List of cultural monuments in Großschirma

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The list of cultural monuments in Großschirma contains the cultural monuments in Großschirma .

This list is a partial list of the list of cultural monuments in Saxony .

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 .

Large company

image designation location Dating description ID
Individual features of the aggregate Grube Churprinz Friedrich August Erbstolln: Münzbachrösche including two mouth holes (see aggregate 09305135, Am Pappenwerk 1) (Map) 1833 Part of the upper water supply of the Churprinz pit, of significance in terms of mining history.

Rösche channeled the water from the Oberen Kunstgraben, which branched off from the Münzbach in the Münzbachtal below the Fürstenhof and then followed the Mulde on the left Muldental slope in a north-easterly direction, under the ridge into the Waltersbachtal to the Oberen Churprinzer Kunstgraben (see object 08991702) 19th century (connection by means of a wooden channel over the Waltersbach) to improve the impact water supply of the Churprinz pit, completion of the Münzbachrösche in 1833, mouth hole on the Muldental slope, elliptically bricked, with large sandstones and keystone, bricked up, mouth hole in Waltersbachtal also elliptically bricked, Uncovered and renovated in 1980 by VEB Bergsicherung Schneeberg.

08991705
 


House and archway Am Hang 12
(map)
around 1800 typical of the landscape with half-timbering on the upper floor, of architectural significance.

Ground floor solid, smoothed, one eaves and one gable side double-bar framework with diagonal struts, gable roof, archway newly plastered with transom and keystone

08991684
 


Individual features of the aggregate mine canal: mine canal with rose including mouth hole (see aggregate 09305134, Am Pappenwerk 1) Am Pappenwerk 1
(map)
1788-1789 Artificial trench for bringing impact water for the Churprinz Friedrich August Erbstolln pit at Großschirma and for transporting ore from the pit to the Halsbrückner Hütte by means of grained barges, Churprinzer and Christbescherunger mine canals including their florets, a preserved lock system and the remains of two barge lifting houses, important evidence of hydraulic engineering - and efficiency of the Saxon ore mining, landscape-shaping technical monuments of special importance in the history of mining and of national standing.

Section of the canal on the left of the Freiberg Mulde from the Anna laundry weir to the mouth of the canal rösche of the Churprinz pit: Section of the mine canal beginning above the Anna laundry weir (object 08991638), running on the left bank of the Mulden and parallel to the Mulde, below the weir a bricked tee off into the Mulde (inlet and Reduction refurbished after flooding in 2002), channel profile partially secured with dry stone masonry, right (towards the Mulde) earth dam (formerly with towpath), south of Rothenfurth as a building with embankment wall made of quarry stone masonry in the area of ​​the hollow impact slope, there also short rose (second mouth hole in the valley of the Kleinwaltersdorfer Baches still original, round arched opening made of quarry stone), the surface canal continues through the Großschirma locality and ends at the mouth of the canal rösche of the Churprinz Friedrich August Erbstolln pit, Churprinz for short (later cardboard, cf.object 09305135) ending (from here gone until the un day-long wheel room in the Mittelschlächtigen Kunstschacht, where an artificial wheel was activated ), in the Rösche the ore barges could be filled with ore from the mine processing plants via ore rolls and then grained towards the neck bridge.

Historical classification: the Churprinzer mine canal formed the so-called Lower Churprinzer water supply for the Churprinz pit, built in 1788–1789 by Johann Friedrich Mende (1743–1798, Saxon art master and later machine director), branching off from the Mulde above the Altväter Bridge and on the right or left running along the valley slope to the Churprinz mine and there supplying the artificial wheels with impact water, the width of the canal not only enabled the impact water supply, but also the transport of ores with the help of grained ore barges in the opposite direction of flow to the Halsbrückner hut, to which a further, upper section of the canal led on the left Muldentalhang from the Rothenfurther barge lift house to the ore house of the iron and steel works in Halsbrücke, lower section of the Churprinzer Bergwerkskanals between Annaer laundry weir and pit Churprinz 1822–1823 by Christian Friedrich Brendel (1776–1861, Saxon machine director) at a higher level created (thus increasing the height of fall that can be used at Churprinz to act on water power machines), the canal ended in a drivable Rösche (Kanalrösche) to the artificial wheel in the Mittelschlächtigen artificial shaft, where the ore barges could load ore from the mine’s own processing plants at a loading station using ore rolls and then on the left bank of the Mulden canal, the ore barges (load approx. 2.5 t) had to cover a distance of approx. 5.3 km (three man crew - two towers, one helmsman), travel time approx. three hours, the ore barge operation was stopped 1868, subsequently only impact water supply, 1790–1792 extension of the mine canal to the Christbescherung Erbstolln pit further down the trough as a Christbescherunger mine canal (projected by the mine separator Johann Friedrich Freileben), also here for the purpose of transporting ore to the Halsbrückner hut, for this use / widening of a ready its existing artificial moat, thus extending the entire route by approx. 3 km, the ore barge operation on this section is only occupied until 1808, a further extension of the mine canal down to the pit of the old hope of God was never completed.

09305136
 


Individual monuments of the aggregate Grube Churprinz Friedrich August Erbstolln: colliery pond with pond dam, Striegelhaus and mouth hole, Oberer Churprinzer Kunstgraben including surcharge to the wheel room of the writer shaft, writer shaft with wheel room and pile, boiler, machine and driving house of the Constantin shaft, middle butcher shaft including artificial wheel, sewer tube of the mine canal to the wheel room of the Mittelschlächtigen Kunstschacht including two mouth holes, washer-dryer including mouth hole, powder tower on a small heap, all retaining and enclosure walls as well as the heap of the Wittigschachts, the heap of the Jehmlichschachts, the mouthhole of the Vulkanus Stolln, the mouthhole of the Vulkanus Stolln Stolln and the mouth hole of the Schwarzer Mittag Stolln (see subject group 09305135, same address) Am Pappenwerk 1
(map)
18./19. Century Evidence of the mine "Churprinz Friedrich August Erbstolln", shortened to "Churprinz", owned by the state from 1707 until its closure in 1900, not only in terms of output, but also in terms of the size of the company and structural and mechanical equipment, one of the most important mines in the Freiberg Reviers, extensively preserved ensemble of mining facilities of particular importance in terms of mining history and technology history, individual components also singular, ensemble also having an impact on the locality and landscape.

In 1707, August the Strong acquired a small private labor mine located at Großschirma, named after his son Friedrich August, mining operation until closure in 1900 or again in 1968 by the state, temporarily one of the most efficient and modern mines in the Freiberg district, shafts: Schreiberschacht (main shaft), Constantinschacht, two artificial shafts, Ferdinandschacht (cf.object 08991642), numerous water wheels for ore extraction (water pegs) and for water lifting (artificial tools), a horse peg for ore extraction, a sponge jug turbine for water retention, later steam pumping and water retention machines as well as associated conveying and water lifting technology in the Main and art shafts used, in the first third of the 19th century employment of approx. 650 miners,

  • Opencast building:
    • Boiler, machine and driving house of the Constantin Shaft: several buildings placed next to each other, e.g. Some with arched windows, saddle roof, different functions readable, shaft sunk 1868–1873 near the hut house (named after the Saxon chief miner Friedrich Constantin Freiherr von Beust, 1806–1891), 1873 installation of an 80 HP water retention steam engine, shaft remained without Great importance for the mine, also after 1945 mainly used for dewatering
    • Unterer Wächter: also called “chapel”, built around 1825 in neo-Gothic forms on the middle-section artificial shaft, on a hillside, high gneiss base, upper floor boarded with wooden construction, neo-Gothic windows, gable roof, beaver tail covering, two turrets with an open bell cage and tent roof
    • "Guardian": a small building above an artificial shaft with an artificial bell (a bell coupled with the artificial device used to raise the water, which made the regular movement of the artificial device audible over the days), the only preserved building of this type in the Freiberg district (originally there was also an artificial shaft on the Oberschlächtigen artificial shaft (more plainly designed) watchman, which was demolished in 1954), the building exemplarily documents the efforts that the Churprinz pit had to undertake solely for the purpose of lifting water from the mine, the importance of the watchman for trouble-free mine operation is also evident in the elaborate design of the building
    • Powder Tower: Round-arched entrance with a keystone and the inscription “Powder Tower”, profiled eaves, conical helmet roof, beaver tail covering, today used as a family crypt, due to the danger of explosion, apart from the other opencast buildings, slightly elevated on a small dump, evidence of mining shooting for driving and ore mining underground
    • Retaining and fencing walls: Various retaining and fencing walls made of natural stone, e.g. Some of the pit's own stamping mills and ores for processing the ores extracted here were located to the east below the hut house.Today, the cardboard factory (not a monument), which was built after the mining operations ceased in 1913, is located on its site, following the water supply system for the Churprinz pit at least in parts continued to be used.
  • Pit buildings (art and driving shafts, wheel rooms and roses):
    • Writer shaft: main shaft of the pit, sunk in the 18th century, ore extraction initially using a hand reel, from 1785 with horse peg, 1795 with water peg (associated wheel room approx. 11 m - 21 m deep, approx. 12 × 12 × 2 m, exemplary pit walling ) and from 1864 with a 30 HP steam conveyor system, 1955–1968 still used as a conveyor shaft by the mining and smelting combine "Albert Funk", on the large heap even younger opencast buildings (no monuments).
    • Mittelschlächtiger Kunstschacht: inside the wheel room with an iron artificial wheel from 1852 (Mittelschlächtige water wheel, approx. 10 m below the Unteren Wächter, accessible), was acted upon by the canal rose (see below for the Churprinzer Bergwerkskanal) and another rose from the Oberschlächtiger Kunstschacht (which the impact water again via the Upper Churprinzer Kunstgraben and received several florets from the colliery pond), operated pump sets to raise the pit water, the water solution was via a floret for washing ore
    • Laundromat: elliptically lined fume cupboard of the Mittelschlächtigen artificial shaft, ending above the non-preserved ore wash of the pit (here providing water to operate the sweeping hearth), with a mouth hole
  • Hydraulic engineering systems: Components of an extensive, highly complex, but in comparison to the Freiberg district waterway facility, quite local system of mining water management from the 18th and 19th centuries, which was used solely to provide impact water for the Churprinz pit (to operate the water gaps for the Ore mining, the artificial wheels for dewatering and the water wheels for driving the processing plants in the stamping mills and ore washes)
    • Upper Churprinzer water supply: Colliery pond: created in 1749 in the Waltersbachtal, dammed up the water from the Waltersbach and a side valley, 1801–1826 increase of the pond dam to increase the storage volume, pond dam with harrow house and mouth hole of the vent hole, keystone of the mouth hole marked “CPFA 1801 / 1826 ”, including mallets and irons
    • Upper Churprinzer Kunstgraben: starting at the Zechenteich, continued on the western valley slope to Großschirma, crossing the Dorfbach there, ending at the Schreiberschacht, where it impacts the Wassergöpel
    • Lower Churprinzer water supply: Churprinzer Bergwerkskanal: Canal rösche with two mouth holes, one of which is a rose mouth hole and a mouth hole as access to the ore barge loading station in the Rösche, wide, partly elliptically lined service gully to the wheel room in the Mittelschlächtigen art shaft, for the mine canal see also the related property (09305134 or 09305137), this was created 1788–1789 by Johann Friedrich Mende (1743–1798, Saxon art master and later machine director), branching off from the Mulde above the Altväter Bridge and running on the right or left side of the valley slope to the Churprinz pit, width of Canal not only enables the impact water supply, but also the transport of ores with the help of grained ore barges opposite the direction of flow to the Halsbrückner Hütte, 1790–1972 extension of the mine canal to the Christbescherung pit located downstream (Christbescherunger Bergwerkskanal, see object 08991671), also for the purpose of transporting ore to the Halsbrückner Hütte, the Churprinzer Bergwerkskanal was rebuilt at a higher level in 1822–1823 by Christian Friedrich Brendel (1776–1861, Saxon machine director) (thus increasing the height of fall that can be used at Churprinz to act on water power machines), the canal ended in a drivable rose (canal rose) to the Kunstrad in the medium-sized artificial shaft, there the ore barges could be loaded with ore from the mine’s own processing plants at a loading station over ore rolls and then treaded up the canal on the left bank of the Mulden, at the Anna laundry weir (cf. Object 08991638) Crossing the Mulde, the following canal section on the right side of the Mulde, above the Altväterbrücke then crossing the Mulde again. Lifting the ore barge from the Mulde into the last section of the canal to the hut by means of a barge lift house - Object 08985801 - on the left Mulden slope, from there on to the Erzhaus of the iron and steel works (distance to be covered approx. 5.3 km, travel time approx. three hours, 1868 cessation of ore barge operation), both mine canals including their roses, a preserved lock system and the remains of two boat lift houses, important evidence of the hydraulic engineering innovation and efficiency of the Saxon ore mining, technical monuments of national importance
  • Other heaps and mouth holes in the area:
    • Wittigschacht heap (Flst. 1021 and 1017)
    • Dump of the Jehmlichschacht (Flst. 898/2)
    • Oral hole of the Vulkanus Stolln (Flst. 1296 and 1366)
    • Anna Stolln's mouth hole (Flst. 90, Gem. Rothenfurth)
    • Oral hole of the Schwarzer Mittag Stolln (Flst. 1159 and 1164)
08991702
 


The aggregate component of the aggregate mine canal, consisting of the Churprinzer and Christbescherunger mine canals including all roses, mouth holes, tees, a lock system, two boat lift houses and a weir in the communities of Halsbrücke and Großschirma (see aggregate 09305137) with the following individual monuments in the municipality of Großschirma: locks and weir with the associated bank reinforcement (see individual monument 08991638), mine canal with Rösche including mouth hole (see individual monument 09305136), individual monuments of the material aggregate mine canal: mine canal including Rösche and canal bridge (see individual monument 09306315), mine canal including Rösche, see individual monument 0930671 Am Pappenwerk 1
(map)
1788-1789 Artificial trench system for the supply of impact water for the pits Churprinz Friedrich August Erbstolln at Großschirma and Christbescherung Erbstolln near Großvoigtsberg as well as for the transport of ores from both pits to the Halsbrückner Hütte by means of grained barges, mine canals including their florets, a preserved lock system and the remains of two barge hoists Hydraulic innovation and performance of the Saxon ore mining, landscape-shaping technical monuments of particular importance in the history of mining and of national standing 09305134
 


Material aggregate Grube Churprinz Friedrich August Erbstolln, consisting of mine and opencast buildings, hydraulic engineering systems as well as heaps with the following individual monuments: Huthaus , Bergschmiede and ancillary buildings (see individual monument 08991701, Am Pappenwerk 3), civil servants residence (see individual monument 08991700, Am Pappenwerk 2), colliery pond Teichdamm, Striegelhaus and Mundloch, Oberer Churprinzer Kunstgraben including an opening channel to the Radstube of the Schreiberschachtes, Schreiberschacht with Radstube and Halde, boiler, machine and driving houses of the Constantinschacht, Unterer Wächter, Mittelschlächtiger Artschacht with Radstube including Artistic Wheel, sewerage to the Mittelschlachtigen Kunstschacht including two mouth holes, washenia including mouth hole, powder tower on a small heap, all retaining and fencing walls as well as the heap of Wittigschachts, the heap of Jehmlichschachts, the mouthhole of Vulkanus Stolln, the mouthhole of the Anna Stolln and the mouth hole of the Schwarzer Mittag Stolln (see individual monument 08991702, Am Pappenwerk 1), Münzbachrösche including two mouth holes (see individual monument 08991705) Am Pappenwerk 1
(map)
18./19. Century Evidence of the mine "Churprinz Friedrich August Erbstolln", shortened to "Churprinz", owned by the state from 1707 until its closure in 1900, not only in terms of output, but also in terms of the size of the company and structural and mechanical equipment, one of the most important mines in the Freiberg Reviers, extensively preserved ensemble of mining facilities of particular importance in terms of mining history and technology history, individual components also singular, ensemble also having an impact on the locality and landscape

In 1707, August the Strong acquired a small private labor mine located at Großschirma, named after his son Friedrich August, mining operation until closure in 1900 or again in 1968 by the state, temporarily one of the most efficient and modern mines in the Freiberg district, shafts: Schreiberschacht (main shaft), Constantinschacht, two artificial shafts, Ferdinandschacht (cf.object 08991642), numerous water wheels for ore extraction (water pegs) and for water lifting (artificial tools), a horse peg for ore extraction, a sponge jug turbine for water retention, later steam pumping and water retention machines as well as associated conveying and water lifting technology in the Main and art shafts used, in the first third of the 19th century employment of approx. 650 miners, associated individual monuments are:

  • Opencast building:
    • Boiler, machine and driving house of the Constantin shaft: see object 08991702, several structures placed next to one another, e.g. Some with arched windows, saddle roof, different functions readable, shaft sunk 1868–1873 near the hut house (named after the Saxon chief miner Friedrich Constantin Freiherr von Beust, 1806–1891), 1873 installation of an 80 HP water retention steam engine, shaft remained without Great importance for the mine, also after 1945 mainly used for drainage, hut house, mining forge and outbuildings (formerly a room house): see object 08991701
    • Official residence (upper stamp mill): see object 08991700, upper of what was once three stamp mills in the pit, reused as the mine manager's residence.
    • Lower guard: also called “chapel”, see object 08991702, built around 1825 in neo-Gothic forms on the Mittelschlächtigen artificial shaft, on a hillside, high base storey made of gneiss, wooden structure boarded upstairs, neo-Gothic windows, gable roof, beaver tail covering, two roof turrets with open bell cage and tent roof ,
    • "Guardian": a small building above an artificial shaft with an artificial bell (a bell coupled with the artificial device used to raise the water, which made the regular movement of the artificial device audible over the days), the only preserved building of this type in the Freiberg district (originally there was also an artificial shaft on the Oberschlächtigen artificial shaft (more plainly designed) watchman, which was demolished in 1954), the building exemplarily documents the efforts that the Churprinz pit had to undertake solely for the purpose of lifting water from the mine, the importance of the watchman for trouble-free mine operation is also evident in the elaborate design of the building
    • Powder tower: see object 08991702, round building with arched entrance, this one with keystone and inscription "Powder tower", profiled eaves, conical helmet roof, beaver tail cover, today used as a family crypt, due to the danger of explosion away from the other opencast buildings, slightly elevated on a small heap, testimony to that mining shooting for tunneling and ore mining underground
    • Retaining and enclosure walls: see object 08991702, on the entire area various retaining and enclosure walls made of natural stone, e.g. Some of the pit's own stamping mills and ores for processing the ores extracted here were located to the east below the hut house.Today, the cardboard factory (not a monument), which was built after the mining operations ceased in 1913, is located on its site, following the water supply system for the Churprinz pit at least in parts continued to be used
  • Pit buildings (art and driving shafts, wheel rooms and roses):
    • Writer shaft: see object 08991702, main shaft of the mine, sunk in the 18th century, ore extraction initially by means of a hand reel, from 1785 with horse peg, 1795 with water peg (associated wheel room at approx. 11 m – 21 m depth, approx. 12 x 12 x 2 m , exemplary pit walling) and from 1864 with 30 HP steam conveyor system, 1955–1968 still used as a conveyor shaft by the mining and smelting combine "Albert Funk", on the large dump even younger opencast buildings (no monuments)
    • Mittelschlächtiger Kunstschacht: inside the wheel room with an iron artificial wheel from 1852 (Mittelschlächtiges water wheel, approx. 10 m below the Unteren Wächter, accessible), see object 08991702, was acted upon via the canal rose (see below at the Churprinzer Bergwerkskanal) and another rose from the Oberschlächtiger artificial shaft (which in turn received the impact water from the Upper Churprinzer Kunstgraben and several florets from the colliery pond), operated pump sets to raise the pit water, the water solution was via a floret for washing ore
    • Laundromat: see object 08991702, elliptically lined fume cupboard of the Mittelschlächtigen artificial shaft, ending above the un-preserved ore wash of the pit (here providing water to operate the sweepings), with mouth hole
  • Hydraulic engineering systems: Components of an extensive, highly complex, but in comparison to the Freiberg district waterway facility, quite local system of mining water management from the 18th and 19th centuries, which was used solely to provide impact water for the Churprinz pit (to operate the water gaps for the Ore mining, artificial wheels for dewatering and water wheels to drive the processing plants in the stamping mills and ore washes),
    • Upper Churprinzer water supply:
      • Colliery pond: see object 08991702, created in 1749 in Waltersbachtal, dammed the water from the Waltersbach and from a side valley, 1801–1826 increase of the pond dam to increase the storage volume, pond dam with harrow house and mouth hole of the vent hole, keystone of the mouth hole marked "CPFA 1801 / 1826 ”, including mallets and irons
      • Oberer Churprinzer Kunstgraben: see object 08991702, starting at the Zechenteich, continued on the western valley slope to Großschirma, crossing the Dorfbach there, once ended at the Schreiberschacht, there impacting the Wassergöpel,
      • Münzbachrösche of the Oberen Kunstgraben: see object 08991705, introduction of additional impact water from the Münzbachtal (19th century), confluence with the Upper Churprinzer Kunstgraben, 1844/45 withdrawal of Münzbachwasser near Langenrinne south of Freiberg to supply the Himmelfahrt mine, from 1846 return / Reintroduction of the Münzbach water into the water supply of the Churprinz mine: the water is drained from the Himmelfahrter mine structures via Stolln into the Rote Graben to Halsbrücke, from there it is passed on through a newly created Rösche in 1846, the former Altväter artificial ditch on the left Muldental slope as well as an 1846 from Christian Friedrich Brendel (1776–1861, Saxon machine director) built culverts - the first of the mining water management - in the upper artificial moat
    • Lower Churprinzer water supply: Churprinzer mine canal: Canal rösche with two mouth holes, one of which is a rose mouth hole as well as a mouth hole as access to the ore barge loading station in the Rösche, see object 08991702, wide, partly elliptically lined opening hole to the wheel room in the central shaft, see also the associated art shaft for the mine Material entity (object 09305134 or 09305137), this was created in 1788–1789 by Johann Friedrich Mende (1743–1798, Saxon master craftsman and later machine director), branching off from the Mulde above the Altväterbrücke and on the right or left side of the valley slope to the Churprinz pit leading, width of the canal not only enables the impact water supply, but also the transport of ore with the help of grained ore barges opposite the direction of flow to the Halsbrückner Hütte, 1790–1972 extension of the mine canal to the Christbescherung pit (Christbescherunger Bergw erkskanal, cf. Object 08991671), also for the purpose of transporting ore to the Halsbrückner Hütte, the Churprinzer Bergwerkskanal was rebuilt at a higher level in 1822–1823 by Christian Friedrich Brendel (1776–1861, Saxon machine director) (thus increasing the usable head at Churprinz for loading water power machines) , the canal now flows into a drivable rose (canal rose) to the Kunstrad in the Mittelschlächtigen art shaft, there the ore barges could be loaded with ore from the mine’s own processing plants at a loading station using ore rolls and then treaded up the canal on the left bank of the Mulden, at the Anna laundry weir (see object 08991638) Crossing the Mulde, the following canal section on the right side of the Mulde, above the Altväter Bridge then crossing the Mulde again. Lifting the ore barges from the Mulde into the last section of the canal to the hut by means of the barge lift house - Object 08985801 - on the left Mulden slope, from there on to the Erzh from the ironworks (distance to be covered approx. 5.3 km, travel time approx. three hours, 1868 cessation of ore barge operation), both mine canals including their florets, a preserved lock system and the remains of two barge houses are important evidence of the hydraulic engineering innovation and efficiency of the Saxon ore mining , technical monuments of national importance
  • Other heaps and mouth holes in the area (see object 08991702):
    • Wittigschacht heap (Flst. 1021 and 1017)
    • Dump of the Jehmlichschacht (Flst. 898/2)
    • Oral hole of the Vulkanus Stolln (Flst. 1296 and 1366)
    • Anna Stolln's mouth hole (Flst. 90, Gem. Rothenfurth)
    • Oral hole of the Schwarzer Mittag Stolln (Flst. 1159 and 1164)
09305135
 


Individual monument of the aggregate Grube Churprinz Friedrich August Erbstolln: civil servants residence, former Upper Pochwerk (see aggregate 09305135, Am Pappenwerk 1) Am Pappenwerk 2
(map)
1818/1819 Plaster construction with boarded-up jumble, mining history and local history of importance

Official residence: formerly the top of what was once the three stamp mills of the Churprinz mine, later the mine administrator's house, two-story plastered building, segmented arched window, boarded jamb, flat saddle roof, inscription plaque ("Founded in the jubilee years of King FRIEDRICH AUGUST, completed the following year.")

08991700
 


Individual features of the aggregate Grube Churprinz Friedrich August Erbstolln: Huthaus, Bergschmiede and ancillary buildings (see aggregate 09305135, Am Pappenwerk 1) Am Pappenwerk 3
(map)
essentially around 1710 Huthaus: stately structure with half-timbered upper floor and roof turret, one of the most representatively designed hut houses in Saxony, significant in terms of mining and building history.
  • Huthaus: ground floor masonry around 1710, conversion / possibly. also extension in 1747, 1820 roof turret with bell and clock, massive ground floor, sandstone walls, entrance with segmented arch and keystone, original two-winged front door, upper floor double-bar timbered timber framing, underneath the original construction still present, crooked hipped roof, bat dormers on two floors at the front, beaver tail covering, Roof turret with clock and open bell cage with hood, inside: still the historical room layout (the prayer room was in the north half of the ground floor) and original doors
  • Bergschmiede: function is actually no longer recognizable today, single-storey natural stone building, plastered, e.g. Some old windows, boarded gables, saddle roof, two bat dormers
  • Outbuilding (formerly a room house): single-storey, massive, central gate, gable field half-timbered, half-hip roof, two bat dormers
08991701
 


villa Am Pappenwerk 4
(map)
1920s Typical plastered building with hipped roof, of local and architectural importance.

Villa: with typical windows and hipped roof

08991704
 


Residential building (with extension) Eschenweg 3
(map)
after 1800 Typical landscape with half-timbered upper floor, building-historically important hooked floor plan, ground floor solid, smoothed, upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, one gable side clad, gable roof, rear extension with barn door 08991737
 


Village church and churchyard Großschirma (church with furnishings, churchyard with enclosure wall and churchyard gate, two tombs and a soldier's grave for three fallen soldiers of World War II)
More pictures
Village church and churchyard Großschirma (church with furnishings, churchyard with enclosure wall and churchyard gate, two tombs and a soldier's grave for three fallen soldiers of World War II) Main street
(map)
around 1200 (church tower) Hall church with mighty, late Romanesque defense tower, imposing defensive enclosure wall, of architectural and local significance.
  • Plastered quarry stone building with drawn-in three-sided choir with buttresses, nave and choir with beaver tail covering, bat dormers, tower with pointed roof turret, slated
  • Tombs
    • Tomb for Franz Louis a. Christiane Charlotte Köhler: oak tree stump with scattered leaves (sandstone), two renewed cartouches “Here in God our good wife and mother rests. Mrs. CCK born Eulick, exodus from mills, b. 1819 died 1884, FLK born 1823, d. 1888 "
    • Tomb with Christ figure: Aedicula with Christ figure
    • Soldier grave: Uffz. Kurt Weigelt, b. July 23, 1915, d. December 3, 1940, ObFldw. Erwin Wittig, b. June 28, 1914, d. September 18, 1943, Uffz. Rudi Gohles, b. February 12, 1916, died May 7, 1945 in Großschirma
  • Quarry stone enclosure wall surrounding the entire churchyard, defensive character, with supporting pillars in the southern area
08991717
 


Individual features of the aggregate mine canal: mine canal including Rösche and canal bridge (see aggregate 09305134, Am Pappenwerk 1) Main street
(map)
1790-1792 Artificial moat to bring about impact water for the pit Christbescherung Erbstolln near Großvoigtsberg as well as for the transport of ore from the pit to the Halsbrückner Hütte by means of grain barges, Christbescherunger and Churprinzer mine canals including their florets, a preserved lock system and the remains of two barge lifting houses - important evidence of hydraulic engineering and innovation Efficiency of the Saxon ore mining, landscape-shaping technical monuments of special mining historical importance and of national standing.

Section of the canal on the left side of the Freiberg Mulde from the Churprinz mine to the Großschirma / Großvoigtsberg district boundary: first section (approx. 550 m) laid underground for the most part in concrete pipes during the GDR era - the sewer since the processing plants of the Churprinz mine Friedrich August Erbstolln were converted , Churprinz for short (see object 09305135) for cardboard production only used to discharge production waste water, the course of the canal above ground begins at a small bridge (keystone marked 1890), the original width can still be read in the terrain, but much lower water flow, on the left (possibly on the parcel 1398) Confluence of the Abzugrösche from the deeper artificial wheels of the Churprinz mine, then further canal course in a north-westerly direction to the bank of the Mulden, followed by a canal run parallel to the Mulde, right-hand embankment (formerly with towpath) still recognizable (on the impact slopes of the Mulden on the air side fastened with retaining walls made of quarry stone masonry), then disappeared for a few meters (in front of the mouth of Friedrich Erbstolln), then again separated from the Mulde by an earth dam, passing immediately north of the former hat house of the 2nd light hole of the Treue Sachsen Stolln and over a canal bridge over the Höllbach (quarry stone arch bridge) to the boundary to Großvoigtsberg, further route see object 08991671

Historical classification: the Churprinzer mine canal formed the so-called Lower Churprinzer water supply for the Churprinz pit, built in 1788–1789 by Johann Friedrich Mende (1743–1798, Saxon master craftsman and later machine director), branching off from the Mulde above the Altväter Bridge and on the right or left running along the valley slope to the Churprinz mine and there supplying the artificial wheels with impact water, the width of the canal not only enabled the impact water supply, but also the transport of ores with the help of grained ore barges in the opposite direction of flow to the Halsbrückner hut, to which a further, upper section of the canal led on the left Muldentalhang from the Rothenfurther barge lift house to the ore house of the iron and steel works in Halsbrücke, lower section of the Churprinzer Bergwerkskanals between Annaer laundry weir and pit Churprinz 1822–1823 by Christian Friedrich Brendel (1776–1861, Saxon machine director) at a higher level created (thus increasing the height of fall that can be used at Churprinz to act on water power machines), the canal ended in a drivable Rösche (Kanalrösche) to the artificial wheel in the Mittelschlächtigen artificial shaft, where the ore barges could load ore from the mine’s own processing plants at a loading station using ore rolls and then on the left bank of the Mulden canal, the ore barges (load approx. 2.5 t) had to cover a distance of approx. 5.3 km (three man crew - two towers, one helmsman), travel time approx. three hours, the ore barge operation was stopped 1868, subsequently only impact water supply, 1790–1792 extension of the mine canal to the Christbescherung Erbstolln pit further down the trough as a Christbescherunger mine canal (projected by the mine separator Johann Friedrich Freileben), also here for the purpose of transporting ore to the Halsbrückner Hütte, for this purpose use / widening of an area ts existing artificial moat, thus extending the entire route by approx. 3 km, the ore barge operation on this section is only occupied until 1808, a further extension of the mine canal down to the pit of the old hope of God was never completed.

09306315
 


Inn with hall Hauptstrasse 5
(map)
End of the 19th century Particularly due to the arched windows of the hall and the exposed location, it is a defining feature of the picture and is of local historical importance.

older component: massive ground floor, upper floor z. Partly half-timbered, clad, half-hipped roof, hall extension with high round arched windows with brick on the upper floor, window with muntin, side windows with profiled roof, gable field with twin round arch with roof and oculi, half-hipped roof with roof overhang

08991741
 


Residential building Hauptstrasse 7
(map)
around 1800 typical of the landscape with a half-timbered upper floor, historically important.

Solid ground floor, upper floor timber-frame clad, a horizontal window, saddle roof, slate roofing, one solid gable side

08991736
 


Two gate pillars of the historic Churprinz mine Hauptstrasse 7 (opposite)
(map)
Beginning 20th century local and mining historical significance.

Pillars made of natural stone with a final transom plate and connecting wall sections, reconstruction at a slightly shifted location

08991735
 


Residential building Hauptstrasse 9
(map)
around 1800 small rural house with half-timbered upper floor typical of the region, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor, upper floor single-bar framework with diagonal struts, boarded gable side, gable roof

08991734
 


Aggregate of manor Großschirma with the following individual monuments: mansion (no.12), western residential and farm building with southern stair tower (no.14, southern part possibly former estate manager's house) and northern barn (no.18) (see individual monument 08991732) and the two eastern ones Farm building (No. 16) and the farm yard as a whole
More pictures
Aggregate of manor Großschirma with the following individual monuments: mansion (no.12), western residential and farm building with southern stair tower (no.14, southern part possibly former estate manager's house) and northern barn (no.18) (see individual monument 08991732) and the two eastern ones Farm building (No. 16) and the farm yard as a whole Hauptstrasse 12; 14; 16; 18th Beginning 19th century Large courtyard that has been preserved in its structure, worth a monument despite structural changes due to its historical significance.
  • Manor house number 12: two-storey plastered building with plastered mirrors, corner pilasters, crooked hip roof, beaver tail covering, later each a wide dormer window
  • Residential and farm building number 14: two-storey, massive, e.g. Partly still sandstone walls, laterally round tower with helmet roof, beaver tail covering, front part (house) with hipped roof, beaver tail covering, bat dormers, adjoining stable part outside with support pillars, mountain caterpillars protruding into the roof, crooked hip roof, beaver tail covering
  • Farm building number 16, consisting of two parts: front part residential house (changed), rear part stable with sandstone walls, saddle roof, bat dormers, a mining caterpillar, then massive outbuilding, saddle roof, beaver tail covering, heavily modified (concrete walls), ruinous
  • Barn number 18: one and a half story, massive, barn door, saddle roof, hipped on one side, one gable side boarded up as a whole
08991733
 


Individual features of the property group Großschirma: manor house (No. 12), western residential and farm building with southern stair tower (No. 14, southern part possibly former estate manager's house) and northern barn (No. 18) of the manor (see also material group 08991733)
More pictures
Individual features of the property group Großschirma: manor house (No. 12), western residential and farm building with southern stair tower (No. 14, southern part possibly former estate manager's house) and northern barn (No. 18) of the manor (see also material group 08991733) Hauptstrasse 12; 14; 18
(card)
around 1870 Courtyard complex preserved in its structure, of importance in terms of building history, local history and the appearance of the town.
  • Manor house number 12: two-storey plastered building with plastered mirrors, corner pilasters, crooked hip roof, beaver tail covering, later each a wide dormer window
  • Residential and farm building number 14: two-storey, massive, e.g. Partly still sandstone walls, laterally round tower with helmet roof, beaver tail covering, front part (house) with hipped roof, beaver tail covering, bat dormers, adjoining stable part outside with support pillars, mountain caterpillars protruding into the roof, crooked hip roof, beaver tail covering
  • Barn number 18: one and a half story, massive, barn door, saddle roof, hipped on one side, one gable side boarded up as a whole
08991732
 


Residential building Hauptstrasse 17
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Half-timbered house typical of the region, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor, solid gable ends, eaves side upper floor timber-framed boarded, gable roof, plain tile covering

08991731
 


Residential building Hauptstrasse 23
(map)
Core 18th century Half-timbered house typical of the region, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor and both gable sides, upper floor eaves sides single-bar truss with corner struts, both gables truss, one boarded, one clad, saddle roof

08991724
 


Old School (Former School) Hauptstrasse 29
(map)
Mid 19th century stately cubature in a street-defining location, of local significance.

Solid ground floor, large windows with gable ends, old double-winged door, first floor z. T. disguised or plastered, crooked hip roof, slate covering

08991703
 


Former stable house Hauptstrasse 32
(map)
after 1800 Half-timbered house typical of the region, of architectural significance.

Hook floor plan, massive ground floor, upper floor double-bar framework, gable side planked onto the existing framework, eaves side boarded up, gable roof, e.g. T. slate cover

08991730
 


Residential building Hauptstrasse 33
(map)
Beginning 19th century simple example of a rural house with a plastered half-timbered upper floor, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor, entrance with segment arch, upper floor with original window size, boarded gable, gable roof, house overall covered with 50s plaster

08991714
 


Farmhouse Hauptstrasse 34
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century Half-timbered building typical of the region with a clad upper floor, of architectural significance.

Ground floor massive, changed, upper floor half-timbered clad, gable roof

08991729
 


Cottage Hauptstrasse 35 1st half of the 19th century Small half-timbered house typical of the landscape with an intact upper floor, historically important

Solid ground floor, various porches, upper floor double-bar framework with corner struts, e.g. T. windows added, one eaves side covered and the rear gable side, gable roof, z. T. old windows

08991713
 


Residential building Hauptstrasse 36
(map)
1st half of the 19th century half-timbered house typical of the landscape, of architectural significance.

Ground floor massive, changed, upper floor single-bar framework with diagonal struts, window with muntin renewed, boarded gable, gable roof, wide crawler-type gully, various attachments to the rear

08991728
 


Cottage Hauptstrasse 40
(map)
re. 1826 half-timbered house typical of the landscape, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor, sandstone walls, entrance with segmental arch and keystone, upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, gable roof, two old windows in the gable

08991727
 


House of a farm Hauptstrasse 42
(map)
around 1800 Half-timbered building typical of the region, largely intact wooden construction, of architectural significance

Solid ground floor, upper floor double-bar timbered mostly clad, one eaves side in the rear area solid, boarded gable, gable roof, slate covering

08991726
 


Residential stable house Hauptstrasse 43
(map)
around 1830 with an intact half-timbered construction typical of the region on the upper floor, historically important

Ground floor solid, smoothed, upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, crooked hip roof

08991690
 


Residential stable house (no. 46) and barn (no. 44) of a former four-sided courtyard Hauptstrasse 44; 46
(card)
End of the 19th century Late example of a courtyard, which is characteristic of the picture due to its hillside location and is of importance in terms of architectural and economic history.
  • Residential stable house: two-storey, solid, plastered walls, box windows, plaster strips and profiled eaves, gable roof
  • Barn: solid ground floor, modified, upper floor half-timbered, boarded gable side, gable roof
08991725
 


Residential building Hauptstrasse 45
(map)
around 1900 Plastered building with structural elements and echoes of Swiss style, largely restored in its original appearance, of architectural significance.

Natural stone plinth with sandstone walls, single-storey, grooved corner cuboids, parapet mirror and window crowns, eaves-side central window with triangular roofing on consoles, jam zone with medallions, e.g. Partly figurative, on the side original wooden entrance porch, saddle roof with overhang, slate covering, three small horizontal skylights

08991689
 


Rectory with rectory, side building and former substitute house and rectory garden Hauptstrasse 50
(map)
1566 (rectory) imposing courtyard, half-timbered buildings, some with very old construction (St. Andrew's cross), of architectural, local and local significance.
  • Rectory: solid ground floor, stable with vaults, timber-framed upstairs, presumably somewhat insulated, old double-winged front door with skylight, window with rung renewed, gable roof, reddish slate
  • adjoining side building: massive ground floor, e.g. T. originally probably open, upper floor half-timbered, z. T. with St. Andrew's crosses and head struts, grooved threshold probably renewed, z. Partly old cross-frame windows, saddle roof, reddish slate
  • Former substitute house (on the street): solid ground floor with a round arched passage, upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, solid gable side, gable roof, slate covering
08991719
 


Großschirma School (School) Hauptstrasse 56
(map)
1897 Plastered building in the typical cubature of the time, part of the town center with church and inn, of architectural and local significance.

Natural stone plinth, two-storey with a three-axis and gabled central projection, entrance with high skylight and straight roofing, large-format windows on the gable sides, strongly profiled eaves, central projection with triangular closure, later loft extensions, gable roof

08991712
 


Cottage Hauptstrasse 59
(map)
around 1800 typical of the landscape with a half-timbered upper floor, of importance in terms of architectural and local history.

Massive ground floor, window z. Partly with rung, boarded up upper floor, windows with decorative framing, plastered rear gable side, saddle roof, wooden water pump demolished

08991686
 


Inn and side building (with Kumthalle) Hauptstrasse 60
(map)
around 1800 Original building in its appearance with intact half-timbering, of architectural and local significance.
  • Stable: two-storey, massive, two-arched Kumthalle, mountain doors, gable roof
  • Inn, older part: solid ground floor, sandstone walls, entrance with segment arch and keystone, two-winged original door, upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, window with muntin renewed, gable roof, two-storey three-axis massive extension, gable roof, podium with picket fence attached in front of the entrance, in front of it formerly two linden trees
08991711
 


Eastern side building Hauptstrasse 65
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Typical regional agricultural building with a half-timbered upper floor, historically important.

Ground floor massive, changed, upper floor timber-framed boarded, old windows, gable roof

08991819
 


Southern side building and western barn of a three-sided courtyard Hauptstrasse 71
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century Agricultural buildings typical of the region with half-timbering of a three-sided courtyard that has been preserved in the structure, of architectural significance, characterizing the street scene due to its hillside location.
  • Stable: solid ground floor, segment arch gates, upper floor timber-framed boarded, windows with sprouts, half-hip roof
  • Barn: predominantly wooden construction, boarded up, hipped roof
08991680
 


Cottage Hauptstrasse 78
(map)
around 1800 largely preserved in its original appearance, characterizing the streetscape.

Solid ground floor, wooden door frame, upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, one gable side plastered, gable roof

08991687
 


Residential building Hauptstrasse 80
(map)
re. 1840 Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor, upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, boarded gable sides, hipped roof

08991688
 


Side building, barn and mountain cellar of a three-sided farm Hauptstrasse 81
(map)
Mid 19th century rural farm buildings typical of the landscape with half-timbering, of architectural and economic importance.
  • Stable: ground floor solid, smoothed, a gate with segment arch, upper floor boarded up, mountain door, window with muntin, gable roof
  • Barn: predominantly wooden construction, boarded up, gable roof
  • Bergkeller: below the house, brickwork
08991679
 


Residential stable house Hauptstrasse 85
(map)
re. 1848 Stately farmhouse with an intact wooden structure on the upper floor, typical of the region, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor, entrances with straight roofing, upper floor plastered eaves side, gable sides boarded up or clad, hipped roof, beaver tail covering, three bat dormers

08991677
 


Courtyard facade and roof truss of a stable house (No. 96) and barn (No. 100) of a four-sided courtyard Hauptstrasse 96; 100
(card)
re. 1690 (threshold) Residential stable house with a very old half-timbered construction with curved St. Andrew's crosses, valuable in terms of building history.
  • Stable house: altogether too much changed, but courtyard side with old half-timbered upper floor, threshold with dragonfly motif, flattened headbands, very old, steep roof truss
  • Barn: solid ground floor, segment arch gates, upper floor boarded up, e.g. T. windows with muntin, gable roof
08991682
 


Residential stable house and stable building of a former three-sided courtyard Hauptstrasse 125
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century Stately farmhouse with half-timbered upper floor typical of the region, of architectural and local importance.
  • Residential stable house: solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, double-transom with corner struts, original window size, two sides boarded up, one gable side slated, some windows with original muntin, windows with decorative framing, saddle roof, slate covering
  • Stable: two-storey, solid, ground floor changed, segment arch and two-arched Kumthalle added (still legible), upper floor two mountain doors and two windows with segment arch, old windows, eaves with ornamental frieze, saddle roof
08991721
 


Memorial to the fallen of the First World War
Memorial to the fallen of the First World War Hauptstrasse 130 (below)
(map)
after 1918 (war memorial) local historical significance.

Approx. 2.50 m high sandstone stele with a pointed arch and relief of the Iron Cross, inscription "Our Heroes Fallen in World War I / 1914–1918", listing of names on the sides, additional board for victims of World War II added under the writing, access divided by steps and pair of pillars, in the front part natural stone slabs

08991678
 


Residential stable house and barn of a three-sided courtyard Hauptstrasse 154
(map)
around 1880 Agricultural buildings typical of the landscape with half-timbering, of architectural and local importance.
  • Residential stable house: Solid ground floor, modified, double windows, upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, clad gable side, gable roof, slate covering
  • Barn: largely wooden construction, boarded up, gable roof
08991676
 


Municipal office with enclosure
Municipal office with enclosure Hauptstrasse 156
(map)
1920s Typical plastered building with hipped roof, characterizing the street scene, of local history.
  • Rusticated natural stone plinth, two-storey, entrance porch with arched position with keystone and hipped roof, original double-leaf entrance door, strong eaves, roof overhang, hipped roof with slate covering, various roof extensions
  • Enclosure of rusticated natural stone adequate to the natural stone base of the building, grid fields between the pillars
08991675
 


Großschirma station: station building
More pictures
Großschirma station: station building Hauptstrasse 157
(map)
around 1900 same type construction as in Großvoigtsberg, testimony to the development of the railway line, of significance in terms of railway history.

T-shaped floor plan, main wing on the ground floor with arched windows, boarded up upper floor, saddle roof, other wing with original single-storey final building, but central projection added in the 1950s, old doors behind

08991748
 


Northern residential stable and eastern moving house of a former four-sided courtyard Hauptstrasse 162
(map)
re. 1779 keystone both buildings with half-timbered upper floor, formerly a wheelwright shop, of architectural and local importance.
  • Residential stable house: solid ground floor, stable part still with vaults. Upper floor half-timbered plastered, rear paneled, gable roof
  • Pull-out house: solid ground floor, modified, upper floor half-timbered plastered, half-hip roof
08991667
 


Side building and barn with an angled floor plan and courtyard paving of a three-sided courtyard Hauptstrasse 172
(map)
Mid 19th century Typical regional agricultural buildings with wooden construction, of architectural and economic importance.
  • Side building: ground floor solid, smoothed, one entrance with segment arch, upper floor double-bar timbered, partly boarded up, gable roof
  • Barn: at right angles, largely wooden construction, boarded up, gable roof, slate roofing
  • Remnants of the courtyard paving with irregular natural stone slabs
08991666
 


Eastern side building of a three-sided courtyard Hauptstrasse 188
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Typical landscape construction with half-timbered upper floor, relic of the original village development, characterizing the street scene.

Solid ground floor, upper floor timber-framed boarded, outer eaves side solid, window with muntin, gable roof

08991720
 


Farmhouse Hauptstrasse 206
(map)
Core 18th century Typical for the region with a half-timbered upper floor, relic of the older village buildings, of importance in terms of building history and the street scene.

Ground floor solid, modified, upper floor timbered on three sides, one gable side solid, above gable clad, gable roof, reddish slate covering

08991722
 


House of a former blacksmith's shop Münzbachtal 1
(map)
re. 1853 Upper floor half-timbered plastered, of architectural and local significance.

Ground floor solid, smoothed, upper floor half-timbered with original window size, partly plastered, partly clad, hipped roof

08991744
 


Residential stable house Sheep farm 1
(card)
1st half of the 19th century stately structure with intact half-timbered upper floor, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor, sandstone walls, upper floor double-bar framework with corner struts, windows z. Partly renewed in accordance with monument regulations, boarded up on two sides, boarded up gable, gable roof, slate covering

08991742
 


Residential building Sheep farm 4
(card)
Kern around 1800 Relic of the historical local development and evidence of rural life and economy, of architectural significance.

Massive ground floor, e.g. Partly scratched sandstone walls, upper floor eaves side later massively exposed, gable side timber-framed boarded, gable roof

08991743
 


Residential building Waldweg 4
(map)
around 1840 typical of the landscape with intact half-timbered upper floor, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor, sandstone walls, entrance with profiled roofing, upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, clad on three sides, crooked hip roof

08991738
 

Großvoigtsberg

image designation location Dating description ID
Christmas present pit: dump and pit pond with florets (Map) 18th century Testimony to regional historical mining, of local and local importance.

Christbescherung pit since the 18th century larger mine in the Freiberg northern district, art and drift shaft, later replaced by a straightening shaft, central mine, laundry from the day buildings only built in 1872, also a hut, in the Muldental. Stockpile: Flst. 606, 5a (part) pond: Flst. 696 (Großvoigtsberg district) and Flst. 888 (district Großschirma).

08991694
 


pump around 1900 Evidence of the water supply, local historical value.

wooden hand pump

08991063
 


Memorial to the fallen of the First World War Glückauf-Strasse 19 (near)
(map)
1920s (war memorial) of local importance.

large sandstone stele with inscription and cross, laterally framed by half-height conical supports made of sandstone, spherical top, bordered by a rounded retaining wall

08991783
 


Großvoigtsberger School (School) Glückauf-Strasse 25
(map)
End of the 19th century Plastered building typical of the time with a gabled central projection, of local significance.

three-storey, massive, on the first two storeys on the gable sides large windows, mostly still original windows, three-axis central projection with triangular gable, on the third floor window canopies, saddle roof

08991592
 


Cottage Glückauf-Strasse 30
(map)
1776 typical of the landscape with a half-timbered upper floor, of importance in terms of building history and the appearance of the street.

Solid ground floor, upper floor single-bar framework with diagonal struts, the outermost axis double-bar (probably the house was later expanded), gable side newly boarded up (insulated), gable roof

08990991
 


villa Glückauf-Strasse 32
(map)
around 1910 Plastered building in the reform style of the time around 1910, of importance in terms of building history and the appearance of the streets. Natural stone plinth, original lattice windows or box windows, sill and lintel emphasized by smooth plaster, entrance porch with compact column, polygonal stair tower with small arched windows and high conical roof, high mansard roof, e.g. T. hipped, slate cover 08991037
 


Municipal Office (Former Municipal Office) Glückauf-Strasse 45 around 1870 without rear extension, formerly a side building of the Hereditary Court, later converted into a municipal office, of local historical importance.

two-storey, massive, sandstone walls, e.g. Sometimes windows with old sprouting, the skylights with diamond-shaped ornamental rungs, loggia-like entrance porch with pilasters, arched windows, the building looks cut off on the north gable side, boarded gable there, hipped roof

08991799
 


Lindenhof restaurant; Inheritance Court (formerly) (Inheritance Court (later inn)) Glückauf-Strasse 47
(map)
End of 18th century Mighty structure at a point that shapes the street scene, of importance in terms of building history and local history.

Two-storey, solid, sandstone walls, entrance with a flight of stairs, hipped roof, slate roofing, three old lightning rods

08991800
 


Cottage Glückauf-Strasse 60
(map)
1st half of the 19th century typical of the region with a half-timbered upper floor, historically important.

Solid ground floor, winter windows, upper floor half-timbered, one gable side clad, second gable side boarded up, eaves side plastered, street-side eaves with towed historical annex, gable roof, house is empty

08991796
 


Cottage, without extension Glückauf-Strasse 83
(map)
18th century typical of the landscape, with an intact half-timbered upper floor, of importance in terms of architectural history and the appearance of the street.

Ground floor solid, smoothed, upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, boarded gable side, gable roof, one side covered with slate

08991801
 


Stable house with barn part Glückauf-Strasse 84
(map)
around 1800 Relic of the old village development with half-timbered upper floor typical of the region, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor, sandstone walls, upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, part of the barn, upper floor single-bar framework with cross strut, gable roof, slate covering, gable side slated

08991784
 


Transformer house; Überlandstromverband Freiberg (formerly): transformer house Glückauf-Strasse 84 (near)
(map)
1912 out of order, but in good original condition, building in half-timbered construction that characterizes the townscape, as a testimony to the early electrification of the Freiberg area of ​​regional and technical historical importance.

Half-timbered construction, old door, high tent roof, wooden structure with gable roof, external dimensions: approx. 2.5 m × 2 m, 8 m high

After Freiberg already had a municipal power supply network around 1905, the electrification of the surrounding communities followed between 1910 and 1920. In order to avoid an unprofitable fragmentation of the supply areas, various municipalities joined together to form supply associations, each with its own electricity company, with Großvoigtsberg being supplied by the Freiberg overland electricity association founded in 1911 through a power station in Lichtenberg. In the course of the progressive networking of the regional supply networks, such as the Freiberg overland electricity association and the Elbe Valley Central Pirna in 1918, and finally the nationalization of the Saxon electricity supply, the individual supply associations lost their independence. In 1925, the joint stock company Sächsische Werke, founded in 1923, also took over the power plant of the Freiberg overland electricity association, which was ultimately shut down in 1929. A few large power plants are now feeding into a supra-regional power grid. The large Hirschfelde power station, for example, increasingly supplied the Freiberg area via the 100 kV transmission line between Dresden, Chemnitz, Silberstrasse and Herlasgrün, which was expanded in 1918. The regionally existing network structures consisting of 15 kV medium voltage lines and 220 or 280 V local electricity networks were retained, but were replaced over time by more modern systems.

The present transformer house from 1912 is a testimony to the early days of electrification in the Freiberg area. It housed the technical systems for converting medium voltage into low voltage that can be used by the end user and was one of a large number of transformation stations built in the same or similar construction in the communities. It is designed as a tower station in half-timbered construction and has a high tent roof, now covered with artificial slate, with a wooden attachment with a gable roof for the wall ducts. It is at the beginning of the development of a new building task: the encasing of electrotechnical systems in village and urban surroundings. In the Freiberg area, this was initially solved with a design linked to the goals of homeland security, in which the technical function is largely hidden by a structural shell that is creatively integrated into the landscape. Depending on the dimensions of the transformers to be housed, the half-timbered type construction was carried out in different sizes (here type A, see scientific notes). The number of stations was based on the size and energy requirements of the respective location. The localities were mainly supplied with a single station, only in the elongated locality of Oberschöna (cf. obj. 09209084 and 09209108) two transformer houses in half-timbered construction have survived to this day. Overall, the following transformer stations have been preserved from this early design in the former supply area of ​​the overland power association:

  • Großvoigtsberg (present object)
  • Kleinwaltersdorf (Obj. 09201352)
  • Niederbobritzsch (Obj. 09208259)
  • Oberschöna (Obj. 09209084 and 09209108)
  • Reichenbach (Obj. 08991601)
  • Seifersdorf (Obj. 08991754)
  • Seiffen (originally from Deutscheinsiedel), Obj. 0923652

Later structural forms of transformer stations are not only more massive and larger, but also have a much more functional, more objective structural design. In addition to the tower stations, which remained the predominant design for a transformer station until the end of the 1970s, the townscape is dominated by simple compact stations made from standardized components today.

Monument value The present transformer house is one of the few surviving evidence of the early electrification of the Freiberg area by the Freiberg overland electricity association. Together with transformer stations of the same construction, it proves the underlying concept as a type construction. In comparison with more recent systems, the design development of this building task is also evident. Above all, as a component of an electricity supply system, the transformer house is to be seen as an important regional and supply-historical material testimony with high scientific and documentary significance and great experience value. The preserved regional power plants and later the power stations, transformer stations and transformer stations, but also the line networks in the various voltage areas, make Saxony's power supply history tangible even today and prove the transition from local supply islands to a state-controlled, supra-regional supply network for electricity. In addition, the present transformer house also has a character that defines the townscape. The fact that the technical task of the transformer house is hidden behind the design of the structural shell that fits into the landscape shows the importance of homeland security at the time of its construction. Together with other of these older transformer stations, some of which have now become functionless - whether they are also type buildings or architecturally individually designed - the transformer house demonstrates a considerate building culture for technical functional buildings in the townscape, which today no longer plays a role in the course of purely economic considerations. LfD / 2012.

08991785
 


Cottage Glückauf-Strasse 87
(map)
around 1800 typical of the landscape with a half-timbered upper floor, historically important.

Ground floor massive, changed, upper floor with original window size, all sides clad, windows with pseudo-sprouting, gable roof

08991791
 


Manual pump Glückauf-Strasse 94 (opposite)
(map)
around 1900 wooden pump, meaning in local history 08991790
 


Cottage Glückauf-Strasse 96
(map)
around 1800 with intact half-timbered upper floor, characterizing the street scene, significance in the local history.

Ground floor solid, smoothed, upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, windows with pseudo sprouts, boarded gable, saddle roof

08991789
 


Individual features of the aggregate mine canal: Christbescherunger Bergwerkskanal;  Christbescherunger Kahnhebehaus;  Christbescherung Erbstolln mine: mine canal including Rösche, boat lift house and tin laundry (see group 09305134, Am Pappenwerk 1)
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Individual features of the aggregate mine canal: Christbescherunger Bergwerkskanal; Christbescherunger Kahnhebehaus; Christbescherung Erbstolln mine: mine canal including Rösche, boat lift house and tin laundry (see group 09305134, Am Pappenwerk 1) Glückauf-Strasse 104
(map)
re. 1872 Tin linen, well-proportioned plastered building with sandstone walls and original details, artificial ditch for bringing about water for the pit Christbescherung Erbstolln near Großvoigtsberg as well as for the transport of ores from the pit to the Halsbrückner hut by means of grained barges, barge lift house, testimony to the expansion plans of JF Mendes and the technical history of the shipbuilding works of relevance, Christbescherunger and Churprinzer mine canals including their roses, a preserved lock system and the remains of two boat lift houses, important evidence of the hydraulic engineering innovation and efficiency of Saxon ore mining, landscape-shaping technical monuments of particular importance in terms of mining history and of national importance.
  • Pewter linen: marked 1872 in the lintel, two-storey, quarry stone plastered, windows with notch and z. T. winter window, entrance with two flight of stairs, gable roof, slate roofing (old German), transition from the upper floor to the area
  • Christbescherunger Kahnhebehaus (foundation walls): built by Johann Friedrich Mende (1743–1798, Saxon art master and later machine director), approx. 4 m high quarry stone wall with arches or blind arches, the building is continued in the mine canal, which is attached to the air side by retaining walls made of quarry stone, Kahnhebehaus was apparently part of a project by JF Mende to continue the mine canal to the Old Hope pit, so that ore barges can also be hauled from there to the Halsbrückner Hütte - not completed, the existing one, originally downstream of the ore wash from the Mulde to the left bank The artificial ditch branching off continues to serve only to supply water to the old hope of God pit, used as a shed after closure, foundation walls as part of an ABM by the Freiberg Institute for the Promotion of Environmental Protection e. V. 1998/1999 secured.
  • Christbescherunger Bergwerkskanal - section of the canal on the left side of the Freiberg Mulde from the district boundary Großschirma / Großvoigtsberg to the Christbescherunger Kahnhebehaus: Canal on the right partly separated from the Mulde by a dam made of high-set quarry stone masonry, on one piece on the impact slope of the Mulde, finally on a building with a strong embankment wall Connection to the above-mentioned boat lift house.

Historical classification: the Churprinzer mine canal formed the so-called Lower Churprinzer water supply for the Churprinz pit, built in 1788–1789 by Johann Friedrich Mende (1743–1798, Saxon master craftsman and later machine director), branching off from the Mulde above the Altväter Bridge and on the right or left running along the valley slope to the Churprinz mine and there supplying the artificial wheels with impact water, the width of the canal not only enabled the impact water supply, but also the transport of ores with the help of grained ore barges in the opposite direction of flow to the Halsbrückner hut, to which a further, upper section of the canal led on the left Muldentalhang from the Rothenfurther barge lift house to the ore house of the iron and steel works in Halsbrücke, lower section of the Churprinzer Bergwerkskanals between Annaer laundry weir and pit Churprinz 1822–1823 by Christian Friedrich Brendel (1776–1861, Saxon machine director) at a higher level created (thus increasing the height of fall that can be used at Churprinz to act on water power machines), the canal ended in a drivable Rösche (Kanalrösche) to the artificial wheel in the Mittelschlächtigen artificial shaft, where the ore barges could load ore from the mine’s own processing plants at a loading station using ore rolls and then on the left bank of the Mulden canal, the ore barges (load approx. 2.5 t) had to cover a distance of approx. 5.3 km (three man crew - two towers, one helmsman), travel time approx. three hours, the ore barge operation was stopped 1868, subsequently only impact water supply, 1790–1792 extension of the mine canal to the Christbescherung Erbstolln pit further down the trough as a Christbescherunger mine canal (projected by the mine separator Johann Friedrich Freileben), also here for the purpose of transporting ore to the Halsbrückner Hütte, for this purpose use / widening of an area ts existing artificial moat, thus extending the entire route by approx. 3 km, the ore barge operation on this section is only occupied until 1808, a further extension of the mine canal down to the pit of the old hope of God was never completed.

08991671
 


Christmas present pit: mouth hole of the Aufschlagagrescherung, heap of the Christ Christmas present pit Glückauf-Strasse 104 (near)
(map)
1st half of the 18th century mining historical significance.

Christbescherung pit since the 18th century, larger mine in the Freiberg northern district, artificial and driving shaft, later replaced by a straightening shaft, central pit, laundry built only in 1872 from the day buildings, at the same time a hat house, preserved in the Muldental, Dresden / Freiberg social tunnel, mouth hole in the stone , Source: MontE database

08991706
 


Farmhouse and barn of a two-sided courtyard Leipziger Strasse 7
(map)
around 1800 typical of the region with half-timbered upper floor, of architectural and economic importance.
  • Residential building: Solid ground floor, changed, upper floor double-bar timbered framework with diagonal struts, windows with muntin gable, gable roof, clad gable, side small annex as storage room
  • Barn: e.g. T. plastered, z. Partly boarded up, high pitched roof, boarded gable, slate covering
08991821
 


Häuslerhaus and manual pump Leipziger Strasse 13
(map)
around 1800 Typical regional house with half-timbered upper floor, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor, upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, one solid gable end, gable roof, wooden water pump

08991807
 


Residential building Leipziger Strasse 19
(map)
around 1820 typical of the landscape with a half-timbered upper floor, of importance in terms of building history and the appearance of the street

Solid ground floor, upper floor single and double-bar framework, horizontal windows, high hipped roof, boarded gable, wooden manual pump

08991626
 


Residential building Mühlweg 3
(map)
around 1850 typical of the landscape with half-timbered upper floor, characterizing the street scene due to its hillside location, of architectural significance.

Ground floor and one solid gable end, upper floor windows with original size and decorative framing, timber-framed boarded, gable roof, house is empty

08991795
 


Residential building Mühlweg 7
(map)
around 1800 Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.

Ground floor solid, smoothed, first floor original window size, mountain door converted to window, boarded or clad, saddle roof

08991802
 


House and side building Mühlweg 11
(map)
around 1800 Residential house with restored half-timbered upper floor, typical of the landscape, significance in terms of local history.

Massive ground floor, e.g. Partly enlarged windows, with muntin, upper floor with single-bar framework with diagonal struts, clay bricks, double windows with muntin, gable roof, beaver tail covering, side building: plastered, gable roof, slate covering

08991787
 


Farmhouse Mühlweg 15
(map)
18th century typical of the landscape with a half-timbered upper floor, historically important.

Solid ground floor, smoothed, upper floor half-timbered with high-seated small windows, plastered, clad gable side, later massively extended around an axis on the south-western gable side, gable roof, slate covering

08991788
 


Residential stable house and barn of a three-sided courtyard Mühlweg 19
(map)
around 1800 Half-timbered construction, of importance in terms of building history and local history.
  • Residential stable house: solid ground floor, entrances sandstone walls with segmental arches, on the residential part with keystone, upper floor half-timbered, planking renewed (with insulation), saddle roof
  • Barn: wooden construction, boarded up, original gates, gable roof
08991793
 


Residential stable house and barn of a three-sided courtyard Mühlweg 21 Beginning 19th century Typical regional farm with half-timbered construction, of architectural and local significance.
  • Residential stable house: solid ground floor, window with muntin renewed, upper floor half-timbered plastered, gable roof
  • Right-angled barn: mainly half-timbered construction, gable roof
08991792
 


Western barn of a farm Reichenbacher Weg 1
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century Timber construction typical of the landscape, of architectural significance.

mainly half-timbered construction with diagonal struts, old windows, mountain doors, gable roof, clad gable side

08991803
 


Cottage Reichenbacher Weg 2
(map)
1st half of the 19th century typical of the region with a half-timbered upper floor, historically important.

Ground floor massive, atypically clinkered, upper floor boarded up, with original window size, gable roof

08991806
 


Residential stable house (without northern extension) and barn of a farm Reichenbacher Weg 24
(map)
around 1800 Half-timbered buildings typical of the region, of architectural and economic importance.
  • Residential stable house: Solid, smoothed ground floor, timber-framed boarded upstairs, high hipped roof, two horizontal skylights
  • Barn: wooden construction, boarded up, gable roof
08991805
 


Residential stable house and two barns Reichenbacher Weg 26
(map)
19th century typical regional three-sided courtyard with half-timbered construction, historically important.
  • Stable house: solid ground floor, sandstone walls, upper floor half-timbered, partly boarded up, partly plastered, saddle roof
  • two barns around the corner, both wooden constructions boarded up, gable roof and mansard gable roof
08991804
 


Residential stable house Siedlerweg 13
(map)
18th century typical landscape farmhouse with intact half-timbered construction, historically important.

Ground floor solid, smoothed, vaults in the stable, upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, strikingly strong beams, boarded gable side, gable roof, roof structure with double beam construction (according to information)

08991786
 


Aggregate of Großvoigtsberg station: entrance signal, telegraph and communication line, switch, railroad master's border post, two level crossings, two lever tensioning devices, exit signal, telephone booth, small wooden house, reception building, station well, signal and bolt crank mechanism, small intercom, switch box, two freight cars, station stop in the station area, an electrician, loading street and ramp, loading jig, goods shed, telephone line system (all components of the entity are parts of the entity)
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Aggregate of Großvoigtsberg station: entrance signal, telegraph and communication line, switch, railroad master's border post, two level crossings, two lever tensioning devices, exit signal, telephone booth, small wooden house, reception building, station well, signal and bolt crank mechanism, small intercom, switch box, two freight cars, station stop in the station area, an electrician, loading street and ramp, loading jig, goods shed, telephone line system (all components of the entity are parts of the entity) Zellwaldring 8
(map)
1872/1873 local and railway historical significance. 08991822
 

High fir

image designation location Dating description ID
Jacobstolln; Daniel shaft: mouth of the Jacob tunnel and heap of the Daniel shaft Beginning 18th century Evidence of historical mining in the region.

Mouth hole: keyhole-shaped, made of flat natural stone, added with a grid (parcel 340/1), dump (parcel 274)

08991708
 


Old hope of God pit: sections of an artificial trench, section at the same time opening gates to the “Old Hope of God” mine, and mouth holes 18th century (artificial moat); 18th century (mouth hole) evidence of mining history in the region, s. also object no. 08991697 (OT Kleinvoigtsberg) u. 08992221 (OT Rothenfurth) 08992220
 


bridge (Map) 19th century Natural stone arch bridge over the Brückenbach, of architectural significance 08991707
 


Residential stable of a four-sided courtyard and courtyard tree Farmer side 3
(card)
18th century Stately farmhouse typical of the region with half-timbered upper floor, significance in terms of building history and local history.
  • Ground floor solid, smoothed, first floor z. T. half-timbered, plastered courtyard side, street-side gable side clad, z. On the upper floor windows with wooden walls, windows with muntins, gable roof, second gable boarded up
  • Hofbaum: horse chestnut
08991668
 


Side building of a four-sided courtyard Farmer side 10
(card)
End of the 19th century Typical regional agricultural building with half-timbering, of architectural significance.

Massive ground floor, e.g. T. openings with segment arch, double-bar framework with diagonal struts, boarded gable side with chamfered corner, window with muntin, mountain door, saddle roof

08991673
 


Northern side building, eastern barn and archway of a four-sided courtyard Bauer page 12
(Map)
18th century both buildings with half-timbered construction, evidence of architectural and local history.
  • Side building (stable): solid ground floor, upper floor single-bar framework with diagonal struts, window with muntin, sliding window, one solid gable side, gable roof, beaver tail covering, on the ground floor a wooden door frame
  • Barn: solid ground floor, half-timbered upper floor, e.g. Partly boarded up, old gates, windows with gaps, mountain door, hipped roof, beaver tail covering
  • Archway: wide basket arch with keystone and lateral striker plates
08991662
 


Transformer house (Groeba station) Lindenstrasse 23 (next to)
(map)
1910/1912 regional type construction largely restored in its original appearance, evidence of the electrification of the place.

Plastered building, high hip roof, beaver tail covering, massive roof structure, slated, with lattice windows on each side, flat tent roof, beaver tail covering

08991669
 


Cottage Lindenstrasse 29
(map)
2nd half of the 18th century Half-timbered house typical of the landscape, characterizing the streetscape, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor, hillside location, upper floor double-bar and single-bar framework, with corner struts, windows with muntins, the eaves side on the street is the only floor there, plastered bricks, one gable side slated (multi-colored), gable roof, red slate covering, bordered in gray

08991670
 


Cottage Muldenweg 1
(map)
re. 1713 Half-timbered building typical of the landscape, significance in terms of building history and the townscape.

Solid ground floor, upper floor single-bar framework with head struts, one gable side boarded up, 2nd solid with boarded gable, gable roof

08991664
 


Farmhouse and barn Muldenweg 6 re. 1838 typical regional small two-sided courtyard with half-timbered buildings, of architectural and economic importance.
  • Residential building: massive ground floor, slightly changed, e.g. T. sandstone walls, upper floor half-timbered, newly boarded, gable side plastered, gable roof, beaver tail covering
  • Barn: mostly half-timbered, e.g. Partly boarded up, old gates and mountain doors, gable roof, beaver tail covering
  • Hofbaum: horse chestnut
08991665
 


Cottage Muldenweg 8
(map)
around 1800 originally a wheelwright shop, with an intact half-timbered construction on the upper floor, of architectural value.

Solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, mostly boarded up, hooked floor plan, toilet recess, gable roof, slate covering

08991663
 


Former residential stable of a two-sided courtyard Neudorfer Strasse 1
(map)
End of 18th century Half-timbered building typical of the landscape and the time, with intact wooden construction, of architectural significance.

Ground floor massive, changed, upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, e.g. T. boarded up, gable roof

08991672
 


Residential stable house of a homestead Teichweg 6 18th century Typical regional farmhouse in half-timbered construction, historically important.

Hook floor plan, massive ground floor, changed, upper floor timber-framed boarded up, some windows slightly wider, e.g. T. old shoot, gable roof

08991661
 

Kleinvoigtsberg

image designation location Dating description ID
Christmas present pit: the mouth of the Christmas present (Map) 18th century of importance in terms of mining history.

Christbescherung pit since the 18th century, larger mine in the Freiberg northern district, artificial and driving shaft, later replaced by a straightening shaft, central pit, laundry built only in 1872 of the day buildings, at the same time a hut house, preserved in the Muldental, made of natural stone, parabolic arch with keystone, bricked up, source: MontE database

08991709
 


Ancient hope of God pit: sections of an artificial ditch, partial section at the same time opening gully to the “Ancient hope of God” pit with mouth hole, as well as artificial ditch for the former washing of the treasure trove of Blessed Miner's Hope with rose including mouth holes (Map) 18th century evidence of mining history in the region, s. also object number 08992220 (OT Hohentanne) u. 08992221 (OT Rothenfurth) u. 09201256 (OT Obergruna) district Kleinvoigtsberg, parcels 259/1, 64a, 266, 267, 215/35 (part) 08991697
 


Dump of the Neuglückschacht; Old Hope Pit of God (Halde) (Map) 1883 (shaft sinking) Testimony to the historical mining in the northern Freiberg district, of local and mining historical importance as well as of importance for the landscape.

Several prominent heaps (see obj. 08991693, 08991692 and 08991696) still mark the locations of the most important shafts of the Old Hope of God mine, which was awarded in 1741. The present, relatively small dump is evidence of the Neuglücker Schacht sunk in 1883 - named after the Neuglück ore to be mined here. Due to the progressive relocation of ore mining to the southern mine field, this was supposed to serve as an additional main shaft, but could never achieve this importance, as the ore was still transported by underground railroad to the unified art and drift shaft and was mined there over the surface. The Neuglücker Schacht received only a wooden chew with a hand pump and manual pit ventilator, which is no longer in existence.

Some of the heaps are the last evidence of the formerly lively ore mining in the Freiberg mining area and document the location or even the course of the mined ore veins and, as a whole, the extent of the underground mine fields. Due to the differences in size and shape, they also allow conclusions to be drawn about age and the conveyor technology used. The comparatively small dimensions of the heap of the Neuglücker Schacht testify to its subordinate function as an artificial and weather shaft. This is particularly clear in comparison with the heap of the Einigkeiter art and driving shaft. This surrounded the main shaft of the Old Hope Mine, which was equipped with a hoisting machine, and was further filled up into the 20th century. After all, heaps like the present one in the post-mining landscape are partly visible marks due to their shape and vegetation and therefore, in their entirety, have a special significance for the landscape as well as a high experience and memory value. LfD / 2012

08991695
 


Dump of the Burkhardtschachtes; Old Hope Pit of God (Halde) (Map) 18th century Testimony to the historical mining in the northern Freiberg district, of local and mining historical importance as well as of importance for the landscape.

Several prominent heaps (see obj. 08991693, 08991692 and 08991695) still mark the locations of the most important shafts of the Old Hope of God mine, which was awarded in 1741. The relatively small dump at hand is evidence of a shaft of the same name that was probably sunk towards the end of the 18th century to mine the Burkhardt Stehender ore. Some of the heaps are the last evidence of the formerly lively ore mining in the Freiberg mining area and document the location or even the course of the mined ore veins and, as a whole, the extent of the underground mine fields. Due to the differences in size and shape, they also allow conclusions to be drawn about the conveyor technology used. The comparatively small dimensions of the existing stockpile testify to the lower delivery volumes and depths that could still be achieved using reel conveyors. This difference is particularly clear in comparison with the neighboring heap of the Einigkeiter Kunst- und Treibeschacht, which was heaped up into the 20th century as the heap of a main shaft with a hoisting machine. After all, heaps like the present one in the post-mining landscape are partly visible marks due to their shape and vegetation and therefore, in their entirety, have a special significance for the landscape as well as a high experience and memory value. LfD / 2012

08991696
 


Cottage Am Silberberg 29
(map)
1691 Dendro one of the oldest houses in the village, with old half-timbered construction, of architectural and house-historical importance.

Solid ground floor, wooden door frame, windows with chiseled sandstone walls, upper floor with double-bar framework with head struts, on the threshold z. Some still have dragonfly motif, gable roof

08991809
 


Cottage and side building Am Silberberg 30
(map)
18th century is one of the oldest half-timbered buildings in the area, therefore, despite structural changes, it is worthy of a monument and of architectural significance.
  • Residential building: Solid, smoothed ground floor, upper floor single-bar timbered framework, boarded up or boarded up, gable roof
  • Side building (without extension): e.g. T. half-timbered construction, gable side mostly boarded up, gable roof
08991810
 


Farmhouse Am Silberberg 32
(map)
1722 Upper floor half-timbered structure, significance in terms of building history and local history, characterizing the streetscape due to its exposed location.

Solid ground floor, double windows with muntin, e.g. T. shutters, timber-framed boarded upstairs, double windows in the living area, saddle roof

08991811
 


Unity art and driving shaft; Old hope of God pit: greenhouse with pulley chair, chimney, heap, heap retaining walls and underground facilities (the shaft saddle, two wheel rooms and an artificial bike) At the cave 2
(map)
from the 2nd half of the 18th century (mining) important, unique testimony to the mining history of the northern Freiberg district, of local, mining and local significance.

The greenhouse consists of two massive, plastered storeys with a distinctive half-timbered gable, a half-hip roof and an iron pulley chair that was later attached. To the north are the machine house, a single-storey building with a gable roof, and the brick-walled, polygonal chimney with a square base. On the base there is a plaque with a mallet and iron, the year 1879 and the letters "AHG" for "Old Hope of God". Other two-storey buildings with a gable roof together with the greenhouse form a U-shaped floor plan. The day buildings are located on a typical, large heap from the 19th century, which is enclosed by stockpile retaining walls and which is divided into two by the street An der Hohle. The underground facilities include the shaft lining in the dump body and two wheel rooms with a preserved artificial wheel (diameter approx. 10 meters). (Plastered buildings, 1½-storey or two-storey in a U-shaped arrangement, differently inclined gable roofs, chimney: brick, square base, polygonal structure, base systems: shaft walls, two wheel rooms, a preserved artificial wheel for pumping water). The greenhouse was built in 1789/1790 as a water cap for the main shaft of the Old Hope pit, the unified art and drift shaft. The mine was one of the most important and profitable mine systems in the Freiberg district. It was awarded in 1741 and, even after the state mining industry in Freiberg was shut down in 1913, it continued to be mined as a privately owned mine until 1929, with small interruptions until around 1937. Between 1955 and 1959, swamping and exploration work for lead and tin ore was carried out here.

The ore extraction in the Einigkeiter Kunst- und Treibeschacht was originally carried out using an above-ground artificial wheel near the ore wash (cf. obj. 08991698) and an approximately 400-meter-long artificial rod. The impact water led to an artificial ditch branching off from the Freiberg Mulde near Großvoigtsberg (see mine canal, sections obj. 08991697, 08992220 and 08992221). Around 1785 the shaft was given a horse peg. In 1791, after completion of the surcharge (cf. ebf. Obj. 08991698) between the Kunstgraben and the Einigkeiter Kunst- und Treibeschacht, a water cap was built into the shaft and the water cap was built. In 1879, a steam hoisting machine finally replaced the old sweeping wheel, so the greenhouse was expanded to include a boiler and machine house. The two water wheels remained in use for lifting mine water well into the 20th century. In the 1930s, modern processing plants were integrated into the buildings near the main shaft, including a stone crusher and a ball mill to crush the ores and flotation cells to separate out ore and waste rock. In 1955 the shaft received a new hoisting machine. The old boiler and machine house gave way to a new building, only the chimney remained. At the same time, a modern headframe with a pulley chair was built into the drifthouse.

Monument value: The greenhouse and the large dump of the Einigkeiter Kunst- und Treibeschachts reveal the former importance of the Old Hope Pit. A large number of other mining facilities have also survived to this day, including the Huthaus (obj. 08991691), Bergschmiede, Powder Tower (obj. 08991692) and ore washing (obj. 08991698), all of which represent the necessary functional units of such a pit. The existing building stock, but especially the greenhouse, is therefore of high value in terms of mining history. In spite of its structural changes, the greenhouse is probably the oldest preserved water goblet in the Freiberg district and is therefore unique for this region. In the context of the underground mines with water wheel and the impact chute (obj. 08991698) as well as the headframe and the machine house from the 1950s, the technological development of the machine-supported extraction used here becomes clear. In addition to the other day buildings of the old hope of God mine, which are scattered around the village, the townscape of Kleinvoigtsberg is shaped by the greenhouse with its half-timbered gable and the pulley chair protruding above the roof as well as its prominent location on the associated dump. It also has a high experience and memory value for the region formed by mining. LfD / 2012.

08991693
 


Cottage At the cave 6
(map)
18th century Small building with a half-timbered upper floor in a street-defining location, of importance in terms of architectural and local history.

Solid ground floor, window with muntin, shutters, upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, gable sides with Bohemian planking, gable roof

08991814
 


Farmhouse and side building At the cave 7
(map)
18th century Typical regional buildings with half-timbered upper floors, of architectural and economic importance.
  • Residential house: solid ground floor, modified, upper floor double-bar timbered timber framing, plastered 2nd eaves side, solid gable side, gable roof
  • Side building: solid ground floor, wooden entrance porch, upper floor half-timbered, boarded up, windows with muntin, gable roof
08991813
 


Residential stable house At the cave 8
(map)
re. 1778 Typical regional farmhouse with half-timbered upper floor, historically important.

Ground floor solid, smoothed, upper floor double-bar half-timbered, e.g. Partly boarded up, clad or plastered, gable roof

08991812
 


Old laundry; Ancient hope of God pit: ore laundry, remains of the wall of the separating bench, dry stone walls with ore roll, mouth holes of the opening hole At laundry 3
(card)
1855 Evidence of the mining history in the northern Freiberg district and in particular the ore processing of the Old Hope of God mine.

The old hope of God mine was one of the most important and profitable mine systems in the Freiberg mining area. It was awarded in 1741 and, even after the state mining industry in Freiberg was shut down in 1913, it continued to be mined as a privately owned mine until 1929, with small interruptions until around 1937. Between 1955 and 1959, swamping and exploration work for lead and tin ore was carried out here. A large number of the daytime buildings of the mine have been preserved to this day, including the hothouse (obj. 08991693), hut house (obj. 08991691), mountain forge and powder tower (obj. 08991692). Furthermore, the old laundry facilities described below - one of the originally two processing sites of the old hope of God mine in the valley of the Freiberg Mulde - have been preserved, even if only partially.

  • Ore washing: The ore washing of the Old Hope God mine was built in 1855 and was used to process the locally extracted silver ore until the mid-1920s. After the closure, the upper floor was still inhabited until the 1990s. The two-storey, elongated building made of quarry stone masonry and the gable side made of brick masonry has a slate roof that is relatively flat for the construction period and in comparison with other Erzwäschen. The windows have brick lintels and the wooden walls typical of 19th century mining buildings. The approximately four meter high continuous ground floor of the so-called shock hearth wash originally housed the shock hearths for washing the ore sludge; it is spanned by a wooden beam ceiling mounted on cast iron columns. In addition to the window and gate openings, an opening for the formerly existing waterwheel shaft can be seen in the wall of the building. In the lower upper floor of the ore laundry was the ore floor, the mine inventory and in the northern part the apartment of the laundry platform. On the trough side of the building, a section of the ditch originally branching off the trough is also visible. This brought water not only for the water wheel of the mill above, but also for the water wheel of the laundry.
  • Mouth holes of the Aufschlagagrösche: Another manmade ditch brought up from Großvoigtsberg ended above the old laundry at the mouth of a muddy hole, completed in 1789, which led to the unified artificial and driving shaft and acted on the artificial and sweeping wheels there 46 meters below ground. In 1847/48 the rose was redesigned and provided with another, arched, masonry mouth hole. The keystone bears the inscription "Alt Hoffnung Gotteser Aufschlag-Rösche 1848". At the same time, the Rösche received an iron rail track that made it easier to transport ore from the shaft to the old laundry. From 1849 onwards, the treatment plants could also be supplied with warm shaft water and thus operated in winter without any impairment.
  • Scheidebank, dry stone walls with ore roll: The Scheidebank has at least its foundation walls to this day and, together with the adjoining dry stone walls, delimits the breakout area between the Scheidebank, Rösche and the newer mouth hole of the Aufschlageschösche. Here, the ore transported via the break-up chute was heaped up and then fed to the processing plants via the ore roll. In the separating bank, the coarsely overgrown ore was separated manually from the deaf rock, while the more finely overgrown ore was mechanically processed with stamping mills and pusher hearths.

Monument value: Only parts of the aforementioned facilities of the old laundry are preserved today, such as the now partially dilapidated shock hearth laundry with a section of the mill and laundry ditch, the foundation walls of the former separating bank, the dry stone walls with ore roll of the breakout area behind it and the mouth holes of the open air. Even if the two former stamp mills of the complex are no longer preserved, the great testimony value of these facilities for the former mining operation of the Old Hope God mine remains. Since only remnants of the former weir system are left of the long wash, the second processing site of the mine, a little further down the river, the systems of the old wash as the only material evidence of the ore processing of this mine are of particular documentary value. Likewise, the dimensions of the former shock stove wash allow conclusions to be drawn about the quantities of ore extracted and processed and thus the size and importance of the Old Hope mine. The functional relationships between the individual mining and processing plants can be traced on the basis of the certificates received. The mouth holes of the impact hole together with the associated mine canal (sections see obj. 08991697, 08992220 and 08992221) are not only essential for understanding the impact water supply to the pit or the transport of ore from the pit to the hut in Halsbrücke (see ibid). Above all, the additional use of the Rösche from the middle of the 19th century for transporting ore as well as the winter return of warm pit water to the shock sources of the ore washing illustrates the networking between the individual mining facilities scattered in Kleinvoigtsberg. From the picking point in front of the mouth hole via the ore roll to the separating bench and shock hearth washing, the further path of the ore within the former processing complex is traceable, so that the preserved systems have a high scientific and documentary value overall. Their problematic general condition only slightly affects their significance in terms of mining history due to the context that can still be read. In connection with the other mining objects scattered around the place from the mine Old Hope of God, e.g. B. the greenhouse that can be seen from the old laundry, they also have a high experience and memory value, they are to be seen as defining the townscape and the surrounding landscape of Kleinvoigtsberg. LfD / 2012

08991698
 


Residential building Mühlweg 23
(map)
around 1825 Typical landscape construction with half-timbered upper floor, of architectural significance.

Ground floor solid, smoothed, upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, e.g. T. clad or boarded up, gable roof, slate covering

08991794
 


Caspar Treibeschacht; Old Hope Mine: mountain blacksmiths, powder house and heap Steigerweg 2
(map)
1773 Evidence of historical mining in the northern Freiberg district, of local and mining history as well as of importance for the local image.

After the start of the Old Hope Mine in 1741, the mine operations expanded steadily. In addition to a main shaft, the Einigkeiter Kunst- und Treibeschacht (cf. obj. 08991693), further day shafts were created to develop the underground ore deposits, including the Caspar Treibeschacht named after the head climber Caspar Beckert. In 1785 the pit's first horse peg was used here, but the driving shaft lost its importance after the main shaft was converted into a water peg in 1791. To the south of the dump or directly on top of it, there are still the former mountain smithy and the mine powder house.

  • Bergschmiede: The former Bergschmiede is a z. Currently heavily modified single-storey massive building with slated gable and an old gable roof with slate covering, two gable dormers and a bat dormer. It was built in 1773 as a replacement for a blacksmith's workshop in the Huthaus (cf. obj. 08991691). This was no longer able to cope with the demands of the steadily expanding mining operation of the Old Hope Mine. In the new mountain blacksmith's shop, equipped with two forge fires, the blacksmiths manufactured or sharpened the miners' toughness, but also manufactured larger machines for mine operations or processing plants. There was already an apartment on the upper floor, but it was not until the second half of the 20th century that the building was converted into a purely residential building.
  • Powder house: The octagonal plastered building with a tent roof with wooden eaves and original beaver tail covering made of hand-painted bricks served as a warehouse for explosives, which were necessary for the shooting work in the mine that began in the second half of the 18th century. It was built in 1795 apart from other day buildings for security reasons. Massive walls and a light roof, but also the old lightning rod, still show the danger of explosion of the stored person. In the 20th century, the powder house housed a place of worship for those killed in the First World War. An original sign with the inscription "Pulver-Thurm" still indicates the original use.

Monument value: Together with the upstream hut house (cf. obj. 08991691), the smithy, powder house and heap form an ensemble which is part of the existing day building of the Old Hope mine and is of local and mining historical importance. Although the Bergschmiede has undergone a major renovation in its original appearance, the basic shape typical of this functional building with a low ground floor and a steep gable roof can still be seen, and one of the two meals of the centrally placed forge fire has still been preserved. In addition, the Bergschmiede is a testament to the rapid expansion of the mine, which after 32 years of operation required a more efficient facility to supply the growing workforce, which in 1890 had over 300 employees. The powder house is unique due to its octagonal shape - round and sometimes square floor plans were common - and, as the oldest surviving day building of this type in the Freiberg district, has a special document value. Its location away from other buildings as well as the compact, solid shape illustrates the hazard potential of the stored explosives and contributes to the experience value of the certificate. Together with the rather flat, but clearly demarcated by vegetation, both buildings, as part of the scattered daytime buildings of the Old Hope Divine Mine, shape the appearance of the site and are of great experience and memorable value. LfD / 2012

08991692
 


Hut house; Old Hope Pit (hut house and barn) Steigerweg 3
(map)
1769 Dendro of local and mining history as well as of local significance.
  • The hut house, built in 1769, was the central administrative building of the Old Hope God mine, which was added in 1741. In addition to the Obersteiger's registration room, a tack room and a material store, it housed a blacksmith's workshop on the ground floor until it was relocated to a neighboring new building in 1773 (see obj. 08991692). Instead, a prayer room with an organ has been set up here. On the upper floor there was the apartment of the hater, the mine supervisor, as well as a restaurant and a bar. Today the hut house is used as a residential building. The two-storey building consists of two parts, the right one is completely solid, while the left one has plastered quarry stone masonry on the ground floor and half-timbering on the upper floor. The gable side, boarded up around 1920 (see Bleyl 1917), is slated today. The multi-rung and partly renewed wooden windows can be closed with board shutters on the ground floor. The steep, slate-covered gable roof has a bell tower with a helmet roof and a weather vane that is not quite centrally placed. It bears the lettering "AHG 1834". The mountain bell from 1818 originally announced the start of the shift to the miners in the village and is still functional.
  • Barn: The quarry stone barn, which was built alongside the hut, currently has a gable roof with corrugated sheet cover - originally beaver tail cover. The wooden door frames and the barrel vault in the cellar are special features.

Monument value: The hut house forms an ensemble with the barn as well as the former mountain smithy and the powder house (cf.obj. 08991692), which is part of the existing day building of the Old Hope God mine and together is of local and mining historical importance . The central administration building of the mine is subject to only a few structural changes in its typical form for this region and the time of construction with a steep roof and roof turret with bell and weather vane. The fact that the mountain bell is still ringing today gives the building's authentic appearance a high level of experience. In addition to the other daytime buildings of the Old Hope Mine, which are scattered around the village, the central hut house in particular shapes the appearance of Kleinvoigtsberg. It is also very memorable for the region shaped by mining. LfD / 2012

08991691
 


Residential house (former Steigerhaus) and barn Steigerweg 4
(map)
1754 (inscription) with half-timbering on the upper floor, significance in terms of local history and mining history.
  • Residential building: hooked floor plan, solid ground floor, upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, windows with muntin, one gable side solid, one gable side boarded up, gable roof
  • Barn: partly solid, partly half-timbered construction, boarded gable, gable roof, slate covering
08991818
 


Residential house (former Steigerhaus) and side building Steigerweg 5
(map)
around 1890 Typical plaster construction, significance in the history of mining.
  • Residential house: single-storey with high basement, sandstone walls with roofing renewed, corner cuboid, gable roof with overhang, slate covering, central roof bay, original doors inside
  • Side building: one-storey with jamb, sandstone walls, narrow cornice, gable roof
08991817
 


Meridian stone of the pit Old Hope of God Steigerweg 5 (near) 2nd half of the 19th century Surveying certificate of the mining industry with a rarity.

Immediately at the fence of the property of the former Steigerhaus of the Old Hope God mine is a meridian stone erected in the 2nd half of the 19th century, a sandstone cube protruding about 80 cm from the ground with a measuring point on the end surface and an iron and partly corroded cover as weather protection. The meridian stone marked the astronomical north direction and served as a geodetic fixed point of the local coordinate system of the Old Hope God pit, awarded in 1741. In compass measurements, the meridian stone enabled the determination of the constantly changing needle deviation due to the magnetic pole shift and thus the arithmetic adjustment of the measurement results. It was also a reference point for local height measurements. Starting from this coordinate zero point, the mountain buildings belonging to the pit could therefore be trigonometrically measured, calculated and subsequently recorded in the form of pit cracks.

The meridian stone is a testimony to the progressive mining surveying technique - the mining technology - of the 19th century, which was founded by Julius Ludwig Weisbach, professor at the Freiberg Bergakademie. It not only has a technical and mining history significance as a local reference point for the surveying and further development of the Old Hope Mine, but also has a high document value for the scientific history of mine separation. Only a few other meridian stones from the Saxon mining industry have survived. B. in Altenberger (cf. obj. 09277682 and 09277802) as well as in the Schneeberger Revier (cf. obj. 08958038), so that it can be assumed that the present certificate is very rare. LfD / 2012. Approx. 80 cm high cuboid with measuring points on the end surface and a cover

08991699
 

Obergruna

image designation location Dating description ID
Totality of Royal Saxon triangulation (European degree measurement in the Kingdom of Saxony);  Station 96 Obergruna: triangulation column
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Totality of Royal Saxon triangulation (European degree measurement in the Kingdom of Saxony); Station 96 Obergruna: triangulation column (Map) re. 1869 (triangulation column) Second order station, significant testimony to geodesy of the 19th century, of significance in terms of surveying history.

Surveying column made of Niederbobritz granite, shaft with tent roof-shaped cover plate, square floor plan with inscription: “Station / Obergruna / der / Kön.Sächs. / Triangulation / 1869 ", as well as" TP "and overleaf" D ", height 1.80 m, edge length above 44 cm, stepped base. The pillar material, made south of Freiberg and consisting of three granite stones, was set up east of Freiberg-Nossener Strasse, at the western end of the village, i.e. at the highest elevation in the town hall. The station is completely preserved, only the cover plate has minor defects. The station has always been used as a trigonometric point in the Saxon main triangular network. In addition, the suffix TP and the ∆ have been added for this purpose. It is not yet possible to say exactly whether a large machine pushed the column at an angle while working the field or whether the ground is slipping away. In the period from 1862 to 1890, a land survey was carried out in the Kingdom of Saxony, in which two triangular networks were formed. On the one hand, there is the network for grade measurement in the Kingdom of Saxony (network I. class / order) with 36 points and the royal Saxon triangulation (network II. Class / order) with 122 points. This national survey was led by Prof. Christian August Nagel, according to which the triangulation columns are also referred to as "Nagelsche columns". This surveying system was one of the most modern layer networks in Germany. The surveying columns set for this purpose remained almost entirely in their original locations. They are an impressive testimony to the history of land surveying in Germany and in Saxony. The system of surveying columns of both orders is in its entirety a cultural monument of supraregional importance. LfD / 2013.

09201212
 


Narrow-gauge railway Freital-Potschappel – Wilsdruff – Nossen: steel truss bridge of the former narrow-gauge railway Freital-Potschappel-Wilsdruff-Nossen over the Freiberger Mulde (see also Obj. 09304569, Reinsberg municipality, OT Reinsberg, Muldenweg 1 (in front)) (Map) 1937 (replacement new building) as a testimony to the former course of the narrow-gauge route of traffic-historical, local-historical and local significance.

Although the city of Wilsdruff tried to establish its own railway connection as early as the middle of the 19th century, the desired connection to Dresden via Freital-Potschappel could only be realized between 1885 and 1886. An extension of the route from Wilsdruff over several rural communities and the city of Siebenlehn to Nossen took place between 1898 and 1899. The single-track line was designed as a narrow-gauge secondary railway with a gauge of 750 millimeters, with only that since on the first 2.3 kilometers from Potschappel In 1856 the existing standard gauge track of a coal railway to Niederhermsdorfer Albertschacht had to be supplemented by a third rail. In addition to passenger traffic, the route was also used to transport goods to the neighboring industrial companies, but above all to transport agricultural products. With the help of trolleys from 1896 and the more modern trolleys from 1910, standard-gauge freight wagons could finally also be used on the narrow-gauge route, so that the time-consuming reloading of freight was no longer necessary. Until recently, heavily used for commuter traffic, passenger traffic on the narrow-gauge Freital-Potschappel-Wilsdruff-Nossen railway was discontinued in 1972 and freight traffic at the end of 1973. From 1974, the narrow-gauge line was gradually dismantled, so that today, in addition to some sections of the route that are still recognizable in the area, the preserved engineering and high-rise buildings in particular testify to the hard-earned connection to the Saxon and German railway network by the neighboring communities.

The present steel truss bridge over the Freiberg Mulde is one of the preserved engineering structures of the Freital-Potschappel-Wilsdruff-Nossen narrow-gauge railway. This replacement new building, carried out in 1937, replaced an older bridge construction built by the Dortmund company August Klönne in the course of the original route extension to Nossen in 1898 (cf. the existing model buildings from Klönne - obj. 09201308, 09201479, 09201480, 09201481, 09201482). The riveted steel truss is supported on the western side of the bridge on an immovable cast steel bridge support, while the eastern side of the bridge was designed as a movable steel roller bearing. On both sides of the Freiberg Mulde, the embankment is attached to the wing walls of the bridge. The railway bridge, although inoperative, still marks the former course of the route in the area. It also documents an engineering solution for overcoming larger natural obstacles such as the Freiberg Mulde. It is therefore of importance in terms of the history of traffic and the local history and is also formative for the townscape. LfD / 2013 Railway bridge extends over two communities: Reinsberg, OT Reinsberg - Niederreinsberg district, Flrst. 456a and Großschirma, Stadt, OT Obergruna - district Obergruna, Flrst. 507/3.

09304654
 


Residential building (without extension) At the upper pond 7
(map)
19th century Upper floor half-timbered, part of the old local structure, historically important.

Solid ground floor, timber-framed upstairs

09201220
 


Individual features of the aggregate Blessed Bergmanns Hope Treasure trove: Stolln with mouth hole (see also aggregate document Bergmannweg 5) At the mill
(map)
1788, bestowed on the Blessed Miner Hope Treasure Trove 6, 8, 10 - Object 09201255, part of a well-preserved historical mining ensemble, as the most important tunnel system in the Freiberg northern district of mining history.
  • Deep Help Gottes Stolln (also Freiberger Commun Stolln): the most important tunnel system of the Freiberg northern district, multiple staggered system, total length 6.6 km (with wings approx. 10 km), was used to discharge the day water, groundwater and impact water from several pits (including Blessed Bergmanns Hope, Old Hope of God in Kleinvoigtsberg, Christmas presents in Großvoigtsberg, Churprinz Friedrich August in Großschirma) into the Freiberg Mulde, tunnel system operated under different names: 1788 Awarding of an older tunnel (green cypress tree tunnel) to the blessed Bergmanns Hoffnung Treasure trove, excavation in the mine field of the treasure trove, 1795 operated as Freiberg Commun Stolln (i.e. by the city), 1812 breakthrough with the blessed miners hope treasure trove, since 1839 the Adolf Stolln was driven from the deep help of God Stolln and completed in 1864, through this supply of the Roßweiner Pit God's blessing with impact water,
  • Mouth hole: located on the western bank of the Mulden near the Obergrunaer Amtsmühle, height 245.1 m above sea level, main mouth hole made of quarry stone, round arched opening, next to it a sandstone slab, inscribed "Tief Hülfe Gottes Freiberger Comuin ... (?) 1764 ... 1796 .. . (?) “, In front of another mouth hole of the fume cupboard built in quarry stone.
09300779
 


Individual features of the aggregate Blessed Bergmanns Hope Treasure trove: Kunstgraben (see also aggregate document Bergmannweg 5) Bergmannweg Middle of the 18th century to the end of the 19th century (mining complex) 6, 8, 10 - (object 09201255), part of a well-preserved historical mining ensemble, of importance in terms of mining history, local history and the landscape.
  • Kunstgraben: on the left bank of the Freiberg Mulde, led from a weir above to the Blessed Bergmanns Hoffnunger Erzwäsch and later cardboard factory (see object 09201142), approx. 900 m long, enclosed by rubble stone walls (later fortification / renovation partly also in concrete) At the end a height of fall of 5.4 m above the level of the hollow to act on the water wheel or later turbine, well-preserved canal of sometimes unusual width, this possibly going back to plans to make navigable in the course of the extension of the Churprinzer mine canal, possibly it only testifies to the need for large amounts of water.
  • Rösche: part of the artificial trench that continues underground in the rock
  • Mouth holes: quarry stone masonry
09201256
 


Totality of Blessed Miners Hope Treasure trove: Mining facilities in the Obergruna district - with the individual monuments Kunstgraben and Rösche as well as associated mouth holes (see individual monument document Bergmannweg - Obj. 09201256), former ore laundry and later cardboard factory (see individual monument document Bergmannweg 10, Scheidebehaus 10, Scheidebehaus - Obj. 09201142) Boiler and steam machine house, prayer house and heap with heap walling and ore roll (see individual monument document Bergmannweg 5) Bergmannweg 5; 6; 8 10
(card)
1886 (ore crusher) 6, 8 - (object 09304228) and deep help of God's tunnel with mouth hole (see individual monument document An der Mühle - object 09300779) as well as the material parts of the dump of the Steyer shaft with dump walling and ore roll, ore crusher house and underground machine rooms with technical equipment, northernmost large and in the 19th Century important silver ore mine of the Freiberg northern district with an extensively preserved inventory of structural and technical facilities as well as characteristic soil structures of mining activities from the 18th and 19th centuries, of importance in terms of mining history, local history and the landscape.

In the valley of the Emrichsbach there is the Gesegnete Bergmanns Hoffnung treasure trove, which gained importance in the 19th century. It was one of the most northerly located pits in the Freiberg district. In the period from 1867 to 1893, the mine generated particularly large profits. In the 19th century, the main shaft of the mine, the Steyer shaft, reached a depth of 572 m. The economic upswing was made possible by the machine equipment that was modern at the time and can be experienced in remains underground. Today the large heap of the Steyer shaft and on top of it the greenhouse with attached separating bench, boiler and steam winding machine house, prayer house and ore crusher house are reminiscent of the aforementioned mining company. In the immediate vicinity you will find the former ore wash, the artificial ditch with rose that causes the impact water and the deep help of god adit built for the purpose of dewatering the Blessed Miners Hope Mine, further authentic evidence of this complex mining facility. Apart from the aforementioned ore crusher house, in which, despite its reshaping, the rising masonry and the roof structure have been preserved, these mining evidence have largely come down to the original. Due to its authenticity and its complex building stock from the 19th century, this mining ensemble has gained significance in the history of mining and is of value for the landscape. LfD / 2012/2015 Source: Monte database of the TU Bergakademie Freiberg

Northernmost large mine in Freiberg Revier, mining operations resumed in 1752, from 1768 trade union operations, working with considerable profit from 1867 to 1893, shut down in 1898, at the end of the 18th century, shaft extraction with horse pegs and dewatering by means of Kunstrad on the Freiberg Mulde as well as an approx. 600 m long field linkage for the artifacts in the shaft, the David Stolln initially served as an outlet vent, from 1812 the Deep Help of God Stolln, 1843/1844 installation of a turbine peg as a hoisting machine in the main shaft of the pit - the Steyer shaft - by master craftsman Braunsdorf , Fourneyron turbine with vertical shaft and horizontal impeller (second turbine ever used in Freiberg Revier), 1879 replacement of the turbine head with a 40 HP steam hoisting machine.

  • Individual features:
    • Bergmannweg 5, 8 (object 09304228): greenhouse, separating bench with riser apartments, boiler and steam winding machine house and prayer house with administrator's apartment
    • Bergmannweg 10 (object 09201142): former laundry and later cardboard factory
    • Bergmannweg (Object 09201256): artificial ditch and Rösche as well as associated mouth holes
    • At the mill (object 09300779): deep help from God Stolln with mouth hole
  • Sub-entity parts:
    • The opencast buildings of the Gesegnete Bergmanns Hoffnung Fundgrube are located on the large heap of the Styer Shaft (the main shaft of the treasure trove) with a sometimes several meter high pile walls made of dry masonry (gneiss) and an ore roll (location approx. 51 ° 0 '21.64 "N / 13 ° 18 '20.42 "E). The ore extracted at the level of the dump plateau was manually separated, the dead rock at the edge of the dump was overturned, while the ore, on the other hand, was "rolled" down into carts through the ore roll, a device consisting of masonry canals at the edge of the dump, and transported to the ore washing on the Freiberg Mulde . From 1886 ore transport was provided with the help of an approx. 600 m long cable car.
    • Furthermore, the ore crusher house, z. Sometimes also referred to as a room house, preserved on the dump of the Steyer shaft, a single-storey solid building that has since been converted and overformed into a residential building, original brickwork and roof trusses have been preserved.
    • The mining complex originally included a mining forge and a powder tower south of the heap, both of which are no longer preserved.
    • Underground engine rooms with technical equipment: Shaft with partly preserved technical equipment, e.g. B. the iron rope cages of the hoisting machine.
  • Not part of the aggregate: To the west of the Steyer Schacht heap there are various heaps and ping trains that mark the location of various veins mined near the surface (Blessed Bergmannshoffnung Morgengang, Helmrich Spat, Traugott Spat) and Johannes Stolln. To the east there are heaps of older, unknown mining activities.
09201255
 


Individual features of the aggregate Blessed Miners Hope Treasure trove: greenhouse, separating bench with riser apartments, boiler and steam winding machine house and prayer house with administrator's apartment (see also aggregate document Bergmannweg 5) Bergmannweg 5; 8
(card)
1843/1844 (greenhouse) 6, 8, 10 - (object 09201255), well-preserved historical mining ensemble, as authentic evidence of ore mining in the 18th and above all 19th centuries, of importance in terms of mining history, local history and the landscape.

In the valley of the Emrichsbach there is the Gesegnete Bergmanns Hoffnung treasure trove, which gained importance in the 19th century. It was one of the most northerly located pits in the Freiberg district. In the period from 1867 to 1893, the mine generated particularly large profits. In the 19th century, the main shaft of the mine, the Steyer shaft, reached a depth of 572 m. The economic upswing was made possible by the machine equipment that was modern at the time and can be experienced in remains underground. Today the large heap of the Steyer shaft and on top of it the greenhouse with attached separating bench, boiler and steam winding machine house, prayer house and ore crusher house are reminiscent of the aforementioned mining company. Apart from the aforementioned ore crusher house, in which, despite its reshaping, the rising masonry and the roof structure have been preserved, these mining evidence have largely come down to the original. Due to its authenticity and its complex building stock from the 19th century, this mining ensemble has gained significance in the history of mining and is of value for the landscape. LfD / 2012/2015. Source: Monte database of the TU Bergakademie Freiberg

Northernmost large mine in Freiberg Revier, mining operations resumed in 1752, from 1768 trade union operations, working with considerable profit from 1867 to 1893, shut down in 1898, at the end of the 18th century, shaft extraction with horse pegs and dewatering by means of Kunstrad on the Freiberg Mulde as well as an approx. 600 m long field linkage for the artifacts in the shaft, the David Stolln initially served as an outlet vent, from 1812 the Deep Help of God Stolln, 1843/1844 installation of a turbine peg as a hoisting machine in the main shaft of the pit - the Steyer shaft - by master craftsman Braunsdorf , Fourneyron turbine with vertical shaft and horizontal impeller (second turbine ever used in Freiberg Revier), 1879 replacement of the turbine head with a 40 HP steam hoisting machine.

  • Greenhouse: built in 1843/1844 for the operation of the Turbinengöpels (hoisting machine in the shaft, guiding of the hoisting ropes from the cable baskets underground via sheaves in the gothic house into the shaft rubble, i.e. in the part of the shaft in which the hoisting racks move), four-storey , cubic and therefore tower-like building, corresponds in appearance to the shaft building of the Abraham shaft in Freiberg, originally with a guard tower, with a three-storey extension, the separating bank: also built in 1843/1844, housed next to the separating bank (for the manual cutting of the extracted raw ore into metal-containing and deaf stone) also prayer room, tack room and apartments for Steiger and Obersteiger, both buildings served as a factory from 1920 to 1929
  • Boiler and steam machine house: vmtl. Erected in 1879 to accommodate the steam hoisting machine and the necessary boiler system, single-storey solid construction, originally with a chimney
  • Prayer house: originally with the administrator's apartment, also known as an expedition building, single-storey solid building with a gable.

The buildings are located on a large heap with a sometimes several meter high heap wall and an ore roll, which, like the technical equipment preserved underground and the ore crusher house, are part of the above-mentioned aggregate (see also aggregate document Bergmannweg 5, 6, 8, 10 - object 09201255 ).

09304228
 


Individual features of the aggregate Blessed Miners Hope Treasure trove: former ore laundry and later cardboard factory (see also aggregate document Bergmannweg 5) Bergmannweg 10 Middle of the 18th century to the end of the 19th century (mining complex) 6, 8, 10 - (object 09201255), part of a well-preserved historical mining ensemble, exceptionally large, very broad building, of importance in terms of mining and industrial history.

Former ore washing of the blessed miner hope treasure trove (Poch and shock hearth washing, ore processing using water power, crushing of the raw ore in the punching mill, flushing out dead rock particles on the shock hearths), location later used as a cardboard factory, two-storey solid construction with plaster structure, 6: 6 axes, expanded Attic storey with attic house and roof bay window.

09201142
 


Residential building Breitenbacher Strasse 22
(map)
19th century Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor, half-timbered upper floor, one clad gable, one solid

09201225
 


Residential building Breitenbacher Strasse 41
(map)
19th century Upper floor half-timbered plastered, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered plastered and clad

09201224
 


Residential stable house, side building and barn of a three-sided courtyard Dorfstrasse 2
(map)
Early 19th century all buildings in half-timbered construction, of architectural and economic importance as well as defining the townscape.
  • Residential stable house: elongated, ten-axis building, solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, partly boarded up, hipped roof
  • Stable: half-timbered construction
  • Barn: solid ground floor / upper floor half-timbered, boarded gable
09201219
 


Cottage Dorfstrasse 22
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor, upper floor timber-framed boarded, gable roof

09201228
 


Northern stable house, western side building and barn of a three-sided courtyard Dorfstrasse 24
(map)
around 1890 The three-sided courtyard that has been preserved in its structure and is image-defining due to its elevated location, is of importance in terms of building history and economic history.
  • Stable house: stately, two-storey solid construction, windows with stone walls, on the ground floor with brick decorations, on the upper floor z. T. small triangular gables
  • Barn: half-timbered construction
  • Side building with additional Kumthalle: elongated, two-storey solid construction, central axis emphasized (but now closed on the ground floor), along the eaves and the gable, a German strip in brick.
09201227
 


Cottage Dorfstrasse 32
(map)
1st half of the 19th century small half-timbered building in the corner of Drei Häuserweg, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, gable partially boarded up

09201226
 


Cottage Dorfstrasse 36
(map)
Early 18th century Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor above high base, upper floor half-timbered, e.g. T. plastered

09201234
 


Stable house of a former three-sided courtyard Dorfstrasse 41
(map)
re. 1718 Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.
  • Stable house: three sides solid, courtyard side with single-bar framework, saddle roof
  • Pull-out house: small half-timbered building, massive ground floor, upper floor boarded up on three sides, marked HS 1718, demolished before 2013
09201233
 


Parsonage: parsonage (No. 46), moving house (No. 48) and barn (No. 44) of a parsonage and parish garden Dorfstrasse 44; 46; 48 1687 (rectory) stately complex, part of the old local structure, of architectural and local importance.
  • Rectory: residential stable house, solid ground floor, stone walls, upper floor half-timbered, boarded gable, hipped roof with bat dormers
  • Pull-out house: large half-timbered building, massive ground floor, boarded up upper floor
  • Barn: wooden structure
09201232
 


Obergrunaer Schule (former school) Dorfstrasse 51
(map)
re. 1895 later municipal office, stately clinker brick building typical of the time in an elevated position, of architectural and local significance.

Two-storey red clinker brick building above a high polygon base with sections in sandstone (corner accentuation, cornices, windows), gabled central projection, strong eaves cornice, saddle roof

09201231
 


Individual monuments of the aggregate village church and cemetery Obergruna: Parish church and memorial plaque for those who fell in the Franco-German War (embedded in the cemetery wall), tomb for the engineer Otto Münzner and his wife Margarethe and two gravestones (see also aggregate document - object number 09300476, same address)
More pictures
Individual monuments of the aggregate village church and cemetery Obergruna: Parish church and memorial plaque for those who fell in the Franco-German War (embedded in the cemetery wall), tomb for the engineer Otto Münzner and his wife Margarethe and two gravestones (see also aggregate document - object number 09300476, same address) Dorfstrasse 52
(map)
1687, 1689 Dendro artistic, historical and local significance.
  • Village church: simple hall church, slate roof turret with bell-shaped dome, western part of the church from 1687, eastern part added in 1834. Extensive restorations from 1987 to 1997 (including a community center and a new sacristy in the eastern section). Plastered quarry stone building with a straight end, arched windows, flat covered inside, circumferential galleries with stencil painting from 1834, the pulpit altar probably included in the 18th century - richly decorated neo-Gothic baptismal font. - Organ from Gebr. Nagel from Riesa-Weida, 1877. As an important building for the community life, the village church is of local historical importance. At the same time, the church is one of the oldest buildings in the village with a diverse architectural history. As a typical Saxon village church, it is also important in terms of architectural history. The monument value of the church results from its architectural and local historical importance.
  • Memorial plaque for those killed in the Franco-Prussian War: self-cast plaque, inscribed "In memory of peace with France, closed on March 7, 1870 (?), Strasbourg ... 1870." As a memorial stone for residents of the place who lived their lives in German -French War, the memorial stone is of local historical importance.
  • Tomb for Ing. Otto Münzner and his wife Margarethe: Otto Münzner (1875–1957) - his grandfather, Friedrich August Münzner received permission from the Bieberstein house on August 31, 1853 to accept and run the iron hammer and mechanical engineering workshop in Obergruna near Siebenlehn . “The forge became the nucleus for a rapidly developing company for mining machines and later also for paper machine construction.” The operation resulted in a district of Obergruna with, among other things, company apartments and the hammer tavern. Otto Münzner joined the company in 1918 and was operations manager from 1925 until his death (together with Moritz Abt). The company was an important mining engineering company. After bankruptcy, Münzner Maschinenbau Obergruna Erich and Otto Münzner started production again in 1936. After 1945 Otto Münzner continued production together with Moritz Abt. "The company was significantly involved in the flourishing of mining in eastern Germany." (Announcements of the Freiberg Altertumsverein, 74th issue 1994). "The products from Obergruna helped to set the standard in the development of German mining machines for a century and a half." The monument value of the tombstone results from the mining historical significance of the Münzner company from Obergruna and thus also its operations manager Otto Münzner in the period from 1926 to 1957.
  • Two Biedermeier tombstones in the churchyard.
09201230
 


The village church and cemetery in Obergruna with the following individual monuments: parish church, memorial plaque for those who fell in the Franco-German War (embedded in the cemetery wall), tomb for the engineer Otto Münzner and his wife Margarethe and two tombstones (see also individual monument 0920130, same address) as well as the entity part : Churchyard wall Dorfstrasse 52
(map)
18th century Plant of local historical and local significance. 09300476
 


Memorial to the fallen of the First World War
Memorial to the fallen of the First World War Dorfstrasse 52 (next to)
(map)
1922 (war memorial) local historical significance.

Above a three-tiered base, tall, slender triangular top with inscription (illegible), relief of the goddess of peace and relief with a tree stump, as a closing urn

09201252
 


Barn of a former two-sided farm Dorfstrasse 55
(map)
End of the 19th century Image-defining half-timbered construction, of architectural and economic importance.

extremely large, free-standing barn with Prussian half-timbering

09201251
 


Cottage Dorfstrasse 56
(map)
re. 1804 Upper floor half-timbered, of importance in terms of building history and the appearance of the street.

Solid ground floor, upper floor visible framework, one gable slated, door lintel marked “AGU 1804 No. 38 MK 1926 “, gable roof

09201250
 


Cottage with extension Dorfstrasse 58
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Upper floor half-timbered plastered, part of the old local structure, of architectural significance.

Due to the hillside high, massive ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, plastered, gable z. T. boarded up, gable roof

09201248
 


Cottage Dorfstrasse 66
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Upper floor half-timbered, of importance in terms of building history and the appearance of the street.

On a hillside, solid ground floor, upper floor exposed framework, solid gable, gable roof

09201241
 


Residential stable of a three-sided courtyard Dorfstrasse 67
(map)
End of 18th century / beginning of 19th century Stately half-timbered building with a large overhang of the roof, of importance in terms of architectural history and the appearance of the street.

Stately building, solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, wide roof overhang, clad gable, gable roof, small closed upper arbor at the rear end

09201249
 


Residential building Dorfstrasse 70
(map)
Mid 19th century Part of the old local structure, historically important.

built on a hillside, two-storey, solid ground floor

09201237
 


Cottage and side building Dorfstrasse 72
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Upper floor half-timbered residential building, of architectural and socio-historical importance.
  • House-making: solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, partly boarded up, gable roof
  • Side building (stable): very small solid construction, gable roof
09201243
 


Southern side building (gatehouse) and northern barn of a four-sided courtyard Dorfstrasse 73
(map)
18th century (gatehouse) Both buildings in half-timbered construction, of architectural and economic importance.
  • Gatehouse: solid ground floor, upper floor single-bar framework, wide and straight passage, gable roof
  • Stable barn: stately building, massive ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, half-hipped roof
09201247
 


Residential building Dorfstrasse 76
(map)
Early 18th century Upper floor with a remarkable, rare half-timbered construction, of architectural and house history of importance.

elongated building, ground floor massive with stone walls (partly), upper floor with single-bar framework, this with headband and Thuringian ladder, in the middle area triple staggered and strongly profiled threshold, saddle roof,

09201244
 


Residential building Dorfstrasse 77
(map)
1908 The only example of a villa-like residential house in the village, built for Mayor A. Illgen, plastered building typical of the time with ornamental framework and floating gable, of architectural and local significance.

Stately building on a slight hillside, single-storey solid construction above a high base, jamb and extended attic in half-timbered, plastered construction, divisions in brick, German band, floating gable

09201239
 


Two houses Dorfstrasse 81
(map)
1740, later changed Both buildings in half-timbered construction, of importance in terms of architectural history and the appearance of the street.
  • Western dwelling house: broad, solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, a solid gable, gable roof, slightly towed at the rear
  • Eastern residential building: on a hillside, solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, changed at different times
09201240
 


Residential building Dorfstrasse 85
(map)
End of 18th century / beginning of 19th century Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.

elongated half-timbered construction: solid ground floor, upper floor single-bar framework, boarded gable, saddle roof

09201242
 


Residential building Dorfstrasse 87
(map)
19th century Upper floor half-timbered, part of the development around the former official mill, of architectural significance

Small two-storey building, solid ground floor, plastered half-timbered upper storey, hipped roof

09201215
 


Residential stable of a two-sided courtyard Three houses 2
(map)
19th century Upper floor half-timbered, part of the “three houses” settlement outside the village, of architectural significance.

small half-timbered building, solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered plastered, boarded gable, gable roof

09201205
 


Stable house in a second side courtyard Three houses 5
(map)
19th century Upper floor half-timbered, part of the “three houses” settlement outside the village, of architectural significance.

Small half-timbered building, solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered plastered and clad

09201206
 


Residential stable house and barn of a two-sided courtyard Freiberger Strasse 56
(map)
End of 18th century / beginning of 19th century Stable house on the upper floor half-timbered cladding, broad-based building with significance in terms of building history and the street scene.
  • Residential stable house: solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, saddle roof, tailcoat roof at the rear, the whole building clad with asbestos panels
  • Barn: half-timbered and wooden construction, gable roof
09201211
 


Residential stable house and side building of a two-sided courtyard Freiberger Strasse 58
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Stable house, upper floor half-timbered, homestead that characterizes the street scene and is of architectural significance.
  • Residential stable house: solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, plastered gable, gable roof, later extension and change in the roof structure on the rear of the building
  • Side building: small plastered building with large archway entrance and basket arch door, gable roof
09201210
 


Forsthaus (former forester's house) Freiberger Strasse 66
(map)
1830 stately half-timbered building with architectural and local significance.

Solid ground floor, upper floor timber-frame boarded, nine axes, half-hip roof

09201209
 


Residential stable of a two-sided courtyard Freiberger Strasse 101
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, e.g. T. boarded up, gable roof

09201207
 


Factory owner's villa of the Münzner mechanical engineering company Hammer 1
(card)
re. 1836 Stately plastered building with a rich structure, of architectural and local significance.
  • Villa: above a high base, two-storey, stately plastered building with strong structuring of the windows and cornices as well as a slightly protruding central projection, which is emphasized by plaster and stucco ornamentation and adorned with two cast iron panels.
    • 1. "1836-1856. In memory of the 50th anniversary of this work, the founder Friedrich August Münzner from the entire civil servant u. Worker personnel, Obergruna dated June 6th "
    • 2. "1836-1911. Dedicated to the 75th anniversary of this work by the entire staff. Obergruna is dated June 6th "
  • Hammerschänke: elongated construction in the manner of a semi-detached house, solid ground floor, two entrances with a powerful lintel, upper floor half-timbered, roof bay, demolished before 2014
  • Ancillary building: two-storey building, solid ground floor, upper floor timber-framed, solid gable, windows with plastered structure, demolition before 2014
09201139
 


Machine and steel construction Obergruna; Münzner foundry (formerly): Former iron foundry, office building, outbuilding with clock tower and gate of the Münzner foundry Hammer 1
(card)
1853-1860 Former bottom hammer of the Obergruna iron hammer works, from 1836 machine factory family Münzner, technical monument and local historical importance.

Former bottom hammer of the Obergruna iron hammer works, from 1836 the Münzner family machine factory, which was specialized in mining machines, worldwide patented products, according to the Münzner safety gears, today buildings and systems are used by mechanical engineering companies.

  • Foundry: high two-storey building with a half-hip roof, dormer with half-timbering
  • Office building: solid, long side with half-timbering, cast iron plate “1836–1936” on the narrow side. In memory of the 100th anniversary of this work. Dedicated by the entire Obergruna following, June 6, 1936 "
  • Outbuildings: massive ground floor, upper floor half-timbered with clock and bell towers, source: MontE database
09201140
 


Residential house (former distillery, without extension) Hammerweg 1
(map)
1836 Upper floor half-timbered, part of the old local structure, historically important.

Massive ground floor with mighty support pillars, on the narrow side additional entrance with wide arched window, upper floor z. T. half-timbered, completely new boarded up

09201238
 


Residential stable house and side building of a former three-sided courtyard Hammerweg 5
(map)
19th century Both buildings have a half-timbered upper floor, form a picture due to their elevated position and are of importance in terms of building history and economic history
  • Residential stable house: solid ground floor, upper floor timber-frame boarded, solid in the rear area, gable roof
  • Side building: solid ground floor, wooden structure upper floor, gable roof
09201245
 


Residential stable of a three-sided courtyard Pflaumenallee 4
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (renovated in 1998) Due to the elevated location, a large, picture-defining half-timbered building, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor, upper floor facing the courtyard and gable half-timbered, the other long side solid and enlarged windows, hipped roof

09201223
 


Former stable house in a four-sided courtyard Plum Avenue 9 1st half of the 19th century Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural and socio-historical importance.

Ground floor massive with sandstone walls, upper floor half-timbered, compartments with loam piles, gable roof

09201221
 

Reichenbach

image designation location Dating description ID
Residential building Ahornweg 1 around 1800 rural house with half-timbered upper floor typical of the region, largely preserved in its original appearance, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor, upper floor single-bar framework with diagonal struts, windows with muntin, boarded gable sides, gable roof, slate covering

08990565
 


Former stable house and barn of a farm Ahornweg 6
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century late examples of agricultural buildings with wooden construction, of architectural and economic importance.
  • Residential house: Solid ground floor, modified, upper floor half-timbered, original window size, clad, gable roof, slate roofing, a horizontal skylight
  • Barn: partly solid, partly half-timbered construction, large old gate, jam zone with mountain hatch, saddle roof
08990589
 


Residential house (former forester's house), gate system and surrounding retaining walls At field 9
(card)
re. 1802 Stately structure with timber-framed upper floor boarded up typical of the region, exposed location, significance in terms of building history, local history and local history.
  • Residential building: massive ground floor, z. Currently changed (entrance relocated, etc.), upper floor with original window size, ornamental roofing, high, mighty half-hip roof, side toilet bay, street-side eaves with double-bar framework
  • Gate system: several entrances with segmental arches, driveway and two entrances flanked by pillars with crowns
  • Retaining wall: dry stone walls with buttresses
08991609
 


Farmhouse At the edge 9b 1st half of the 19th century Typical regional house with half-timbered upper floor, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor, upper floor double-bar framework with corner struts, e.g. T. boarded up, one gable side massive, gable roof, z. T. old windows, old door

08991635
 


Memorial to those who fell in the Franco-German War
Memorial to those who fell in the Franco-German War At the pond
(map)
after 1870 Obelisk-like sandstone monument with fine ornamentation, local historical significance.

About two meters wide, fortified by natural stone, sandstone about 2.20 m high on it, base area with inscriptions (illegible), obelisk with acanthus , laurel wreath and cross, the final top is missing

08991615
 


Memorial to the fallen of the First World War
Memorial to the fallen of the First World War At the pond
(map)
1920s (war memorial) Obelisk-like structure with a wide staircase in front of it, characterizing the street below the church, of local historical significance.

wide base, obelisk made of red sandstone, relief with laurel wreath, inscription: "To your brave sons who stayed in World War II for the fatherland / 1914–1918", top with cross, in front of it originally iron fence with cross and swords, three-step staircase with side steps Walls

08991612
 


Reichenbach village church (church with furnishings)
More pictures
Reichenbach village church (church with furnishings) At the pond 2
(map)
1727-1728 Hall church with central turret, partly built in half-timbered construction, of architectural and local significance.

Solid base area and corner zones as well as additions, otherwise half-timbered plastered, the north side entirely boarded up, the three window axes with original windows, on the east side original double-winged door, profiled wooden eaves, hipped roof, beaver tail covering, roof turret with clock, slated, curved tent roof

08991614
 


Old school (former school (now residential building)) At the pond 2 (next to)
(map)
re. 1834 Upper floor half-timbered, largely restored in its original appearance, of architectural and local significance.

Solid ground floor, sandstone walls, entrance with roofing on consoles, upper floor eaves side double-bar framework with diagonal struts, crooked hip roof, beaver tail covering, two bat dormers, later massive annex to the rear (both gable sides and rear front solidly developed)

08991613
 


Western stable house and northern side building (with Kumthalle) of a three-sided courtyard Am Teich 8
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century Stable house upper floor half-timbered, agricultural buildings typical of the region, of architectural significance.
  • Residential stable house: solid ground floor, modified, upper floor double-bar timbered framework with diagonal struts, old windows in the gable field, gable roof (newly covered), solid rear
  • Stable: two-storey plastered building, basket-arched Kumthalle, gable roof
08991616
 


Cottage At the pond 9 Early 19th century typical of the region with an intact half-timbered upper floor, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor (changed), upper floor half-timbered clad or plastered, gable roof

08991619
 


Cottage (without extensions) Am Teich 11
(map)
around 1800 Half-timbered house, largely preserved in its original form, of architectural value.

two-storey, solid ground floor, half-timbered upper floor, gable roof with beaver tail double covering

09300511
 


Stable house of a farm Am Teich 12
(map)
Kern 17th century Typical regional farmhouse with a very old half-timbered construction with curved St. Andrew's cross and dragonfly motif on the threshold, of architectural and domestic importance.

Ground floor massive, changed, eaves side single-bar framework with head struts, gable side and rear part clad, gable roof

08991617
 


Transformer house; Überlandstromverband Freiberg (formerly): transformer house Berggasse
(map)
1912-1913 Half-timbered building that characterizes the locality, as evidence of the early electrification of the Freiberg area of ​​regional and technical historical importance.

Solid base, half-timbered structure, compartments with brick, plastered, steep tent roof with slate covering and wooden top with gable roof with slate covering

After Freiberg already had a municipal power supply network around 1905, the electrification of the surrounding communities followed between 1910 and 1920. In order to avoid an unprofitable fragmentation of the supply areas, various municipalities joined together to form supply associations, each with their own electricity company, with Reichenbach being supplied by the Freiberg overland electricity association founded in 1911 through a power station in Lichtenberg. In the course of the progressive networking of the regional supply networks, such as the Freiberg overland electricity association and the Elbe Valley Central Pirna in 1918, and finally the nationalization of the Saxon electricity supply, the individual supply associations lost their independence. In 1925, the joint stock company Sächsische Werke, founded in 1923, also took over the power plant of the Freiberg overland electricity association, which was ultimately shut down in 1929. A few large power plants are now feeding into a supra-regional power grid. The large Hirschfelde power station, for example, increasingly supplied the Freiberg area via the 100 kV transmission line between Dresden, Chemnitz, Silberstrasse and Herlasgrün, which was expanded in 1918. The regionally existing network structures consisting of 15 kV medium voltage lines and 220 or 280 V local electricity networks were retained, but were replaced over time by more modern systems.

The present transformer house from 1912/13 is a testimony to the early days of electrification in the Freiberg area. Until it was shut down at the end of the 1970s, it housed the technical systems for converting medium voltage into low voltage that can be used by end consumers and was part of a large number of transformation stations built in the same or similar construction in the communities. It is designed as a tower station in half-timbered construction and has a high, slate-covered tent roof with a wooden attachment with a gable roof for the wall ducts. It is at the beginning of the development of a new building task: the encasing of electrotechnical systems in village and urban surroundings. In the Freiberg area, this was initially solved with a design linked to the goals of homeland security, in which the technical function is largely hidden by a structural shell that is creatively integrated into the landscape. Depending on the dimensions of the transformers to be housed, the half-timbered type construction was carried out in different sizes (here type B, see scientific notes). The number of stations was based on the size and energy requirements of the respective location. The localities were mainly supplied with a single station, only in the elongated locality of Oberschöna (cf. obj. 09209084 and 09209108) two transformer houses in half-timbered construction have survived to this day. Overall, the following transformer stations have been preserved from this early design in the former supply area of ​​the overland power association:

  • Großvoigtsberg (Obj. 08991785)
  • Kleinwaltersdorf (Obj. 09201352)
  • Niederbobritzsch (Obj. 09208259)
  • Oberschöna (Obj. 09209084 and 09209108)
  • Reichenbach (present object)
  • Seifersdorf (Obj. 08991754)
  • Seiffen (originally from Deutscheinsiedel, Obj. 09236523)

Later structural forms of transformer stations are not only more massive and larger, but also have a much more functional, more objective structural design. In addition to the tower stations, which remained the predominant design for a transformer station until the end of the 1970s, the townscape is dominated by simple compact stations made from standardized components today.

Monument value: The present transformer house is one of the few remaining evidence of the early electrification of the Freiberg area by the Freiberg overland electricity association. Together with transformer stations of the same construction, it proves the underlying concept as a type construction. In comparison with more recent systems, the design development of this building task is also evident. Above all, as a component of an electricity supply system, the transformer house is to be seen as an important regional and supply-historical material testimony with high scientific and documentary significance and great experience value. The preserved regional power plants and later the power stations, transformer stations and transformer stations, but also the line networks in the various voltage areas, make Saxony's power supply history tangible even today and prove the transition from local supply islands to a state-controlled, supra-regional supply network for electricity. In addition, the present transformer house also has a character that defines the townscape. The fact that the technical task of the transformer house is hidden behind the design of the structural shell that fits into the landscape shows the importance of homeland security at the time of its construction. Together with other of these older transformer stations, some of which have now become functionless - whether they are also type buildings or architecturally individually designed - the transformer house demonstrates a considerate building culture for technical functional buildings in the townscape, which today no longer plays a role in the course of purely economic considerations. LfD / 2012

08991601
 


Southwestern house and northwestern side building (with Kumthalle) of a four-sided courtyard Berggasse 1
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century Agricultural building with half-timbered upper floor of a farm that has been preserved in its structure, of architectural and economic significance.
  • Residential house: Solid ground floor, modified, upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, boarded up one gable side, solid second gable side, gable roof
  • Stable: Solid ground floor, single-arched Kumthalle with brick arch, upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, partly boarded up, gable roof
08991632
 


Northern stable house, southwestern barn and side building of a three-sided courtyard attached to it Berggasse 11
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Half-timbered buildings preserved in the construction, of architectural and economic significance.
  • Residential stable house: solid ground floor, sandstone walls, slightly changed, upper floor timber-frame boarded, windows with muntin, second gable side clad, toilet bay, saddle roof
  • Barn: solid ground floor, boarded up upper floor, gable roof
08991600
 


Tomb of the mayor and landowner Emil Scheinert as well as a tomb for 6 victims of fascism Hirschstrasse
(map)
Late 1920s of local importance.
  • Scheinert tomb: elaborately designed with columns and semi-dome in the style of the time, column position with polygonal shafts, black polished granite tablet: "Resting place of the mayor and landowner Emil Scheinert / * Jan. 21, 1875 / died Jan. 3, 1927", dome top, black polished granite, “It is done”, sandstone enclosure
  • Grave slab for 6 victims of fascism: concrete slab, relief essay with inscription: “Here are 6 concentration camp prisoners murdered in May 1945”, framed by a star-shaped one

laid out barbed wire relief

08991630
 


Residential stable house and two barns in a three-sided courtyard Kirchsteig 2 around 1800 intact courtyard structure with half-timbered buildings, of architectural and economic importance.
  • Residential stable house: solid ground floor, upper floor double-bar timbered framework with diagonal struts, boarded gable, saddle roof, boarded up outer eaves side
  • northern barn: half-timbered construction, mountain door, gable roof
  • southern barn: wooden construction, boarded up, gable roof
08991608
 


Residential stable house, side building, barn and enclosure wall of a three-sided courtyard Kirchsteig 3
(map)
Core 18th century stately courtyard with typical regional buildings with wooden construction, architectural, local and economic significance.
  • Stable house: solid ground floor, entrance with keystone, wooden extension, upper floor half-timbered, clad, hipped roof
  • Barn: wooden structure, boarded up, gable roof, stable built at right angles: solid ground floor, e.g. Partly changed, upper floor boarded up, gable roof
  • Enclosure wall with arched entrance and driveway with gate pillars
08991607
 


Residential stable house and two side buildings of a four-sided courtyard Kirchsteig 4
(map)
around 1800 stately buildings with half-timbered upper storey, significance in terms of building history and local history.
  • Residential stable house: ground floor solid, smoothed, upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, but mostly plastered, gable roof, a mountain caterpillar, back with short forelock
  • Northern side building: solid ground floor, changed, upper floor two construction phases can be seen, single-bar framework in the right part with changes, left part double-bar with diagonal struts, boarded gable side, gable roof, slate covering
  • southern side building: solid ground floor, entrance with sandstone walls and roof, upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, some very old windows, clad gable side, gable roof, slate roofing
08991606
 


Stable house of the former hereditary court Talstrasse 1
(map)
Core probably 2nd half of the 18th century Stately structure with half-timbered upper floor in an exposed location, of architectural and local importance.

Solid ground floor, sandstone walls, entrance with segment arch and keystone, e.g. Some of the original windows and two-winged old door with skylight, upper floor mostly half-timbered, clad, original window size, hipped roof

08991610
 


Inheritance court: inn of the former inheritance court and house tree Talstrasse 3
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century characteristic building with half-timbering on the upper floor, characterizing the street scene, of importance in terms of building history and local history.
  • Ground floor massive, changed, entrance with sandstone walls with straight roofing, upper floor eaves side three-bar framework with diagonal struts, e.g. T. windows with sprouting, solid gable ends, small arched window in the gable field, hipped roof
  • House tree: chestnut
08991611
 


Residential building (former forge) Talstrasse 5
(map)
Kern 17th century Partly very old half-timbered construction with curved St. Andrew's cross and dragonfly motif, of importance in terms of building history and house history, characterizing the street scene.

Ground floor solid, smoothed, upper floor single-bar framework, in the middle part the oldest section with flattened head struts and St. Andrew's cross, otherwise with diagonal struts or plastered, boarded gable, gable roof (new covering)

08991602
 


Residential house with barn extension Talstrasse 7
(map)
1st half of the 19th century, probably 1833 with half-timbered construction typical of the landscape, of architectural and local history of interest.
  • Solid ground floor, modified, upper floor double-bar framework with corner struts, windows with muntin, one solid gable side, gable roof
  • on the eastern side of the gable set back barn extension, in the upper part with half-timbering, pent roof
08991603
 


Residential building Talstrasse 9
(map)
Core 18th century Hook-shaped floor plan, half-timbering on the upper floor, characterizing the street scene and of significance in terms of building history.

Solid ground floor, upper floor single-bar timbered frame with diagonal struts, one gable side with Bohemian planking, gable-side wing largely solid and with extension, saddle roof, occasional windows with muntin and winter windows

08991604
 


Cottage Talstrasse 11
(map)
around 1800 typical of the landscape with intact half-timbered construction on the upper floor and wooden economic section, significance in terms of architectural and local history, characterizing the street scene.

Solid ground floor, upper floor single-bar framework with diagonal struts, boarded gable, with old sliding window, gable roof, built-in economic section, boarded up, pent roof

08991808
 


Residential building Talstrasse 17
(map)
18th century Typical landscape residential house with intact half-timbered construction on the upper floor, of importance in terms of building history and the street scene.

Solid ground floor, plastered atypically, upper floor single-bar framework with diagonal struts, clad gable side, solid second gable side, window with muntin renewed, gable roof, slate covering

08991599
 


House of a farm Talstrasse 23
(map)
Kern 17th century Typical regional building with a half-timbered upper floor with a particularly old half-timbered construction (curved St. Andrew's cross), of importance in terms of building history, house history and local history.

Solid ground floor, slightly modified, upper floor single-bar framework with St. Andrew's cross and flattened head braces, threshold with dragonfly motif, later extended timber framework towards the west, double-bar with diagonal braces, clad gable ends, gable roof, slate covering

08991597
 


Eastern farmhouse (former stable house) and southern side building of a three-sided courtyard Talstrasse 28
(map)
around 1880 Typical rural property of the time, the plastered areas with accentuating design, of architectural and economic importance.
  • Residential building: massive ground floor, e.g. Partly changed, massive gable sides, pilaster strips, profiled window frames, two arched windows in the gable, oculi, eaves side upper floor half-timbered clad, gable roof, slate covering
  • Side building: two-storey, massive, pilaster structure, three segment arch gates, upper floor window with muntin, ventilation slots arranged in pairs in the left part, profiled eaves, gable roof
08991598
 


Western and northern side buildings and eastern barn of a four-sided courtyard Zellhäuser 1
(map)
at the end of the 18th century large stately structures, e.g. Partly of scientific and documentary value, local historical importance.
  • Barn: two-storey, with large segment arch gates, windows with sandstone walls, over the gates with segment arch, gable roof with roof overhang,
  • northern side building: solid ground floor, e.g. Partly changed, upper floor half-timbered, boarded up outside, massive gable side, crooked hip roof, slate covering, ruinous
  • western side building: two-story, heavily modified, hipped roof
08991596
 


Eastern side building and western barn of a three-sided courtyard Zellhäuser 3
(map)
19th century Typical regional farm buildings of a large half-timbered farm, of interest in terms of building history and local history.
  • Barn: predominantly half-timbered construction, partly boarded up, gable roof, e.g. T. slate cover, building extended twice
  • Stable: massive ground floor, changed, upper floor mostly half-timbered, boarded up, old windows, gable roof, slate roofing
08991594
 


Residential stable house and barn of a former miners' settlement Zellhäuser 6
(map)
around 1800 Typical regional stable house with half-timbered upper floor, of architectural and local significance.

The house, built in typical regional half-timbered construction with a later western extension, is part of a former small miners' settlement north of Reichenbach, which was probably built before 1800 at the foot of the Zellwald forest. Mining flourished in the 18th and 19th centuries in Reichenbach and the neighboring communities and, along with agriculture, made a significant contribution to village development. Due to the increasing number of inhabitants, new properties emerged not only within the villages, but also outside of the localities smaller settlements such as the Zellhäuser. The existing building documents a traditional construction method that exemplifies this rural development at the end of the 18th century. The authentic character of the half-timbered building has been preserved and documents the working and living conditions of the time before 1800. The younger barn from around 1900, which stands in the corner of the house, documents the changes in the agricultural use of the farm and the changes that go with it. The plastered building with a very well preserved roof structure and three original gate openings on the courtyard side forms a spatial component of the Winkelhof. As the last residential building in the former miners' settlement "Zellhäuser" to have been preserved in its basic construction, it has an identity-creating testimony and documentation value. The monument status of both buildings thus results - in addition to the architectural history - also from their local and social historical significance. LfD / 2017

  • Residential stable house: Solid ground floor, upper floor double-bar or single-bar framework with diagonal struts, clad gable side, gable roof, various small attachments, two-storey, narrow, massive add-on on the western gable side, gable roof
  • Barn: massive, three gates, large central gate, the two sides with segment arches, gable roof
08991593
 


Western barn and southern side building of a three-sided courtyard Cell houses 9; 9b
(card)
1st half of the 19th century Typical regional agricultural farm buildings with half-timbered structures, significance in terms of building history and local history.
  • Stable: solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered with original window size, clad, gable roof
  • Barn: half-timbered construction with diagonal struts, old gates, windows with muntin, gable roof, slate covering, clad gable side
08991591
 


Forester's house, northern side building and western barn of a former forestry yard Zellhäuser 13
(map)
around 1900 Despite structural changes, it is a monument, of local historical importance.
  • Residential house: single-storey, solid, window and gate with segment arch with brick surround, beveled brick bench, some original windows, jamb zone with ornamental framework, central bay window, crooked hip roof
  • Stable: partly solid, partly wood construction, hipped roof with raised eaves, beaver tail crown covering
  • Barn: plastered quarry stone structure, central segment arched door, gable roof, beaver tail crown covering
08991595
 


Syringe house Zur Aue
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century Certificate of fire protection in the place.

Quarry stone construction, gate entrance with old gate on the gable side, boarded gable field, recovery hatch, gable roof, beaver tail covering

08991622
 


Northern side building and western barn of a four-sided courtyard Zur Aue 1
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Rural farm buildings typical of the region with half-timbered structures, significance in terms of architectural and local history.
  • Stable: solid ground floor, changed, upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, mountain door, e.g. Some old windows, boarded up gable side, clad outside, gable roof
  • Barn: originally a house, half-timbered e.g. T. on the ground floor, upper floor half-timbered z. T. boarded up, z. T. disguised, gable roof
08991623
 


Western side building (with Kumthalle) of a four-sided courtyard To Aue 7
(map)
around 1900 Late example of a rural half-timbered building with a central projectile and roof turret, of architectural historical interest. Solid ground floor, wide segmented arched door, in the central projection probably originally a two-arched Kumthalle, upper floor double-bar framework, southern gable side massive, crooked hip roof, open ridge on central projection with tent roof 08991621
 


Cottage Zur Aue 12
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Rural house typical of the region with an intact half-timbered upper floor, of architectural historical interest.

Solid ground floor, larger wooden entrance porch, upper floor double-bar framework with corner struts, gable roof, slate covering, boarded up one gable side

08991618
 


Barn of a former four-sided farm and mountain cellar Zur Aue 15
(map)
around 1900 Agricultural building typical of the region with a more recent half-timbered construction and evidence of rural stockpiling, historically important.
  • Stable house: Solid ground floor, changed, upper floor largely half-timbered, clad, high pitched roof, gable side upper floor with horizontal windows
  • Barn: solid ground floor, half-timbered upper floor, e.g. Partly covered, flat saddle roof, sliding gate
  • Bergkeller: small brick building on a slope with a gable roof, boarded gable, segmental arch entrance, residential stable house was demolished before 2013
08991620
 


Residential stable house and mountain cellar Zur Aue 18
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century Late example of a farmhouse with a half-timbered upper floor typical of the region and evidence of rural stockpiling, historically important.
  • Stable house: massive ground floor, e.g. Partly changed, upper floor double-bar framework with corner struts, one gable side and back plastered, second gable side solid, balcony structure inserted in front of the entrance, gable boarded up on solid side, saddle roof
  • Bergkeller: quarry stone wall with a simple wooden door
08991631
 


Residential stable house and western barn of a three-sided courtyard Zur Aue 19
(map)
End of the 19th century stately building of the later generation, rural construction with half-timbering, of local history of interest.
  • Stable house: solid ground floor, changed, upper floor half-timbered, partly clad, partly plastered, gable roof
  • Barn: ground floor changed, high upper floor with three-bar framework with diagonal struts, mostly boarded up, hipped roof, slate roofing
08991820
 


Moving out house of a three-sided farm Zur Aue 22
(map)
1st half of the 19th century typical of the region with intact wooden construction on the upper floor, of architectural and socio-historical importance.

Solid ground floor, wooden door frame, old door with skylight, upper floor with original window size, boarded up, gable roof, wooden economic section on the rear gable side

08991627
 


Bridge over the Hirschgraben To Aue 50 (near)
(map)
presumably 19th century traffic history significance.

Natural stone arch bridge over a stream

08991628
 

Rothenfurth

image designation location Dating description ID
Dump God with us; Halde St. Anna; Halde Seven Brothers; Old dumps: four dumps (Map) 18th century Ranking of heaps, significance in terms of mining history and local history.

Halde "God with us": Flst. 274a, heap "St. Anna “: Flst. 288, heap “Seven Brothers”: Flst. 29/1, "Altväter" dump: Flst. 314 and 318.

08991710
 


Old hope of God pit: sections of an artificial trench, section at the same time opening gates to the “Old Hope of God” mine, and mouth holes 18th century (artificial moat); 18th century (mouth hole) Mining history evidence of the region, see also object no. 08991697 (OT Kleinvoigtsberg) u. 08992220 (OT Hohentanne) 08992221
 


Altväterbrücke (former aqueduct over the Freiberger Mulde and the Churprinzer mine canal)
More pictures
Altväterbrücke (former aqueduct over the Freiberger Mulde and the Churprinzer mine canal) Alte Meißner Strasse
(map)
around 1570, Part of the bridge is located in the municipality of Halsbrücke, OT Halsbrücke (object 08985206), evidence of one of the most important mining water management systems in the Halsbrücker area, three-arched stone bridge, of great local, transport and mining historical importance, valuable in terms of building history due to its old age.

Three-arched bridge, still four-arched until 1993/94 (length 70.2 m, total width 5.05 m, lane width 2.85 m, height 7.3 m, span of the arches over 10 m), originally as a road bridge in the 16th century Built for the Freiberg – Meißen road, end of the 17th century / beginning of the 18th century with higher pillars and arched arches to create an aqueduct (now with 12 stone arches with a span of 10 to 14 m, total length of the structure 188.5 m , Height 24 m), was used to supply the St. Anna pit north of the hollow on the slope, together with the old fathers, with water for an artificial bike from the old fathers artificial ditch branching off from the Münzbach; after this pit was closed in 1752, it was still used to supply Isaac's inheritance ditch from 1767 Until 1795 with impact water, subsequently further maintenance for possible future use, in 1893/94 then demolition of the aqueduct due to dilapidation, continued use of the road bridge until today, bridge cheeks and parapet walls made of quarry stone (house stones a us Freiberg Gneiss), covered with slabs, street pavement made of gneiss, lane flanked by a narrow footpath (granite pavement made of small pieces), concrete and reinforced concrete used during renovation in 1993/94, the two southern bridge arches seem older from the wall structure, the northern arch over the 1788 / 89 built Churprinzer mine canal probably later supplemented, the silted up fourth arch on the left bank of the Mulden was filled in during the renovation, massive pier stumps as templates on the bridge, while east (upstream) on the central bridge piers as ice breakers, triangular half-height support pillars, on the western one Side (downstream) cuboid supporting pillars up to a little above the parapet height, these templates are remnants of the higher pillars attached to the original road bridge, which supported the arches of the aqueduct, they replaced a channel construction originally made of wood until 1715. Former aqueduct extends over two communities: Halsbrücke, OT Halsbrücke - district of Halsbrücke, Flrst. 271, 277/3 and Großschirma, Stadt, OT Rothenfurth - district Rothenfurth, Flrst. 376, 312, 331, 358/1

08991637
 


Isaakbrücke (road bridge with a stone marking the boundary) Isaac
(card)
19th century Part of the bridge is located in the municipality of Halsbrücke, OT Halsbrücke, Am Hammerberg (object 08985205), a wide-span sandstone arch bridge, of importance in terms of technology and transport history.

flat single-arch bridge over the Freiberg Mulde, rusticated sandstone blocks, slightly rising towards the middle, sparsely decorated iron railing, path edging made of granite slabs, bridge strings made of ashlar masonry, at the level of the middle of the river a marker stone on the outer railing with the inscription: "Halsbrücke" and "Rothenfurth" (painted on); Bridge extends over two municipalities: municipality of Halsbrücke, OT Halsbrücke, Am Hammerberg, district Halsbrücke, parcel 173d

08991639
 


Residential building Isaac 2
(card)
Core 18th century Typical for the region with a boarded-up upper floor, presumably a former miners' house, of architectural and local significance.

Smoothed ground floor, half-timbered upper floor, but all windows enlarged, saddle roof, presumably former miners' house

08991640
 


Heap Isaac 2 (near)
(card)
18th century Testimony to mining history.

larger hill planted with deciduous trees

08991641
 


Four high water marks
Four high water marks Muldentalstrasse
(map)
re. 1827 High water marks carved in the rock with inscription, local historical significance 08991658
 


Mouth hole Muldentalstrasse
(map)
18th century Testimony to mining, of local history.

Mouth hole carved in the rock, closed by brickwork and iron hatch

08991643
 


Individual features of the aggregate mine canal: Churprinzer mine canal; Anna laundry weir; Mine canal: mine canal, lock system and weir with associated bank reinforcement (see subject group 09305134, Am Pappenwerk 1) Muldentalstrasse
(map)
1788-1789 Bank reinforcement made of quarry stone masonry, covered with gneiss slabs, artificial ditch to bring about impact water for the Churprinz Friedrich August Erbstolln pit near Großschirma as well as for the transport of ores from the pit to the Halsbrückner Hütte by means of grain barges, Churprinzer and Christbescherunger mine canal including its roses - the preserved lock system Last of several in the course of the mine canal - and the remains of two boat lift houses - important evidence of the hydraulic engineering innovation and efficiency of Saxon ore mining, landscape-shaping technical monuments of particular importance in the history of mining and of national importance.
  • Anna laundry weir: based on its name, originally designed as a dam to supply an ore laundry to the nearby St. Anna mine and its ancestors, rebuilt by CF Brendel in 1823 as part of the elevation of the mine canal, in the weir database of the Saxon rivers as "Wehr Pappenwerk Großschirma / Wehr Altväterbrücke “(Wehr-ID 124) marked, fixed weir, 13 m wide, 1.9 m high, backwater length 330 m, tee of the mine canal branching off to the left of the weir

(see object 09305136) - a few meters below the weir - after flooding in 2002, reused as a Rauhgerinne basin pass (fish pass),

  • Lock system: System with a lock chamber to overcome the barrage of the Anna laundry weir and a branch into the reservoir above the weir, with remains of old gates to close the lock chamber and branch, lock system and hollow bank with rubble stone masonry, this bank reinforcement covered with gneiss slabs Badly damaged flood in August 2002,
  • Churprinzer Bergwerkskanal - section of the canal on the right side of the Freiberger Mulde a little downstream of the Rothenfurther barge lift house to the lock system on the Annaer laundry weir: the course of the mine canal can still be seen in the terrain profile, passing under an arch of the Altväter Bridge to the lock system on the Mulden weir, the ore barges on the left bank of the Mulden weir see object 09305136) coming - changed on a rope above the weir to the right bank, after passing the lock system, they were trolled up the canal in order to cross the river again at the Rothenfurther barge lift house (see object 08985801)

Historical classification: the Churprinzer mine canal formed the so-called Lower Churprinzer water supply for the Churprinz pit, built in 1788–1789 by Johann Friedrich Mende (1743–1798, Saxon master craftsman and later machine director), branching off from the Mulde above the Altväter Bridge and on the right or left running along the valley slope to the Churprinz mine and there supplying the artificial wheels with impact water, the width of the canal not only enabled the impact water supply, but also the transport of ores with the help of grained ore barges in the opposite direction of flow to the Halsbrückner hut, to which a further, upper section of the canal led on the left Muldentalhang from the Rothenfurther barge lift house to the ore house of the iron and steel works in Halsbrücke, lower section of the Churprinzer Bergwerkskanals between Annaer laundry weir and pit Churprinz 1822–1823 by Christian Friedrich Brendel (1776–1861, Saxon machine director) at a higher level created (thus increasing the height of fall that can be used at Churprinz to act on water power machines), the canal ended in a drivable Rösche (Kanalrösche) to the artificial wheel in the Mittelschlächtigen artificial shaft, where the ore barges could load ore from the mine’s own processing plants at a loading station using ore rolls and then on the left bank of the Mulden canal, the ore barges (load approx. 2.5 t) had to cover a distance of approx. 5.3 km (three man crew - two towers, one helmsman), travel time approx. three hours, the ore barge operation was stopped 1868, subsequently only impact water supply, 1790–1792 extension of the mine canal to the Christbescherung Erbstolln pit further down the trough as a Christbescherunger mine canal (projected by the mine separator Johann Friedrich Freileben), also here for the purpose of transporting ore to the Halsbrückner Hütte, for this purpose use / widening of an area ts existing artificial moat, thus extending the entire route by approx. 3 km, the ore barge operation on this section is only occupied until 1808, a further extension of the mine canal down to the pit of the old hope of God was never completed.

08991638
 


Residential building Muldentalstrasse 16
(map)
around 1800 Rural house typical of the region with an intact half-timbered construction on the upper floor, historically important.

Ground floor massive, changed, upper floor double-bar framework with corner struts, boarded gable, gable roof, slate covering, one gable side plastered, gable clad

08991644
 


Residential building Muldentalstrasse 20
(map)
around 1800 typical landscape building with half-timbering on the upper floor, historically important.

Solid ground floor, upper floor eaves side half-timbered clad, gable sides solid, gable roof

08991659
 


Residential building Muldentalstrasse 27
(map)
18th century with intact half-timbered construction, of importance in terms of building history and the street scene.

Solid ground floor, upper floor single-bar framework with diagonal struts, one gable side plastered, gable roof, slate covering

08991660
 


House of a farm Muldentalstrasse 32
(map)
around 1800 typical of the landscape with a half-timbered upper floor, historically important.

Solid ground floor, upper floor double-bar framework with corner struts, a horizontal window with central support on one gable side and one side of the street, crooked hip roof, beaver tail roofing, rear extension with half-timbered upper floor, gable roof, beaver tail covering

08991605
 


House of a farm Muldentalstrasse 34 2nd half of the 19th century late example of a typical landscape dwelling with a half-timbered upper floor, of architectural significance.

Ground floor massive, changed, upper floor double-bar framework with corner struts, gable roof

08991645
 


Memorial to the fallen of the First World War
More pictures
Memorial to the fallen of the First World War Muldentalstraße 37 (next to)
(map)
after 1918 Obelisk-like red granite with inscription, local historical significance.

Two-tiered base, roughly 3 m high, roughly hewn stone, polished text fields, relief of the Iron Cross, inscription: "1914–1918 / In memory of our dear heroes who fell in the World War / the grateful community of Rothenfurth", lists of names on the sides, below the front Lettering field, subsequently cast-iron plaque: "The Victims of War and Violence / 1939–1945", including a list of names, four large fir trees behind the memorial

08991648
 


Cottage Muldentalstrasse 38
(map)
Early 19th century with intact half-timbered construction, important in terms of building history.

Solid ground floor, upper floor with double-bar framework with irregular post spacing and diagonal struts, boarded gable side, gable roof

08991646
 


Residential house, paving and stone sluice Muldentalstrasse 39
(map)
around 1840 Rural house typical of the landscape with a boarded-up upper floor, historically important.
  • Ground floor solid, smoothed, entrance with sandstone walls with segmented arch and keystone, upper floor presumably half-timbered, one gable side solidly built on the inside, crooked hip roof
  • Stone sluice: water flow from the slope through the house to the Freiberger Mulde
  • Path: irregular large natural stone slabs
08991647
 


Residential building Muldentalstrasse 41
(map)
around 1830 To a large extent restored in its original appearance, with a half-timbered upper floor, which is important in terms of the history of the building and the street scene.

Hook floor plan, massive ground floor, quarry stone masonry, sandstone walls (new), window with mullion, upper floor half-timbered boarded and insulated, double window with muntin and decorative framing, crooked hip roof, slate roofing, roof pike with towed roof

08991653
 


Dorfkirche and Kirchhof Rothenfurth (church with furnishings and churchyard with enclosure)
More pictures
Dorfkirche and Kirchhof Rothenfurth (church with furnishings and churchyard with enclosure) Muldentalstrasse 45a
(map)
Core 14th century Hall church with ridge turret, plastered quarry stone building, of architectural and local significance.
  • Church: plastered building with arched windows, windows renewed with changed division, sandstone walls, main entrance with the roof, one-storey extension in front of the three-sided choir apse, two-storey extensions with side entrances, hipped roofs, church roof with very steep hips on the gable side, wooden eaves , two bat dormers, slate covering, polygonal roof turret with hood and small helmet, slated
  • Enclosure: sandstone masonry, gate pillars made of sandstone blocks, pyramidal end with top, old gates (19th century), tomb: neo-Gothic, side columns with decorated capitals, inscription illegible, base with chamfered corners and different profiles
08991650
 


Residential building Muldentalstrasse 49b
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century typical of the region with half-timbered construction on the upper floor, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor, smoothed, first floor with original window size, clad, solid rear gable side, gable roof

08991651
 


Residential stable house and side building Muldentalstrasse 54
(map)
after 1800 Agricultural buildings typical of the landscape with a half-timbered upper floor, of architectural and economic significance.
  • Stable house: solid ground floor, slightly changed, upper floor half-timbered partly boarded up, partly clad, windows with decorative framing, saddle roof
  • Side building: solid ground floor, upper floor double-bar timbered, partly boarded up, on the courtyard side boarded up porch with staircase, saddle roof
08991746
 


Residential stable house, items and barn of a three-sided courtyard Muldentalstrasse 55
(map)
Core 18th century Three-sided courtyard that has been preserved in its structure and is of importance in terms of architectural and economic history.
  • Residential stable house: solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, shortened, as there is no upper floor above the stable part, plastered, windows with gaps, saddle roof
  • Specifically: Solid ground floor, only stable windows, entrance with segment arch and keystone, upper floor double-bar timbered, mostly boarded up, old windows, half-hip roof, slate roofing
  • Barn: partly solid, partly wooden construction boarded up, gable roof
08991745
 


Northern side building of an intact four-sided courtyard Muldentalstrasse 62
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century Agricultural building typical of the landscape with a half-timbered upper floor, of local history of interest.

Massive ground floor, e.g. T. sandstone walls, upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, window with muntin, mountain door, saddle roof, boarded gable sides

08991655
 


Residential building Muldentalstrasse 63
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century Late example of rural construction with a half-timbered upper floor, of architectural significance.

Ground floor solid, smoothed, upper floor half-timbered, original window size, clad, one gable side solid, gable roof, two horizontal skylights

08991656
 


Feldgut (farm with stable house, two side buildings, barn, house tree, farm garden and orchard) Muldentalstrasse 72 around 1780 (stable house); End of the 19th century (side building); End of the 19th century (barn) Stately four-sided courtyard preserved in its structure, worthy of a monument despite structural changes, of architectural and economic importance 08991657
 


Ferdinandschacht; Churprinz Friedrich August Erbstolln mine (shaft building, machine house, hut house, gatekeeper's house, wash house, ancillary building and dump of a former mine) Muldentalstrasse 78
(map)
19th century Testimony to the last phase of mining activity in Freiberg Land, significance in terms of mining history and regional history.
  • Shaft building: plastered construction with a serial row of large windows with original muntin, flat saddle roof, machine house: plastered construction with colossal window arrangement, flat saddle roof
  • Huthaus: small plastered building with boarded jamb and gable field, entrance porch on the gable side, gable roof
  • Gatehouse: single-storey plastered building with a very flat roof
  • Outbuildings: several single-storey structures, e.g. Partly plastered, flat gable roof, sunk east of the Mulde by the Churprinz Friedrich August Erbstolln pit from 1863 to develop ore deposits there, from 1869 with 10-hp conveyor and dewatering steam engine, around 1960 mainly mining for deaf rock
08991642
 

Seifersdorf

image designation location Dating description ID
Inheritance court: Northern residential stable house, western side building, eastern barn and southern wing of the building with barn and two side buildings as well as six pillars of a former hereditary court Am Kirchbusch 3
(map)
around 1800 stately four-sided courtyard with architectural and local historical significance.
  • Residential stable house: solid ground floor, sandstone walls, wide entrance with segmented arch and keystone, stable part changed, upper floor double-bar timbered frame with diagonal struts, windows with muntin, boarded gable side, gable roof (partly raised later)
  • Western side building: partly three-storey due to the hillside location, massive ground floor, upper storeys half-timbered, double-bar with diagonal struts, window with muntin, boarded up on the outside, gable roof, four old lightning rods
  • eastern barn: massive, e.g. T. segment arch gates, some wooden window frames, z. Some old windows, half-timbered gable, half-hip roof, beaver tail covering
  • southern wing of the building with barn and two side buildings: partly solid, partly plastered Prussian half-timbering, saddle roof
  • Side building: massive, buttresses, hipped roof
  • Pillar: natural stone with a spire, approx. 2.50 m, e.g. T. with a degree
08991776
 


Residential building Am Kirchbusch 4
(map)
1930s Timber house in prefabricated construction, largely preserved in its original appearance, of architectural historical interest.

Natural stone plinth, single storey, porches, transverse planking, gable roof with wide dormer window, slate covering, three gate pillars made of natural stone

08991777
 


Residential building Am Perzebach 2
(map)
Mid 19th century typical of the region with a half-timbered upper floor, historically important.

Ground floor solid, smoothed, upper floor double-bar half-timbering with corner struts, clad gable, gable roof, originally the business section on the side massively replaced

08991761
 


North and east side buildings of a four-sided courtyard Am Perzebach 4
(map)
1st and 2nd half of the 19th century rural farm buildings with half-timbered construction, of architectural significance.
  • 1. Side building: Solid ground floor, various gate openings, upper floor half-timbered, boarded up, hipped roof, beaver tail covering
  • 2nd side building: solid ground floor, upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, old windows, gable roof, beaver tail covering
08991649
 


Cottage Am Perzebach 8
(map)
Core 18th century, maybe older typical of the landscape with old half-timbered construction on the upper floor, significance in terms of local history and building history.

Solid ground floor, various additions, upper floor single-tier half-timbering, one gable side clad, gable roof

08991760
 


House and pump Am Perzebach 12
(map)
around 1800 Residential stable house with an intact half-timbered upper floor, of importance in terms of building history and the appearance of the street.
  • Solid ground floor, weather house (around 1900), upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, windows renewed, gable roof, e.g. T. slate covering, one gable side clad
  • wooden hand pump
08991759
 


bridge Am Perzebach 12 (near)
(map)
re. 1818 Testimony to the development of the village in terms of traffic history, of significance in terms of building history and technology.

Natural stone arch bridge with keystone

08991758
 


Residential stable house and side building of a farm Am Perzebach 14
(map)
around 1800 rural buildings typical of the landscape with half-timbered construction, of architectural and economic significance.
  • Residential stable house: solid ground floor, upper floor, double-bar timbered framework with diagonal struts, window with muntin renewed, boarded gable side, gable roof
  • Outbuildings: massive ground floor, e.g. T. segment arch gates, upper floor timber-framed boarded, windows with muntin, gable roof
08991779
 


bridge Am Perzebach 15 (near)
(map)
1st half of the 19th century of importance in terms of building history and technology history.

Natural stone arch bridge

08991755
 


Transformer house; Überlandstromverband Freiberg (formerly): transformer house Am Perzebach 15b
(map)
1912 out of order, but in very good condition, building in half-timbered construction that characterizes the townscape, as a testimony to the early electrification of the Freiberg area of ​​regional and technical historical importance.

After Freiberg already had a municipal power supply network around 1905, the electrification of the surrounding communities followed between 1910 and 1920. In order to avoid an unprofitable fragmentation of the supply areas, various municipalities joined together to form supply associations, each with their own electricity company, whereby Seifersdorf was supplied by the Freiberg overland electricity association founded in 1911 through a power station in Lichtenberg. In the course of the progressive networking of the regional supply networks, such as the Freiberg overland electricity association and the Elbe Valley Central Pirna in 1918, and finally the nationalization of the Saxon electricity supply, the individual supply associations lost their independence. In 1925, the joint stock company Sächsische Werke, founded in 1923, also took over the power plant of the Freiberg overland electricity association, which was ultimately shut down in 1929. A few large power plants are now feeding into a supra-regional power grid. The large Hirschfelde power station, for example, increasingly supplied the Freiberg area via the 100 kV transmission line between Dresden, Chemnitz, Silberstrasse and Herlasgrün, which was expanded in 1918. The regionally existing network structures consisting of 15 kV medium voltage lines and 220 or 280 V local electricity networks were retained, but were replaced over time by more modern systems. The present transformer house from 1912 is a testimony to the early days of electrification in the Freiberg area. It housed the technical systems for converting medium voltage into low voltage that can be used by the end user and was one of a large number of transformation stations built in the same or similar construction in the communities. It is designed as a tower station in half-timbered construction and has a high, slate-covered tent roof with a wooden attachment with a gable roof for the wall ducts. It is at the beginning of the development of a new building task: the encasing of electrotechnical systems in village and urban surroundings. In the Freiberg area, this was initially solved with a design linked to the goals of homeland security, in which the technical function is largely hidden by a structural shell that is creatively integrated into the landscape. Half-timbered construction, high tent roof with slate covering, wooden attachment with gable roof

Depending on the dimensions of the transformers to be housed, the half-timbered type construction was carried out in different sizes (here type A, see scientific notes). The number of stations was based on the size and energy requirements of the respective location. The localities were mainly supplied with a single station, only in the elongated locality of Oberschöna (cf. obj. 09209084 and 09209108) two transformer houses in half-timbered construction have survived to this day. Overall, the following transformer stations have been preserved from this early design in the former supply area of ​​the overland power association:

  • Großvoigtsberg (Obj. 08991785)
  • Kleinwaltersdorf (Obj. 09201352)
  • Niederbobritzsch (Obj. 09208259)
  • Oberschöna (Obj. 09209084 and 09209108)
  • Reichenbach (Obj. 08991601)
  • Seifersdorf (present object)
  • Seiffen (originally from Deutscheinsiedel, Obj. 09236523)

Later structural forms of transformer stations are not only more massive and larger, but also have a much more functional, more objective structural design. In addition to the tower stations, which remained the predominant design for a transformer station until the end of the 1970s, the townscape is dominated by simple compact stations made from standardized components today.

Monument value: The present transformer house is one of the few remaining evidence of the early electrification of the Freiberg area by the Freiberg overland electricity association. Together with transformer stations of the same construction, it proves the underlying concept as a type construction. In comparison with more recent systems, the design development of this building task is also evident. Above all, as a component of an electricity supply system, the transformer house is to be seen as an important regional and supply-historical material testimony with high scientific and documentary significance and great experience value. The preserved regional power plants and later the power stations, transformer stations and transformer stations, but also the line networks in the various voltage areas, make Saxony's power supply history tangible even today and prove the transition from local supply islands to a state-controlled, supra-regional supply network for electricity. In addition, the present transformer house also has a character that defines the townscape. The fact that the technical task of the transformer house is hidden behind the design of the structural shell that fits into the landscape shows the importance of homeland security at the time of its construction. Together with other of these older transformer stations, some of which have now become functionless - whether they are also type buildings or architecturally individually designed - the transformer house demonstrates a considerate building culture for technical functional buildings in the townscape, which today no longer plays a role in the course of purely economic considerations. LfD / 2012.

08991754
 


Residential building Am Perzebach 18
(map)
around 1800 typical of the landscape with a half-timbered upper floor, of importance in terms of building history and the appearance of the street.

Ground floor solid, smoothed, upper floor single-bar framework with diagonal struts, eaves side boarded up (old below), gable sides boarded up or clad, gable roof

08991756
 


Residential building Am Perzebach 20
(map)
around 1800 Rural dwelling house with half-timbered upper floor, largely restored in its original appearance, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor, upper floor single-bar framework with diagonal struts, window with muntin renewed, one gable side slated, gable roof

08991757
 


Residential building Am Perzebach 22
(map)
after 1800 Small half-timbered building in an exposed location (without later massive annex), historically important

Ground floor solid, smoothed, upper floor double-bar framework with corner struts, window with muntin, boarded gable side, gable roof, slate covering

08991753
 


bridge Am Perzebach 35 (near)
(map)
19th century Significant in terms of traffic history and technology history.

Natural stone arch bridge with keystone

08991749
 


Old School (Former School and Barn) At the old school 45
(map)
1775 Representative half-timbered building with a mighty roof turret, barn with a very old half-timbered construction, historically important, characterizing the townscape and historically important.
  • Residential building: ground floor solid, smoothed, upper floor eaves side two-tier half-timbering with diagonal struts, crooked hipped roof, two dormers, slate covering, roof turret with open bell cage, polygonal, with clock and bell, curved hood, slated overall, upper floor boarded up
  • Barn: double-bar framework with wide stand spacing and St. Andrew's cross in the upper compartment, boarded gable side and rear side, gable roof
08991752
 


Farmhouse and barn Bergstrasse 1
(map)
around 1800 Residential stable house with half-timbering on the upper floor, largely restored in its original appearance, of significance in terms of building history and local history.
  • Solid ground floor, old segment arch in the commercial part, upper floor mostly double-bar timbered, window with muntin or double window (two-winged), saddle roof
  • Barn: wooden structure, gable roof
08991773
 


Former stable house and side building Bergstrasse 2
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century typical of the landscape with a half-timbered upper floor, of architectural and economic importance.
  • Stable house: solid ground floor, upper floor timber-framed boarded, gable side and outside plastered, gable roof
  • Side building: solid ground floor, modified, upper floor half-timbered, gable side clad, mountain doors, gable roof, slate roofing
08991772
 


Residential building Lichtensteiner Strasse 5
(map)
around 1800 typical of the landscape with a half-timbered upper floor, of importance in terms of architectural and local history

Ground floor solid, smoothed, upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, boarded gable side, gable roof

08991774
 


House and side building Lichtensteiner Strasse 11
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Typical regional buildings with half-timbered upper floors, of architectural and local importance.
  • Residential building: solid ground floor, changed, upper floor two-tier timber framing, e.g. Sometimes it is being renewed (wood and clay bricks), gable roof
  • Side building: solid ground floor, upper floor double-bar timbered, boarded gable side, peplum window, saddle roof
08991765
 


Residential building Lichtensteiner Strasse 12
(map)
around 1730 typical of the landscape with a half-timbered upper floor with old half-timbered construction, of importance in terms of building history and local history.

Ground floor solid, smoothed, upper floor single-bar framework with headbands, with ornamentally designed intermediate posts (perhaps originally upper arbor), gable roof

08991762
 


Residential building (former municipal office) Lichtensteiner Strasse 13
(map)
around 1850 with half-timbered upper floor, of importance in terms of building history and the appearance of the street.

Solid ground floor, upper floor double-bar framework with corner struts, one gable side boarded up, one gable side solid, gable roof

08991766
 


bridge Lichtensteiner Straße 13 (near)
(map)
19th century Testimony to the traffic-related development of the place, of importance in terms of building history and technology.

Natural stone arch bridge

08991767
 


Residential building Lichtensteiner Strasse 16
(map)
around 1800 with half-timbered upper floor, of importance in terms of building history and the appearance of the street.

Ground floor solid, smoothed, upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, clad gable sides, gable roof

08991763
 


Residential stable house, side building and barn of a former four-sided courtyard Lichtensteiner Strasse 17
(map)
around 1900 Residential stable house: plastered construction with largely intact wall-opening ratio and economical structure, the farm buildings typical of the landscape with a half-timbered upper floor.
  • Residential stable house: two-storey, ground floor part of the stable changed, vaults still exist, profiled sills on the upper floor, profiled roofs over plastered mirrors, profiled eaves
  • Barn: ground floor solid, smoothed, upper floor single-bar framework with diagonal struts, mountain door, window with muntin, gable roof, slate covering
  • Side building: solid ground floor, modified, one gable side solid, upper floor double-bar framework, diagonal struts, mountain door, gable roof
08991768
 


Residential building Lichtensteiner Strasse 18
(map)
around 1800 Largely with an intact half-timbered upper storey, significance in terms of architectural and local history.

Ground floor solid, smoothed, upper floor original window size, boarded up, gable roof, beaver tail covering

08991764
 


Residential building Lichtensteiner Strasse 24
(map)
around 1850 Typical of the region with a half-timbered upper floor, intact wooden structure, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor, clad upper floor, original window size, gable roof

08991769
 


Residential stable house Lichtensteiner Strasse 25
(map)
around 1850 Stately structure with a typical regional half-timbered upper floor, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor, first floor original window size, clad eaves sides, boarded gable side, gable roof

08991770
 


House and barn Lichtensteiner Strasse 28
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Small two-sided courtyard typical of the landscape with an intact half-timbered upper floor, historically important.
  • Residential building: solid ground floor, upper floor timber-frame clad, original window size, saddle roof
  • Barn: wooden construction, partly boarded up, partly clad with corrugated iron, gable roof
08991771
 


Two side buildings and a barn of a four-sided courtyard Mobendorfer Strasse 14
(map)
Kern around 1700 Stately rural property typical of the region with half-timbered buildings, exposed location, of importance in terms of building history and the appearance of the street.
  • Side building: solid ground floor, modified, upper floor timber-frame clad, high hip roof
  • 2nd side building: massive ground floor, modified, upper floor single-bar framework with diagonal struts, mostly boarded up, gable roof
  • Barn: two-storey, mostly half-timbered construction with diagonal struts, boarded up outside, gable roof, beaver tail covering
  • Stable house: burned down in the late 1980s
08991780
 


Residential stable house and side building of a three-sided courtyard Mühlenstrasse 8
(map)
around 1800 buildings typical of the landscape with half-timbered upper floors, of architectural significance.
  • Residential stable house: solid ground floor, upper floor double-bar timbered, one gable side solid, outer eaves side a solid section, small gable-side extension and towed extension with half-timbered upper floor, boarded up second gable field, gable roof, plain tile roofing
  • Side building: solid ground floor, upper floor double-bar timbered, mostly boarded up, gable roof
08991751
 


Residential stable house, barn, side building and archway of a four-sided courtyard Mühlenstrasse 12
(map)
around 1800 Farm preserved in the structure, the farm buildings with half-timbering, of architectural and local significance
  • Stable house: two-storey, massive, plastered, mighty gable roof, e.g. T. slate cover
  • Stable barn: solid ground floor, upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, mountain doors, windows with muntin, gable roof, slate roofing, second outside upper floor boarded up
  • Barn: partly solid, partly wooden construction boarded up, saddle roof, smoothed courtyard side, outside visible framework and two large gates
08991750
 


Börnermühle (mill house with technical equipment and barn) Mühlenstrasse 16
(map)
re. 1841 Building with wooden construction in an exposed location, of importance in terms of building history, local history and technology history.
  • Residential building: L-floor plan, street-side eaves side double-bar framework with diagonal struts, building otherwise massive, entrance sandstone walls with roofing, saddle roof
  • Barn: mainly half-timbered construction, e.g. T. disguised, gable roof
08991781
 


Residential building To quarry 1
(map)
re. 1868 Typical of the landscape with an intact half-timbered upper floor, characterizing the street scene, of importance in terms of building history

Solid ground floor, entrance profiled sandstone walls with straight roofing, upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, boarded gable side and back, gable roof, slate covering

08991778
 

Siebenlehn

image designation location Dating description ID
Old school (former school in open development) Albertstrasse 2
(map)
Early 19th century Part of the development close to the market, of local significance.

Broad, stately building, two-storey, 7: 3 axes, crooked hip roof, oversized roof extension

09201179
 


Residential building in closed development Albertstrasse 6
(map)
re. 1765; later overmolded Simple plastered construction, of importance in terms of building history and urban planning.

two-storey, elongated building with seven axes, walled-in keystone marked JGH 1765, saddle roof

09201177
 


Residential house in semi-open development Albertstrasse 7
(map)
Early 19th century In the street, largely authentically preserved building, of architectural and urban significance.

Broad, two-story building with five axes, beautiful original front door, hipped roof

09201178
 


Residential house in open development Am Bachweg 2
(map)
Early 19th century Upper floor half-timbered, important in terms of building history and urban development.

Small two-storey building, solid ground floor, plastered half-timbered upper storey, steep pitched roof

09201194
 


Memorial stone for the natural scientist Amalie Dietrich with surrounding open space
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Memorial stone for the natural scientist Amalie Dietrich with surrounding open space Amalie-Dietrich-Höhe
(map)
1926/1927 of local importance.

In the forest on the Amalie-Dietrich-Höhe, a monolithic sandstone block with a modern plaque: "In memory of our Amalie Dietrich, born May 26th, 1801, died March 9th, 1891".

09201198
 


Stable house of a former three-sided courtyard Breitenbacher Strasse 2
(map)
19th century Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.

Large elongated building, massive ground floor, upper floor timber-frame, boarded gable, (ground floor of the former stable area partly unchanged)

09201199
 


Cottage Breitenbacher Strasse 9
(map)
19th century Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor, upper floor timber-framed boarded, gable roof

09201201
 


Residential stable house and barn of a two-sided courtyard Breitenbacher Strasse 12
(map)
around 1700, later changed Both buildings in half-timbered construction, of architectural and economic importance.
  • Residential stable house: elongated building, solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered with headband and profiled sill beams
  • Barn: half-timbered construction, object partially renovated
09201203
 


Hufengut: western gatehouse and southern side building of a four-sided courtyard and sundial on the residential building Breitenbacher Strasse 13
(map)
re. 1644 Both side buildings in half-timbered construction, of architectural and local importance.
  • 1st side building (gatehouse, former stable, now converted into an apartment): solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered with headband, wide arched archway, marked 1644
  • 2nd side building (former stable): solid ground floor / upper floor half-timbered, sundial from 1644 on the residential building, object partially renovated
09201202
 


Residential stable house Breitenbacher Strasse 23
(map)
19th century Upper floor half-timbered, important in terms of building history and local history.

Elongated building, upper floor timber-frame boarded, gable slated

09201204
 


Residential stable house, side building and barn of a three-sided courtyard Breitenbacher Strasse 35
(map)
1904/1905 stately courtyard with architectural and local history significance.
  • Residential stable house: large two-story solid construction, structure in red brick, profiled stone walls, crooked hip roof
  • Side building: two-storey solid construction with a crooked hip roof
  • Barn: one-storey with jamb, half-timbered construction partly with brick infill, completely boarded up, hipped roof with beaver tail double covering, inside a threshing floor with planking and two bansen
09201213
 


Residential house in closed development and corner location Forsthofstrasse 1
(map)
End of the 19th century Elaborate clinker brick facade, of importance in terms of building history and the street scene.

Yellow brick building in the corner of Freiberger Strasse, divisions in red brick and cast stone, windows with triangular gables and heavily profiled walls, roof houses and roof bay windows with volute decorations, polygonal bay windows

09201185
 


Residential house in open development Forsthofstrasse 3
(map)
Beginning 20th century stately, villa-like plastered building with clinker brick structure, historically important.

two-storey above a high polygon base, divisions in yellow and red brick (windows / cornices / corners), windows e.g. T. pointed arch, half-timbered balcony

09201187
 


Residential house in a four-sided courtyard Forsthofstrasse 4
(map)
End of the 19th century Part of the old local structure, historically important.

Elongated solid construction, ground floor and mezzanine floor, structure in red brick, strongly profiled windows with cast stones

09201189
 


Enclosure wall and cemetery gate of the cemetery as well as five tombs and memorials for those who fell in World War II Freiberger Strasse
(map)
after 1945 of local importance.
  • Enclosure wall: plastered quarry stone with wrought iron gate
  • Individual gravestones: two lavishly decorated baroque sandstone tombs (writing illegible), a stump of porphyry pillar with garland and shield (writing illegible), Empire, tombs for the builder Straube and the painter Prof. Otto Altenkirch
  • War memorial for those who fell in World War II, three granite stones (red and gray)
  • Crypt: with two large ornate iron plates and grating, demolished before 2006
09201196
 


Residential building in closed development Freiberger Strasse 3
(map)
Mid 19th century Plastered building with a steep pitched roof, of importance in terms of building history and urban planning.

Small two-story plastered building, wide segmented arched door with keystone, steep roof with pike

09201164
 


Schwarzes Roß (inn and hotel "Schwarzes Roß" in open development) Freiberger Strasse 9
(map)
Renovated in 1897 Concise plastered construction of local history and street picture-defining importance.

Extremely stately, elongated building of 13: 6 axes, ground floor round arched windows with strong profiles and cast stones, wide portal with half columns and strong triangular gable, partly renovated

09201163
 


Residential house in half-open development and workshop on the back Kirchgasse 1
(map)
18th century, later changed Part of the old core development of the city, of importance in terms of building history and urban development.
  • Residential building: broad structure with seven axes, two-storey solid construction, gate changed.
  • Outbuildings: former locksmith's workshop, small half-timbered building, massive ground floor, object partially renovated
09201190
 


Evangelical City Church Siebenlehn (church with furnishings, five tombs and two coats of arms on the outer church wall)
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Evangelical City Church Siebenlehn (church with furnishings, five tombs and two coats of arms on the outer church wall) Kirchgasse 2
(map)
1764-1766 Baroque hall church of architectural and urban historical importance.

Baroque hall church, the soaring west tower with bell roof and open lantern. New building 1764–1766, including older components from the previous building from 1701 to 1703. The tower, which has been shifted to the north from the axis, is probably Gothic in its core; Renovated several times in the 19th century, restorations in 1835–85. Plastered quarry stone building with straight end and arched windows. On the north side the city coat of arms and the coat of arms of Electress Anna from 1581. Inside, flatly covered, on the north and south sides leading into the chancel, double galleries with built-in boxes and prayer rooms, organ gallery in the west. Pulpit altar made of wood from 1826. - Cup-shaped sandstone baptism set in white gold, 1825. - Original organ by Barth & Boscher from Dippoldiswalde renewed in 1938, organ and organ prospectus by organ builder Carl Albrecht Heinrich von Knoblauch 1811, rococo epitaph by the sculptor Albert from Mohorn for the head game master Heinrich Gottlob Schüler (died 1780) and his wife Johanna Hedwig, b. Schwartze (died 1769). Around five ornamental tombstones from the 17th and 18th centuries on the exterior of the church, partially renovated (2004)

09201152
 


Rectory with western archway and eastern retaining wall with enclosure as well as rear retaining wall on Otto-Altenkirch-Straße
Rectory with western archway and eastern retaining wall with enclosure as well as rear retaining wall on Otto-Altenkirch-Straße Kirchgasse 3
(map)
re. 1789 Rectory upper floor half-timbered plastered, part of the old buildings close to the market, of architectural and local significance.
  • Residential house: stately two-storey building on a high base with 3: 4 axes, solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, hipped mansard roof
  • western gate: round arched, marked HPW 1789 in the keystone, eastern retaining wall made of quarry stone with wrought iron fence, rear retaining wall on Otto-Altenkirch-Strasse plastered quarry stone wall
09201191
 


Residential building in closed development Kirchgasse 4
(map)
around 1800 simple, structurally reshaped plastered building of urban value.

Two-storey plastered building with an embroidered arch portal on the ground floor, quarry stone masonry and brickwork on the eaves side, on the courtyard side of the ground floor quarry stone masonry, upper floor half-timbered plastered, structurally slightly remodeled inside, no historical doors preserved, top floor expanded, large parts of the roof structure had to be replaced.

09300512
 


Residential house in open development Kirchgasse 5
(map)
Early 19th century Upper floor half-timbered plastered, part of the old buildings close to the market, of architectural significance.

Two-storey building built on a hillside, solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, solid gable, boarded up in the upper part, crooked hip roof

09201192
 


Residential house in semi-open development Liebichstrasse 3
(map)
End of the 19th century Elaborate clinker brick facade, of importance in terms of building history and the street scene.

Two-storey yellow brick building over polygon base, structure in red brick, around windows in cast stone, two-axis central projection, slightly protruding, with a somewhat more elaborate design (shell motif over the window on the 1st floor), German ribbon on the eaves, hipped mansard roof, object partially renovated

09201182
 


Residential house in semi-open development Liebichstrasse 5
(map)
End of the 19th century Elaborate clinker brick facade, of importance in terms of building history and the street scene.

Two-storey yellow brick building with divisions in red brick and cast stone, windows with triangular gable and segmented gable, eaves with German tape, roof house and roof bay, object partially renovated

09201183
 


Siebenlehner Schusterjunge (monument in honor of the local shoemaker's guild)
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Siebenlehner Schusterjunge (monument in honor of the local shoemaker's guild) Market
(map)
1926 artistically and historically of importance.

Fountain made of red granite, inscribed "Ehret das Handwerk", with a bronze sculpture of a working shoemaker boy on it

09201161
 


Residential house in half-open development and corner location Market 1
(map)
End of the 19th century Clinker brick facade, of importance in terms of building history and urban planning.

Two-storey red brick building above a high base with rich decorations, curved window gables, curved roof structures, 8: 5 axes, with shutters

09201148
 


Residential house in semi-open development Market 7
(map)
End of 18th century stately, elongated half-timbered building, part of the old market development, of importance in terms of building history and characterizing the square.

Solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered plastered, 9: 2 axes, mighty mansard hipped roof with bat dormers, built after 1764, the only change is the installation of the shop window in 1907 by the cutlery dealer Heimrich Humitzsch, in 1907 the roof was covered with tiles.

09201147
 


Residential house in semi-open development Market 8
(map)
Early 19th century Upper floor half-timbered, part of the old market development, of architectural significance.

Two-storey building, solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, mansard roof with forelock, attic house, with shop

09201149
 


Residential house in semi-open development Market 10
(map)
End of the 19th century Part of the newer market development after the city fires, of importance in terms of building history and urban development history.

Two-storey yellow brick building with red brick and cast stone divisions, upper storey with small triangular gables over the windows, the sloping corner to the market emphasized by the entrance and balcony, attic house, with shop

09201150
 


Residential house in open development and corner location Market 11
(map)
End of the 19th century Part of the newer market development after the city fires, of importance in terms of building history and urban development history.

Three-storey building, ground floor with plastered structure, the two upper floors are red brick with a strong structure in sandstone, two-storey bay window to the sloping corner, with shop

09201151
 


Residential house in semi-open development Markt 13
(map)
End of the 19th century Part of the newer market development after the city fires, of importance in terms of building history and urban development history.

Solid ground floor, upper floor brick with elaborate decorations around the windows (volutes, rosettes), beveled corner accentuated by gable structure, six roof houses, with shop

09201166
 


Residential house in semi-open development Market 15
(map)
End of 18th century / beginning 19th century Upper floor partly half-timbered, part of the old market development, of importance in terms of building history and urban development history.

Wide-spread building of 3: 3 axes, two-storey, to Reinsberger Strasse half-timbered on both floors, plastered, to the market massive (with built-in gate), crooked hip roof

09201168
 


Residential house in closed development and corner location Markt 16
(map)
End of the 18th century, later reshaped Part of the old market development, of importance in terms of building history and urban development

Broadly based two-storey building of 8: 5 axes, upper floor brick, very large, steep roof with two pikes, with shop

09201153
 


Residential house in half-open development and corner location Markt 17
(map)
End of 18th century / beginning of 19th century Part of the old market development, of importance in terms of building history and urban development.

stately two-storey solid building with stone walls, hipped mansard roof

09201154
 


Residential house in semi-open development Markt 18
(map)
End of 18th century Part of the older market development, of importance in terms of building history and urban development.

Broad, two-storey building with 7: 3 axes, massive ground floor, wide arched door with keystone, upper storey plastered half-timbering, hipped roof

09201169
 


Residential building in closed development Market 20
(map)
End of 18th century Part of the old market development, of importance in terms of building history and urban development.

stately two-storey building with five axes, ground floor with wide arched portal, steep roof, significant in terms of urban planning

09201155
 


Residential building in closed development Markt 21
(map)
re. 1768 Part of the old market development, of importance in terms of building history and urban development.

narrow two-storey house with three axes and wide arched portal, in the keystone pretzel and date, marked CD 1768, upper storey half-timbered, steep roof, significant from an urban point of view

09201156
 


Residential building in closed development Markt 22
(map)
re. 1767 Part of the old market development, of importance in terms of building history and urban development.

narrow two-storey plastered building, door keystone with date, marked CR 1767, roof house, with shop, significant in terms of urban development

09201157
 


Residential building in closed development Markt 24
(map)
re. 1766 Part of the old market development, of importance in terms of building history and urban development.

two-storey building with five axes, wide arched portal, keystone with date, marked JCM 1766, roof pike, with shop

09201158
 


Residential house in semi-open development Markt 27
(map)
End of 18th century / beginning of 19th century Part of the old market development, of importance in terms of building history and urban development.

Broad, two-storey building, slightly shifted, gable truss plastered and truss slated

09201162
 


Residential house in half-open development and corner location Markt 28
(map)
Early 19th century Part of the older market development, of importance in terms of building history and urban development

Solid ground floor, upper floor plastered half-timbering, half-hip roof, with shop

09201160
 


City Hall (City Hall in semi-open development)
More pictures
City Hall (City Hall in semi-open development) Markt 29
(map)
around 1935 Part of the development after the fires at the end of the 19th century, plastered building typical of the time with architectural and local historical significance.

two-storey building in corner position, hipped roof

09201159
 


Residential house in open development Nossener Strasse 1
(map)
1920s Plastered facade based on the Art Decó style, important in terms of building history.

A stately two-storey building above a high quarry stone base with an extended attic and three-axis roof bay window, interesting decoration with curved cornices and triangular, pointed pilasters

09201186
 


To the Schützenhaus (inn with hall) Nossener Strasse 15
(map)
End of the 19th century Plastered building with arched windows (hall) on the upper floor, of local history.

elongated structure, hall with arched windows on the upper floor, object partially renovated

09201184
 


Memorial to the fallen of the First World War Otto-Altenkirch-Strasse
(map)
after 1918 of local importance.

Honor grove with five large sandstone blocks and two curved sandstone banks, object partially renovated

09201146
 


Mining dump of the former Sohr shaft Otto-Altenkirch-Strasse
(map)
18th century of importance in terms of mining history.

overgrown rubble dump

09201216
 


Residential house in half-open development and corner location Otto-Altenkirch-Strasse 2
(map)
End of the 19th century Formerly with a restaurant, part of the newer market development, of importance in terms of building history and urban development history.

Massive ground floor above a high base, red brick upper floor, decorations identical to Markt 13, seven roof houses

09201167
 


Residential building in closed development Otto-Altenkirch-Strasse 15
(map)
19th century Upper floor half-timbered plastered, of architectural significance.

Small two-storey building, solid ground floor, plastered upper floor half-timbering, arched door, property partially renovated

09201195
 


House and memorial plaque (wall relief) of the landscape painter Otto Altenkirch
House and memorial plaque (wall relief) of the landscape painter Otto Altenkirch Otto-Altenkirch-Strasse 26
(map)
End of the 19th century of local importance.

Broad, two-storey plastered building, ground floor partly with arched windows, strong profiles, roof houses, wall relief with a portrait of Otto Altenkirch, marked 2.1.1875 - 20.7.1945

09201144
 


Memorial stone for the naturalist Amalie Dietrich
Memorial stone for the naturalist Amalie Dietrich Otto-Altenkirch-Straße 31 (in front)
(map)
Mid 20th century of local importance.

Sandstone slab with inscription and depictions of various plants / animals / ship: “This was the home of the great natural scientist Amalie Dietrich, who worked her way up from a simple child of the people to a scientific collector due to the distress of the life struggle. For ten years she researched and collected in Australia. Born May 26, 1821 in Siebenlehn, died March 9, 1891 in Rendsburg. Better a difficult life than an empty life. ”Partly renovated property

09201197
 


Badeanstalt (former) (residential building in open development) Otto-Altenkirch-Strasse 49
(map)
End of the 19th century with echoes of Swiss style, of architectural significance.

Brick building with red and yellow brick, the extension with Prussian half-timbering, gable with wooden decorations and leaf carvings, object partially renovated

09201145
 


Residential house in closed development and corner location Preusserstraße 1
(map)
End of the 19th century Clinker brick facade with accentuated corner design, important in terms of building history and urban planning.

Two-storey brick building with elaborate decorations on the windows (consoles / triangular gables / curved gables, balusters, etc.), the bevelled corner slightly protruding, with shutters

09201180
 


Residential house in semi-open development Reinsberger Strasse 9
(map)
19th century Upper floor half-timbered plastered, part of the old town center, historically important.

narrow two-storey building with four axes, solid ground floor with profiled segment arch portal, upper storey plastered half-timbering, steep pitched roof

09201170
 


Northern barn of a four-sided courtyard Reinsberger Strasse 22
(map)
19th century Upper floor half-timbered, of architectural and economic importance.

Solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered with half-timbered roof bay window as a dovecote

09201200
 


Residential house in open development Reinsberger Strasse 25
(map)
Early 19th century Upper floor half-timbered plastered, part of the old local structure, of architectural significance.

Small two-story building, solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered plastered, gable boarded, door with sandstone walls

09201173
 


Water tower
More pictures
Water tower Wasserturmstrasse 8
(map)
Door lintel re. 1912 Significant in terms of technology history and the landscape, construction company Max Schwenke from Dresden.

The 40 meter high water tower of Siebenlehn, which defines the townscape, was built in 1912 by the Dresden construction company Max Schwenke and was in operation until 1993. It is a reinforced concrete skeleton structure, the eight columns of which stand out as pilaster strips on the exterior and are brought together in round arches below the octagonal, slated container floor. The pillars arise from a round base, which is decorated with oval windows and a sandstone portal. The upper end of the tower protrudes slightly on consoles and is closed by a bell roof with a lantern. The 200 m³ steel mezzanine tank, which has been preserved to this day, was used to store water. The Siebenlehner water tower illustrates in the parallel use of two construction forms - the reinforced concrete construction with riveted steel water tank - the transition to the pure reinforced concrete construction, which was used a little later. It is therefore of great architectural and technical historical value. At the same time, it is a landmark in the region that can be seen from afar. LfD / 2017. monolithic, high reinforced concrete skeleton construction with brickwork, on an octagonal base, three-storey round structure with round blind arches, the top two-storey slated, tail cap with lantern

09201137
 


Monument to the naturalist Amalie Dietrich
Monument to the naturalist Amalie Dietrich Wasserturmstrasse 27 (in front)
(map)
1979 of local importance.

naturalistic half-body representation on a high sandstone base

09201143
 

Remarks

  1. The list may not correspond to the current status of the official list of monuments. This can be viewed by the responsible authorities. Therefore, the presence or absence of a structure or ensemble on this list does not guarantee that it is or is not a registered monument at the present time. The State Office for the Preservation of Monuments in Saxony provides binding information .

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