List of cultural monuments in Gohlis-Süd (G – M)

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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:

This partial list includes the cultural monuments of G-M .

Legend

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

List of cultural monuments in Gohlis-Süd, G – M

image designation location Dating description ID
Apartment building in closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 9
(map)
1914 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293844
 
Apartment building in open development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 29
(map)
1905 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09293847
 
Apartment building in open development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 31
(map)
1929 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293848
 
Apartment building in half-open development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 38
(map)
around 1875 (tenement) Loggias with Tuscan columns, of architectural significance 09295824
 
Apartment building in open development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 46
(map)
1901, marked 1902 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09293849
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 51
(map)
1875/1885 (tenement house) with shops, plastered facade, of importance in terms of building history 09297878
 
Double apartment building in closed development and designed open spaces in the rear area
Double apartment building in closed development and designed open spaces in the rear area Georg-Schumann-Strasse 52; 54
(card)
1927–1929 (tenement) four-storey plastered building with shops (see also: Sasstrasse 8/10 and Georg-Schumann-Strasse 56–56c), eagle as a sculptural ornament above the entrance, of architectural significance

In the 19th century there were market gardens on the area of ​​the Gohliser Flur, among other things gardener Ferdinand Otto Jähnich had a new house built with an integrated greenhouse in 1860. Later, on the Leipzig arterial road towards Halle, the art and trade gardener Gustav Jänich, on the corner gardener Karl Friedrich Jahn, property owners. Only in 1927, after the construction association for the procurement of inexpensive apartments in Leipzig eGmbH had acquired the parcels 306, 307, 308e, was a preliminary project for the redevelopment of the site with multi-storey buildings for a total of 70 apartments to be submitted. The architect Max Schönfeld made the drafts, who later also submitted new plans for the building application, and was responsible for the static calculations and construction management. It was possible to build on sustainable clay soil, and the permit for five four-story and three five-story residential buildings was granted on February 8, 1929. The final official audits were carried out for all houses at the end of the year. A car building was not implemented, but a single-storey shop building arranged around the corner. This burned out during the war, but the construction department of the building cooperative was able to restore it from 1949 to 1952. Sasstrasse 8 was also damaged and had an emergency roof until 1956. The group of tenements in the urban area, with light plaster over shell limestone plinths, is very effective in a prominent corner location. A courtyard situation was created with the design of green spaces through the fronts that receded into the depths of the property and the shopfitting erected in the corner on the street corner, in which Konsum Leipzig retail stores could be found for decades. The fronts of the residential buildings show a strict horizontal structure with ribbons and cornices, loosening up in the form of the triangular stairwells protruding from the facade and a partially very individually designed portal situation of the house entrances, including Georg-Schumann-Straße 56, more elaborate at 52 and 54. The shop front on Georg-Schumann-Straße is very pronounced, so that the shell limestone used here to clad the first floor is hardly noticed. The base of the shop zone is clad with shell limestone slabs on the street and side, while clinker masonry is visible over a granite threshold to the rear. The tree-lined lawn is framed with a cut hedge. Overall, the refurbished assembly is an excellent example of architecture in the transition from Art Déco to architecture from the 1930s. A historical peculiarity on the former corner plot of land number 306 was the public demonstration of neon signs in 1927, some with moving images. For this purpose, a screen construction was set up around the corner and the picture surface was shown from behind by a cinema set in an empty stable building. There is a historical and architectural-artistic importance for the tenement group. LfD / 2019

09293933
 
Apartment buildings (No. 56–56c) in a residential complex, green space in the courtyard and shop fitting (No. 58) Georg-Schumann-Strasse 56; 56a; 56b; 56c; 58
(card)
1927–1929 (tenement) Associated tenement houses at Georg-Schumann-Strasse 52/54 and Sasstrasse 8/10, plastered facade, inscription panels, of architectural significance

In the 19th century there were market gardens on the area of ​​the Gohliser Flur, among other things gardener Ferdinand Otto Jähnich had a new house built with an integrated greenhouse in 1860. Later, on the Leipzig arterial road towards Halle, the art and trade gardener Gustav Jänich, on the corner gardener Karl Friedrich Jahn, property owners. Only in 1927, after the construction association for the procurement of inexpensive apartments in Leipzig eGmbH had acquired the parcels 306, 307, 308e, was a preliminary project for the redevelopment of the site with multi-storey buildings for a total of 70 apartments to be submitted. The architect Max Schönfeld made the drafts, who later also submitted new plans for the building application, and was responsible for the static calculations and construction management. It was possible to build on sustainable clay soil, and the permit for five four-story and three five-story residential buildings was granted on February 8, 1929. The final official audits were carried out for all houses at the end of the year. A car building was not implemented, but a single-storey shop building arranged around the corner. This burned out during the war, but the construction department of the building cooperative was able to restore it from 1949 to 1952. Sasstrasse 8 was also damaged and had an emergency roof until 1956. The group of tenements in the urban area, with light plaster over shell limestone plinths, is very effective in a prominent corner location. A courtyard situation was created with the design of green spaces through the fronts that receded into the depths of the property and the shopfitting erected in the corner on the street corner, in which Konsum Leipzig retail stores could be found for decades. The fronts of the residential buildings show a strict horizontal structure with ribbons and cornices, loosening up in the form of the triangular stairwells protruding from the facade and a partially very individually designed portal situation of the house entrances, including Georg-Schumann-Straße 56, more elaborate at 52 and 54. The shop front on Georg-Schumann-Straße is very pronounced, so that the shell limestone used here to clad the first floor is hardly noticed. The base of the shop zone is clad with shell limestone slabs on the street and side, while clinker masonry is visible over a granite threshold to the rear. The tree-lined lawn is framed with a cut hedge. Overall, the refurbished assembly is an excellent example of architecture in the transition from Art Déco to architecture from the 1930s. A historical peculiarity on the former corner plot of land number 306 was the public demonstration of neon signs in 1927, some with moving images. For this purpose, a screen construction was set up around the corner and the picture surface was shown from behind by a cinema set in an empty stable building. There is a historical and architectural-artistic importance for the tenement group. LfD / 2019

09293934
 
Apartment building in closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 66
(map)
1885 (tenement house) with gate passage, with shops, plastered façade, historically important 09299624
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 71
(map)
1865/1870 (tenement house) with house passage, plastered facade, historically important 09293922
 
Apartment building in closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 75
(map)
1883 (tenement) with gate passage, with shop, plastered facade, Prussian caps in the gate passage, of architectural significance 09295133
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Georg-Schumann-Strasse 76
(map)
1887 (tenement house) with wrought-iron courtyard gate, with shop, plastered facade, of architectural significance 09294109
 
Apartment building in open development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 78
(map)
1910 (tenement) with gate passage, with shops, plastered façade, historically important 09294108
 
Apartment building in closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 86
(map)
around 1880 (tenement) with shops, plastered facade, of importance in terms of building history 09297765
 
Double tenement house in closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 87; 89
(card)
1906, marked 1907 (double tenement house) with gate passage, with shops, plastered façade, historically important

In 1861 a house for Mr. Kösser in Gohlis was built on what is now the double site, and between 1880 and 1881 a rear building was built on the site with fire register number 349 on behalf of the financier Johann Gottfried Friedrich. In the summer of 1904, the businessman Julius Karl Müller took over the area, submitted a preliminary project five weeks later and in September 1905 submitted the building application for a residential and commercial building, as well as a single-storey side and rear building for a bath and bathing establishment. New plans were submitted in May 1906, which were granted execution permits in November. Demolition work began at the beginning of 1907, structures were in place, a laundry and storage building was under discussion. The Gohlis architect Ernst Steinkopf took on the drafts, construction management and statics, while the construction was master builder Hermann Hetzer under the supervision of the bricklayer foreman Hermann Pausch. On October 2nd, 1907, the permission to use it was given. For the rear area, there was a machine laundry project in 1913, applications for garages in 1928 and 1933, in 1969 the PGH (Production Cooperative of the Crafts) Orthopedics, Surgery Mechanics is on record in the courtyard building (not preserved). The façade of the semi-detached house dominates the intersection area and the row development of the quarter: side elevations with dwarf houses, slightly protruding polygonal bay windows and a mighty, centrally arranged roof house structure the façade above the consistently separated ground floor with the previously largely preserved historical shop fronts (until the renovation in 1996). The plastered facade appears to be flat, which is characterized by pilasters, grooves, different plaster structures, but especially by small-scale window structures. In the 1905 draft plan there are two staircases, with two apartments at number 73 (87) and one tenant per floor at 75 (91). After the renovation in 1996, the house shows itself convincingly in the preservation of the original substance. For the house, which characterizes the street space due to its size, an urban development value can be ascertained in addition to the architectural history, the house clearly shows the desire of the municipal council for a representative expansion of the road . LfD / 2018

09294209
 
Apartment building (with two house numbers) in closed development, with three courtyard buildings Georg-Schumann-Strasse 91; 93
(card)
1892–1893 (apartment building), 1893 (commercial building), 1896 (commercial building) with shops, historically important

The two properties, formerly Äußere Hallesche Straße 77/79, were combined in 1896 under the fire register number 350B of Department A for Leipzig-Gohlis. At number 79, in 1892/1893, a five-storey tenement building was built on the site of a two-story residential building, master builder and bricklayer Hermann Gustav Tautz and private man Anton Hermann Böttger, carried out by colleagues from the firm of the steam brick owners, master mason and master carpenter Böttger & Tautz. In 1893, a rear building with an angled floor plan was built for later use as a workshop or photographic studio, and in 1896 a side building on property number 77. Two apartments in the front building were on the upper floors 1 and 2 and three rental units were on the two floors above. The ground floor comprised two shops and the passage to the commercial courtyard. A shop renovation in 1967–1968 on behalf of HO (trade organization) Kondi, Leipzig district operation, was decisive for the appearance of the house and the access to the interior. Both shop areas were merged and the street-side entrance to the house was walled up (design by architect and master builder Gerhard Harttig). Parts of the historic shop fronts were preserved, as well as the structured plastered facade with stucco decoration and strong roofs, sills and cornices with consoles, a rarity for the Leipzig apartment building stock are the wrought-iron grilles in front of the windows of the first floor, as well as the blind balustrades inserted under the sills. In 2018, the three-wing, two-storey courtyard development was still unrefurbished and damaged behind the front building, which was renovated in 2013/2014. The former studio with its glass front on the upper floor and the skylights is of particular interest. LfD / 2018

09297880
 
Apartment building in closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 97
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) with house passage and shop, plastered facade, historically important 09297882
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 100
(map)
around 1880 (tenement) with gate passage, with shop, plastered facade, historically important 09296972
 
Cellar system as well as gate entrance and gatehouse of a former brewery Georg-Schumann-Strasse 103; 105; 107; 109; 111
(map)
E. 19th century (storage cellar and cellar under the Mälzer), end of 19th century (gatehouse) Extensive storage cellars of rarity on the site of the former Gohliser brewery (storage cellar and cellar formerly under the malt house), of local historical importance 09262421
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 104
(map)
around 1880 (tenement) with house passage and shops, plastered facade, of architectural significance 09296971
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Georg-Schumann-Strasse 110
(map)
1892 (tenement house) with shop and corner shop, clinker brick facade, historically important 09293579
 
Apartment building in closed development and rear building Georg-Schumann-Strasse 113
(map)
1887/1888 (tenement house) Front building with gate passage, plastered facade, historically important 09294212
 
Apartment building in closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 114
(map)
after 1890 (tenement) Front building with shop, plastered facade typical of the time, of architectural significance 09294105
 
Apartment building (no.116) in closed development and two adjacent workshop buildings (no.116a) in the courtyard Georg-Schumann-Strasse 116; 116a
(card)
1890 (tenement house) Front building with gate passage, historicizing clinker brick facade with bay window, historically important 09294103
 
Apartment building in closed development and courtyard building
Apartment building in closed development and courtyard building Georg-Schumann-Strasse 117
(map)
1874 (tenement house), 1887 (rear building) with shops, plastered facade, of importance in terms of building history

The parceling plan included the building site of master mason CF Heintze in Gohlis - at the beginning of April 1874, plans for a semi-detached house by builders Wilhelm Eichler and Gottfried Bergmann were examined and found to be permissible. A free-standing building with two side loops and courtyard-side entrances was planned. The final inspections took place in mid-September, with Eichler being on record as the owner of today's house number 117. On the upper floors there were two apartments with an entrance hall, kitchen, two rooms and a chamber, but only one privet for both tenants on the stairs. A shop installation in the basement, which was requested in December 1876, was only possible because the house on what was then Hallische Strasse had a front garden, through which the entrance with stairs was inserted. In 1887 a rear building, later demolished, was built, in 1904/1905 two sheds and at the same time two shops, now on the ground floor of the house, were built, a conversion of the attic dated from 1905, also by master builder Ernst Schlieder. In March 2019, the house was still showing its original plastering from 1874 on the upper floors and a preserved wooden shop front in the manner of the reform style. The two central axes of the two upper floors stand as a risalit, the piano nobile is characterized by fine plaster grooves, the eaves zone is stucco consoles. White plastic windows create an agonizing contrast to this. Most of the equipment has been preserved, and the iron anchoring of an earlier overhead tram line has been preserved. Georg-Schumann-Straße 117 is one of the few, also largely authentically preserved, residential buildings from the construction period immediately after the founding of the Empire. LfD, 2018, 2019

09291943
 
Apartment building in closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 118
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) with house passage and shops, plastered facade, of architectural significance 09296894
 
Apartment building in closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 120
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) 09293007
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 121
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) with gate passage, with shops, clinker brick facade, historically important 09296970
 
Apartment building in closed development
Apartment building in closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 122
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) with gate passage, with shop, clinker brick facade, historically important 09294216
 
Double tenement house in closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 124; 126
(card)
1901–1903 (double tenement house) with gate passage, with shops, rich facade structure, of importance in terms of building history 09294217
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 127
(map)
around 1880 (tenement) with gate passage, with shops, plastered facade, Prussian caps in the gate passage, of architectural significance 09296961
 
Apartment building in closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 129
(map)
around 1880 (tenement) with gate passage, with shops, plastered façade, historically important 09296960
 
Apartment building in closed development in a corner and front garden on Mottelerstraße with shops Georg-Schumann-Strasse 130
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, original store, significant building history 09294219
 
Apartment building in closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 131
(map)
around 1885 (tenement) with gate passage, with shops, plastered facade, Prussian caps in the gate passage, of architectural significance 09297372
 
Apartment building in closed development
Apartment building in closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 132
(map)
1927 (tenement) with shops, plastered facade, of importance in terms of building history 09294220
 
Apartment building in closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 133
(map)
1880s (tenement) with doorway and shops, clinker brick facade, wooden panels in the doorway, vestibule door, historically important 09294221
 
Double apartment building in closed development and two rear buildings Georg-Schumann-Strasse 134; 136
(card)
1927 (double tenement house) with shops, plastered facades, original shops, significant in terms of building history 09294222
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Georg-Schumann-Strasse 135
(map)
1890s (tenement) with shops, clinker brick facade, stucco structure, important in terms of building history 09294223
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Georg-Schumann-Strasse 137
(map)
marked 1897 (tenement house) with corner shutter, clinker brick facade, of architectural significance 09296893
 
Apartment building in closed development and rear building
Apartment building in closed development and rear building Georg-Schumann-Strasse 138
(map)
1912 (tenement house), 1889–1890 (rear building) with house passage, shop, plastered facade, wooden panels in the gate passage, of architectural significance

First, in 1889/1890, a two-story rear building with an office, housekeeping and coachman's apartment was built for the master builder Robert Schlieder in his own design. He owned some land in the quarter and operated his room here. The vaulted rooms for a horse stable on the ground floor were ultimately also converted for residential purposes. In 1894, the warehouse and factory premises were given a wall on the street side, which had to give way to a new residential building planned on the property in 1912. Again Schlieder acted as client, contractor, site manager and structural engineer. All apartments had an inside bathroom, the two ground floor apartments also had a sales room. An apartment was also planned for the attic, the laundry room as an annex on the courtyard side. It is remarkable that the Baupol. Amt B, Development Plans Department, submitted a counter-proposal to the facade design submitted by Schlieder. The final inspection took place at the end of September 1912. In 1960 the shop on the left was to be converted into living space, as part of the renovation from 2014 to 2016 the former second restaurant on the right. The renovation result for the front and rear building is questionable from a monument protection point of view - the renovation and expansion as well as the balcony extensions are too extensive. The effect of the former facade is impaired. Two oriels extending over all three upper floors characterize the reform style-oriented plaster facade, which has some decor. Strangely flat consoles stick under the all-round eaves cornice, a tower top leads the right bay window further into the roof zone, which has been disfigured by massive expansion. LfD / 2018

09294224
 
Apartment building in closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 139
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) with doorway and shops, clinker brick facade, wooden panels in the doorway, of architectural significance 09294225
 
Apartment building in closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 140
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) with gate passage and shops, plastered facade, stucco and wooden panels in the gate passage, of architectural significance 09296881
 
Apartment building in closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 142
(map)
1890s (tenement) Clinker brick facade, terrazzo, of architectural significance 09294226
 
Apartment building in closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 143
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) with shops, plastered facade, of importance in terms of building history 09294227
 
Apartment building in half-open development
Apartment building in half-open development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 144
(map)
1887 (tenement house) historicizing plastered facade, building in a corner position to the railroad tracks, finely structured gable wall with high visibility from the bridge, of architectural significance

The gable of the house, which was built on a plot of land on the railway line of the former Thuringian Railway, is visible from afar. In the years 1883 and 1884 it was initially planned to build a factory for artificial mineral water, medical bandages and chemical-pharmaceutical preparations in addition to a villa for the managing director and owner of the Leipziger Engel-Apotheke, Mr. pharmacist Rudolph H. Paulcke. No less a person was responsible for the planning than the renowned architect Max Bösenberg. After the official rejection, the project was not pursued any further. In 1887, master mason and carpenter Robert Schlieder submitted documents for a residential building with a rebated tile roof and a wash house. The first house in the series was the building with rear access, mezzanine and plastered facade over clinker plinth. Modern artificial stone moldings were used for cornices, roofs and sills. The shop installation, which was later dismantled, was carried out in 1897 by master builder Carl Robert Schlieder on his own behalf. In 1926 the defective railroad fence was pointed out and in 1933 defective jewelry was knocked off the facade. Two two-axis side projections clasp the middle section, which has four axes - the simple furnishings, which also include cellar window grilles, apartment doors and staircase, have largely been preserved. Renovation 2018. The rental apartment building, which is effective in terms of urban planning, has a historical value. LfD / 2018

09263944
 
Apartment building in closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 145
(map)
1895–1896 (tenement house) with gate passage and shop, plastered facade, historically important 09296928
 
Apartment building in closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 147
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) with gate passage and shops, clinker brick facade, historically important 09294228
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Georg-Schumann-Strasse 149
(map)
1890s (tenement) with corner shutter, plastered facade, of architectural significance 09294229
 
Apartment building in closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 151
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) with a shop, clinker brick facade, stucco and wooden panels in the entrance area, important in terms of building history 09294230
 
Apartment building in closed development and rear building
Apartment building in closed development and rear building Georg-Schumann-Strasse 153
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) with gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important 09294231
 
Apartment building in closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 155
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) with gate passage and shop, historicizing clinker brick facade, historically important 09294232
 
Apartment building in closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 157
(map)
around 1880 (tenement) with gate passage and shop, clinker brick facade, historically important 09260266
 
Apartment building in closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 159
(map)
around 1880 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09260267
 
Apartment building in closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 161
(map)
1895/1900 (tenement) with shop, clinker brick facade, of importance in terms of building history 09294233
 
Apartment building in closed development Georg-Schumann-Strasse 163
(map)
around 1885 (tenement) with house passage, plastered facade, historically important 09296882
 
Apartment building in half-open development and in a corner, with shops Gohliser Strasse 19
(map)
1909 (tenement) Plastered facade, reform style architecture, important in terms of building history

The architect Walter Heßling created the plans for the residential and commercial building on the corner of Ehrensteinstrasse in 1909 for the dentist Peter Bachmann. The monumental-looking building is generously structured, the quiet roof zone is crowned by a belvedère above the three-axis corner break. The high, stone-clad ground floor surrounds the arched entrance. Here, too, the delicately simple structure includes the small projected windows with a transom. Only the bay windows and the corner framing show figurative ornamentation in the sill fields. The originally created two large apartments per floor were divided in 1936 by Georg and Werner Wünschmann. LfD / 1998/2002

09291314
 
Apartment building in closed development Gohliser Strasse 21
(map)
around 1910 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

Construction file not received. The house, which was built around 1910, shows its function as a central building in the closed row between Ehrensteinstrasse and Prellerstrasse through the high gable, to which two gabled oriels are symmetrically assigned. It is also centered by the central entrance between rusticated half-columns. The facade decoration is limited to this entrance, the coffered window walls in the gable and the typical “Empire” decorations on the bay windows. LfD / 1998/2002

09291316
 
Double tenement house (Ehrensteinstrasse 11 and Gohliser Strasse 22) in open development Gohliser Strasse 22
(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 5 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 for three and four-room apartments of various sizes and shops in the corner buildings. 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
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner, with a front garden on Prellerstraße Gohliser Strasse 23
(map)
marked 1904 (tenement house) with shops, plastered façades, stucco and wooden panels in the entrance area, important in terms of building history

The corner building on Prellerstraße was built according to plans that Emil Franz Hänsel created in 1904 for the Naumann & Mette construction business. The commercial building has shops on the ground floor facing Gohliser Strasse, and a 6-meter-deep front garden facing Prellerstrasse. The Art Nouveau facade is richly and decoratively designed using various materials and plaster structures, with the bay windows, the segmented gable field facing the main street and the one with a tower dome raised corner wing are particularly lavishly decorated with floral and figurative decorations. The “haut” façade becomes more light upwards: above a heavy, irregular rustic ground floor, the first floor is designed with darker trickle plaster, while the two upper floors appear almost unadorned in light, smooth plaster. As a contrast to the coarse-grained plaster, the windows and bay windows have square, smooth plaster edges. The eaves area under the gable and the corner tower is decorated with geometric stencils. The ground floor was changed in 1960 by renovating shop windows. LfD / 1998/2002

09291318
 
Apartment building in half-open development Gohliser Strasse 24
(map)
1868, in the core (tenement house) with shop, plastered facade, important in terms of building history

On the border between Gohlis and Pfaffendorfer Flur (Leipziger Strasse 1), Theodor Einckel, Mechanicus in Leipzig, had a house with a side building built by master carpenter C. Leonhardt. The basic type of the house has been preserved: three-storey with a flat central template, which ends in a two-axis dwelling. The entrance was at the rear, the kitchen and chambers were located here, and a spiral staircase led to the upper floors. There were three two-winged rooms at the front. In 1896, the owner of the factory built in the courtyard in 1895 had the house rebuilt: the ground floor was opened by three round-arched shop windows, the windows above were given a straight roof and balcony baskets, the dwelling and the gable side a stepped gable or a bay window. The factory building in the courtyard, a four-story brick building with an extended mansard roof and raised corner wing, extended behind the drill house that still exists here. In 1904 the machine factory "Diamant" produced here, later the company Lösche (music automatons) 1930 the bookbindery Thieme. LfD / 1998/2002

09291319
 
Factory building in the rear Gohliser Strasse 24a
(map)
09306911
 
Apartment building in closed development and shop (with shop equipment) Gohliser Strasse 26
(map)
1873–1874 (tenement) Tenement house with passage and shops, plastered facade, historically important 09302535
 
Apartment building in open development today Gohliser Strasse 29
(map)
1878 (tenement house) with shops, plastered facade, of importance in terms of building history

The three-story house with a mezzanine floor under the flat roof is part of the closed development on Leipziger Strasse, which was built in the late 1860s. It was built in 1878 as a semi-detached house with number 27, which was destroyed in the war. The Rietzschke, which was vaulted when the houses were built, flowed roughly below the entrance to number 27. (It flowed parallel to the newly designed Poetenweg in the Pleiße.) At the time of construction, the entire ground floor was occupied by shops and offices. The facade with the evenly and closely lined up window axes is centered in the central axis by triangular or segment roofing. A strong cornice separates the ground floor and the mezzanine from the main floors. The finely profiled window sashes, cornices and the triglyph frieze give the simple facade architectural coherence. LfD / 1998/2002

09291320
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Gohliser Strasse 32
(map)
1872 (tenement house) formerly with a corner restaurant, plastered facade, historically important

The corner house on Fritz-Seger-Straße (Bismarckstraße) was built in 1872 according to plans by the Gohlis master mason Carl Harz. Its acute-angled floor plan with the corner break that was not yet binding at the time corresponds to the layout of the street. An entresol was laid out as a storage floor above the shops on the ground floor, and the shop windows were laid out like its two-axis combined windows. This ground floor zone, designed with plaster ashlar and closed off with segmental arches, formed an effective base for the four-and-a-half-story building with a flat hipped roof. The upper floors, each separated by a cornice, are kept correspondingly simpler. LfD / 1998/2002

09291321
 
Apartment building in closed development Gohliser Strasse 35
(map)
1876 ​​(tenement house) with shop, plastered facade, original shop front, significant in terms of building history

Both houses were built in 1876 instead of an existing village building. The master bricklayer Heintze from Gohlis built it for Moritz Bauermann, who in 1877 set up a slaughterhouse in the side buildings built at the same time. On the first floor of the front houses there were “vaults”, that is, shops and a liquor bar. The floor plan was one apartment per floor with three front rooms as well as a kitchen and chamber on the courtyard side. With the exception of the changed ground floor, the original facade structure from the 1870s with profiled window sashes and roofing, plastering on the two main floors and fields on the upper floor have been preserved. LfD / 1998/2002

09293123
 
Apartment building in closed development Gohliser Strasse 36
(map)
1860s (tenement) with shop, plastered facade, important in terms of building history

Construction file only from 1887: Teacher Krieger's request for shop fitting. The house was probably built in the 1860s, as indicated by the window frames and the neo-Gothic frieze in the roof zone. LfD / 1998/2002

09293000
 
Apartment building in closed development Gohliser Strasse 37
(map)
1876 ​​(tenement house) with shop, old shop front, plastered facade, historically significant

Both houses were built in 1876 instead of an existing village building. The master bricklayer Heintze from Gohlis built it for Moritz Bauermann, who in 1877 set up a slaughterhouse in the side buildings built at the same time. On the first floor of the front houses there were “vaults”, that is, shops and a liquor bar. The floor plan was one apartment per floor with three front rooms as well as a kitchen and chamber on the courtyard side. With the exception of the changed ground floor, the original facade structure from the 1870s with profiled window sashes and roofing, plastering on the two main floors and fields on the upper floor have been preserved. LfD / 1998/2002

09293061
 
Apartment building in closed development Gohliser Strasse 40
(map)
around 1910 (tenement) with shop, sandstone facade, reform style architecture, of architectural significance 09291322
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Gohliser Strasse 41
(map)
1887/1888 (tenement house) with shops, plastered facade, of importance in terms of building history

The corner house on what was then the main street of the village of Gohlis, today Menckestrasse, was built in 1887 as part of the rebuilding of a former estate. Until then, it was replaced by one of the two-story, five-axis houses with a dwelling typical of the area. A corner pavilion closed off the garden up to the main street, the large estate was enclosed by stable buildings and a barn. The four-story corner house was built by master bricklayer Harz for Marie Günther. The ground floor was already occupied by shops at the time of construction, the floors above are separated by strong cornices in the horizontal emphasis typical of the time, the three-axis corner projection is emphasized by bunging, window canopies and a two-story bay window. Above the two vividly highlighted main floors, the upper floor shows itself with smaller windows and a simpler design. At the same time, the development of the street front to the main street was continued and the renovation of the former estate was completed. (See Menckestrasse 1). LfD / 1998/2002

09291323
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner, with a former pharmacy Gohliser Strasse 42
(map)
marked 1873 (tenement house) with shop, historicizing clinker brick facade, of importance in terms of building history and local development

The Kronenapotheke on the corner of Ulrichstrasse was built in 1873 for the pharmacist Münch by the well-known Leipzig master builder Moritz Münch. The three-story, flat-roofed building had a terrace with a pergola in front of the sloping corner to the square, here was the entrance to the pharmacy, which took up the entire ground floor with its laboratory and ancillary rooms. The entrance to the apartment was on Leipziger Straße, here the stone walling of the plinth is aligned with the terrace. Finely profiled cornices separate the storeys from each other, three corner axes are highlighted by a decorative frieze and by balcony and window parapets. The other areas of the beautifully structured late classicist building are colored with red brick facing. The pharmacy was located here until 1998. LfD / 1998/2002

09291324
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Gohliser Strasse 43
(map)
1878–1879 (tenement house) With shops, plastered façade typical of the time, accented corners by balconies, of architectural and historical importance, buildings number 43 and 45 characterize the front of the square opposite the Gohliser Friedenskirche

Number 43/45: On July 17, 1878, a building application for a corner residential building was submitted by Oswald Braune and master mason Carl Harz, who took on the design and implementation. At the same time, a side building with a wash house and two sheds should be built. Changes to the floor plan, submitted shortly thereafter, affected the right-hand half of the building, in whose basement an oven and bakery were to be installed. After the building permit was granted on August 17, 1878, a new facade drawing was created for the right-hand part of the building, which had already begun and was completed by December. For the corner residential building, the building acceptance took place on August 5, 1879. The residential building on the neighboring property Menckestrasse 2 was named as a rubble property in connection with repair work on the corner building in 1953. A building application for repair work on Gohliser Straße 43 was received on February 28, 1956. Opposite the Gohlis Friedenskirche and at the narrow street entrance to the former Gohlis village green, the splendid corner apartment building seems indispensable in terms of urban planning, and with its classicistic plastered and stucco facade manifests the change in the suburb of Gohlis from rural character to development in the Wilhelminian style. The broken corner with balconies is particularly effective, and the presence of the property is indicated by the complete use of the ground floor by trade and commerce. Standing dormers show the residential use of the mansard floor, which is covered with natural slate panels. The narrow house at Gohliser Straße 45 was smoothed in the second third of the 20th century, with one apartment per floor. Both houses with preserved equipment, the old oven in the courtyard extension with white facing bricks had to be demolished due to its ruinous condition in 2012/2013. The renovation of both buildings took place in 2014, initially the entire original stucco of the corner house was removed and only the sandstone sills were preserved in situ, at number 45 a historicizing adjustment was made to number 43. In terms of urban planning, both buildings shape the front of the square opposite the Gohliser Friedenskirche, house number 43 is also effective as a corner residential building facing Menckestrasse, significant in terms of both building history and development. LfD / 2012, 2014, 2018

09298020
 
Apartment building in closed development Gohliser Strasse 45
(map)
1878 (tenement house) With shops, plastered façades, of importance in terms of building history and the history of local development, buildings number 43 and 45 characterize the front of the square opposite the Gohliser Friedenskirche

The narrow house at Gohliser Straße 45 was smoothed in the second third of the 20th century, with one apartment per floor. Equipment of the house preserved. Renovation in 2014, with a historicizing adjustment to number 43 was made at number 45. Buildings number 43 and 45 characterize the front of the square opposite the Gohliser Friedenskirche, which are significant in terms of both building history and local development. LfD / 2012, 2014

09306488
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Gothaer Strasse 3
(map)
1873 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294003
 
Apartment building in closed development Gothaer Strasse 5
(map)
1873 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294004
 
Apartment building in half-open development Gothaer Strasse 13
(map)
1881/1883 (tenement house) Formerly with a shop, plastered facade with sandstone structure, important in terms of building history 09294006
 
Apartment building in half-open development Gothaer Strasse 15
(map)
1883 (tenement) Plastered facade with sandstone integration, of architectural significance 09294007
 
Apartment building in closed development Gothaer Strasse 16
(map)
1878 (tenement house) with gate passage, plastered facade, historically important 09294008
 
Apartment building in half-open development Gothaer Strasse 17
(map)
1891 (tenement house) formerly with a shop, plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294009
 
Apartment building in closed development Gothaer Strasse 18
(map)
1879 (tenement house) with gate passage, plastered facade, historically important 09294010
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Gothaer Strasse 22
(map)
1881 (tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294011
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development and rear building Gothaer Strasse 28
(map)
1873/1874 (tenement house) Front building with doorway, plastered facade, historically important 09294014
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Heinrothstrasse 4
(map)
1935 (tenement) Plaster clinker facade with two flat bay windows, of importance in terms of building history 09293049
 
Double tenement house (with Stallbaumstrasse 36) in a closed development in a corner with a front garden Heinrothstrasse 5
(map)
around 1900 (double tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09292950
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Heinrothstrasse 6
(map)
1936 (tenement) forms a row of houses with number 8–16, plastered facade, terrazzo in the entrance area, of architectural significance 09293050
 
Hand lever pump with well shaft and cover plate Herloßsohnstrasse
(map)
1914 (manual pump) opposite Herloßsohnstraße 2, of local historical importance 09296889
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Herloßsohnstrasse 2
(map)
1896 (tenement) with corner shutter, clinker brick facade, of architectural significance 09293052
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Herloßsohnstrasse 4
(map)
1905 (tenement) formerly with a shop, clinker brick facade, of importance in terms of building history 09293053
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development with fencing and front garden Herloßsohnstrasse 7
(map)
1908 (part of a double tenement house) Double apartment building with number 9, plastered facade, of architectural significance 09293054
 
Apartment building in closed development with enclosure and front garden Herloßsohnstrasse 9
(map)
1905 (part of a double tenement house) Double apartment building with number 7, plastered facade, of architectural significance 09293055
 
Double apartment building in a closed development with a memorial plaque for Felix Petyrek and a front garden Herloßsohnstrasse 11; 13
(card)
1913 (double tenement house) Plastered facade, reform style architecture, important in terms of building history 09293056
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development (double apartment building with No. 14) Herloßsohnstrasse 12
(map)
1905 (part of a double tenement house) historically important 09293057
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development (double apartment building with No. 12) Herloßsohnstrasse 14
(map)
1905 (part of a double tenement house) historically important 09293058
 
Apartment building in closed development in a corner with a front garden Herloßsohnstrasse 17
(map)
1890s (tenement) Plastered facade, vestibule door, of importance in terms of building history 09293059
 
Apartment building in semi-open development, with front garden and enclosure Kanalstrasse 5
(map)
1925–1926 (apartment building) with Bleichertstrasse 14 belonging to the residential complex Blochmannstrasse 23-27, plastered facade, terrazzo in the entrance area, in traditionalist style, historically important 09293886
 
Apartment building in closed development and front garden Kasseler Strasse 1
(map)
1870 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered facade, wooden panels in the gate passage, of architectural significance 09294272
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Kasseler Strasse 3
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294273
 
Residential house in open development with front garden Kasseler Strasse 4
(map)
1877 (residential house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294274
 
Apartment building in closed development Kasseler Strasse 5
(map)
1900/1905 (tenement house) Formerly with a shop, plastered facade, stucco, wooden panels and wall painting in the entrance area, of importance in terms of building history 09294275
 
Apartment building in closed development Kasseler Strasse 7
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered facade, stencil painting in the gate passage, of architectural significance 09294276
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden and side wing in the courtyard Kasseler Strasse 8
(map)
1865/1900 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09294277
 
Apartment building in closed development, former bakery and historical decopying saw Kasseler Strasse 11
(map)
1888 (tenement house), around 1910 (decopying saw) with gate passage and shop, plastered facade, wooden panels in the gate passage, of architectural interest as a document of the Wilhelminian development of the district, decopier saw from Lingner around 1910

After the building permit was granted on September 29, 1888, the four-storey apartment building was built in a record-breaking construction time under the contractor of the carpenter F. Albin Börngen and the completion was announced on December 15 of the same year. A bakery was located in the courtyard building - the goods were sold in the shop in the front building. In 1903 the businessman Friedrich Arno Klingner is mentioned as the owner, in 1905 the property passed into the possession of the master baker Ernst Hermann Knorr. The well-proportioned Gründerzeit plastered facade is structured by two-axis side elevations, the horizontal is determined by the rows of richly decorated window canopies and large stucco consoles in the eaves area. LfD / 2005

09294278
 
Group of tenements in closed development Kasseler Strasse 11a; 13; 15; 15a
(card)
1890s (tenement) Number 15 formerly with a shop, number 13 with a gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important 09294279
 
Apartment building in closed development Kasseler Strasse 16
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered facade, wooden panels in the gate passage, of architectural significance 09294280
 
Apartment building in closed development Kasseler Strasse 17
(map)
1910/1915 (tenement house) Formerly with a shop, plastered facade, original shop, significant in terms of building history 09296952
 
Apartment building in closed development Kasseler Strasse 19
(map)
1900/1905 (tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294281
 
Apartment building in closed development and front garden Kasseler Strasse 20
(map)
1891-1892 (tenement house) with gate passage, plastered facade, the building in the closed street has a historical value in terms of building history and local development

Between July 1891 and February 1892, the project for the construction of a front and a rear residential building as well as a laundry room was implemented by the building owners, the master carpenters Karl Göldner and B. Schulze from Gohlis. The eight-axle rear building, which is no longer in existence today, had a plastered facade and three small apartments on each of the three floors. The front building has a representative four-storey façade: smooth plaster, structural elements and detailed historical stucco decor result in an overall picture that is well worth seeing. In keeping with the times, a risalit was formed and the design of the two middle floors was emphasized. A gate is used to access the courtyard. 2005 Application for renovation, conversion, expansion of the attic space and balcony extension on the front building submitted by Friedrich Keller from Munich in cooperation with the Leipzig graduate engineer Christine Partschefeld. The high-quality interior has also been preserved. The building in the closed street has an architectural and site development historical value. LfD / 2013, 2014

09294282
 
Apartment building in open development in a corner with an enclosure and front garden Kasseler Strasse 21
(map)
marked 1899/1900 (tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294283
 
Apartment building in closed development and front garden Kasseler Strasse 22
(map)
1892–1893 (tenement house) Apartment building with gate passage and formerly shop with original shop front, historicizing plaster facade, Prussian caps in the gate passage, of architectural significance

The builders and executors in personal union were the two master carpenters Karl Göldner and B. Schulze, who applied for a front and rear residential building in 1892 and built it in 1893 (at that time Braustraße 10). In both houses three apartments on the upper floors and two apartments on the ground floor, on the first floor of the front house a vaulted passageway and a shop instead of an initially intended restoration. Incidentally, the two gentlemen mentioned had built the neighboring property (today number 20) a short time before. Renovation and extension work in 1896 in connection with the establishment of a restaurant: the ground floor was now equipped with a restaurant, lounge, breakfast room, kitchen and pantry. 2000/2001 Demolition of the rear building and application for a balcony extension and maisonette apartments in the attic of the front apartment house by the property community Schkeuditzer Straße 22 GbR and designs by the independent architects Hansen & Petersen from Leipzig. The plaster facade with laterally emphasized coupled axes and highlighting of the two middle floors. The historicist decor is designed in many ways, including a tooth-cut frieze with stucco consoles on the eaves. Today shops and restaurants are subject to residential use. A historical value in terms of both the history of architecture and the history of local development can be ascertained for the apartment building located in the closed street, as it documents the phase of the extensive Wilhelminian expansion. LfD / 2012, 2014

09296951
 
Apartment building in closed development Kasseler Strasse 24
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09296950
 
Apartment house in open development with enclosure and front garden Kasseler Strasse 25
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294284
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Kasseler Strasse 26
(map)
around 1885 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09296948
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Kasseler Strasse 28
(map)
around 1885 (tenement) 09296949
 
Apartment building in half-open development, residential building (rear building) and plastic in the courtyard Kasseler Strasse 31; 33
(card)
1938 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294285
 
Apartment building in closed development and front garden Kasseler Strasse 32
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) with gate passage, clinker brick facade with artificial stone integration, historically important 09297775
 
Residential house (rear building) in semi-open development, with garden and garden sculptures Kasseler Strasse 33
(map)
1938 (residential building) is behind Kasseler Straße 31, plastered facade, tent roof, of architectural significance 09294132
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Kasseler Strasse 34
(map)
1895/1900 (tenement) with house passage, plastered facade, stucco, historically important 09294286
 
Apartment building in semi-open development, with front garden, garden and coach house in the courtyard Kasseler Strasse 35
(map)
1893–1894 (tenement house), 1893–1895 (coach house) with gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important

The first planning application for a “stately residential building” was submitted in August 1893 by the businessman F. Robert Röthig, with drawings and static calculations by the architect Leopold Stentzler attached. These plans showed a “villa-like residential building” characterized by rich stucco decor, an ornate tower top at the broken corner and a risalit with a neo-renaissance dwarf house, along with a corresponding contemporary garden design. At the same time, a stable building with a laundry room, wagon shed and fodder floor in the courtyard was also provided with lavish historical ornamentation. In mid-January 1894, new plans from those involved were submitted for application. A stamp on the plans confirms the involvement of the master builder Robert Röthig from Leipzig, owner of a bureau for architecture and construction. September brought plans for the enclosure and tectures on the house, and construction was completed in December. For stables and residential buildings, the final official inspection took place on February 1st. In 1929 the stables in the courtyard building were converted into workrooms, doors were relocated, windows enlarged and a new connecting staircase was created from a ground floor room to the attic to storage floors. An extension to the stable building was planned for 1931, and in 1933 the spacious apartment on the first floor of the front building was to be divided. In 1935, architect Curt Möbius took over the building management of the apartment divisions on the 1st and 2nd floors, later in 1941, architect Will Wohllebe designed three spacious two-room apartments on the top floor. Only the right attic apartment, into which tenants moved from May 5, 1943, was allowed to be built. The first draft in 1893 took a classic villa building as the basic structure - Stentzler arranged the most important rooms around a central vestibule. The subsequent draft also provided for only one apartment per floor, but now with a staircase to be installed on a longitudinal front and a corridor surrounding the staircase in a U-shape. The facade decoration was reduced, the corner tower and the dwelling were omitted. Three pilasters with stucco decoration and capitals, which extend over the upper three floors and support a wide eaves zone with a final tooth-cut frieze, contribute to the appearance of the executed design of the historicist rental villa. Reddish exposed clinker brickwork corresponds with light dividing elements and restrained stucco decoration. A narrow green strip is in front of the house. Some freehand paintings in the stairwell testify to the splendor and high artistic level of the design, which is largely preserved under the filler and uniform color. The high-quality apartment entrance doors, some with over-portals, as well as the wooden staircase and fittings in the apartments have survived. The plastered courtyard building looks picturesque, with brick arches, exposed framework, decorated beam ends, slate roof, storage hatches and crowned small dormers. Two wagons could be parked at ground level, there were stables and an equipment room as well as the coachman's room. Such was also set up on the upper floor, next to two crockery chambers, which could possibly also have been used for billeting. The front building and around 1/3 of the substance of the annex building has been renovated, but two thirds of the former depot were in a poor, sometimes ruinous condition at the end of 2019. The garden area and some paved courtyard areas have been preserved, but the building-time demanding enclosure has not been preserved. The splendid historicism building, including the ancillary facilities, has a historical and local development value. LfD / 2019

09294287
 
Apartment building in closed development in a corner with a front garden Kasseler Strasse 36
(map)
1895/1900 (tenement) Corner shutter, plastered facade, vestibule door, historically important 09294288
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Kasseler Strasse 37
(map)
around 1885 (tenement) with gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important 09296875
 
Apartment building in closed development Kasseler Strasse 39
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) Plastered facade, stencil painting in the entrance area, of importance in terms of building history 09294290
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Kasseler Strasse 40
(map)
1880s (tenement) with gate passage, plastered facade, historically important 09294765
 
Apartment house in closed development, with front garden and fencing in the courtyard Kasseler Strasse 42
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered facade, historically important 09296878
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Kasseler Strasse 44
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09296877
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Kasseler Strasse 46
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) with gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important 09296876
 
Monument to Heinrich Pfeil Kickerlingsberg
(map)
1930 (monument) In front of Kickerlingsberg number 19, placed on October 16, 1930 for the song writer and son of a book printer, of artistic and personal significance 09293355
 
Residential and studio house, with enclosure and garden Kickerlingsberg 15
(map)
1927–1928 (residential building) Residential, studio and exhibition building of the art dealer and architect Willy Richter, built according to his own design, plastered facade in the style of classical modernism, one of the earliest cubic flat-roof residential buildings in Leipzig, of architectural and artistic importance

The cubic, white-painted residential and studio house, built in 1928 according to the plans of its client, the architect and art dealer Willy Richter, is one of the few consistent examples of the Bauhaus style in Leipzig. Two rows of narrow windows on the street side, designed as hinged windows in the lower residential floor, as English windows in the studio floor. On the south-east side, large studio window with exit, on the garden terrace on the upper floor. Narrow window sockets made of yellow-green ceramic tiles and a cornice-like frieze made of the same material as a closure under the flat roof support the structure of the building in a very reserved manner. Next to the entrance door there is an openwork ceramic field in the Art Deco style. LfD / 1998/2002

09292454
 
Residential building in open development, with enclosure, front garden and staircase Kickerlingsberg 17
(map)
1930–1931 (residential building) Plastered facade, architecturally high-quality access area, of architectural significance 09290559
 
Villa with enclosure and front garden Kickerlingsberg 19
(map)
1914 (villa) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

Building application on May 8, 1914 from businessman Ernst Hamann. Plans and construction management by builders Richard Lamm and Otto Sperling. The two-storey villa is set back behind the square-like extension at the Poetenweg confluence. A roofed entrance porch, supported by rusticated pillars, the loggia above and the three regular dormers in the flat hipped roof make the street view very inviting despite its strict classicism, the delicate enclosure with the round arched gate supports this impression. The entrance on the right leads to the stairwell on the northwest corner, the kitchen is opposite on the northeast corner. This meant that the north side of the street was occupied by commercial and functional rooms, while the area south of the central hall was reserved for living and representation rooms. The large dining room on the garden side is extended by a semicircular bay window, to the side of which there were ladies' and gentlemen's rooms. The subtle architectural decoration in the style of the time with partly baroque tendencies: fluted pilasters on the bay window, curved decorative fields on the upper floor and the typical studded border on the windows and the side bay window. Here stucco parrots and the lettering "Camilla" in a stucco frame. The shutters on the upper floor also complete the authentic impression that has been preserved. 1937 sale. LfD / 1998/2002

09293354
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Kickerlingsberg 22
(map)
1913 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

Originally the second of the series of three assembled single-family houses between Prellerstraße and Poetenweg. (The corner building of the Cichorius family destroyed in the war, replaced by a new building). Building application on May 29 1913 by master builder Carl Noack, plans by architect Walter Heßling. The facade is asymmetrically divided by a three-axis porch with a closing balcony on the top floor in front of the dwelling. To the left of this is the access axis with the entrance, staircase and cloakroom; the large hallway is in the front building. While this with its tall, narrow windows combined by profiling and the bar-shaped grilles sets a pronounced vertical accent, the right part of the facade with the wide semicircular window indicates the location of the salon. The dining room faced the garden with a veranda in front. LfD / 1998/2002

09296855
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Kickerlingsberg 24
(map)
1913 (tenement) 09296856
 
Double tenement house (with Poetenweg 25) in a closed area in a corner, with a front garden Kickerlingsberg 26
(map)
1913 (double tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

The villa, which appears as a semi-detached house, marks the beginning of the development at the junction of Kickerlingsberg and Poetenweg. In 1912 Max Fricke created the plans for the factory owner Redlich, who commissioned the part of the house on Poetenweg. In December of that year, the Naumann & Mette construction business continued the Kickerlingsberg component for the merchant Schmuel Mandelbroit in accordance with Fricke's plans. The extensive two-storey building with the high, little-developed broken mansard roof is particularly effective on the common main facade facing the square thanks to its harmoniously balanced, calm design. In contrast to other head buildings, the façade is curved in a concave manner, and two semi-circular bay windows with thick windows accentuate the corners of the building. The two floors above a high base are visually separated by two cornices, with the higher ground floor being the main floor. Only the filigree grilles over the lower cornice, the balcony grilles over the bay windows and the small-scale window bars are used as structuring decorative forms. The two short side wings on the street sides are more subdivided and the floor plans are adapted to the needs of the respective builders. The roof areas are also more developed here, with the manorial and servant entrances to the utility rooms on the courtyard side. The large trapezoidal room behind the bay window in both parts of the house was designed as a music room on Poetenweg. A simple fence made of concrete posts and a lattice-shaped wooden fence, which took up the concave outline, connects both parts of the house. The Kickerlingsberg house went to the tobacco merchant Konstantin Perpessa (Mustafa & Perpessa) in 1931. LfD / 1998/2002

09291018
 
Hand lever pump with well shaft and cover plate Kirchplatz
(map)
before 1890 (hand lever pump) Gothic type, Gohlis church square, on Lützowstraße, of local history 09290017
 
Church with equipment
Church with equipment Kirchplatz
(map)
1871–1873 (church), 1871/1873 (altar), 1871/1873 (crucifix), 1871/1873 (pulpit), 1871/1873 (lectern) neo-Gothic clinker brick building, of local and architectural importance 09291296
 
Plaza Kirchplatz
(map)
1st third of the 20th century (square) with paving and green space around the Friedenskirche Gohlis, of importance in terms of local development 09298009
 
Enclosing a property Kirchplatz 9
(map)
around 1900 (garden fence) of cultural and historical importance 09293174
 
Reception building with adjoining goods handling building and toilet block
Reception building with adjoining goods handling building and toilet block Kirschbergstrasse 57
(map)
1892 (reception building) Clinker brick construction, of local and architectural significance 09264562
 
Apartment house in half-open development with fencing Kirschbergstrasse 66a
(map)
1898 (tenement) in the corner to the railway tracks, formerly with a shop (café), clinker-plaster facade, of historical importance 09264554
 
Apartment building in closed development Kirschbergstrasse 68
(map)
1898 (tenement) with gate passage and former shop (bakery since 1898), yellow clinker brick facade, stucco in the gate passage, historically important 09264556
 
Apartment building in closed development Kirschbergstrasse 68a
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, vestibule door 20th century, of architectural significance 09264560
 
Apartment building in closed development Kirschbergstrasse 68b
(map)
1898 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, vestibule door, historically important 09264555
 
Apartment building in half-open development Kirschbergstrasse 69
(map)
before 1877 (tenement) Gate passage, plastered facade, of importance in terms of building history and the history of local development, in particular as evidence of the transition between free-standing villas and closed apartment buildings

The front building was already in place when the building contractor Friedrich August Gäbler applied for a wooden stable building in the courtyard in 1877. A rear building was built in 1882 for master furrier Ernst Barthel by the craftsman M. Eichler and from 1885–1886 a (right) side building was built by master bricklayer Germanus. Master builder A. Laminated wood took on the order for the construction of a stable and wheelwright workshop building. Renovation in 2012. The extremely fine plaster frame with elegant stucco structure, which shows the forms of late classicism, was formerly characteristic of the facade. The axes are emphasized on both sides and the middle floor is emphasized by the more elaborate decoration. The left three-storey side building in the courtyard, built in 1882, is simple in its design (2014 in ruinous condition, but still winter windows on the facade and original plastering on the gable, deletion in 2015). For the development of the local border between Gohlis and Möckern, a residential building which is historically significant and which has largely lost the informative value of the formerly long residential and commercial property for economic and social structures due to the "in between" parking lot. LfD / 2014

09264557
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Kirschbergstrasse 70
(map)
1897–1899 (tenement house) with corner shutter, clinker brick facade, of architectural significance

Master roofer Otto Heller and carpenter owner Gustav Spahlholz intended to build a corner house in Möckernscher Flur in 1897, with plans from architect Otto Lehmann. In addition to a normal rental unit, the ground floor was to have two further apartments, each with an integrated shop, and the upper floors, which were accessed via a staircase with a triangular eye, also had three apartments. Less than two weeks after receiving the building permit on May 3, 1898, the building site and the project were sold. New entrepreneurs were Heinrich Emil Kothe and the architect Albin Wilhelm Neumann, who made some changes and entrusted the company to the building contractors Emil Alwin Plöttner and Karl Eduard Brandt with the execution. The house was finished in 1899, and in 1936/1937 it was given an attic apartment and additional living space through the dismantling of a shop in the war years 1940 to 1942. The renovation, balcony extension and demolition of the garage built in 1974 took place in 1996/1997, albeit without a monument protection permit. The house looks like a corner building on the street leading to the Möckern train station and an initially privately built, later no further side street far into the public space. Above the plastered ground floor - the corner store has been preserved - three upper floors show yellow clinker brickwork, side projections and an emphasis on the corner, structural elements made of artificial stone. Ashlar plaster is to be obtained on the plinth, stucco consoles are located under the sills of the 2nd floor, the eaves area is smoothed. In addition to the parallel staircase and structures in the entrance area, further equipment details have been preserved. The corner house is of architectural interest. LfD / 2018

09264558
 
Villa (with equipment), with terrace, front garden and enclosure Kirschbergstrasse 71
(map)
1874 (villa) 09293935
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Kirschbergstrasse 72
(map)
1895/1900 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09264559
 
Apartment building in closed development Kirschbergstrasse 76
(map)
1908 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09264561
 
Residential complex consisting of three apartment buildings Kirschbergstrasse 78; 80; 82
(card)
around 1920 (apartment building) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294196
 
Rental villa with enclosure and front garden Knaurstrasse 5; 5a
(card)
1911 (rental villa) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293359
 
Hand lever pump with well shaft and cover plate Lindenthaler Strasse
(map)
1914 (manual pump) before number 1, type dolphin, of local significance 09294882
 
Apartment house in half-open development in a corner with fencing Lindenthaler Strasse 1
(map)
1911 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293391
 
Double apartment building (with Lindenthaler Straße 4) in open development, with side fencing and gate entrance Lindenthaler Strasse 2
(map)
1909 (half of a double tenement house) Plastered facade, terrazzo and wooden panels in the entrance area, reform style architecture, of architectural significance 09293392
 
Double tenement house (with No. 5) in open development with fencing Lindenthaler Strasse 3
(map)
1909 (half of a double tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293393
 
Double tenement house (with Lindenthaler Straße 2) in open development, with lateral fencing Lindenthaler Strasse 4
(map)
1909 (half of a double tenement house) Plastered facade, terrazzo and wooden panels in the entrance area, reform style architecture, of architectural significance 09293394
 
Double apartment house (with No. 3) in open development Lindenthaler Strasse 5
(map)
1909 (half of a double tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293395
 
Apartment building in open development Lindenthaler Strasse 6
(map)
1904 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293396
 
Apartment building in open development Lindenthaler Strasse 7
(map)
1910 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293397
 
Apartment building in open development Lindenthaler Strasse 8
(map)
1907 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293398
 
Villa with enclosure and garden Lindenthaler Strasse 14
(map)
1857, in the core (villa) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293399
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Lindenthaler Strasse 30
(map)
around 1885 (tenement) with shops and gate passage, plastered facade, an original shop front, significant in terms of building history 09296984
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Lindenthaler Strasse 32
(map)
around 1885 (tenement) with shops and gate passage, clinker brick facade, wooden panels in the gate passage, original shop front, historically important 09296985
 
Apartment building in closed development Lindenthaler Strasse 38
(map)
around 1885 (tenement) with house passage and shops, clinker brick facade, historically important 09296986
 
Apartment building in closed development Lindenthaler Strasse 39
(map)
around 1910 (tenement) with shops, plastered facade, of importance in terms of building history 09294177
 
Apartment building in closed development in a corner and front garden on Elsbethstrasse Lindenthaler Strasse 43
(map)
around 1875 (tenement) with shops, plastered facade, of importance in terms of building history 09294178
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Lindenthaler Strasse 44
(map)
1886–1888 (tenement) with shops, plastered facade, of importance in terms of building history 09297373
 
Apartment building in closed development Lindenthaler Strasse 45
(map)
1880s (tenement) with house passage and shop, plastered facade, historically important 09294179
 
Apartment building in closed development Lindenthaler Strasse 49
(map)
1885–1886 (tenement house) with gate passage and shop, plastered facade, historically important 09296988
 
Apartment building in closed development in a corner and front garden in Cöthner Straße Lindenthaler Strasse 53
(map)
around 1880 (tenement) with shops, plastered façade, staircase with a round stairwell, of architectural significance 09296982
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Lindenthaler Strasse 55
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) with shop, plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294180
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Lindenthaler Strasse 57
(map)
around 1875 (tenement) with house passage and shop, plastered facade, historically important 09293885
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Lindenthaler Strasse 59
(map)
1880s (tenement) with shops, clinker brick facade, staircase with a round eye, important in terms of building history 09294181
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Lüderstrasse 1
(map)
around 1860 (tenement) with house passage, plastered facade, historically important 09297888
 
Apartment building in closed development Lüderstrasse 5
(map)
around 1880 (tenement) Plastered facade, two stucco capitals in the entrance area, of architectural significance 09297889
 
Villa with enclosure and front garden Lumumbastraße 12
(map)
1922–1923 (villa) Outpost Poliklinik Menckestrasse, later the medical center at the Rosental, plastered facade, of architectural significance

November 24, 1922 Application for residential building and designs by Fritz Riemann for factory owner Otto Bärwald. In the building, which looks cubic, dominates the semicircular bay window on the street side, which continues over a hip foot in the mansard / hipped roof. Fluted pilaster strips and application works arranged in rectangular fields, the shapes of which are characterized by art déco, make it stand out from the structure, the other areas of which are only enlivened by the colored folding shutters. The entrance on the northwest side in a single-storey porch, next to it the servants' entrance. The garden side with a conservatory extension, above it a balcony. The three main rooms faced the street, while the kitchen wing protruded slightly as an extension on the garden side. Including a garage. 1926 sold to a Jewish tobacco dye shop, 1935 foreclosure. Around 1951 Soviet Polyclinic, later a branch of Polyclinic North. LfD / 1998/2002

09291234
 
Double house (with Prellerstraße 12) in open development, with front garden and enclosure Lumumbastraße 14
(map)
1936 (half of a double house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

Semi-detached house with Prellerstraße 12. Plans March 30, 1936 by master builder O. Franke and Dipl. Ing. J. Leonhardt for Margarete Risop. The building does not appear as a corner house in the classic sense, but as an elongated two-storey building with the longitudinal front facing Lumumbastraße. Both parts of the house are not identical in their external appearance. Lumumbastraße 14, for example, is characterized by a two-storey semicircular bay window with art deco application work and semicircular windows with folding shutters as the main view, while the northern part of the house with its simpler design is assigned to Prellerstrasse with its entrance. LfD / 1998/2002

09291235
 
Apartment building in half-open development in a corner with a front garden Lumumbastraße 18
(map)
1889 (tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

1889 Application for the construction of a "double villa" on the corner of Prellerstraße by master mason Moritz Wilde and master builder Carl Kühn. The planned "sibling villa" at Prellerstraße 19 was only built after 1894 by C. Kühn according to his own plans. The large corner house was originally designed for apartment buildings, and the representative facade met this requirement. A wide corner project, like the ground floor zone, is highlighted by plastering, with a splendid balcony, antique aedicule shapes, Hermes pilasters and festoons, and at the same time holds the large corner building together visually. The side facing Prellerstraße (where the sibling villa was to continue construction), designed as the main façade, is marked by triangular roofing on the first floor. LfD / 1998/2002

09291237
 
Residential and office building in open development Lumumbastraße 27
(map)
1868 (residential house) Clinker brick facade, iron wall anchors, the factory buildings mostly destroyed in the war and no longer existent, historically important

In August 1868, the businessman Edmund Wilhelm Quarch (Rödiger & Quarch) applied for the construction of a factory building with a boiler house and steam engine for dyeing and preparing tobacco products. The plans were created by Otto Klemm, architect and court master mason. The factory site was directly on the border with Leipzig behind the buildings of the military hospital. The plans from 1869 show a series of factory buildings along what is now Prellerstrasse, starting with the laundry on the Pleiße, through two dye works, the three-story main building and the factory owner's house. In addition to a two-storey brick building on Prellerstrasse, which has since been converted, probably part of the original dye works, and an adjoining one-storey half-timbered building from the end of the 19th century, the former residential building, a two-storey brick building on a field stone base with pilaster strips between the window axes, has almost been preserved in its original form. After 1903 it served as the office building of what was now Fritz Schulz's chemical factory, from 1921 as the office building of the grand piano and piano factory H. Leutke AG, after 1928 as the building for the municipal technical college. The remaining factory buildings were destroyed in the war and demolished in 1957. LfD / 1998/2002

09298005
 
Rental villa, with enclosure and front garden Lumumbastraße 29
(map)
around 1920 (rental villa) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

According to the post-war file of 1963, the building was badly damaged in the bombing of December 4, 1943 and at that time belonged to the architect Fritz Riemann. The volume and decorative shapes of the villa, especially the pointed gable, the Art Deco application work on the bay window and the semicircular entrance porch between the two wings of the building indicate that it was built in the late 1920s and could be attributed to Fritz Riemann himself. In the 1920s and 1930s he designed several residential buildings in Gohlis and in 1922 still lived at Platnerstrasse 5. The building went to the NVA (National People's Army) in 1961, which arranged for the residents: high-ranking Soviet officers to renovate. LfD / 1998/2002

09291239
 
Railway bridge over Lützowstrasse Lützowstrasse
(map)
1906/1907 (railway bridge) 09293927
 
Club house in open development and in a corner, with front garden and enclosure Lützowstrasse 3a
(map)
around 1925 (club house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09295875
 
Enclosure of a villa plot Lützowstrasse 4
(map)
around 1890 (enclosure) historically important 09296177
 
Villa, now a school, with enclosure and garden Lützowstrasse 8
(map)
around 1900, older in the core (villa) Plastered facade with a mansard roof, stucco ceiling and pillars in the garden room, named after the tobacco merchant and merchant family Lodde (later Lodde-Dodel), of importance in terms of building history and local development 09293928
 
Villa with coach house, garden and enclosure Lützowstrasse 17
(map)
around 1885 (villa) Plastered facade, with a wooden winter garden, see also Blumenstrasse 47a, of architectural significance 09293931
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Lützowstrasse 30a
(map)
around 1925 (tenement) Plastered facade, in the traditionalist style, of architectural significance 09293929
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Lützowstrasse 32
(map)
1921 (tenement) adjoining the residential complex Blochmannstrasse 29–59, plastered facade, in the traditionalist style, of architectural significance 09293930
 
Apartment building in closed development and front garden Magdeburger Strasse 2
(map)
around 1885 (tenement) with gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important 09296980
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development with a front garden Magdeburger Strasse 5
(map)
1887 (tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294182
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Magdeburger Strasse 9
(map)
1898 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294184
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Magdeburger Strasse 10
(map)
1900 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered facade, historically important 09294185
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Magdeburger Strasse 11
(map)
1890s (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09294186
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden and rear building Magdeburger Strasse 12
(map)
1890s (tenement) Front building with gate passage, plastered facade, historically important 09294187
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Magdeburger Strasse 13
(map)
1890s (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294188
 
Apartment building in closed development and rear building Magdeburger Strasse 14
(map)
around 1880 (tenement) Front building with gate passage, plastered facade, stucco and painting in the gate passage, rear building clinker facade, historically important 09294189
 
Apartment building in closed development in a corner with a front garden Magdeburger Strasse 15
(map)
1890s (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294190
 
Apartment house in closed development with rear building and outbuildings in the courtyard Magdeburger Strasse 16
(map)
1890s (tenement) Clinker brick facades, important in terms of building history 09294191
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Magdeburger Strasse 17
(map)
1887 (tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294192
 
Apartment buildings in a residential complex with front garden borders and designed forecourt Magdeburger Strasse 18; 20; 22; 24; 26; 28; 30; 32
(card)
1929–1931 (apartment building) Residential complex in a closed, U-shaped development, plastered facade, of architectural significance 09294193
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Magdeburger Strasse 19
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09296979
 
Apartment building in a closed development with a front garden Magdeburger Strasse 21
(map)
1903 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09294194
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Magdeburger Strasse 23
(map)
1900/1905 (tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294195
 
Apartment house in open development with enclosure and front garden Magdeburger Strasse 25
(map)
around 1908 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09296965
 
Double apartment building in an open area in a corner with a front garden Magdeburger Strasse 27; 29
(card)
1890s (double tenement house) Plastered facade, stucco and wooden panels in the entrance area, vestibule door, of importance in terms of building history 09294197
 
Apartment building in open development in a corner with an enclosure and front garden
Apartment building in open development in a corner with an enclosure and front garden Magdeburger Strasse 31
(map)
marked 1903 (tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294198
 
Double apartment building in open development with enclosure and front garden Magdeburger Strasse 33; 35
(card)
around 1900 (double tenement house) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09294199
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Magdeburger Strasse 34
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, stucco and vestibule door in the entrance area, historically important 09294200
 
Double tenement house (with Breitenfelder Strasse 36) in closed development, with front garden Magdeburger Strasse 36
(map)
around 1905 (double tenement house) 09294201
 
Villa with coach house, front garden and enclosure as well as courtyard building
Villa with coach house, front garden and enclosure as well as courtyard building Magdeburger Strasse 38
(map)
1900/1905 (villa) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09294202
 
Villa with front garden Magdeburger Strasse 40
(map)
around 1900 (villa) Plastered facade with clinker brick structure, in the country house style, historically important 09294203
 
Apartment building in open development with front garden Magdeburger Strasse 42
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09294204
 
Double apartment building in open development with enclosure and front garden
Double apartment building in open development with enclosure and front garden Magdeburger Strasse 44; 46
(card)
marked 1898 (double tenement house) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09294205
 
Apartment house in open development with enclosure and front garden as well as courtyard building Magdeburger Strasse 48
(map)
1897–1898 (tenement), 1898 (enclosure), 1897–1898 (outbuilding) Clinker brick facade, historically important

In autumn 1897, an application was made for a free-standing main building and an auxiliary building on the rear boundary of the property to the route of the Thuringian Railway. For master carpenter Karl Göldner, who also took over the execution, the architect Voigt contributed plans and static calculations, only after the completion of the two houses in 1898 did those involved turn to the fencing. In 1902 a veranda extension was planned on the western gable front for the client and master carpenter Karl Friedrich Göldner. In 1909 the Leipziger Credit-Bank AG took over the property, submitted plans for the stable building in 1912, and in 1913 an external iron staircase, wagon shed and toilets were added there. In May of the war year 1918, horse dealer Emil Wilhelm Hermann Brunnert applied for an expansion of the stables (which, however, could not be implemented), “because he mainly supplies horses for troop members of the local garrison and therefore always has to hire a larger number of horses for inspection, which is larger stables requires ". Only a single-storey car shed with a crockery room and a car washroom was approved for use in 1920. But as early as 1929, Brunnert noted as the reason for setting up an auto repair workshop that his “horse business is as good as no longer going” and that he had to create a new existence for himself. “By the fact that the horse disappears from the street”. Within a process that lasted several years, building officer Prof. Paul Richter, architect and master builder Johannes Richter as well as the construction business of Hugo Reichardt, construction of the iron veranda in 1933. It shows the facade of the house with clinker-clad upper floors and the same plinth area, which is now simply plastered Ground floor, a polygonal three-sided stand bay window, a dwarf house as well as a front garden and enclosure. Parts of the furnishings have also been preserved. The house is part of a small assembly of a similar facade design with red clinker facings and plastered ground floor areas (with numbers 46/44 and 42), it has a building historical value. LfD / 2018, 2019

09294206
 
Double apartment building (Marbachstraße 2 with Platnerstraße 6) in open development in a corner, with fence, front garden and remise building (Winkelstraße 1) in the courtyard and rear garden with pavilion Marbachstrasse 2
(map)
1901–1902 (half of the double apartment building), 1902 (Remise) Plastered facade, corner building effective in urban planning in the historicist style, with architectural value

October 1901 Application from businessman Paul Canitz for the construction of a house with a courtyard. Plans: Master mason Wilhelm Germanus. With its free-standing eastern gable side, it bordered what was then Teichstrasse (now Winkelstrasse), a narrow lane that ran along the pond that was located here until around 1897. The west side of the house forms the corner area to Marbachstraße, which was planned in 1898. The front, which is only biaxial here, is connected by a corner bay with a curved dome and lantern with the longer facade facing Platnerstrasse. With its pronounced horizontal structure, the conventional roofing windows, the storey hierarchy, etc., the apartment building appears very conservative for the time it was built. As a “stately home” it was designed for only one large apartment per floor, accessible from the entrance and staircase at the back. In 1902 a building for a stable and coach house and a coachman's apartment was built in the courtyard. In 1908, the bookseller Hans Heinrich Reclam bought the building; in the same year he had the remise converted into a garage and installed a gas engine to generate electrical light. The adjoining garden was used by the Reclam family and is one of the last remaining owner gardens in Leipzig, located in the middle of a closed apartment building and rental villa quarter. In addition to a pavilion-like building used as a garden house, some rare but also typical plants have been preserved and the basic structure of the garden can be read. LfD / 1998/2002/2011

09293360
 
Apartment house in open development with enclosure and front garden Marbachstrasse 2a
(map)
1901–1904 (apartment building), 1901–1904 (enclosure) On the street side, white facing brick facade, of architectural significance

Initially, the private citizen CG Canitz from Grimma started the construction project for a residential building in 1901 and had already made arrangements with the builder Wilhelm Germanus for the implementation, but it was not until 18 months later in April 1903 that the master bricklayer Emil Plöttner began to carry out the work as the new property owner. Only one apartment was planned on each floor, comprising three rooms, three chambers, a corridor and kitchen, toilet, closet and flower room. After an appeal on December 24, 1903, an initially rejected attic apartment was still approved, the final examination took place in January 1904. In the years 1936–1938, a garage was built on the property. The elegant-looking street facade rises above the exposed natural stone base, with light facing bricks and a plastered central bay window above a polygonal floor plan. Artificial stone moldings were used to frame the windows, few details show the characteristics of Art Nouveau - a stucco half medallion on the bay window is eye-catching. The furnishings and the loggias (1926 renewal of the veranda) on the rear have the same elegance. Both gable fronts are plastered unadorned. The front garden fence has been preserved in its original form, and the house has been renovated. In the last decades of the 19th century, the formerly larger property belonged to Carl Wilhelm Seyffert, owner of a pastry shop and factory of canned fruits. His summer apartment was in the residential building, in the factory ice from the neighboring pond (now filled in) was used for cooling for many years. A summer house from the garden, built around 1865, stands today on a listed garden property with access via Winkelstrasse. The building has an architectural and historical value. LfD / 2018

09293362
 
Double apartment building in open development with enclosure and front garden Marbachstrasse 4; 6
(card)
1898–1899 (double tenement house), 1898–1899 (enclosure) Plastered facade, evidence of local development in the old Gohlis town center 09298002
 
Apartment house in open development in a corner with garden, enclosure and front garden Marbachstrasse 7
(map)
1897 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09293361
 
Apartment building in open development in a corner with an enclosure and front garden Marbachstrasse 8
(map)
1898–1900 (tenement), 1900 (enclosure) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

On September 26, 1898, the building permit was issued, and shortly afterwards the authorities withdrew the property because the building owner had not paid the road bail. A new attempt dates to the end of winter 1899, in the summer of 1900 the final inspection for the residential building took place on the "Weintraube" corner plot on Weinligstrasse, the enclosure was built in the last quarter of 1900. When the restaurateur Heinrich Hartmann initially acted as an entrepreneur, Wilhelm Hartmann took over after the shell inspection for Hartmann's heirs the financing of the completion. All aspects of the execution were in the hands of the architect Edmund Castner. Two apartments of different sizes on each floor were ready to be rented, one of which had a bathroom. The laundry room was in the basement, and the househusband's apartment under the roof. Plans for a second attic apartment bear the date 1923 and the signatures of the architects Paul Weber and M. Kannengießer. Reconstruction / renovation lasted in 1997 and 1998. However, the result looks too smooth and sanded, the plastered facade with its slightly changed appearance is more boring than inspiring, iron bars are inappropriately stretched in front of all windows. Details of the facade decoration and structuring are not correct, the massive roof extension has a disturbing effect, especially with the house that is quite free in the street space and the green area opposite. The fire gable in Marbachstrasse refers to the sibling house originally intended to be built here. LfD / 2018

09296959
 
Double apartment building in open development, with fencing and front garden Marbachstrasse 9; 11
(card)
1904 (double tenement house) Plastered facade with sandstone integration, of architectural significance 09293363
 
Apartment house in open development with enclosure and front garden Marbachstrasse 13
(map)
1906 (tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293365
 
Apartment building in half-open development Marbachstrasse 14
(map)
around 1910 (tenement) Plastered facade with plastered structure, of importance in terms of building history 09293366
 
Apartment building in semi-open development with enclosure and front garden Marbachstrasse 16
(map)
1901 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293367
 
Apartment building in closed development Menckestrasse 1
(map)
1887 (tenement house) with gate passage and shop, plastered facade, wooden panels in the gate passage, of architectural significance

First house in the main street of Gohlis, which was extended by the redefinition of the building line in 1886. It was built in 1887 by master bricklayer Harz for Marie Günther instead of the farm buildings of an old farm (see Gohliser Straße 41), and was the prelude to the closed “urban” development of the old village street. With its clear vertical tendency, the facade stands out from the usual horizontal Neo-Renaissance scheme of the 1880s. The vertical combination of the two main floors with square pilaster strips continues the equally unusual beam-like structure between the windows on the ground floor. The upper floor closes off over a wide belt with smaller arched windows and originally rich console cornice. LfD / 1998/2002

09293433
 
Apartment building in closed development Menckestrasse 3
(map)
1910 (tenement) with shop, plastered facade, important in terms of building history

Instead of a two-storey, gable-end farmhouse, the four-storey apartment building was built in 1910 for the council actuary Otto Hildebrand according to plans by master builder D. Ritter. With two oriels that take up the plaster structure of the ground floor in the square edges, figurative application work in rectangular fields and geometric plaster decorations, it corresponds to the style of the time striving for clarity. LfD / 1998/2002

09293435
 
Residential house, side building, gate entrance and courtyard paving of a farm Menckestrasse 4
(map)
1864–1865, later redesigned (residential building), around 1850 (side building) Residential building historicizing plastered facade with central projectile and mid-level house, formerly with balcony, side building, pull-out house with former stable building, last remaining courtyard on the old Gohlis village green, between 1865 and 1873 the first Gohlis pharmacy was located here, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history

House originally part of the three-sided courtyard number 4. The eaves-facing house was built in 1865 by master bricklayer August Schneider for Sophie Röthig as part of the renovation of property number 64. The two-storey, six-axis residential building type with a central projectile and a dwarf house was originally structured according to the typical local scheme of the time: high fieldstone plinth, ground floor and building edges with plastered ashlar, floor structure through belt cornices, the central axes through triangular roofing, the recesses emphasized by straight roofing with acroteries. The pediment was adorned with a rose window, the first floor of the central risalite was decorated with a delicate wrought-iron balcony. Except for a few remains, including the beautiful entrance door decorated with rosettes and rhombus frieze (1992), the late Classicist structure of the house has been removed. The entrance was in an annex at the rear, a cross corridor divided the floor plan, three interconnected rooms to the front and the kitchen, pantry, closet, and toilet to the rear. From 1865 until the new Kronenapotheke was built in 1873, the first Gohlis pharmacy was located here. A floor plan change in 1935 made 6 small rooms out of three large rooms on the upper floor. LfD / 1998/2002

09293437
 
Apartment building in closed development with a restaurant
Apartment building in closed development with a restaurant Menckestrasse 5
(map)
1904 (tenement) Gate passage, plastered facade, founded in 1858, owner of Cajeris since 1914, of importance in terms of building history and local development

Gosenstube "Ohne Bedenken" In 1867 there was a three-sided courtyard with a rear barn, on the left a gable-side two-storey house with a corrugated wall and a crooked hip roof. With the conversion of the barn for restoration in 1869, the development into a well-known restaurant began, which, unlike most of the others, still exists today. In 1872 a four-storey house was built while the old house was retained, in 1886 and 1898 wooden colonnades were built in the garden. 1904 Building application from Carl Cajeri for extension and overbuilding of the old building and basement of the courtyard. (The Leipziger Gose, a top-fermented drink, was brewed and served in Cajeri's Gosenstube "Ohne Bedenken"). The house from 1872 was included in the new building according to plans by the architect Wilhelm Becker, and the late Classicist window roofing with acroteries and consoles were also retained. The passage and the semicircular bay window, which also contains oval portrait medallions in its Neo-Empire jewelry, were created at the intersection of the two houses. A horizontally emphasized design of the ground floor with colored plaster strips connects both parts of the house, the left part is marked as a restaurant with larger windows. The colonnades in the beer garden have not been preserved. LfD / 1998/2002

09293436
 
Double tenement house in closed development with courtyard building Menckestrasse 7; 7a
(card)
1902 (double tenement house) Front building with gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important

In 1902 master carpenter Hermann Stein applied to demolish the old buildings of a three-sided courtyard that reached as far as Poetenweg, to divide the property and to build two new buildings each on Menckestrasse and Poetenweg. Numbers 7 and 7a were built as a mirror image of the semi-detached house with side passageways, two polygonal bay windows and a brick facade above the ground floor, which was sculpted with plaster strips. The upper floors are also lively designed with plaster strips, plastered window sockets and recessed plaster fields in the sill fields. A stable and a coachman's apartment were built on the border to the Poetenweg property. LfD / 1998/2002

09293438
 
Multi-family houses in a residential complex, with front gardens Menckestrasse 9; 9a; 11
(card)
1934–1935 (apartment building) Plastered facade, front gardens with hedge borders, residential complex together with Poetenweg 12-14, of architectural significance

"Poetenhof" residential complex The plans for a residential complex on the site of the former Leonhardtschen estate between Menckestrasse and Poetenweg were created in 1934 by Dipl.-Ing. Walther Born for its new owner, Stieglitz & Co., Rauchwarenfärberei Nikolaistraße 28–32. Towards Menckestrasse, two eaves-standing head buildings flank a set back building, behind whose pointed gable a block of flats consisting of four houses extends to Poetenweg. Two narrow arched passageways lead to a residential street that opens up the building block on the east side and to the green area on its west side, which originally contained tenants' gardens. The typical sleek buildings of the 1930s are provided with clinker-framed entrances above a low natural stone base. In addition, the four-storey facades are only structured by the window grouping - three-part windows alternate with almost square ones. In 1937 the buildings became the property of Gothaer Lebensversicherung. (See also Poetenweg 12, 12a, 12b, 14) LfD / 1998/2002

09293916
 
Apartment building in closed development Menckestrasse 10
(map)
1911 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

In 1910 the architect Richard Müller applied for a building application for a four-story house for Nelly Müller. The house, in which the architect himself lived, has two bay windows connected by balconies, of which the left one with a balcony closure is covered by a wider roof structure. The monumental design of the entrance with Doric columns and a broken gable field, the oval window of which is framed by figurative stucco, corresponds to the rustic, high granite base. Rectangular fields on the bay windows, the preserved geometric balcony grilles and the ornamental application work on the reserves are sparingly used building decor. LfD / 1998/2002

09293439
 
Apartment building in closed development
Apartment building in closed development Menckestrasse 12
(map)
1908–1909 (tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

In 1909, building inspector Georg Lubowski created the plans for the apartment building, which was listed after the old building was demolished, for Mrs. Jenny Herfurth and publisher Carl Rentsch. With the two bay windows and the asymmetrical roof landscape, it corresponds to the preferred building type of the time, which also includes the design of the entrance with the obligatory, stucco-framed ox-eye. Other elements, especially the fine-grained design of the facade surfaces with plaster grooves on the bay windows and the ground floor and the ornament in the curved gable belong to a belated Art Nouveau style. LfD / 1998/2002

09293440
 
Tenement house (no.13) in closed development and coach house (no.13a) in the courtyard Menckestrasse 13; 13a
(card)
1889 (tenement house) Front building with gate passage, sandstone facade, wall structure and ceiling design in the gate passage, of architectural significance

In 1889, the architects Pfeifer & Handel created the plans for a new building for Ernst Handel and Richard Freyer. The client's wish for a “stately” tenement house with all the modern comforts related to modern toilets with flushing (water reservoir in the attic) and above all to the design of the facade with complete sandstone cladding. The deliberately generous facade, which is based on Italian Renaissance models, fulfills this claim to representation without displaying ostensible wealth of jewelry. A side building contained the horse stable with coach house and coachman's apartment, which belonged to a stately home. LfD / 1998/2002

09293441
 
Apartment building in closed development Menckestrasse 14
(map)
1909 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

First in the closed row of three sophisticated tenement houses dated on the area of ​​Roeder's heirs. Publishing house bookseller Rentsch and his sister Jenny Herfurth were built after the turn of the century. In the old building, which existed until 1908, the music machine company Lochmann & Co. had been based since the 1890s. After its demolition, the tenement building was built from 1908 according to plans by architect E. August Stehmann, which gives the basic tenor for the following numbers 12 and 10: two bay windows, asymmetrical roof shape, strict facade structuring with plastering and flat application work, as in the more neoclassical style before the outbreak of the First World War. The bathroom, which is located in the front of the stairwell at the back instead of the toilet in Wilhelminian style buildings, is part of the floor plan that is usual for this type of building. LfD / 1998/2002

09293442
 
Apartment building in closed development Menckestrasse 15
(map)
1882 (tenement house) with gate passage, plastered facade, historically important

Instead of a three-sided courtyard with two gable houses, Wilhelm Grass had a four-storey tenement house built by master mason Harz in 1882. It shows the typical horizontal facade division of the 1880s with extremely fine treatment of the surfaces: the building edges and window spaces with plastering are interrupted by broad bands underlaid with delicate friezes. The two indicated side elevations are accentuated by roofs and restrained stucco decoration. Above the upper floor, which is kept lower as usual, a protruding console cornice completes the facade. Originally, up to the second floor there was only one apartment per floor with three front rooms and a kitchen and two chambers to the rear. LfD / 1998/2002

09293443
 
Apartment building in closed development Menckestrasse 16
(map)
1885 (tenement house) with gate passage, clinker brick facade, wrought-iron balcony grilles, historically important

In 1885, Franz Voigtsberger, the new owner of Löhr's Palais, which he had converted into the Hotel Fürstenhof in 1889, had the four-storey apartment building built in place of the house, barn and stable of a three-sided courtyard. The architect H. Waldschlägel created the plans. The façade is simple: the upper floors are clad in bricks above a ground floor with a pillar, the windows are framed and roofed, with the central axes above the central passage being emphasized by a balcony and acroteria. A side wing contained the stable and coach house. LfD / 1998/2002

09298004
 
Apartment building in closed development and outbuildings in the garden Menckestrasse 18
(map)
1889 (tenement house) with gate passage, plastered facade, home of the poet Georg Maurer (1907–1971), of personal history

The tenement house built in 1889 has almost lost its monumental character due to the smoothing of the facade. The beautiful gate from the time it was built has been preserved. As the home of the writer Georg Maurer (1907–1971), who had a significant influence on the so-called Saxon Poet School of the 1960s, of personal historical importance. LfD / 1998/2002, 2016

09298003
 
Residential building in closed development
Residential building in closed development Menckestrasse 19
(map)
1902 (tenement) At times Poliklinik Menckestrasse, built as a single-family house, plastered facade in Art Nouveau style, stucco decorations in exhilarating lightness, garden side partly in half-timbered rather country house-like design, architect: Alfons Berger, of architectural, artistic and socio-historical importance

In place of the family's summer home that had existed since the early 19th century, the architect Alfons Berger created the plans for Ludwig Kobes' single-family home in 1902. The striking Art Nouveau building is dominated by the six-axis curved gable that characterizes the residential part of the house. The flat stucco decorations above the (changed) semicircular window of the gable (two female angels wreath a medallion) and the two floral window crowns next to the slightly curved balcony basket express a lively lightness. The right part of the house is marked as the entrance zone. Compared to the living area, heavier architectural motifs are decisive here. The smooth surfaces of the door superstructure and the arched oriel attachment are effectively drawn into the rough rustic plinth that is raised here. The stairwell window arches up the roof zone that is only visible here. The garden side was designed more like a country house with half-timbering on the upper floors and opened up with balconies and terraces. When it was converted into Poliklinik Nord in 1949, the floor plan was largely changed. LfD / 1998/2002

09293444
 
Double tenement house in a semi-open development Menckestrasse 21; 21a
(card)
1901 (double tenement house) 09293445
 
Individual monument of the Gohliser Schlösschen as a whole: Palace with palace garden, outbuildings and enclosure as well as several sculptures (Friedrich-August-Monument, Gellert-Sulzer-Monument, Vertumnum and Pomona, three sculptures dancing couple with putto) and wrought-iron gate from Gerhard's garden (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09303853, same address), of architectural and artistic importance
More pictures
Individual monument of the Gohliser Schlösschen as a whole: Palace with palace garden, outbuildings and enclosure as well as several sculptures (Friedrich-August-Monument, Gellert-Sulzer-Monument, Vertumnum and Pomona, three sculptures dancing couple with putto) and wrought-iron gate from Gerhard's garden (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09303853, same address), of architectural and artistic importance Menckestrasse 23
(map)
1755–1756 (castle), 1775–1780 (Friedrich August monument) Stylistically it is assigned to the Saxon rococo architecture of the Knöffel school. Due to the Seven Years' War, the interior works remained unfinished. They were commissioned in the 1770s by the Leipzig university professor Johann Gottlob Boehme, who married the widow Richter. The building is an elongated 17-axis complex with a high mansard roof, two-storey after the farm yard on Menckestrasse, three-storey after the sloping garden side through a high basement. A five-axis two- or three-storey central wing emerges from the line, on the courtyard side as a flat risalit, on the garden side as a deeper porch with rounded corners. Its high tower with a clock and onion dome was laid out as a “point de vue” for one of the aisles going out from the planned Augustus the Strong's Castle in the Rosental. The facade, structured by pilaster strips and simple rectangular fields, is adorned in the central wing with rocailles above the entrance, the windows and in an attic flanked by dolphins with a vase. Two three-axis deep porches on the courtyard side contain the stairwells. The garden side is enclosed by single-storey arcade-like wings that originally served as an orangery, bowling alley and the like. They were renewed in 1936/1937. The floor plan is reflected in the exterior: The three main rooms are in the middle wing: the garden room, the “sala terrena”, in the basement, the salon on the ground floor and the ballroom on the upper floor. The individual rooms and cabinets are lined up on both sides of the salon in an even sequence, connected to one another as an “enfilade”. A continuous corridor also opens up the rooms on the courtyard side. The stairwells are located in the side wings at its ends. The furnishings correspond to the so-called plait style prevailing in the 1770s, a transitional form between late baroque and classicism. The ballroom, called “Oeser-Saal”, is adorned with the ceiling painting “Triumph der Psyche” by the hand of the Leipzig academy director Adam Friedrich Oeser as well as with painted over-portraits and cassettes in the ceiling voute, which imitate illusionistic architecture. The "stone hall" in the basement, which creates the connection to the garden, was named after the equally perfect imitation of precious marble and alabaster furnishings. In the garden there are two monuments that were later erected here based on designs by Oeser: the welcoming memorial for Gellert and Sulzer and the monument to Elector Friedrich August III from 1779, which was moved here in the 1930s from the former Königsplatz (Leuschnerplatz). Also the magnificent wrought-iron gate to the Menckestrasse - once part of Gerhard's garden, one of the bourgeois baroque gardens, was moved here around 1936. The Gohliser Schlösschen has been owned by the city since 1906 and is used as a cultural site and restaurant. LfD / 1998/2002 09293463
 
Gohliser Schlösschen as a whole, with the following individual monuments: Palace with palace garden, outbuildings and enclosure as well as several sculptures (Friedrich August Memorial, Gellert Sulzer Memorial, Vertumnum and Pomona, three sculptures dancing couple with putto) and a wrought iron gate from Gerhard's garden (individual monuments , see also obj. 09293463, same address)
More pictures
Gohliser Schlösschen as a whole, with the following individual monuments: Palace with palace garden, outbuildings and enclosure as well as several sculptures (Friedrich August Memorial, Gellert Sulzer Memorial, Vertumnum and Pomona, three sculptures dancing couple with putto) and a wrought iron gate from Gerhard's garden (individual monuments , see also obj. 09293463, same address) Menckestrasse 23
(map)
1755–1756 (palace complex) Gardens restored according to the historical model, small ground floor aligned with the axis of the building, which is framed on the sides by orangeries, central water basin with fountain in the center of the ground floor and closure to the Poetenweg through hedge structures and a partially broken wall with crowned columns, Friedrich-August - Monument by Oeser 1775–1780, Gellert Sulzer monument from the 1770s

Gohliser Schlösschen From 1755 to 1756 the merchant and council builder Johann Caspar Richter had a castle built on his Gohlis estate based on the French "maisons de plaisance" model. The architect is not known, more recent research sees him as the Leipzig late Baroque master builder George Werner, stylistically it is assigned to the Saxon Rococo architecture of the Knöffel school. Due to the Seven Years' War, the interior works remained unfinished. They were commissioned in the 1770s by the Leipzig university professor Johann Gottlob Boehme, who married the widow Richter. The building is an elongated 17-axis complex with a high mansard roof, two-storey after the farm yard on Menckestrasse, three-storey after the sloping garden side through a high basement. A five-axis two- or three-storey central wing emerges from the line, on the courtyard side as a flat risalit, on the garden side as a deeper porch with rounded corners. Its high tower with a clock and onion dome was laid out as a “point de vue” for one of the aisles going out from the planned Augustus the Strong's Castle in the Rosental. The facade, structured by pilaster strips and simple rectangular fields, is adorned in the central wing with rocailles above the entrance, the windows and in an attic flanked by dolphins with a vase. Two three-axis deep porches on the courtyard side contain the stairwells. The garden side is enclosed by single-storey arcade-like wings that were originally used as an orangery, bowling alley and the like. served. They were renewed in 1936/1937. The floor plan is reflected in the exterior: The three main rooms are in the middle wing: the garden room, the “sala terrena”, in the basement, the salon on the ground floor and the ballroom on the upper floor. The individual rooms and cabinets are lined up on both sides of the salon in an even sequence, connected to one another as an “enfilade”. A continuous corridor also opens up the rooms on the courtyard side. The stairwells are located in the side wings at its ends. The furnishings correspond to the so-called plait style prevailing in the 1770s, a transitional form between late baroque and classicism. The ballroom, called “Oeser-Saal”, is adorned with the ceiling painting “Triumph der Psyche” by the hand of the Leipzig academy director Adam Friedrich Oeser as well as with painted over-portraits and cassettes in the ceiling voute, which imitate illusionistic architecture. The "stone hall" in the basement, which creates the connection to the garden, was named after the equally perfect imitation of precious marble and alabaster furnishings. In the garden there are two monuments that were later erected here based on designs by Oeser: the welcoming memorial for Gellert and Sulzer and the memorial to Elector Friedrich August III from 1775–1780, which was moved here from the former Königsplatz (Leuschnerplatz) in the 1930s. The magnificent wrought-iron gate to Menckestrasse - once part of Gerhard's garden, one of the bourgeois baroque gardens, was moved here around 1936. The Gohliser Schlösschen has been owned by the city since 1906 and is used as a cultural site and restaurant. LfD / 1998/2002

09303853
 
Wikidata-logo.svg
Apartment building in closed development, with restaurant
Apartment building in closed development, with restaurant Menckestrasse 24
(map)
1898–1899 (tenement house) Gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important

In December 1898 the Aktien-Bierbrauerei Gohlis applied for the construction of a restoration and residential building. The architect Curt Nebel created the plans for the front building with side building. On the ground floor, the large arched windows make the restaurant recognizable, while the passage on the left leads to the apartments. The facade of the former restaurant and dance hall "Kaiser Friedrich" is richly decorated with color-differentiated brick cladding, portrait medallions and a triangular bay window. In 1942, foreign forced laborers in the coal trade were housed in a barrack next to the dance hall. LfD / 1998/2002

09293446
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Menckestrasse 25
(map)
1901 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

The right head building next to the entrance to the Gohliser Schlösschen was also built at the request of the lessee Nitzsche according to plans by Alfons Berger and completed in November 1902 under the new owner by the master mason Jaenicke. The original facade design with pinned pilaster strips on the first two floors and the Art Nouveau ornament on the wide corner bay - a climbing tree - has been largely smoothed out. LfD / 1998/2002

09293447
 
Apartment building in closed development Menckestrasse 26
(map)
1903 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

Since 1877 there was a "finer restaurant" with garden colonnades and orchestra pavilion in a former garden house of the banker Gustav Plaut. In 1898 the Aktienbrauerei applied for the old building to be demolished and a new building built according to Curt Nebel's plans, similar to number 24. The new building was not realized until 1903, now on behalf of master mason Mühlner according to plans by Curt Möbius. The facade, originally with a rounded ground floor, a vertical combination of two upper floors and restrained Art Nouveau decor on the bay windows and entrance, has been smoothed with new plastering. LfD / 1998/2002

09293448
 
Rental villa with enclosure, gate and front garden
Rental villa with enclosure, gate and front garden Menckestrasse 27
(map)
1883 (rental villa) historicizing plastered facade, stucco and floor tiles in the entrance area, of architectural significance

Built as a villa for the printer's owner Otto Fischer in 1883 according to plans by the contractors Meißner & Miersch. The free-standing two-storey building on the corner of the former Green Lane is built on a square floor plan, with a flat template on the street side and semicircular staircase to the large garden. The flat hipped roof is surmounted by gables over the porches, the windows are formed as aedicules. Filigree parapets, bars and a frieze in the eaves form the decoration of the late classicist villa. LfD / 1998/2002

09293449
 
Apartment building in half-open development Menckestrasse 28
(map)
1892 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade, historically important

1892 New construction after demolition of old buildings for Hermann Marx according to plans by master mason M. Eichler. The front of the building follows the course of the road that turns north here; accordingly, the central five axes in a flat risalit form a slight corner break, surmounted by a three-axis roof structure. Otherwise, the brick-faced facade is consistently structured horizontally, with the middle floor being designed as a belétage with strong roofs and consoles. LfD / 1998/2002

09293450
 
Apartment building in open development Menckestrasse 29
(map)
1861 (tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

In 1861 the three-story house was built for a Mrs. Luder. It shows the typical shapes of the sleek Biedermeier houses of that time: Symmetrical structure through a flat central template with a dwelling, double cornice above the ground floor with plastered ashlar, fine, profiled window canopies, while the central axes are emphasized by gables, rosette in the gable triangle. LfD / 1998/2002

09293451
 
Residential house in semi-open development, gate entrance and courtyard pavement as well as house garden (including grotto with water basin) and garden pavilion on property at Menckestrasse 30 Menckestrasse 30
(map)
1864 (house), around 1900 (gazebo) Formerly associated part of the garden on the Schillerweg 25 property (see object 09297793), residential building historicizing plastered facade with sandstone structure and double flight of stairs, garden partly with old wood and paths with borders, urban, artistic and local historical importance, the grotto is a rarity 09299619
 
Apartment building in closed development, formerly with post office and garden Menckestrasse 32
(map)
1888–1890 (tenement house) The garden area originally extended to number 30 and parcel 52b (Schillerweg 25) on Schillerweg, tenement house with gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important

In 1888 the sculptor and plasterer Carl Ebert applied for the construction of a new apartment building. The Imperial Post Office was located here as early as 1890, as indicated by the coat of arms above the right entrance. The facade is colored by the alternation of plastered and brick-faced zones as well as the use of window roofs with stucco fillings. LfD / 1998/2002

09293452
 
Office and factory building in semi-open development
Office and factory building in semi-open development Menckestrasse 33; 35; 37
(card)
1872–1873, later redesigned (factory) of importance in terms of building history and local history 09293179
 
Apartment building in closed development with a rear building Menckestrasse 39
(map)
1889 (tenement house) Front building with gate passage and shops, plastered facade, historically important

1889 Application for a new apartment building for the wagon owner Heinicke according to plans by the architect Hermann Heyne. The passage leads to a rear building that contained a workshop and apartments. The ground floor with shops, the demanding facade with two square risalits and blown gables on the main floor. A dense row of roof houses in the mansard roof. LfD / 1998/2002

09293454
 
Apartment building in formerly half-open development Menckestrasse 40
(map)
around 1880 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293636
 
Apartment building in closed development with rear building and courtyard paving Menckestrasse 41
(map)
1890-1891 (tenement house) Front building with gate passage and shops, plastered facade with bay window, historically important

Erected at the same time as number 39 by the vehicle owner Heinicke and also equipped with shops on the ground floor and a rear building. The facade, however, has a different design, with continuous beading and an oriel, which was still atypical in Gohlis at this time, which, like the roofing windows, is decorated with stucco festons. LfD / 1998/2002

09293455
 
Residential house (with memorial plaque, now a museum with Schiller memorial) and side building of a farm, as well as enclosure with portal
Residential house (with memorial plaque, now a museum with Schiller memorial) and side building of a farm, as well as enclosure with portal Menckestrasse 42
(map)
1717 (farmhouse) old village location Gohlis, plastered half-timbered house, younger neo-baroque, free-standing entrance gate to the courtyard, at times the summer house of the poet Friedrich Schiller (1759–1805), one of the last surviving farms in Leipzig-Gohlis, of importance in terms of building history, local history and personal history

Schillerhaus Friedrich Schiller was a guest from May to September 1785 in the very simple farmhouse built in 1717. This is where the "Ode to Joy" was born. The building, which consists of a basement, ground floor, first floor and mansard, is made of clay and field stone masonry on the ground floor, the walls are steeply sloped, the upper floor consists of half-timbered with partial brick infill. The outbuilding, a very narrow, gable-free clay / half-timbered house with a high mansard roof, was built around the same time. The house has been owned by the Leipzig Schiller Club since 1856, which also had the gate with the gabled volute top built. After 1945, the Schillerhaus came into municipal ownership as part of the City History Museum. LfD / 1998/2002

09293456
 
Two residential buildings in semi-open development Menckestrasse 43; 43d
(card)
1863 (tenement) historicizing plastered facades, historically important

Former garden restaurant “Schillerschlößchen” In 1863 the Leipzig landowner Friedrich Gottlob Ullrich had a summer house built behind the Gohliser mill: two-storey, three-axis, with a flat, gabled central projection. It contained an entrance hall, salon and living room on the ground floor, while the basement housed the kitchen, pantry and wash house. As early as 1865 he submitted the application for the extension of a dance hall, which, like the associated front building, was not completed until 1875. The colonnades of the dance and garden restaurant “Schillerschlößchen” built in 1878 were later converted into bowling alleys and in 1944 into garages. In 1947 the roof area of ​​the older part of the house was changed by the local company Philipp Holzmann AG. The original structural elements such as cornices and plastered structures have been preserved on the severely endangered buildings; the formerly magnificent hall with galleries and furnishings from the Wilhelminian era is in ruins. LfD / 1998/2002

09293457
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Menckestrasse 44
(map)
1873 (double tenement house) with shops, plastered façades, some original shop fronts, reform style architecture from around 1910, some of them older in the core, location right next to the Gohlis Schillerhaus, significant building history

Number 44: The corner house on Schillerweg built in 1914 for master butcher Emil Bauer according to plans by E. August Stegmann. There are several shops on the ground floor, and the upper floors are combined with fluted pilaster strips over a wide belt. The corner wing to the Schillerweg is highlighted by a three-axis template and a high volute gable. LfD / 1998/2002

09293458
 
Commercial building (drugstore building) in semi-open development in a corner
Commercial building (drugstore building) in semi-open development in a corner Menckestrasse 46
(map)
1880 (shop) Plastered facade, tile cladding, forms a plot of land with Schillerweg 36, historically important 09302678
 
Double apartment building in open development Menckestrasse 51; 51a
(card)
1902–1903 (double tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

The architect Albert Wolf created the plans for the open-plan duplex house in 1902 for the master potter Johann Albert Hasenpusch from Kleinzschocher. Wolf also took over the execution, the static calculations and construction management; towards the end of the project, house number 51, architect Otto Schmidt held the building management function until completion in October 1903. In house number 51, the large apartments were divided between 1933 and 1937. Originally, there was only one tenant on each floor of one half of the house, with a salon, a separate dining room, toilet and bathroom being available. Plastering and painting work was planned for number 51 in the summer of 1960. Planned courtyard buildings in 1903 did not receive approval from the building authorities. The conventional but finely structured, elegant plastered facade of the twin house has a pounded ground floor zone, two bay windows, straight window canopies and sill fields. It shows no concessions to the Art Nouveau, which otherwise had largely prevailed in the facade design of this time. LfD / 1998/2002, 2018

09293459
 
Villa (no. 56) with garden and fence, outbuildings (no. 54) on the street and coach house in the courtyard Menckestrasse 54; 56
(map)
around 1865 (villa), 1872 (remise), 1905 (outbuilding) historicizing plastered facade, porch door in the entrance area, outbuilding with half-timbered gable, in the country house style, historically important

Ensemble of villa, stable and outbuilding. The villa was built in 1861 for Carl Richard Auerbach according to plans by the Leipzig master mason Heinrich Purfürst. The building, which is heavily structured by the street-side template, entrance porch, bay window and garden-side terrace, originally had numerous neo-Gothic elements in terms of window shapes, entrance design and interior furnishings. They were dismantled in 1914 by the architect Martin Dülfer, Dresden, during the "modernization" of the house on behalf of the owner Walter Friedel, court music dealer and co-owner of the Steingräber publishing house. The side building was built in 1872 as a stable and coach house with a coachman's apartment on the upper floor. Especially in the roof zone, the two half-timbered gables with carved eaves board and free rafters, it contains country house elements. The freight elevator was located in the gable facing the courtyard. The side building was connected to the residential building by a gate system. In 1905 the single-storey building was built, also as a stable and coach house with a coachman's apartment, which borders the courtyard with the large garden. LfD / 1998/2002

09293461
 
Rental villa with enclosure and front garden Möckernsche Strasse 1
(map)
1865 (rental villa), 1896 (rental villa) Plastered facade, historically significant residential building in a prominent corner location, formerly on the edge of the Gohlis town center 09293368
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Möckernsche Strasse 2
(map)
1912 (tenement) with shops, plastered facade, of importance in terms of building history 09293369
 
Apartment building in closed and rearward development Möckernsche Strasse 7
(map)
1880s (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293372
 
Villa, today in closed development, with enclosure, front garden and garden as well as paving and plastic Möckernsche Strasse 9
(map)
1876 ​​(villa) Plastered facade, terrace, important in terms of building history 09293374
 
Apartment building in half-open development Möckernsche Strasse 11
(map)
1889 (tenement house) with exposed side to Marbachstraße, plastered facade, of architectural significance 09293375
 
Multi-family house in a residential complex (together with Eisenacher Strasse 53a / 55 / 55a), with a front garden border Möckernsche Strasse 14
(map)
1936 (apartment building) with gate passage, four-storey plastered building in traditionalist style with elaborate, vertical plaster structure in Art Deco style in the area of ​​the stairwell, characteristic example of the architecture of the 1930s, of architectural significance 09293376
 
Apartment building in closed development Möckernsche Strasse 19
(map)
1903 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09293378
 
Apartment building in closed development Möckernsche Strasse 21
(map)
1902 (tenement) with gate passage and shop, clinker brick facade, historically important 09293379
 
Apartment building in closed development Möckernsche Strasse 23
(map)
1901 (tenement) with gate passage and formerly with shop, plastered facade, historically important 09293380
 
Apartment building in closed development Möckernsche Strasse 25
(map)
1902 (tenement) with gate passage and formerly with shop, plastered facade, wrought-iron window grilles in the gate passage, historically important 09293381
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Möckernsche Strasse 26
(map)
1907 (tenement) with shops, plastered facade, of importance in terms of building history 09293382
 
Apartment building in closed development Möckernsche Strasse 28
(map)
1904 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, cellar window grilles, historically important 09293383
 
Apartment building in closed development Möckernsche Strasse 30
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09293384
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Möckernsche Strasse 30a
(map)
1904 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09293385
 
Apartment building in formerly open development and rear building in the courtyard Möckernsche Strasse 35
(map)
1874 (tenement house) formerly with a shop, plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293386
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Möckernsche Strasse 42
(map)
1902 (tenement) Plastered facade, wooden panels and stucco in the entrance area, important in terms of building history 09293387
 
Apartment building in half-open development Möckernsche Strasse 45
(map)
1903 (tenement) with a former iron gate, historically important 09293388
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner, with fencing and front garden Möckernsche Strasse 47
(map)
1904 (tenement) Corner shutter, plastered facade, of importance in terms of building history 09293389
 
Villa with enclosure and front garden Mottelerstraße 1
(map)
1896–1897 (villa) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294038
 
Apartment building in closed development and front garden Mottelerstraße 5
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered facade, historically important 09296883
 
Rental villa with enclosure, front garden and courtyard paving Mottelerstraße 6
(map)
1894–1895, marked 1895 (rental villa) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294039
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Mottelerstraße 7
(map)
1900 (tenement) House passage, shop, clinker brick facade, important in terms of building history 09294040
 
Apartment house in open development in a corner with a front garden and remains of the enclosure Mottelerstraße 8
(map)
1896–1899 (tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294035
 
Apartment building in closed development, with a front garden and rear building and an annex attached to it Mottelerstraße 9
(map)
1902 (tenement) Front building with gate passage, plastered facade, historically important 09294041
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Mottelerstraße 10
(map)
around 1885 (tenement) formerly with shop and front gardens, plastered facade, historically important 09296884
 
Apartment building in closed development and front garden Mottelerstraße 11
(map)
1902–1903 (tenement house) with gate passage, clinker brick facade, wooden panels and stucco ceiling in the gate passage, historically important 09294042
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Mottelerstraße 12
(map)
around 1885 (tenement) with house passage, plastered facade, historically important 09296885
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Mottelerstraße 13
(map)
1904 (tenement) with corner shutter, clinker brick facade, of architectural significance 09294043
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Mottelerstraße 14
(map)
around 1885 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered facade, historically important 09296886
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Mottelerstraße 15
(map)
1905 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294044
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Mottelerstraße 17
(map)
1905 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294045
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Mottelerstraße 18
(map)
1888/1889 (tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294046
 
Apartment building in semi-open development with a front garden Mottelerstraße 19
(map)
1904–1905 (tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294047
 
Apartment building in closed development in a corner with a front garden Mottelerstraße 20
(map)
1898 (tenement) Formerly with a corner shutter, plastered facade, historically important 09294048
 
Villa (No. 23) with front garden (No. 21/23) Mottelerstrasse 21; 23
(card)
1896–1897 (villa) Plastered facade with sandstone structure, with porch and veranda, of architectural significance 09294050
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Mottelerstraße 22
(map)
1898 (tenement) Plastered facade, stucco and wooden panels in the entrance area, important in terms of building history 09294049
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Mottelerstraße 24
(map)
1899 (tenement house) Plastered facade, stucco and wooden panels in the entrance area, important in terms of building history 09294051
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Mottelerstraße 26
(map)
1898/1899 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09294052
 
Apartment building in closed development in a corner with a front garden Mottelerstraße 28
(map)
1900 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09294053
 

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

Web links

Commons : Kulturdenkmale in Gohlis-Süd  - Collection of pictures