List of cultural monuments in Gohlis-Süd (A – F)
The list of cultural monuments in Gohlis-Süd contains the cultural monuments of the Leipzig district "Gohlis-Süd" of the Gohlis district , which were recorded in the list of monuments by the State Office for Monument Preservation Saxony as of 2017.
Due to the large number of cultural monuments, the list, arranged alphabetically by address, is divided as follows:
- List of cultural monuments in Gohlis-Süd (A – F)
- List of cultural monuments in Gohlis-Süd (G – M)
- List of cultural monuments in Gohlis-Süd (N – Z)
This partial list includes the cultural monuments of A-F .
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 Gohlis-Süd, A – F
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Plaza | Auerbachplatz (map) |
after 1920 (playground) | designed green space (opposite Blochmannstrasse 29–51) with rows of trees and stairs, bounded by a railway viaduct, of importance in terms of local development and urban green history |
09293850 |
|
Half-open apartment building and iron enclosure on Schorlemmerstrasse | Berggartenstrasse 4 (map) |
1905 (tenement) | Plastered facade, important in terms of building history |
09293166 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Berggartenstrasse 6 (map) |
1906/1907 (tenement house) | Clinker brick facade, historically important |
09293167 |
|
Apartment building in a half-open area in a corner, with a side gate on Lindenthaler Straße | Berggartenstrasse 8 (map) |
1908 (tenement) | Plastered facade, important in terms of building history |
09293168 |
|
Double tenement house in closed development | Berggartenstrasse 10; 12 (card) |
1908–1909 (double tenement house) | with gate passage, plastered facade, historically important
A first draft by the architects Leopold and Alfred Stentzler for master bricklayer August Kluge from the end of 1905 was never implemented. For each half of the house, the design showed a vertically aligned facade structure with a striking, centrally designed box bay window, along with a dwarf house and Art Nouveau decor. A new building application in 1908, now for Börngen & Co., was initially more successful. After the shell inspection in September of that year, construction stalled and could only be continued after the property had been foreclosed. The buyer was master bricklayer Friedrich August Kluge, and the use of the building was granted at the beginning of July 1909. Plastered facades above sandstone plinths on granite sill that extend to the level of the ground floor windows are shaped by polygonal oriels on the upper floors. These are moved outwards from the middle of the street front of each house, flanked by loggias with massive balustrades and through-passages below. The two spacious entrances are right next to each other, the decorative decor shows characteristics of reform style. Behind the two bay windows that extend beyond the eaves line, there are mighty gable gables; the successful renovation included the high-quality, “home-style” furnishings. Representative late Art Nouveau building with great visual impact in the street area, of architectural significance. LfD / 2018 |
09293169 |
|
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner | Berggartenstrasse 14 (map) |
1911–1912 (tenement) | Plastered facade, important in terms of building history
Karl Alfred Landmann, construction foreman from Lindenau, stands for execution and site management, the gentlemen of the construction business Friedrich and Jahn initially secured the financing of the four-storey residential building built between 1911 and 1912 in an obtuse corner location. But as soon as the building permit was granted, Landmann took over the role of building owner alone. In 1913 the house and land came into the ownership of the Leipziger Grundstücksverwertungsgesellschaft mbH, in 1919 to Hofmundbäcker Alfred Bärwinkel and probably briefly to private man Richard Hermann Nestmann. In 1920 Minna Theresa Wieseler was born. Hero owner. Two tenants were planned for the ground floor in 1911, with only one apartment on each of the upper floors and a smaller one under the roof. However, these were also divided into two apartments in the period from 1935 to 1937, with verandas at the rear, which were rebuilt in 1998. In the courtyard area there was a car garage that was unfortunately not outdated - from 1913! The plastered façade is characterized by the clarity and objectivity of the reform style architecture, while the small-scale window rungs give the façade a decidedly elegant style. Clearly the difference between originally preserved box windows with their elegance and some newly manufactured windows with too wide spars and frames. At the broken corner is the house entrance with a garland decoration, on both sides there are box oriels (which seem a bit too powerful for their effect) with an optical continuation through dwelling houses in the roof zone. The sophisticated furnishings have largely been preserved, the high living spaces promise the highest level of living comfort, the building has been renovated. The striking corner building is significant in terms of urban development and, as a bourgeois apartment building, has a historical value. LfD / 2018 |
09293171 |
|
Row of houses in open development, with fencing and garage house | Berggartenstrasse 15; 17; 19; 21 (card) |
1934 (residential building) | Plastered facades, porch doors, of importance in terms of building history
1934 Application from the Marienhöhe EGMBH cooperative for the construction of a four-storey apartment block with 33 apartments. Except for the ground floor, in which apartments were designed for large numbers of children, the remaining two-room apartments have a bathroom, IWC and kitchen exit. The architect Walter Haedrich created the plans. The base, stepped entrance walls and the set staircase axes in dark-burned clinker brick, which are surmounted by low stepped roof structures, structure the building block simply but effectively. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09293175 |
|
Residential house in open development in a corner | Berggartenstrasse 18 (map) |
1830/1840 (residential building) | Plastered facade, important in terms of building history
The last evidence of the rural development in the former Gartenstrasse. The gable design of the single-storey, five-axis house with a half-hipped roof, three-axis dwarf house and roof houses points to the period around 1830/1840. The former pottery house was connected to the sewer system in 1890. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09293172 |
|
Apartment building in a formerly closed development | Berggartenstrasse 22 (map) |
1877 (tenement) | with gate passage, plastered facade, wooden panels in the gate passage, of architectural significance
Built as one of the first multi-storey tenement houses in the newly paved street in 1877 at the request of Heino Kanz. A shop was originally located next to the gate passage on the ground floor (with plaster ashlar). The three-storey house with a “French” roof shows the extremely fine-grained building decor of that time in the roofing of the windows, the console cornice and the plastering drawing. In 1888 the three-axle extension was added. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09297887 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Berggartenstrasse 26 (map) |
1880 (tenement) | with gate passage, plastered facade, historically important
Instead of a single-storey house built in 1836 with a gabled dwarf, which was raised by one storey in 1856, a new three-storey apartment building was built in 1880. The plans come from the master bricklayer Harz in Gohlis and follow the typical pattern: mansard roof, side passage, beading on the ground floor, restrained window roofing on the first floor, as well as finely divided friezes and cornices. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09262324 |
|
Rental villa (with equipment), with front garden | Bleichertstrasse 2 (map) |
1886 (rental villa) | Plastered facade, neo-renaissance style repertoire, more recent expansion, significant in terms of building history |
09299235 |
|
Apartment building in half-open development | Bleichertstrasse 4 (map) |
1881 (tenement house) | Plastered facade, important in terms of building history |
08986039 |
|
Apartment building in semi-open development, with front garden and enclosure | Bleichertstrasse 14 (map) |
1925–1926 (tenement) | with Kanalstrasse 5 belonging to the residential complex Blochmannstrasse 23-27, plastered facade, in traditionalist style, of historical importance |
09293883 |
|
Apartment buildings in a residential complex | Bleichertstrasse 15; 17 (map) |
1925–1926 (double tenement house) | with Blochmannstrasse 29–59 forming a residential complex, plastered facade, in traditionalist style, of architectural significance |
09293884 |
|
Stop at a train station, with two railway bridges over Lützowstrasse and a railway viaduct on Blochmannstrasse | Blochmannstrasse (map) |
1894, opening (passenger station), 1906–1907 (viaduct), 1894 (railway bridge) | Viaduct is located between Geibelstrasse and Lützowstrasse, double station with two separate stops, only the northern, somewhat lower-lying stop with historical equipment such as roofing and paving of the platform between the tracks has been preserved, southern stop has been completely renewed and without monument value, northern railway bridge iron construction, southern Railway bridge yellow clinker masonry with sandstone structure, bridge piers with obelisk attachments, to the east adjoining the viaduct, also in yellow clinker brick architecture and supported by arches, of importance in terms of local development and railway history |
09294931 |
|
Apartment buildings in a residential complex, with fencing and front garden | Blochmannstrasse 23; 25; 27 (card) |
1925–1926 (apartment building) | with Kanalstrasse 5 and Bleichertstrasse 14 forming a residential complex, plastered facade, terrazzo in the entrance area, in traditionalist style, of architectural significance
The shortest block between Kirchweg and Kanalstraße with only three houses was built between March 1925 and June 1926. The façades facing Blochmannstrasse, which are set back behind a green strip, are three-story as before, while those facing the side streets are four-story. There is a passage to the courtyard on the side streets between the two. The facade design to the main street is identical to that of numbers 33-27. What is new is the colored differentiation of the building blocks, which begins here with a strong ocher yellow. Until 1992, the original eight-mullion division of the windows was still partially preserved. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09293865 |
|
Apartment buildings in a residential complex | Blochmannstrasse 29; 31; 33 (card) |
1922–1924 (apartment building) | Plastered facade, terrazzo in the entrance area, in the traditionalist style, of architectural significance
Blochmannstraße 35, 33,31,29 with Kirchweg 15, 17 number 35 was built in 1922 as the last building in the set back row, a polygonal intermediate building also connects to the following three houses in the building line as well as the corner buildings on Kirchweg, the after the building application from September 1924 were completed in June 1925. In the facade design, the Riefelsockel and the horizontal emphasis by sill cornices have remained, the entrances have been changed, now round-arched with cassette framing, and the blind arches over the windows of the ground floor. The three-axis corner design facing the church path is emphasized by rosettes in the wide plaster strips. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09293867 |
|
Apartment building in closed development, with front garden and fence | Blochmannstrasse 35 (map) |
1922–1924 (apartment building) | Plastered facade, evidence of cooperative housing construction in Leipzig, in the traditionalist style, of architectural significance
Blochmannstraße 35, 33, 31, 29 with Kirchweg 15, 17 number 35 was built in 1922–1924 as the last building in the set back row, a polygonal intermediate building also connects to the following three houses in the building line and the corner buildings on Kirchweg which were completed in June 1925 according to the building application from September 1924. In the facade design, the Riefelsockel and the horizontal emphasis by sill cornices have remained, the entrances have been changed, now round-arched with cassette framing, and the blind arches over the windows of the ground floor. The three-axis corner design facing the church path is emphasized by rosettes in the wide plaster strips. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09293870 |
|
Apartment houses in closed development, with front garden and fencing | Blochmannstrasse 37; 39; 41 (card) |
1921 (apartment building) | Plastered facade, in the traditionalist style, of architectural significance
Blochmannstrasse 37–59 with Lützwowstrasse 32 / 30a In January 1921, the building cooperative applied for the construction of a settlement opposite the Royal Prussian State Railway near the Gohlis-Eutritzsch stop. In December the first 13 houses, starting with the corner development on Lützowstrasse (Kaiser-Friedrich-Strasse), were completed. The gable of Lützowstraße number 32 was connected in a hinge-like manner to Blochmannstraße 59 by a polygonal porch with an open upper floor arbor. A small front garden allows this corner solution to be creatively effective. The first three houses on Blochmannstrasse are in line with the street, while the following nine are set back behind a hedge-enclosed lawn. Here, too, a polygonal bay porch connects the front and rear rows. At the rear of the entire series there were originally gardens as well as laundry drying areas. The houses each contain two three-room apartments per floor, with the staircase not going through to the courtyard, which creates more space. The apartments contained IWC but no bathroom. A laundry room was in the basement. Kitchen loggias are attached to the courtyard. The entire series has a plaster base with vertical grooves and a horizontal emphasis underlined by sill cornices. Otherwise, the facade design is not uniform, rather the elongated series is rhythmized by an increased plasticity from the inside out: between numbers 43 and 45 a four-axis roof extension indicates the middle of the row between Lützowstraße and Kirchweg. In the other buildings, the eaves line is only interrupted by the roofing of the protruding stairwell, which gives the series its vertical accentuation. While the entrances to the central buildings number 43 and 45 are kept in simple round arches, the other frames are framed in strong plaster rustics. The penultimate of the recessed buildings, numbers 37/39 and 47/49, are three-dimensionally accentuated by coffered and gabled window frames on the first floor. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09293873 |
|
Apartment houses in closed development, with front garden and fencing | Blochmannstrasse 43; 45 (card) |
1921 (apartment building) | Plastered facade, in the traditionalist style, of architectural significance
Blochmannstrasse 37–59 with Lützwowstrasse 32 / 30a In January 1921, the building cooperative applied for the construction of a settlement opposite the Royal Prussian State Railway near the Gohlis-Eutritzsch stop. In December the first 13 houses, starting with the corner development on Lützowstrasse (Kaiser-Friedrich-Strasse), were completed. The gable of Lützowstraße number 32 was connected in a hinge-like manner to Blochmannstraße 59 by a polygonal porch with an open upper floor arbor. A small front garden allows this corner solution to be creatively effective. The first three houses on Blochmannstrasse are in line with the street, while the following nine are set back behind a hedge-enclosed lawn. Here, too, a polygonal bay porch connects the front and rear rows. At the rear of the entire series there were originally gardens as well as laundry drying areas. The houses each contain two three-room apartments per floor, with the staircase not going through to the courtyard, which creates more space. The apartments contained IWC but no bathroom. A laundry room was in the basement. Kitchen loggias are attached to the courtyard. The entire series has a plaster base with vertical grooves and a horizontal emphasis underlined by sill cornices. Otherwise, the facade design is not uniform, rather the elongated series is rhythmized by an increased plasticity from the inside out: between numbers 43 and 45 a four-axis roof extension indicates the middle of the row between Lützowstraße and Kirchweg. In the other buildings, the eaves line is only interrupted by the roofing of the protruding stairwell, which gives the series its vertical accentuation. While the entrances to the central buildings number 43 and 45 are kept in simple round arches, the other frames are framed in strong plaster rustics. The penultimate of the recessed buildings, numbers 37/39 and 47/49, are three-dimensionally accentuated by coffered and gabled window frames on the first floor. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09293875 |
|
Apartment houses in closed development, with front garden and fencing | Blochmannstrasse 47; 49; 51; 53 (map) |
1921 (apartment building) | Plastered facade, in the traditionalist style, of architectural significance |
09293877 |
|
Tenement houses in a residential complex, with a front garden and enclosure on Lützowstrasse | Blochmannstrasse 55; 57; 59 (card) |
1921 (apartment building) | Plastered facade, terrazzo in the entrance area, in the traditionalist style, of architectural significance
Blochmannstrasse 37–59 with Lützwowstrasse 32 / 30a In January 1921, the building cooperative applied for the construction of a settlement opposite the Royal Prussian State Railway near the Gohlis-Eutritzsch stop. In December the first 13 houses, starting with the corner development on Lützowstrasse (Kaiser-Friedrich-Strasse), were completed. The gable of Lützowstraße number 32 was connected in a hinge-like manner to Blochmannstraße 59 by a polygonal porch with an open upper floor arbor. A small front garden allows this corner solution to be creatively effective. The first three houses on Blochmannstrasse are in line with the street, while the following nine are set back behind a hedge-enclosed lawn. Here, too, a polygonal bay porch connects the front and rear rows. At the rear of the entire series there were originally gardens as well as laundry drying areas. The houses each contain two three-room apartments per floor, with the staircase not going through to the courtyard, which creates more space. The apartments contained IWC but no bathroom. A laundry room was in the basement. Kitchen loggias are attached to the courtyard. The entire series has a plaster base with vertical grooves and a horizontal emphasis underlined by sill cornices. Otherwise, the facade design is not uniform, rather the elongated series is rhythmized by an increased plasticity from the inside out: between numbers 43 and 45 a four-axis roof extension indicates the middle of the row between Lützowstraße and Kirchweg. In the other buildings, the eaves line is only interrupted by the roofing of the protruding stairwell, which gives the series its vertical accentuation. While the entrances to the central buildings number 43 and 45 are kept in simple round arches, the other frames are framed in strong plaster rustics. The penultimate of the recessed buildings, numbers 37/39 and 47/49, are three-dimensionally accentuated by coffered and gabled window frames on the first floor. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09293880 |
|
Apartment house in open development and corner location, with fencing and front garden | Blumenstrasse 23 (map) |
1888–1889 (tenement house) | As a typical three-storey plastered building with corner blocks and hipped roof, it is of architectural significance
Villa-like apartment building on the corner of Kanalstrasse, applied for by master glazier B. Sandig in October 1888, was continued by master mason Richard Keller a year later after a change of ownership and new plans. The three-storey building, erected on a rectangular floor plan, is clearly and unpretentiously structured according to the pattern of late Classicist villa buildings: the ground floor and building edges are provided with plastered ashlar, as are the pilaster strips on the flat four-axis central projection, which emphasizes the main view towards Canal Street. Straight roofs, originally underlaid with stucco, decorate the belétage. Despite its villa-like character, the building functioned as a tenement house with two apartments per floor. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09290825 |
|
Residential house in open development with enclosure and front garden | Blumenstrasse 25 (map) |
1887–1888 (tenement house) | Formerly with a garage, plastered facade, historically important
Middle of the three villas from the 1880s between Kanalstrasse and Kirchweg. Building application from Amalie Reichel in September 1887, plans by architect J. Berthelen. The two-storey building faces the street on the gable side, set back behind a front garden, the original iron fence of which has been preserved and to which an outside staircase led from the gable-side salon. The entrance is in a porch on the north side. Gable porches at the rear and loft extensions give the small two-family villa, whose plastered façade is soberly structured by brick bands and friezes, a lively outline. 1888 Installation of a steam boiler system for flushing the toilet and bathroom in the basement. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09293896 |
|
|
Apartment building in open development in a corner with an enclosure and front garden | Blumenstrasse 27 (map) |
1887 (tenement house) | striking, historicizing plastered building with corner bay window, of architectural significance
Building application for the villa on the corner of Kirchweg in 1887 from the building contractor Josef Pirat. After the change of ownership in 1889, the new owner, master builder CF Neumann, changed the plan, completed in August 1890. The extensive building is structured by three-axis flat projections on both sides of the street and a corner bay window. Roof extensions with semicircular gables, small roof houses and a pointed corner turret enliven the flat hipped roof. The facade surface is designed with cornice strips, smooth plaster strips on the first and second floors, and plaster grooves on the middle floor. The villa contained apartments. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09293898 |
Apartment house in open development in a corner with a front garden | Blumenstrasse 31 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | historicizing plastered building with richly designed corner bay windows and crowning of the roof, of architectural significance
No construction file. The Wilhelminian style building from around 1895 accentuates the corner situation to the church path with a magnificent bay window, surmounted by a wooden open roof structure with a dome. The adjoining two axes of the corner risalit also demonstrate the claim of villa architecture with the aedicule windows, although the free-standing corner building is only an apartment building. The entrance is on Blumenstrasse, here the elongated facade is closed off by a two-axis risalit surmounted by a high stepped gable. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09293900 |
|
Enclosure of a tenement house in a corner | Blumenstrasse 34 (map) |
around 1885 (garden fence) | Iron fence with original stands, see also Blumenstrasse 36, of local historical importance |
09298013 |
|
Apartment building in semi-open development with a front garden | Blumenstrasse 35 (map) |
1875 (tenement house) | historicizing plastered facade with typical design elements of its time, of architectural significance
Detached semi-detached house for Felix Krempler and Hermann Künnecke. Built in 1875 as one of the first urban tenement houses in Eutritzsch. The outbuildings included a stable, a wagon shed and a wash house, and later a bakery and sausage kitchen. The three-storey front building with an extended mansard roof is set back behind a front garden. Above the quarry stone plinth, the ground floor is designed with plaster bunging, the first floor with a single-axis risalit each with roofs on delicate consoles. The conclusion is a plaster band with medallions in the eaves zone. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09293901 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with enclosure and front garden | Blumenstrasse 36 (map) |
1875–1880 (tenement) | Typical plastered facade with sills and window canopies, iron fence, see also Blumenstrasse 34, of architectural significance
No construction file. The middle one, in the series consisting of three houses between Kanalstrasse and Kirchweg, is the last almost unchanged house in the closed three-storey building on the north side of the street. Even the iron front garden fence has been preserved and gives a picture of the original street situation. The finely divided forms of the stucco decoration on the windows and the end cornice as well as the entrance door and iron fence supports point to a time of origin in the mid-1870s. The ground floor was usually provided with plaster grooves. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09298012 |
|
Apartment building in semi-open development with a front garden | Blumenstrasse 37 (map) |
1875 (tenement house) | Historic plastered facade with simple, time-typical design elements, of architectural significance |
09293902 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Blumenstrasse 42 (map) |
around 1875 (tenement) | simple plastered facade with sandstone integration, of architectural significance |
09293903 |
|
Apartment building in closed development and front garden | Blumenstrasse 44 (map) |
around 1875 (tenement) | with passage through the house, formerly with a shop, simple plastered facade with segmented arched windows on the 1st floor, historically important |
09298014 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Blumenstrasse 46 (map) |
around 1875 (tenement) | with passage through the house, historicizing plastered facade with décor typical of the time, segmented arched windows on the ground floor, of architectural significance |
09298015 |
|
Remise of a villa, with enclosure and garden | Blumenstrasse 49 (next to) (map) |
around 1885 (coach house) | Single-storey plastered building with a pent roof, building belonged to Villa Lützowstraße 17, historically important |
09293938 |
|
Apartment building in semi-open development with enclosure and front garden | Blumenstrasse 51 (map) |
around 1880 (tenement) | historicizing plaster facade with sandstone structure, elaborately designed cornice and eaves frieze, of architectural significance |
09293904 |
|
Villa with front garden | Blumenstrasse 72 (map) |
1888 (villa) | Richly decorated plaster facade with sandstone structure, volute gable, porch door and rear tower, a prominent example of villa architecture from around 1900, of architectural significance |
09293905 |
|
Methodist church and attached parish hall and front garden | Blumenstrasse 74 (map) |
1929 (church) | simple plastered facade with expressionistic design elements in the gable, significant in terms of building history |
09293906 |
|
Villa with villa garden, plastic, garden shed and coach house as well as fencing | Blumenstrasse 76 (map) |
around 1890 (villa), inscribed 1908 (villa), 1920s (fountain sculpture) | Plastered facade, terrace with cast stone reliefs on the house, villa named after the merchant Richard Senf, of architectural significance |
09293907 |
|
Rental villa, with front garden | Böhmestrasse 1 (map) |
around 1870 (rental villa) | historicizing plastered facade with cornice and eaves frieze, as a typical example of the time, of architectural significance |
09293204 |
|
Apartment building in half-open development | Bothestrasse 3 (map) |
around 1885 (tenement) | with passage through the house, simple plastered facade typical of the time, significant in terms of local development |
09296873 |
|
Residential building in closed development | Bothestrasse 4 (map) |
1895/1900 (residential building) | Clinker brick facade with colored clinker brick structure and set profiled iron supports on the ground floor, outbuilding to Villa Eisenacher Straße 86 (see there), historically important |
09293991 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Bothestrasse 6 (map) |
around 1875 (tenement) | formerly with gate passage, plastered facade, historically important |
09296872 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Bothestrasse 7 (map) |
1922–1926 (tenement house) | Plastered building with two dominant oriels and a designed, arched door frame, of architectural significance |
09293992 |
|
Apartment building in half-open development | Bothestrasse 12 (map) |
around 1915 (tenement) | with gate passage, clinker brick facade with plaster base, of architectural significance |
09296874 |
|
Apartment building in closed development and courtyard building | Bothestrasse 13 (map) |
1876 (tenement house) | with gate passage and shop, historicizing plaster facade, wooden panels in the gate passage, of architectural significance |
09294081 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Bothestrasse 14 (map) |
1887 (tenement house) | with gate passage, historicizing clinker brick facade with design elements typical of the time, of architectural significance |
09294981 |
|
Apartment building in a formerly closed development and rear building | Bothestrasse 15 (map) |
1876 (tenement house) | with gate passage, plastered facade, wooden panels in the entrance area, of architectural significance |
09294082 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Bothestrasse 21 (map) |
1890 (tenement house) | with gate passage and shop, historicizing plastered facade with facade structure typical of the time, see also Bothestraße 23, original shop front, significant in terms of building history |
09294083 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Bothestrasse 23 (map) |
1890 (tenement house) | with house passage, shop, plastered facade typical of the time, pilasters in the passage, see also Bothestrasse 21, of importance in terms of building history |
09294084 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Bothestrasse 25 (map) |
1890/1891 (tenement house) | with gate passage, historicizing plastered facade with sills, window canopies and eaves frieze as design elements typical of the time, of architectural significance |
09294085 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Bothestrasse 26 (map) |
1938 (tenement) | Clearly structured, objectified plastered facade with clad base area, of importance in terms of building history |
09294086 |
|
Apartment house in half-open development in a corner and ancillary building in the courtyard | Bothestrasse 27 (map) |
1885 (tenement house) | Historicized plastered building with gate passage, part of the building raised by one floor to Georg-Schumann-Straße with corner store, courtyard building to the railway line behind, of architectural and urban significance |
09294088 |
|
Residential house in a formerly closed development with outbuildings | Bothestrasse 28 (map) |
1862 (residential house) | Plastered facade, partly adobe, as the oldest building in the area, of architectural significance |
09294090 |
|
Apartment building in half-open development | Breitenfelder Strasse 1 (map) |
around 1870 (tenement) | horizontally structured plastered facade with cornices and ornamentally decorated window frames, a characteristic example of apartment buildings at the end of the 19th century, of architectural significance |
09297371 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Breitenfelder Strasse 4 (map) |
1885 (tenement house) | Typical plastered building, formerly with a shop, symmetrically structured facade, central balconies and laterally offset three-axis dwarf house, historically important |
09294016 |
|
Apartment building in closed development, with front garden and rear building | Breitenfelder Strasse 5 (map) |
1885 (tenement house) | Historicized plastered building with gate passage, symmetrically constructed and horizontally emphasized facade with window canopies and sills, stucco medallions and panels in the gate passage, of architectural significance |
09294017 |
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Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Breitenfelder Strasse 7 (map) |
1890 (tenement house) | Historicized plastered building with a symmetrically structured facade, richly designed window canopies and sills as well as a console frieze under the eaves as a special design feature, historically significant |
09294018 |
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Apartment house in closed development in corner location and front garden | Breitenfelder Strasse 9 (map) |
1874 (tenement house) | Massive plastered building with gate passage, horizontal facade structure with cornices, console frieze, corner accentuation with balconies and accentuating, lavishly designed triangular window canopies, an important building in terms of urban development and of architectural significance due to its style elements typical of the time |
09294019 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Breitenfelder Strasse 10 (map) |
1884 (tenement) | Historicized plastered building with gate passage, cornice above the ground floor and clinker-clinkered plinth area, symmetrically structured facade with design elements typical of the time such as window canopies and sills, of architectural significance |
09294020 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Breitenfelder Strasse 12 (map) |
1883–1884 (tenement house) | Historicizing plastered building with gate passage and formerly a shop, the Wilhelminian style building has a historical significance, marks a formative phase of the Gohlis expansion
Master bricklayer Karl Harz took over the construction of the narrow, four-story tenement house and a workshop building in the courtyard with a bakery and chimney on his own behalf from 1883–1884. In addition to the oven and baking room, a flour floor and the boys' room were also housed here (upstairs). Plans of the front building show a shop apartment on the ground floor next to the passage, on the upper floors there were two apartments each with a living room, two chambers, a kitchen and toilets in the stairwell. From 1888, the property changed hands several times under master bakers (the last one was the Anton Endlichhofer bakery). In 1964, master builder Martin Schreinert drew up plans for converting the shop into living space. In October 1992, the building permit for an attic extension was granted, which was accompanied by modernization and renovation. The result of the building renovation shows a typical plastered historicism building over a visible quarry stone base (granite), the preserved front garden is thanks to the former Gohlis local building regulations. There is stucco decoration on the plastered facade, with the bel étage appearing more emphasized by window roofing with grotesque relief panels over the lintels, the eaves area dominated by strong consoles. Cornices and the frames of the cellar window grilles are / were made of sandstone. The Wilhelminian style building has a historical significance and marks a formative phase of the Gohlis expansion. LfD / 2014, 2018 |
09294021 |
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Apartment house in closed development in corner location and front garden | Breitenfelder Strasse 14 (map) |
1887 (tenement house) | Compact, strongly horizontally emphasized plastered building, formerly with a store, double cornices above the ground floor, richly decorated eaves zone, building typical of the time, of importance in terms of urban planning and building history due to its location |
09294022 |
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Tenement house in half-open development, with enclosure and front garden | Breitenfelder Strasse 15 (map) |
1886 (tenement house) | with gate passage, plastered facade, historically important |
09294023 |
|
Apartment house in closed development in a corner | Breitenfelder Strasse 17 (map) |
around 1885 (tenement) | with house passage and corner shutter, richly structured plaster facade, wooden panels in the house passage, of importance in terms of town planning and building history |
09296983 |
|
School and gym with connection building | Breitenfelder Strasse 19; 21 (card) |
1891 (school) | Broad clinker building with sandstone structure, hipped roof and side risalits with raised triangular gables, the gym in the courtyard is designed in the same way, originally preserved building ensemble and characteristic example of the Wilhelminian expansion of the city and the associated socio-historical aspects, of importance in terms of building history, site development and social history |
09294024 |
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Apartment house in closed development in a corner | Breitenfelder Strasse 22 (map) |
1903 (tenement) | Historicized plastered building with a former corner store, emphasis on the corner location by bay windows with plastered structure with Art Nouveau elements and glare framework on the upper floor, typical building of the time, of architectural significance |
09294025 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Breitenfelder Strasse 24 (map) |
1902 (tenement) | Historicized plastered building with natural stone base (porphyry), simple, symmetrical facade design with window canopies and sills, of architectural significance |
09294026 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Breitenfelder Strasse 26 (map) |
1902 (tenement) | Historic clinker plastered building with natural stone plinth and symmetrically structured facade, the ground floor is structurally separated from the upper floors by the plastered facade and arched windows, a characteristic example of its time, of architectural significance |
09294027 |
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Apartment building in open development in a corner with a front garden facing Cöthner Straße | Breitenfelder Strasse 27 (map) |
around 1885 (tenement) | Simple plastered building with artificial stone integration, corner bay windows and side projections, as a typical example of the building history |
09296978 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Breitenfelder Strasse 28 (map) |
1905/1915 (tenement house) | Historicizing building with varied plaster structure by means of subdivided pilaster strips, plaster fields and friezes, of importance in terms of building history |
09296977 |
|
Apartment house in open development in a corner | Breitenfelder Strasse 29 (map) |
1897/1898 (tenement house) | historicizing plastered building with sandstone structure, formerly with corner shutter, high plinth area, horizontally accentuated ground floor zone with subsequent cornice, corner bay window and eaves frieze as typical design elements, of historical importance |
09294028 |
|
Apartment house in open development in a corner with enclosure | Breitenfelder Strasse 31 (map) |
1898 (tenement) | Historicizing plastered building with basement floor with natural stone facing, corner bay windows, side elevations and window canopies with grotesque reliefs as accentuating design elements of the bel étage, of importance in terms of building history |
09294029 |
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Double tenement house (with Magdeburger Straße 36) in a closed development in a corner | Breitenfelder Strasse 36 (map) |
1902–1903 (double tenement house) | Historic clinker brick building with sandstone structure, plastered ground floor, corner store, of architectural significance
In accordance with the building regulations for the Brandt'sche area in Gohlis, the application for the construction of a residential building was formulated. In personal union, architect Georg Döhler acted for all matters from the application in 1902 to the final examination in 1903, supported by technician Georg Kühne from his office. A corner house and a building in a row were built, each with two apartments per floor. From 1995 to 1997 renovation and loft extensions took place, and a restaurant was installed on the corner. The clinker brick facade has plaster structures, sills and roofs made of sandstone as well as “geometric” Art Nouveau decor. The central elevation with a broken corner has a defining effect, the roof extension from the 1990s is unfortunate. The furnishings of the houses have been sensitively renovated like the facades. A building historical value must be recorded for the double tenement house, and the building also has an urban impact. LfD / 2018 |
09294030 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Breitenfelder Strasse 38 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | Historic clinker brick building with shop, facade with sandstone integration and sparse Art Nouveau ornamentation as the window crowning, of architectural significance |
09262322 |
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Apartment building in half-open development | Breitenfelder Strasse 40 (map) |
1903 (tenement) | Historic clinker brick building with plastered ground floor, sparse sandstone structure with Art Nouveau ornamentation as the crowning of the windows, of architectural significance |
09294031 |
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Apartment building (with three entrances) in open development, with side fences and green living space behind the building | Breitenfelder Strasse 42; 44; 46 (card) |
1930 (block of flats) | strongly horizontally emphasized plastered building with a central, slightly elevated porch, symmetrical perforated facade with loggias and expressionistic style elements, a characteristic example of modern construction, of architectural significance |
09294032 |
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Apartment building in half-open development in a corner with a front garden on the gable side | Cöthner Strasse 2 (map) |
around 1930 (tenement) | Traditionally built four-storey plastered building with expanded hipped roof, central projection, house entrance accentuated by artificial stone surrounds and shutters as accentuating design elements, as a characteristic example of its time of architectural significance |
09296992 |
|
Row of tenement houses in closed development, with front garden | Cöthner Strasse 2a; 4; 6 (card) |
around 1930 (apartment block) | Traditionally built four-storey plastered building with expanded hipped roof, middle entrance (number 4) particularly emphasized by artificial stone surrounds, side buildings structured by flat bay windows, shutters throughout on the 4th floor as accentuating design elements, as a characteristic example of its time of architectural significance |
09296991 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Cöthner Strasse 7 (map) |
1897 (tenement) | historicizing plastered building with symmetrically structured plastered and sandstone facade, characteristic example of the city expansion around 1900, of importance in terms of architectural and urban development history |
09293945 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Cöthner Strasse 11 (map) |
1890 (tenement house) | Historicizing plastered building with plastered and sandstone facade regularly structured by window canopies and sills, characteristic example of the city expansion around 1900, of importance in terms of building history and urban development |
09293946 |
|
Apartment building in closed development and front garden | Cöthner Strasse 12 (map) |
1892 (tenement house) | with gate passage, plastered facade, characteristic example of historicism, of importance in terms of building history and urban development history |
09293947 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Cöthner Strasse 13 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | historicizing plastered building with gate passage, characteristic example of the city expansion around 1900, of importance in terms of building history and urban development history |
09296998 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Cöthner Strasse 15 (map) |
1887–1888 (tenement house) | historicizing plastered building with gate passage, characteristic example of the city expansion around 1900, of importance in terms of building history and urban development history |
09296999 |
|
Apartment house in closed development with front garden and shop | Cöthner Strasse 16 (map) |
1889 (tenement house) | historicizing clinker brick building with gate passage and shop, characteristic example of the city expansion around 1900, of importance in terms of building history and urban development history
Spinning master Peter List took over the financing for the construction of the two tenement houses on the property in 1889. Architect and master mason Alexander Dick was entrusted with the design, structural calculations and construction management. An apartment, a second apartment with a shop and the passage were planned for the four-storey front residential building on the ground floor, and two rental units each on the floors above. The rear residential building was designed one storey lower, with two apartments and also a passage on the ground floor and three horses on the two upper floors. In 1936, two wash houses were built in the rear courtyard because the damage to the laundry rooms in the basement had become too great (Franz Hoffmann construction business). In this second courtyard there were already tool and vehicle sheds and the storage area had protective roofs. Additional garages were built in the 1st courtyard in 1939 (demolished in 1999). Renovation, balcony extension and minor changes to the floor plan take place between 1999 and 2001; the rear building has no monument value. The facade of the front building appears in a strong red clinker tone over the lightly plastered ground floor zone and the green of the front garden. The historic shop front has been partially preserved. Structural elements made of artificial stone and some stucco decor from late historicism are complemented by ornate iron wall anchors between the two upper floors. The property and the building document the decisive change in Gohlis during the time of the great expansion of the area; it is a historical value to be recorded. LfD / 2018 |
09296990 |
|
Apartment building in a formerly closed development and rear building | Cöthner Strasse 17 (map) |
1901 (tenement) | with gate passage, distinctive building with historicizing clinker-sandstone facade, of architectural and urban development-historical importance |
09293948 |
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Apartment building in closed development and front garden | Cöthner Strasse 18 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | with gate passage, distinctive building with historicizing clinker brick facade, iron wall anchors, of importance in terms of building history and urban development |
09296989 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Cöthner Strasse 20 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | with gate passage, historicized plastered building with symmetrical facade design typical of the time, significant in terms of building history and urban development history |
09263919 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Cöthner Strasse 21 (map) |
1888 (tenement house) | Historicized plastered building with a symmetrically structured facade made of sandstone sills, window canopies and plaster blocks of the ground floor zone, as a typical example of the city expansion of architectural and urban development history of importance |
09294055 |
|
Apartment building in closed development and front garden | Cöthner Strasse 23 (map) |
1898 (tenement) | Formerly with a shop, a striking building with a historicizing clinker-sandstone facade, significant in terms of building history and urban development |
09294056 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Cöthner Strasse 26 (map) |
1886 (tenement house) | distinctive, color-contrasting clinker brick facade with segmented arched windows, as a late historical example of urban expansion, of significance in terms of building history and urban development history |
09294057 |
|
Apartment building in a formerly closed development and front garden | Cöthner Strasse 27 (map) |
1894 (tenement house) | with gate passage and former shop, distinctive clinker plaster facade with plaster blocks on the ground floor and first floor, characteristic example of late historicism, of importance in terms of building history and urban development |
09294058 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Cöthner Strasse 29 (map) |
1887 (tenement house) | Historicizing plastered building with gate passage, plastered ashlar on the ground floor and window canopies, sills and console frieze as design elements of the upper floors, characteristic building from around 1900, of architectural and urban development historical importance |
09294059 |
|
Apartment building in closed development and front garden | Cöthner Strasse 31 (map) |
1891, 2002 (workshop building demolished) | Historic clinker plastered building with gate passage, plaster ashlar on the ground floor as well as floral and figurative facade painting on the 4th floor as special design features, characteristic building from the time around 1900, of importance in terms of architectural and urban development |
09294060 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Cöthner Strasse 33 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | Historicized plastered building with plaster ashlar on the ground floor and window canopies and sills characteristic of the time, of importance in terms of building history and urban development |
09262328 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Cöthner Strasse 34 (map) |
around 1880 (tenement) | Historicizing plastered building with plaster ashlars, window roofing and sills as characteristic design features of the architecture of this time, of importance in terms of building history and urban development history |
09291295 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Cöthner Strasse 35 (map) |
1904 (tenement) | Historic clinker brick building in a similar design to number 37, on the ground floor and 3rd floor set off by plastered surfaces and designed with window roofs and sills typical of the time, of importance in terms of building history and urban development |
09294061 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Cöthner Strasse 37 (map) |
1903 (tenement) | Historic clinker brick building in a similar design to number 35, separated by plastered surfaces on the ground floor and 3rd floor and designed in a manner typical of the time with roofing windows and sills, of importance in terms of building history and urban development |
09294062 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Cöthner Strasse 39 (map) |
1902, marked 1903 (tenement house) | Representative building with gate passage, formerly with shop, red brick facade with contrasting stucco structure in Art Nouveau elements, of importance in terms of building history and urban development history |
09294063 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Cöthner Strasse 40 (map) |
1903 (tenement) | Formerly with a shop, simple clinker brick facade with plastered ground floor zone, artificial stone surround of the entrance area as an eye-catching design feature, of importance in terms of building history and urban development |
09294064 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Cöthner Strasse 41 (map) |
1901 (tenement) | Formerly with a shop, historic clinker building with plastered ground floor zone and sandstone and artificial stone integration, a characteristic example of the architecture of its time, of importance in terms of building history and urban development |
09294065 |
|
Apartment building in half-open development | Cöthner Strasse 45 (map) |
1897 (tenement) | historicizing clinker brick facade with sandstone integration, plaster ashlar on the ground floor, characteristic example of the architecture of its time, of importance in terms of building history and urban development |
09294066 |
|
Apartment building in open development with front garden | Cöthner Strasse 46 (map) |
1898 (tenement) | historicizing plastered building, side elevations with ornamental framework in the gables, window frames with late Gothic style elements, characteristic example of the architecture of its time, of importance in terms of building history and urban development |
09294067 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Cöthner Strasse 47 (map) |
1898 (tenement) | historicizing plastered clinker facade with side elevation and design typical of the time, of importance in terms of building history and urban development history |
09294068 |
|
Apartment building in semi-open development with enclosure and front garden | Cöthner Strasse 48 (map) |
1909–1910 (tenement), 1910 (enclosure) | Three-storey plastered building, gabled central projectile with natural stone cladding on the ground floor, wooden bay window raised on the side, a simple example of the architecture of its time, of importance in terms of building history and urban development
The master mason Moritz Schneider was responsible for the execution and the static calculations under the contract of the private individual Johann Friedrich Wilhelm. A building application for the residential half of a building designed as a semi-detached house was submitted in April 1909, the declaration of execution according to a uniform plan was signed on June 1 and the official approval was issued eight days later. Later architectural drawings concerned the addition of a wooden veranda to the side. On July 1, 1910, permission to use it after completion took place. A good two years later there was still no house attached, and the gable was still unplastered - to the annoyance of the building authorities. But in 1913 this desired twin house was built, however not according to the desired “uniform plan”, but in a new guise according to plans by the architect F. Otto Gerstenberger. In 1968, the rear balconies were subjected to an examination, the renovation and renovation together with the roof extension were made from 1995 onwards. The plastered building, set back from the street space by a front garden and fence, is largely deprived of its facade decoration from the time of construction. At most, the central bay window with a dwarf house and rustic cladding on the ground floor looks more appealing - the side gable front with its staircase porch and two-storey loggias standing on slender, high wooden supports is more appealing. These are clad with wood and generously glazed on three sides, original details have been preserved inside the house, including the stairwell with lead-glazed windows. The dormer placed to the left of the gable of the dwarf shows little understanding of the historical building fabric. The building has a historical value. LfD / 2018, 2019 |
09296964 |
|
Apartment building in closed development, with front garden and workshop building in the courtyard | Cöthner Strasse 49 (map) |
1898 (tenement) | Late historical, two-tone clinker brick building with a gate passage, a characteristic example of the architecture of its time, of importance in terms of building history and urban development |
09294069 |
|
Apartment building in open development in a corner with an enclosure and front garden | Cöthner Strasse 50 (map) |
1902 (tenement) | Clinker plastered building with a lively structured facade, eye-catching Art Nouveau relief in the southern gable, characteristic testimony to the architecture around 1900, of significance in terms of building history and urban development |
09294070 |
|
Apartment building in closed development, with front garden and workshop building in the courtyard | Cöthner Strasse 51 (map) |
1898 (tenement) | Front building with gate passage, two-tone clinker brick facade with historicist decorative and design elements, as a typical building of the time, of architectural and urban development history |
09294071 |
|
Double apartment building in open development with fencing at No. 52 and front garden | Cöthner Strasse 52; 54 (card) |
1898 (double tenement house) | Three-storey plastered building with a hipped roof and porphyry base, similarly designed facades with porphyry structure and gable ends, side bay window at house number 52, a building that sets itself apart from the surrounding development in terms of its design and is of significance in terms of building history and urban development |
09294072 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Cöthner Strasse 53 (map) |
1901 (tenement) | historicizing clinker brick building with offset ground floor and side, plastered and fragmented risalits, characteristic example of architecture around 1900, of importance in terms of building history and urban development |
09294073 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Cöthner Strasse 55 (map) |
1900 (tenement) | Three-storey clinker brick building with plastered ground floor and designed facade, which, in the combination of a few Art Nouveau elements, gives an unusual overall impression, a high-quality example of the fading historicism, of importance in terms of building history and urban development |
09294074 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Cöthner Strasse 57 (map) |
1899 (tenement house) | historicizing clinker brick building with plaster structure on the ground floor, design elements typical of the time, of architectural significance |
09294075 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Cöthner Strasse 59 (map) |
1899 (tenement house) | Clinker brick facade, typical of the time, of architectural significance |
09294076 |
|
Apartment house in open development in a corner and front garden | Cöthner Strasse 60 (map) |
1926 (tenement) | with a shop, a dominant plastered building with a subtle Art Deco façade, of architectural significance |
09294078 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Cöthner Strasse 61 (map) |
1899 (tenement house) | Typical plaster clinker facade, characteristic example of the time around 1900, of architectural significance |
09294077 |
|
Apartment building in semi-open development with a front garden | Cöthner Strasse 62 (map) |
1911 (tenement) | Plaster facade structured by oriels with ornamentation and cornices, see also Cöthner Straße 64, typical example of architecture after 1900, of architectural significance |
09294079 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Cöthner Strasse 63 (map) |
1899–1900 (tenement) | Plastered facade in the style of historicism, stucco in the entrance area, value in terms of building history and district development history
The two contractors Wilhelm Eifert and Johann Friedrich Herrmann Lehmann applied for a residential and side building in October 1899 and early May 1900 for the purpose of a final inspection. A shop was installed on the left in 1901/1902, which was reversed in 1937. The completely plastered house, built as a couple, has six axes and four storeys. More elaborate window frames with stucco decor show the two middle floors, the eaves stucco consoles (the formerly elongated consoles have been replaced by hardware store consoles). A mezzanine and the decoration, which was quite conservative for the time it was built, are remarkable, although the attachments on the two central roofs on the 1st and 2nd floors are unfortunately missing today. In the entrance area there is a stucco ceiling, wall structure and floor tiles, in the stairwell there are further details of the historical furnishings. Since the last renovation, the tenement house in closed row development has had a front garden as a "high lawn area" instead of the formerly very wide footpath with mosaic paving (same design at Cöthner Straße 57/59/61 and similar front gardens on other properties, compare the wide paved walkways in the front area the street). Refurbishment before 2008, with the plastering of the exposed clinker plinth from the time of construction also not very friendly. The house in the closed street has an architectural value. LfD / 2017, 2018 |
09294080 |
|
Apartment building in half-open development | Cöthner Strasse 64 (map) |
1911 (tenement) | Plaster facade structured by bay windows with ornamentation and cornices, see also Cöthner Straße 62, typical example of architecture after 1900, of architectural significance |
09294690 |
|
Apartment building in open development in a corner, with side gate and fencing | Ehrensteinstrasse 7 (map) |
1911–1912 (tenement) | Reform style architecture, plastered facade with emphasis on corners, important in terms of building history
In 1911, the architect Emil Max Langheinrich, the owner of the plot, drew up the plans for the large, stately tenement house, which was to contain apartments with 10 rooms each. The entrance on the east side leads into the main staircase to a large hallway that was illuminated from the winter garden. This is followed by the representative rooms on the south side of the street, while the utility wing with a side staircase is on the east and north sides. A garage for 3 cars was planned in the basement. The mighty structure, which appears even higher due to the fully developed attic, is built in the neoclassical forms characteristic of Langheinrich, strictly vertically structured and only accentuated with building decor in a few prominent places. The longer main facade is structured over two floors by a wide template formed by three pilaster strips, which continues in the roof zone in an equally wide structure. To reduce the height effect, a cornice delimits the upper floor. The corner connection to Lumumbastraße is a polygonal bay, another corner bay to the rear contains the winter garden. Both bay windows are marked in the roof by small structures. An outside staircase leads to the garden. The house was sold to a Jewish tobacco shop in 1919, and in December 1938 the “Aryanization” and the division of the apartments LfD / 1998/2002 took place |
09291463 |
|
Residential house in open development, with enclosure, two gate entrances and front garden | Ehrensteinstrasse 9 (map) |
1923–1924 (residential building) | dominant plastered building with portico-style template on the ground floor and pilaster strips on the upper floor, artistically valuable wrought-iron gates, historically and artistically significant monument text : The two-family house for the tobacco merchants Felix Booch-Arkossy and Alfred Kielert was built in 1923–1924 according to plans by the city building director i. R. Emil Rayher erected. The square structure appears unusually steep, as on the one hand the floor level in front of the facade is lowered and a roof extension with a small belvedere placed in the middle of the hipped roof increases the height effect. The flat, portico-like template in the facade appears to be two-storey due to the lowering of the floor, its pilaster strips and sills are adorned with application work in Art Deco style and roofed with triangular gables (see similar "porticos" from the 1920s at the Ringmessehaus and the former Oberpostdirektion) . Overman-high walls with arches lead to the side entrances. The two apartments each occupy two floors, with the rooms being grouped around a large rectangular hallway. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09291464 |
|
Double tenement house (Ehrensteinstrasse 11 and Gohliser Strasse 22) in open development | Ehrensteinstrasse 11 (map) |
1936 (double tenement house) | simple plastered facade in the style of the thirties, emphasis on the corner building with semicircular bay windows and corner shutters, base and entrances in natural stone framing, see also: residential complex Ehrensteinstraße 13-23 and Richterstraße 13 / 13a, of architectural and socio-historical importance
Residential complex between Gohliser Strasse and Richterstrasse. The project developed in 1936 and 1937 for a residential complex on the site of the former drill house saw two corner buildings facing Gohliser and Richterstraße and - behind a ventilation gap - a contiguous block with five entrances (13, 15, 17, 19, 21). The builders were the owners of the cylinder grinding shop and piston factory Heinrich Bastert and Gustav Wienstroth. The architect Fritz Riemann created the plans. Three- and four-room apartments of different sizes and shops in the corner buildings were planned. In terms of design, the two corner buildings are highlighted by semicircular bay windows and corner shutters with entrances, framed by natural stone. Otherwise, the buildings appear in the simple style of the thirties: a base made of Theuma natural stone in the typical layered stone masonry also extends around the entrances with rustic oak doors. A spatial structure of the row is indicated by two bay-like templates in which the window axes are connected by cornices. With Ehrensteinstraße 21 and 23 and Richterstraße 13 / 13a for manufacturer Wilhelm Spilker, the residential complex was completed in 1938. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09291465 |
|
Hand lever pump with well shaft and cover plate | Ehrensteinstraße 11 (in front) (map) |
1915 (manual pump) | Replacement of number 129, of local history |
09292784 |
|
Multi-family houses in a residential complex, with front gardens | Ehrensteinstrasse 13; 15; 17; 19; 21 (card) |
1936 (apartment building) | simple plastered facades in the style of the thirties, plinths and entrances highlighted by natural stone framing, in unity with Ehrensteinstrasse 11 and 23, Richterstrasse 13 / 13a and Gohliser Strasse 22, plastered facade, of architectural and socio-historical importance
Residential complex between Gohliser Strasse and Richterstrasse. The project developed in 1936 and 1937 for a residential complex on the site of the former parade house saw two corner buildings facing Gohliser and Richterstrasse and - behind a ventilation gap - a contiguous block with five entrances (13, 15, 17, 19, 21). The builders were the owners of the cylinder grinding shop and piston factory Heinrich Bastert and Gustav Wienstroth. The architect Fritz Riemann created the plans. Three- and four-room apartments of different sizes and shops in the corner buildings were planned. In terms of design, the two corner buildings are highlighted by semicircular bay windows and corner shutters with entrances, framed by natural stone. Otherwise, the buildings appear in the simple style of the thirties: a base made of Theuma natural stone in the typical layered stone masonry also extends around the entrances with rustic oak doors. A spatial structure of the row is indicated by two bay-like templates in which the window axes are connected by cornices. With Ehrensteinstraße 21 and 23 and Richterstraße 13 / 13a for manufacturer Wilhelm Spilker, the residential complex was completed in 1938. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09291466 |
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Apartment building in a residential complex, with a front garden | Ehrensteinstrasse 23 (map) |
1938 (apartment building) | simple plastered facade in the style of the thirties, emphasis on the corner building by semicircular bay windows, entrances and plinths in natural stone framing, see also Richterstrasse 13 and 13a, Ehrensteinstrasse 11-21 and Gohliser Strasse 22, of architectural and social significance |
09291475 |
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Double dwelling (with Richterstrasse 10) in open development, with garden and front garden, fence, gate entrance and garage in the courtyard | Ehrensteinstrasse 29 (map) |
1924–1926 (twin house) | Art Déco decorative elements and shutters, animated plaster facade, hipped roof structured with dormer windows, entrance porch on the gable side, built for Justizrat Hans Geutebrück, of architectural and personal significance
In 1924 the architect Wilhelm Halpaap and Dr. Max Kuhn submitted the application to build a semi-detached house. The plans are drawn by Dipl. Ing. J. Nebel, Munich. The two-storey house on an elongated rectangular ground plan turns with its longer facade to Ehrensteinstrasse, the side front and the garden in the typical architectural terrace design of the time face to Richterstrasse. Both parts of the house, each accessible through entrance porches on the narrow sides, contained only one apartment each, accessed by a two-story hallway, and opened onto the garden with a loggia on the upper floor and a terrace, which were separated from the dining room by a glass wall. (A figural painting in the Art Deco style was preserved here in 1956). The entrance door to Richterstrasse has an artistically forged grille and a high-quality figural cast stone relief in art-deco shapes above the lintel. The broken roofs of the windows with pointed gables and the pointed gables of the roof houses are characteristics of this time. A small-scale window rung and folding shutters are design elements that give life to the otherwise deliberately simple, elongated rectangular facade. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09291479 |
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Villa with front yard, garden, enclosure, fountain with figure in the front yard | Ehrensteinstrasse 31 (map) |
around 1910 (villa) | Effective, gable-independent plastered construction with polygonal side bay windows, side winter garden, architectural and artistic significance |
09299416 |
Pergola and enclosure of a villa plot | Ehrensteinstrasse 33 (map) |
around 1910 (pergola) | historical significance |
09299417 |
|
|
Villa with coach house, front garden and enclosure | Ehrensteinstrasse 35 (map) |
1912–1913 (villa) | Two-storey plaster over a square floor plan with a mansard roof, facade structure using polygonal templates, a notable example of architecture after 1900, of architectural significance
Villa, built 1912–1913 for factory director Felix Siegel according to plans by the architects Crawfurd-Jensen & Edler. The building on an almost square floor plan with a high, hipped mansard roof is structured by semicircular and polygonal templates: entrance and staircase porch on the east side, mansion bay window on the street side, dining room bay window on the west side and winter garden with veranda on the garden side. Edges of the building and porches are emphasized by ashlar ashlar, a roof structure with a high semicircular finish dominates the prestigious street front. The interior was accessed through a square hall, originally spanning several floors and with a skylight. The villa includes the former coach house, stylistically corresponding to the main building, also with a mansard roof and semicircular gable. 1944 division into apartments. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09291482 |
Apartment building designed in a semi-open development, with lateral fencing | Ehrensteinstrasse 39 (map) |
1926–1927 (double tenement house) | originally part of a double residential building, four-storey plastered building with a mansard roof, facade structure through semicircular bay windows and very high stone plinth, stylistically based on the period around 1910, of architectural significance
The tenement house was added to the existing number 37 (destroyed in the war) in 1926/1927. The building regulations stipulated an adjustment to this building, which was built around 1912. The architects Zweck und Voigt created the plans for the new building. The height, shape of the roof and the structure using semicircular bay windows were adjusted. The very high stone plinth also corresponded to the older building, while the decoration with ornamental building decorations was dispensed with. Art deco ornamentation is drawn in the middle bay window in the plans. The round structure of the corner bay was completed by a dome. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09291483 |
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Apartment building in half-open development and in a corner, with shop (former pharmacy) | Ehrensteinstrasse 47a (map) |
1926–1928 (tenement) | simple plastered facade with corner tower and bay window as dividing elements, as part of a group of the last, authentically preserved building structure, historically significant
Number 41 represents the head building of an assembly group originally consisting of five houses (41/43/45/47 / 47a). Numbers 37 and 39 also belonged to the clients, the architect and construction business owner Otto Lauke and Max Seyfarth. The plans date from 1926, they vary the basic spatial motif with bay windows and corner tower already laid out for number 37, but the individual forms such as entrances, doors and application work correspond to the art deco style of the time. The final head building was number 47a, which already contained a pharmacy when it was completed in 1928. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09291486 |
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Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner | Ehrensteinstrasse 49 (map) |
1907 (tenement) | historicizing plastered building with corner shutters, strong emphasis on the corner facade, side bay windows, divided mansard roof and facade with a small structure, a characteristic example of the prosperous urban development after 1900, of architectural significance
Emil Franz Hänsel created the plans for the residential and commercial building on the corner of Georg-Schumann-Strasse in 1907 for the merchant Paul Völcker. With densely structured façade surfaces, the opening of the wide corner break and accentuation of the roof landscape, Hänsel has taken some of its bulk from the large corner building. Decorated zones alternate with smooth plaster strips, such as the two middle floors that are emphasized by beading and combined with pilaster strips. The ground floor, modified in 1941 with new shop windows, was covered with trickle plaster like the upper floor. The much smaller windows on the upper floor are framed by plastic garlands, just like the pilaster strips on the middle floors are also given plastic substance by a knobbed decoration. Floral building decor can be found in the curved gable field of the entrance and in the sills of the corner bay windows. Overall, the building is typical of the decorative phase in the architect's work. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09291487 |
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Apartment building in a formerly closed development | Eisenacher Strasse 2 (map) |
1885 (tenement house) | with passage through the house, historicizing plastered facade with décor typical of the time, of architectural significance |
09293206 |
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Rental villa with coach house, garden and enclosure | Eisenacher Strasse 3 (map) |
marked 1881–1882 (rental villa) | Plastered facade, important in terms of building history |
09292205 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Eisenacher Strasse 6 (map) |
1887 (tenement house) | historicizing plastered facade with décor typical of the time, wooden panels and stucco in the entrance area, characteristic example from around 1900, of architectural significance |
09293207 |
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Double apartment building (with Schorlemmerstraße 12) in open development in a corner | Eisenacher Strasse 7 (map) |
1910/1920 (double tenement house) | Massive structure with a smooth plastered facade, rustic plinth and structured cornices, the figural reliefs next to the front doors are of particular architectural importance |
09293208 |
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Apartment house in a corner | Eisenacher Strasse 8 (map) |
1878 (tenement house) | Formerly with a corner store, historicizing plastered facade with sandstone integration, a simple example of architecture from the late 19th century, of architectural significance |
09293209 |
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Apartment house in a corner | Eisenacher Strasse 9 (map) |
1862 (tenement house) | Historicizing plastered facade typical of the time with sandstone structure, historically important |
09293210 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Eisenacher Strasse 14 (map) |
around 1880 (tenement) | historicizing plastered facade with natural stone plinth and décor typical of the time, characteristic example of the city expansion around 1900, of architectural significance |
09293211 |
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Double tenement house in closed development | Eisenacher Strasse 17; 19 (card) |
1903–1904 (double tenement house) | Plastered facade, wooden panels and terrazzo in the entrance area, important in terms of building history |
09293212 |
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Apartment building in closed development and front garden | Eisenacher Strasse 21 (map) |
around 1875 (tenement) | with gate passage, plastered facade, historically important |
09297350 |
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Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Eisenacher Strasse 23 (map) |
1887 (tenement house) | Plastered facade, stucco and terrazzo with mosaic in the entrance area, important in terms of building history |
09293213 |
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Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Eisenacher Strasse 25 (map) |
1886 (tenement house) | historicizing clinker brick facade with segmented arched windows and varied ornamentation, as a structurally interesting, time-typical building of architectural significance |
09293215 |
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Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Eisenacher Strasse 27 (map) |
1894 (tenement house) | Formerly with a shop, plastered facade with sandstone structure, facade design typical of historicism with sills and window canopies, as a characteristic example of architecture around 1900 of architectural significance |
09293216 |
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Apartment building in closed development and front garden | Eisenacher Strasse 29 (map) |
1881 (tenement house) | with gate passage, plastered facade with sandstone integration, cornice, characteristic sills, window canopies and console frieze, characteristic of the style of historicism, of architectural significance |
09293217 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Eisenacher Strasse 35 (map) |
1885–1886 (tenement house) | with gate passage, formerly with shop, plastered facade with sandstone structure, cornice, sills and window canopies as typical design features of historicism, of importance in terms of building history
Master mason Carl Harz was under contract with the product dealer and master butcher Friedrich Wilhelm Richter for the construction of a front and rear building on the property at Langen Strasse 56 at that time. The building application is dated September 7, 1885, the protocol of the final examination from September 11 of the following year . In the courtyard building, a laundry room, slaughterhouse, sausage kitchen and a horse stable and hayloft could be set up, in the front building a shop apartment was built on the ground floor next to the passage and two tenants were accommodated on the two floors above. In addition to floor space, an apartment under the roof was also planned. Instead of the local (narrow) front garden, in 1891 the building authorities decided that the narrow strip had been sealed with mosaic paving. Between 1898 and 1902 Richter had a horse stable built as an extension to the courtyard building (complete demolition of the courtyard building in 1997) and in 1907 a second shop was set up in the house. Formerly, the plastered façade on the street side was structured by sandstone, the ground floor of which no longer has any of the former plaster structures, the shop zone has been dismantled. Cheap, prefabricated cast parts are attached around the windows as a frame. The famous Gohliser Aktienbrauerei was formerly located opposite the house, and the building has a historical value. LfD / 2019 |
09293218 |
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villa | Eisenacher Strasse 38 (map) |
1865 (villa) | Two-storey, representative historicizing plastered building with a gently sloping hipped roof, a notable example of early historicism, of architectural significance |
09293219 |
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Apartment building in half-open development and side wall in the courtyard for No. 38 | Eisenacher Strasse 40; 40a; 40b (card) |
1899 (tenement), 1899 (enclosure) | with gate passage, four-storey plastered building with extended mansard roof, wooden panels in the gate passage, enclosure as a clinker wall, as a typical example of architecture around 1900 of architectural significance |
09293220 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Eisenacher Strasse 42 (map) |
1901 (tenement) | Plastered facade with cornices, window canopies, dwarf house with decorative gable, characteristic example of the time around 1900, of architectural significance |
09293221 |
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Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Eisenacher Strasse 43 (map) |
1886 (tenement house) | historicizing plastered facade with ornamental design elements, characteristic example of its time, of architectural significance |
09293222 |
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Apartment house in closed development in a corner | Eisenacher Strasse 44 (map) |
1902 (tenement) | Uniform perforated facade with offset ground floor and accentuating oriels with balconies, plastered construction typical of the time, of historical importance |
09293223 |
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Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Eisenacher Strasse 47 (map) |
1885 (tenement house) | with house passage, three-storey plastered building with sandstone structure, design typical of the time with grooves, window canopies and sills, of importance in terms of building history |
09293224 |
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Apartment building in closed development and front garden | Eisenacher Strasse 49 (map) |
1891 (tenement house) | with house passage, historicizing plastered facade with design elements typical of the time, of architectural significance |
09293225 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Eisenacher Strasse 51 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | with gate passage to Möckernsche Straße 8, broad clinker brick facade, ground floor with plaster grooves, historicizing facade design, construction typical of the time, of historical importance |
09293226 |
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Multi-family houses in a residential complex (together with Möckernsche Straße 14) | Eisenacher Strasse 53a; 55; 55a (card) |
1936 (apartment building) | four-storey plastered buildings in the traditionalist style with elaborate, vertical plaster structure in the Art Deco style in the area of the stairwells, a characteristic example of the architecture of the 1930s, of architectural significance |
09293227 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Eisenacher Strasse 57 (map) |
1909 (tenement) | four-storey plastered building in reform style architecture, objectified facade design, gabled entrance area, characteristic example of the architecture of this time, of architectural significance |
09293228 |
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Double tenement house in closed development | Eisenacher Strasse 59; 61 (map) |
around 1905 (double tenement house) | Diverse plastered façade with floral and geometric ornaments, dwelling houses with ornamental frameworks in the adjacent area, a characteristic example of the historicism era, of architectural significance |
09293229 |
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Apartment building in closed development in a corner with a front garden | Eisenacher Strasse 63 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | Historic plastered construction with design elements typical of the time, such as window canopies, plaster grooves, console frieze, characteristic example of architecture around 1900, of architectural significance |
09293240 |
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Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner | Eisenacher Strasse 65 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | Historicizing plastered facade with central projections and detached, ornamental plastered fields as design elements, a typical example of architecture of the time, of architectural significance |
09293232 |
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Apartment building in closed development and front garden | Eisenacher Strasse 66 (map) |
around 1875 (tenement) | with house passage, simple plastered facade with design elements of historicism, of importance in terms of building history |
09296954 |
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Apartment building in closed development, with front garden and workshop building in the courtyard | Eisenacher Strasse 68 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | Front building with gate passage, four-storey plastered building, ground floor with plastered ashlar, window canopies and stucco ornaments as characteristic design features of historicism, former glazing in the courtyard, of architectural significance |
09293234 |
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Apartment building in half-open development | Eisenacher Strasse 70 (map) |
around 1875 (tenement) | Historicizing plastered facade with cornices, plaster grooves and window canopies, a characteristic example of the time around 1900, of architectural significance |
09291688 |
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Apartment building in half-open development | Eisenacher Strasse 74 (map) |
1914 (tenement) | cautiously designed plastered facade with forms of the reform style, characteristic example of architecture after 1900, of importance in terms of building history |
09293236 |
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Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Eisenacher Strasse 76 (map) |
1896 (tenement) | Plastered facade with neo-renaissance style elements, central projection, gable, segmented arched window, a characteristic example of architecture around 1900, of architectural significance |
09293237 |
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Enclosure and gate entrance to a property and garage house in the courtyard | Eisenacher Strasse 80 (map) |
around 1890 (enclosure) | Clinker pillar and iron fence as a fence, of architectural significance |
09296887 |
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Villa with fencing, two gates, garden and coach house | Eisenacher Strasse 84 (map) |
1902 (villa) | Two-storey plastered building with asymmetrical facade structure, different window sizes and window shapes, side tower structure and wooden veranda, characteristic example of the buildings around 1900, of architectural significance |
09293238 |
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Residential house in open development | Eisenacher Strasse 85 (map) |
1861 (tenement house) | simple plastered facade with a dwelling, a rare example of the change in the building structure shortly before the founding of the empire, of importance in terms of building history and the history of local development
The master bricklayer Heinrich Purfürst signed the plans for a two-story residential building to be built in 1861, and Johann Gottlieb Volland was named as the client. An unrealized design by Carl Hertel shows a single-storey residential building. The executed, simple two-storey plastered building over rubble stone base has a distinctive four-axis dwarf house and a rear entrance. This building documents the structural change in the Leipzig suburbs and upstream villages in the 1860s, when, in addition to the "classic" village development, the first purely residential buildings were built, mostly on the thoroughfares (and) on the outskirts of the town center development. Only a few of these houses from the immediate construction phase before the founding of the empire have largely been preserved in their original form in what is now the city of Leipzig. The traditional furnishings of the building, which was formerly located at Möckernsche Straße 18, include the stairwell, apartment entrance and interior doors and windows. LfD / 2013/2014 |
09293988 |
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Villa with enclosure, gate entrance, garden and workshop building as well as shed in the courtyard | Eisenacher Strasse 86 (map) |
1880 (villa) | Villa with a simple plastered façade, central projectile, pavilion-like bay window, courtyard building with clinker brick façade, named after the Brandt family, who owned the brickworks, of architectural and local significance |
09293239 |
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School building, with a front yard | Elsbethstrasse 1 (map) |
1884–1888, marked 1888 (school) | Plastered facade with sandstone integration, of architectural and local importance |
09293919 |
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School building with gym, ancillary building as well as connecting passage, fence, front garden and courtyard paving | Elsbethstrasse 2; 4 (card) |
1905 (school) | Plastered facade, of importance in terms of building history and local history |
09293917 |
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Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Elsbethstrasse 3 (map) |
around 1885 (tenement) | Plastered facade, important in terms of building history |
09293926 |
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Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Elsbethstrasse 5 (map) |
around 1885 (tenement) | Plastered facade, important in terms of building history |
09293924 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Elsbethstrasse 6 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, historically important |
09293920 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Elsbethstrasse 7 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | with gate passage, plastered facade, original shop front, significant in terms of building history |
09293923 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Elsbethstrasse 9 (map) |
1887–1889 (tenement house) | with gate passage, formerly with shop, plastered facade, significance in terms of building history
At the time of construction, the property had the address Obere Blumenstrasse 10 - between November 1887 and February 1889 a tenement house with a passage, shop and retail flat was built here. Financing, construction management, design and execution were handled by master mason Carl Ferdinand Neumann. Three residential units were to be rented on the upper floors. A rear building was not built until the second attempt in 1889/1890 with a laundry room in the basement and three apartments on the floors, the formerly planned workshop building in the courtyard, for which the passage was designed, was not implemented. Renovation, loft extension and balcony extension for the front building took place in the period 1994 to 2000, concerning the rear building around 1998. The variously structured plastered facade of the street front has on the two upper floors between slightly protruding side projections larger areas with reddish-colored clinker cladding, elaborate window roofs and a row Stucco consoles under the main cornice. The late historic building in a closed row is accessible from the rear, has received numerous parts of the furnishings, the former shop areas have been converted into living space. Significance in building history. LfD / 2017, 2018 |
09295238 |
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Apartment building in closed development, with front garden and workshop building in the courtyard | Elsbethstrasse 10 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | Front building with gate passage, plastered facade, stucco and wood paneling in the gate passage, of architectural significance |
09293925 |
|
Apartment building in closed development and front garden | Elsbethstrasse 11 (map) |
around 1885 (tenement) | with gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09297942 |
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Apartment building in closed development with a front garden | Elsbethstrasse 12 (map) |
1887 (tenement house) | Plastered clinker brick facade, with gate passage, two iron wheel deflectors, of architectural significance |
09295240 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Elsbethstrasse 13 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | with gate passage, formerly with shop, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09291297 |
|
Apartment building in a formerly closed development and front garden | Elsbethstrasse 14 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | with gate passage, clinker-plaster facade, historically important |
09295241 |
|
Residential building / rear building in semi-open development | Elsbethstrasse 16 (map) |
around 1890 (rear building) | Plastered facade, important in terms of building history |
09297000 |
|
Taxi post | Elsbethstraße 17 (in front) (map) |
around 1970 (supply building) | in front of house number 17 in corner position, artificial stone plinth with blue top, important in terms of technology history |
09291026 |
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Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Elsbethstrasse 22 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | with gate passage, plastered facade, wooden panels in the gate passage, of architectural significance |
09294158 |
|
Apartment building in closed development and front garden | Elsbethstrasse 24 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with shop, plastered facade, wooden panels, stucco and wall paintings in the entrance area, of architectural significance |
09294159 |
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Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Elsbethstrasse 26 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | Plastered facade, important in terms of building history |
09294160 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Elsbethstrasse 27 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, historically important |
09296973 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Elsbethstrasse 28 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | Plastered facade, important in terms of building history |
09294161 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Elsbethstrasse 29 (map) |
1895/1900 (tenement) | Plastered facade with sandstone integration, of architectural significance |
09294162 |
|
Apartment building in closed development and front garden | Elsbethstrasse 30 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with shop, plastered facade with sandstone structure, original shop front, significant in terms of building history |
09294163 |
|
Apartment house in closed development in a corner | Elsbethstrasse 32 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | Plastered facade with sandstone integration, of architectural significance |
09294165 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Elsbethstrasse 33 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | Plastered facade with sandstone integration, of architectural significance |
09294166 |
|
Apartment house in closed development in corner location and front garden | Elsbethstrasse 34 (map) |
around 1885 (tenement) | with a shop, plastered clinker facade, of architectural significance |
09260268 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Elsbethstrasse 35 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | with house passage, plastered facade with sandstone structure, historically important |
09294167 |
|
Apartment building in semi-open development with a front garden | Elsbethstrasse 36 (map) |
around 1885 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, historically important |
09260269 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with front garden | Elsbethstrasse 37 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | Plastered facade, important in terms of building history |
09294168 |
|
Children's detention center in open development, with enclosure and front garden | Elsbethstrasse 38 (map) |
1881–1882 (pen) | Plastered facade, of importance in terms of building history and social history |
09294169 |
|
Apartment building in half-open development | Elsbethstrasse 40 (map) |
1895/1900 (tenement) | with gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09294170 |
|
Apartment building in open development | Endnerstrasse 6 (map) |
1910–1912 (tenement house) | Plastered facade, front door with etched panes, historical value
A preliminary project submitted by the master builder Ernst Schlieder in April 1910 was followed by the actual application for the construction of a residential building in late autumn of that year, signed by businessman Friedrich Hermann Bertram as financier. The architecture and engineering office Weber & Schöne made new plans for the undertaking that was subsequently implemented, and Franz Robert Bauer was now the entrepreneur. After the basic building test in August 1912, the house was completed in January 1913; construction company Hermann Planitz took over the execution. Refurbishment 2005/2006. The entrance is arranged in the middle of the facade, which is completely plastered over an artificial stone base, and on the right is an end of the dwelling. The appearance in the style of contemporary reform architecture is almost unadorned. Incidentally, both designs have a similar facade structure with different numbers of floors, a central building entrance and utility access. In addition to the more elaborate cellar window grilles, numerous interior fittings have been preserved. Building historical value. LfD / 2017, 2018 |
09298017 |
|
Apartment house in a corner location in a semi-open development (structural unit with Prellerstraße 53/55), with a front garden | Erfurter Strasse 1a (map) |
marked 1935 (tenement) | Plastered facade with sgraffiti, of architectural significance
September 13, 1934 application by the architects Bock & Paatzsch for the construction of three residential buildings for the open trading company. The Hauptsimshöhe was adjusted to the existing old building number 51, while the building block was set back a total of 4 meters from the street. The final part of the house forms a wing facing Erfurter Straße, here a semicircular porch extending over all floors (originally with a needle-like turret) with floral sgraffito painting sets the only decorative accent. Otherwise the facades are markedly simple. Only the entrance zones are highlighted in color with porphyry cladding, which includes the two adjacent axes of the ground floor, and a narrow clinker frame. The wide, three-part windows also have a narrow clinker frame. The houses each contain two apartments of 90 square meters per floor, smaller two-room apartments in the Erfurter Strasse wing, and were sold in 1936 to the Allianz and Stuttgarter Lebensversicherungsbank. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09293160 |
|
Enclosure of a villa plot | Erfurter Strasse 2 (map) |
around 1885 (garden fence) | Iron fence and sandstone plinth, historically important |
09298011 |
|
Rental villa with enclosure, front yard and garden | Erfurter Strasse 4 (map) |
1878–1879 (rental villa) | Plastered facade, important in terms of building history |
09293358 |
|
Villa with enclosure, front garden and garage in the yard | Fechnerstrasse 2 (map) |
1885 (villa) | Today a mother-child home, clinker brick facade, in a country house style, of architectural significance |
09293037 |
|
Apartment house in open development with enclosure and front garden | Fechnerstrasse 3 (map) |
1906 (tenement house) | Plastered facade, important in terms of building history |
09293038 |
|
Villa with enclosure, front yard and garden | Fechnerstrasse 4 (map) |
around 1895 (villa) | Plastered facade, important in terms of building history |
09296924 |
|
Apartment house in open development with enclosure and front garden | Fechnerstrasse 5 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | Plastered facade, important in terms of building history |
09293039 |
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Apartment house in open development in a corner with a front garden | Fechnerstrasse 6 (map) |
probably around 1890 (tenement) | Plastered facade with sandstone integration, of architectural significance |
09293040 |
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Apartment building in open development in a corner with an enclosure and front garden | Fechnerstrasse 7 (map) |
1885 (tenement house) | Plastered facade with sandstone integration, of architectural significance |
09293041 |
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Villa with front garden | Fechnerstrasse 8 (map) |
1895/1900 (villa) | Plastered facade, in the country house style, of architectural importance |
09296865 |
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Rental villa, outbuildings, front garden and enclosure as well as garden | Fechnerstrasse 10 (map) |
1897 (rental villa) | Plastered facade, terrace, important in terms of building history |
09293043 |
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Double tenement house with No. 13 in half-open development with fencing and front garden | Fechnerstrasse 11 (map) |
1888 (tenement house) | Plastered facade, important in terms of building history |
09293044 |
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Double apartment building in open development with enclosure and front garden | Fechnerstrasse 12; 14 (card) |
1905/1915 (double tenement house) | Plastered facade, important in terms of building history |
09296866 |
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Double tenement house with No. 11 in half-open development with fencing and front garden | Fechnerstrasse 13 (map) |
1889 (tenement house) | Slate roof, plastered facade, important in terms of building history |
09294360 |
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Apartment building in open development in a corner with an enclosure and front garden | Fechnerstrasse 15 (map) |
1910 (tenement) | Plastered facade, important in terms of building history |
09293046 |
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Remise (No. 3) with fencing and paving as well as a garden on the Friedensstraße 1 property | Friedensstrasse 1; 3 (card) |
1893 (coach house) | Building with clinker brick facade, of importance in terms of architectural and site development |
09293410 |
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Villa with enclosure, garden and courtyard paving | Friedensstrasse 2 (map) |
1862 (villa) | Plastered facade, figure niche with sculpture, of architectural significance |
09293409 |
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Villa with fencing, pavement and garden | Friedensstrasse 4 (map) |
1865 (villa) | Plastered facade, wooden heating panels, important in terms of building history |
09293411 |
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Enclosure of a former villa | Friedensstrasse 5; 5a; 5b; 5c (card) |
1860/1870 (garden fence) | Brick wall with high plinth area and slatted fields, of architectural significance |
09293173 |
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Villa with enclosure and front garden | Friedensstrasse 6 (map) |
1862 (villa) | Plastered facade, terrace with iron railing, of architectural significance |
09293413 |
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Enclosure of a former villa | Friedensstrasse 7 (map) |
1860/1870 (garden fence) | historically important |
09296879 |
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Villa, with garden | Friedensstrasse 9 (map) |
1872 (villa) | Plastered facade, marble steps and vestibule door in the entrance area, of architectural significance |
09293406 |
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Hand lever pump with well shaft and cover plate | Fritz-Seger-Strasse (map) |
1912 (hand lever pump) | Birdcage type, of local significance |
09294853 |
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Villa with enclosure, garden, front yard and gazebo | Fritz-Seger-Strasse 7 (map) |
1872 (villa) | Plastered facade, important in terms of building history
June 1872 Application from master mason Heintze to build a house for master roofer August Mutze. The free-standing villa-like building originally had one and a half stories with a short right side wing raised by one story. The back entrance led to a spiral staircase. The kitchen, girls' room and "private" were in the basement. Later numerous renovations: 1890 heightening of the recessed part, 1911 renovation of the staircase, relocation of the entrance to the side front and the addition of a polygonal porch front. 1917 Installation of a bakery in the basement, extension of the courtyard for the Pumpernickel factory "Germania". 1920 Enlargement of the house with an extension with a wide window axis and domed semicircular bay window. The plaster design of the old house was taken over with plastered strips. The Pumpernickel factory existed until 1933. Afterwards acquisition by a power truck entrepreneur and establishment of a garage yard. Preserved the wrought iron enclosure, around 1890. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09262327 |
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Villa with enclosure and front garden | Fritz-Seger-Strasse 8 (map) |
1902 (villa) | Plastered facade, important in terms of building history
1.9. 1902 Application from pharmacist Dr. Curt Schraps on villa construction, plans by master builder Ernst Fritz Schade. The long side of the villa faces Richterstrasse. The three main rooms from the central hall were located here, while the entrance, accessible via a flight of stairs, is on the north side facing Fritz-Seger-Straße. The servants' entrance behind it gave access to the kitchen and utility rooms in the basement, bedrooms, children’s and guest rooms were upstairs, and the girls’s room was in the attic. The south side facing the garden has, as usual, a veranda, terrace and open staircase, the street sides are designed to move with bay windows and balconies. The abundant building decoration: floral stucco reliefs on gables, bay windows, windows, as well as balcony grilles and fencing show the Art Nouveau forms of the time. Flat corner pilasters and a slightly profiled cornice strip the building cube together. In 1912 the publisher Hilmar Klasing (Verlag Velhagen & Klasing) acquired the villa. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09262326 |
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Villa with enclosure and front garden | Fritz-Seger-Strasse 14 (map) |
1886–1887 (villa) | Clinker brick construction, of architectural significance
October 31 1886 Application from master builder Robert Weber for the construction of a stately home for privy councilor Prof. Dr. Wülker. The simple rectangular building with a light red facing brick facade on the two upper floors is only slightly divided by plaster strips on the entrance projectile and cornice strips. The basement is set off by dark red clinker bricks. Deviating from the usual scheme, according to which the main rooms were located regardless of the cardinal direction facing the street, here - on the north side - only the kitchen, pantry and one room are arranged. On the other hand, facing the garden were the study, dining room and the salon, which had a veranda (enlarged in 1913). There was a large bathing room in the basement. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09293002 |
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villa | Fritz-Seger-Strasse 16 (map) |
1901 (villa) | two-storey villa with plastered facade, side staircase and vestibule door, of architectural significance
November 1900 first application for the construction of a villa by university professor and literary historian Albert Köster, plans by architect Hugo Groothoff, Hamburg. New plans by Groothoff March 1901. A clear concept of spatial planning “from the inside out” produces a strongly moving outline. In particular, the entrance wing on the southwest side is staggered in height and depth. It consists of a single-storey cloakroom extension (with triple-coupled windows), the staircase projecting with a pointed gable reaching into the roof (with staggered windows and a large stepped window that illuminates the hallway behind) and a two-storey extension behind which the dining room was located. In the street-side risalit behind the large window adorned with Art Nouveau stucco and an ox-eye was the library, next to it in the back the study, while on the garden side there was a salon with a bay window, the music room with a polygonal, three-branched porch and the dining room extended by a veranda . In the basement there was a kitchen and utility rooms as well as central heating. The garden front is even stronger than the street side, with extensions of different heights, verandas with wooden structures and various roofs in a picturesque, irregular shape. The enclosure consisted of iron grating over a brick base. Between number 17 (undeveloped) and number 19: manual pump of the type "bird cage" with cassette pump body, around 1910. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09293003 |
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Rental villa with enclosure, front garden, courtyard paving and garage | Fritz-Seger-Strasse 19 (map) |
1912 (rental villa) | Plastered facade, balcony, important in terms of building history
1872 Construction of a villa according to plans by the client, architect Emil Hetzel. The small two-storey building with a classic three-axis facade and flat roof was slightly rebuilt in 1891 by Max Bösenberg for Luise Weidlich and sold in 1910 to Otto Klasing (Velhagen & Klasing), who owned the neighboring property (today a sports field) with a large villa from the 1860s. In 1912 he applied for the old house to be demolished in favor of a new building with garages and a car workshop. Architect Fritz Schade created the plans. The country house with two side projections and a steep, protruding roof. In the basement there were two entrances to the “automobile hall”, which took up the entire basement of the house with 3 garages, car pits, workshop and the chauffeur's apartment. The entrance to the apartments on the upper floors is on the right-hand side in a large arched loggia. The stairwell in the right risalit can be recognized by the large three-part window. Behind it extends an elongated hall, from which three rooms extend to the front - the large main room is highlighted by the bay window in the form of a "choir". A set of stairs leads from a glazed loggia on the upper floor of the southwest side front to the garden, including a wall fountain. Several rooms and the kitchen faced the north. The heavily developed top floor contained seven rooms, a bathroom, etc. The numerous gables, folding shutters and the originally trellised areas on the ground floor gave the building the character of a country house. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09293004 |
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Villa with enclosure, front yard and garden | Fritz-Seger-Strasse 21 (map) |
1897–1900 (villa) | Plastered facade, important in terms of building history
September 13, 1897 Architect Alphons Berger requested the construction of a villa for businessman Adolf Poppe. The two-storey villa appears as a cube on a square floor plan, penetrated by powerful risalits that protrude over the flat roof of the building. The street-side template with gable end and semicircular bay porch. On the side risalits there are two terraces facing the garden and a loggia with a strong fluted corner column facing the street. As usual, the representative rooms opened up from the central hall to the front: dining room with bay window, living room and master's room with loggia. The kitchen and utility rooms were in the basement. The exterior of the villa (the plans were changed again in May 1898) already shows clear traits of Art Nouveau, obviously influenced by the simultaneous villa buildings by Paul Möbius. As with this one, the plastic protruding strips of plaster, which surround the building like a cornice and at the same time serve as parapets for the street-side balconies, have both a constructive and a decorative character. The grooved semicircular closures of the skylight windows, the curved transom and the floral console-like structures (which appear similarly again on the fence posts) point in this direction. Typical of the early Art Nouveau phase is the design of the entrance on the southwest side with a monumental frame with wide curved consoles that end in female heads. Above a thermal bath window extending over two floors. 1919 sold to mine owner and coal wholesaler Hickethier, from 1959 company kindergarten. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09293005 |
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Apartment house in open development, with enclosure, garden and front yard | Fritz-Seger-Strasse 23 (map) |
1897–1898 (tenement house) | Clinker brick facade, of importance in terms of building history and local development
11/23 1897 Application by Oswald Braune for a new residential building, plans by master builder Moritz Wilde. The unambitious building with a brick facade divided by plaster strips contained apartments, accessed from the side entrance via a long corridor. The apartments each contained two corner salons and two living rooms to the front, to the rear bedrooms, kitchen and girls' room. The windows of the two lower floors had narrow roofs, the ground floor a plastering. LfD / 1998/2002 |
09293006 |
swell
- State Office for the Preservation of Monuments Saxony Dynamic web application: Overview of the monuments listed in Saxony. The location “Leipzig, City, Gohlis-Süd” 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