strasse 1; 5; 7; 9 (card) |
1929–1931 (apartment building) | Plastered facade, clinker edging on the front doors, a house number Arthur-Hausmann-Straße 3 does not exist, remarkable residential buildings in the modern style, architect: Georg Wrede, of urban and architectural significance, see also Theresienstraße 38-48 and Hartzstraße 12-20 |
09294920 |
|
Multi-family house in a residential complex, with a front garden | Arthur-Hausmann-Strasse 2 (map) |
around 1925 (apartment building) | multi-colored plastered facade, of architectural significance, see also Dessauer Strasse 39–45, Hamburger Strasse 27/29 and Theresienstrasse 50–60 |
09294923 |
|
Multi-family houses in a residential complex, with front gardens | Arthur-Hausmann-Strasse 6; 8th; 10; 12 (card) |
after 1930 (apartment building) | Plastered facade with clinker brick structure, number 6 with a colored lead glass window in the stairwell, in the traditionalist style of the time, of architectural significance |
09262824 |
|
Multi-family houses in a residential complex, with front gardens | Arthur-Hausmann-Strasse 9a; 11; 13; 15 (card) |
after 1930 (apartment building) | Plastered facade with clinker brick structure, staircase projections with gable endings, lead-glazed staircase windows, of architectural significance, see also Theresienstraße 45–49 |
09294918 |
|
Individual monument of the above aggregate: Service building in the Prussian operating part of the main station, with stairs to the track field and gate on Berliner Straße (see also material component document - Obj. 09304791, Berliner Straße, without no.) | Berliner Strasse (map) |
around 1910 (social building) | Single-storey plastered building, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of railway history and building history |
09305161 |
|
The aggregate component of the above aggregate, with the individual monuments: Bahnbetriebswerk West (Obj. 09294979, Berliner Straße 90) and service building (Obj. 09305161 - Berliner Straße, without no.) - (see also Objective Document - Obj. 09304785, Willy-Brandt-Platz 7) | Berliner Strasse (map) |
around 1910 (railway buildings) | relevance to the history and technology of railways, importance to building history and urban development |
09304791 |
|
|
Former factory building in open development | Berliner Strasse 65 (map) |
after 1907 (factory) | Clinker brick facade, street-defining factory building, formerly knitwear factory, supra-regional significance for economic history |
09263071 |
More pictures |
Factory building in a corner and in half-open development | Berliner Strasse 69 (map) |
around 1900 (factory) | built for the Carl Kästner safe and safe manufacture, from 1900 stock corporation, clinker brick facade typical of the time, with a cyclist relief as a reference to the main shareholder "Lipsia-Fahrrad-Industrie-AG", of industrial history |
09294389 |
|
Factory owner's villa and factory building in the courtyard | Berliner Strasse 71 (map) |
marked 1899 (factory owner's villa), 1899–1900 (factory) | Villa two-storey, historicized plastered building, factory courtyard with metal foundry and turning shop, consisting of four buildings, there is increased architectural historical interest in the construction of the nationally known architect Max Bösenberg, and the property is also of relevance to local development and industrial history
The foundry Friedrich Eduard Erich & Sohn (Max Richard Erich), also a factory for necessities and a factory for bathing facilities, submitted a building application for the construction of a residential house on May 1, 1899 and commissioned the renowned architect Max Bösenberg with design planning and Construction supervision (it signed for Bösenberg Küster iV). At the same time an outbuilding was to be built and a storage shed was requested at the end of the year. On June 26, 1899, the building permit was issued and the final revision was carried out almost to the day in the following year. Plans for a factory extension were submitted as early as September 1900 and in October for a warehouse, again from the Max Bösenberg office. In 1902 the term “crucible foundry” is used, a factory for gas and water supply systems. This was followed by further conversions, extensions and extensions of the production buildings as well as use by the factory owner Maschinenfabrik Curt Sachse & Co, the Karl Jurisch bullet turning shop, an auto repair workshop M. Erich Kiwus, Max Gläser & Co for textile raw materials, a wholesaler for printing supplies and a specialty house for lithographic stones and zinc foundry Klötzer & Co. In 1900, the manorial factory owner's villa, consisting of two floors with a jamb and a basement, was available. The facade structure, which is clear but richly decorated in the design, has plaster and artificial stone structures, a polygonal stand bay on the street side and a stepped projection with a house entrance, a protruding roof with decorated beam ends. The windows on the upper floor are framed by strong frames, while the ground floor was provided with plaster grooves. Corner blocks in plaster and stucco elegantly frame the historicist villa building on the design drawing, the decor of which shows the transition from historicism to art nouveau. Among other things, the windows and doors inside have been preserved. The factory yard with its clinker brick buildings that have been changed several times and partially damaged during the war complements the residential and factory premises in a unique way, to which the immediate location near the train station contributes. With interest, a sheet dated 1943 could be found in the building file with a drawing of a garden pond that was supposed to be used for deletion purposes. There is a heightened historical interest in the construction of the nationally known architect Max Bösenberg, and the property is also of relevance to the history of local development and industrial history. LfD / 2014 |
09263072 |
|
Workshop building in semi-open development | Berliner Strasse 75 (map) |
around 1890 (workshop) | clinker brick facade typical of the time, blinds, evidence of the industrial development of the district, of architectural and economic importance |
09263778 |
Semi-open residential and commercial building | Berliner Strasse 81a (map) |
around 1905 (residential and commercial building) | Sparingly decorated plaster facade, terrace facing the street, of architectural and economic importance |
09262997 |
|
|
Workshop building in semi-open development | Berliner Strasse 83 (map) |
around 1900 (workshop) | Clinker brick facade with green-glazed brick structure, testimony to the industrial development of the quarter, of architectural and economic importance |
09262996 |
|
Individual monument of the above aggregate: Locomotive shed and accommodation building as well as fencing along Berliner Straße up to the Berliner Brücke (see also aggregate component document - Obj. 09304791, Berliner Straße, without no.) | Berliner Strasse 90 (map) |
1903–1904 (locomotive shed), 1906–1907 (overnight building) | See also the neighboring roundhouse III (object 09260358, Rackwitzer Straße 1, 3, OT Schönefeld-Abtnaundorf), built as roundabout II of the Prussian State Railways, supra-regional railway historical and technical relevance, historical and urban significance |
09294979 |
More pictures |
Individual monuments og aggregate: memorial stone and numerous grave monuments as well as memorial for the fallen of the 1st World War (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305678) | Berliner Strasse 123 (map) |
from 1864 (tomb) | of importance in terms of local history and religious history
Old Israelite Cemetery In 1862, the Leipzig Israelite Cemetery acquired land on Delitzscher Flur to create a new cemetery, as the cemetery in Johannistal, which had existed since 1814, could no longer be expanded. The new cemetery was inaugurated in 1864. The elongated, narrow complex is cut through by a central avenue and divided into several sections by walls. An originally existing celebration hall has been destroyed. As is customary in Jewish cemeteries, the grave steles stand close together and face east. Missing steles are marked with number blocks. The oldest stones from the 1860s to 1870s can be found in 49 rows in Section I: sandstone steles with antique gable crowns and corner acroteries, the mostly Hebrew inscriptions heavily weathered. The wall tombs on the two surrounding walls date from the same time, also made of sandstone and endangered due to their finely divided design. In addition to neo-Gothic and Renaissance forms, Moorish style elements can often be found here, such as the horseshoe arch and finely divided oriental ornamentation. (Fam. Wolff, number 3, Fam. Hermann Aaron Meyer, number 10). The model for this was obviously the shape of the community synagogue built in 1855 on Gottschedstrasse. Often, oval marble slabs can be found in front of the wall tombs, as they were also used in Christian cemeteries at the time. The following symbols are common: blessing hands (priestly agreement), sabbath candlesticks, water jugs (origin from the tribe of Levi) grapes (fertile Israel). At the beginning of Section I there is a burial house (Nefesch). Among the representative tombs on the partition walls are those of Henriette Goldschmidt, founder of the General German Women's Association, the bankers Jakob Plaut and Samuel Kroch, the Breslauer department store owner and the Ariowitsch family, donors of the Jewish retirement home. The wall tombs from the turn of the century are of the same type as those in Christian cemeteries, as there shell limestone is the preferred material. Black granite now predominates in the steles. In 1926, the Jewish architect Wilhelm Haller designed the memorial for the fallen of the First World War in art deco forms. Until 1932, shortly after the inauguration of the New Israelite Cemetery on Delitzscher Strasse, burials took place in the Old Israelite Cemetery, and urns of concentration camp victims are buried in Section V. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09263806 |
Subject aggregate Old Israelitischer Friedhof, with the following individual monuments: memorial stone and numerous gravestones as well as memorial for the fallen of the 1st World War (see also individual monument object - Obj. 09263806) as well as an avenue and as an aggregate part: the terrace near the entrance | Berliner Strasse 123 (map) |
Inaugurated in 1864 (cemetery) | Ancillary building demolished before 2016, of local and religious significance |
09305678 |
|
The northern cemetery as a whole, with the following individual monuments: administration building, parentation hall and ancillary building, memorial for those who fell in World War I, tombs, seven fountains, three benches in the entrance area, enclosure and cemetery gate (see individual monument document - Obj. 09263807) as well as a horticultural cemetery with three avenues | Berliner Strasse 125; 127 (card) |
Inaugurated in 1881 (cemetery) | Numerous significant tombs (wall places and row graves), fountain around 1912 made of artificial stone, the three original benches of the type "Leipziger Rinde", of local historical importance, also of garden historical testimony value |
09305677 |
|
Memorial stone in the cemetery in memory of those who fell in the Battle of Leipzig in 1813 | Berliner Strasse 125; 127 (card) |
1899 (memorial stone) | The mortal remains of the soldiers buried at this point were found in the extension of the Leipzig gas works in Eutritzsch, historically significant |
09298028 |
|
Individual monument and aggregate: Administration building, parentation hall and outbuildings, memorial for those who fell in World War I, tombs, seven wells, three benches in the entrance area, enclosure and cemetery gate (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305677) | Berliner Strasse 125; 127 (card) |
from 1881 (tombs) | Numerous significant tombs (wall places and row graves, see also attached list), fountain around 1912 made of artificial stone, the three original benches of the type "Leipziger Rinde", of local historical importance, also of historical garden value
North Cemetery As the second municipal cemetery (after the New Johannis Cemetery), the North Cemetery was consecrated in 1881, which was supposed to accommodate the deceased from the northern parish and the northern inner city. It is located right next to the Jewish cemetery and, in accordance with the traditional scheme, is accessed by three main avenues and paths that cross at right angles and divided by several intermediate walls. Around 1884, a representative chapel in the style of the Italian Renaissance with two morgues to the side was built according to plans by court architect Otto Brückwald. After being destroyed in the war, only two altered buildings have survived, while the buildings opposite the farmyard with the apartment for the inspector and gravedigger have remained in their original form. On the outer walls and partition walls are the burial sites of the bourgeoisie, the oldest from the 1880s mostly as simple gable architecture made of sandstone and with iron borders. In terms of craftsmanship, the tomb of the di Pol family (terrazzo manufacturer) with a mosaic field in the tympanum (1906), among those buried here are the publisher, printer and donor Karl Christian Philipp Tauchnitz (d. 1884), the publisher Ernst Otto Seemann (d. 1904 ) and the first Leipzig zoo director Ernst Pinkert (died 1909). LfD / 1998/2002 |
09263807 |
|
Three hand lever pumps with well shaft and cover plate | Berliner Strasse 125; 127 (at) (card) |
after 1900 (hand lever pump) | a pump type Gothic, of local history |
09263808 |
|
Multi-family houses in a residential complex | Bernburger Strasse 2; 4 (card) |
1936–1938 (apartment building) | Plastered facade, house entrances with roofs on brackets, importance in terms of local development and building history, see also Anhalter Straße 4–12 |
08966354 |
|
Individual monument above aggregate: Six apartment buildings in the residential complex (No. 16, 18, 20, 24, 26, 28), administration building / kindergarten (No. 22) and two outbuildings (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305359, Bernburger Straße 16-28) | Bernburger Strasse 16; 18; 20; 22; 24; 26; 28 (card) |
1899–1901 (apartment building) | Part of a closed residential complex of social housing, named after the publisher Herrmann Julius Meyer (publisher of the well-known Meyers Konversations-Lexikons), founder of the "Association for the construction of cheap apartments", plastered façades with brick structure, architect: Max Pommer, building and social history of importance, see also Hamburger Strasse 42–64, Schönefelder Strasse 44–70 and Theresienstrasse 61–73 |
09262812 |
|
Material entirety of the Meyersche Homes Eutritzsch residential complex, with the following individual monuments: six tenement houses at Bernburger Strasse 16, 18, 20, 24, 26, 28 as well as administration building / kindergarten (Bernburger Strasse 22) and two outbuildings (Obj. 09262812), 12 tenement houses at Hamburger Strasse 42, 44 , 46, 48, 50, 52, 54, 56, 58, 60, 62, 64 (Obj. 09262811), seven apartment buildings Theresienstraße 61, 63, 65, 67, 69, 71, 73 (Obj. 09262813), 14 apartment buildings Schönefelder Straße 44, 46, 48, 50, 52, 54, 56, 58, 60, 62, 64, 66, 68, 70 (Obj. 09262814) as well as designed green space in the inner block courtyard, tenant gardens and drying area, furthermore with the following elements: two Gate entrances on Bernburger Strasse | Bernburger Strasse 16; 18; 20; 22; 24; 26; 28 (card) |
1899–1901 (residential complex) | Closed residential complex of social housing, named after the publisher Herrmann Julius Meyer (publisher of the well-known Meyers Konversations-Lexikons ), founder of the "Association for the construction of cheap apartments", plastered façades with brick structure, architect: Max Pommer, of architectural and socio-historical importance |
09305359 |
|
|
Factory building at the rear and ammonia compressor | Bitterfelder Strasse 7; 9 (card) |
1913 (cold store), 1913 (factory building) | Clinker facade, location on the industrial track, rare and unusually large system for compressing ammonia, formerly reinforced concrete construction, of local and technical significance |
09262994 |
More pictures |
Factory building in a corner location in open development, with side fencing and gate entrance | Bitterfelder Strasse 13 (map) |
around 1900 (factory building) | Clinker brick facade, cellar window grilles, highlighted corner design, industrial building typical of the time, of architectural and local significance |
09262993 |
Individual monument and aggregate: apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305684, Anhalter Straße 15, 17, 17a) | Bonhoefferstrasse 1; 3; 5; 7 (card) |
1929–1930 (apartment building) | Part of a closed, preserved civil servants' housing complex of the time, in the traditionalist style, plastered facade, loggias, striking colored facade design, of architectural and urban significance, see also Gedikestrasse 5 and Heinickestrasse 6 |
09294429 |
|
Individual monument and aggregate: apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305684, Anhalter Straße 15, 17, 17a) | Bonhoefferstraße 2; 4; 6; 8 (card) |
1929–1930 (apartment building) | Part of a closed, preserved civil servants' housing complex of the time, in the traditionalist style, plastered facade, loggias, distinctive colored facade design, of architectural and urban significance, see also Gedikestrasse 7 and Heinickestrasse 8 |
09294452 |
|
Residential house in open development | Bünaustraße 4a (map) |
1st half of the 19th century (residential building) | presumably former farmhouse, plastered building with a crooked hip roof, of importance in terms of local development |
09294390 |
|
Residential house in semi-open development (structural unit with No. 7), with front garden | Bünaustraße 5 (map) |
marked 1895, later reshaped (residential building) | historicizing plastered facade, lead-glazed staircase windows, iron canopy, wide bay window facing the street, of architectural significance |
09294809 |
|
Residential house in half-open development (structural unit with No. 5), with front garden | Bünaustraße 7 (map) |
1895 (residential building) | historicizing plastered facade with balcony, of architectural significance |
09294808 |
|
Apartment building (with two house numbers) in open development | Bünaustraße 7a; 7b (card) |
around 1915 (tenement) | Plastered facade, two side projections with triangular gables, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history |
09294807 |
|
Apartment building (No. 9) in open development, with front garden and another apartment building (No. 11) in the rear | Bünaustraße 9; 11 (card) |
marked 1935 (tenement) | both houses typical plastered facade of the time with colored plaster structure, entrance facade accentuated by balconies, stylistically between traditionalism and modernity, of importance in terms of building history |
09294806 |
|
Residential house, side building, barn and courtyard paving of a farm | Bünaustraße 13 (map) |
2nd half of the 19th century (farmhouse), after 1800 (side building), marked 1736 (barn) | The only property that survived the fire in "Klein Ende" in 1736, reconstruction by Urban Apitzsch, barn marked in 1736 with clay walls and porphyry plaque, of significance in terms of building history and the history of the site |
09294394 |
|
Individual monument above aggregate: Apartment building in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305683, Buschenaustraße 1–6) | Buschenaustraße 1 (map) |
1929 (apartment building) | Plastered facade with clinker brick structure, stairwell windows with structured glass, of architectural and urban significance, see also Buschenaustraße 2 and 4/6 and Dieselstraße 1–7 and 9/11 |
09262846 |
|
Subject aggregate urban housing estate Buschenaustraße, with the following individual monuments: Multi-family houses Buschenaustraße 1 (Obj. 09262846), Buschenaustraße 2 (Obj. 09262848), Buschenaustraße 4, 6 (Obj. 09262849), Dieselstraße 1, 3, 5, 7 (Obj. 09262845) and Dieselstrasse 9, 11 (Obj. 09262847), furthermore with the following parts: front gardens on Buschenaustrasse and Hofgrün | Buschenaustraße 1; 2; 4; 6 (card) |
1928–1929 (residential complex) | Plastered facades with clinker brick structure, important in terms of building history and urban development |
09305683 |
|
Individual monument above aggregate: Apartment building in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305683, Buschenaustraße 1–6) | Buschenaustraße 2 (map) |
1928–1929 (apartment building) | Plastered facade with clinker brick structure, stairwell windows with structured glass, of architectural and urban significance, see also Dieselstrasse 1-7 and 9/11 as well as Buschenaustrasse 1 and 4/6 |
09262848 |
|
Individual monument above aggregate: apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305683, Buschenaustraße 1–6) | Buschenaustrasse 4; 6 (card) |
1928–1929 (apartment building) | Plastered facade with clinker brick structure, of architectural and urban significance, see also Dieselstrasse 1–7 and 9/11 and Buschenaustrasse 1 and 2 |
09262849 |
|
Arthur-Bretschneider-Park: Park | Coppistraße (map) |
1899–1904 (park), extension 1912–1914 (park) | In connection with urban expansion in the north of Leipzig, establishment of a public park on the Rietzschkewiesen, of local history and gardening significance |
09262706 |
|
Rental villa in semi-open development, with front garden facing Delitzscher Strasse | Coppistraße 1 (map) |
after 1880 (rental villa) | attached to Delitzscher Straße 51, historicizing plastered facade, veranda-shaped porch with exit from the upper floor, garden sculpture, of architectural significance |
09294430 |
|
Villa with garden | Coppistraße 2 (map) |
marked 1890, in the core much older (villa) | Plastered facade with porphyry tufa structure, to the street a central projection with volute gable and corner bay window, to the garden tower with half-timbered storey, in the neo-renaissance style, of importance in terms of building history and local development |
09294431 |
|
Semi-detached house in open development, with front garden and fence | Coppistraße 3; 5 (card) |
around 1880 (double dwelling) | historicizing plastered facade with stucco decoration, porphyry plinth, of importance in terms of building history and local development |
09294432 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Coppistraße 6 (map) |
marked 1912 (tenement) | Plastered facade with balconies and bay windows, sandstone plinths, marble wall cladding in the entrance area, staircase windows with remnants of lead glazing, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history |
09294811 |
|
Villa with garden, garden pavilion and side enclosure | Coppistraße 7 (map) |
around 1850 (villa) | Plastered facade, rich stucco interior, built as a separate house by architect Ottomar Jummel, of importance in terms of building history and local development |
09298416 |
|
Apartment building in half-open development | Coppistraße 8 (map) |
1912 (tenement) | Plastered facade with half-timbered gable, corner bay window, wooden balconies on the back, significant in terms of building history |
09294435 |
|
Villa with coach house, fence and gate entrance | Coppistraße 9 (map) |
around 1890 (villa) | clinker brick facade typical of the time with stair tower, coach house with half-timbered upper floor, villa of the merchant Jacob Joachimsthal, later of the operations director Wilhelm Schroers, of importance in terms of building history and local development |
09294434 |
|
Apartment house in open development in a corner | Coppistraße 10 (map) |
1903–1904 (tenement house) | Well-structured plastered facade with bay windows and wooden balconies, a lead glass window in the vestibule, echoes of Art Nouveau, important from an architectural point of view |
09294812 |
|
More pictures |
Apelstein No. 36 (V) | Delitzscher Strasse (map) |
inscribed 1863 (memorial stone) | in front of house number 32, memorial stone in memory of the battles of the Battle of Leipzig in 1813, 25,000 men under General Blücher against the Polish troops under General Dombrowski, historically significant |
09294400 |
Railway viaduct between Delitzscher Strasse and Geibelstrasse | Delitzscher Strasse (map) |
1878 (viaduct) | of importance in terms of railway history |
09294929 |
|
More pictures |
Residential house (No. 15) in open development, with fencing to the viaduct, outbuildings in the courtyard and factory hall (No. 17) in the property | Delitzscher Strasse 15; 17 (map) |
around 1890 (residential building), early 20th century (factory hall) | Residential house with representative clinker brick facade, marble cladding, sandstone pillars, vestibule door, in the style of historicism, factory building with simple brick facade, of architectural and local importance |
09294395 |
Apartment building in open development | Delitzscher Strasse 19 (map) |
around 1875 (tenement) | Formerly with a coach house in the courtyard, reduced plastered facade with field stone plinth, of importance in terms of local development |
09294396 |
|
Apartment building (with two entrances, Delitzscher Straße 21 and Wilhelm-Sammet-Straße 1) in open development in a corner, with fencing, gate entrance and front garden | Delitzscher Strasse 21 (map) |
1891-1893 (tenement house) | Plastered facade with porphyry tufa structure, corner tower with hood, leaded glass window, in the style of late historicism, of architectural significance |
09294433 |
|
|
Rental villa, with coach house in the courtyard and side fencing | Delitzscher Strasse 27 (map) |
1868 (rental villa) | Historicizing plastered facade typical of the time with characteristic structure, marble steps in the entrance area, iron canopy |
09294397 |
Rental villa with coach house in the courtyard | Delitzscher Strasse 29 (map) |
around 1900 (rental villa) | Plastered facade with mansard roof, street facade accentuated by a gable-crowned porch, small column-supported entrance building on the side, in the reform style of the period around 1910, of architectural significance |
09294398 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Delitzscher Strasse 32 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with shops, plastered facade, front door with polished panes, stencil painting from the 1950s in the entrance area, of importance in terms of local development |
09293001 |
|
Apartment building in semi-open development, with a memorial plaque on the facade | Delitzscher Strasse 34 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | with shops, neo-baroque clinker brick facade, above the entrance a brass plaque: "Here on October 18, 1813, Prince Blücher stood with his staff", of architectural and local significance |
09294401 |
|
Residential house in open development and courtyard paving | Delitzscher Strasse 43 (map) |
around 1840 (residential building) | simple plastered facade, saddle roof with roof house, typical house of the town expansion from 1840, of importance in terms of urban development |
09294374 |
|
Two apartment buildings in open development in a corner, with shop front | Delitzscher Strasse 47; 47a (card) |
1934 (tenement) | Number 47a with shop, decorated plastered facade, mural 1934, etched staircase windows, of architectural significance |
09294402 |
|
Apartment building in half-open development | Delitzscher Strasse 49a (map) |
around 1930, number 49a (apartment building) | Typical plaster facade with echoes of the modern style, important in terms of building history
for number 49: Bock and Paatzsch acted as builders, designers and architects themselves leading the building - a four-story corner house was planned. The application for the building was submitted in March 1933, the application for final building acceptance on September 23 of the same year. The builders Voigt & Böhme were entrusted with the execution, the firm Eisenfabrik und Eisengießerei Franz Mosenthin was responsible for the statics, at the same time the neighboring house number 49a was built. Consistently in the modern taste of the times, the four-storey corner house presented itself with a smooth plastered facade over exposed clinker plinths, squat rectangular windows and formerly with facade painting. From 1960 to 1962 the store, which was partly built out of the facade, was converted into a bank branch on behalf of HO Industriewaren and in 1994/1995. At the same time, the attic was expanded, renovated and modernized. As part of a district review, the changes to the building were assessed as so comprehensively incompatible with historical monuments (including the thermal insulation composite system on the street side) that they were removed from the list of cultural monuments in 2016. Externally, only the house entrance door is original. LfD / 2017 |
09294403 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Delitzscher Strasse 50 (map) |
1883 (tenement) | with a passage through the house and formerly with a shop, plastered facade still with a classicistic effect, of architectural significance |
09294404 |
|
Rental villa in semi-open development, with coach house in the courtyard | Delitzscher Strasse 51 (map) |
around 1880 (rental villa) | Rental villa built on Coppistraße 1, historicizing plastered facade, to the street central projecting with tympanum, staircase with velvet upholstery on the handrail, colored lead glazing, to the front garden veranda, historically important |
09294405 |
|
Apartment building in closed development, with courtyard paving | Delitzscher Strasse 52 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with gate passage and shops, representative clinker brick facade, in the style of historicism, of architectural significance |
09294406 |
|
Villa with enclosure and front garden | Delitzscher Strasse 53 (map) |
around 1895 (villa) | multi-colored clinker brick facade with outside staircase, lead glass window, in the style of the neo-renaissance, named after the owner builder Friedrich Max Uhlemann, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history |
09294407 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Delitzscher Strasse 66 (map) |
around 1912 (tenement) | with shops, plastered facade with wide box bay windows, stucco reliefs in the entrance area, lead-glazed staircase windows, reform style architecture, of significance in terms of building history |
09294408 |
|
Corner café or restaurant building (attached to a residential building) | Delitzscher Strasse 67 (map) |
around 1890 (café) | Decorated plastered facade with plaster structure, in the style of historicism, of architectural and local significance |
09294425 |
|
Apartment building in open development | Delitzscher Strasse 69 (map) |
around 1875 (tenement) | with shop, historicizing plastered facade, of importance in terms of local development |
09294493 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Delitzscher Strasse 72b (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | with shops, center-emphasized historicizing plastered facade, vestibule door in the entrance area, of architectural significance |
09294410 |
|
Residential house in open development | Delitzscher Strasse 73 (map) |
around 1875 (residential building) | historicizing plastered facade, location near the Eutritzsch Church, of importance in terms of local development |
09297801 |
|
Apartment building in closed development, with courtyard building | Delitzscher Strasse 74 (map) |
around 1910 (tenement) | with shop, clinker brick facade typical of the time, stencil painting, etched staircase windows, of architectural significance |
09294411 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Delitzscher Strasse 76 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with gate passage, with shop, historicizing clinker brick facade, etched staircase windows, stencil painting in the gate passage, of historical importance |
09294412 |
|
Double apartment building in open development, with side fencing | Delitzscher Strasse 77; 79 (card) |
around 1880 (tenement) | historicizing plastered facade with reduced structure, two porches with tail gables, location near the Eutritzsch church, of architectural significance |
09294772 |
|
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner | Delitzscher Strasse 78 (map) |
around 1912 (tenement) | with shops, plastered façade with bay windows, loggias, terrazzo, stucco frieze and relief in the entrance area, reform style architecture, in a prominent corner location on Wittenberger Strasse, of importance in terms of building history and urban planning |
09294413 |
|
Apartment building in closed development and courtyard building | Delitzscher Strasse 80 (map) |
around 1910 (tenement) | with gate passage and shop, sandstone plaster facade with bay windows, stucco and leaded glass windows in the entrance area, reform style architecture, of architectural significance |
09294414 |
|
Apartment building in half-open development | Delitzscher Strasse 80a (map) |
around 1910 (tenement) | with gate passage, sandstone-plaster facade with wide bay windows and half-timbered gables, stucco reliefs in the gate passage, reform style architecture, of architectural significance |
09294415 |
|
Apartment building in open development | Delitzscher Strasse 81 (map) |
around 1908 (tenement) | Sparsely decorated plastered facade with brick plinth, wide central projectile with tail gable, vestibule door, stucco and wooden panels in the entrance area, important from an architectural point of view |
09261915 |
|
Residential house in formerly half-open development, with a side garden and enclosure | Delitzscher Strasse 82 (map) |
around 1905 (residential building) | Plastered facade with bay window facing the street, iron balcony grille, remains of stucco, of architectural significance |
09294416 |
|
Gate of a tenement house | Delitzscher Strasse 88 (map) |
1886 (gate) | of importance in the history of handicrafts |
09260923 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Delitzscher Strasse 90 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | with gate passage and shop, clinker plaster facade, original shop front |
09291871 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Delitzscher Strasse 94 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | historicizing clinker brick facade, staircase windows with remains of etched glazing, of architectural significance |
09294417 |
|
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner | Delitzscher Strasse 96 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with shops, simplified plastered façade, but high-quality equipment, inside etched glazing, in the entrance area ceiling painting, stucco, vestibule door, of architectural significance |
09294418 |
|
Former tram depot | Delitzscher Strasse 97 (map) |
Early 20th century (tram depot) | Steel truss roof structure, of importance in terms of building history and technology |
09306394 |
|
Individual monument above aggregate: apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305688, Thaerstraße 1–38) | Delitzscher Strasse 98; 98a; 100; 100a (card) |
1929 (apartment building) | striking plastered facades with clinker brick structure and saddle roofs, front doors with polished panes, lead-glazed staircase windows, of importance for urban planning and building history, see also Thaerstraße 1–38 and Schönefelder Straße 1–7 |
09292512 |
|
Residential house in open development | Delitzscher Strasse 104 (map) |
around 1865 (residential building) | with shop fitting, plastered facade, elevated central projection, of importance in terms of local development |
09299420 |
|
Individual monument and aggregate: three apartment buildings (no. 105a / b, no. 105 c / d, no. 107–111) in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305681, Delitzscher Straße 105–111) | Delitzscher Strasse 105a; 105b; 105c; 105d; 107; 109; 111 (map) |
after 1930 (apartment building) | Unusually designed plastered buildings with flat roofs, of importance in terms of urban development and architectural history, see also Gräfestraße 28–32 |
09294447 |
|
Material entity Second residential complex of the construction company, with the following individual monuments: four apartment buildings (Delitzscher Straße 105a / 105b, 105c / 105d, 107/109/111, Obj. 09294447 and Gräfestraße 28/30/32, Obj. 09294392), furthermore with the following elements: Front garden, courtyards, laundry areas, paving and access road | Delitzscher Strasse 105a; 105b; 105c; 105d; 107; 109; 111 (map) |
after 1930 (residential complex) | Unusually designed plastered buildings with flat roofs, of importance in terms of urban planning and building history |
09305681 |
|
Apartment building in open development | Delitzscher Strasse 106 (map) |
1870 (tenement) | Simplified plastered facade, rear verandas around 1900, of importance in terms of local development |
09294419 |
|
Residential house in open development with side gate entrance | Delitzscher Strasse 108 (map) |
1863–1865 (residential building) | Simplified plastered facade, iron grilles on the entrance windows, of importance in terms of local development |
09294420 |
|
School building (No. 110), another school building in the courtyard, gymnasium (No. 112) and gate entrance | Delitzscher Strasse 110; 112 (card) |
1863 (school), 1876 (school) | Plastered buildings typical of the time, gate access with two iron wheel deflectors, of architectural and local importance |
09294384 |
|
Apartment building in open development, with a front garden and side walls, including the associated apartment building Mothesstrasse 3 | Delitzscher Strasse 117 (map) |
around 1935 (tenement) | Plastered facade with porphyry tufa, between traditionalism and modernism, of importance in terms of building history |
09298612 |
|
Apartment building in closed development and courtyard building | Delitzscher Strasse 118 (map) |
around 1885 (tenement) | Front building with gate passage, historicizing plastered facade, historically important |
09294214 |
|
Apartment building in closed development and courtyard building | Delitzscher Strasse 120 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | Formerly with a shop, clinker brick facade typical of the time, stucco in the entrance area, porch door with lead glazing, echoes of Art Nouveau, of importance in terms of building history |
09264548 |
|
Villa with side fence and gate entrance | Delitzscher Strasse 121 (map) |
around 1905 (villa) | Plastered facade with sandstone structure, side elevation with stepped gable facing the street, lead glass windows, wooden balcony, villa named after the manufacturer Carl Münster, owner of the chemical factory M. Brockmann, of local and architectural importance |
09294271 |
|
|
Apartment building in closed development | Delitzscher Strasse 122 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | historicizing clinker brick facade, of architectural significance |
09294498 |
Apartment building in half-open development in a corner, with a front garden in the side street | Delitzscher Strasse 124 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | with shop, historicizing clinker brick facade, historically important |
09262718 |
|
|
Apartment building in half-open development in a corner (structural unit with no. 128, 130, 132), with a front garden in the side street | Delitzscher Strasse 126 (map) |
around 1906 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, stucco in the entrance area, apartment doors with overhangs, staircase windows with remains of etched glazing, in the Art Nouveau style, of significance in terms of building history |
09262717 |
Double apartment building in closed development (structural unit with no.126 and 132) | Delitzscher Strasse 128; 130 (card) |
around 1906 (double tenement house) | Clinker brick facade with bay windows, in Art Nouveau style, of architectural significance |
09262716 |
|
Memorial to the fallen of the 1st World War (fallen of the allotment garden association naturopathy) | Delitzscher Strasse 129 (map) |
1926 (Fallen Memorial) | historically significant |
09299447 |
|
Apartment building in semi-open development in a corner (structural unit with no. 126, 128, 130) | Delitzscher Strasse 132 (map) |
around 1906 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, stucco in the entrance area, etched staircase windows, apartment doors with overhangs, in the Art Nouveau style, of architectural significance |
09262715 |
|
Apartment house in a corner and open development | Delitzscher Strasse 134 (map) |
around 1897 (tenement) | with corner shutter, clinker brick facade typical of the time, stucco and painting in the entrance area, apartment doors with overhangs, remains of etched staircase windows, of significance in terms of building history |
09262714 |
|
Apartment buildings in a residential complex | Delitzscher Strasse 138; 140; 142; 144; 146 (card) |
after 1930 (apartment building) | Plastered facade, see also Delitzscher Straße 176/178 and Essener Straße 2, important in terms of building history |
09261497 |
|
Subject aggregate St. Georg Municipal Hospital, with the following individual monuments: numerous institutes, ward houses and outbuildings, memorial for the wounded of World War I (see individual monument document - Obj. 09290820, same address), with the following aggregate parts: ventilation openings, concrete vase, partially received the im Pattern laid pavement pavement, entrance area with candelabra and two large flagpoles, in entrance house 12 two fountains, stone pyramid for Dr. Seyffarth (plaque from 1945 not a memorial) in a park with a water basin and pond | Delitzscher Strasse 141 (map) |
1908–1913 (hospital complex), after 1945 (stone pyramid monument) | representative plastered buildings in the reform style of the time around 1910, of architectural and local significance |
09305690 |
|
Individual monument above material aggregate: numerous institutes, ward houses and outbuildings of a hospital facility, memorial for the wounded of the 1st World War (see also material aggregate document - Obj. 09305690, same address) | Delitzscher Strasse 141 (map) |
1908–1913 (hospital component), after 1918 (war memorial) | representative plastered buildings in the reform style of the time around 1910, of architectural and local significance |
09290820 |
|
Hand lever pumps Leipzig (aggregate); Hand lever pump No. 291 | Delitzscher Strasse 141 (map) |
around 1910 (hand lever pump) | Manual pump with well shaft and cover plate; in the municipal clinic “St. Georg “Leipzig, historically important |
09294844 |
|
Apartment building in closed development and courtyard paving | Delitzscher Strasse 150 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | with shops, clinker brick facade, vestibule door, stairwell window with remains of etched glazing, of architectural significance |
09294422 |
|
Residential house in open development | Delitzscher Strasse 151 (map) |
around 1905 (residential building) | Belonging to the nursery at St. Georg Hospital, charming building in country house style, of architectural significance |
09299448 |
|
Apartment building in closed development and courtyard paving | Delitzscher Strasse 152 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | with gate passage, plastered clinker facade, vestibule door with colored glazing, of architectural significance |
09294421 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Delitzscher Strasse 154 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | with gate passage, with shops, clinker-plaster facade, of architectural significance |
09262800 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Delitzscher Strasse 156 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, historically important |
09262799 |
|
Apartment building in half-open development in the corner and coach house in the courtyard | Delitzscher Strasse 158 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | Formerly with a gate passage, with a restaurant and shop, plastered clinker facade, of architectural significance |
09262798 |
|
Apartment house in closed development in a corner | Delitzscher Strasse 160 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | with corner shutter, historicizing clinker brick facade, stucco in the entrance area, of architectural significance |
09262708 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Delitzscher Strasse 162 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | historicizing clinker brick facade, of architectural significance |
09262709 |
|
Double tenement house in closed development | Delitzscher Strasse 168; 168a (card) |
1910–1911 (double tenement house) | with gate passage (number 168a), plastered facade with sturdy bay windows and balconies, number 168 porch door, number 168a wooden paving in the gate passage, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history and local development, the property has been a pottery site since 1870
1870 sought-after Mrs. Emilie Beer born. Müller started building a house and performing a kiln for a pottery. Albert Haupt as the architect and the building trade master Johann Carl Leonhardt were called in for the project. The later pottery owner Herman Karl Freygang initiated various extensions. The establishment of a glaze mill in 1881 seems remarkable, for 1903 the company Stephan & Schubert, Kunstanstalt und Papierwaren GmbH, is based on the property. The basis for the fundamental redesign of the property planned in 1910 was laid by the local law on the development of Leipzig-Eutritzsch-Nordost, confirmed in 1907. With the exception of the old stable building, all buildings should be demolished. The entrepreneur was the businessman Heinrich Ludwig Franz Raabe, who entrusted Bernhard Leuthier with the execution and the architect Theodor Quietzsch with the planning and management of the project. The old stable building was to be converted and expanded, a rear residential building in the courtyard and a double house on the street side. Drawings from July 1910 were revised and excavation began in November. The rear residential building was completed in summer 1911, the front building in autumn. The building sections of the duplex had a different floor space: in number 168 only one apartment per floor was planned, in the neighboring building there were two on the upper floors. With the exception of the two apartments under the roof, the bathroom / toilet was behind the apartment doors. A workshop building built on the property at number 168a in 1913 is now located at Magnusstrasse 5b. The two powerful box oriels with attractive reliefs are characteristic of the double tenement house facade, the plastered facade looks elegant and restrained. The small window projections, the iron exits and the originally preserved entrance doors make a decisive contribution to the appearance of the Reformstil front. The interior is convincing of the high quality equipment. LfD / 2017, 2018 |
09262710 |
|
Double tenement house in closed development | Delitzscher Strasse 170; 170a (card) |
around 1930 (double tenement house) | Plastered facade in the style of modernism, accentuated stairwells, of architectural significance |
09262873 |
|
Two multi-family houses in a row of houses (with Essener Straße 2) | Delitzscher Strasse 176; 178 (card) |
1936 (apartment building) | Plastered facade, washhouse entrances to the rear with iron barriers, of architectural significance, see also Essener Straße 2 |
09262712 |
|
Individual monument and aggregate: Ceremonial hall of the cemetery, enclosure, grave monuments and memorial stone as well as 17 grave stones of the former Jewish cemetery Johannistal (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305691, same address) | Delitzscher Strasse 224 (map) |
after 1928 (tombstones), 1814–1864 (offset tombstones), 1955 (celebration hall), 1951 (memorial stone) | artistically and historically of importance; Gravestones from the former Johannistal cemetery (1814–1864) |
09290803 |
|
New Israelitischer Friedhof, with the following individual monuments: Cemetery hall, with enclosure, tombs and memorial stone as well as 17 tombstones of the former Jewish cemetery Johannistal (see individual monument document - Obj. 09290803, same address) and the cemetery complex with avenue | Delitzscher Strasse 224 (map) |
after 1928 (cemetery) | artistically and historically of importance |
09305691 |
|
|
Former winery in a corner, with enclosure and gate entrance | Dessauer Strasse 6 (map) |
marked 1909 (wine cellar) | Clinker-plaster facade, in the "castle style", document of the industrial history of the northern Leipzig area, of scientific interest |
09262989 |
|
Office and residential building in semi-open development, with fencing and gate entrance | Dessauer Strasse 8 (map) |
around 1900 (residential and office building) | clinker brick facade typical of the time, document of the industrial history of the northern Leipzig area, of scientific interest |
09262990 |
|
Residential and office building in open development, with lateral fencing | Dessauer Strasse 9 (map) |
around 1910 (residential and office building) | Plastered facade with balcony, reform style architecture, document of the industrial history of the northern Leipzig area, of scientific interest |
09262988 |
|
Residential and office building in semi-open development and paving the access path | Dessauer Strasse 12 (map) |
1902 (residential and office building) | Plastered facade, flat bay window facing the street, between Reform and Art Nouveau, document of the industrial history of the northern Leipzig area, of scientific interest |
09262991 |
Courtyard building (residential and office building) | Dessauer Strasse 18 (map) |
around 1900 (residential and office building) | Clinker brick facade, etched staircase windows, document of the industrial history of the northern Leipzig area, of scientific interest |
09262992 |
|
Residential and office building in open development in a corner | Dessauer Strasse 22 (map) |
around 1905 (residential and office building) | Well-structured plastered facade with half-timbered elements, corner accentuated by a bay-like design, stencil painting strip in the stairwell, document of the industrial history of the northern Leipzig area, of importance in terms of building history and local history |
09262985 |
|
Former factory coach house and fencing with two gates | Dessauer Strasse 24 (map) |
1906–1907 (Remisen building), 1907 (enclosure) | Clinker facade, document of the industrial history of the northern Leipzig area, of scientific interest
For a long time the world-famous company Villeroy & Boch was located on the larger industrial site in the corner of Hohmannstrasse. In the summer of 1906, plans for the construction of a new business and warehouse building were submitted by the architects Handel and Franke, which were also under contract for statics, construction management and partial execution. A good 1,000 square meters of the 2500 square meter land area should be built on. Loading ramps were provided for the track systems and the installation of two freight elevators was planned. The warehouse should also contain a director's room, sample room for novelties, a main office, a city office and a waiting room with check-in. In addition, the construction of a shed with an apartment on the upper floor was applied for on the street, this building is today, in addition to the representative fence, the last largely original evidence of the property development completed in 1907. Edmund Stoye's company is well-known for the professional implementation of the plans on the property under the direction of foreman Hermann Quitzsch from Plagwitz, the elevator system was supplied by Unruh & Liebig while Brüggemann & Lewus installed the lightning protection system. 1921 erection of two chimneys because of the installation of two iron regulating furnaces, in 1934 internal alterations in the factory building and in 1941 application for the installation of an air raid shelter for 3 × 50 people in accordance with the Führer ruling of October 10, 1940. Explosive bombs from an Allied air raid damaged the factory building, which in December 1940 passed from the Mettlach company Villeroy & Boch to businessman Johannes Friedrich, the owner of Louis Perlmann, Stahlwarenfabrik, Solingen and Leipzig, founded in 1868. In the application for a reconstruction in 1947 it is stated that the building burned out completely, but that the surrounding walls that were still standing were still usable (architect Werner Zill). In 1970 approval for the parcel subdivision and building permit for the expansion of the rubble site according to plans by architect H. Kopischke. The application for the conversion of the existing coach house building into a hotel was submitted in December 1992, and from 2000 it was again converted with a table dance bar on the ground floor. The two-storey coach house that has been preserved has an effective yellow clinker brick facade and colored blinding stone, a small gable end to the street and portal frame, wrought iron grids are stretched between the high clinker pillars of the enclosure. Significant industrial-historical testimony in the Eutritzsch industrial park, document of the development of the district in connection with the development of the immediate area around the Leipzig main station, which is under construction. LfD / 2011 |
09262986 |
|
Residential and office building on a factory site | Dessauer Strasse 26 (map) |
1907–1908 (residential building); 1907–1908 (factory building) | Clinker building, the last remaining part of a company known throughout Germany, document of the industrial history of the northern Leipzig area, of scientific interest
On May 12, 1907, the building application for a cardboard and corrugated cardboard factory with siding was issued by the well-known Leipzig architect and master builder Emil Richter, who was also the site manager and was responsible for the structural calculations. The office and residential building was open to the public on the ground floor and had an apartment on each of the two floors above. The owner was supposed to move in on the first floor and the accountant in the attic. The client was the company Uetrecht & Co, which acquired the property from municipal property in July 1907. In addition to the house described - which is still preserved today - plans for a factory building and a stable building were submitted, and Naumann & Kelle was commissioned with the execution. Due to financial difficulties at Uetrecht & Co, the property was acquired by master builder Bruno Castner in July 1908, and the final inspection was requested in October. The company Castner & Hennig was on the market as a “special construction business for fire-proof Rabitz and Monier constructions as well as ceilings of their own systems”. With share capital of 120,000 marks, ISI-Werke was founded on November 15, 1909: the Internationale Schallplatten Industrie GmbH, whose shareholders were the engineer Bruno Castner and the businessman Franz Rost from Leipzig-Gohlis. An internationally significant idea of industrial progress found shelter in a company building in Leipzig: the “record company”, which at the beginning of the 20th century replaced the phonograph with its wax and chilled cast iron cylinders developed by Edison. Long before radio was invented, the first modern mass medium came onto the market and also found its way into the living rooms of the Wilhelmine Empire. Musical recordings were also made in a factory building in Wahrener Linkelstraße, but the highest quality recordings were made in the ISI works in Dessauer Straße 26. From the beginning, their business activities included all steps of record production, from the manufacture of the wax matrix blanks and shellac compound to the Production of sound recordings and records up to distribution. In the 1920s there were around 150 employees at the ISI works; in 1931, for example, the daily record production alone (!) Was 15,000. Because of the good acoustics in the factory hall, even larger orchestral works were initially recorded in Dessauer Straße, and later the converted ballet hall in the Alberthallen at Leipzig Central Station was used. The product names ISIPHON, Electrocord and Cordy were also popular. Incidentally, the ISI-Blitz is a registered design brand with a worldwide reputation. In March 1923 Paul Lösche's Leipzig orchestrion works were also located on the property. ISI had tough competition with the Polyphon-Werke producing in Leipzig. At the end of 1932, production at the ISI works was stopped. In the building that has been preserved to this day, a small renovation was carried out in 1933 under the leadership of the architect Georg Döhler; With the exception of the four-axle house in question, the property was completely demolished in 1996 and a new exhibition and sales building for office machines and office furniture along with an adjacent warehouse and workshop was built on. The two-storey, pittoresque clinker brick building with an extended mansard, structured by green-glazed bricks and accessed through a side entrance with an original two-winged house entrance door and skylight, has been preserved, further equipment details are original. Testimony to Saxon industrial history, importance for the Eutritzsch district development and popular education, memorable value, rarity value. LfD / 2011 |
09262987 |
|
Individual monument above aggregate: apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305679, Dessauer Straße 31–37) | Dessauer Strasse 31; 33; 33a; 33b; 33c; 33d; 35; 35a; 35b; 35c; 37 (card) |
1929–1931 (apartment building) | Plastered facades, clinker edging on the front doors, remarkable residential buildings in the modern style, architect: Georg Wrede, of importance in terms of town planning and building history, see also Arthur-Hausmann-Straße 1, 5–9, Theresienstraße 38-48 and Hartzstraße 12-20 |
09263754 |
|
Totality of residential complex Dessauer Straße building cooperative of the Leipziger Mieterverein, with the following individual monuments: Apartment buildings Dessauer Straße 31-37 (Obj. 09263754), Arthur-Hausmann-Straße 1, 5, 7, 9 (Obj. 09294920), Theresienstraße 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48 (Obj. 09294921) and Hartzstraße 12, 14, 16, 18, 20 (Obj. 09294922) as well as parts of the whole: wall enclosures on Dessauer Straße and Hartzstraße, as well as green spaces in the courtyards and front gardens on Theresienstraße | Dessauer Strasse 31; 33; 33a; 33b; 33c; 33d; 35; 35a; 35b; 35c; 37 (card) |
1929–1931 (residential complex) | Plastered facade, clinker edging on the front doors, on Theresienstraße residential building in zigzag position with striking balconies, remarkable residential buildings in the style of modernism, architect: Georg Wrede, of importance in terms of urban planning and building history |
09305679 |
|
|
Factory building | Dessauer Strasse 32 (map) |
around 1930 (factory building) | well structured clinker facade, small factory building of the former Saxon conc. Mineral water institute Dr. Ralf Struve, typical of small parcel sizes, of importance in terms of building and industrial history |
09298614 |
|
Former warehouse building including loading ramp (address: Dessauer Straße 40 and Hartzstraße 10), with subsequent residential and administrative building including garages in a corner (address: Dessauer Straße 36/38), courtyard paving and paving of the former loading zone and two fences | Dessauer Strasse 36; 38; 40 (card) |
1929–1930 (warehouse) | Warehouse building with loading ramp on the street side and former railroad siding on the courtyard side, brick facade, in the modern style, architect: Philipp Schaefer (chief architect of Karstadt AG, in 1920 the department store groups Theodor Althoff AG and Rudolph Karstadt AG merged, most of the Althoff branches were under theirs old name continued), of architectural, economic, local and architectural significance |
09262829 |
Multi-family houses in a residential complex with a front garden on Arthur-Hausmann-Strasse | Dessauer Strasse 39; 41; 43; 45 (card) |
around 1925 (apartment building) | Plastered facade, lead-glazed staircase windows, ceiling stucco in the entrance area, reform style architecture, of architectural significance, see also Arthur-Hausmann-Straße 2 and Hamburger Straße 27/29 |
09294924 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Dessauer Strasse 66 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | Plastered facade, stucco in the entrance area, remnants of lead-glazed staircase windows, echoes of Art Nouveau, significant in terms of building history |
09262999 |
|
Apartment building in half-open development | Dessauer Strasse 68 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | symmetrically structured plastered facade, between Art Nouveau and Historicism, of importance in terms of building history |
09262998 |
|
Individual monument above aggregate: apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305683, Buschenaustraße 1–6) | Dieselstrasse 1; 3; 5; 7 (card) |
1929 (apartment building) | Plastered facade with clinker brick structure, stairwell windows with structured glass, of architectural and urban significance, see also Buschenaustraße 1, 2 and 4/6 and Dieselstraße 9/11 |
09262845 |
|
Residential and office building, enclosure, gate entrance and southern outbuilding of a factory | Dieselstrasse 6 (map) |
around 1920 (residential and office building) | Plastered facade, lead-glazed staircase windows, of importance in terms of building history and local history |
09262843 |
|
Residential and administrative buildings as well as the enclosure of a factory | Dieselstrasse 8 (map) |
around 1915 (residential and office building) | Clinker brick facade, street-side bay window, expanded hipped roof, of architectural and local significance |
09262844 |
|
Individual monument above aggregate: apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305683, Buschenaustraße 1–6) | Dieselstrasse 9; 11 (card) |
1928–1929 (apartment building) | Plastered facade with clinker brick structure, stairwell windows with structured glass, of architectural and urban significance, see also Dieselstrasse 1–7 and Buschenaustrasse 1, 2 and 4/6 |
09262847 |
|
Multi-family house in a row of houses (with Delitzscher Strasse 176/178) | Essener Strasse 2 (map) |
1936 (apartment building) | Plastered facade, head building of the row of houses, historically important, see also Delitzscher Straße 176/178 |
09262713 |
|
Factory floor | Essener Strasse 27b (map) |
around 1915 (factory hall) | Clinker-plaster facade, arched portal as entrance, of local significance |
09263804 |
|
|
Storage building (grain silo) and siding | Essener Strasse 34 (map) |
1935 (silo) | Reinforced concrete skeleton construction, significant building and urban history |
09262279 |
|
Former town hall (with post office, under two house numbers) and enclosure with two gates | Eutritzscher Markt 1; 1a (card) |
1887–1888, marked 1888 (town hall) | representative clinker brick facade typical of the time with balcony, gables and clock tower, in neo-renaissance forms, formerly with an integrated post office building (post office 21), of architectural and local significance |
09294423 |
Residential house in open development and fencing | Eutritzscher Markt 6 (map) |
Mid 19th century (residential building) | Residential house with plastered half-timbered upper floor and half-hipped roof, towards the street a roof house with triangular gable, of importance in terms of building history and the history of local development |
09294424 |
|
Parts of a restaurant | Eutritzscher Markt 7 (map) |
marked 1640 (furnishings), 19th century (parts of the building) | Former inn with the oldest bar in Leipzig, with a signed wooden column marked 1640, regular table corner with wooden lattice, demolition of the building in January 2001 (plastered building with two cellar vaults), parts of the restaurant salvaged, of great local history |
09264550 |
|
Individual monument and aggregate: apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305684, Anhalter Straße 15, 17, 17a) | Gedikestrasse 1; 3 (card) |
around 1930 (apartment building) | Part of a closed, preserved civil servants' housing complex of the time, in the traditionalist style, plastered facade, distinctive colored facade design, of architectural and urban significance, see also Heinickestrasse 2/4, Paul-Schneider-Strasse 1-7 and Wittenberger Strasse 44-50 |
09263800 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Gedikestrasse 2 (map) |
around 1930 (tenement) | Plastered facade, high porphyry base, central projectile with broken gable, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history |
09294814 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Gedikestrasse 4 (map) |
around 1930 (tenement) | Plastered facade, high porphyry base, central projectile with broken gable, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history |
09294815 |
|
Individual monument above aggregate: Apartment building in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305684, Anhalter Straße 15, 17, 17a) | Gedikestrasse 5 (map) |
1929–1930 (apartment building) | Part of a closed, preserved civil servants' housing complex of the time, in the traditionalist style, plastered facade, distinctive colored facade design, of architectural and urban significance, see also Heinickestraße 6 |
09263799 |
|
Multi-family houses in a residential complex, with a green passage (between No. 12 and 14) to the sliding street | Gedikestrasse 6; 8th; 10; 12; 12a; 12b; 14; 14a; 14b; 16 (card) |
1931 (apartment building) | simple plastered facade, loggias, house entrances edged in clinker, polished staircase windows, of architectural and socio-historical importance, form a row of houses together with sliding street 33 / 33a / 33b and 37 / 37a / 37b |
09294427 |
|
Individual monument above aggregate: Apartment building in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305684, Anhalter Straße 15, 17, 17a) | Gedikestrasse 7 (map) |
1931 (apartment building) | with shop extension (number 7a) next to number 7, part of a closed, preserved official housing complex of the time, in the traditionalist style, plastered facade, distinctive colored facade design, of architectural and urban significance, see also Anhalter Straße 15–17a, Heinickestraße 8 and Bonhoeffer-Straße 2-8 |
09263798 |
|
Multi-family houses in a residential complex | Gedikestrasse 20; 22; 24; 26; 28 (card) |
1926 (apartment building) | Well structured plastered facades, entrance portals in clinker brick construction, in traditionalist style, of architectural and socio-historical importance, see also Anhalter Straße 11/13 |
09291198 |
|
Railway bridge over Geibelstrasse | Geibelstrasse (map) |
1905–1906 (railway bridge) | Arched bridge with tied arches, yellow clinker edging with sandstone pillars, railway bridge on route 6367 Leipzig-Großkorbetha, route kilometers 1750, of importance in terms of architectural and technical history |
09294930 |
|
Apartment building in open development | Geibelstrasse 10 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | historicizing clinker brick facade, cellar window grilles, historically important |
09291001 |
|
Apartment building in half-open development (forms a semi-detached house with no.16) | Geibelstrasse 14 (map) |
around 1897 (tenement) | historic clinker brick facade, historically important |
09262791 |
|
Apartment building in half-open development (forms a semi-detached house with No. 14) | Geibelstrasse 16 (map) |
around 1897 (tenement) | historic clinker brick facade, historically important |
09262792 |
|
Apartment building in open development, with lateral fencing | Geibelstrasse 18 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | representative clinker brick facade in the style of historicism, over the apartment doors floral stencil painting, of architectural significance |
09291000 |
|
Apartment building in open development, with lateral fencing | Geibelstrasse 20 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | representative clinker brick facade in the style of historicism, winter gardens with iron columns at the rear, of architectural significance |
09262793 |
|
Three multi-family houses (No. 22/24, 26/28 and 30/32) in a residential complex, with enclosing walls and green spaces | Geibelstrasse 22; 24; 26; 28; 30; 32 (card) |
around 1935 (twin house) | Typical plaster facade of the time, in the traditionalist style, of architectural significance, see also Schinkelstrasse 1–9 and 10–14 |
09262795 |
|
Semi-detached house in open development in a corner, with garden and fencing | Geibelstrasse 44; 46 (card) |
1929–1930 (double dwelling), 1929 (enclosure) | Plastered facade with clinker brick structure, standing bay clad with clinker bricks, partially pointed arch windows, windows to Mörikestrasse with colored lead glazing, of architectural significance
On the same day (March 26, 1929) the building application for "half a single-family duplex" was submitted to the approval authority by the building manager and architect FB Thon. This "on the basis of the local law on building facilitation for small houses of July 25, 1919", which resulted in tax benefits for the builders. Thon, who also looked after two neighboring semi-detached houses, carried out the structural calculations, the construction business Otto Süße from Schönefeld carried out the work. The corner house on Mörickestrasse was financed by director Paul Emil Curt Grabs, number 46 (at the time of construction number 32) by businessman Willy Schüppel and his wife Charlotte Maria Martha Gertrud, born Leineweber, born. Hoax. The latter was approved for use on February 10, 1930, and for the later number 44, this is dated January 28. Here, however, in a modification of the initial planning, two apartments were set up in the building. The semi-detached house has a plastered facade with structures made of iron clinker brick, wooden folding shutters, a tiled hipped roof, designed green areas to the rear and on the street fronts. At number 46 there is a pond basin with clinker brick surround in the garden, in both halves of the house the original above-average furnishings have largely been preserved, the fencing at the property line. The construction of private apartments has an architectural and artistic value, is an indispensable part of a high-quality residential area. LfD / 2019 |
09294436 |
|
Apartment building in open development | Geibelstrasse 56 (map) |
around 1905/1910 (tenement house) | Plastered facade, brick base, two corner oriels, of importance in terms of building history |
09297772 |
|
Apartment building in formerly half-open development | Görlitzer Strasse 4 (map) |
1862 (tenement house) | with house passage and with shop, plastered facade typical of the time, of importance in terms of local development
In May 1862 Friedrich Gottlob Oertel submitted the building application for a new house and a stable building with toilets. A three-axis extension with an inserted shop was added to the three-storey, six-axle building in 1894. The locksmith and fitter Paul Hupfer commissioned the company of master masons Oertel & Uhlemann with the work. The last major changes to the house included a courtyard-side toilet extension in 1933/1934 by the builder Erich Kohnert. Above the visible natural stone and brick base is the structured plaster facade, the result of the last renovation is not entirely happy. Parts of the shop front from 1894 and the door of the house passage have been preserved in the original. There is a district development and architectural value. LfD / 2017 |
09262967 |
|
Apartment building in half-open development | Görlitzer Strasse 8 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, of importance in terms of local development |
09262968 |
|
Residential house in open development | Görlitzer Strasse 12 (map) |
1862 (residential house) | one-storey plastered building, wide two-storey risalit with gable, of importance in terms of local development |
09262970 |
|
Apartment building in half-open development (forms a semi-detached house with No. 32) | Görlitzer Strasse 30 (map) |
around 1910 (tenement) | Typical of the time, decorated plaster facade, of architectural significance |
09294916 |
|
Apartment building in semi-open development (forms a semi-detached house with No. 30) | Görlitzer Strasse 32 (map) |
around 1910 (tenement) | Typical of the time decorated plaster facade, stucco and stencil painting in the entrance area, of architectural significance |
09294917 |
|
Several bridges over the northern Rietzschke at Eutritzscher Park | Graefestrasse (map) |
around 1880 (bridge) | private connecting paths to the private gardens of the former farms at Gräfestraße 9 and 17 (connecting paths to the Rietzschkeaue), of local historical importance |
09298710 |
|
|
Hand lever pump with well shaft and cover plate | Graefestrasse (map) |
before 1890 (hand lever pump) | Little lion type, significant in terms of local history |
09294451 |
Rental villa, with garden, fence, entrance gate, paving and outbuildings | Graefestraße 3 (map) |
around 1905 (rental villa) | representative plastered facade with ornamental framework structure and two-storey veranda, echoes of Jugendstil and Reform style, of importance in terms of building history |
09294437 |
|
House of a farm | Graefestraße 4 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century (farmhouse) | Gable-independent clay building, upper floor presumably half-timbered (plastered), belongs to the old village center of Eutritzsch, important in terms of building history and local development |
09262801 |
|
Rental villa with enclosure and garden | Graefestraße 5 (map) |
around 1905 (rental villa) | representative plastered facade with two-storey wooden veranda, of architectural significance |
09294438 |
|
Apartment building in semi-open development with a front garden | Graefestraße 8 (map) |
Late 19th century (tenement house) | Historicizing clinker plaster facade, wooden verandas on the back, terrazzo inside, of architectural significance |
09294439 |
|
House and gate of a farm | Graefestraße 9 (map) |
19th century (farmhouse) | Plastered facade, windows with folding shutters, half-hipped roof, three cannonballs from 1813 walled in, in the old village center of Eutritzsch opposite the church, of architectural and local significance |
09291158 |
|
Tenement house in half-open development, with enclosure and front garden | Graefestraße 10 (map) |
around 1925 (tenement) | Plastered facade with two sculptures next to the entrance, pointed arched entrance, typical plastered building from the 1920s, of architectural significance |
09294440 |
|
Villa (No. 11) with garden and enclosure, courtyard paving and ancillary building (No. 11a) as well as a baroque memorial stone in the property | Graefestrasse 11; 11a (card) |
marked 1900 (villa) | representative clinker brick facade with half-timbered and sandstone elements, side stair tower, terrazzo with mosaic inside, in the style of historicism, five cannonballs walled in from 1813, of importance in terms of building history and local development |
09294441 |
|
Side building of a former farm | Graefestraße 13 (map) |
around 1865 (already in 1876) | Plastered facade, stable building typical of the region, belongs to the old village center of Eutritzsch, historically important |
09294443 |
|
More pictures |
Church (with equipment) and cemetery with gate entrance, enclosure, tombs and memorial for those who fell in World War I | Graefestrasse 16 (map) |
1489–1503, older in core (church), 1482 (bell), 1480 (bell), probably before 1613 (portrait of Magister Christian Fröhlich), after 1681 (portrait of M. Samuel Avenarius) | late Gothic hall church with retracted choir and west tower, in the core probably older, most important village church of the Gothic period in the Leipzig area, of architectural, art and local significance |
09294449 |
Parish and parish house of the Christ Church, with garden, enclosure, gate entrance and gate | Graefestrasse 18 (map) |
1894–1895 (parish hall) | Plastered building with porphyry tufa structures, in the style of historicism, of architectural and local significance |
09306393 |
|
Residential house, side building, two barns built next to one another, gate entrance and courtyard paving of a farm | Graefestrasse 19; 21 (card) |
around 1870/1880 (farmhouse) | possibly formerly two courtyards, plastered residential building with flat saddle roof, still with a classicistic effect, courtyard area belongs to the old village center of Eutritzsch, of importance in terms of building history and local development |
09294444 |
|
Portal (currently expanded and stored) | Graefestraße 20 (map) |
re. 1605 (part of the building) | Renaissance portal made of Rochlitz porphyry tufa with a one-sided seating niche, historically important |
09298709 |
|
Villa in half-open development | Graefestraße 22 (map) |
1900 (villa) | Plastered facade with porphyry tufa structures, multi-part roof landscape, side stair tower and balcony, echoes of the reform style of the time, residence of the merchant and tobacco shop, Max Hauffe, of importance in terms of building history and local development |
09291159 |
|
Apartment building in half-open development, with fencing, front garden and rear building | Graefestraße 23 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | richly structured, historicizing plastered facade, two balconies with iron bars, of importance in terms of building history and local development |
09294445 |
|
|
House and enclosure of a farm | Graefestraße 25 (map) |
1789 (farmhouse) | Gut of the Leipzig copper engraver Christian Gottlieb Geyser (1742–1803) with a memorial plaque from 1932, upper floor half-timbered building with plastered brick infills, belongs to the old village center of Eutritzsch, historically important |
09294446 |
Villa in the rear | Graefestraße 27 (map) |
around 1895 (villa) | Plastered facade with wooden balconies, in the Swiss house style, of architectural importance |
09291160 |
|
Individual monument above aggregate: apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305681, Delitzscher Straße 105a – 111) | Graefestrasse 28; 30; 32 (card) |
after 1930 (apartment building) | unusually designed plastered buildings with flat roofs, of importance in terms of urban development and architectural history, see also Delitzscher Straße 105a – 111 |
09294392 |
|
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House, side building and gate post of a farm | Graefestraße 29 (map) |
around 1820 (farmhouse), 1875 (residential house) | Gable-independent residential building an adobe building, eaves-standing residential building, younger solid construction, belongs to the old village center of Eutritzsch, of significance in terms of building history and local development
It is probably one of the five oldest houses in the former Eutritzsch village center. At the gable, it stands set back from the street space, is plastered and has a tiled roof. The front crooked hip comes from the time the house was built around 1780. It is a two-story clay corrugated building, of which hardly more than a dozen have survived in the Leipzig area from the time before the Battle of the Nations in 1813. The board ceilings in the former so-called parlor and in the room above are unique in the urban area. The thick beams have throats, the boards of the ceilings are attractive “in herringbones”. There is a small vegetable cellar at the corner, which also has a vault. A stable building formerly directly adjacent to the residential building has been demolished. This is where the entrance to the house is now. The construction file begins in 1863, with documents relating to the construction of a stable building by a Möckern master mason. The landowner Joh. Heinrich Kermse (also: Kirmse) is well-known as the client, who in 1875 was involved in the construction of a new residential house facing the village street. Carpenter CFJ Gaebler is on record on the plan documents. However, the drawing does not show any notes from the building authorities and the house standing here today with four window axes, two floors and a small vaulted basement room is likely to be the result of a comprehensive renovation of an older building. The plaster probably comes from the 1930s, a rear toilet extension was built in 1953/1954. The wooden shutters on the ground floor and the profiled eaves above a toothed cutting bar catch the eye. Before 1863, the barn (not a monument) of the small courtyard was built using clay-wave technology, the roof of which partially collapsed in 1926. Some of the parts were demolished afterwards, while the small remaining part was to be given a flat roof. The property with two preserved residential buildings has a local historical value and, in particular, because of the slight curvature in the course of the street, a street-defining value. In addition, the gable-facing house, which is possibly the oldest surviving house in Eutritzsch, has a special architectural and scientific-documentary significance. LfD / 2019 |
09294448 |
Residential house in open development with garage and front garden | Graefestrasse 29a (map) |
1937–1941 (residential building) | Plastered facade in the traditionalist style of the time, important in terms of building history |
09264549 |
|
Rental villa, former guest house | Graefestraße 31 (map) |
1895 (rental villa) | Plastered facade, half-timbered vestibule, formerly the large garden restaurant "Schloß Debrahof" in Eutritzsch, of local historical importance |
09290706 |
|
Residential house in open development | Graefestraße 32a (map) |
around 1910 (residential building) | Plastered facade with half-hip roof, curved gable in the roof, of architectural significance |
09292183 |
|
Villa with enclosure, front garden and gate entrance | Graefestraße 33 (map) |
around 1890 (villa) | Plastered facade with half-timbered elements, wooden balcony, boarded up jamb, wooden vestibule, villa in the Swiss house style, named after the first owner, master mason Wilhelm Seidel, of architectural significance |
09294473 |
|
Rental villa with enclosure | Graefestraße 34 (map) |
around 1903 (rental villa) | Plastered facade with Art Nouveau decor, expanded mansard roof, of importance in terms of building history and local development |
09294800 |
|
Villa with enclosure and front garden | Graefestraße 35 (map) |
around 1900 (villa) | historicizing plastered facade with wooden veranda, named after the first owner, master tailor Ernst Eduard Wolanke, of architectural significance |
09294801 |
|
Rental villa with fence, gate and garden pavilion | Graefestraße 36 (map) |
1902–1903 (rental villa) | Historic clinker brick facade, terrazzo with mosaic in the entrance area, of importance in terms of building history and site development |
09294805 |
|
Residential house in open development, with enclosure and front garden | Graefestraße 37 (map) |
1935 (residential house), 1935 (enclosure), 1936 (front garden) | Plastered facade, semicircular stair tower facing the street, windows with folding shutters, in the traditionalist style of the time, of architectural significance |
09294802 |
|
Rental villa with enclosure, gate entrance and two garden pavilions | Graefestraße 38 (map) |
around 1902 (rental villa) | Plastered facade in Art Nouveau style, of importance in terms of building history and local development |
09294804 |
|
Villa with enclosure, gate entrance and garden | Graefestraße 39 (map) |
around 1905 (villa) | Decorated plastered facade, multi-part roof landscape, reform style architecture, built for the merchant Emil Hahn, owner of the tobacco goods import company A. Loy & Co., of architectural significance |
09294803 |
|
|
Factory building in semi-open development | Haferkornstrasse 5 (map) |
1909 (factory building) | Clinker brick facade, of importance in terms of local development and industrial history |
09261923 |
Factory building in open development and an angled courtyard building attached to it | Haferkornstrasse 7 (map) |
around 1927 and older (factory building) | Clinker facades, important in terms of local development and architectural history |
09261922 |
|
|
Factory building (Haferkornstrasse 8 and Zerbster Strasse 2) and boiler house with chimney (Haferkornstrasse 8) | Haferkornstrasse 8 (map) |
around 1905 in the core (factory building), around 1925 extension (factory building) | Clinker brick facades, manufacturer of advertising stamps and calendars, book printing, important in terms of building history and local history |
09261920 |
Former power station hall and power station of a tram | Haferkornstrasse 11; 13 (card) |
1896 (power station), 1896 (power station hall) | First power station of the Leipzig Electric Tramway (Great Leipzig Tramway), clinker brick facade, of architectural and local significance |
09298617 |
|
Apartment house in closed development in a corner | Haferkornstrasse 16 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | Historicistic plastered facade with plaster and artificial stone inclusions, broken corner, formerly with a corner shutter, of importance in terms of local development |
09294454 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Haferkornstrasse 18 (map) |
around 1880 (tenement) | Smoothed plastered facade with plastered and stone structures, gate passage, of importance in terms of local development |
09263777 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Haferkornstrasse 20 (map) |
around 1880 (tenement) | historicistic plastered facade with plaster, stone and stucco structures, gate passage, of importance in terms of local development |
09262963 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Haferkornstrasse 22 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | Historicistic plastered facade with plaster and artificial stone incorporations, central axis framed by pilasters and crowned with a small triangular gable, lateral templates, gate passage, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history |
09294455 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Haferkornstrasse 25 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | Historicistic plastered facade with plastered, artificial stone and stucco structures, gate passage, formerly a shop, of importance in terms of local development |
09262321 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Haferkornstrasse 26 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | Historicistic plastered facade with plaster and artificial stone inclusions, lateral templates, formerly a shop, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history |
09294456 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Haferkornstrasse 29 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | Historicistic plastered facade with plaster and artificial stone inclusions, of importance in terms of local development |
09294457 |
|
Apartment building in a formerly closed development | Haferkornstrasse 30 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | Historicistic plastered facade with plaster and artificial stone inclusions, of importance in terms of local development |
09262553 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Haferkornstrasse 31 (map) |
1890 (tenement house) | Historicistic plastered facade with plaster and artificial stone incorporations, gate passage, formerly with a shop, of importance in terms of local development
Master mason Friedrich Hermann Wendel, who was also responsible for the execution, submitted the building application for the front residential building and the rear building with a house. Between April and October 1890, the two houses were built in what was then Blücherstrasse. Gate passage (and formerly a shop) also show a commercial use of the property, the gray plaster facade formerly with painted clinker imitation over the grooved ground floor. The solid Wilhelminian style building with special emphasis on the two middle floors through strong window roofs on stucco consoles, the rear building demolished. 2002 renovation with loft extension and balcony extension as well as floor plan changes. LfD / 2007 |
09294458 |
|
Apartment building in closed development and courtyard building | Haferkornstrasse 33 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | Historicistic plastered facade with plaster and artificial stone incorporations, painted clinker bricks, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history |
09294459 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Haferkornstrasse 35 (map) |
around 1880 (tenement) | Plastered facade with plaster and artificial stone integration, of importance in terms of local development |
09294460 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Haferkornstrasse 36 (map) |
around 1920 (tenement) | simple plastered facade with plastered structure, house passage, shop, of importance in terms of local development |
09262320 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Haferkornstrasse 38 (map) |
around 1915 (tenement) | Plastered facade in the reform style around 1915, plastered structure, lateral template, above different roof structures, house passage, of importance in terms of local development |
09294835 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Haferkornstrasse 39 (map) |
around 1880 (tenement) | historic plastered facade with plaster and stone structure as well as stucco decoration, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history |
09294461 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Haferkornstrasse 40 (map) |
around 1915 (tenement) | Plastered facade in the reform style around 1915, plastered structure, central emphasis by wide box-shaped bay windows, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history |
09262319 |
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Apartment house in closed development in a corner | Haferkornstrasse 41 (map) |
around 1880 (tenement) | Historicizing plastered facade with stucco decoration, plaster and sandstone structures, risalit-like corner design with pilasters and a small segmented gable, formerly a shop, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history |
09294462 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Haferkornstrasse 42 (map) |
around 1915 (tenement) | Plastered facade in reform style around 1915, plaster divisions and accentuating plaster decor, emphasis on the center through a flat template, gate passage, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history |
09262318 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Haferkornstrasse 44 (map) |
around 1915 (tenement) | Plastered facade in the reform style around 1915, plaster divisions, of importance in terms of local development |
09262317 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Haferkornstrasse 46 (map) |
around 1915 (tenement) | Plastered facade in the reform style around 1915, plaster divisions and accentuating plaster decor, of importance in terms of local development |
09262316 |
|
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Apartment building (address: Haferkornstrasse 48/50 and Schiebestrasse 12) in a corner and closed development, with a cinema | Haferkornstrasse 48; 50 (card) |
1913 (tenement), 1913, opening (cinema) | Plastered building in the reform style around 1910, plaster and artificial stone incorporations, facade later simplified, flat templates as corner emphasis and border of the front on the sliding street, expanded roof, of importance in terms of local development and cultural history |
09294463 |
Apartment building in semi-open development (structural unit with no.12 and 14) | Hamburger Strasse 10 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | Plaster facade (formerly clinker brick) in the forms of the outgoing historicism, artificial stone incorporations, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history |
09299319 |
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Apartment building in closed development (structural unit with no.10 and 14) | Hamburger Strasse 12 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade in the forms of the outgoing historicism, artificial stone incorporations, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history |
09299318 |
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Apartment building in half-open development (structural unit with no.10 and 12) | Hamburger Strasse 14 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade in the forms of the outgoing historicism, artificial stone incorporations, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history |
09262840 |
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Apartment building in half-open development | Hamburger Strasse 16 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | Plaster facade in Art Nouveau forms, plaster and artificial stone incorporation, facade design similar to number 18 and 20, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history |
09262839 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Hamburger Strasse 18 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | Plastered facade in Art Nouveau forms, plastered and artificial stone integrations, box bay window moved out of the middle with ornamental framework in the upper area, above it a dwarf house, gate passage, facade design similar to numbers 16 and 20, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history |
09262838 |
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Apartment building in half-open development | Hamburger Strasse 20 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | Plaster facade in Art Nouveau forms, plaster and artificial stone structures, outer axes accentuated by triple windows, side roof house, facade design similar to number 16 and 18, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history |
09262837 |
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Apartment building in semi-open development (structural unit with no.24 and 26) | Hamburger Strasse 22 (map) |
marked 1902 (tenement house) | Plaster clinker facade in the forms of the outgoing historicism and Art Nouveau, with a shop, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history |
09262836 |
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Apartment building in closed development (structural unit with No. 22 and 26) | Hamburger Strasse 24 (map) |
1902–1903 (tenement house) | Plaster clinker facade in the forms of the outgoing historicism and Art Nouveau, emphasis on the center through a template with a gable end, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history
As the middle of three buildings, the rental apartment was built between 1902 and 1903 on behalf of the local master mason Friedrich August Klingner based on plans by the architect Paul Weber, who also did static calculations and was in charge of construction. Two apartments per floor are behind a clinker plaster facade, the formerly ingeniously curved central risalit gable of which is now greatly simplified. Unfortunately, the different plaster structures of the Art Nouveau period fell victim to “smooth and clean plastering” during the renovation in 1996–1998. Nevertheless, the house appears as part of the group of three, defining the street space in the ensemble of an almost completely preserved street from around 1900. The furnishings include high-quality apartment entrance doors, staircases and Art Nouveau stucco in the entrance area. LfD / 2011 |
09262835 |
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Apartment building (No. 26) in a semi-open development (structural unit with No. 22 and 24), with a side gate entrance and a former factory building (No. 26a) in the courtyard | Hamburger Strasse 26; 26a (card) |
1902–1903, marked 1903 (tenement house), 1902–1903 (courtyard building) | Plaster clinker facade in the forms of the outgoing historicism and Art Nouveau, courtyard building with clinker facade, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history
The residential house and rear building were to be built on the property as early as 1900 according to plans by architect Franz Hübler for master mason Oscar Müller, but did not begin until September 1902, initially with a front residential building designed by architect Paul Weber for - and certainly also by master mason Friedrich August Klingner. In November a new building application for a rear building was issued, the now two-storey factory building received approval in February 1903 and in the same year the company Gasglühlicht-Fabrik "Lipsia" Conrad Kaemmnitz moved into. From 1996 to 1998, six apartments were installed here under the ownership of Andreas Lewandowski, L&M Wohnbau- und Modernisierungs GmbH in Lich (today number 26a). After the property was divided in 1997, renovation and renovation work also began on the front building. The Art Nouveau house belongs to a group of three (with number 22/24) and is designed as a pair. A side elevation and various types of plaster structure the clinker facade as well as the artificial stone moldings used. The furnishings include flat Art Nouveau stucco in the entrance area and apartment entrance doors with beautiful over-portals. Structurally and historically significant as a testimony to the expansion of the town in Eutritzsch between the old town center and the industrial area near the railway site. In its structure as a residential and commercial property typical of the district. LfD / 2012 |
09262834 |
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Multi-family houses in a residential complex | Hamburger Strasse 27; 29 (card) |
around 1925 (apartment building) | Plastered facades, very beautiful portals, reform style architecture, of architectural significance, see also Arthur-Hausmann-Strasse 2, Dessauer Strasse 39–45 and Theresienstrasse 50–60 |
09294925 |
Apartment building in half-open development (structural unit with No. 30 and 32), with workshop building in the courtyard and courtyard paving | Hamburger Strasse 28 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade in the forms of the outgoing historicism with Art Nouveau elements, plaster and artificial stone inclusions, flat lateral template, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history |
09262833 |
|
|
Apartment building in closed development (structural unit with No. 28 and 32) | Hamburger Strasse 30 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade in the forms of the outgoing historicism with Art Nouveau elements, plaster and artificial stone incorporations, central emphasis by box oriels with gable ends, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history |
09262832 |
Apartment building in half-open development (structural unit with neighboring houses No. 28 and 30) with side gate | Hamburger Strasse 32 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade in the forms of the outgoing historicism with Art Nouveau elements, plaster and artificial stone incorporations, flat lateral template, with shop fittings, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history |
09262831 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Hamburger Strasse 35 (map) |
marked 1904 (tenement house) | Plastered facade with art nouveau decoration, plaster and artificial stone inclusions, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history |
09262821 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Hamburger Strasse 37 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | Late historical clinker brick facade with plaster and artificial stone incorporations, side axes with coupled windows, with gate passage and shop, of importance in terms of local development |
09262820 |
|
Apartment building in semi-open development, with side entrance gate | Hamburger Strasse 38 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | Late historical clinker brick facade with Art Nouveau elements, plaster and artificial stone inclusions, of importance in terms of local development |
09262830 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Hamburger Strasse 39 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade in the forms of the outgoing historicism with Art Nouveau touches, artificial stone incorporations, of importance in terms of local development |
09262819 |
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Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner | Hamburger Strasse 40 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | Smoothed plastered facade in the forms of the outgoing historicism, corner bay windows, templates partly with triple windows, roof house on the side facing Hamburger Strasse, shops, of importance in terms of local development |
09294104 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Hamburger Strasse 41 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | Late historical clinker brick facade with clinker brick and artificial stone inclusions, with gate passage and shop, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history |
09262818 |
|
Individual monument and aggregate: 12 apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305359, Bernburger Straße 16–28) | Hamburger Strasse 42; 44; 46; 48; 50; 52; 54; 56; 58; 60; 62; 64 (card) |
1899–1901 (apartment building) | Part of a closed residential complex of social housing, named after the publisher Herrmann Julius Meyer (publisher of the well-known Meyers Konversations-Lexikons), founder of the "Association for the construction of cheap apartments", plastered façades with brick structure, architect: Max Pommer, building and social history of importance, see also Bernburger Strasse 16–28, Theresienstrasse 61–73 and Schönefelder Strasse 44–70 |
09262811 |
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Apartment building in closed development with a rear building | Hamburger Strasse 43 (map) |
1905–1906 (apartment building), 1905–1906 (rear building) | unusually designed plastered facade with Art Nouveau decoration, also historicist echoes, of importance in terms of building history and the history of local development
A building application for a residential and rear residential building with a wash house was submitted by Emma Elisabeth Birkigt on May 11, 1905 and the carpenter Max Birkigt was entrusted with the construction management. In both houses two apartments per floor. The final inspection for both buildings took place in September 1906 under the new owner, Dr. phil. Hermann Kurth (national economist), who took the architect Otto Schmidt under contract for the construction management. Another change of ownership in March 1908 to Dr. phil. Curt Arthur Frenzel in Probstheida, who in 1909 applied for a wash house to be added to the front house. With regard to the existing Leipzig tenement houses, the Art Nouveau façade is quite unusual with different plaster surfaces and decorative decorative panels. The original furnishings, including stucco in the doorway and a wooden staircase, have largely been preserved. The back building as a two-storey couple with completely original equipment (still 5/2013) and plastered facade. Significance in terms of building history and the historical development of the district as a rental residential property in the urban expansion area, effectively the front building in the closed street. LfD / 2012 |
09262817 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Hamburger Strasse 45 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) |
09262816 |
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Apartment building in half-open development | Hamburger Strasse 47 (map) |
around 1910 (tenement) | Sparsely decorated plaster facade, gable in the roof, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history |
09262815 |
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Apartment building in open development in a corner, with lateral fencing | Hartzstrasse 2 (map) |
around 1930 (tenement) | Unconventionally designed hard-fired brick facade with clinker brick structure, between traditionalism and modernity, of importance in terms of building history |
09297741 |
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Former warehouse building including loading ramp (address: Dessauer Straße 40 and Hartzstraße 10), with subsequent residential and administrative building including garages in a corner (address: Dessauer Straße 36/38), courtyard paving and paving of the former loading zone and two fences | Hartzstrasse 10 (map) |
1929–1930 (warehouse) | Warehouse building with loading ramp on the street side and former railroad siding on the courtyard side, brick facade, in the modern style, architect: Philipp Schaefer (chief architect of Karstadt AG, in 1920 the department store groups Theodor Althoff AG and Rudolph Karstadt AG merged, most of the Althoff branches were under theirs old name continued), of architectural, economic, local and architectural significance |
09262829 |
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Individual monument above aggregate: apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305679, Dessauer Straße 31–37) | Hartzstrasse 12; 14; 16; 18; 20 (card) |
1929–1931 (apartment building) | Plastered facade, clinker edging on the front doors, remarkable residential buildings in the style of modernism, architect: Georg Wrede, of importance in terms of town planning and building history, see also Arthur-Hausmann-Strasse 1 and 5–9 and Theresienstrasse 38–48 |
09294922 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with a front garden | Heinickestrasse 1 (map) |
around 1903 (tenement) | historicizing clinker brick facade, partly art nouveau decor, of architectural significance |
09262802 |
|
Individual monument and aggregate: apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305684, Anhalter Straße 15, 17, 17a) | Heinickestrasse 2; 4 (card) |
around 1930 (twin house) | Part of a closed, preserved civil servant housing complex of the time, in the traditionalist style, plastered facade, distinctive colored facade design, front doors with polished panes, of architectural and urban significance, see also Gedickestrasse 1/3, Wittenberger Strasse 44-50 and Paul-Schneider-Strasse 1 –7 |
09263797 |
|
Apartment building in closed development, with front garden and fence | Heinickestrasse 3 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | Plaster clinker facade, front door with lead-glazed skylight, between Jugendstil and Reform style, number 5 in a similar design, of importance in terms of building history |
09262803 |
|
Apartment building in closed development, with front garden and fence | Heinickestrasse 5 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | Plaster clinker facade, front door with lead-glazed skylight, between Art and Reform style, number 3 in a similar design, of importance in terms of building history |
09262804 |
|
Individual monument above aggregate: Apartment building in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305684, Anhalter Straße 15, 17, 17a) | Heinickestrasse 6 (map) |
1929–1930 (apartment building) | Part of a closed, preserved civil servant housing complex of the time, in the traditionalist style, plastered facade, distinctive colored facade design, of architectural and urban significance, see also Gedikestrasse 5 |
09294453 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Heinickestrasse 7 (map) |
around 1907 (tenement) | Plastered facade with brick surfaces, stucco in the entrance area, lead-glazed staircase windows, between Art and Reform style, of importance in terms of building history |
09262805 |
|
Individual monument above aggregate: Apartment building in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305684, Anhalter Straße 15, 17, 17a) | Heinickestrasse 8 (map) |
1931 (apartment building) | Part of a closed, preserved civil servant housing complex of the time, in the traditionalist style, plastered facade, distinctive colored facade design, of architectural and urban significance, see also Gedikestrasse 7 |
0926379 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with a front garden | Heinickestrasse 9 (map) |
around 1907 (tenement) | Formerly with a shop, plastered facade, decorative wall tiles and stucco in the entrance area, remnants of lead-glazed staircase windows, in the reform style of the time around 1910, of architectural significance |
09262806 |
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Apartment building in closed development with a front garden | Heinickestrasse 11 (map) |
around 1907 (tenement) | Plastered facade, remnants of lead-glazed staircase windows, in the reform style of the time around 1910, of architectural significance |
09262807 |
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Apartment building in closed development with a front garden | Heinickestrasse 13 (map) |
around 1908 (tenement) | Plastered facade, lead-glazed staircase windows, wall and ceiling paintings in the entrance area and in the stairwell, in the reform style of the time around 1910, of architectural significance |
09262808 |
|
Apartment building in closed development, with front garden and fence | Heinickestrasse 15 (map) |
around 1908 (tenement) | Plastered facade, lead-glazed staircase windows, painting in the entrance area, in the reform style of the time around 1910, of importance in terms of building history |
09262809 |
|
Apartment building in closed development and front garden | Heinickestrasse 19 (map) |
around 1910 (tenement) | Plastered sandstone facade, lead-glazed staircase windows, ceiling painting and stucco in the entrance area, with gate passage and old advertising writing above the gate, of importance in terms of local development |
09262810 |
|
Individual monument above aggregate: apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305689, Zerbster Straße 7-27) | Heinz-Kapelle-Strasse 1; 3 (card) |
1924–1925 (apartment building) | Plastered facade in Art Déco forms, of architectural and urban significance, see also Heinz-Kapelle-Strasse 2/4, Hohmannstrasse 9/11, 10/12 and Zerbster Strasse 7–7c, 9–19, 21–27 |
09262979 |
|
Individual monument above aggregate: apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305689, Zerbster Straße 7-27) | Heinz-Kapelle-Strasse 2; 4 (card) |
1924–1925 (apartment building) | Plastered facade in Art Deco forms, of architectural and urban significance, see also Heinz-Kapelle-Strasse 1/3, Hohmannstrasse 9/11, 10/12 and Zerbster Strasse 7–7c, 9–19, 21–27 |
09262980 |
|
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Hand lever pump with well shaft and cover plate | Hohmannstrasse (map) |
1906 (hand lever pump) | Type dolphin, of local history |
09294892 |
Two adjacent workshop buildings and ancillary buildings, with fencing of the property and storage building (with loading ramp and canopy) in the courtyard | Hohmannstrasse 8 (map) |
around 1905 (workshop) | Clinker buildings, chimney not a monument, evidence of the industrialization of the north of Leipzig, of importance in terms of building history and local development |
09262984 |
|
Individual monument above aggregate: apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305689, Zerbster Straße 7-27) | Hohmannstrasse 9; 11 (card) |
1924–1925 (apartment building) | Plastered facade in Art Déco forms, of architectural and urban significance, see also Heinz-Kapelle-Strasse 1/3, 2/4, Hohmannstrasse 10/12 and Zerbster Strasse 7–7c, 9–19, 21–27 |
09262975 |
|
Individual monument above aggregate: apartment buildings in a residential complex (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09305689, Zerbster Straße 7-27) | Hohmannstrasse 10; 12 (card) |
1924–1925 (apartment building) | Plastered facade in the form of Art Deco, of architectural and urban significance, see also Heinz-Kapelle-Strasse 1/3, 2/4, Hohmannstrasse 9/11 and Zerbster Strasse 7–7c, 9–19, 21–27 |
09262977 |
swell
- State Office for the Preservation of Monuments Saxony Dynamic web application: Overview of the monuments listed in Saxony. The location “Leipzig, Stadt, Eutritzsch” 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