List of cultural monuments in Gohlis-Süd (N – Z)

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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 properties of N-Z .

Legend

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

List of cultural monuments in Gohlis-Süd, N – Z

image designation location Dating description ID
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Natonekstrasse 2
(map)
around 1908 (tenement) Plastered facade, vestibule door with skylight, of importance in terms of building history 09297883
 
Apartment building in closed development Natonekstrasse 8
(map)
1900 (tenement) with gate passage, clinker brick facade, wooden panels in the gate passage, historically important 09294094
 
Apartment building in closed development and rear building Natonekstrasse 10
(map)
1902–1903 (tenement house) with gate passage, clinker brick facade, wall structure in the gate passage, historically significant tenement building with unconventional Art Nouveau facade

In 1865 a new residential and side building as well as another outbuilding were erected in 1877 - in August 1902, bricklayer foreman Johann Gottfried Welz commissioned the architect and builder of the same name, Richard Welz, to plan and build a rental residential building. The demolition of all buildings is documented for October 1902, the final inspection of the front residential building took place in June 1903, a single-storey rear building was available from June 1904 and was expanded in 1908. From this year, the residence of the company founded by Max Holz in 1901 is documented. A head bow of this company, which ran in 1939, names a "factory for baking flavors, fruit essences, spice extracts, luxury food colors, essential oils, drugs, ground spices". Repairs to the plaster and new plastering of the courtyard front are documented for 1938. Renovation and loft extension took place in 1996. The nine-axis Art Nouveau apartment building with a passage on the ground floor and a clinker brick facade, contrary to the building file drawing, with specially designed window frames, especially on the two middle floors. Apartment building with an unconventional Art Nouveau facade, which is significant in terms of local development and architectural history. LfD / 2013, 2014

09294095
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development, with courtyard building Natonekstrasse 12
(map)
1890/1891 (tenement house), 1864 (outbuilding) Front building with gate passage, clinker brick facade, wooden panels in the gate passage, historically important 09294096
 
Apartment building in closed development with a front garden Natonekstrasse 20
(map)
1898/1901 (tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294097
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Natonekstrasse 22
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) Plaster clinker facade, Prussian caps in the gate passage, of architectural significance 09296975
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Natonekstrasse 23
(map)
1888 (tenement house) Shop, clinker brick facade, important in terms of building history 09294092
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Natonekstrasse 24
(map)
1900 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294099
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Natonekstrasse 25
(map)
1887 (tenement house) with gate passage, plastered facade, historically important 09294093
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Natonekstrasse 26
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09296974
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden and rear building as well as outbuildings in the courtyard Natonekstrasse 27
(map)
1887/1889 (tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294100
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Natonekstrasse 28
(map)
1895 (tenement) with corner shutter, plastered facade, original shutter, significant in terms of building history 09294101
 
Apartment building in closed development, with front garden and workshop building in the courtyard Natonekstrasse 29
(map)
1887 (tenement house) with house passage, plastered facade, historically important 09294091
 
Apartment building in closed development in a corner with a front garden Natonekstrasse 30
(map)
1887 (tenement house) with corner shop and former gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important 09294102
 
Park Platnerstrasse
(map)
probably 1904–1905 (park area) In a design typical of the time, with old woody stock (formerly with Schillerlinde), of importance in terms of local development and urban green history 09293032
 
Apartment building in half-open development Platnerstrasse 1
(map)
1888–1889 (tenement house) with gate passage, plastered facade, stucco in the gate passage, of architectural significance

The three-story apartment building was built in 1888 and 1889 for the Gohlis merchant Carl Gallwitz. The architect and certified building trade master Paul Lange contributed plans, and in 1889 also for the rear-facing horse stable (changed several times). In 1922, Mendel and Mina Friedlich applied for one floor to be added, with plans by the architect Otto Schlitter. Isak and Goldine Schächter took up this unrealized project again in 1923 and brought in architect Adolf Warnstorff (also not carried out). The spacious apartments were split up in 1934 (1st floor) and 1937 (2nd floor) under the leadership of the construction company Willy Arnold. The rear balcony annex falls in the period 2011/2012. The plastered façade shows itself, each set by restrained roof structures, raised flat side projections: on the right, three-axis with a balcony on the first floor and on the left, single-axis with a round arched gate entrance. Windows on the second floor are adorned with volute canopies, consoles and friezes under the sills, the eaves area with a tooth-cut frieze and also stucco consoles. A neo-baroque cartouche is located above the entrance and the splendid, two-winged Baroque-style Art Nouveau door, decor is also in the passage, and some of the apartments have opulent stucco ceilings. The three-storey, splendid historicism building has an architectural historical value, it is a testimony to the increasing urbanization of the village of Gohlis. LfD / 1998/2002, 2019

09294140
 
Double apartment building in open development Platnerstrasse 2; 4
(card)
1872 (double tenement house) Significant in terms of building history and defining street space, significant in terms of building history

March 21, 1872 Application from master bricklayer Carl Heintze for glazier Ernst Heintze and restaurateur Carl Weise to build a double house. The house was facing the old Teichstrasse (now Winkelstrasse) with the south gable, which led to the smithy pond; there was a front garden facing the street. The high basement was planned as a glass workshop and glass warehouse, two single-storey courtyard buildings contained another workshop with a tiny apartment and a shared wash house. Small apartments, apparently for journeymen or assistants, were also housed in the gable ends of the attic. The simple block of flats with a high sandstone basement is adorned with window canopies and stucco panels, which were attached without any attempt to create a rhythm. It contained one apartment per floor, accessible through a cantilevered staircase facing the courtyard, with part number 2 being smaller with only two living rooms facing the street. Number 4 contained a windowless maid's room at the end of the corridor. 1901 Conversion of the courtyard building (glazier) by Handel & Franke (no longer available today). LfD / 1998/2002

09299225
 
Double tenement house in closed development Platnerstrasse 3; 5
(card)
1909–1911 (double tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

December 1909 after the demolition of an old villa-like building, application for a license and plans for three connected houses by Oswald Handel (architectural firm Handel & Franke). In the justification for the building it is pointed out that because of the noise from the beer garden of the "Schillerschlößchen" behind it, contrary to the practical construction method, the living rooms have to be arranged to the north facing the street. The kitchens were located in the distinctly deep stairwell fronts on the south side, with an “exit” next to it. The houses, completed in 1911, have a contemporary modern, that is, sparingly structured facade, sculpted by polygonal bay windows and loggias, by plastering and flat application work on bay windows and balconies, a rectangular frieze above the cornice and flat decorative motifs under the eaves. The base originally with vertical grooves, the roof area changed by enlarging the dormers. Number 5 is a mirror image, with the entrance loggia, which also includes the cellar entrance, in the outer axis. In the hallways plaster reliefs with dancing women and putti. LfD / 1998/2002

09297797
 
Double apartment building (with Marbachstraße 2) in open development, with fencing, front garden and shed (Winkelstraße 1) in the courtyard as well as rear garden with pavilion Platnerstrasse 6
(map)
1901–1902 (double tenement house) 09297798
 
Apartment building in closed development Platnerstrasse 7
(map)
1909–1911 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

Originally planned as House 3 of the Handel & Franke series in an identical design. After a change of ownership in 1913, the client, architect Curt Möbius, changed the plan. The rectangular bay window and the wider dwarf house were placed on the right-hand side as a stronger accent opposite the converging Marbachstrasse. The facade is simpler, without plastering and application work. LfD / 1998/2002

09294144
 
Residential house and factory with storage, remains of the former mill ditch and courtyard paving of a mill property Platnerstrasse 13
(map)
in the middle of the 19th century (mill), marked 1877 (mill) Typical plaster facade of the time, of local significance 09294145
 
Residential house in open development in a corner, with enclosure, gate and front garden Platnerstrasse 15
(map)
1924 (residential building) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

April 15, 1924 Application from Albert Bolte, President of the Chamber of Industry and Commerce, for a new residential building to be built. Plans by Otto Paul Burghardt. The rectangular building with the longitudinal front facing Platnerstraße is structured symmetrically. The central entrance porch protruding into the roof zone is flanked by two lower roof extensions. The lively garden side is similarly symmetrical, with a curved terrace and two flanking oriels. The side fronts each have a single-storey bay window with a concave curved roof in front of the two rear axes. The internal structure also appears strict and even: parapet-like fields merge the window axes of the two floors vertically, with consoles and flat rosettes underneath. These details, together with the wreaths and medallions in the entrance risalit, the wreathed ox-eye in the garden front, the vase attachments in the back gable and the strong square plinth are reminiscent of the style of the period before 1914. The floor plan relocates the main rooms, dining room, living room, and study to the Garden side behind the rectangular hallway. To the front were the reception room (right) as well as the cloakroom, kitchen, etc. The interior has been changed since the 1960s as a result of renovations in connection with the establishment of a nursing home for the North Polyclinic. LfD / 1998/2002

09293356
 
Villa, with front garden and courtyard paving Poetenweg 3
(map)
1880 (villa) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

After a first application from master painter Carl Kühn to build a three-story house, which was rejected in March 1878, the small villa was built in 1880 as the first building on the newly laid out Promenade Street. The plans were created by the master builder Hugo Franz. The regular rectangular building, originally with a hipped roof and triaxial on all sides, has a structure according to the canon of the 1870s: plastered rustics on the ground floor, emphasis of the central axes by triangular gables, a wide, stepped cornice and a decorative cornice. Originally figurative ornamentation between the windows of the upper floor. A first renovation in 1897 moved the entrance from the street front to a porch on the west side, in 1908 the house was raised by a jamb above the console cornice and a mansard roof was added, the corners of the building under the eaves received decorative cartouches, a wooden veranda was added. After the foreclosure auction in 1932, the villa was given three storey apartments. LfD / 1998/2002

09293182
 
Tenement house in half-open development, with enclosure and front garden Poetenweg 5
(map)
1887 (tenement house) Plastered facade, historically important, see also Poetenweg 7

February 14, 1887 Building application for the three-storey semi-detached house by restaurateur Oskar Behringer (father of the painter of the same name, who owned the house in 1919), the plans were made by architect Curt Nebel. The massive-looking building is subdivided by two cornices above the high quarry stone plinth, and - unusual for the time - there are no architectural decorations, only the windows on the first floor are accentuated by straight roofs and a keystone. The mansard roof has barrel-covered dormers. There were two apartments per floor in each part of the house, accessible through entrances in the polygonal staircase porches on the side fronts. In the center of the semi-detached house there is a square atrium around which the four kitchens are arranged. LfD / 1998/2002

09293183
 
Tenement house in half-open development, with enclosure and front garden Poetenweg 7
(map)
1887 (tenement house) Plastered facade, historically important, see also Poetenweg 5

February 14, 1887 Building application for the three-storey semi-detached house by restaurateur Oskar Behringer (father of the painter of the same name, who owned the house in 1919), the plans were made by architect Curt Nebel. The massive-looking building is subdivided by two cornices above the high quarry stone plinth, and - unusual for the time - there are no architectural decorations, only the windows on the first floor are accentuated by straight roofs and a keystone. The mansard roof has barrel-covered dormers. There were two apartments per floor in each part of the house, accessible through entrances in the polygonal staircase porches on the side fronts. In the center of the semi-detached house there is a square atrium around which the four kitchens are arranged. LfD / 1998/2002

09293184
 
Double apartment building (with No. 10) in open development, with fencing and front garden Poetenweg 8
(map)
1900 (double tenement house) Clinker brick facade with sandstone integration, of architectural significance

Three-storey semi-detached house, building application on September 21, 1900 by businessman Albert Günther (for number 10) and Dipl. Ing. Stein (number 8). Plans by master bricklayer Wilhelm Germanus. The facade with brick facing, windows with ashlar or plaster frame, which shows only economical concessions to Art Nouveau forms. In the mansard roof dormers with triangular roofs. The structure is grouped at the front edges of the building by transversely positioned oriels that protrude over the roof zone and originally had high, pointed hoods over the strongly protruding roof. The center of the building is emphasized by a flat risalit. Originally apartments with a villa-like layout around a central hall. LfD / 1998/2002

09293185
 
Apartment house in open development in a corner Poetenweg 9
(map)
1888 (tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

May 24, 1888 Application from master painter Carl Kühn for a villa-like detached house on the corner of Street BB, which later became Döllnitzer Street. Plans by architect Curt Nebel. The three-storey apartment building contained one apartment each on the ground floor and the first floor and two apartments on the upper floor. The front of the staircase at the rear (with toilets on the platforms) led to a corridor running the full width of the house, from which the salon (three central axes highlighted by an iron balcony in the facade) and two flanking rooms led off to the front. On the back the kitchen and three chambers. The exterior construction also expresses high demands: the ground floor is designed as a horizontally accentuated plinth zone with plaster strips, the upper floors are combined by cornices. The wide, windowless risalits on all four corners of the building are unusual in that they have fluted pilaster strips and stucco festons ending in Corinthian capitals, which are accentuated by triangular gables in the roof zone above a console cornice. Together with the two balconies on curved consoles that center the facade, they give the apartment building an almost festive character. LfD / 1998/2002

09293186
 
Double apartment building (with No. 8) in open development, with enclosure and front garden Poetenweg 10
(map)
1900 (double tenement house) Clinker brick facade, historically important

Three-storey semi-detached house, building application on September 21, 1900 by businessman Albert Günther (for number 10) and Dipl. Ing. Stein (number 8). Plans by master bricklayer Wilhelm Germanus. The facade with brick facing, windows with ashlar or plaster frame, which shows only economical concessions to Art Nouveau forms. In the mansard roof dormers with triangular roofs. The structure is grouped at the front edges of the building by transversely positioned oriels that protrude over the roof zone and originally had high, pointed hoods over the strongly protruding roof. The center of the building is emphasized by a flat risalit. Originally apartments with a villa-like layout around a central hall. LfD / 1998/2002

09293187
 
Multi-family houses in a residential complex, with front gardens Poetenweg 12; 12a; 12b; 14
(card)
1934–1935 (apartment building) Plastered facade, residential complex together with Menckestrasse 9–11, of architectural significance

see Menckestraße 9, 9a, 11

09297899
 
Residential house in closed development with fencing and front garden Poetenweg 13
(map)
1923 (residential building) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

In November 1923, Dr. med. Schmaja Abraham, called Alexander Sascha Kaplan, co-owner of the smoking company Nikolaistraße 28–32. Plans by builder Oscar Schade. As the head building of a row of single-family houses that is already under construction, the main facade is oriented at right angles to the other buildings to the east and connected to them by a polygonal corner bay window, originally provided with a curved hood. A stair tower on the south corner that functions as a servants' stairwell flanks the main facade with an entrance porch resting on pillars and a wide, gabled roof extension. The narrower street facade with semicircular loggia, above that roof extension. Oriel corners and entrance pillars originally with plaster ashlar, figurative application work in art deco forms on the bay window (partially removed during renovation in 1999). The garden side with terrace and exit. The apartments with different floor plans, designed according to the needs of the residents. Kitchen and ancillary rooms accessible through the entrance in the stairwell. Garage in the basement. Preserved the simple enclosure. LfD / 1998/2002

09293188
 
Double dwelling in closed development with enclosure and front garden Poetenweg 15; 17
(map)
1923 (duplex) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

On May 4, 1923, architect Johannes Koppe applied for the construction of two connected single-family villas for Lipsia Areal- und Baugesellschaft mbH . The raised entrances each lead via an anteroom with cloakroom and toilet to a large hallway with stairs to the upper floor. While there was only the sideboard on the (northern) side of the street, the actual living rooms were located: the master bedroom and dining room on the garden side, which was opened by large windows and loggias. Bedrooms, children's rooms, guest rooms and girls' rooms were on the upper and upper floors, while the kitchen and utility rooms were in the basement. The facade with folding shutters, window brackets, round windows in the so-called country house style, in door bars and application work Art Deco forms. After completion, sale to the Philippsohn family. LfD / 1998/2002

09293189
 
Residential house in closed development with fencing and front garden Poetenweg 19
(map)
1920 (residential building) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

After the land was sold in 1917 and drafts that had not been carried out due to the war and the turmoil after the war, the building application was submitted by agricultural machinery general agent Paul Stempner on May 23, 1924. The plans by the architect Hermann Günther are similar to the neighboring houses with a “simple, functional design” in the heights of the cornice and ridge. Simple decorative elements in typical Art Deco shapes can be found on the bay window, which stands out from the facade with lighter, square plaster, and in the cantilevered roofs and cornices of the upper floor windows. Entrance and garage entrance are arranged in the high basement. The simple wooden enclosure and folding shutters correspond to the original ten designs. Originally a central gable extension in the gable roof. LfD / 1998/2002

09293190
 
Residential house in semi-open development with a front garden Poetenweg 22
(map)
1912 (residential building) Currently kindergarten, plastered facade, reform style architecture, important in terms of building history

For Dr. med. Oswald Beelitz building application for a stately home on February 6, 1912 by architect Otto Paul Burghardt (at about the same time, for the same client, design of the opposite house at Menckestrasse 17 on the same garden plot). With volutes, barrel roofs, vividly sculpted festoons and cartouches, the building shows the tendency towards neo-baroque, strong forms, as contemporaries attest to the architect. The extension on the ground floor was originally planned as a slightly curved pillar porch, which corresponded to the more protruding semicircular stairwell porch. This originally had a hood covered with copper like the canopy. The entrance led to a central living hallway, from which the representative rooms opened out to the front and the dining room with winter garden, ladies and gentlemen's rooms with veranda to the rear. Post office since 1951, later kindergarten. LfD / 1998/2002

09293191
 
Residential house in semi-open development with front garden Poetenweg 23
(map)
1911–1912, marked 1911 (residential building) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

On June 25, 1912, Emil Franz Hänsel submitted the plans for a villa on behalf of Ms. Laura Finkelstein. The building was the beginning of the subsequent closed row of single-family houses. As with the following two-storey houses, the entrance is in the basement. The architect relocated it in a semicircular porch that overlaps the corner of the building, so the bay windows of the ladies' room above receive some light from the west side front. The semicircular entrance hall leads to the stairwell, which is indicated in the (northern) street front by a group of three small windows (originally with rosette-shaped colored glazing). Next to it was the kitchen. This left the entire south and west side free for the living and representative rooms: on the ground floor there was the large dining room with a terrace facing the garden and, above all, the large music salon, which, like the music salon designed by Hänsel at Villa Hupfeld (1911), has oval interior contours . The more private living room, bedroom, study and guest rooms were on the upper and top floors. With the volutes above the entrance and the cartouche-like stucco framing of the stairwell windows, Hansel adapts to the neo-baroque tendencies around 1912. Due to the removal of the base cornice and the folding shutters on the upper floor and the loft extensions, the facade has lost its originally denser structure and color. LfD / 1998/2002

09293192
 
Double tenement house (with Kickerlingsberg 26) in half-open development in a corner, with gate entrance, enclosure and front garden Poetenweg 25
(map)
1912 (half of a 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

09293193
 
Villa with villa garden, enclosure and garden gate Poetenweg 26
(map)
1911–1912 (villa) Villa next to the Gohliser Schlösschen, with a plastered facade typical of the time, wrought-iron garden gate, the basic structure of the garden has been preserved, old trees, terrace and path system are important in terms of building history

In October 1911, the Royal Saxon Building Councilor Anton Käppler acquired the property next to the garden of the Gohliser Schlößchen from the municipality and submitted the plans for a single-family house, which, as agreed, was to be built in the rear part, set back from the street. The villa impresses with its generous and classically simple forms: the building on a square floor plan is extended on the south-facing garden side by a wide semicircular bay, which is closed on the upper floor by a balcony. The contours of the terrace in front and the architectural garden design take up these semicircular shapes. Terrace doors and ground floor windows also have semicircular closures that are taken up by the bright folding shutters. In the mansard hipped roof, a wide central gable with curved approaches and vases on pedestals, the shape of the wreathed oval in the gable field recurs in the ornamentation of the balcony grille. The floor plan corresponded to the generosity of the exterior: the entrance on the east side leads to the large central hall with stairs to the upper floor. The three representative rooms on the south side started from here: reception room, master bedroom, dining room, the latter with a connection to the pergola-roofed fountain courtyard on the west side. The upper floors were reserved for privacy, and there was a studio in the attic. The commercial area was excluded from the main house, it was located in the annex on the north side, on the upper floor of which the caretaker's apartment was also located. The carriage shed was attached to this at right angles. LfD / 1998/2002

09293196
 
Villa, with enclosure and front garden Poetenweg 27
(map)
1912 (villa) Today socio-cultural education center, plastered facade, vestibule door, named after lawyer Dr. Georg Zöphel, important in terms of building history

Heinrich Mossdorf's building application for villa construction for lawyer Dr. Georg Zöphel on July 13, 1912. The building, known as the “country house”, but its dimensions far exceeding it, appears heavy and voluminous, especially due to the generously structured area of ​​the mighty mansard roof and the cubic-looking side wings on the main facade. The pillar vestibule in front of the slightly convex rear layer tries to mitigate this effect with its wealth of ornaments. The Neo-Biedermeier application work above the ground floor windows and in the narrow blind arches of the staircase windows as well as the serrated friezes also fulfill this task. Polygonal porches loosen up the cube on the west side and the garden front. The vestibule leads to a central hallway, which is largely taken up by the surrounding staircase. Two large main rooms, not designated in their function, connected by a sliding door, lie on the garden side. There was a separate apartment in the attic. After 1990 the building was temporarily used as a socio-cultural education center. LfD / 1998/2002

09293194
 
Factory building (with two house numbers) and fencing Poetenweg 30; 32
(card)
1897 (factory building), marked 1921, older in the core (factory building) Clinker brick building in the courtyard of the property was probably a former office building, otherwise a large multi-wing factory building as a plastered facade (see also Menckestrasse 33–37), of local significance 09299248
 
Villa with pergola, front garden and enclosure Poetenweg 31
(map)
1923 (villa) Plastered facade, vestibule door, of importance in terms of building history

In April 1922, Emil Franz Hänsel applied for a house to be built for the factory owner Otto Tetzner (Ludwig-Hupfeld-AG). Only a second application from July 1923, also from the Hansel office, was carried out. The building, located on the corner of Schlößchenweg, on an elongated rectangular floor plan, has a deep staircase projection as a central wing. A pergola leads to it from the garden gate in the concave, curved enclosure wall. The side wings each with a continuous balcony over the first floor and finished off with semicircular corner porches with flat zinc roofs. The central building is accentuated by turrets with a lantern. The simple exterior is given its extravagant effect by the striking stencil plaster design - light Art Deco smooth plaster ornament in front of rough plaster or rough plaster ornament in front of a smooth surface - and the grooved eaves zone. The floor plan corresponds to the client's requirements: the stairwell on the north side of the street does without the usual hall. Here on the north side only the utility rooms are located, while the dining room, ladies' room and men's room occupy the entire garden front. In front of it is a terrace with a central pillar veranda. 1960 Conversion to an infant nursery. LfD / 1998/2002

09293195
 
Residential house in half-open development, with enclosure and front garden Poetenweg 33a
(map)
1925 (residential building) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

May 23, 1925 Application from master builder Arthur Kornagel for a house based on plans by architect Curt Schiemichen. The original part of the semi-detached house number 33 was destroyed in the war (supplemented by a new building in modern forms), which means that the proportions of the building do not seem right today. Originally, the plastered building was combined horizontally between the storeys with strips of iron clinker slabs (after partial destruction only retained in the porch on the side front), layers of bricks also emphasize the oriels and building edges. The single-storey brick extension on the west side leads to the spiral staircase that opens up the apartments. LfD / 1998/2002

09296859
 
Residential house in half-open development, with enclosure and front garden Poetenweg 35
(map)
1923 (residential building) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

May 30, 1923 Request from the architect Johannes Koppe for the construction of a family house for the doctor Izsó Hoffmann. As the end of a row of connected houses with the narrow side facing the street. A single-storey corner bay window conveys to the east side, where the main entrance with an outside staircase is located. It leads to a central hall with stairs to the private rooms on the upper floor. The practice rooms were accessible from a separate entrance behind in the side porch. The facade shows the contemporary art deco forms, especially in the roof extension and the ornamentation of the cornices that surround the upper floor. Colored folding shutters in front of yellowish plaster and vegetation completed the facade. LfD / 1998/2002

09293197
 
Residential building in closed development Poetenweg 37
(map)
around 1923 (residential building) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

The neighboring single-family house was also built around 1923/24, the original building file has not been preserved. With its semicircular bay window, structured by pilaster strips and crowned by a balcony grille with groups of putti, the sculpted entrance tract and the polygonal protruding staircase above, the central building has a stronger plastic structure than the two neighboring houses. LfD / 1998/2002

09293198
 
Residential house in semi-open development with front garden Poetenweg 39
(map)
1924 (residential building) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

The businessman Carl August Becker (leather goods, Reichsstrasse 30) applied for a building permit in March 1924, the plans come from the architect Carl Voigt. The highlighted window arrangement at the corner of the only three-axis facade denotes the seat of the living hall and above the stairwell. It is repeated on the side front. The two-lined living rooms were therefore arranged one behind the other, the dining room facing the garden with an open pergola. Garage and business entrance in the basement. Part of the emphasized severity of the almost unadorned facade was the small-scale window rungs. LfD / 1998/2002

09293199
 
Villa with enclosure and front garden Poetenweg 41
(map)
1924 (villa) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

In February 1924, Carl Voigt submitted the building application for the neighboring villa of the factory director Georg Bauer. The rectangular building with a flat, strongly protruding hipped roof has a cubic, heavy appearance due to the windowless corner wings, structured with pilaster strips and plastered fields on the sides of the monumental entrance porch, which takes up two thirds of the height of the facade. A strong cornice running around the structure separates the raised ground floor from the slightly thicker windowed upper floor. The only decorative accent is the neo-baroque design of the entrance with a blown gable. It leads via the vestibule into the central hall and the staircase to the east of it. To the extension on the east side was the master's room, the living room and dining room were, as usual, on the garden front, with a wide semicircular porch in front of it. The kitchen and sideboard were on the west side, and the caretaker's apartment in the basement. Retrospective elements of monumental neoclassicism can be recognized in the structural design of the representative villa. LfD / 1998/2002

09293200
 
Villa with garden, entrance gate and paving of the access road Poetenweg 45
(map)
1925–1926 (villa), 1926 (gate entrance) Plastered facade with porphyry tufa structure, distinctive tower, in the style of Art Déco, of importance in terms of architectural, artistic and district development

The house located in the middle between Poetenweg and Primavesistraße can be reached through a narrow entrance behind number 43. It was built between 1925 and 1926 for Hermann Straube by Johannes Koppe. The otherwise very functional plastered building on a field stone base and with a high hipped roof has a stair tower with a crenellated wreath and a pointed tower dome on the southeast corner. Here is the entrance to the utility wing. The main entrance with a flight of stairs in a single-storey porch clad with porphyry panels is contemporary in design. The initials HS in the keystone. LfD / 1998/2002

09293202
 
Villa with front garden Poetenweg 45a
(map)
1925-1926, re. 1926 (villa) 09296860
 
Villa with front garden Poetenweg 47
(map)
1924–1925 (villa) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

Building application on December 9, 1924 by businessman Albin Hoffmann, plans by Carl Voigt. The building on a square floor plan with a hipped roof. The street front is moved by a central entrance projecting with a slightly convex cornice line. Above in the roof zone a gabled roof extension. The significantly elevated ground floor zone is raised from the upper floor by a circumferential profiled cornice. On the east side, a balcony on the upper floor repeats the curved contours of the entrance zone. The entrance leads via an outside staircase to the central hall with a flight of stairs to the upper floor. Next to it facing the street, cloakroom or master's room, the dining room with a semicircular veranda and music room, as usual, on the garden side. Upstairs living room and bedrooms. In the raised basement there was an additional rented small apartment at the request of the housing administration office, next to it the garage. In its overall attitude between country house character and neoclassicism, this villa building also points more towards the time before the First World War than into the 1920s. LfD / 1998/2002

09293203
 
Villa with front yard and garden Poetenweg 49
(map)
1926–1927 (villa) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

On December 31, 1926 application for the construction of a stately single-family house for the state lottery holder Hermann Domdey. The architect Paul Klotzsch created the plans. The entrance in the western porch led past the cloakroom and two toilets to the central square hall. The representative rooms facing the street (dining room, music room, gentleman's room) were based on the classic villa floor plan, all of which were extended with bay windows or winter gardens. On the north-west corner were the kitchen and sideboard in connection with the dining room, the family's private rooms on the upper and top floors. In the exterior, the ground floor with its greater height is marked as the main floor, the upper floor with a series of tapering, coupled windows as a continuous ribbon of windows is divided into lower and smaller sections. Here, between two axes, three-dimensional heads: helmeted man, woman, Mercury. Other typical Art Deco shapes can also be found in the roof houses with pointed struts. LfD / 1998/2002

09296861
 
Rental villa with front garden and enclosure Poetenweg 51
(map)
1924 (rental villa) Consulate Poland, plastered facade, of architectural significance

February 29, 1924 Application from master builder Erich Becker to build a villa for businessman Johannes Krause. The cubic structure is structured towards the street by a porch, which opens into two bay windows connected by a balcony on the first floor. Groups of putti above the balcony parapets of the converted attic and a triangular gable adorned with neo-baroque stucco ornamentation seem out of date for the time it was built. On the garden side a veranda supported by Doric columns, above it a loggia and balcony. The ornate entrance on the west side, framed by fluted columns, sets a further decorative accent. While offices, the caretaker's apartment and utility rooms were located in the basement, the representative rooms arranged around a central hall were located on the upper floor, which was highlighted by large windows. At the beginning of the 1950s, there was a school for the state retail trade, later the University's Institute for International Studies, and from the 1970s the consulate of the People's Republic of Poland. LfD / 1998/2002

09293205
 
Apartment building in half-open development (structural unit with No. 6), with front garden Pölitzstrasse 4
(map)
1910 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293416
 
Apartment building in semi-open development (structural unit with No. 4), with front garden Pölitzstrasse 6
(map)
1910 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293417
 
Apartment building in half-open development (structural unit with No. 10), with enclosure and front garden Pölitzstrasse 8
(map)
1902 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09293418
 
Apartment house in open development in a corner, with a front garden Pölitzstrasse 9
(map)
1899 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09293419
 
Apartment building in half-open development (structural unit with No. 8), with enclosure and front garden Pölitzstrasse 10
(map)
1902 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09293420
 
Apartment house in open development, with enclosure and front garden Pölitzstrasse 11
(map)
1900 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09293421
 
Apartment house in open development, with enclosure and front garden Pölitzstrasse 12
(map)
1903 (tenement) Plaster and clinker facade, important from an architectural point of view 09293422
 
Apartment building in semi-open development with a front garden Pölitzstrasse 13
(map)
around 1898 (residential building) Plastered facade, part of a double tenement house (with number 15, this war-damaged, not a monument), historically important 09293423
 
Apartment building in semi-open development (structural unit with No. 16) and ancillary building in the courtyard, with enclosure and front garden Pölitzstrasse 14
(map)
1900–1904 (tenement house), 1904 (outbuilding) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

A first building application for a residential building was submitted at the end of November 1900 as a detached semi-detached house to be built together with number 16. The architect Karl Heinrich Zimmermann signed as the client, for construction management, statics and design under the authority of the office for architecture and construction, Zimmermann and Jagemann. A good year later, Zimmermann took over both the property including the approved building project and the architecture office. But at the beginning of 1903 the area at Pölitzstraße 14 was still undeveloped, the completed house number 16 was owned by Otto Hugo Ehrling from Plagwitz, owner of an electrical engineering institute. In February 1903, Cäsar Sonnenkalb submitted a preliminary building request with drafts by the architect and building inspector Georg Lubowski, and the building permit was granted in March 1904 to the certified master builder Emil Moritz Eulitz, who, in addition to the financing, also took on the statics, design and construction management. The house, founded on stable, grown gravel ground, was built with the participation of the master builder Max Friedrich from Reudnitz by autumn of the same year. The company Hermann Fritzsche was consulted with regard to the iron internal staircase with its elegant railing in Art Nouveau forms. At the same time, a side building was built at the rear (refurbished 2019/2020), including the laundry room and a horse stable with Prussian cap vault on the left, saddle and harness room on the upper floor and two chambers for horse keepers. On the right bordered a shed with fodder floor. Applications for the division of the spacious apartments into two (2nd floor) or three rental units on all other floors were submitted in 1936, 1947 and 1948. The new subdivision of the apartments took place in 1996/1997, accompanied by renovation work, roof extensions and the construction of courtyard-side balconies. The plastered facade of the house is set in scene very effectively, with loggias, a prominent bay window with a large gable between the steps in neo-renaissance forms, stucco decor under some window parapets. The two new dormers, the simple historicizing enclosure with posts that are far too small, the side access path made of concrete pavement, and on closer inspection also the windows are not quite happy. LfD / 2019

09293424
 
Apartment building in semi-open development (structural unit with No. 14), with front garden Pölitzstrasse 16
(map)
1900 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293425
 
Apartment building in semi-open development with a front garden Pölitzstrasse 17
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09296955
 
Apartment house in open development and in a corner, with a front garden Pölitzstrasse 18
(map)
marked 1891 (tenement house) representative clinker brick facade, of architectural significance 09293426
 
Apartment house in open development in a corner, with a front garden Pölitzstrasse 19
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) Plastered facade with sandstone structure, porphyry plinth, of architectural significance 09294146
 
Apartment building in semi-open development (structural unit with No. 22), with front garden Pölitzstrasse 20
(map)
1892 (tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293427
 
Double apartment building in open development, with front garden and enclosure Pölitzstrasse 21; 23
(card)
around 1890 (double tenement house) Plastered facade with sandstone integration, of architectural significance 09294147
 
Apartment building in semi-open development (structural unit with No. 20), with front garden and enclosure Pölitzstrasse 22
(map)
1892 (tenement house) Plastered facade, marble steps in the entrance area, historically important 09293428
 
Apartment building in half-open development (structural unit with No. 26), with front garden Pölitzstrasse 24
(map)
1893 (tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293430
 
Double apartment building in open development, with fencing, front garden and paving of the driveway Pölitzstrasse 25; 27
(card)
1895 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294367
 
Apartment building in semi-open development (structural unit with No. 24), with front garden Pölitzstrasse 26
(map)
1893 (tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293432
 
Villa, with enclosure and front garden Pölitzstrasse 28
(map)
around 1905 (villa) Plastered facade, in the country house style, of architectural importance 09296863
 
Double apartment building in open development, with front yard and enclosure No. 32 Pölitzstrasse 30; 32
(card)
around 1895 (double tenement house) Plastered facade, fencing also facing the former Parthen flood channel, of architectural significance 09296864
 
Villa, with enclosure and gate entrance as well as villa garden Prellerstraße 1
(map)
1915 (villa) Sandstone facade, for a time a children's home, historically important

March 6, 1915 Building application and plans by Otto Paul Burghardt for the construction of a villa with outbuildings and gardens for the businessman Hans Kurth. The extensive construction on the large property between Preller-, Primavesi- and Turmgutstraße is given a moving outline by the semicircular porches on all sides of the building: bay windows, terraces, open staircases. The entrance in the north, also in a semicircular template flanked by columns, leads via an oval vestibule into the large hall with a surrounding staircase. The billiard hall opened out from the hall to the south and opened onto a semicircular winter garden with Ionic half-columns, an outside staircase and a balcony. To the east was the dining room, which opens into a semicircular bay window. The study and living room, also with bay windows, were on the west side. The extensive utility rooms in the basement were accessible from the servants' entrance on the east side. All main and representative rooms were located on the south-west and south-east side, with bay windows or terraces extended to the outside - their arrangement determined the outline of the house. The outer fronts of the two-and-a-half-story house with a steep, developed hipped roof are clad with ashlar, in the base with strong horizontal support, otherwise in fine ashlar. Overall conception and architectural details correspond to the neoclassical tendencies typical of the time: strong columns, empire wreaths in the wide semicircular gables, consoles, squat balcony balustrades, vases and orthostats, whereby the tendency towards rounded shapes corresponds to the handwriting of the architect, who ascribed baroque features to contemporaries. The garden plan, also designed by Burghardt, for the 2060 square meter property was matched in its geometric design to the outline of the house, which is characterized by semicircular contours. In the background of the complex were a fish basin, tennis court and a park-like part. The iron fence with curved contours has been preserved with the exception of the gate. LfD / 1998/2002

09293138
 
Villa with enclosure and front garden Prellerstraße 1a
(map)
1915 (villa) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

The two-storey, originally angular building was built as a horse stable, coach house and garage for villa number 1, with the coachman and chauffeur apartments on the upper floor. The ashlar of the building corners is based on the main house, while the gable surfaces with ornamental framework, the pointed-gable roof houses and the folding shutters correspond to the country-style shapes of such ancillary buildings. The side wing was rebuilt in 1935 when it was separated from the villa. LfD / 1998/2002

09293139
 
Semi-detached house in open development and in a corner, with front garden and enclosure Prellerstrasse 3; 5
(card)
1923–1924 (twin house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

August 12, 1922 Application from architect Gustav Pflaume for the construction of two single-family houses on behalf of Saxonia Immobiliengesellschaft. The two parts of the house appear as a completely identical semi-detached house, combined in the two outer axes by a side projection and accessed through single-storey entrance porches on the side fronts. The ground floor above the high basement is highlighted by an even row of tall arched windows, with fluted pilasters with spherical attachments extending into the base zone between each axis. The smaller, tightly grooved upper floor windows, with a strangely outdated, profiled Renaissance frame and undulating roofing in the side projections, are evenly arranged without any rhythmic structure. The relatively flat hipped roof with barrel-shaped dormers in the central part and attic-like extensions with gable stucco. The garden side with terraces and balconies and, moreover, the same window and dormer shapes, each contains a garage in the basement. The street front facing south-east contained only the cloakroom in the emphasized side axis, next to it the kitchen and ladies' room, while the dining and men's rooms were on the garden side and the upper floor housed the bedrooms. LfD / 1998/2002

09293140
 
Apartment building in half-open development Prellerstraße 9
(map)
1926–1927 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

First building application October 4, 1926 by architect Adolf Warnstorff for a house for Max Lux, owner of the Hofapotheke zum Weißen Adler, Hainstraße 6. Execution according to revised plans from October 1927. The two-storey building with an extended attic contains one apartment with 3.5 per storey Rooms around a central hall. The structure, which appears massive, is structured by the central bay porch with profiled cornices and plaster strips. LfD / 1998/2002

09293141
 
Apartment building in closed development Prellerstraße 11
(map)
1936 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

April 14, 1936 Building application from architect Walter Kernt for a three-family house for Carl Rückmar. The row house between two existing buildings adapts to the facade design of number 13, it is probably designed according to the present design by Alfred Bischoff. The house entrance in the basement under the central axis with the rounded balconies made it possible to create a four-room apartment on each floor. Next to the garage entrance LfD / 1998/2002

09293142
 
Double dwelling (with Lumumbastraße 14) in open development in a corner, with fencing and front garden Prellerstraße 12
(map)
1936 (half of a double tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

see Lumumbastraße 14

09293143
 
Apartment house in closed development with fencing Prellerstraße 13
(map)
1935 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

September 8, 1935 Building application for a three-family house from manufacturer Reinhard Träger, plans by architect Alfred Bischoff. Here, too, the entrance is in the basement, with a garage next to it. The bay window with the characteristic rounded corners lies in the outer axis, the wide windows are vertically connected to one another by lighter plaster bars. Originally the number 15, which was destroyed in the war, completed the series as a head building. LfD / 1998/2002

09293144
 
Apartment building in open development with front yard and enclosure Prellerstraße 16
(map)
1938 (tenement) As a supplementary building from the 1930s in a representative residential area, it is of architectural and urban history 09299226
 
Apartment building in semi-open development, with side entrance gate Prellerstraße 19
(map)
1894 (tenement house) Formerly wrought-iron courtyard gate, clinker brick facade with sandstone structure, of historical importance

January 8, 894 Application from the master builder Carl Kühn, owner of numerous pieces of land in the area, to build a "villa". The three-storey apartment building with a free east side, on which the entrance is located, originally only contained one 5-room apartment per floor with a large salon and numerous ancillary rooms. The brick facade with wrought-iron balconies and generous stucco shapes on the windows on the upper floors takes account of these lordly ambitions. The attic was only expanded in its existing form in 1923. LfD / 1998/2002

09293145
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Prellerstraße 20
(map)
1873 (tenement) with house passage, plastered facade, historically important

The corner house at Gohliser, formerly Leipziger Straße, is still part of the first construction phase of the expansion of the village of Gohlis. In April 1873, master bricklayer Heinrich Walther submitted the building application for the inn owner and “wage carriage owner” Wilhelm Helmerdig. From the beginning until 1957, the three-storey building with an extended “French” roof contained a restaurant with an entrance in the corner wing. In 1886, the establishment of a pig slaughterhouse was approved and the restaurant was later expanded over the entire ground floor zone. It was not until 1888 that the originally four-axle front on Prellerstrasse was extended by three axles and an entrance. LfD / 1998/2002

09293163
 
Double apartment building in open development and side gate at No. 23 Prellerstrasse 21; 23
(card)
1901 (double tenement house) Plastered facade, gate entrance with wrought iron gate, of architectural significance

February 18, 1901 Application from master builder Moritz Wilde for the construction of a semi-detached house. The three-storey building is centered by a loft decorated with ornamental framework and laterally bounded by a polygonal corner bay on the upper floor, also with half-timbering in the lantern under the pointed tower. Each half of the house is also accentuated by a doubled window axis with stuccoed triangular roofing on the main floor. A double cornice summarizes the building. The entrances on the side fronts each open up a 5-room apartment on each floor, arranged around the large hall. LfD / 1998/2002

09293146
 
Apartment building in closed development Prellerstraße 22
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) with doorway and shop, clinker brick facade, historically important

July 17, 1888 Albin Börngen's first application for the construction of a house with a bakery and bakery. Execution only from June 1889 according to new plans by building trade foreman Heinz Wilde for Dr. FL Zschunke. The facade is conventional with elaborate window roofing in front of brick facing. The ground floor with bakery was originally made with plaster ashlar. LfD / 1998/2002

09298006
 
Apartment building in closed development Prellerstraße 24
(map)
around 1860 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09299384
 
Apartment building in closed development Prellerstraße 25
(map)
1876 ​​(tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

September 5, 1876 Application from master masons Friedrich Ullrich and Friedrich Zehmisch for the construction of three contiguous residential buildings as a corner development on Leipziger (Gohliser) Strasse. (The two buildings belonging to Gohliser Straße smoothed). The facade of the only five-axis house corresponds to the style of the early 1870s with profiled window roofing, finely divided stucco panels on the upper floor, tooth-cut eaves, rosettes and acroteries over the two emphasized side axes. The development of the property also included a wash house in the courtyard and a laundry drying shed with a chicken coop. LfD / 1998/2002

09293147
 
Apartment building in closed development Prellerstraße 27
(map)
1874–1875 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

November 1874 Building application from August Schröder, plans from the building contractor Heinrich Hecht. As with number 25, the execution of the facade is simplified compared to the plans. The house contains two apartments per floor, with two rooms facing the front, the chamber, kitchen and pantry facing the courtyard. Only one “private” was planned for both apartments. The side passage suggests a courtyard development, in addition to the obligatory wash house, a two-storey residential building with small apartments (2 rooms 1 chamber) at the rear border of the courtyard was applied for in 1881, but this was only completed in 1888. LfD / 1998/2002

09293148
 
Apartment building in closed development Prellerstraße 28
(map)
1875–1876 (tenement house) with gate passage, plastered facade, historically important 09293149
 
Apartment building in closed development Prellerstraße 29
(map)
1888 (tenement house) with gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important

February 1, 1888 Application from factory director Richard Voigtländer for the construction of a front and rear building. The facade of the front building is very simple: the uniform structure of the brick facade is only interrupted by a prominent axis above the central entrance (the side passage was only built in 1935). The first single-storey courtyard building housed the owner's mechanical silk embroidery, from 1918 an instrument shop for the Walter Riedel piano factory, and after the expansion to cover the entire width of the property, car repair workshops were located here. LfD / 1998/2002

09293150
 
Apartment building in closed development Prellerstraße 30
(map)
1881 (tenement house) with house passage, plastered facade, historically important

August 29, 1881 Application from master carpenter JG Oertelt for the construction of a house and a woodshed. The facade decoration is not specified in the plans, which presumably came from the client himself, which indicates the arbitrariness of the prefabricated elements subsequently added in such simple buildings. LfD / 1998/2002

09299164
 
Apartment building in closed development Prellerstraße 31
(map)
1874–1875 (tenement) with house passage, plastered facade, historically important

In September 1874, on behalf of the Leipziger Bau-Bank, the future court architect Otto Brückwald applied for the construction of a house and a cooper's workshop along with the Pichhaus on the banks of the Rietzschke. Since plans for the front building no longer exist, it is not known whether Brückwald himself designed the simple residential building, the facade of which with the flat window structures seems to come from around 1900. In 1887 the machine embroidery manufacturer Voigtländer acquired the property and added a floor to the rear building. LfD / 1998/2002

09293151
 
Apartment building in closed development Prellerstraße 36
(map)
1878 (tenement house) Front building with gate passage, clinker brick facade, iron gate around 1910, historically important

The first application in October 1877 for the construction of a slaughterhouse with a cowshed was not approved because the road lock was not yet completed. In July 1878 the building contractor Albert Weber applied for the construction of a front and rear building. Here, too, the facade plans of the front building, which were probably created in his office, do not match the simpler design, which was probably taken from the existing fund after the house was completed: finely divided stucco elements in the style of the time as acanthus acroteries on the window roofs, a rosette frieze under the Cornice, tooth cut and delicate consoles in the final cornice. In March 1879 Weber applied for the establishment of a slaughterhouse for large and small cattle with stables, a slaughterhouse, sausage kitchen, etc., and a smokehouse was built in the cellar of the front building. In 1898 the property went to the wagon owner Mühlberg, in 1908 the courtyard was largely built up with stables for the major freight forwarder Otto Jäger, and in 1914 the passage was expanded for this. LfD / 1998/2002

09298007
 
Apartment building in closed development Prellerstraße 38
(map)
1887–1888 (tenement house) with house passage, clinker brick facade, historically important

November 7, 1887 Application from master carpenter JG Oertelt for the construction of a residential house and associated wash house in the courtyard. In 1896 a two-storey, two-winged storage room for the seeds of the merchant Rohleder was added, which largely blocked the courtyard. From 1910, the Curt Stehfest electrotechnical factory was located here, and later other businesses were located here. LfD / 1998/2002

09297308
 
Apartment building in semi-open development with enclosure and front garden Prellerstraße 44
(map)
1890 (tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

Originally a semi-detached house with number 42, the corner house on Richterstraße was destroyed by the war. The client, Wilhelm Grafs, also had the following semi-detached houses number 46/48 and 50/52 built. The exact year of construction and the architect of number 44 are not known, they may have been built around 1890, roughly at the same time as the neighboring houses mentioned according to plans by the architect Heinrich Rust. The double apartment building, villa-like in the neo-Gothic style: coupled windows with a slender central column under pointed arches on the main floor and tracery openings in the balcony. The entrance with a three-pass skylight, set back behind the corner bay window. The house contained apartments, with two living rooms facing the street, the kitchen and girls' room to the left of the stairwell in the risalit, and the bedrooms facing the garden. The rear wooden veranda was added in 1907. LfD / 1998/2002

09293152
 
Rental villa with enclosure, front garden and paved path Prellerstraße 45
(map)
1893 (rental villa) Plaster clinker facade, terrace, important in terms of building history

June 1893 Request from the architects Weichardt and Eelbo for the construction of a two-family villa for the master mason Friedrich Zehmisch. The floor plan of the two-and-a-half-storey villa is based on the classic scheme: a square with differently shaped templates on all four sides. A wide semicircular bay dominates the street, on the main floor with porphyry pilaster strips in front of sandstone veneer, stone parapet above, on the upper floor formerly with filigree columns and zinc roofing. The rear areas are each uniaxial with large aedicule windows. The winter garden on the southeast side, originally with massive pillars on the ground floor, graceful cast-iron pillars above and a balcony, was rebuilt in 1948 in a massive and simplified manner after being destroyed in the war. The entrance zone on the west side is particularly representative: The entrance has a high round arch that extends to the bel étage, above which the stairwell is illuminated by a wide Palladio window. The interior was originally determined by the central, multi-storey hallway with skylight, from which the representative rooms: living room, dining room (with bay window) and salon opened out to the front. At the rear were the bedrooms, playrooms and children's rooms, while the utility rooms were as usual behind the stairwell and the top floor was reserved for guest rooms, girls' rooms and the caretaker's apartment. The façade, with plastering on the ground floor and light brick facing on the bel étage, received its most striking decoration from the painted fields in the mezzanine. The painting (mythological scenes or ornamentation on the corners) covered the entire building and was painted over when the villa was modernized. LfD / 1998/2002

09293153
 
Double apartment building in open development, front garden and courtyard paving Prellerstrasse 46; 48
(card)
1890 (double tenement house) historicizing clinker brick facade with faced basement, side elevation, of architectural significance

August 1890 Application for the construction of a semi-detached house for Wilhelm Grafs according to plans by Heinrich Rust. Probably in a deliberate contrast to the neo-Gothic neighboring house number 42/44, the sophisticated apartment building appears in strict neo-renaissance forms. Above quarry stone plinths and the ground floor, which is emphasized horizontally by plaster bunging, separated by several cornices, the upper floors are designed as brick cladding façades with evenly structured windows. Two side elevations with representative aedicule windows and a steep pointed gable summarize the elongated facade, the console cornice and the dense row of roof houses give it a lively conclusion. The tenement house contained prestigious apartments: in the corner projections there was the salon, next to it there was a mansion, living room and dining room. Utility rooms and girls' rooms were on the side fronts behind the entrance risalit, and the bedrooms with "exit" to the rear. LfD / 1998/2002

09293154
 
Apartment house in open development with side fencing Prellerstraße 51
(map)
1905 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

April 6, 1905 Application from the Heyne Brothers, master masons and carpenters, for the construction of a residential building. The plans presumably from their own company. The use of differently structured materials: rustic cuboid in the plinth, plaster grooves on the ground floor, wide belt cornice made of pointed sandstone, window frames with grooved plaster, still shows the influence of Art Nouveau. The asymmetrical mass distribution: central bay window with gable, a bay window leading around the corner of the building on the east side (originally with a curved dome) and a bay window-like template on the west side front, which creates a connection to a short side wing, are forms typical of the time. LfD / 1998/2002

09293157
 
Apartment houses in closed development (structural unit with Erfurter Straße 1a), with front gardens Prellerstrasse 53; 55
(card)
1934–1936, marked 1935 (tenement) Plastered facade with sgraffiti, of architectural significance

September 13, 1934 Application by the architects Bock & Paatzsch for the construction of three residential buildings for the open trading company. The Hauptsimshöhe was adjusted to the existing old building number 51, while the building block was set back a total of 4 meters from the street. The final part of the house forms a wing facing Erfurter Straße, here a semicircular porch extending over all floors (originally with a needle-like turret) with floral sgraffito painting sets the only decorative accent. Otherwise the facades are markedly simple. Only the entrance zones are highlighted in color with porphyry cladding, which includes the two adjacent axes of the ground floor, and a narrow clinker frame. The wide, three-part windows also have a narrow clinker frame. The houses each contain two apartments of 90 square meters per floor, smaller two-room apartments in the Erfurter Strasse wing, and were sold in 1936 to the Allianz and Stuttgarter Lebensversicherungsbank. LfD / 1998/2002

09293158
 
Double tenement house (with no. 56) in open development, with fencing and memorial plaque for the Battle of the Nations near Leipzig and factory building in the courtyard Prellerstraße 54
(map)
1892-1894 (half of a double apartment building) Memorial plaque commemorating General Blücher's assault during the Battle of Leipzig in 1813, plastered facade of the front building, see also Prellerstraße 56, of architectural and historical importance

December 12, 1892 Application from Hoffmann, Heffter & Co. (Wein-Import und Export, Klosterstrasse 1) for the construction of a commercial building and a twin villa. Plans: Fritz Drechsler. The "double villa" consists of two differently sized parts of the house: number 56 with only one apartment each and number 54 for two families per floor. The elongated building is heavily structured: at number 54, two deep, gabled side templates, which appear as crossbars, delimit the facade, the central projecting crowned by a pointed gable roof with turrets contains the entrance and stairwell. Wooden balcony parapets between the templates, wooden verandas at the back. Number 56 also has the same wooden balconies between two projections. The entrance is in the wide corner template with a sloping approach, which is supported by a short sturdy column. In addition, "exits" set back like a loggia with wooden parapets. The stairwell is marked by sloping windows on the side. The right template with volute gable and stone balcony with three-pass parapet. As usual, the living room faces the front, the kitchen chamber, bedroom, toilet and separate bathroom face the rear. The construction is one of the infrequent examples of romantic historicism in housing in the 1890s. With neo-Gothic set pieces, such as the keel arch entrance of number 54, crowned with a coat of arms and pinnacle, the tracery on the stone balconies and bay parapets, the stepped volute gables, the shape of the staircase risalit of number 56, reminiscent of medieval fortifications, and not least the material mix of wooden parapets and stone , he offers an emphatically picturesque picture. This romantic-historicist view corresponds to the 54 cannon balls walled in next to the entrance, which, according to the inscription, were found during the construction of the house and were supposed to come from Marshal Blücher's assault on Gohlius on October 16, 1813. Originally, the front garden was closed by an iron fence, three gates in curved Art Nouveau shapes. Completion of construction in March 1894. The four-storey rear building, which occupies the entire width of the courtyard, was originally built in Tudor Gothic shapes, with a crenellated crown, coupled neo-Gothic windows and large ogival openings on the ground floor. The deep porch for the elevator has been carefully designed with a round arched entrance, tracery windows and a blind arch structure under the high roof. After war damage in 1947, rebuilt in a simplified manner. 1934 Acquisition by the Wilhelm Horn company, a brandy and liqueur factory, a wine distillery and winery, which operated it until the 1970s and has operated it again since the 1990s. LfD / 1998/2002

09293159
 
Double apartment building (with No. 54) in open development Prellerstraße 56
(map)
1892-1894 (half of a double apartment building) Plastered facade, see also Prellerstraße 54, inscription plate from 1688, of architectural significance 09293161
 
Apartment house in open development in a corner with a front garden and enclosure in Erfurter Straße
Apartment house in open development in a corner with a front garden and enclosure in Erfurter Straße Prellerstraße 57
(map)
1888 (tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

January 13, 1888 Request from architect Otto Lehmann to build a house for post assistant Adolph Schröer. Plans by Moritz Wilde, architect and master builder. The large corner house turns with the longer front (24.43 m) to the former Albertstrasse (Erfurter Strasse). A flat, three-axis corner projection, highlighted by the plaster banding that extends up to the upper floor, windows with triangular roofs and a richly decorated two-storey bay window at the “broken corner” convey the impression of Prellerstraße. Originally a roof structure with a curved hood above the bay window. The dominant feature is the horizontal stratification of the building: rubble stone plinth, plaster bands, two belt cornices, console cornice (destroyed) and the low mansard roof with the even row of roof houses convey this impression. The massive building has a limited vertical structure by emphasizing the two corner axes on both sides of the street. The two wooden balconies were not added until 1908. LfD / 1998/2002

09293162
 
Apartment building in semi-open development with workshop building in the courtyard Prellerstraße 62
(map)
1897–1898 (tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

November 6, 1897 Application from architect GH Gerstenberger for the construction of a “small commercial building” and a stately residential building for the wax manufacturer Felix Ellrich. The "commercial building" was a two-story building for the production of black wax with a 14 meter high chimney. The originally free-standing front building contained large apartments around a central hall. The entrance in a flat porch on the side front. Corner and triangular bay windows resting on tapering consoles, corner tower, curved gable structure with preserved crowning, lavishly designed roof houses, windows with stepped walls and other details give the building its picturesque character. LfD / 1998/2002

09293164
 
Apartment building in closed development Prellerstraße 64
(map)
1900 (tenement) Originally part of Drachenfels Castle, plastered facade, of architectural significance

A first building application in 1896 for the construction of a semi-detached house and a four-storey courtyard building was not approved. Only a modified plan by the builder Robert Röthig on behalf of the master bricklayer Johann Moch from April 1900 was implemented. From the original nine-axis house, three axes and the half-destroyed entrance axis remained after it was destroyed in the war. (The remaining part rebuilt after 1995). The entrance axis, offset by ashlar, marked the center of the house and was crowned by a curved roof structure. Incidentally, the destroyed part was a mirror image of the existing one: with gothic arched curtain windows and three-pass-like balustrades. LfD / 1998/2002

09293165
 
Villa, with front yard and garden Primavesistraße 1
(map)
around 1930 (villa) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09291133
 
Villa with enclosure and garden Primavesistraße 6
(map)
1926–1927 (villa) Plastered facade, historically and artistically significant, testimony to the individual housing construction of the 1920s in Leipzig

Master builder Emil Hedel - owner of a construction business for civil engineering - led 1926/1927 on behalf of student Dr. Hermann Arno Eichhorn built a residential building according to plans by the building manager RO Koppe, and Karl Mehner came in for the statics. A Neo-Renaissance and Art Déco-oriented single-family house with bay windows, roof houses and terraces covered by Welschen hoods was built on the corner plot of Schlößchenweg. Windows with small muntins and wooden folding shutters are characteristic. The solidity and elegance of the architecture is continued in the delightful garden design: with natural stone stairs, paved paths and selected plants. Floor plans from the time of construction show private living rooms along with a study on the upper floor, including a men's, a women's, and a dining room next to a cloakroom and a hallway with a bay window, parts of the high-quality furnishings have been preserved. The fencing between the plastered brick pillars covered by Rochlitz porphyry tuff slabs over natural stone plinths has changed. A historical and artistic value can be ascertained for the villa. LfD / 2018

09293109
 
Enclosure of a villa plot Primavesistraße 7
(map)
around 1925 (garden fence) Porphyry cuboid with cover, important from an architectural point of view 09296854
 
Villa with enclosure and garden Primavesistraße 8
(map)
1923–1924 (villa) Plastered facade with sandstone integration, of architectural significance 09293110
 
Semi-detached house in open development with fencing, front garden, gate entrances and path paving Primavesistrasse 9; 10
(card)
1923 (number 10), 1923–1924 (number 9), 1923–1924 (gate entrance) Plastered facade, of importance in terms of building history and local development, part of the high-quality Gohlis villa district 09293111
 
Rental villa, with garden and enclosure Primavesistraße 11
(map)
1923 (rental villa) Plastered facade, villa property that is significant in terms of building history and district development history 09293201
 
Apartment building in closed development, with front garden and courtyard building Reginenstrasse 4
(map)
around 1870 (tenement) Front building plastered facade, rear building clinker brick facade, historically important 09293961
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Reginenstrasse 6
(map)
1874 (tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

The building application for a three-story house and a wash house by the bricklayer and entrepreneur Christian Eduard Mähnert was dated May 4, 1874. The apartments could already be moved into at the end of October, with only one planned on each floor with three rooms, one chamber, kitchen and corridor. Toilets were in the stairwell. The establishment of a pig slaughterhouse on the property can be seen in connection with the meat shop on the ground floor. In 1883, the 2.26 meter narrow passage next to the house, the so-called Schlippe, was to be closed and a passage to be set up. A storage building for iron and haberdashery goods was built in the courtyard in 1905 for businessman Emil Kertscher by the Gohlis master masons and carpenters Röthig & Hedel. In 1911, architect Curt Laux provided the same builder with plans for a storey and roof structure, and the construction work was again carried out by Robert Röthig and Emil Hedel. In 1945 a makeshift roof replaced the burned-down roof, before the rebuilding of the gable roof was applied for in May 1949 and the building project was approved in a modified form in 1950. Renovation and loft extensions took place in 2001–2003. The building fits into the closed development structure of the Gohlis expansion in the so-called founding years, shows a brick and quarry stone base, a high house with a round arch and a plastered street front with simple decoration. The translation of the house and the recent expansion of the roof area are clearly legible. Not all parts of the building have been renovated in accordance with listed buildings. Building historical value. LfD / 2014, 2018

09299263
 
Apartment building in closed development and front garden Reginenstrasse 10
(map)
around 1870 (tenement) with house passage, plastered facade, historically important 09299309
 
Apartment building in closed development in a corner with a front garden Reginenstrasse 11
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) with gate passage, formerly with corner shutter, plastered facade, historically important 09293963
 
Apartment building in closed development and front garden Reginenstrasse 12
(map)
around 1870 (tenement) with house passage, plastered facade, historically important 09296994
 
Apartment building in closed development in a corner with a front garden Reginenstrasse 13
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) with gate passage, formerly with corner shutter, plastered facade, historically important 09293964
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Reginenstrasse 15
(map)
around 1885 (tenement) Gate passage, plastered facade, of architectural significance 09293965
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Reginenstrasse 16
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) with shop, plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293966
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Reginenstrasse 18
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) Gate passage, plastered facade, of architectural significance 09296995
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Reginenstrasse 19
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293967
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Reginenstrasse 20
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered facade, historically important 09296996
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Reginenstrasse 21
(map)
around 1885 (tenement) Plastered facade, exquisitely decorated Wilhelminian style building with urban and architectural value 09293968
 
Apartment building in closed development with enclosure and front garden Reginenstrasse 22
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) with gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important 09293969
 
Apartment building in closed development in a corner with a front garden Reginenstrasse 23
(map)
around 1885 (tenement) Formerly with a corner shutter, plastered facade, historically important 09296997
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner with fencing and front garden Reginenstrasse 24
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09293970
 
Double house (with Ehrensteinstraße 29) in open development, with garden and front yard, garage, fence and gate entrance
Double house (with Ehrensteinstraße 29) in open development, with garden and front yard, garage, fence and gate entrance Richterstraße 10
(map)
1924–1926 (half of a twin house) Plastered facade, front door with bronze reliefs, built for businessman Dr. Max Kuhn, co-founder of the Lauterbach & Kuhn music publisher and owner of the “Drei Könige” exhibition center with the associated coffee house, is of importance in terms of both building history and personal history

Richterstrasse 10 and Ehrensteinstrasse 29: In 1924 the architect Wilhelm Halpaap and Dr. Max Kuhn submitted the application to build a semi-detached house. The plans are drawn by Dipl. Ing. J. Nebel, Munich. The two-storey house on an elongated rectangular ground plan turns with its longer facade to Ehrensteinstrasse, the side front and the garden in the typical architectural terrace design of the time face to Richterstrasse. Both parts of the house, each accessible through entrance porches on the narrow sides, contained only one apartment each, accessed by a two-story hallway, and opened onto the garden with a loggia on the upper floor and a terrace, which were separated from the dining room by a glass wall. (As recently as 1956, figurative painting in art deco style was preserved). The entrance door to Richterstrasse has an artistically forged grille and a high-quality figural cast stone relief in art-deco shapes above the lintel. The broken roofs of the windows with pointed gables and the pointed gables of the roof houses are characteristics of this time. A small-scale window rung and folding shutters are design elements that give life to the otherwise deliberately simple, elongated rectangular facade. LfD / 1998/2002

09293010
 
Apartment building in open development, with front garden and paving Richterstraße 12
(map)
1889 (tenement house) Clinker-sandstone facade, important in terms of building history 09293012
 
Double apartment building in a residential complex, with a front garden Richterstrasse 13; 13a
(card)
1938 (double tenement house) see also Ehrensteinstraße 11–23 and Gohliser Straße 22, plastered facade, of architectural significance

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

09293013
 
Rental villa with front yard, garden and garden pavilion and enclosure Richterstrasse 16
(map)
1868, in the core (rental villa) Plastered facade, iron house gate, of architectural significance 09293015
 
Apartment house in open development with enclosure and front garden Richterstrasse 23
(map)
1889 (tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293016
 
Apartment building in half-open development in a corner, with enclosure, front garden and paving Richterstrasse 25
(map)
1901 (tenement) Plastered sandstone facade, important in terms of building history 09293011
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Sasstrasse 1
(map)
1875/1880 (tenement house) Formerly with a corner shutter, plastered facade, historically important 09294000
 
Apartment house in closed development in corner location and front garden Sasstrasse 2
(map)
1887 (tenement house) with corner shutter, plastered facade, of architectural significance 09294001
 
Apartment house in closed development in corner location and front garden Sasstrasse 4
(map)
1886 (tenement house) formerly with a shop, plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294002
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Sasstrasse 7
(map)
around 1920 (tenement) with shop, plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09299418
 
Double apartment house in a semi-open development, as well as gate entrance and green area Sasstrasse 8; 10
(card)
1927, marked 1929 (double tenement house) Plastered facade, belonging to the residential complex Georg-Schumann-Straße 52, 54, 56, 56 a – c, of historical importance

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

09293939
 
Post office building in open development with upstream stairs and stop pillars for the gate entrance
Post office building in open development with upstream stairs and stop pillars for the gate entrance Sasstrasse 12
(map)
1926 (post) Plastered building with Art Deco decor, ceramic work on the door frames and in the interior, of architectural and artistic importance 09293915
 
Apartment house in open development with side fencing Sasstrasse 22
(map)
1904 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293913
 
Residential house in open development Sasstrasse 24
(map)
1882 (residential house) Historicizing plastered facade with a noticeably high ground floor, concise cornice and gable offset by eaves cornice, of architectural significance

The detached house built in 1882 for commercial gardener and horticultural owner Friedrich Wilhelm Lehmann, who paid master bricklayer Robert Schlieder for design and execution, presents itself in late classical style. The building file began as early as 1878 with the reconstruction of an old Thuringian Railway keeper's house as a wash house and work room, which lasted until 1879. A license application for a new residential building in 1899 was rejected. The building on the eaves facing the street with three axes has a plaster facade over a high brick base, sandstone sills and stucco decoration. On the ground floor there were formerly two rooms, chamber, kitchen and forecourt, above two rooms, three chambers and, in the basement, wood and coal cellar, private cellar, utility cellar, assistant room and chamber. The small representative house is accessed via the right, two-axis gable side. Renovation work before 1996. Significance in terms of building history and the history of the development of the district, evidence of the building structure before the boom in the development of apartment buildings and a document of the Gohlis craft history. LfD / 2012

09293914
 
Hand lever pump with well shaft and cover plate Schachtstrasse
(map)
1906 (hand lever pump) Type dolphin, of local history 09294851
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Schachtstrasse 1
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, stucco valley in the entrance area, of importance in terms of building history 09292734
 
Apartment building in closed development and front garden Schachtstrasse 2
(map)
1889–1891 (tenement house), 1891 (front garden) with house passage, plastered facade, mezzanine floor, of importance in terms of building history and site development

Initially, the carpenters Franz Schmidt and Adolph Richter intended to build a house and a back building on the property (the neighboring corner property also belonged to them), but the plans probably made by master bricklayer Wilhelm Germanus in 1889 were never implemented. In 1891 Gustav Franz Friedrich from Gohlis submitted a new request with new drawings, for which the architect W. Dathan should be contacted. The house, designed as a couple, had a passage on the ground floor and was completed in the same year with the assistance of the carpenter Karl Göldner. Immediately after the final examination in September 1891, the application for the front garden and the erection of a picket fence as an enclosure was submitted. As with the neighboring corner house on Hallische Strasse, slate was planned for the roof. The rear building, which was used as a clothes cleaning and dye works for many years, has been rebuilt several times. In the years 1997 to 1998 renovation, loft extensions and balcony extensions were carried out on the front building. The completely plastered historicism facade of the house, which is quite narrow with only six axes, rises above a masonry base that is left exposed. Grooves, a cornice, stucco in the window canopies and a rich structure of the eaves give the building a typical appearance. The building documents the expansion of the Gohlis area and is of architectural value. LfD / 2017, 2018

09296962
 
Apartment building in closed development and courtyard building Schachtstrasse 3
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) Front building with gate passage, clinker brick facade with sandstone structure, wooden panels, historically important 09293676
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Schachtstrasse 5
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) with gate passage, clinker brick facade with sandstone integration, of architectural significance 09293680
 
Apartment building in closed development Schachtstrasse 6
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered facade with sandstone integration, of architectural significance 09293683
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Schachtstrasse 7
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) Gate passage, clinker facade with sandstone structure, mezzanine floor, wooden panels in the gate passage, of architectural significance 09293687
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Schachtstrasse 8
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) historicizing clinker brick facade with mezzanine floor, gate passage, of architectural significance 09293688
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Schachtstrasse 9
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) Gate passage, clinker facade, wooden panels in the gate passage, of architectural significance 09294309
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Schachtstrasse 10
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) Gate passage, plastered facade, of architectural significance 09294310
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Schachtstrasse 11
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) Gate passage, shop, clinker brick facade, wooden panels in the gate passage, historically important 09294311
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Schachtstrasse 12
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) Gate passage, shop, clinker brick facade with sandstone integration, of architectural significance 09294312
 
Apartment building in closed development in a corner with a front garden Schachtstrasse 13
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) formerly with a shop, clinker brick facade, of importance in terms of building history 09294313
 
Apartment building in closed development in a corner with a front garden Schachtstrasse 14
(map)
around 1885 (tenement) Corner store, clinker brick facade, of architectural significance 09296963
 
Apartment building in half-open development in a corner with a front garden Schachtstrasse 16
(map)
1912–1913 (tenement house) Plastered facade, horizontally structured by cornices, valances, the building is one of the few reform style tenement houses in the district and has an architectural historical value

In 1909 the declaration of the execution of two buildings according to a uniform plan was signed - the views of the completed houses at Schachtstrasse 16 and Cöthner Strasse 48 show a different result. The house on Cöthner Strasse was built between 1909 and 1910, but the neighboring house was not applied for until 1912. Architect F. Otto Gerstenberger from Lindenau made the plan drawings for businessman Arthur Scheibe, which received official approval on June 28, 1912. The construction business Paul Göpel was contractually bound for the execution and construction management of the corner building. But it was only the following property owners, master glazier Friedrich Wilhelm Schmidt in Gautzsch and the private man Robert Ernst Emil Kießhauer from Stötteritz who managed the building right up to the shell inspection. The building was built on stable clay soil, but on July 15, 1913 the foreclosure auction of the corner property took place. The owner was master carpenter Emil Richard Müller from Lindenau, who completed the construction at Schachtstrasse 16 in the same year. The Gohlis cigar dealer Friedrich Max Berger is also mentioned. The confirmation sheet on functional area modernization measures dates from August 1986, an application for closures from 1994 and the application for renovation, loft extensions and balcony renewal for 1998. At the end of 1999, the latter project was completed. The three-storey reform style building on the corner plot of land facing Cöthner Straße is simple and withdrawn, with the front garden and enclosure on the two fronts. Design elements are two standing bay windows that can be understood as two-axis risalits, profiled sill cornices that are continuous on all floors and the punched metal blinds (replicas) of the windows on the street sides, the house entrance is at the rear. The building is one of the few reform style tenement houses in the district and has a historical value. LfD / 2019

09294693
 
Enclosure and gate of a property Schillerweg 3
(map)
around 1885 (enclosure) Gate with sandstone pillars, enclosure as an iron fence, of local historical importance 09298019
 
Residential house in open development, with fencing and garden Schillerweg 6
(map)
1830s, later redesigned (residential building) Probably half-timbered plastered, of importance in terms of building history and site development

The two-storey house corresponds to the type that was customarily built in the 1830s: two-storey with profiled cornices, a dwarf house with a triangular gable and semicircular window. Originally only seven axles, in 1874 the addition of an additional axle and the expansion of additional dormers by the businessman Grünhalt is documented. At that time the house contained two unequal sized apartments per floor, the larger one with two rooms to the front, flanked by a single-windowed chamber. The entrance was originally at the rear. Next to the antechamber there was a kitchen and a rectangular chamber, a corridor divided the house lengthways. The toilets were housed in a courtyard building together with the wash house in 1884. The fountain and stable building were also in the courtyard. The front garden with sandstone posts and a simple iron grille. In 1884 the house belonged to a master bookbinder from Leipzig. LfD / 1998/2002

09294234
 
Residential house in open development, garden and enclosure Schillerweg 8
(map)
around 1840 (residential building) presumably half-timbered, of architectural significance

Originally Lindenthaler Strasse 1a. It was not until the AWG apartments were built on Berggartenstrasse in 1962 that the Lindenthaler Strasse (previously Böttcherstrasse), which originally ran through to Schillerweg, was separated, and it still exists today as a narrow "loop" next to the house. The first application for the construction of a country house from the landowner Christian Gottlieb Denhardt dates from 1832 and was rejected by the municipal administration until 1837. The house, which was probably built shortly thereafter, again shows the typical local type from the 1830 / 1840s: a Biedermeier two-storey house with a belt cornice, flat three-axis central projection, dwarf house with triangular gable and ox-eye. It is given a more sophisticated character by the arched windows on the ground floor. It contained one apartment per floor, with three main rooms in front, behind the cross corridor kitchen and chambers. In 1894 the rear staircase was changed by a deep extension. The iron fence probably dates from this time. LfD / 1998/2002

09294235
 
Villa with villa garden and enclosure Schillerweg 14
(map)
1838 (villa), around 1880 (enclosure) Villa set back in the property with partly original furnishings, iron fence with sandstone pillars, garden with remains of the Wilhelminian style and old trees around a central meadow area and a surrounding path, of architectural significance

1837 Concession for Friederike Wilhelmine Streffer to build a house. The two-storey house is set back far from the street, in the middle of the garden plot that reached to Berggartenstraße at the time of construction. The symmetrical axis structure 1-3-1 of the central entrance, the transverse rectangular plastered fields under the sills of the three central axes of the upper floor and the cornice characterize the simple Biedermeier building. In 1870, the extension of a single-storey salon is on record, which indicates its use as a bourgeois country house. The enclosure, iron fence between high sandstone pillars, probably from the end of the 19th century. LfD / 1998/2002

09298021
 
Villa with enclosure, front yard and garden Schillerweg 16
(map)
1858 (villa) Plastered facade, stucco in the entrance area, with a rear extension, of importance in terms of building history

Instead of a street-typical two-storey house with a dwelling built in 1838, the businessman Friedrich Koch had a villa-like house built in 1858 according to plans by the Leipzig architect Oskar Mothes. The two-storey building has a polygonal bay on the street side, which is surmounted in the roof zone by a graceful roof house with acrotery-crowned triangular gable and lateral volutes. Under the strongly protruding flat hipped roof, the jamb is designed as a decorative zone with baroque openings and wooden consoles. A profiled cornice divides the building in the middle, a medallion with an angel figure is inserted on the side front on the upper floor. The back has a deep risalit in which the entrance is covered by a canopy on slender iron pillars and the porches on both sides as a winter garden or bay window with a balcony. After 1879, the Leipzig lawyer Leberecht Scheuffler initiated renovations, which mainly changed the ground floor zone. Instead of the segmental arches designed like those on the upper floor, the windows were given straight ends and plastered sill panels. LfD / 1998/2002

09294236
 
Residential house in open development, with enclosure, front garden and garden Schillerweg 17
(map)
1858 (residential house) Plastered facade, veranda at the back, of architectural significance

In March 1875, the banker Heinrich Pückert applied for the construction of a connecting “colonnade” between his two houses (today numbers 17 and 19). The drawing shows both houses of the typical local type: five or six axles with a dwarf house, central entrance and profiled cornice number 17 has been preserved in this form. It looks more sophisticated than its neighbors due to the profiled window roofing on the ground floor and a mezzanine floor with multi-part windows. An inscription in the gable indicates the year of construction 1858, but both houses can already be found on a Gohlis map from 1842. 1858 should therefore refer to a conversion, perhaps the “translation” through the mezzanine floor, as Pückert carried out in 1865 at his neighboring house number 19. 1884 - the earliest in rural Gohlis - the installation of a “water closet” for the Kaufmann Schroeder, who also had the architect Max Bösenberg remodeled in 1893, in which the living spaces were relocated to the garden side to the south and expanded with a bay window, while the kitchen and pantries were placed on the street side. An entrance porch on the eastern side of the gable led to the stairwell with a curved flight of stairs. Further renovations, such as the addition of a veranda with a balcony at the back and the extension of the attic, were carried out in 1909 by Anton Käppler for the bank director Theodor Walther. LfD / 1998/2002

09294237
 
Villa in semi-open development, with enclosure and villa garden Schillerweg 18
(map)
1922–1923 (villa) Plastered facade, mansard roof, villa named after the Goldberg tobacco merchant family, of architectural significance

The Leipzig architect Gustav Pflaume built a residential building in 1922/1923 on the front part of the large property that originally belonged to the Leipzig bookseller Friedrich Volckmar and which now includes numbers 18, 24 and 28. The villa on a rectangular floor plan with a developed mansard / hipped roof and east-facing main view, the rear adjoins the corner building number 20. The determining element on the main floor are the large, arched windows, which are separated by fluted pilaster strips and in the sills have the typical decorative shapes of the neoclassical buildings around 1910. A bay window with square edges, behind which a loggia opens in the mansard roof, divides the front side. The entrance on the south side led to the large hall, this to the music room on the east side, connected to a closed corner veranda. LfD / 1998/2002

09294238
 
Residential house in open development, with enclosure, front garden and garden Schillerweg 19
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (residential building) plastered half-timbered building, house of the Gustav Wustmann family, of architectural significance

January 1865 Application for the "translation" of his house by banker Heinrich Pückert. This probably meant the mezzanine, which, like the neighboring house number 17, which also belongs to Pückert, was provided with small, three-part windows. Otherwise, the drawing shows a Biedermeier house type such as No. 17 with a flat central projectile, cornice and dwelling and without the wooden cladding, which is probably a result of the renovation by Emil Franz Hänsel, which was carried out in 1911 on behalf of the Leipzig merchant Paul Schmutzler. The roofing windows with brackets, which adorn the central axis of the ground floor as well as the windows on the floor and are adorned with a festoon, are likely to come from the same period. This neoclassical renovation also included folding shutters in contrasting colors on the upper floors. LfD / 1998/2002

09294239
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Schillerweg 20
(map)
around 1875 (tenement) simple plastered facade with belt cornices and underlaid sills, of architectural significance 09299431
 
Villa with garden Schillerweg 23
(map)
19th century (villa) two ceilings inside of particular interest, plastered facade with elongated windows, exit on the 1st floor and shutters, of architectural significance

The house, which emerged from a Biedermeier house after several renovations, has been changed today. The arabesque-style wall painting discovered during the renovation and the wood paneling of the ceiling of the former salon originate from the renovation carried out in 1879 for the Leipzig businessman Adolph Heym. LfD / 1998/2002

09292789
 
Residential house in open development Schillerweg 24
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (residential building) Plastered facade, building belongs to the richer type of Biedermeier-classicist country houses, historically important

October 1864 Application from the master mason Wilhelm Heintze to add a side wing to the house of the bookseller Friedrich Volckmar. The two-storey residential building with its longitudinal front facing what was then Lindenstrasse, with plastered ashlar on the ground floor, cornice and rectilinear window canopies on the main floor, belongs to the richer type of Biedermeier-classicist country houses that the wealthy Leipzig bourgeoisie had built in Gohlis before the middle of the century. The three-storey side wing (changed today) contained a well room on the ground floor as well as a bath room, wash house and chicken coop. LfD / 1998/2002

09297794
 
Enclosure and part of the garden of an original villa plot Schillerweg 25
(map)
around 1895 (garden fence) of importance in terms of local development

Undeveloped property, only the iron fence between the sandstone posts, end of the 19th century. LfD / 1998/2002

09297793
 
Residential house in semi-open development Schillerweg 26
(map)
1860 (residential building) simple plastered facade, gable roof, of architectural significance

July 1860 Application from the master mason HM Kornagel for a three-story new building for Christian Winckler in front of his old house. Two “logis” with three rooms, two chambers, two kitchens and an antechamber each were planned per floor. The rural apartment building was only built on two floors, a cornice at the height of the sill is underlaid with a serrated frieze like the final cornice. LfD 1998/2002

09294240
 
Apartment building in half-open development Schillerweg 27
(map)
1880s (tenement) historicizing clinker brick facade with profiled window frames and decorative reliefs, balconies and console frieze, of architectural significance

At the corner bend to the former Lindenstrasse, with the south gable facing the restaurant garden of the "Kaiser Friedrich" (Menckestrasse 24/26), Louis Witt, clerk at the Leipzig Imperial Court, had a three-storey apartment building built in 1891 by master bricklayer Wilhelm Germanus. The yellow brick façade is enhanced by plaster structures such as rusticated window sashes and arches, female stucco masks, finely divided stucco panels, iron balconies in front of the flat side elevation and, last but not least, the richly carved, completely preserved wooden doors. LfD / 1998/2002

09294241
 
Former outbuilding in a half-open area, now a residential building Schillerweg 28
(map)
around 1880 (outbuilding) Plastered facade, formerly an annex to number 30, of architectural significance 09302422
 
Apartment building in half-open development Schillerweg 29
(map)
1884–1886 (tenement house) richly decorated, historicizing clinker brick facade with crowned dormers that emphasize the sides and three small gable dormers in between, of architectural significance

After the completion of the neighboring building number 27, Louis Witt had an existing house from the middle of the century demolished in 1892 and erected a new apartment building, the north gable of which borders the Schillergarten, which was also newly built in those years. The building, also built by master bricklayer Wilhelm Germanus, boasts an even more splendid plaster decoration in front of the yellow brick facade and replaces the unapproved third floor with an elaborately developed attic. The beautiful front door has also been preserved here. LfD / 1998/2002

09294242
 
Residential house in open development Schillerweg 30
(map)
1860 (tenement house) simple plastered facade, gable roof, of architectural significance

The three-story building already existed on a plan from 1872, when its owner, bookseller Voerster, applied for the addition of a stable and coach house. It was probably built around 1860, probably in connection with the development of this area by the booksellers and publishers family Volckmar / Voerster, to which the building complex number 24, which was also built around this time, belonged. In terms of type: plastered brick building on a field stone base, with a profiled cornice and gable roof, it corresponds to the rural tenement houses of that time in Gohlis, but it had only one apartment per floor with three rooms to the front and a kitchen and chamber to the rear next to the staircase with a spiral staircase. Only in 1912 was a toilet installed in the rear porch. LfD / 1998/2002

09294243
 
Apartment building in open development, with a former restaurant and annex (formerly with synagogue) Schillerweg 31
(map)
1888 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade, establishment of a synagogue in 1922, of architectural significance

As early as 1888, the “restaurateur” Hermann Mehnert had a colonnade built on the western border of the “Schillerlaube” beer garden. (The conscious arbor in the garden of the Schillerhaus was in the neighboring property). After several changes to the plan, the two-storey restaurant building with a yellow brick façade was finally built from 1891 based on drawings by the architect Heinrich Rust, the sloping corner wing of which faces the beer garden and is crowned by a roof extension with a pyramid-shaped end. A plaque shows the name “Restaurant zur Schillerlaube”. The corner entrance led to the restaurant, which took up the entire ground floor, characterized by the large window openings with a semicircular finish. Above each there were two apartments, to which the entrance led on the right side axis. A flat risalit with a pointed roof structure in the street facade forms the design counterweight to the accentuated corner wing. Here a male bust with portrait-like features. Next to the restaurant is a single-storey half-timbered building, probably from the 1890s, built to replace the former colonnade. From 1922 the “Schaare Zedek” synagogue was located at 31 Schillerweg. LfD / 1998/2002

09294244
 
Gate entrance to a villa plot Schillerweg 32
(map)
around 1880 (gate entrance) 09297796
 
Residential house (No. 34) in open development and former leather goods factory (No. 34a) in the courtyard, coach house as well as front garden, fence and garden Schillerweg 34; 34a
(card)
marked 1886 (factory) Residential building historicizing plastered facade, factory clinker brick facade, of architectural and local significance

In 1863 the garden property of Dr. Wienicke on what was then Berggäßchen initially built a small two-storey residential building (on the ground floor bathroom and wash house, above room, chamber, kitchen) and a greenhouse. The drawings come from the master bricklayer Heintze, who in 1870 created the plans for a larger building on a square floor plan and with a flat hipped roof for the new owner Keyser. The ground floor was rounded over a field stone plinth, flat corner projections emphasize the cubature of the building, the upper floor above a cornice is emphasized as a bel étage by clear, antique-like window shapes with roofs. 1920 Changes (increase?) By the leather manufacturer Albert Heine. March 1886 Application from the leather manufacturer Albert Heine for the construction of a house (building inscription next to the door). The elongated building with a brick facade initially contained apartments. The entrance is in a deep porch, originally with a high gable top. The risalit with balcony on the northern front of the building also originally had a shell top, crowned by an obelisk. Glazed ornamental friezes over the basement, in the final cornice and in the window arches give the red brick facade color and liveliness. At about the same time as the house and stylistically adapted to it, the stable and coach house was built, which was changed in 1930 by adding a garage. The residential building was later used as a factory (leather goods and haberdashery wholesale Albert Heine). LfD / 1998/2002

09294245
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Schillerweg 35
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

Until the demolition in 1893, a two-story rural house with a half-hip roof stood at the eaves facing Berggasse. Carl Moritz Schneider, as owner and building contractor, replaced it with the extensive corner building facing Schillerstrasse; its southern gable side bordered on the garden of the Schiller Club. The apartment building facade is designed very sparingly compared to the time it was built: simple roofs on the first floor, triangular roofs and narrow stucco panels in the beveled three-axis corner projections as well as the obligatory plastering joints on the ground floor essentially form the facade structure. The ground floor was used as a bag-making and saddlery, with two apartments on each floor above. LfD / 1998/2002

09297795
 
Residential house in open development Schillerweg 36
(map)
1861 (residential building) Plastered facade, forms a plot of land with drugstore building Menckestrasse 46, historically important

1861 New construction of a two-storey, gable-facing residential house in place of an older farmhouse by master mason A. Schneider. The longitudinal facade facing the courtyard corresponds to the Biedermeier type of construction: six-axis with a belt cornice, the flat central projection surmounted by a dwarf house with a gable triangle and ox-eye. Originally the entrance in the central elevation (later changed), behind it a central corridor and next to the entrance a chamber as well as a two-lined room, field stone plinth. LfD / 1998/2002

09294246
 
Apartment building in half-open development Schlößchenweg 1
(map)
1912 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293108
 
Rental villa with enclosure and front garden Schlößchenweg 3
(map)
1923 (rental villa) Plastered facade, mansard roof, important in terms of building history 09293104
 
Residential house in open development with enclosure and front garden Schlößchenweg 5
(map)
1934 (residential building) Plastered facade with expressionistic decor, curved hipped roof, of architectural significance

The detached, elegant and reserved single-family house was designed by the architect Fritz Riemann for the university professor Dr. Wilhelm Lange. The basis was the local law number 7, the corner property was formerly listed under number 2655 in the land register of old Leipzig. After the subdivision, the new parcel 3766 was registered, in 1935 the changed number 3760. The building application was submitted in February 1934, and the final inspection took place in August. Initially, a living space of almost 163 square meters was assumed, after the change of plan only 148.8. In the basement of the building, with the exception of the foundation slab by master builder Arthur Seifert, a garage, heating and laundry room were installed, and under the roof a girls' room measuring nine square meters. In addition to the living rooms on the two main floors, a library was also planned. Light plaster on the wall surfaces is stretched between a dark building base and a roof covered with dark tiles. The main façade of the smoothly plastered house is structured very cautiously, with a clinker base and a few small areas of exposed clinker masonry next to profiled cornices among the design features. The house entrance is presented to the facade as a risalit, encompassing the entrance through an arch made of natural stone and two small windows on the left and right with grids typical of the construction period. The southern front is generously windowed. In addition to the preserved furnishings, the paving on the property and the fencing are original, and the surrounding garden contributes greatly to the appearance of the building - the urban situation in relation to a small green area is not insignificant. The house documents the architecture of the 1930s in the private sector and is a testimony in the Œvre of the important architect Fritz Riemann. LfD / 2019

09293105
 
Rental villa in half-open development, with enclosure and front garden Schlößchenweg 6
(map)
1923 (rental villa) Double house with Schlößchenweg 8, plastered facade, of architectural significance 09293106
 
Rental villa in half-open development, with enclosure and front garden Schlößchenweg 8
(map)
1923–1924 (rental villa) Double house with Schlößchenweg 6, plastered facade, of architectural significance 09293107
 
Apartment building in open development with front garden Schorlemmerstrasse 1
(map)
1907 (tenement) Decorless plastered facade with natural stone plinth, central risalit, round corner bay window and arched and segmented arched windows on the ground floor as special design elements, of importance in terms of building history 09293464
 
Villa with enclosure Schorlemmerstrasse 2; 2b
(card)
marked 1858, in the core (villa), 1858 (enclosure) Plastered facade (Remise is Friedensstrasse 1/3), sandstone-clad winter garden, marble column and wooden panels in the entrance area, of architectural significance 09293465
 
Double apartment building (with No. 5) in open development with fencing and front garden Schorlemmerstrasse 3
(map)
around 1906 (half of a double apartment building) Plastered facade, raised natural stone plinth and bevels, bay windows and wooden balconies as well as the dwelling as side accentuation, see also Schorlemmerstraße 5, important in terms of building history 09293466
 
Apartment building in open development with front garden Schorlemmerstrasse 4
(map)
1907/1909 (tenement house) Plastered facade, mansard roof, important in terms of building history 09293467
 
Double apartment building (with No. 3) in open development with fencing and front garden Schorlemmerstrasse 5
(map)
1906 (half of a double apartment building) Plastered facade, raised natural stone plinth and bevels, bay windows and wooden balconies as well as the dwarf house as side accentuation, see also Schorlemmerstraße 3, important in terms of building history 09293468
 
Apartment building in open development, with enclosure, garden and front garden Schorlemmerstrasse 6
(map)
1909–1910 (tenement) Plastered facade, mansard roof with a dominant gable dormer and balcony on the first floor, of architectural significance

A magnificent, palais-like design by the architect Emil Franz Hänsel in 1907 was not implemented, instead the new property owner, Dr. med. Gustav Peter Walther Freytag two years later the architect Georg Wünschmann and the builder Alfred Lohse with the construction of a villa. This much lower-level building, completed in 1910, tries to assert itself with the narrow street facade through a compact roof house and a bay-like porch between the higher neighboring buildings, a garage in the basement and a small balcony on the upper floor with baluster parapets and two vases decorated with festoons. At the side, a strong entrance portal accentuates the plain, baroque style plastered facade. On the back veranda and stairs to the designed villa garden with a fountain (garden monument). In addition to the practice rooms, the ground floor included a salon and music room, while the girls' and guest rooms were set up on the mansard floor. Structural fencing, beautiful cellar window grilles and parts of the furnishings (including staircase and open fireplace on the ground floor) have been preserved. The house in 1919 owned by lawyer Justizrat Dr. jur. Berthold Löwenstein, 1939 Retired Government Medical Officer D. Dr. med. Johannes Petzschke from Chemnitz, 1967 mentions surgeon Dr. med. CH Zacharias. 1980 Project to expand the physiotherapy department of Poliklinik Nord, in September 1998 building application for conversion and renovation. LfD / 2008

09293469
 
Apartment building in semi-open development with a front garden Schorlemmerstrasse 7
(map)
1901 (tenement) Plastered facade with veneered plinth, facade livened up by bay windows and balconies, see also Schorlemmerstrasse 9, of architectural significance 09293470
 
Apartment building in open development with front garden Schorlemmerstrasse 8
(map)
1907 (tenement) horizontally structured plastered facade by belt cornices and a dominant dwarf house, of importance in terms of architectural history 09293471
 
Apartment building in semi-open development with a front garden Schorlemmerstrasse 9
(map)
1907 (tenement) Plastered facade with a clad base, facade livened up by bay windows and balconies, see also Schorlemmerstraße 7, historically important 09293472
 
Apartment house in open development with enclosure and front garden Schorlemmerstrasse 10
(map)
1907 (tenement) richly structured plastered facade with cornice, distinctive gables and loggias, of architectural significance 09293473
 
Double apartment building (with Schorlemmerstraße 13) in open development, with fencing and front garden Schorlemmerstrasse 11
(map)
1907 (tenement) Historicizing facade with ashlar plaster, corner bay window, risalite with curved gable, historically important 09293474
 
Double tenement house (with Eisenacher Strasse 7) in an open area in a corner, with a front garden Schorlemmerstrasse 12
(map)
1910 (double apartment building) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293475
 
Double tenement house (with Schorlemmerstrasse 11) in open development, with enclosure and front garden Schorlemmerstrasse 13
(map)
1907 (double apartment building) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293476
 
Villa, with a front garden Stallbaumstrasse 1
(map)
1882–1883 ​​(villa) Plastered facade with plastered structure, of importance in terms of building history 09293115
 
Rental villa with enclosure and front garden Stallbaumstrasse 5
(map)
1904, marked 1905 (rental villa) Plastered facade with plastered structure and ornamentation, bay window, volute gable, of architectural significance 09293116
 
Apartment house in open development in a corner with a front garden Stallbaumstrasse 8
(map)
1895 (tenement) Plastered facade with sandstone integration, of architectural significance 09293117
 
Villa with attached garage and front garden Stallbaumstrasse 9
(map)
1915 (villa) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09296958
 
Enclosure of a villa plot Stallbaumstrasse 10
(map)
around 1895 (garden fence) of local importance 09296957
 
Apartment building in open development, with attached garage, enclosure and front garden Stallbaumstrasse 11
(map)
1914 (tenement) richly decorated plaster facade, hipped roof, historically important 09293118
 
Double apartment building (No. 12/14) in open development with fencing and ancillary building (No. 14a) as well as paving in front of the forecourt and garden Stallbaumstrasse 12; 14; 14a
(card)
1911–1912 (double tenement house), 1911–1912 (enclosure), 1911–1912 (outbuilding) Plaster facade, architectural and personal historical value 09293119
 
Apartment house in a half-open area in a corner, with a front garden Stallbaumstrasse 13
(map)
1913 (tenement) Plastered facade, reform style architecture, important in terms of building history 09293120
 
Double apartment building in open development with enclosure and front garden Stallbaumstrasse 16; 18
(card)
1904 (double tenement house) Plastered facade over clinker-clad ground floor with plastered structure, of importance in terms of building history 09293121
 
Enclosure of a tenement house in a corner Stallbaumstrasse 20
(map)
around 1905 (garden fence) historically important 09296869
 
Double tenement house in a semi-open development with a front garden border Stallbaumstrasse 32; 34
(card)
1927–1929 (double tenement house) Plastered facade with clinker base, two side cores and shutters as traditional design elements, glazed verandas in the rear area, important from an architectural point of view 09293122
 
Double tenement house (with Heinrothstrasse 5) in a corner and in closed development, with a front garden Stallbaumstrasse 36
(map)
around 1904 (double tenement house) 09296870
 
Apartment building in closed development Stockstrasse 2
(map)
1899 (tenement house) with gate passage and shop, clinker brick facade, bay window, historically important 09293407
 
Apartment building in closed development Stockstrasse 3
(map)
1888 (tenement house) Plastered facade with sandstone and clinker brick structure, terrazzo and wooden panels in the entrance area, of architectural significance 09293408
 
Apartment building in closed development Stockstrasse 10
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) with gate passage, clinker brick facade with artificial stone integration, historically important 09297885
 
Apartment building in closed development, with fence, front garden and workshop building in the courtyard Stockstrasse 11
(map)
1885 (tenement house) Front building with gate passage, plastered facade, historically important 09293412
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Stockstrasse 12
(map)
around 1885 (tenement) Formerly with a corner shutter, plastered facade, historically important 09297886
 
Apartment building in closed development (with historical advertising), with enclosure, front garden and workshop building in the courtyard Stockstrasse 13
(map)
1882 (tenement house) Front building with gate passage, plastered facade, historically important 09293414
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Stockstrasse 15
(map)
1880s (tenement) Plastered facade with sandstone integration, of architectural significance 09293415
 
Apartment building in open development with front garden and front garden enclosure wall Stollestrasse 1
(map)
1934 (tenement) Plastered facade, marble and wooden panels in the entrance area, "model house for working people", of architectural significance 09293176
 
Residential house in half-open development and in a corner location, with garden and plastic, front garden and enclosure and millstone Stollestrasse 2
(map)
inscribed 1912 (residential house), 1910 (sandstone sculpture), 1912 (bronze sculpture) historically important 09293177
 
Residential house in closed development, with front garden Stollestrasse 4
(map)
1915 (residential building) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293178
 
Residential house in closed development, with front yard and sculptures (knee end) in the garden Stollestrasse 6
(map)
around 1925 (residential building) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09296867
 
Villa with enclosure and front garden Turmgutstrasse 1
(map)
1925 (villa) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09293103
 
Apartment building in closed development with enclosure and front garden Ulrichstrasse 2
(map)
1871 (tenement house) with house passage, plastered facade, historically important 09293135
 
Apartment building in open development with fence, front garden and portal to the front garden Ulrichstrasse 6
(map)
1904 (tenement) Typical plaster facade of the time, iron balconies, vestibule door, historically important 09293136
 
Villa with enclosure, garden, front yard Weinligstrasse 2
(map)
1924 (villa) Plastered facade with a steep hipped roof and dormers curved on all sides, important in terms of building history 09293125
 
Apartment house in open development with enclosure and front garden Weinligstrasse 3
(map)
1888 (tenement house) Plastered facade over natural stone plinth with sandstone structure in the country house style, of architectural significance 09293126
 
Villa with enclosure and front garden Weinligstrasse 5
(map)
1885 (villa) Plastered facade with clinker base and sandstone structure, of importance in terms of architectural history 09293127
 
Villa with enclosure and front garden Weinligstrasse 7
(map)
1883 (villa) Plastered facade, terrace, important in terms of building history 09293128
 
Apartment building in open development with front yard and enclosure Weinligstrasse 9
(map)
1909 (tenement) Plastered facade with rustic plinth and mansard roof, of architectural significance 09293129
 
Apartment building in open development in a corner with an enclosure and front garden Weinligstrasse 11
(map)
around 1910 (tenement) Plastered facade with sandstone integration, of architectural significance 09293130
 
Double apartment building (with No. 15) in open development, with fencing Weinligstrasse 13
(map)
1906 (half of a double apartment building) historicizing plastered facade with side elevations and volute gables, characteristic building of its time, of architectural significance 09293131
 
Apartment building in open development in a corner with an enclosure and front garden Weinligstrasse 14
(map)
1898–1899 (tenement house) historicizing clinker brick facade with plastered ground floor, building typical of the time, of architectural significance

“In consideration of the low altitude” of the area, only open construction was permitted in the 1895 building guidelines; the apartment building on the corner of Marbachstrasse was built between 1898 and 1899 for the merchant and beer merchant Friedrich Carl Canitz. A househusband apartment on the top floor could only be furnished by W. Germanus in 1900 after discussions with the building authorities. The entrance to the house, initially conceived on the courtyard side, was, according to Tektur, from the main viewing side, on what was then Wettinerstraße. Master builder Dathan took over the execution of veranda and balcony extensions on the gable front of Marbachstrasse in 1910/1911; the client was Marie Sophie Auguste verw. Canitz born Röbel. A balcony renovation was approved at the end of June 1989, the building application for renovation, floor plan changes and roof extensions in autumn 2003. The central and two side projections are only slightly in front of the facade, the corner is broken. Three of the four storeys have red clinker cladding, the ground floor has grooved plastering, and the roof facing Weinligstrasse has bothersome dormers. The new balcony system lacks any reference to the historical model from 1909. In addition to the representative front door, a lot of the original substance could also be preserved inside. The front garden is not inconsiderable for the effect of the corner house. Across from the front on Marbachstrasse, there was no development and a park was created. It is about half a meter below street level, illustrating the difficult, because damp, building site. LfD / 2017, 2018

09293132
 
Double tenement house (with no. 13) in open development, with fencing Weinligstrasse 15
(map)
1907 (double apartment building) historicizing plastered facade with side elevations and volute gables, characteristic building of its time, of architectural significance 09293133
 
Villa with garden gate and front garden Weinligstrasse 21
(map)
1922–1923 (villa) Plastered facade, with wrought iron garden gate, private apartment building from the 1920s with architectural value

The property was undeveloped for an unusually long time, possibly also due to the damp building site. The application for the single-family home was submitted three days before the turn of the year 1922/1923, and at the beginning of August 1923 the application for the final examination. Merchant Kurt Tuch signed contracts with the architects Carl William Zweck and Hans Voigt for planning documents and the construction company Julius Kornagel for the practical implementation. The building and civil engineering company Wilhelm Klotzsch is named separately for the Berra hollow stone ceilings used. Expansion of the attic and renovation work will take place in the period 2004/2005. War damage was discussed in 1948 and later removed. In 1934, businessman Julius Leidhold took over the house and grounds. The antique-looking house entrance with fluted pillars made of cast concrete, the strong toothed cornice under the eaves, the distinctive folding shutters of the upper floor windows are striking. The larger cellar windows indicate more intensive use as a utility and coal cellar, garage, laundry room and drinking hall. The corner house at Marbachstrasse 8 from the years of construction 1898–1900 is already frighteningly close, but the seven-story investment property Möckernsche Strasse 5 is a disaster in terms of urban planning. In terms of architectural history, it was of significance as a private residential building in the 1920s. LfD / 2018

09293134
 
Apartment house in open development in a corner, with a front garden Wiederitzscher Strasse 3
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, vestibule door, historically important 09294247
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner, with a front garden Wiederitzscher Strasse 4
(map)
1895/1900 (tenement) with shop, clinker brick facade, stucco structure in the entrance area, important from an architectural point of view 09294248
 
Double apartment building (No. 5/7) in open development, with a front garden and ancillary building (No. 5a) in the courtyard Wiederitzscher Strasse 5; 5a; 7
(card)
1899–1900 (number 7), 1902–1903 (number 5), 1899–1900 (number 7a today), 1902–1903 (number 5a today) Twin house with clinker brick facade, of architectural significance 09294249
 
Apartment building in closed development Wiederitzscher Strasse 6
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, wooden panels and stucco in the entrance area, important in terms of building history 09294250
 
Apartment building in closed development Wiederitzscher Strasse 8
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) with gate passage and shop, clinker brick facade, stucco ceiling and ceiling painting in the gate passage, shop front original, historically significant 09294252
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Wiederitzscher Strasse 12
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) with corner shutter, plastered facade, of architectural significance 09294253
 
Apartment building in closed development with a front garden Wiederitzscher Strasse 13
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09296930
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Wiederitzscher Strasse 14
(map)
1890s (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09294255
 
Apartment building in closed development with a front garden Wiederitzscher Strasse 15
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, stucco structure in the entrance area, important in terms of building history 09294256
 
Apartment building in closed development with a front garden Wiederitzscher Strasse 16
(map)
1895 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09294257
 
Apartment building in closed development with a front garden Wiederitzscher Strasse 17
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) Clinker brick facade with plastering on the ground floor, important from an architectural point of view 09297774
 
Apartment building in closed development with a front garden
Apartment building in closed development with a front garden Wiederitzscher Strasse 18
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, stucco in the entrance area, of architectural significance 09296929
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Wiederitzscher Strasse 19
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) with shops, clinker brick facade, important in terms of building history 09294258
 
Apartment building in closed development with a front garden Wiederitzscher Strasse 20
(map)
1890s (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09294259
 
Apartment building in half-open development Wiederitzscher Strasse 21
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, stucco and wooden panels in the entrance area, important in terms of building history 09294260
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Wiederitzscher Strasse 22
(map)
1900/1905 (tenement house) with shops, clinker brick facade, important in terms of building history 09296927
 
Apartment building in closed development Wiederitzscher Strasse 23
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Clinker brick facade with extraordinary Art Nouveau ornamentation, of importance in terms of building history 09294261
 
Apartment building in half-open development Wiederitzscher Strasse 24
(map)
1895/1900 (tenement) with shop, clinker brick facade, of importance in terms of building history 09294262
 
Apartment building in half-open development Wiederitzscher Strasse 25
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09296892
 
Apartment building in closed development Wiederitzscher Strasse 26
(map)
1895/1900 (tenement) with shop, plastered facade, very beautiful shop front, significant in terms of building history 09294263
 
Apartment building in closed development Wiederitzscher Strasse 28
(map)
1895/1900 (tenement) with shop, plastered facade, vestibule door, historically important 09294264
 
Double tenement house in closed development Wiederitzscher Strasse 29; 31
(card)
1926/1929 (double tenement house) Plastered facade with raised clinker plinth, sill cornice, of architectural significance 09294265
 
Apartment building in half-open development Wiederitzscher Strasse 30
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09296891
 
Apartment building in half-open development in a corner, with front garden and enclosure Wiederitzscher Strasse 32
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Corner shutter, plastered facade, of importance in terms of building history 09296890
 
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 Winkelstrasse 1
(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
 
Residential house in semi-open development with a front garden Wolfener Strasse 15
(map)
1864 (residential building) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293402
 
Apartment building in half-open development Wolfener Strasse 17
(map)
1899 (tenement house) with shop, plastered facade, original shop front, significant in terms of building history 09293403
 
Apartment building in closed development Wolfener Strasse 19
(map)
1912 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293404
 
Apartment building in open development in a corner with an enclosure and front garden Wolfener Strasse 20
(map)
1908 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09293405
 
Apartment building in closed development, with shop Wolfener Strasse 21
(map)
1910/1915 (tenement house) Plastered facade, original shop with shop window, significant building history 09294211
 

Former cultural monuments

image designation location Dating description ID
Sandstone portal Berggartenstrasse 1
(map)
1909–1911 (portal) Sandstone portal of an apartment building in open development 09298018
 
Double tenement house Ehrensteinstrasse 41; 43
(map)
1926–1927 (double tenement house) Double apartment building in semi-open development (plastered facade; lead-glazed staircase windows) 09298010
 
Tenement house Eisenacher Strasse 37
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Apartment building in closed development (plastered clinker facade) 09290824
 
Tenement house Georg-Schumann-Strasse 53
(map)
around 1885 (tenement) Apartment building in a formerly closed development with shops (plastered facade) 09298022
 
Tenement house
Tenement house Georg-Schumann-Strasse 119
(map)
around 1875 (tenement) Apartment building in closed development with passage and shops as well as advertising leaflet "Pelze" (plastered facade; 9 winter windows; renovation of the gate passage 1890) 09292732
 
Tenement house Lützowstrasse 5b
(map)
around 1885 (tenement) Apartment building in half-open development on the corner of Eisenacher Straße (clinker brick facade; all windows are original) 09295827
 
Residential building Menckestrasse 2
(map)
around 1850 (residential building) Residential house and former stable building of a farm in open development (plastered half-timbered building) as well as an eaves-standing residential building with a dwelling; The first Gohlis pharmacy was located here between 1865 and 1873 09293434
 
Residential building Möckernsche Strasse 38
(map)
1865/1870 (tenement house) Residential house in open development (plastered facade) 09293988
 
Pavement Natonekstrasse
(map)
around 1886 (pavement) historic pavement between Cöthner and Magdeburger Strasse 09299618
 
Residential building
Residential building Poetenweg 30
(map)
1925 (residential building) Residential house in open development (plastered facade and original shutters) and fencing as well as a striking factory building around the corner 09293431
 
Tenement house Reginenstrasse 9
(map)
around 1880 (tenement) Apartment building in closed development with passage and front garden (plastered facade; wooden panels in the entrance area; mural on the ground floor) 09293962
 

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