List of cultural monuments in Großzschocher

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The list of cultural monuments in Großzschocher contains the cultural monuments of the Leipzig district of Großzschocher , which were recorded in the list of monuments by the State Office for Monument Preservation Saxony as of 2017.

Legend

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

List of cultural monuments in Großzschocher

image designation location Dating description ID
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner, with a side gate Albert-Vollsack-Strasse 2
(map)
1902 (tenement) Formerly with a corner store, historicist plastered facade, as an almost unique example of the northern expansion of Großzschocher around 1900 of importance in terms of local building history

Gustav Ronniger from Großzschocher submitted the application for the construction of a house in the northern extension area for the corner property on Dieskau- / Albert-Vollsack-Straße in September 1902 as the client and contractor. After a few changes, which resulted mainly from the planned widening of the main road at that time, the administration approved the project in December. In August 1903 the building was completed according to the plans of the architect Adolf Freiberger. Three years later, the corner store, which Ronniger had already planned when the house was built, was to be set up. Obviously there were delays, because it was not until 1911 that the building authorities confirmed the execution. The four-story house was given a special accent on the corner of the building due to the gable structure, which was demolished in 1960 due to its dilapidation. As an almost singular example of a completed construction project for the northern expansion of Großzschocher around 1900, the house is of particular importance in terms of local building history. LfD / 2012

09298954
 
Apartment building in open development with side gate entrance Albert-Vollsack-Strasse 4
(map)
1906-1907 (tenement house) Historicistic plastered facade, as an almost unique example of the northern expansion of Großzschocher around 1900 of importance in terms of local building history

Gustav Ronniger emphasized in the building application dated May 25, 1906, that the purchase of the property alone cost 8,000 marks in 1902. Contrary to the local building regulations, the planned residential building should have four floors, because only the additional rental space could yield sufficient interest on the capital. Ronniger only received the required approval for the building project in July of the following year, and even the Dresden Ministry of the Interior was involved in the matter. The façade of the residential building, which was completed at the end of 1907, differed significantly from the originally planned one: master builder Anton Schmidt initially envisaged a design combination of two floors each with a rich decor in the upper half of the building. A much simpler plastered facade was then implemented - also by Schmidt - which is more reminiscent of the beginning of the last third of the 19th century than of the years after 1900. The house is one of the few completed buildings that arose in the northern extension area of ​​Großzschocher, which has a special significance in terms of local building history. LfD / 2012

09298956
 
Semi-detached house in open development Ameisenstrasse 91; 93
(card)
1924-1925 (double tenement house) old location Windorf, plastered facade in the style of Art Deco , of importance in terms of local history, architectural history and urban development

The company Meier & Weichelt planned after the First World War, east of today's Dieskaustraße. To build a settlement with houses for the company's employees in the immediate vicinity of the waterworks. In October 1924, the architect Hans Heinrich Grotjahn submitted the design drawings for the first duplex in the estate. The shell was already completed at the beginning of the following year and the building was accepted in October 1925. The hipped roof of the two-storey plastered building with side balcony extensions was originally intended to have two dormers on the front. In the further processing, these were combined into a monumental roof house with a bent triangular gable, through which the building is now an eye-catcher of the ant road. On the first floor, the facade was given a surrounding parapet cornice and the middle windows and the house entrance doors were given wide borders. The double dwelling remained the only construction carried out on the estate, the further development of which the company Meier & Weichelt waived before the first building was completed. The context in which it was created has a historical significance, and the design has an architectural and urban significance. LfD / 2011

09264565
 
Apartment building in open development Anton-Zickmantel-Strasse 3
(map)
1888-1889 (tenement house) historicistic plastered facade, as one of the first multi-storey tenement houses in the old location of Großzschocher of importance in terms of local building history

In 1888, carpenter Richard Frosch applied for the construction of a front house and a carpenter's workshop with a wash house as a separate courtyard building. The architect Anton Schmidt from Großzschocher took over the construction management. He planned a two-horse house, the facade of which he provided with a relatively simple plaster structure over a natural stone base. The restrained decor such as the storey and eaves cornice as well as varying window roofs give the street front its exact symmetry. When the building was completed in 1889, it was one of the first multi-storey tenement houses in the old location of Großzschocher, which contributes significantly to the building's significance in terms of local construction history. LfD / 2012

09299181
 
Double apartment building in half-open development with courtyard paving Anton-Zickmantel-Strasse 8; 10
(card)
1899-1900 (double tenement house) Historicist clinker brick facade emphasized in the center with artificial stone structure, of importance in terms of local building history, evidence of local development at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries

After Johann Christian Rudert had enlarged his property, in 1899 he applied for a permit for the construction of a stately twin house on what was then Schleußiger Weg. The architect and building trade master Anton Schmidt from Großzschocher was in charge of the execution. The building could already be occupied in the following year. At the same time, a workshop building for the joinery and furniture workshop of Gustav Albin Rudert was built in the courtyard. Facing the street, the twin house appears as a large building, the symmetrical facade of which is characterized by the central gable above a flat risalit . Different colored clinker bricks and artificial stone decor contribute to the decorative impression. There are triangular gables over the former side entrances on the ground floor, overlaid with cartouches with the owner's initials. The house is a characteristic example of rental apartment construction in Großzschocher around 1900, which is what makes it so important in terms of local building history. LfD / 2013

09264571
 
Residential house in open development and outbuildings Anton-Zickmantel-Strasse 20
(map)
around 1850 (residential building) Residential house with a simply structured plastered facade, outbuildings with a single-storey brick building, of importance in terms of local development 09264678
 
Row of tenements (consisting of four houses, address: Ponickaustraße 2, Giordano-Bruno-Straße 28 and Anton-Zickmantel-Straße 27/29) with a front garden Anton-Zickmantel-Strasse 27; 29
(card)
1929-1930, number 29 (apartment block), 1930, number 27 (apartment block) simply structured plastered facade, in the traditionalist style of the 1920s, significance in terms of building history 09264574
 
Row of tenements (consisting of four houses, address: Pfeilstraße 22, Giordano-Bruno-Straße 19 and Anton-Zickmantel-Straße 31/33), with a front garden Anton-Zickmantel-Strasse 31; 33
(card)
1928-1929, number 31 (apartment block), 1928-1930, number 33 (apartment block) Plastered facade, in the traditionalist style of the 1920s, of architectural significance

On behalf of the non-profit Leipzig construction company for small apartments, architect and builder Erich Heiser submitted a preliminary project for a block of flats in June 1928. Part of the system (number 31) was completed in the following year, followed by the second in 1930. Heiser planned a three-storey building committed to traditional construction, the middle section of which has an additional storey. Two triangular gables cover the two vertical ribbon windows of the stairwells. The long front is skillfully structured with flat wall projections, parapet cornices and a differentiated plaster design and different window formats. Since the renovation of the house in the 1990s, oversized roof structures have obscured the appearance. As a characteristic example of the traditional tenement building of the late 1920s, the house is of architectural significance. LfD / 2013

09264578
 
Workshop building and boiler house with chimney of a factory Anton-Zickmantel-Strasse 50
(map)
1924 (workshop), 1924 (chimney), 1924 (boiler and machine house) Clinker brick facade, of local and industrial significance 09264580
 
Two residential buildings in open and half-open buildings Breitschuhstrasse 11; 13
(card)
1873-1874 (number 11, residential building), 1863-1866 (number 13, residential building) Buildings with simple plastered facades, of importance in terms of local development

The simple gable-facing plastered building is the oldest on the property: it was built in 1863-1866 by the master carpenter Wilhelm Mattick from Großzschocher. The house on the eaves followed in 1873/1874, for which the local master carpenter Karl Ziegenhorn took over the construction management. In the end, only part of a large rear building planned in 1890 was carried out, as the municipality's building deputation criticized the size of the project. The group of houses clearly shows the first phase of local expansion at the beginning of the last third of the 19th century with the beginning of the high phase of the architectural redesign process by Großzschocher around 1900. The historical value of the site is based on this. LfD / 2013

09264691
 
Residential house in open development Breitschuhstrasse 12
(map)
around 1840 (residential building) Single-storey building in clay half-timbered construction, half-hipped roof, as an example of the first town expansion in the 19th century of architectural significance

The small, gable-facing house with a half-hipped roof, which was built in a clay half-timbered construction, was very likely built around 1840. It is one of the first houses to be located beyond the old location of Großzschocher, which can also be seen in the buildings that are still slightly set back from today's street. Therefore, the building has a historical significance. LfD / 2012

09298970
 
Memorial for the Turner Großzschochers who fell in World War I Breitschuhstrasse 17
(map)
after 1918 (Monument to Fallen) of local importance 09264693
 
Gym in semi-open development Breitschuhstrasse 17
(map)
marked 1929 (gym) vertically structured plastered facade, clinker-clad entrance to the courtyard, of local and sporting significance 09264694
 
Villa with front garden Breitschuhstrasse 33
(map)
1900-1901 (villa) historic clinker brick facade, remarkable wooden veranda, architectural significance due to the building type and design, built for the school director Alfred Kleine

This two-storey building, which was built by Christian Hermann Haubenreißer for school director Johannes Alfred Kleine from 1900 to 1901, can be assigned to the type of a city villa. Originally the clinker-clad house only had a mansard roof ; the upper attic storey with the drying floor was not added until 1904, which changed the proportions of the building. In addition to the laterally arranged risalit, which gives the street front a special accent, and the artificial stone and plaster structures of the facade, it is above all the veranda on the north side of the building that has a decisive influence on the appearance of the house. The importance of the local building history is determined by the local rarity of the building type and the typical design of the time. LfD / 2012

09264695
 
Residential building in open development, later a children's institution Brückenstrasse -
(map)
around 1850 (residential building) Single-storey building plastered, half-timbered gable, socially and historically significant, defining the townscape, former address Brückenstraße 11 (deleted on October 15, 1998), significant testimony to the history of local development

In 1880, the existing one-story house, which was very likely built around 1850 and was owned by the manor, was significantly expanded by the carpenter Julius Werner for a children's room in the Großzschocher children's institution. Apart from minor alterations and additions, the construction of this early social facility remained largely intact until the beginning of the 21st century, when the building was partially demolished. The front building on the street side was excluded from this. The exposed location at the intersection of Buttergasse and Brückenstraße gives the preserved small building with its half-timbered gable and half-hipped roof a special presence in the street space, which results in its defining significance for the townscape, which is to be seen alongside its architectural and socio-historical value. LfD / 2012

09264585
 
Road bridge over the White Elster, with lanterns Brückenstrasse -
(map)
1905-1910 (road bridge) Railings with artificial stone posts, iron lamp posts on them, technical monument, as an early reinforced concrete structure of supra-local importance for civil engineering as well as of local and historical importance 09264581
 
Railway bridge Brückenstrasse -
(map)
1956-1960 (railway bridge) Prototype of a steel truss bridge with rod connections using high-strength screws, railway line Leipzig-Plagwitz - Markkleeberg-Gaschwitz (6379, see PG) over the White Elster, successor building from 1956 to 1960 by the Deutsche Reichsbahn, of technical and transport historical importance 09306484
 
Residential house in open development Brückenstrasse 5
(map)
around 1850 (residential building) single storey with a gable roof , social and architectural significance

The single-storey, gable-side house with a formerly adjoining stable - probably built around 1850 - belonged to master cooper Friedrich Hermann Heine in the 1880s. In 1885 he had a laundry room building with a smokehouse built on the street. As a small craftsman's house from the middle of the 19th century, the building on Brückenstraße 5 is of local and architectural importance, not least because of the leap in scale of the Wilhelminian-style development in the west. LfD / 2011

09299039
 
House, barn and side building of a three-sided courtyard Brückenstrasse 7
(map)
around 1820 (farmhouse), 1892-1893, marked 1893 (barn) One of the few surviving farms in Großzschocher, upper floor residential building, half-timbered plastered, clinker-brick barn, of local architectural significance

The three-sided courtyard is one of the few surviving rural structures in Großzschocher, which is separated from the street by a garden and a house built in 1889/1890. On the west side of the courtyard is the stable house with a crooked hip roof, which was most likely built around 1820. A two-story stable building was built on the opposite side in 1862. Between these two buildings, a large barn with a clinker facade and tiled roof has replaced a previous building that was still thatched since 1892/1893. Since the beginning of the 20th century, parts of the building have also been used as a locksmith's workshop. Despite numerous renovations, the structure of a rural farm complex from the 19th century and the genesis of rural building can still be traced today, which gives the complex its significance in terms of local building history. LfD / 2012

09298980
 
Residential house in open development, with fencing and gate system Buttergasse 9
(map)
1908-1909 (residential house) Country house style building with half-timbering, former forester's house, in addition to its historical significance as part of the manor district due to the building typology, it is also of local architectural value

The property belonged to the manor in the 19th century and was built with a brick drying barn in 1869/1870. In 1908, the deputy head of the estate, Röcke, submitted the building application for the construction of a forester's house with service rooms and an apartment on the upper floor. Apparently the forester Rocke also had certain knowledge of building, because as a builder he was also responsible for the construction management. Even if the administrative authorities had already approved the project, Countess Wedel applied for another approval for the new building a few weeks later, and the builder Anton Schmidt was responsible for the changes in the plans and was also to oversee the execution. The forester's house, completed in 1909, shows the traditional notions of a country house with the front porch, the glare framework in the attic and the crooked hip roof and thus fully corresponds to the function as an administrative and residential building of the manor. In addition to its importance in terms of local building history as a building typological example of a rural villa, which is rare in Großzschocher, the building as part of the manor also has local historical value. LfD / 2012

09264588
 
Apartment building in closed development Buttergasse 12
(map)
1909-1910 (tenement house) Plastered facade, raised box oriel , handcart passage, stencil painting and remnants of colored lead glazing in the stairwell, reform architecture , see also the neighboring house Buttergasse 14, of architectural significance

Just four days after submitting the building application for the property at Buttergasse number 14, the teacher Bruno Munzig applied for a residential building to be built on the neighboring property. Here, too, master builder Eugen Horn from Leipzig-Gohlis led the project that was carried out by master builder Otto Voigt (Großzschocher). Obviously, however, the neighboring building was not carried out until March 1911, because the building examination did not take place until March 1911; Above the ground floor, the street facade with the bay window and the roof house on the mansard floor is strictly symmetrical. Center bay windows, pilaster-like wall templates and parapet mirrors, which also correspond in their design to the neighboring house - which corresponds to the representative apartments inside - make one think of an 18th century town house, although the ornamentation is at least partially attributable to the architectural reform efforts before the First World War . This special facade design accounts for the building's historical value, which is increased by the architectural connection with the neighboring house. LfD / 2012

09264589
 
Apartment building in half-open development Buttergasse 14
(map)
1909-1910 (tenement house) Plastered facade, corner tower, box bay window, staircase with stencil painting and remnants of colored lead-glazed staircase windows, see also neighboring house Buttergasse 12, as a typical example of reform architecture of architectural significance

In September 1909, the teacher Bruno Munzig submitted a building application for the construction of a multi-storey residential building on the property at Schleußiger Weg 21. The construction manager was the master builder Eugen Horn (Leipzig-Gohlis), the construction work was in the hands of Otto Voigt, master builder from Großzschocher. In the summer of the following year, the house with its representative apartments was ready for use. In 1995/1996 the house with its characteristic corner bay was extensively renovated. The building is characterized by a differentiated façade design: the smooth surfaces of the upper floors rise above a ground floor with plastered structures, which are only sparsely structured with parapet mirrors and pilaster-like templates. On the street facade, a highlighted rectangular bay window sets a further accent, while a two-storey veranda was built on the narrow side of the house. The importance of the building in terms of local building history results from this outstanding design effort compared to other contemporary buildings of the reform style. In addition, due to its location, the house has a special presence in the street area of ​​Buttergasse. LfD / 2012

09264590
 
Apartment building in open development and in a corner location, with an attached gym and ancillary building in the courtyard Buttergasse 18
(map)
1896-1897 (tenement house), 1897 (as a colonnade) representative historicist plastered facade, in addition to the historical significance due to the earlier use by the workers' sports club, of local and sports historical relevance

In order to be able to build his new tenement house with an inn, for which the building application was submitted in April 1896, the owner Bernhard Frosch had to demolish a large barn and stable building that belonged to a rural courtyard. In the following year Frosch also planned the construction of a so-called colonnade adjoining the house, an arbor for the garden of the inn, and a wash house. In June 1897 these building projects were completed, for which the architect and building trade master Anton Schmidt was responsible. A three-storey building was created, the facades of which were given a special structure by colossal pilasters, contrary to the architectural drawing submitted. The solution to the corner situation appears unusual: the larger-than-life artificial stone sculpture of a frog was placed in a semicircular niche above the ground floor entrance to the restaurant - certainly a reminder of the builder and eponymous for the house. Less than two years after the building was completed, the owner had the colonnade converted into a social hall, which was connected inside with the guest rooms. The use of the property by Turner has been verifiable since 1900, as a temporary outbuilding for the sports equipment was built at that time and a corresponding building with a cloakroom was added to the hall the next year. It was the worker athletes who moved into quarters in the Froschburg after they had separated from the (bourgeois) general gymnastics club. Due to this usage history, the buildings have a special local historical value, which is also - not least because of the unusual design of the façades in the local context - to be accompanied by a historical significance. LfD / 2012

09264591
 
Residential house (with extension) and barn of a three-sided courtyard Buttergasse 28
(map)
around 1830 (farmhouse), 1890-1891 (extension) Gable-independent farmhouse, a simple plastered building with a crooked hipped roof, the brick-built extension, massive barn, architectural historical value, also as an example of the change in use from a rural to a commercial courtyard area of ​​socio-historical importance

The development of this property is one of the few remaining rural courtyards. The gable-facing house with a half-hipped roof in half-timbered construction over the massive ground floor was most likely built around 1830. In 1890/1891 a two-storey brick building with apartments was added instead of a stable. After the First World War, the old barn at the rear was converted into a stable for the coal merchant Franz Hoffmann. The buildings thus document the change from primarily rural to primarily commercial use. For this reason, the historical value of the local building must be accompanied by a socio-historical significance. LfD / 2012

09264594
 
House of a farm Buttergasse 30
(map)
around 1830 (residential building) in the gable position, upper floor half-timbered plastered, half-hip roof, architectural historical value, also as an example of the change in use from a rural to a commercial courtyard complex from a socio-historical perspective

The development of this property is one of the few remaining rural courtyards. The gable-facing house with a half-hipped roof in half-timbered construction over the massive ground floor was most likely built around 1830. In 1890/1891 a two-storey brick building with apartments was added instead of a stable. After the First World War, the old barn at the rear was converted into a stable for the coal merchant Franz Hoffmann. The buildings thus document the change from primarily rural to primarily commercial use. For this reason, the historical value of the local building must be accompanied by a socio-historical significance. LfD / 2012

09264596
 
Apartment building in open development Buttergasse 31
(map)
1910-1911 (tenement house) simply structured plastered facade, historically important as a typical example of the reform architecture before the First World War

In the first decade of the 20th century, the typical buildings of a rural courtyard were still on the property. In December 1910 Otto and Auguste Pfeifer applied for the construction of a three-storey apartment building, which was originally planned and built as a half-open building by the Colditz company Müller & Meier. A barely ornamented plastered building was created with an upper floor project in the middle of the facade. The window bars make a significant contribution to the structure of the facade. Due to its economical facade design, the building can be seen as an example of buildings in Großzschocher that were based on the standards of reform architecture on the eve of the First World War. LfD / 2012

09264573
 
House of a farm Buttergasse 35
(map)
Early 19th century (farmhouse) in eaves facing the street, plastered facade, crooked hip roof, as one of the oldest surviving buildings in Großzschocher, it is of particular architectural significance

It is very likely that the northern part of the two-storey eaves building was built at the beginning of the 19th century. In 1879 the local carpenter Karl Ziegenhorn expanded the house by extending it to the south. In this way, he created space for a new shop at ground level and for living spaces on the upper floor. Extensive construction measures affected the old side building and the numerous ancillary buildings due to very different forms of use in the subsequent period, although most of them no longer exist today. A restaurant was operated on the property in the years before 1900, for which the garden at the back was also used. In 1922/1923 the building on the street side was rebuilt for a lacquer factory, in which spirit varnishes were to be produced, including the addition of the two doors on Buttergasse. A few years later, residential use dominated again after the property was acquired by the manor. Due to its early construction and the only small number of comparable buildings that have been preserved, the house has a special significance in terms of local building history. LfD / 2012

09264597
 
Residential house in open development Buttergasse 36
(map)
around 1815 (residential building) Single-storey residential building with a half-hipped roof, clay building with half-timbering, as one of the oldest preserved buildings in the historical location of the town, of architectural significance, as a clay building also of scientific and documentary value

The small cottage property is one of the oldest surviving buildings from Großzschocher and was very likely built as a clay building with a half-timbered attic in the 1st quarter of the 19th century. In 1874/1875 the property owner Friedrich Wilhelm Handel had a small stable building with a wash house built by the master carpenter Karl Ziegenhorn on the southern property boundary. Despite the demolition recommended by the building supervisory authorities in 1947, the building with no basement has been preserved to this day. With its half-hip gable and the triangular gable of the roof house, the building shows the typical forms of rural construction at the beginning of the 19th century and, despite its simplicity, an aesthetically successful solution to the building task. As a testament to the old village development, the house has a special significance in terms of local building history. LfD / 2012

09304441
 
House of a farm with enclosure Buttergasse 41
(map)
marked 1725 (farmhouse) Gable facing the street, half-timbered upper floor and half-hipped roof, wooden window frames, due to its age, the house has a special significance in terms of local building history

If a brick with an inscription in the entrance to the cellar was not reused, then the number 1725 here indicates the year the house was built. It is very likely that it was built in the 18th century and is one of the oldest surviving buildings in Großzschocher-Windorf. The gable-independent building with a half-timbered upper floor is closed by a half-hipped roof and has wooden window frames as a special feature. The slender pillars of the courtyard entrance are also remarkable. As a characteristic example of the old village development of Buttergasse and, above all, due to its age, the house has a special significance in terms of local building history. LfD / 2012

09264598
 
House (No. 44, with surrounding area) and side building (No. 46) of a farm Buttergasse 44; 46
(card)
around 1800 (farmhouse) Half-timbered buildings, farmhouse with a surrounding structure that is rarely found in Leipzig, of great importance in terms of local history and architectural history 09298978
 
Memorial stone for Theodor Körner
Memorial stone for Theodor Körner Dieskaustraße -
(map)
marked 1913 (memorial stone) In memory of the poet and Freikorps fighter and his stay in Großzschocher June 1813, seriously wounded after the Battle of Kitzen, hidden here and found by farmers, boulder with inscription, as an object of remembrance culture in connection with the Wars of Liberation, supra-regional historical significance

As part of the centenary of the Battle of the Nations near Leipzig, the monument was consecrated in August 1913, which is supposed to mark the place where the poet Theodor Körner is said to have been found wounded in June 1813 as a member of the Lützow Freikorps. The community of Großzschocher provided the financial means for the monument and the manorial estate provided the property. The monument consists of a mighty granite boulder, which rests on a field stone base and bears the dedication on the front. The grain stone is one of the numerous monuments that were erected in and around Leipzig to commemorate the Battle of Nations. Due to the outstanding cultural significance of the historical event in the 19th and early 20th centuries, the monument, in conjunction with the other Leipzig monuments in the region, has a supraregional cultural and historical significance. LfD / 2012

09264635
 
Cable junction box for telephone connections Dieskaustraße -
(map)
presumably 1922 (cable distributor) Cable distributor Leipziger type number 7, metal housing, of technical significance, rarity and documentation value 09299742
 
Apartment building in half-open development Dieskaustraße 128
(map)
1903-1904 (tenement house) Plastered facade, as one of the few examples of the northern expansion of Großzschocher planned around 1900, of architectural significance

Immediately after Gustav Ronniger had finished his construction project on the corner of Albert-Vollsack-Straße, he presented the plans for the construction of a two-horse apartment building on the neighboring property to the community building committee. The regular building application followed in September, which the authorities approved over a month later. In July 1904, the four-storey building was completed, which Ronniger carried out as client, site manager and probably also as the construction contractor. The northern facade axis with wider windows deviates from the regular structure of the street front, otherwise a great homogeneity predominates, as the restrained decor only varies slightly from floor to floor. The house is one of the few buildings carried out in the planned northern expansion of Großzschocher, which was planned around 1900, which gives it its significance in terms of local building history. LfD / 2012

09298955
 
Apartment building in half-open development Dieskaustraße 160
(map)
1899 (tenement house) with gate passage and shop, historicizing clinker brick facade, as a typical example of a residential building around 1900 of architectural significance

At the beginning of 1895, master bricklayer Richard Leonhardt from Leipzig-Kleinzschocher applied for the construction of a multi-storey residential building as owner and site manager for the property. However, it did not come to fruition. Four years later, Hermann Ronniger from Windorf submitted another application for development on the property. Shortly after the construction of the four-story tenement house, the master butcher Hermann Starke acquired the property, who also built a side building for the utility rooms of his business. The front building has a gate and a shop built in 1914-1917 on the ground floor. The clinker brick facade has traditionally designed plaster and artificial stone integrations such as bands and window roofing. As a typical residential and commercial building from around 1900 in the main street of Großzschocher, it is of importance to LfD / 2012 in terms of local building history

09298960
 
Residential house in open development (with restaurant extension), enclosure, gate, gate entrance, bowling alley and courtyard paving Dieskaustraße 165
(map)
1869-1870, later redesigned (residential building), 1877 (bowling alley) Plastered facade with simple architectural structure, central projectile with rafter gable, entrance with wooden vestibule, urban and historical significance 09264600
 
Residential house in semi-open development
Residential house in semi-open development Dieskaustraße 166
(map)
1872-1873 (residential house) Plastered facade with restrained plaster structure, expanded saddle roof, building historical value due to the development in the course of the first phase of expansion by Großzschocher around 1870, socio-historical importance due to the former typical use of the property with a mixture of residential and small business (formerly Kurt Dockhorn)

On March 18, 1873, the final inspection of the house built by the master carpenter F. Sachse, which the property owner Johann Karl Dockhorn had started in the summer of the previous year, was carried out. Even today, not only the original windows with winter windows are preserved on the two-storey building, but also the restrained plaster structure that enlivens the street facade. Already built before the expansion of Dieskaustraße, the house was originally behind a front garden. In the side building, Kurt Dockhorn set up a floor wax factory, against which the Leipzig competition took unsuccessful action against the building police and the trade office. This small business resumed production after the Second World War. The historical building value of the house results from its construction in the first phase of expansion by Großzschocher around 1870, the former typical use of the property with the mixture of living and small business is of socio-historical interest. LfD / 2012

09264601
 
Apartment building in formerly half-open development Dieskaustraße 173
(map)
1900 (tenement) With a shop, historic clinker brick facade, the typical representative of the apartment building architecture of the time, it is important in terms of local building history

Carl Julius Rüger from Leipzig-Kleinzschocher managed the construction of the four-story house with a shop on the ground floor for the owner Karl Friedrich Fleck in 1900. At the same time, outbuildings were erected in the rear area of ​​the property, in which there was first a pig slaughterhouse and then a carpentry, which resulted in the typical mixed use of the property. Four years after the completion of the front building, six to seven sleeper boys lived in the two rooms and two chambers of the ground floor apartment, in addition to a family of four and two foster children. This highlights the catastrophic housing situation in Großzschocher at the beginning of the 20th century. The residential building with the two flat side projections, the symmetrical structure on the upper floors and the alternation between the clinker facade and the decorative elements made of artificial stone is a characteristic example of contemporary apartment building architecture in Großzschocher and, in addition to its local building history, also has a socio-historical significance. LfD / 2012

09264602
 
Residential house in open development Dieskaustraße 178
(map)
1869-1870 (residential house) Well-structured plastered facade, expanded gable roof, significance in terms of local building history due to the preserved design of the street front as well as the construction in the course of the first phase of expansion by Großzschocher

Within a few months between December 1869 and April 1870, a small two-storey apartment building with two apartments per floor and a small outbuilding was built for the owner Johann Karl Wilhelm Michael. The carpenter Karl Ziegenhorn from Großzschocher was responsible for the construction. At the beginning of the 20th century, a trader from Leipzig-Kleinzschocher used the outbuildings to store bones and there was a hairdresser's in the front building, and later a hot ironer was installed here. The original street-side facade design of the house deserves special attention. A corner cuboid was imitated with plaster scratches, the fields under the windows are reminiscent of parapet mirrors and the eaves are also highlighted with long rectangular frames. This originally preserved design of the street front and the emergence of the building in the first phase of local expansion at the beginning of the last third of the 19th century give the building a special significance in terms of the local history. LfD / 2012

09298957
 
Apartment building in closed development Dieskaustraße 192
(map)
1887 (tenement house) in the corner of a cul-de-sac, historicist plastered facade with rich stucco structure, the architectural significance results from the rich facade design, and due to the long-term use as a cinema, it is also of local historical value

The corner apartment house, which the master bricklayer Heinrich Wilhelm Ruschelau had built on Hauptstrasse in 1887, underwent major structural and functional changes in 1912/1913. A cinema was added to the house and the ground floor of the existing building was integrated into the new room. The Großzschocher cinema was located here for around 50 years and was converted into a consumer outlet at the end of the 1960s. Today only little reminds of this cultural use, but the rich facade decorations of the time of origin have been preserved on the upper floors of the street-side house. Masks and heads reminiscent of grotesques, as well as cartouches, decorate pilaster strips and window canopies. The eaves have a serrated frieze and brackets fitted with fittings. Plaster tapes contribute to the horizontal revitalization of the street fronts. The richness of the facade structure gives the house, as an extraordinary testimony to contemporary building around 1885 in Großzschocher, a special building-historical importance, to which the local history should be added due to the long-term use as a cinema. LfD / 2012

09294968
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development and in a corner location Dieskaustraße 193
(map)
1899-1900 (tenement house) with corner shop and gate passage, historicizing clinker brick facade, dimensions and design of the house illustrate the characteristic features of the local expansion phase around 1900, from which the importance of the local building history results

The oldest surviving building on the property is the two-storey side wing on Anton-Zickmantel-Strasse: a bakery was built here in 1891. In 1899, the master baker Bruno Schneider then submitted the building application for a new residential building on Dieskaustraße. Hermann Haubenreißer carried out the project, which was completed in September 1900. Contrary to the concession drawing, a house was built that outwardly appears to consist of two different buildings: the larger part on the street corner was given a clinker brick facade on the upper floors, and to the north there is a completely plastered area. A homogeneously designed eaves cornice brings the parts together again. The ground floor, which is also uniformly designed, still houses two shops and the gate passage. In this building, too, with a view of the bakery building, the leap in scale that found its way into Großzschocher with the expansion of the town around 1900: instead of two-story buildings, there were now four-story buildings that were just being built on the main street. The house has a local historical significance. LfD / 2012

09264603
 
Residential house (formerly with a bakery) and barn of a farm as well as fencing with gate and gate Dieskaustraße 197
(map)
1865-1866 (farmhouse), 1870-1871 (barn), around 1840 (gate entrance) Residential house with shop, simply structured plastered facade with twin windows in the gable, fencing with richly decorated sandstone pillars, the importance of local building history as a characteristic example of the structural redesign by Großzschocher at the beginning of the last third of the 19th century

After the master baker Carl Heinrich Freiberger from Windorf had acquired the property with a rural courtyard, he had a new gable-independent house built by the carpenter Karl Ziegenhorn from 1865-1866. The simple two-story building with a storey and eaves cornice is accentuated on the street side by a double arched window in the attic. In 1870/71, the old property was further redesigned with the construction of a large rear barn. At the same time, the one-story south side building was also built. The enclosure is particularly remarkable: sandstone pillars and richly decorated wrought-iron gates close the courtyard from Dieskaustraße. The complex is of particular importance in terms of local building history, as it shows, in connection with the few other preserved contemporary buildings on the street, the architectural and functional diversity of the structural redesign by Großzschocher at the beginning of the last third of the 19th century. LfD / 2012

09264605
 
Apartment building in closed development Dieskaustraße 198
(map)
1903-1904 (tenement house) with shop and formerly with restaurant, plastered facade, in the style of late historicism, as a typical example of the expansion of Großzschocher around 1900, architectural significance

After: Ida Wilhelmine Eisert used. Mittag had also acquired the neighboring property from Gaschwitz, she applied in August 1903 for the construction of a large residential building with restoration on the ground floor on plots 184 and 185. The plans of the builder Anton Schmidt for this were approved at the beginning of next year. Already in June 1904 the rooms of the three-horse house could be occupied. In 1938 the Reich Air Protection Association set up an air raid protection school in the former restaurant. The street front of the four-storey house is characterized by two cantilevered risalits, which are finished with gables. The parapets and lintels have a decor that is reminiscent of neo-Gothic shapes. The merging of small plots for a more spacious development, the four-storey structure and the facade design typical of the time make the house a typical representative of the urban expansion of Großzschocher around 1900. This results in its importance in terms of local building history. LfD / 2012

09264606
 
Apartment building in closed development Dieskaustraße 200
(map)
1903-1904 (tenement house) with doorway and shop, historicizing plastered facade, stencil painting in the stairwell, of importance to the history of the building 09264607
 
Apartment building in open development Dieskaustraße 205
(map)
1908-1909 (tenement house) with shop, strikingly designed plastered facade, box bay window, staircase window with remains of colored glazing, between reform style and late historicism, a characteristic example of the urban expansion of Großzschocher before the First World War, from which the importance of the local building history results

Instead of a rural courtyard, the manufacturer Otto Polenz had a house built in 1908/1909, which was to include a shop on the ground floor. The Leipzig architect Eugen Horn was responsible for the planning and execution of the design, who gave the house an almost metropolitan character: he put a mighty box bay in front of the four-story building on the upper floors, above which - now asymmetrically arranged - a gable with a broken gable Contour rises. In addition, plaster mirrors under the windows, ornamented sills and curved window canopies liven up the facade. The building is a characteristic example of the urban expansion of Großzschocher before the First World War, which just included Dieskaustraße as the town's main shopping street. This is what gives the house its historical value. LfD / 2012

09264608
 
Apartment building in closed development Dieskaustraße 206
(map)
1898-1899 (tenement) with gate passage and shop, historicizing plaster clinker facade, as a typical example of the town's expansion around 1900, architectural significance

In February 1898, the mechanical engineer Richard Deubel applied for the construction of a four-storey apartment building instead of a rural courtyard with a gable-independent dwelling for his wife Alwine Hedwig born in 1875. Thomas, who owned the property. In September of that year the new building had reached the first floor, the final examination took place in February 1899. A two-horse house with a shop on the ground floor was built according to the plans of master bricklayer Richard Leonhardt. The gate passage not only served to develop the rear property, but in the 1920s and 1930s also served as an area for a food stall. The simple facade facing Dieskaustraße shows the traditional alternation of clinker brick and plastered surfaces as well as artificial stone frames for the windows. As a typical example of the urban expansion of Großzschocher around 1900, the house is of local architectural significance. LfD / 2012

09298974
 
Apartment building in closed development Dieskaustraße 208
(map)
around 1925 (tenement) with shop, plaster clinker facade in horizontal stripes, typical architecture of the 1920s, significance in terms of building history 09264609
 
Residential house in open development Dieskaustraße 209
(map)
1865-1866, later redesigned (residential building) Single-storey eaves building, plastered facade, half-hipped roof with little roof house, coat of arms there, relevance to local building history due to its exemplary importance for Großzschocher's first phase of local expansion in the 19th century

If the design had been carried out by Anton Schmidt in 1910, then a four-storey representative tenement house with rich architectural décor would have replaced the one-storey building from 1865/1866. The project was not carried out, however, only renovation and expansion work was carried out, including the addition of the street-side shop. Therefore, the building still presents itself today as a simple eaves-standing house, which is characterized by its three dormers with a crooked hip roof. In the gable surfaces of the roof houses there are medallions with an ornamented frame, the middle one being covered with the Saxon coat of arms. Originally all three dormers had two arched windows each. The historical relevance of the house, built by master carpenter Wilhelm Mattick for landowner Gottlieb Heinrich Ronniger, results from its exemplary importance for the first phase of expansion by Großzschocher at the beginning of the last third of the 19th century. LfD / 2012, 2018

09298975
 
Apartment building in closed development Dieskaustraße 210
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) with shops, richly decorated, historicist clinker brick facade, mosaic in the entrance area, staircase window with etched glazing, of importance to the history of the building 09264610
 
villa Dieskaustraße 212
(map)
1897-1899, marked 1898 (villa) historic plastered facade with corner bay window, urban development significance due to the exposed location, architectural historical relevance as a prelude to the western expansion of the town after 1900, memorable value due to its use as a local bank branch (since 1935), built for the doctor Erich Freund

When the doctor Erich Freund submitted the building application for the construction of a residential building in half-open development in June 1897, his property was not yet in the exposed corner, because Huttenstrasse was yet to break through. Nevertheless, the design of the house, completed in 1899, for which the architect Anton Schmidt was responsible, counted on this future urban planning situation. The two-storey villa with a mansard roof received its special accent from a corner bay window on the first floor. A side extension with a veranda was added in 1904/1905. In 1935, the Sparkasse of the City of Leipzig bought the building and had it converted inside to accommodate a cash desk. Due to its exposed location, the building is of particular importance in terms of urban development, which is to be placed alongside the relevance of the local building history - resulting from the context in which it was built. Last but not least, the house is anchored in the minds of the population through its use as a bank branch, so that it is also highly memorable. LfD / 2012

09299182
 
school Dieskaustraße 213
(map)
1895-1896 (school), 1899-1905, south wing (school), 1911-1912, north wing (school) Plastered building with street-side neoclassical facade, side wing oriented towards the reform style, building, site and socio-historical significance, memorable

Until the end of the 19th century, the Großzschocher school was located directly in front of the Apostle Church on today's Dieskaustraße. Due to the rapid population growth around 1900, the school community felt compelled to build a large new building on the property to the south. According to the plans of the architects Ludwig and Hülssner (office for school and hospital buildings in Berlin and Leipzig), a three-storey building was built in 1895/1896, which, by its size alone, demonstrated an urban claim. Today's street-side middle section of the school corresponds to this first construction phase. The façade bears neoclassical features through the central projection, which is closed off by a triangular gable. Shortly after completion, the school community of Frohburg asked for the project drawings, from which regional awareness of the school building can be recognized. Even this first building was planned for lateral extensions. In 1899, the young Leipzig architect Emil Franz Hänsel presented corresponding designs for a south wing , which also provided for a special system for supplying fresh air to the interior. In 1904/1905, this project was greatly modified and the local master builder Anton Schmidt was responsible for it. Finally, the office of Reichel and Kühne from Leipzig built the north wing of the church in 1911/1912. This latest extension wing shows a formal language that is based on contemporary reform architecture with differentiated window shapes and a varied roof landscape, whereas the street front was still determined by a dignified symmetry that significantly characterizes the town center. The south wing suffered damage in the Second World War, but was rebuilt afterwards. Even if the facades have now largely been smoothed out, the essential design features of the individual building sections can still be seen. In addition to its architectural relevance as a contemporary solution to the important school building task, the three-wing assembly group is of great local and socio-historical importance and is memorable. LfD / 2014

09264611
 
Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner Dieskaustraße 217
(map)
1882-1883 (tenement house) historic clinker brick facade, artificial stone sculpture on the broken corner, architectural significance as a testimony to the beginning of the architectural remodeling by Großzschocher in the last quarter of the 19th century, relevance to local history due to the client of the mill owner Zickmantel

At a prominent location in the center of the village, the mill owner Anton Leberecht Zickmantel had a corner apartment house built between 1882 and 1883. Between 1961 and 1965, the interior was converted in the course of setting up an ambulance. A clinker-clad facade rises above a natural stone plinth, which is interrupted by a cornice between the ground floor and the first floor and finished off with an eaves cornice. In addition to the differently designed framing of the windows, there is above all the group of figures of a woman with two children at the corner of the building, which gives the building a special presence in the street space. The house is one of the first three-story buildings by Großzschocher and is therefore an important testimony to the beginning of urban expansion in the last quarter of the 19th century, which gives the house its architectural significance. Due to the owner of the mill, Zickmantel, it is also relevant to the local history. LfD / 2012

09264613
 
Apartment building in half-open development Dieskaustraße 218
(map)
1899-1900 (tenement house) historicizing plaster clinker facade, building historical significance as an example of the architectural redesign by Großzschocher around 1900

Christian Hermann Haubenreißer erected the four-storey building in the middle of the center of Großzschocher from 1899-1900 as the client and master builder. Originally there were still two shops on the ground floor. The facade is characterized by the alternation of plastered wall zones and clinker cladding. Between the grooved ground floor and the third floor, the wall surface - interrupted only by plaster strips - was clad with yellow clinker bricks. Red clinker bricks frame the facade like corner blocks. Differently designed window canopies and the profiled eaves create additional accents. The original entrance door with a skylight and a richly decorated grille is also remarkable. The building is a typical example of the architectural design around 1900 and, with its size, also the urban expansion of Großzschocher at that time. The historical significance of the house results from this. LfD / 2012

09298972
 
Side building and barn of a farm Dieskaustraße 221
(map)
1888 (side building), 1888 (barn) Brick buildings on an angular floor plan, as one of the few remaining rural properties in Großzschocher of local historical importance

It is very likely that around 1850 a two-story residential building in a courtyard with a half-hip roof was built on the road to Knauthain. In 1888, the carpenter Karl Ziegenhorn from Großzschocher built a stable building and a barn adjoining it at right angles as an extension of his house to replace older farm buildings. This courtyard was preserved until 2012 when the residential building on the street side was demolished due to the acute danger of collapse. The entirety of the courtyard is a significant example of a rural property from the 19th century, which gives it its significance in terms of local history. LfD / 2012

09264614
 
Apartment building in half-open development Dieskaustraße 224
(map)
1901 (tenement) with shop, historicistic plastered facade, historically important

Starting in October 1894, a three-storey residential building with a stable and wash house was commissioned by Franz Wilhelm Franz (now Breitschuhstraße 16) on the property that was stuck through to the parallel street (formerly Triftstraße). On July 26, 1900, the application was made for a larger and a smaller residential building on the main street, today's Dieskaustraße. Architect and builder Anton Schmidt acted on behalf of the building contractor Franz. Two apartments were planned for each of the larger buildings, while in the narrower (right) apartment building only one tenant per floor (today Dieskaustraße 222). The ground floor zones were given commercial use. The tenants were able to move in in the summer of 1901. In 1934 a pharmacy was set up in the left house and work began on converting an attic apartment, with a room as a studio with a skylight. The widow Ida Stein engaged the architect Dipl.-Ing. Hanns Fritz Stein. At the same time, an apartment in the side building was set up, whose temporary use as an emergency apartment was extended by another five years in 1941, "in view of the housing shortage and the war conditions". Due to the good condition of the rooms, a further approval was granted in 1947 for a further ten years (the demolition of the courtyard building was discussed around 2000). Renovations, conversions and extensions of the front building number 224 take place in the period 1997 to 1999. On the one hand, a completely plastered facade with a facade structure typical of the time and structure emphasizing the two middle floors, on the other hand, unfortunately, a less fortunate renovation result. The two roof houses seem less than happy, the incorrect window frames and the missing decorative fields above the windows are regrettable. The façade of the neighboring house number 222 is partially better preserved in its structure. The house, which is interesting in terms of urban planning, is an early representative of the redesigns in the old location of Großzschocher and has a historical value. LfD / 2018

09298973
 
Barn of a former sheep farm Dieskaustraße 235
(map)
around 1800 (barn) old location Windorf, formerly also with the shepherd's house (clay building) and gate entrance, remarkable half-timbered barn as the last evidence of the old shepherd's farm on the area of ​​the former Vorwerk Windorf, has a special local historical significance 09264617
 
Residential house in open development Dieskaustraße 237
(map)
around 1830 (residential building) old location Windorf, rural house, single-storey clay building, local historical significance as an example of the earlier village development of Windorf

Probably around 1830 the single-storey house was built as a clay building, which also included smaller stable buildings on the rear boundary of the property. In 1896, a utility building called the “wooden stable” was added to the house. Due to its early construction, the building is one of the few remaining examples of the former village development of Windorf, which is of local historical importance. LfD / 2011

09264618
 
Residential house in open development, street-side outbuilding and blacksmith's workshop in the courtyard, as well as fencing and gate entrance Dieskaustraße 240
(map)
inscribed 1890 (residential building), 1876-1877 (outbuilding), subsequently inscribed 1685 (smithy), 1890 (smithy) old location Windorf, former forge plot, historicistic plastered facade, the functional structure of the forge complex has an architectural, local and socio-historical significance

Two dates on the building refer to the history of this property: it was already mentioned in 1685 and in 1890 master blacksmith Karl Marquardt had the old, thatched-roof house demolished and replaced with a new building. The master carpenter Julius Werner designed a two-story residential building, the attic of which was expanded two years later. Today's appearance of the four-axis facade is simpler than intended on the design, which was characterized by a rich plaster structure. At the same time, the immediately adjacent forge with an open metal shed was built. As early as 1876/1877, an auxiliary building was built as a south-western boundary to the courtyard, on the upper floor of which there was first a journeyman's chamber and then Karl Marquardt senior's exodus apartment. In 1929 it was redesigned for the establishment of an emergency apartment, which resulted in today's barren street-side appearance. The legible functional structure of a forge complex, which is also relevant to local and social history, is of importance in terms of architectural history. LfD / 2011

09264619
 
Apartment building in open development and courtyard building Dieskaustraße 248
(map)
1880 (tenement) old location Windorf, plastered facade, tenement house with shop, historical building significance 09299034
 
Residential house in half-open development with fencing Dieskaustraße 252
(map)
1894-1895 (residential house) old location Windorf, Gründerzeit plastered facade, side elevation with cracked gable, the architectural historical significance results from the design typical of the time

According to a design by the architect Emil Werner from Leipzig-Schleußig, the single-story house was built in 1894/1895 in a semi-open development. The master mason Julius Kornagel was responsible for the execution. The "picturesque" impression of this country house results from the change in color and material on the wall surfaces (rubble stone base, smooth plaster, window finishes and shutters), but above all from the roof design with the gables, of which the street side is given a special accent through an open space. The plan drawing that has been preserved shows an even stronger emphasis on the rural character: the side gable, which is also hipped, has been provided with visible framework and partial board cladding. In addition, Emil Werner planned a veranda at the transition to the neighboring building and the rear entrance to the house should also have an open wooden porch. The historical significance results from the typical design of the house. LfD / 2011

09299035
 
Residential house in open development Dieskaustraße 253
(map)
around 1830 (residential building) old location Windorf, single-storey building with a half-hipped roof on one side, as one of the few examples of the former village development of Windorf of local history

In 1865 Carl Drehsdner submitted the building application for the construction of a stately two-story residential building, for which the master mason Louis Winkler and the master carpenter W. Pfefferkorn submitted plans. Despite the official approval for this construction project, it was not carried out - and so a gable-independent house with a crooked hip roof, which was probably built around 1830, is still on this property today. In 1952 the two small windows in the street gable were combined into one large one. The historical importance of the house is due to the age of the house, which is one of the few surviving examples of village development in Windorf. LfD / 2011

09299038
 
Double apartment building in half-open development and in a corner, with a front garden Dieskaustraße 268; 270
(card)
1936-1937 (double tenement house) old location Windorf, traditionalistic plastered facade from the 1920s / 1930s with modern design elements, the importance of the local history results from the owner of the von Wedel family and, as a characteristic example of residential construction before the Second World War, of architectural relevance

In April 1936, the architect HW Merkel from Leipzig-Schleußig submitted the building application for the construction of a double dwelling for the Gräflich von Wedel'sche property company - the von Wedel family owned the Großzschocher manor. This was to be supplemented by an even larger residential building of the same type on Dieskaustraße. The construction of the house was in the hands of the master builder Otto Götz, owner of the construction business Ernst Bock Nachf. In the following year, the semi-detached house with a hipped roof was ready for occupancy. The simple, plastered street facade above the clinker base gets its structural accent from the two stairwells, which - slightly cut into the front - are emphasized by the vertical band of the continuous window. At the rear, the balconies from the construction period determine the view with which each of the 12 three-room apartments was furnished. As a building that exemplifies the multi-storey apartment building before the Second World War, the semi-detached house is of importance in terms of architectural history, and the context in which it was built has relevance to local history. LfD / 2012

09264624
 
Apartment building in half-open development Dieskaustraße 271
(map)
1891-1892 (tenement house) old location Windorf, with gate passage, historicistic plastered facade, wooden panels and stencil painting in the gate passage and stairwell, due to the preserved interior decoration of architectural significance, the visible leap in scale to the neighboring property illustrates the changed dimension of the development around 1900, which is locally relevant

Master bricklayer Paul Zechendorf from Leipzig-Kleinzschocher had a house built in 1891/1892 on the street that was then only built on the mill ditch side with a laundry and stable building in the courtyard. Zechendorf probably also took care of the construction and made the construction drawings. In 1901 Selma Zechendorf applied for a bathing establishment to be built on the rear property, but in the same year decided not to implement the project because of the hygienic requirements imposed by the district doctor, among other things. The construction drawing submitted shows a facade structure in the street front that is identical to the execution, but with a much richer decoration and the formation of central and side projections. Today the ground floor appears grooved and the windows on the first two upper floors have a horizontal roof. Wooden panels and stencil paintings have been preserved in the gate passage and in the stairwell. Last but not least, this building-related decoration gives the house a historical significance, but also the leap in scale of the buildings at the end of the 19th century, which is still visible today with a view of the neighboring property, which is also of local historical importance. LfD / 2011

09299036
 
Apartment building in closed development Dieskaustraße 275
(map)
1905-1908 (tenement house) old location Windorf, historicizing clinker brick facade, remains of stencil painting and wooden paving in the doorway, as a typical tenement house from the beginning of the 20th century of architectural historical importance

As early as March 1905, the building contractor Albin Müller submitted the building application for the construction of a residential house and a stable building with a wash house to the Leipzig authorities. But only more than two years later, after Müller again applied for a permit, did the authorities approve of the application and let down building law concerns. The building was completed within a few weeks and use was permitted in January 1908. The clinker brick facade of the street front received plastered cartridges and coats of arms in the parapet fields of the windows, which was not foreseen in the building drawings from 1907. Remnants of stencil painting have been preserved in the gateway. This typical tenement house from the beginning of the 20th century is of architectural significance. LfD / 2011

09298924
 
Waterworks with water tower and two buildings, courtyard paving, gate system and enclosure as well as inscription plaque on the tower Dieskaustraße 281
(map)
marked 1904 (waterworks), 1904 (factory building), 1913 (extension), 1904 (water tower), 1904 (auxiliary building) old location Windorf, building with clinker facade, as an infrastructural facility from the beginning of the 20th century of local and technical historical importance

The then still independent village of Großzschocher-Windorf, located south-west of the city, commissioned the renowned hydraulic engineer Adolf Thiem, who had previously also planned the water supply for the city of Leipzig, with the projection of its own waterworks. It was to be built directly on the Mühlgraben and the buildings were to be partially placed on the existing embankment walls. The building application for the operating buildings of this waterworks - the machine house, de-ironing system with water tower and the keeper's house - was submitted on May 26, 1904, and the building was completed in November of the same year. The ensemble is completed by a single-storey house for the water master (with office, living room, kitchen and three bedrooms) with an adjacent building for the laundry room. In February 1925 the waterworks, which is characterized by its yellow clinker facade and is closed off from the street with a wall made of yellow clinker, went into operation. In order to achieve drinking water quality, the groundwater pumped by a twin-engine suction gas engine system (Leipziger Maschinenbau-AG) had to be de-iced in the so-called de-icing system. For this purpose, groundwater was first enriched with oxygen with the help of a fan, whereby the dissolved iron was converted into insoluble iron oxide. The water was then filtered over several layers of gravel, stored in the pure water tank and pumped into the associated water tower. Another collecting basin cleared the polluted residual water before it was discharged into the Mühlgraben. On the outside, the de-icing system is functionally unadorned. The round containers are only visible towards the Mühlgraben and otherwise filled with earth to form a hill. The yellow clinker water tower can be entered from this hill. Above its entrance is a cast iron plaque with the year of construction 1904, two large windows provide light. In 1925, the suction gas engines were replaced by diesel engines before the municipality's increased demand for water made it necessary to expand the waterworks in 1928. For this purpose, 15 new wells in the existing "Baurat Thiem" design were built in addition to the existing seven. The long machine house was converted into a residential building after the waterworks was decommissioned in 1999. Although an additional storey was created inside, it retained its original character as an industrial building and was not changed externally. The structure of a suburban water supply system can still be seen in the buildings of the Großzschocher waterworks. It is therefore in its entirety of local and social history and also of high technical historical value. LfD / 2017

09264630
 
Official residence and factory building of a gas works Dieskaustraße 290
(map)
1899-1900, later rebuilt (civil servants' residence) old location Windorf, official residence plastered facade, factory building with clinker facade, as an infrastructural facility from the beginning of the 20th century of local and technical historical importance 09264631
 
Main building and fire department building of a factory
Main building and fire department building of a factory Ernst-Meier-Strasse 3
(map)
1913 (factory) old location Windorf, vertically structured clinker brick facade, of particular importance in terms of building history and local history as well as industrial history 09264645
 
Group of tenement houses in open development with front gardens and some enclosures Friedrich-Schmidt-Strasse 3; 5; 7
(card)
1910 (number 3, tenement house), 1911 (nos. 5 and 7, tenement house) discreetly decorated plastered facade, distinctive group of houses, reform architecture, significance in terms of local building history

It could have been a really big hit: In June 1910, the building contractor Gustav Skuhr from Großzschocher submitted a building application for the first part of a group residence, which also contained a view drawing of the entire house. What the architect Curt Schiemichen designed here was a monumental city palace, committed to the contemporary reform style, which would have been without equal in Großzschocher. A completely different street view was then implemented in 1910/1911, which nevertheless stands out from the average of local building. The assembly gets its uniform character from the series of three risalits, which are closed in the attic by high, bent gables. The unity is also underlined by the design highlighted house entrance in the middle part, which is the only one on the street front. Restrained plaster structures such as garlands, parapet cartouches or pearl rods at the corners of the risalite loosen up the facade. The context in which the building was created and the individual design of the building have a significance in terms of the history of local construction. LfD / 2012

09264639
 
Group of tenement houses in open development, with enclosure and front garden Friedrich-Schmidt-Strasse 14; 16; 18
(card)
1901-1903, number 18 (tenement), 1901-1903, number 16 (tenement), 1901-1903, number 14 (tenement) historicizing plastered clinker facade, importance in terms of local development and building history

The first application that Ernst Max Skuhr and Gustav Skuhr from Großzschocher submitted in 1901 for the construction of a group rental house was rejected by the authorities because the road in the western extension area was not yet completed. The next year the application was successful. The Skuhr company built two of the three buildings of the group house by 1903, and they sold house number 14 to the entrepreneurs Müller & Fehd, who took over the project. Apparently they had taken on themselves financially, because as early as 1904 the property, which had meanwhile been developed, was foreclosed. Despite the great uniformity of the street facade, which results from the fact that the window frames are identical on each floor, the different ownership structures are evident at the front. While house number 14 is clad with uniformly red clinker bricks, red clinker strips structure the orange wall surface of the other houses made of the same material. Due to the context in which it was built, the building is of importance in terms of local development and building history. LfD / 2013

09298968
 
Double apartment building in open development, with front garden Friedrich-Schmidt-Strasse 20; 22
(card)
1903 (double tenement house) historicizing plaster and clinker facade, significance in terms of local building history

On April 1, 1903, the bricklayer Bernhard Pfefferkorn from Großzschocher submitted the building application for the construction of a residential building on the property at number 20. Three weeks later, this was done by the room foreman Hugo Müller and the bricklayer foreman Georg Fehd from Gautzsch for the neighboring area. Together they pledged to build both buildings according to a uniform plan. The halves of the house could be completed in the same year. The installation of top floor apartments took place in 1909/1910, which resulted in the street-side gable. The plastered clinker facade of the house was one of the traditional design solutions that were typical for Großzschocher when it was built. Originally, the entire ground floor was rendered. The bright parapet fields, the window frames and the various window canopies are effectively set off against the red brick surfaces of the upper floors. With its simple plastering, the elongated street gable refers to the more recent era. For these reasons, the building is of importance in terms of local building history. LfD / 2012

09298962
 
Apartment block (consisting of five houses: Gerhard-Ellrodt-Straße 14/16/18, Ponickaustraße 26 and Giordano-Bruno-Straße 2) with a front garden Gerhard-Ellrodt-Strasse 14; 16; 18
(card)
1931 (apartment block) Ornamental plastered facade, cubic appearance, staggered structure, in the style of classical modernism, as an architecturally high-quality building from the time of construction of local building historical importance

As early as 1923, the C. Brömme construction business submitted a building application for the construction of a residential building on the property on behalf of Meier & Weichelt. The planned traditional group house was not built. Seven years later there was another attempt: the architect Otto Martin Rothmann from Leipzig was planning a block of flats on a curved floor plan for the land and building company Großzschocher, which was to have a hipped roof except for a transverse building block. A modified project was implemented in 1931. In addition to changes to the small apartments inside, it was above all the external appearance that Rothmann transformed. He did without the hipped roof in the building, which now has a three-fold staggered floor plan and is differentiated in height. A semicircular bay was placed in front of the crossbar, creating an effective accent in the street space on Gerhard-Ellrodt-Straße. The outer corners of the plastered building tier are rounded on the mezzanine floor, only above do the right-angled walls begin. In spite of the facade surface, an extremely finely structured structure was created, which is also enlivened by different window shapes - especially in the stairwells. Stairs in the front gardens lead down to the lower house entrances, some of which are accompanied by shops. The apartment block is one of the most architecturally high-quality buildings of the time in Großzschocher-Windorf, which explains its special significance in terms of local building history. LfD / 2013

09264642
 
Medical center and green area with an avenue leading to the main entrance Gerhard-Ellrodt-Strasse 19
(map)
1952-1953 (Polyclinic) Simple plastered façade, social building typical of the time, which is important in terms of local history and industrial history in addition to its socio-historical importance, and is of architectural historical relevance in the rare implementation of a type design by the German Building Academy

In December 1952, the design office for industrial building in Leipzig worked out the plans for the building on the basis of a type design from the German Building Academy. The office was not only responsible for the design, but was also responsible for checking the building regulations; the municipal authorities only had a limited say in this matter. In June 1953 the relevant building permit was granted. The location of the simple building to the east of the factory premises resulted from the design of the space in front of a factory gate that was supposed to seal off Gerhard-Ellrodt-Straße to the west. A comparable architectural design of the neighboring engineering school makes this connection visible today. The angular two-storey building consists of a high base level with artificial stone facing on the square, the protruding corner building, where the two building wings meet, has an additional mezzanine level. Entrance areas and a group of windows on the north-west front have porphyry- colored artificial stone frames that stand out from the plaster. As a social facility of GISAG from the early 1950s, which was built in connection with the neighboring research and school buildings, the building is not only important in terms of local and social history, but also of industrial history. Since the Poliklinik is the rare implementation of a type design by the Bauakademie, the relevance of the building history is to be assessed as supra-regional, which is only partially affected by recent changes. LfD / 2012

09264644
 
Former school building with courtyard paving and gate entrance Gerhard-Ellrodt-Strasse 22
(map)
1952-1953 (technical school) Plastered facade with clock on the facade as well as a former portrait board for Georg Schwarz, leaded glass window in the stairwell, typical representative of the building and industrial history of the early GDR, therefore historical and architectural significance

In 1952/1953, the two-storey building of the technical college for foundry technology was built in two construction phases in close connection with the neighboring Central Institute for Foundry Technology. The urban planning department criticized the VEB Industrial Design project, whereupon minor changes were made to the urban planning classification. The municipal authority could not exert a greater influence, as the design office was also responsible for matters relating to building law. While the façade on Bismarckstrasse was accented by the main entrance and the staircase windows above it with lead glazing, the rear was made without any major design requirements. Originally, a cultural house was to be used in a connecting building to the institute building. A laboratory extension planned at the end of the 1950s was never completed, as was the connection to the neighboring institute building. The narrow side adorned with a clock on Gerhard Ellrodt-Straße made reference to the GISAG company policlinic, which the school also had in construction details such as the window division and the artificial stone structures. The architectural connection with the neighboring buildings, but also the simple design of the technical school itself, makes it appear as a typical representative of building and industrial history in the still young GDR, from which the historical, building and social-historical importance results. LfD / 2012

09264646
 
Open-plan railroader's house and shed Gerhard-Ellrodt-Strasse 38
(map)
1900-1901 (railway house), 1906 (shed) Wilhelminian style building, clinker brick facade, together with the neighboring station building (object 09264648) as a typical industrial suburban train station, of significance in terms of railway history and local history

A few years after the station building in Großzschocher had been built by the Prussian State Railways, a civil servants' residence was built in the immediate vicinity between 1900 and 1901. A total of six apartments - each consisting of a kitchen and two rooms - found space in the simple brick building with a half-hip roof. In accordance with the typical Prussian railway architecture of the time, the façades are divided up by bands of yellow bricks as well as eaves and gable cornices. The wash house built at the same time was expanded a little later to include a small stable building. Together with the neighboring station building, the civil servants' residence is a characteristic example of an industrial suburban train station and is of significance in terms of railway and local history. LfD / 2013

09264647
 
Reception building with adjoining goods shed, paving of the driveway and signal box B1 at the level crossing
Reception building with adjoining goods shed, paving of the driveway and signal box B1 at the level crossing Gerhard-Ellrodt-Strasse 38a
(map)
1892-1893, reception building (station building), 1892-1893, goods shed (goods shed), around 1955, signal box (signal box) Reception building from the Wilhelminian era brick facade, signal box clinker construction around 1950 in the modern style, together with the neighboring civil servants' residence (object 09264647) as a typical industrial suburb railway station in terms of railway history and local history, and the signal box is of significance in terms of technology and construction history 09264648
 
Apartment block (consisting of five houses: Gerhard-Ellrodt-Straße 14/16/18, Ponickaustraße 26 and Giordano-Bruno-Straße 2) with a front garden Giordano-Bruno-Strasse 2
(map)
1931 (apartment block) Ornamental plastered facade, cubic appearance, staggered structure, in the style of classical modernism, as an architecturally high-quality building from the time of construction of local building historical importance

As early as 1923, the C. Brömme construction business submitted a building application for the construction of a residential building on the property on behalf of Meier & Weichelt. The planned traditional group house was not built. Seven years later there was another attempt: the architect Otto Martin Rothmann from Leipzig was planning a block of flats on a curved floor plan for the land and building company Großzschocher, which was to have a hipped roof except for a transverse building block. A modified project was implemented in 1931. In addition to changes to the small apartments inside, it was above all the external appearance that Rothmann transformed. He did without the hipped roof in the building, which now has a three-fold staggered floor plan and is differentiated in height. A semicircular bay was placed in front of the crossbar, creating an effective accent in the street space on Gerhard-Ellrodt-Straße. The outer corners of the plastered building tier are rounded on the mezzanine floor, only above do the right-angled walls begin. In spite of the facade surface, an extremely finely structured structure was created, which is also enlivened by different window shapes - especially in the stairwells. Stairs in the front gardens lead down to the lower house entrances, some of which are accompanied by shops. The apartment block is one of the most architecturally high-quality buildings of the time in Großzschocher-Windorf, which explains its special significance in terms of local building history. LfD / 2013

09264642
 
Group of tenements in open development Giordano-Bruno-Strasse 3; 5; 7
(card)
1910-1911, numbers 3, 5, 7 (tenement house) Sparsely structured plastered facade, as one of the oldest houses in the western extension area, of importance in terms of site development and as a typical example of Reform Style architecture in terms of building history

When master builder Otto Leonhardt asked the Amtshauptmannschaft for a special permit to build a group of tenements in May 1910, he pointed out the urgent need to build small apartments, such as those recently created with the Meyerschen houses in Leipzig-Kleinzschocher. The group house built from November / December 1910 until the autumn of the following year with the apartments arranged in two or three horses did not fully correspond to these ideas, but at least shows an effort to meet this great demand. Leonhardt designed an asymmetrically structured assembly in which the street front was covered with gable structures, narrow oriels and a restrained plaster structure. As one of the oldest houses in the western extension area, the group building has a significance in terms of the history of local development and the design, which is committed to reform style architecture, gives it significance in terms of local building history. LfD / 2013

09264650
 
Group of tenements in open development Giordano-Bruno-Strasse 4; 6; 8
(card)
1913-1919 (number 4), 1913-1917 (number 6), 1913-1919 (number 8) Sparingly structured plastered facade, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history

Master builder Otto Leonhardt applied for the construction of a four-part group house in January 1913. The First World War prevented a quick execution and only houses number 4-8 could be started before. Their completion was then delayed in some cases until 1919. As with the other buildings at the same time by the agricultural and construction company, attempts were also made here to structure the street front by means of a restrained plaster structure, roof structures and window bars. The house entrances with their plaster frame also have a special emphasis. The importance of the local building history is based on the characteristics of the group building as a typical tenement house, which can be assigned to the reform style architecture. LfD / 2013

09264651
 
Group of tenement houses (three houses with the addresses: Huttenstrasse 27, Pfeilstrasse 10 and Giordano-Bruno-Strasse 9) in open development, with a front garden on Pfeilstrasse Giordano-Bruno-Strasse 9
(map)
1910-1911 (Giordano-Bruno-Straße 9), Pfeilstraße 10, 1910 (Huttenstraße 27) Elaborately designed plastered façade, with shops, reform style architecture, relevance to the history of local building and development

As early as 1909, master mason Richard Leonhardt from Leipzig-Kleinzschocher applied for the construction of an almost palais-like group residence for his property on Schmuckplatz, the center of the western extension of Großzschocher. But only the second modified building application in the following year - this time submitted by Otto Leonhardt for the Großzschocher land and construction company - was carried out by 1911. Compared to other residential buildings in the expansion area, the complex is designed symmetrically and is centered in the high, broken central gable of Huttenstrasse 27.On both sides of the entrance of this house there were originally shops that also emphasized the central axis. The two side buildings are distinguished by corner bay windows and smaller gables. A varied plaster structure of the group building forms flat risalits and parapet mirrors and thus loosens up the long facade front, while the high all-round clinker base summarizes the building. As a particularly differentiated and lavishly designed group residential building, which refers to the location on Schmuckplatz, the house is of importance in terms of local building history and development history. LfD / 2013

09264671
 
Group of tenements in open development Giordano-Bruno-Strasse 11; 13; 15; 17
(map)
1911-1912, nos. 11-17 (tenement house) simply structured plastered facade, in the stairwell, as an example of the typical regional reform style architecture of importance in terms of building history and relevance to the history of local development due to the construction in the western expansion area before the First World War

The four-part tenement group was created in 1911/1912 for the Großzschocher land and construction company under the direction of master builder Otto Leonhardt. As with other projects in the western extension of the town, the symmetrically constructed building, which is committed to the reform architecture, is structured by a central projection with a high broken gable and two upper floor projections. The latter have a hipped end. A small bay window is indicated by a plaster structure in the central axis. The differentiated sprouting of the numerous windows also plays an important role in structuring the facade. As an example of the reform style architecture typical of the area, the group of tenements is significant in terms of building history and relevant to the history of local development due to its construction in the western expansion area before the First World War. LfD / 2013

09264653
 
Group of tenement houses in open development, with lateral fencing Giordano-Bruno-Strasse 16; 18; 20
(card)
1911-1912, nos. 18 and 20 (tenement house), 1911-1913, number 16 (tenement house) varied plastered facade, colored lead glazing in the stairwell, reform style architecture, important in terms of building history

The construction of the group house highlights how the construction industry was organized in Großzschocher after 1900. In August 1911, master builder Otto Leonhardt submitted the building applications for numbers 18 and 20 for the land and construction company as the largest property owner of the western extension of the town, and already provided the overall view of the group house. However, the southern part of the area on which the house was to be built belonged to master builder Anton Schmidt, who only submitted a building application in December 1911. Due to several changes in Schmidt's planning, the completion of number 16 was delayed by February 1913, while the other two houses were already inspected by the building authorities in May 1912. The completed, plastered group building has a clinker base and simple structural elements such as cornices and parapet mirrors, which enliven the street front. In its symmetrical basic structure with the two side projections raised into the roof area, the house corresponds to the original planning of the agricultural and construction company. However, details such as the polygonal bay window and the verandas at number 16 show that a different design was implemented at this point, which took into account the prominent location on the jewelry square. The context in which the house was built and the design, which is based on the contemporary reform style, has a significance in terms of local development and building history. LfD / 2013

09264656
 
Row of tenements (consisting of four houses, address: Pfeilstraße 22, Giordano-Bruno-Straße 19 and Anton-Zickmantel-Straße 31/33), with a front garden Giordano-Bruno-Strasse 19
(map)
1928-1929, number 31 (apartment block), 1928-1930, number 33 (apartment block) Plastered facade, in the traditionalist style of the 1920s, of architectural significance

On behalf of the non-profit Leipzig construction company for small apartments, architect and builder Erich Heiser submitted a preliminary project for a block of flats in June 1928. Part of the system (number 31) was completed in the following year, followed by the second in 1930. Heiser planned a three-storey building committed to traditional construction, the middle section of which has an additional storey. Two triangular gables cover the two vertical ribbon windows of the stairwells. The long front is skillfully structured with flat wall projections, parapet cornices and a differentiated plaster design and different window formats. Since the renovation of the house in the 1990s, oversized roof structures have obscured the appearance. As a characteristic example of the traditional tenement building of the late 1920s, the house is of architectural significance. LfD / 2013

09264578
 
Group of tenement houses in open development, with lateral fencing Giordano-Bruno-Strasse 22; 24; 26
(card)
1912 (number 22), 1912-1913 (number 24), 1912-1913 (number 26) varied rendered facade, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of local development and building history

The designs for the group house that master builder Otto Leonhardt submitted for approval to Land- und Baugesellschaft Großzschocher in 1912 were shaped by the efforts to make the long street frontage varied. In addition to flat risalits and bay-like porches, it was above all a differentiated roof landscape that gave the building, which was completed in 1912 and 1913, its characteristic character. In addition, a parapet cornice, plaster structures and, last but not least, the sprouting of the windows enliven the street facade of the group house. The roofing of the house entrance at number 24. The courtyard side is determined by the large balconies. As a typical example of tenement house architecture in the western extension area of ​​Großzschocher, which was based on the reform style, the building has a significance in terms of local development and building history. LfD / 2013

09264654
 
Church (with furnishings) as well as the surrounding church square with enclosure wall, tomb at the church, tomb with tombs and another tomb at the tombs
Church (with furnishings) as well as the surrounding church square with enclosure wall, tomb at the church, tomb with tombs and another tomb at the tombs Huttenstrasse -
(map)
in the core 1217 (church tower), 1516 (church choir), 1693-1696 (church), remodeling 1904-1908 (church), 1908 (ceiling painting) The core of the Romanesque choir tower church, the choir was renovated late in the Gothic style, baroque redesign, thorough renovation in 1908 in neo-baroque forms, plaza with enclosed paths and old wood, formerly the cemetery of the villages of Großzschocher and Windorf, of architectural, art and local history

The current appearance of the plastered hall church in the center of the village results from numerous structural changes and extensions. A Romanesque church, from which the tower choir has been preserved, was consecrated in 1217. As a replacement for an apse, the late Gothic polygonal choir with the characteristic reticulated vault was built in 1516. The southern addition to the sacristy is also medieval. At the end of the 17th century, the pieces of equipment that still shape today (altar, pulpit) and a patronage box protruding into the choir were created. A little later, in 1713/1714, the nave was extended. The exterior of the church today is determined by the redesign of the years 1904-1908, which was under the direction of the architect Julius Zeißig. This resulted in the tower being raised and, above all, a representative west facade in neo-baroque forms. An open portico was presented to the entrance. In 1926 the seated figures of Peter and Paul on the facade were created. Inside, Zeißig largely respected the baroque furnishings. During a restoration in the 1960s, the original late Gothic painting in the choir vault was exposed. Until the end of 1861, the surrounding churchyard served as a churchyard for Großzschocher. In connection with the reconstruction of the church, the area was redesigned in 1908. The new school building made it possible to demolish the western development that separated the square from the main street, so that a spacious green area was created on the corner of Dieskau and Huttenstrasse. A curved circular path leads around the church and expands like a square in front of the church. The area in front of the church with a direct connection to the main street was later redesigned. A restoration effort in 1996/1997 reinterpreted this immediate relationship. The Apostle Church is essentially the oldest cultural monument in Großzschocher-Windorf, on which the local historical significance is based. In addition to the architectural historical significance, which can be established in the Romanesque building type of a choir tower church, the late Gothic choir and the successful redesign of the church and churchyard after 1904, it is the splendid baroque interior design that has particular art historical relevance for the city of Leipzig. LfD / 2013

09299187
 
Plaza Huttenstrasse -
(map)
around 1905/1915 (Schmuckplatz) Ornamental square with old trees, bounded by Giordano-Bruno-Straße and Pfeilstraße, of local and urban green history 09264674
 
Apartment house in open development and in a corner, with fencing Huttenstrasse 1
(map)
1893-1894 (tenement house) historicistic plastered facade, architectural significance as an example of the architectural remodeling of the old location of Großzschocher around 1900

In the second half of the 19th century the property belonged to a rural farm complex that occupied the entire area between Buttergasse and the churchyard (see also Huttenstrasse 3 and 5). In February 1893, the property owner Friedrich August Wilhelm Jahn submitted a building application for the construction of a new residential building instead of a large barn built in 1869 on the corner of Huttenstrasse and Buttergasse, which the authorities approved two months later. It was planned to accommodate a large apartment on each floor, which should consist of four rooms, two chambers and a girls' room. The new building was completed after almost a year, which means that the year 1904 on the facade cannot be linked to the construction of the house. The corner building is characterized by a richly decorated plaster facade, which is characterized by a ground floor usage, pilaster strips and cornices and in which the roofing windows on the first floor are a special eye-catcher. The house is a meaningful example of the architectural remodeling of the old Großzschocher location in the period around 1900, which resulted in a significance in terms of local building history. LfD / 2012

09264655
 
Individual monument belonging to the Grosszschocher manor: two farm buildings (see also collective document - Obj. 09264676) Huttenstrasse 1a
(map)
End of the 19th century (farm building) Clinker brick facades, significance for local history 09264658
 
Material entirety of the manor of Großzschocher, with the individual monuments: two farm buildings (see list of individual monuments - Obj. 09264658) and the manor park and the totality parts: outbuildings of a manor Huttenstrasse 1a
(map)
End of 19th century (manor), 19th century (manor park) of local importance 09264676
 
Apartment building in open development and in a corner position, with side gate entrance Huttenstrasse 2
(map)
1886 (tenement house) historicistic plastered facade, as one of the earliest multi-storey tenement houses in Großzschocher in terms of local building history

In 1863 there was a house with a thatched roof on the corner property when the master carpenter Friedrich Karl Ziegenhorn built an angular outbuilding in the yard of the property, of which the former wash house has been preserved to this day. More than twenty years later, Ziegenhorn, who was one of the busy local builders, built a new three-story building in place of the old house in 1886. With this construction project, the structural remodeling of Huttenstrasse into an urban residential street was initiated. The exterior shows a restrained plaster structure, and the roofing of the windows on the first floor is a special feature. The somewhat clumsy roof structure on the corner of the building was not built until 1904, when the widow von Ziegenhorn had the roof removed. As one of the early surviving three-story residential buildings from the urbanization process of Großzschocher, the building is primarily of importance for the local area. LfD / 2012

09264659
 
Former gardener's house of a manor, today a club house, with inscription plaque
Former gardener's house of a manor, today a club house, with inscription plaque Huttenstrasse 2a
(map)
1778, +/- Dendro (house), 1865 (memorial plaque) Plastered brick building, sandstone panel from 1865 in memory of the poet and Freikorps fighter Theodor Körner (1791-1813), on June 18, 1813, Körner, seriously wounded in the Battle of Kitzen, was brought to the manor gardener's house, national historical and documentation value 09264660
 
Apartment building in half-open development Huttenstrasse 3
(map)
1901-1905 (tenement house) Historicizing clinker brick facade with Art Nouveau decoration, building historical value due to the special facade design and as an example of the structural remodeling of the old location of Großzschocher around 1900

Less than ten years after the corner house on Buttergasse was built, the property owner Friedrich August Wilhelm Jahn had the builder Anton Schmidt build a new building in place of the old house on the courtyard. The street view of the area had now fundamentally changed. Instead of the low village buildings, three-story apartment buildings were built. Huttenstrasse 3 is also characterized by its facade design, because the building owner and architect - in contrast to the neighboring somewhat older buildings - had Art Nouveau decorative elements implemented here, which can be seen in the parapets on the second floor. Above all, however, it is the roof area into which the new forms found their way: the vegetable-like enclosed kidney-shaped windows in the two curved side gables with the accompanying ornamented posts are characteristic. In addition to its significance in terms of the history of local architecture, as it was built in the course of the urbanization process before the First World War, the building has a particular architectural relevance resulting from the facade design, which is unusual in the contemporary local context. LfD / 2012

09264661
 
Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner Huttenstrasse 5
(map)
1899-1900, marked 1900 (tenement house) in a corner situation facing the church square, historicizing clinker brick facade, corner accentuation by gable, significance in terms of building history 09264662
 
Apartment building in closed development Huttenstrasse 6
(map)
1911 (tenement) simply structured plastered facade, as a characteristic example of the construction of apartment buildings shortly before the First World War with echoes of the reform architecture in terms of building history

A single-storey eaves house with an extended attic built by the master carpenter Karl Ziegenhorn in 1863 was demolished in 1911 in order to build a three-storey apartment building on this site, for which the mason foreman Hermann Schmidt was responsible. Instead of one large apartment on the first floor, two small ones were used. The street front is characterized by great simplicity, only a central projection protrudes slightly on the two upper floors. The delicate sprouting of the windows is all the more important for the appearance of the facade. The design typical of the reform architecture before the First World War accounts for the importance of the house in terms of local building history. LfD / 2012

09264663
 
Apartment building in half-open development Huttenstrasse 8
(map)
1910 (tenement) simply structured plastered facade, as a characteristic example of the construction of apartment buildings shortly before the First World War with echoes of the reform architecture in terms of building history

After the small one-story rural house built by the bricklayer Julius Thomas in 1878 was demolished on the property, work began in January 1910 on the construction of a multi-storey apartment building. The owner, god of honor Hennig, commissioned the architect Otto Lehmann as the site manager. He had to revise his plans, as the building authorities demanded a better design adaptation to the surrounding development. Even after the final inspection of the house on July 1, 1910, there were repeated official objections because of the establishment of a store in the basement, which were unsuccessful, however. In 1934 the attic was finally rebuilt. The restrained facade design is characterized by a two-story risalit, which is continued in a roof structure. Due to the location on the access road to a rear property and not least because of the view to Apostelkirchplatz and Dieskaustraße, the plastered structure on the street side is partly continued on the side facade. With a view of the neighboring rectory, the leap in scale of the urban development around 1900 compared to the previous village-like development becomes impressively clear. This results in a local building history and architectural significance. LfD / 2012

09264664
 
Rental villa with garden Huttenstrasse 12
(map)
1910-1911, marked 1911 (rental villa) Plastered facade with reliefs, historical significance as an example for the construction of apartment buildings based on the reform architecture after 1900

At the end of the 19th century, there was a rural house with stables on the rear property, which is only connected to Huttenstraße by a connecting path. The construction of a new residential building, which the owner Hermann Jacob applied for in March 1910 to build a new residential building in place of the existing buildings, even occupies the Saxon Higher Administrative Court. The municipality wanted to refuse the approval for the building project: officially because of the redefinition of the building line on Huttenstrasse, but the press suspected that the municipality was interested in the property and the purchase price was too high. But Jacob was able to enforce his plan through legal means. He had a rental villa built according to his own plans, which, with its strictly symmetrical structure, the simple plastered facades and the sparse accentuation with plastic elements - here there are numerous relief panels - is a typical representative of the traditionally oriented reform architecture of the time. This also results in the historical significance of the house, which is increased by the context in which it was built and the different lines of conflict. LfD / 2012

09264666
 
Rectory in open development, with garden, enclosure wall and fountain Huttenstrasse 14
(map)
1768-1770 (rectory), 1951 (enclosure) simply designed plastered facade and crooked hip roof, significance in terms of local history, social history and building history, worth remembering

In the last year of his life, pastor Heinrich Engelbert Schwartze (1704-1767) initiated a new building for the rectory, which was carried out in 1768-1770. In the masonry of the fountain on the property there is a brick with the year 1732, which indicates a previous building or an outbuilding that was built at that time. The rectory was built as a simple, well-proportioned half-timbered building over a massive ground floor, facing today's Huttenstrasse. It is rounded off by a hipped roof typical of the time. The partially preserved wooden window frames are remarkable. Shortly before the church was remodeled at the beginning of the 20th century, the builder Anton Schmidt carried out a major renovation of the house, in which the street-side gable was given an elaborate decorative framework. The remaining wall surfaces were plastered and given a simple structure. Until 1930 a large parish barn stretched along Dieskaustraße, which, together with other outbuildings, were necessary for the economic preservation of the parish. As one of the oldest surviving buildings in Großzschocher, the rectory has a special architectural history, its function in the community requires a local and social historical value. LfD / 2014

09264667
 
Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner Huttenstrasse 15
(map)
1892-1893 (tenement house) Façade to Breitschuhstrasse, historicistic plastered façade, architectural value 09298969
 
Apartment house in open development and in a corner Huttenstrasse 17
(map)
1907 (tenement) with corner shutter, plastered facade, as a testimony to residential building architecture at the beginning of the 20th century of relevance to the history of local building

Karl Michael, master mason from Leipzig-Kleinzschocher, built a corner residential building on his property in 1907 with a shop apartment on the ground floor. Shortly after the completion it came to the foreclosure auction, the new owner was the school director Johannes Alfred Kleine. Characteristic for the house in the western extension area is the corner of the building leading into the top floor, which is closed off by a curved and broken gable. The two street fronts are determined by a plaster structure consisting of pilaster strips and parapet panels. The house entrance door is remarkable, the design of which suggests art nouveau elements. The house is a characteristic example of residential building architecture in Großzschocher in the first decade of the 20th century and is therefore of importance in terms of local building history. LfD / 2012

09264668
 
Aggregate of cemetery Großzschocher, with the individual monuments: mortuary, chapel and several tombs (see also individual monument document - Obj. 09264649, same address) as well as horticultural designed cemetery and avenue, furthermore with the aggregate parts: enclosure wall and cemetery gate Huttenstrasse 17a
(map)
from 1861 (cemetery), 1890 (chapel) Local historical value, beautiful arched chapel from the 19th century of architectural historical value

Cemetery on a regular area between Huttenstrasse and Gerhard-Ellrodt-Strasse. Eastern part opened in 1861 (surrounded by walls, divided roughly in the middle by a transverse wall with a passage), there a representative chapel in the arched style (1890) and morgue, gate system on Huttenstrasse and ancillary buildings on Gerhard-Ellrodt-Strasse. Starting from the chapel, the main route axis of the eastern part, in the northern section with an old linden avenue (Tilia cordata). On the boundary walls there are some representative wall graves (including hereditary burials of the mill owner family Zickmantel and the landowner family Seifert), grave fields in the northern section divided by hedges in a north-south direction. The western part was added as an extension around 1900 with a surrounding main path. In the north two older horse chestnuts (Aesculus hippocastanum), on the western main path a number of older specimens of red-leaved norway maple (Acer platanoides, variety 'Schwedleri'?). As a burial complex of the second half of the 19th century (older part) in a functional division typical of the time and with structural equipment and historical tombs of local historical importance. Special elements of the horticultural design are the lime tree avenue related to the chapel and the subdivision by hedges in the eastern part as well as the use of red-leaved Norway maple on a section of the western path of the expansion area.

09304580
 
Individual monument of the aggregate cemetery Großzschocher: morgue, chapel and several tombs (see also aggregate document - Obj. 09304580, same address) Huttenstrasse 17a
(map)
from 1861 (cemetery), 1890 (chapel) Local historical significance, beautiful 19th century arched chapel of architectural value 09264649
 
Apartment building in open development and in a corner location, formerly with a post office Huttenstrasse 18
(map)
1903-1905 (tenement house) historicizing clinker brick facade, corner bay window, post office on the ground floor, historical significance as an example of the development of the western extension area, local historical and memorable value due to the use as a post office building

The property originally belonged to the Freiberger bakery on Dieskaustraße. In the course of the western expansion of the town, the master baker Gottfried Freiberger had a corner residential building built here by the master builder Anton Schmidt from 1903-1905. In the year after completion, the ground floor was converted to create space for the Großzschocher post office. The building is characterized by a differentiated facade design. Above the plastered ground floor, the facades are clad with red clinker bricks, from which the bright sills and roofs of the windows made of artificial stone stand out effectively. Above the box oriel on the broken corner of the building, the attic above the eaves has been provided with decorative trusses. The house exemplarily shows which design elements were used on the facades in residential construction around 1900. The resulting architectural significance is supported by its memorable value and its relevance to local history due to its use as a post office building. The building is of importance in terms of local building history because of its urban location in the western expansion area. LfD / 2012

09264669
 
Apartment building in a formerly half-open area and in a corner Huttenstrasse 20
(map)
1903-1904 (tenement house) with corner shutter, historicizing plaster clinker facade, corner bay window, as evidence of the tenement building with typical design and architectural value

Even before the extended Huttenstrasse broke through towards the church, the corner building was one of the first to be erected in the western extension area. Businessmen Ernst Arthur Schröder and Paul Eulitz from Leipzig submitted the building application for this in February 1903. A change of ownership soon set in, so that the bricklayer foreman Wilhelm Ferdinand Max Kühn (Leipzig-Kleinzschocher) finally owned the property. A few months after the building was completed in January 1904, however, the building contractor lost it again through a foreclosure auction. The three-storey house is characterized by a special emphasis on the corner location. A polygonal bay window is placed on the two upper floors and is closed off by a curved roof that protrudes into the roof house of the corner projections. Window roofing and parapet areas with a different design contribute to the vitalization of the clinker brick facade. The building history of the house is a characteristic example of private-sector construction around 1900, and the design can also be assessed as typical of a suburban residential building of that time. These reasons give the building a significance in terms of local building history. LfD / 2012

09261868
 
Tenement house in half-open development and in a corner, with a restaurant and side enclosure Huttenstrasse 25
(map)
1913-1914 (tenement house) Plastered facade, reform style architecture, significance in terms of the history of building and development due to the location in the western extension area of ​​Großzschocher with a design typical of the time

In 1912, master builder Otto Leonhardt planned a diversified group residence with bay windows, gables and differentiated roof structures for the Großzschocher land and construction company on this property and the property to the east. Despite the granted building permit, the project did not come to fruition. The new owner Florus Weiske submitted a new building application the following year, whereby the facade designs were much simpler. Until January 1914, the corner building was the only part of the group building. Since then, there has been a restaurant on the ground floor in the corner of Schmuckplatz. As a characteristic example of the reform architecture, the street fronts are only sparsely decorated with plaster and artificial stone elements and a parapet cornice. The house entrance is particularly highlighted with a side frame and a semicircular window. Some important design elements such as the street-side balconies, the canopy over the access to the guest room and the windows with their fine mulch have been lost in recent years. The historical significance of the house in terms of construction and site development results from the typical design of a building on the main street of the western extension area of ​​Großzschocher. LfD / 2013

09264670
 
Group of tenement houses (three houses with the addresses: Huttenstrasse 27, Pfeilstrasse 10 and Giordano-Bruno-Strasse 9) in open development, with a front garden on Pfeilstrasse Huttenstrasse 27
(map)
1910-1911 (Giordano-Bruno-Straße 9), Pfeilstraße 10, 1910 (Huttenstraße 27) Elaborately designed plastered façade, with shops, reform style architecture, relevance to the history of local building and development

As early as 1909, master mason Richard Leonhardt from Leipzig-Kleinzschocher applied for the construction of an almost palais-like group residence for his property on Schmuckplatz, the center of the western extension of Großzschocher. But only the second modified building application in the following year - this time submitted by Otto Leonhardt for the Großzschocher land and construction company - was carried out by 1911. Compared to other residential buildings in the expansion area, the complex is designed symmetrically and is centered in the high, broken central gable of Huttenstrasse 27.On both sides of the entrance of this house there were originally shops that also emphasized the central axis. The two side buildings are distinguished by corner bay windows and smaller gables. A varied plaster structure of the group building forms flat risalits and parapet mirrors and thus loosens up the long facade front, while the high all-round clinker base summarizes the building. As a particularly differentiated and lavishly designed group residential building, which refers to the location on Schmuckplatz, the house is of importance in terms of local building history and development history. LfD / 2013

09264671
 
Group of tenements (consisting of three houses: Pfeilstrasse 12 and Huttenstrasse 28/30) in open development with a front garden Huttenstrasse 28; 30
(card)
1911-1914, Huttenstrasse 28/30 (tenement house), 1911-1912, Pfeilstrasse 12 (tenement house) Location: on Huttenplatz, varied plastered facade, reform style architecture, significance in terms of building history

At the most prominent point in the western extension area of ​​Großzschocher, the land and construction company of the builder Otto Leonhardt had a group house built between 1911 and 1914 with a particularly picturesque facade structure. House number 30 is highlighted with a tall pediment as the center point. A polygonal bay window on the corner of Huttenplatz and Giordano-Bruno-Straße is faced in the western part of the building with a risalit with balconies and a small gable. With a wide variety of window shapes, Leonhardt prevented a monotonous row of wall openings. Plaster structures such as cornices, parapets and serrated friezes also loosen up the street fronts. The tenants of the representative apartments - in part the design of the stairwells still testify to the design effort - included the Leipzig painter Gustav Ziemann, the local painter of Großzschocher Hermann Paul Sauer and the well-known doctor Kurt Herrmann. This means that the group house not only has a significance in terms of local building history, but also has a relevance to the local history. LfD / 2013

09264672
 
Railway bridge Küchenholzallee -
(map)
1906 (railway bridge) Originally preserved, riveted steel girder bridge with pendulum support, with granite edging and artificial stone balustrade, part of the Leipzig-Plagwitz - Markkleeberg-Gaschwitz railway line (6379, see PG), of particular importance in terms of railway history and building history, rarity 09299032
 
Row of houses with front gardens Lipinskistrasse 39; 41; 43; 45; 47; 49; 51
(card)
1954-1955 (apartment block) old location Windorf, plaster facade with artificial stone integration, in the style of the national building tradition of the 1950s, building historical value 09264638
 
Park Mühlparkweg -
(map)
End of the 19th century (park area) Park with a system of paths, a pond and old trees, as well as a millstone on the pond island, borders the Elstermühlgraben, historical value, garden design significance 09264708
 
Mühle Großzschocher; later Kunstmühle Zickmantel & Schmidt: Mill property with mill (Zur Alten Bäckerei 4), office and residential building (Zur Alten Bäckerei 2) as well as stable building (Mühlparkweg 2a), Mühlgraben, enclosure and courtyard paving Mühlparkweg 2a
(map)
marked 1878 (office and residential building) Formerly also mill building Industrial mill predominantly brick buildings, of local and industrial historical importance 09304637
 
Prefabricated house Mühlparkweg 25
(map)
1928 (garden house) Model house from the construction fair of 1928, re-erected in its current location in 1932, of architectural and architectural significance, rarity, testimony to Saxon economic history

In addition to an existing garden house, Elisabeth Müller had a wooden frame construction weekend house built on her property in the summer of 1932. Presumably it was acquired as a prefabricated house at the Leipzig construction fair in 1928. The post system rises above a massive concrete cellar, which is clad on the inside with fibreboard and outside with logs, ending with a cardboard mansard roof. The interior is accessed via a small vestibule, to which originally a wooden external staircase led. It is noteworthy that the house is the only known, preserved building whose design goes back to the Julius Blüthner Pianofortefabrik. In times of the economic crisis, the sale of grand pianos and upright pianos came to an almost complete standstill during the 1920s. In order not to have to cease operations, the company's product range was expanded to include furniture and prefabricated houses made of wood. As an example of the effects of the economic crisis on a well-known Leipzig company and the development of prefabricated houses, the building is important in terms of economic and architectural history. LfD / 2014

09305625
 
Apartment house in open development and in a corner, with a front garden Pfeilstrasse 1
(map)
1907-1908 (tenement house) with corner shutter, simple plastered facade, stairwell windows with lead glass, apartment doors with overhangs and grilles, as an early example of the planned expansion of Großzschocher in terms of architectural history

The house at Pfeilstrasse 1 was one of the first buildings that the Land- und Baugesellschaft Großzschocher mbH erected in the expansion area between today's Gerhard-Ellrodt- and Anton-Zickmantel-Strasse according to the Reichesches development plan. The master mason Richard Leonhardt from Leipzig-Kleinzschocher submitted the building application for the construction company in June 1907. After several changes to the plan - including a bathroom in an apartment on the first floor - the final inspection could be carried out the following year. In the three-story, simple building with its plastered facade, the corner location is architecturally emphasized by the half-timbered gable. With the protruding, gently sloping roofs of the dormers, Leonhardt also tried to transfer the motifs of rural construction to multi-storey apartment construction after 1900. As an early example of the planned expansion of Großzschocher, the house is of importance to the history of local construction. LfD / 2012

09298967
 
Group of tenement houses (three houses with the addresses: Huttenstrasse 27, Pfeilstrasse 10 and Giordano-Bruno-Strasse 9) in open development, with a front garden on Pfeilstrasse Pfeilstrasse 10
(map)
1910-1911 (Giordano-Bruno-Straße 9), Pfeilstraße 10, 1910 (Huttenstraße 27) Elaborately designed plastered façade, with shops, reform style architecture, relevance to the history of local building and development

As early as 1909, master mason Richard Leonhardt from Leipzig-Kleinzschocher applied for the construction of an almost palais-like group residence for his property on Schmuckplatz, the center of the western extension of Großzschocher. But only the second modified building application in the following year - this time submitted by Otto Leonhardt for the Großzschocher land and construction company - was carried out by 1911. Compared to other residential buildings in the expansion area, the complex is designed symmetrically and is centered in the high, broken central gable of Huttenstrasse 27.On both sides of the entrance of this house there were originally shops that also emphasized the central axis. The two side buildings are distinguished by corner bay windows and smaller gables. A varied plaster structure of the group building forms flat risalits and parapet mirrors and thus loosens up the long facade front, while the high all-round clinker base summarizes the building. As a particularly differentiated and lavishly designed group residential building, which refers to the location on Schmuckplatz, the house is of importance in terms of local building history and development history. LfD / 2013

09264671
 
Group of tenements (consisting of three houses: Pfeilstrasse 12 and Huttenstrasse 28/30) in open development with a front garden Pfeilstrasse 12
(map)
1911-1914, Huttenstrasse 28/30 (tenement house), 1911-1912, Pfeilstrasse 12 (tenement house) Location: on Huttenplatz, varied plastered facade, reform style architecture, significance in terms of building history

At the most prominent point in the western extension area of ​​Großzschocher, the land and construction company of the builder Otto Leonhardt had a group house built between 1911 and 1914 with a particularly picturesque facade structure. House number 30 is highlighted with a tall pediment as the center point. A polygonal bay window on the corner of Huttenplatz and Giordano-Bruno-Straße is faced in the western part of the building with a risalit with balconies and a small gable. With a wide variety of window shapes, Leonhardt prevented a monotonous row of wall openings. Plaster structures such as cornices, parapets and serrated friezes also loosen up the street fronts. The tenants of the representative apartments - in part the design of the stairwells still testify to the design effort - included the Leipzig painter Gustav Ziemann, the local painter of Großzschocher Hermann Paul Sauer and the well-known doctor Kurt Herrmann. This means that the group house not only has a significance in terms of local building history, but also has a relevance to the local history. LfD / 2013

09264672
 
Group of tenement houses in open development with front garden Pfeilstrasse 14; 16; 18; 20
(card)
1912-1914 (number 14, apartment building), 1912-1913 (number 16, number 18, apartment building), 1912 (number 20, apartment building) Sparsely decorated plastered facade, of architectural significance due to the design with echoes of the reform architecture and the context of its development, which refers to the organization and financing of private housing construction around 1900

Originally, in 1910, the master bricklayer Wilhelm Wesche from Leipzig intended to build a three-part group residence on his property in Großzschocher. To increase his rental income, however, he enlarged the project and had the architect Emil Richter draw up the plans for a group of four. At the instigation of the community, Richter had to rework the street view several times, as it took offense at the monotonous appearance of the front. The symmetrically structured building was carried out in 1912-1914. Central and smaller side elevations with roof houses set design accents, as do cornices, parapet areas, window division and the framing of the house entrances. Wilhelm Wesche apparently took over the execution of the building, because as early as 1916 the property was acquired in a foreclosure auction by the building lender Spar- und Advance-Verein Leipzig-Reudnitz. Therefore, the building has not only significance in terms of local building history as a typical building characterized by the reform architecture, but also through the context of its development, which refers to the organization and financing of private housing construction around 1900. LfD / 2013

09299198
 
Group of tenement houses in open development with front garden Pfeilstrasse 15; 17; 19; 21
(card)
1910-1915 (tenement house) Sparsely decorated plastered facade, reform style architecture, relevance to local building history as a typical example of the architectural development in Großzschocher immediately before the First World War

In June 1910, the authorities approved the construction of a three-part group house, which the master mason Karl Wilhelm Wesche wanted to build. But the client and contractor Wesche apparently changed the project on their own initiative by adding another house with number 15. An asymmetrical assembly was thus created by 1915, which formerly had narrow exits on the risalits of the street front at numbers 17, 19 and 21. The risalit gables, of which the middle one marks the axis of the original three-group house, shape the view. In addition, cornices and plaster reliefs in the form of cartridges or garlands help to liven up the view. As a typical example of the architectural development in Großzschocher in the years before the First World War, the group of houses is relevant to the history of local building. LfD / 2013

09264681
 
Row of tenements (consisting of four houses, address: Pfeilstraße 22, Giordano-Bruno-Straße 19 and Anton-Zickmantel-Straße 31/33), with a front garden Pfeilstrasse 22
(map)
1928-1929, number 31 (apartment block), 1928-1930, number 33 (apartment block) Plastered facade, in the traditionalist style of the 1920s, of architectural significance

On behalf of the non-profit Leipzig construction company for small apartments, architect and builder Erich Heiser submitted a preliminary project for a block of flats in June 1928. Part of the system (number 31) was completed in the following year, followed by the second in 1930. Heiser planned a three-storey building committed to traditional construction, the middle section of which has an additional storey. Two triangular gables cover the two vertical ribbon windows of the stairwells. The long front is skillfully structured with flat wall projections, parapet cornices and a differentiated plaster design and different window formats. Since the renovation of the house in the 1990s, oversized roof structures have obscured the appearance. As a characteristic example of the traditional tenement building of the late 1920s, the house is of architectural significance. LfD / 2013

09264578
 
Apartment house in open development and in a corner, with a front garden Pfeilstrasse 23
(map)
1909-1913 (tenement house) Sparsely decorated plastered facade, corner tower, reform style architecture, architectural historical significance as a characteristic representative of tenement building around 1910 in the western extension area of ​​Großzschocher

The master bricklayer Karl Wilhelm Wesche from Leipzig-Lindenau submitted the building application for the construction of a residential house in November 1909, for which the master builder Otto Voigt made the drawings. In 1913 the three-storey house was ready to move into. A few years later, following a foreclosure auction, it changed hands, and in the 1920s one of the owners was Allgemeine Transportanlagengesellschaft mbH Großzschocher. The corner bay window, which is closed over the top floor with a hemispherical dome, is characteristic of the building, while a gable in Pfeilstraße sets an additional accent. Furthermore, cornices and a few plaster ornaments structure the flat facades. As a characteristic example of architecture from around 1910 in the expansion areas of Großzschocher, the house has a local building historical value. LfD / 2012

09264684
 
Apartment building (consisting of four houses, addresses: Ponickaustraße 2, Giordano-Bruno-Straße 28 and Anton-Zickmantel-Straße 27/29), with a front garden Ponickaustraße 2
(map)
1930 (tenement) simply structured plastered facade, in the traditionalist style of the 1920s, significance in terms of building history 09264576
 
Apartment block (consisting of five houses: Gerhard-Ellrodt-Straße 14/16/18, Ponickaustraße 26 and Giordano-Bruno-Straße 2) with a front garden Ponickaustraße 26
(map)
1931 (apartment block) Ornamental plastered facade, cubic appearance, staggered structure, in the style of classical modernism, as an architecturally high-quality building from the time of construction of local building historical importance

As early as 1923, the C. Brömme construction business submitted a building application for the construction of a residential building on the property on behalf of Meier & Weichelt. The planned traditional group house was not built. Seven years later there was another attempt: the architect Otto Martin Rothmann from Leipzig was planning a block of flats on a curved floor plan for the land and building company Großzschocher, which was to have a hipped roof except for a transverse building block. A modified project was implemented in 1931. In addition to changes to the small apartments inside, it was above all the external appearance that Rothmann transformed. He did without the hipped roof in the building, which now has a three-fold staggered floor plan and is differentiated in height. A semicircular bay was placed in front of the crossbar, creating an effective accent in the street space on Gerhard-Ellrodt-Straße. The outer corners of the plastered building tier are rounded on the mezzanine floor, only above do the right-angled walls begin. In spite of the facade surface, an extremely finely structured structure was created, which is also enlivened by different window shapes - especially in the stairwells. Stairs in the front gardens lead down to the lower house entrances, some of which are accompanied by shops. The apartment block is one of the most architecturally high-quality buildings of the time in Großzschocher-Windorf, which explains its special significance in terms of local building history. LfD / 2013

09264642
 
The school building and the access path bordered by roses Schoenauer Strasse 113a
(map)
1953 (technical college) Plastered facade with artificial stone integration, in the style of the national building tradition of the 1950s, historical as well as building historical and socio-historical value 09264686
 
Water tower
Water tower Wasserturmweg -
(map)
1904-1905 (water tower), reconstruction 1927-1928 (water tower) With a loft container, 570 cubic meters capacity, due to the shape and as a testimony to the urban development, it is particularly landscape-shaping, of architectural and technical significance, the latter is enhanced by the preserved water container

Together with the waterworks in Großzschocher, a water tower was built in 1904/05, which the community had built far west of the railway line from where it was then. A tapered, round tower structure in clinker construction was used for the container with a spherical mezzanine that was manufactured by the August Klönne company in Dortmund. The original container storey had narrow arched windows and four stepped dwelling houses as well as a conical tile roof. After the incorporation of Großzschocher, the tower was to be brought to the operating level of one of the two Leipzig areas with high water pressure, the "High Zone North". Instead of the container volume of 300 m³, a capacity of 570 m³ was planned, for which the tower head also had to be redesigned. Instead of the simple elevation of the tower head originally planned by the waterworks in 1926, the building construction department dealt with the architectural revision, the drawings for this were made in September 1927 by the company Eduard Steyer, Leipzig-Plagwitz, in whose hands also the execution of the project lay April 1928 was completed. In this structural and technical condition, the 41.7 m high tower served as a water supply until 1990. Only the base, in which a rectangular entrance leads into the interior, and a narrow strip in the lower area of ​​the tower shaft are plastered, otherwise yellow bricks determine the appearance. A two-layer round arch frieze leads over to the cantilevered container storey, into which three rows of lunette windows are cut. Its segmental arches made of blue-red hard-fired clinker effectively stand out from the yellow wall surfaces made of the same material. The motif recurs at the end of the tower, which is formed by three rows of arches placed one above the other, the top of which is broken. Due to its shape and as a testimony to the city's technical development, the building has a special landscape-shaping, historical and technical-historical significance, which is reinforced by the preserved water reservoir. The tower head reflects current architectural developments of the 1920s and is therefore relevant to the history of the building. LfD / 2013

09264688
 
Group of tenement houses in open development with front garden Wilhelm-Michel-Strasse 3; 5; 7
(card)
1910-1911 (tenement house) Sparsely decorated plastered facade, as a characteristic example of reform architecture at the beginning of the 20th century, of importance in terms of local building history

In 1910/1911, bricklayer Ernst Max Skuhr built a three-part group dwelling in the western extension area, which was characterized by the prominent design of the central building. Here a high gable interrupts the eaves line as the end of a flat risalite. The symmetrically arranged facades of the two side houses have plaster reliefs in the parapet fields, and the window bars are an important structural element. At the beginning of the 1920s, the top floor was changed when more apartments were set up here. These measures were dominated by high inflation: for example, for the final examination of the work in number 5, fees of 5.8 million marks had to be paid to the municipal treasury. The group of houses is of importance in terms of local building history, as it can be seen as a significant example of architecture at the beginning of the 20th century in Großzschocher. LfD / 2013

09298963
 
Apartment building in semi-open development with front garden and enclosure Wilhelm-Michel-Strasse 4
(map)
1910 (tenement) Sparingly decorated plaster facade, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history

The building contractor and bricklayer Gustav Skuhr, who was not unknown in Großzschocher, took over the financing and execution of the residential project, which was carried out between February 1910 and the final inspection was carried out on July 5th of the same year. The mirror image shows number 8, the middle building of the assembly with a slightly different shape. In front of the house there is a green area, the border of which is made up of sandstone pillars and the same sandstone plinth (sandstone was used in an unusually diverse way in various buildings in the street). The light plastered facade stands out effectively from the dark tiled roof. Simple plaster structures and a roof house with triangular gable indicate the reform style. The renovation, extension of the attic storey and the extension of the balcony take place between 1996 and 1998. Incidentally, two apartments per floor were designed in the planning year; As a social housing in the Großzschocher expansion area, the house has an architectural historical value. LfD / 2018

09264241
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Wilhelm-Michel-Strasse 6
(map)
1910 (tenement) Sparingly decorated plaster facade, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history

The middle house of a group of three in open construction was built in 1910 by the building contractor and bricklayer Max Ernst Skuhr on his own behalf and own execution (also the neighboring property on the right). At the time, the building land on the left was still owned by the municipality. Two apartments with a corridor, two rooms, a chamber and a kitchen were built on each floor, with exit from the courtyard on the two upper floors. Hermann Hennecke as the builder and the executor Hugo Schaaf stand for the installation of a second rental unit in the roof in 1923. For 1939 the new plastering of the front sides and the cladding of the base with split clinker panels were planned by the applicant Martin Kresse the construction business Otto Skuhr. Subsequent renovation, accompanied by a rear balcony extension, in 1999. Two plaster pilaster strips with decorative garlands in the upper area, which extend over the entire height of the facade, characterize the view, encompass the central front with the house entrance and the dwelling. The front door frame and plinth are (today) plastered, the front garden area and parts of the furnishings have been preserved. The social housing construction in the Großzschocher plan extension area has a historical value. LfD / 2018

09298965
 
Group of tenement houses in open development with front garden Wilhelm-Michel-Strasse 9; 11; 13
(card)
marked 1908 (tenement house) Plastered facade with sandstone elements, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history 09264696
 
Apartment building in semi-open development with a front garden Wilhelm-Michel-Strasse 10
(map)
1914 (tenement) strikingly structured plastered façade, windows with colored lead glazing, reform style architecture, with the extensive renunciation of façade decor and the effect of the building dimensions, a typical example of apartment house architecture and therefore of importance in terms of building history

The building contractor Gustav Skuhr erected the three-storey building with a plastered facade in 1914 as a corner building of a group house. Immediately after the First World War, the top floor was redesigned with the establishment of another apartment. The street-side porch is given a monumental effect by the pilaster strips that span the floors and the mighty dwelling. The mating of the windows is of great importance for the facade effect of the otherwise simple building. The extensive renunciation of facade decor and the effect of the building dimensions make the house a typical representative of building in Großzschocher. The significance of the local building history is based on this. LfD / 2012

09264697
 
Apartment house in open development and in a corner, with a front garden Wilhelm-Michel-Strasse 15
(map)
1909 (tenement) Sparsely decorated plastered facade, reform style architecture, local building historical value due to the design characterized by largely renouncing facade decor and the effect of the building dimensions, which is characteristic of contemporary apartment building architecture in Großzschocher

The building contractors Ernst and Gustav Skuhr from Großzschocher gave their corner residential building, which Gustav Skuhr built in 1909, almost resembling a city palace. The differentiated central projections are decisive for the two street fronts. The large cartouche in the triangular gable on Anton-Zickmantel-Straße shows this front as the front. A pilaster structure underlines the architectural structure of the facades, while other building decor was used extremely sparingly. Echoes of contemporary reform architecture are unmistakable. This is what gives the house its significance in terms of local building history. LfD / 2012 The building contractors Ernst and Gustav Skuhr from Großzschocher gave their corner apartment building, which Gustav Skuhr built in 1909, to look almost like a city palace. The differentiated central projections are decisive for the two street fronts. The large cartouche in the triangular gable on Anton-Zickmantel-Straße shows this front as the front. A pilaster structure underlines the architectural structure of the facades, while other building decor was used extremely sparingly. Echoes of contemporary reform architecture are unmistakable. This is what gives the house its significance in terms of local building history. LfD / 2012

09299750
 
Gate entrance to a farm Wingertgasse 9
(map)
1877 (gate entrance) old location Windorf, three sandstone pillars with crown, characterizing effect due to the location in the old town center of Windorf

Three sandstone pillars form a small gate and a large passage and provide access to a former rural courtyard. Most likely built in 1877 in connection with the street-side residential building, the characteristic pillar crowning distinguishes the gate passage. Not least because of the location of the property, it has a significant impact on the townscape. LfD / 2012

09264699
 
Apartment house in open development in a corner as well as lateral fencing Wöllnerstrasse 2
(map)
1905-1906 (tenement house) with shop, plastered clinker facade, corner bay window, as a characteristic example of the architectural and urban development of Großzschocher around 1900 of importance to the history of local architecture

The property was one of those that had already been built on before Großzschocher's development into an industrial suburb. In 1891 there was evidence of a single-storey building with a half-hipped roof that could have been around a hundred years old at that time. It was a residential building with a shop for a butcher's shop. In 1904, the manufacturer Friedrich Otto Polenz and the building contractor Karl Anton Schmidt, as owners, submitted the building application for a large corner apartment building. Schmidt was also responsible for the design, while the execution in 1905/1906 was in the hands of the new owner Karl Emil Michael, a building contractor from Leipzig-Kleinzschocher. In addition to apartments, there was again a butcher's shop in the building. Two years later, the house changed hands again through a foreclosure auction: now it was owned for a long time by the wife of cantor Müller from Kotzschbar. The corner bay with a tower-like structure is decisive for the exterior. Its continuous clinker cladding is continued on the ground floor, the parapet zone of the first floor and under the eaves. Compared to the approved building drawing, the executed house shows significant differences in structural construction and design, which can be seen above all in the significantly reduced execution of the building decoration. Only a few years ago, apart from the street-side gable wall, the ancillary building was demolished, which in part goes back to a functional building that arose before the large corner building was built. As a characteristic example of the architectural and urban development of Großzschocher around 1900, it is of local and architectural significance. LfD / 2011

09264701
 
Apartment building in half-open development Wöllnerstrasse 3
(map)
1904-1907 (tenement house) Plastered facade with dominating balcony, staircase with original painting, of importance in terms of local building history due to the special design and the history of its origins

Although the building application for a group and rear residential building was approved by Karl Anton Schmidt as a representative of the Polenz und Schmidt company in December 1904, construction on the southern property only got underway at the beginning of 1906. At this point in time, Hermann Oskar Hänsel had bought the area and assumed responsibility as the construction company. Apparently, Hansel took over financially, because in the autumn of 1906 there was a foreclosure auction in which Schmidt and Heinrich Friedrich Otto Polenz were awarded the contract for the property. Friedrich Richard Lange and Marie Polenz nee bought it from them. Lehmann left again soon afterwards and completed the building project by March 1907. The street facade is smoothly plastered over the brick-built ground floor. A three-storey wooden balcony that extends to the top floor characterizes the view - unusual for Großzschocher. The rural impression of the building is reinforced by the crooked hip, which closes the roof house with a visible framework. The small gable above a risalit on the otherwise simple south facade was also provided with a visible framework. If it is these design elements alone that give the house a special significance in terms of local building history, the frequent change of ownership during the construction of the building shows in a characteristic way the speculative features of the building boom in Großzschocher around 1900, which manifests the value of the building history. LfD / 2013

09264702
 
Group of tenement houses in open development, with rear fencing Wöllnerstrasse 4; 6; 8
(card)
1904-1905 (number 4, apartment building), 1904-1906 (number 6, apartment building), 1904-1905 (number 8, apartment building) Plastered facade with balconies, due to the building history and the facade design, which is unusual for Großzschocher, of importance in terms of local building history

On May 28, 1904, the master builder Anton Schmidt submitted the building applications for the buildings of a group residence for the company Polenz & Schmidt, which the authorities approved on June 23, 1904. Shortly before, he had also applied for permission to carry out the buildings individually and to make minor structural changes. This included setting up two smaller apartments on each floor instead of one large apartment in number 8. But apparently little happened in the next few months, because it was not until the spring of 1905 that Anton Schmidt informed the building authorities that he had sold the land. Reinhold Kühn from Großzschocher built houses 6 and 8 (completed in February 1906 and September 1905, respectively) and building contractor Gustav Skuhr built building number 4 (completed in September 1905). The context in which it was created refers to the widespread property speculation around 1900 and the enormous need for smaller apartments at that time. With the group house, a building group that was unusual for Großzschocher was created, which adapted traditional forms of country house architecture for a tenement house with street-side balconies and gables - provided with ornamental frameworks. Compared to these dominant design elements, the economical plaster decor takes the second row, only in the middle part (number 6) it is more powerful. Due to the history of the building and the facade design, which is unusual for Großzschocher, the building is of particular importance in terms of the history of local construction. LfD / 2013

09264704
 
Apartment building in closed development Wöllnerstrasse 5
(map)
1904-1907 (tenement house) The plastered facade, half-timbered gable, balcony, Wöllnerstraße 3 follows the same design, which is important in terms of building history

Master builder Karl Anton Schmidt submitted the plans for the house for Polenz & Schmidt in November 1904, which was part of a group building. For a short time, Hermann Oskar Hänsel was responsible as the building owner and contractor. After a long delay, the construction was completed in May 1907 and the new owners Richard Lange and Marie Polenz, nee. Lehmann were able to rent out the house. The street front is characterized by a two-storey wooden balcony. Together with the decorative half-timbered gable above, the image of rural architecture was impressed on the facade. Shutters originally reinforced this impression. The other design elements - central projections, an unadorned plastered facade, the clinkering of the ground floor - belonged to the current repertoire of contemporary rental apartment construction. At the same time, house number 5 represented the middle part of a group building with a uniform design. This type of building may be considered characteristic of the first decade of the 20th century in Großzschocher. Because of this, the house at Wöllnerstraße 5 is of importance in terms of local building history. LfD / 2013

09264705
 
Mill property with mill (Zur Alten Bäckerei 4), office and residential building (Zur Alten Bäckerei 2) as well as stable building (Mühlparkweg 2a), Mühlgraben, enclosure and courtyard paving To the old bakery 2; 4
(card)
marked 1878 (office and residential building) Formerly also mill building Industrial mill predominantly brick buildings, of local and industrial historical importance 09304637
 
House of a farm To the old bakery 7
(map)
around 1830 (residential building) Plastered facade, presumably half-timbered on the upper floor, due to its age, the importance of the local and architectural history and its scientific and documentary value

Probably built around 1830, the plastered half-timbered house with ground floor walls in clay corrugated construction was part of a courtyard, which also included a stable and barn. In 1875 a chimney was installed in the house on behalf of the landowner Edmund Zacharias. At the beginning of the 1920s, the apartments in the side wing were in extremely poor condition, in 1934 the side building was rebuilt and the gable roof was removed. The municipal building authorities forbade the same project on the street-side residential building for urban planning reasons, so that only a shortening was made here. Not least because of its age, the stately building is of importance in terms of location and architectural history and of scientific and documentary value. LfD / 2011

09298979
 
House (later with bakery) and side building of a farm To the old bakery 12
(map)
1823 (farmhouse), 1880 (side building) Half-timbered buildings, partly plastered, as one of the oldest surviving farms in Großzschocher, of particular importance in terms of local building history and socio-historical importance.

In 1823 the first half-timbered buildings, some of which were plastered, were built on the property that extends as far as the Mühlgraben. A bakery was set up in the building on the street side in 1875. As a result, the original small three-sided courtyard changed very quickly: the old stable was replaced by a large new building on the southern border of the angular property, where in 1892 the baker Heinrich Robert Franke also had additional rooms built for the bakery with a high chimney. In 1911 Otto Franke added a shop extension to the house and in the mid-1920s a steam oven was installed. The shop was relocated between the two bakery buildings after the Second World War, when four tenants lived in the property. In 1957 the bakery was closed. Since the bakery is one of the oldest surviving buildings, it is of particular importance in terms of local architecture and social history. LfD / 2012

09264586
 
Residential house with barn extension of a farm To the old bakery 13
(map)
around 1830 (farmhouse) Rural house, upper floor half-timbered plastered, special local and architectural value, as it is one of the oldest preserved buildings by Großzschocher

The former farm with a two-storey house, side barn and barn that no longer exists was most likely built around 1830. The house with half-timbered upper floor is closed off by a half-hip roof. As early as 1938 it was very dilapidated, but it was always able to avoid demolition. As one of the few examples of pre-Wilhelminian development in the local area, the building has a local and architectural significance: it is one of the oldest houses in Großzschocher. LfD / 2011

09264570
 

Former cultural monuments

image designation location Dating description ID
Farmhouse Anton-Zickmantel-Strasse 9
(map)
around 1850 (farmhouse) Farmhouse and garden; Half-timbered plastered 09264572
 
Designed plaza Dieskaustraße
(map)
Designed square in the corner of Huttenstrasse with enclosed paths, fencing and old trees (formerly the cemetery of the village of Großzschocher) 09264675
 
Residential building Dieskaustraße 152
(map)
around 1860 (residential building) Residential house in open development with enclosure (plastered facade) 09299010
 
Former Brick factory Dieskaustraße 155
(map)
around 1900 (brickworks) Former brickworks with kiln, combustion chamber, chimney and extensions (partially still recognizable loading hatches; half-timbered structures with brick infill; large chimney is not a monument) 09298721
 
Tenement house Dieskaustraße 191
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Apartment building in a formerly closed development with gate passage and shop (plastered clinker facade) 09298959
 
Tenement house Dieskaustraße 269
(map)
1893–1895 (tenement house) Apartment building in closed development with gate passage (clinker-plaster facade; completely preserved stencil painting in the stairwell and in the gate passage) 09302286
 

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  • State Office for the Preservation of Monuments Saxony Dynamic web application: Overview of the monuments listed in Saxony. The location “Leipzig, Stadt, Großzschocher” must be selected in the dialog box, after which an address-specific selection is made. Alternatively, the ID can also be used. As soon as a selection has been made, further information about the selected object can be displayed and other monuments can be selected via the interactive map.
  • Thomas Noack, Thomas Trajkovits, Norbert Baron, Peter Leonhardt: Cultural monuments of the city of Leipzig. (Contributions to urban development 35), City of Leipzig, Department of Urban Development and Construction, Leipzig 2002

Web links

Commons : Kulturdenkmale in Großzschocher  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files