List of cultural monuments in Kaditz

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The list of cultural monuments in Kaditz includes the cultural monuments of the Dresden district of Kaditz . The notes are to be observed.

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

Legend

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

List of cultural monuments in Kaditz

image designation location Dating description ID
Residential stable of a three-sided courtyard
Residential stable of a three-sided courtyard Altkaditz 1
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (stable house) Gable-independent, partly in massive construction or half-timbered, with upper arbor, part of the historically grown, authentically preserved and supraregional significant village structure Altkaditz, of architectural and urban development history. 09217646
 
Residential stable of a three-sided farm, later an inn
Residential stable of a three-sided farm, later an inn Altkaditz 2
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (stable house) Gable-independent, since 1844 as a small wine tavern, as an inn "Schneider's beer and wine tavern" until 1975, with inscription, half-timbered construction partially preserved, part of the nationally important historical village center of Altkaditz, local and architectural value. 09217647
 
archway Altkaditz 4
(map)
marked 1899 (gate entrance) with adjoining wall area, preserved in its location and design, entrance area for a stately courtyard, marked apex stone, important evidence of the typical local courtyards and enclosures, decisively determines the authentically preserved townscape of the supra-regionally important village center of Altkaditz. 09217648
 
Residential house and side building, both located directly on the Anger, a former three-sided courtyard
Residential house and side building, both located directly on the Anger, a former three-sided courtyard Altkaditz 7
(map)
1906 (residential building), around 1880 (side building) striking residential building rebuilt after the major fire in 1906, massive ground floor and two-storey half-timbered area, architectural influences from urban villa construction, side buildings before 1900 (around 1880), courtyard as an exemplary example of structural adaptations after 1900 in the rural suburbs of Dresden, part of the supraregional important village complex Altkaditz, material witness to the history of urban development. 09217650
 
Residential stable of a three-sided courtyard
Residential stable of a three-sided courtyard Altkaditz 8
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (stable house) Gable-independent, solid on the ground floor, upper floor in half-timbered, fully bricked gable, part of the historically grown, authentically preserved, supraregional significant village structure Altkaditz., of architectural and urban development history. 09217651
 
Residential stable of a three-sided courtyard
Residential stable of a three-sided courtyard Altkaditz 9
(map)
18th century (stable house) Two-storey half-timbered house with an elaborately designed gable, significance in terms of building history and urban development, part of the nationally important historical village center. 09217652
 
archway
archway Altkaditz 10
(map)
1799 (gate entrance) with adjoining wall area, entrance to a spacious courtyard, marked 1799 in the keystone, important evidence of the typical local courtyards, has a decisive influence on the authentically preserved appearance of the village. 09217653
 
Residential stable of a three-sided courtyard
Residential stable of a three-sided courtyard Altkaditz 11
(map)
18th century (stable house) Gable-independent, oldest part of the courtyard, solid ground floor, upper floor in half-timbered construction, with upper arbor, significance in terms of architectural and urban development history, part of the nationally important historical village center of Kaditz. 09217654
 
Residential stable house with upper arbor, gate and archway of a three-sided courtyard
Residential stable house with upper arbor, gate and archway of a three-sided courtyard Altkaditz 14
(map)
1803 (stable house) Exemplary of the rural way of life of that time, plastered gable, half-timbered building on the upper floor with upper arbor, wide, covered gate with keystone marked 1803, significance in terms of building history and urban development, part of the nationally important historical village center of Kaditz. 09217655
 
Residential stable house, side building, gate and archway of a three-sided courtyard
Residential stable house, side building, gate and archway of a three-sided courtyard Altkaditz 15
(map)
1816 (stable house) one of the most authentic complexes in Altkaditz., gate entrance in the keystone marked 1816, residential house and former pull-out house two-storey and gable, significance in terms of architectural and local history, part of the nationally important historical village center. 09217656
 
Residential stable house, side building and barn of a three-sided courtyard
Residential stable house, side building and barn of a three-sided courtyard Altkaditz 17
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (stable house) Side building formerly stable and moving house, rear barn, three-sided courtyard largely authentically preserved, farm exemplary of the historically grown, uniform settlement structure of the supra-regionally important village center of Altkaditz, high architectural and local historical importance. 09217657
 
barn
barn Altkaditz 19
(map)
around 1800 (barn) Closing the back of the courtyard, tangible evidence of the former economic use of the courtyard, exemplarily for a barn belt that used to be closed around the village center, of architectural and economic significance. 09217682
 
House and gate entrance of a former three-sided courtyard
House and gate entrance of a former three-sided courtyard Altkaditz 22
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (farmhouse) Two-storey, gable-independent, solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, with upper arbor, significance in terms of architectural and local history, part of the historic village center of Altkaditz. 09217658
 
Residential stable house, side building, gate, gate and field-side enclosure of a three-sided courtyard
Residential stable house, side building, gate, gate and field-side enclosure of a three-sided courtyard Altkaditz 23
(map)
1799–1802, marked 1802 (stable house) 1993 to 2012 free church community center (Altlutheraner), main building with upper arbor and half-timbering on the upper floor and the gables of the gable roof, as an outstanding testimony to the rural architecture of the early 19th century in this region in terms of architectural and urban development history, part of the important historical village complex of Altkaditz. 09217659
 
Rectory, side building and enclosure to the green as well as enclosure on the field side
Rectory, side building and enclosure to the green as well as enclosure on the field side Altkaditz 23a; 25
(card)
19th century (rectory) Main house and auxiliary building with massive basement and half-timbered upper floor, door in the keystone marked 1686, Oberlaube, significance in terms of architectural and urban development, part of the historic village center of Kaditz. 09217660
 
The whole of the Emmaus Church and the Kaditz cemetery in its functional and creative unit
More pictures
The whole of the Emmaus Church and the Kaditz cemetery in its functional and creative unit Altkaditz 27
(map)
around 1500 (churchyard) The whole of the Emmaus Church and the Kaditz churchyard in its grown functional and design unit with the following individual monuments: Church, monumental graves, war memorial for those who died in World War I and II, 59 bomb victims, and churchyard wall including three entrances and gates (see individual monument list - Obj. 09216974) , plus churchyard (garden monument), especially the Kaditz linden tree , one of the oldest trees , a former court linden tree south of the church; Artistically, historically and personally as well as significant in terms of landscape design. 09217661
 
Wikidata-logo.svg
Individual monuments of the Emmaus Church and Kirchhof Kaditz (individual monument for ID No. 09217661)
More pictures

Individual monuments of the Emmaus Church and Kirchhof Kaditz (individual monument for ID No. 09217661)
Altkaditz 27
(map)
around 1500 (church), 1869 tower (church), 1756 (altar), 1867 (baptism), 1887 (organ) Individual monuments of the whole Emmaus Church with furnishings and Kaditz churchyard: Church, monumental graves, war memorial for those killed in World War 1 and 2, 59 bomb victims and churchyard wall including three entrances and gates; Artistically, historically and personally as well as significant in terms of landscape design. 09216974
 
Diaconate
Diaconate Altkaditz 29
(map)
1719, inscribed in the keystone (diaconate) Acting as part of the enclosure around the churchyard, simple, baroque plastered building, keystone of the entrance portal marked 1719, of architectural and local significance, in connection with the church and churchyard, important for the historically inherited appearance of Kaditz. 09217662
 
House, stable house and barn of a three-sided courtyard
House, stable house and barn of a three-sided courtyard Altkaditz 30; 30a; 30b; 30c; 34
(card)
1st half of the 19th century (stable house) striking rural property, building partly still with half-timbering on the upper floor, important material evidence of the local and architectural development, part of the historically nationally important village of Altkaditz. 09217663
 
Old school: school building (former)
More pictures
Old school: school building (former) Altkaditz 32
(map)
1854 (church school) Former Kaditz church school ("old school") used today as a residential building, massive, two-story, with a saddle roof, plastered facade, material evidence of the town's development history, together with the church, diaconate and parish the spiritual center of the village. 09217664
 
Wikidata-logo.svg
Residential group
Residential group At the hooves 3; 5; 7; 9; 11
(card)
1912, inscribed (apartment building) Two-storey, elongated row of five houses, by Hans Erlwein, mixture of traditionalist shapes and Reformation demands, well-preserved structural condition and high-quality execution, building complex shows urban, architectural and social historical significance. 09217665
 
Unity of the Volksheim Kaditz settlement with several individual monuments At the hooves 12; 13; 14; 15; 16; 17
(map)
1927–1930 (settlement) Material entirety of the Volksheim Kaditz housing estate with numerous individual monuments and the outdoor facilities as a totality part; Enclosed example of the construction of small apartments and settlements around 1930, also vividly documents the urban development of Dresden since the Weimar Republic , when numerous settlements emerged on the outskirts of the city, significant in terms of building history and urban development history. 09305942
 
Individual monument belonging to the Volksheim Kaditz settlement: semi-detached / multi-family house (individual monument for ID no. 09305942)

Individual monument belonging to the Volksheim Kaditz settlement: semi-detached / multi-family house (individual monument for ID no. 09305942)
At the hooves 12; 14
(card)
1927–1930 (twin house) as a characteristic example of small-scale housing and settlement construction around 1930, with expressionistic design elements, as well as part of a settlement complex that emerged during the Weimar Republic and then in large numbers on the outskirts of the city, significant in terms of building history, social history and urban development history. 09217666
 
Individual monument belonging to the Volksheim Kaditz settlement: semi-detached / multi-family house (individual monument for ID no. 09305942)

Individual monument belonging to the Volksheim Kaditz settlement: semi-detached / multi-family house (individual monument for ID no. 09305942)
At the hooves 13; 15
(card)
1927–1930 (twin house) as a characteristic example of small-scale housing and settlement construction around 1930, with expressionistic design elements, as well as part of a settlement complex that emerged during the Weimar Republic and then in large numbers on the outskirts of the city, significant in terms of building history, social history and urban development history. 09217796
 
Individual monument belonging to the Volksheim Kaditz settlement: residential building / apartment building (individual monument for ID No. 09305942)

Individual monument belonging to the Volksheim Kaditz settlement: residential building / apartment building (individual monument for ID No. 09305942)
At the hooves 16
(card)
1927–1930 (apartment building) as a characteristic example of small-scale housing and settlement construction around 1930, with expressionistic design elements, as well as part of a settlement complex that emerged during the Weimar Republic and then in large numbers on the outskirts of the city, significant in terms of building history, social history and urban development history. 09217795
 
Individual monument belonging to the Volksheim Kaditz settlement: residential building / apartment building (individual monument for ID No. 09305942)

Individual monument belonging to the Volksheim Kaditz settlement: residential building / apartment building (individual monument for ID No. 09305942)
At the Hufen 17
(map)
1927–1930 (apartment building) as a characteristic example of small-scale housing and settlement construction around 1930, with expressionistic design elements, as well as part of a settlement complex that emerged during the Weimar Republic and then in large numbers on the outskirts of the city, significant in terms of building history, social history and urban development history. 09217797
 
Individual monument belonging to the Volksheim Kaditz settlement: semi-detached / multi-family house (individual monument for ID no. 09305942)

Individual monument belonging to the Volksheim Kaditz settlement: semi-detached / multi-family house (individual monument for ID no. 09305942)
Andersenstrasse 2; 4
(card)
1927–1930 (twin house) as a characteristic example of small-scale housing and settlement construction around 1930, with expressionistic design elements, as well as part of a settlement complex that emerged during the Weimar Republic and then in large numbers on the outskirts of the city, significant in terms of building history, social history and urban development history. 09217667
 
Individual monument belonging to the Volksheim Kaditz settlement: semi-detached / multi-family house (individual monument for ID no. 09305942)

Individual monument belonging to the Volksheim Kaditz settlement: semi-detached / multi-family house (individual monument for ID no. 09305942)
Andersenstrasse 15; 17
(map)
1927–1930 (twin house) as a characteristic example of small-scale housing and settlement construction around 1930, with expressionistic design elements, as well as part of a settlement complex that emerged during the Weimar Republic and then in large numbers on the outskirts of the city, significant in terms of building history, social history and urban development history. 09217798
 
Individual monument belonging to the Volksheim Kaditz settlement: semi-detached / multi-family house (individual monument for ID no. 09305942)

Individual monument belonging to the Volksheim Kaditz settlement: semi-detached / multi-family house (individual monument for ID no. 09305942)
Andersenstrasse 16; 18
(card)
1927–1930 (twin house) as a characteristic example of small-scale housing and settlement construction around 1930, with expressionistic design elements, as well as part of a settlement complex that emerged during the Weimar Republic and then in large numbers on the outskirts of the city, significant in terms of building history, social history and urban development history. 09217668
 
Apartment house in a corner and open development
Apartment house in a corner and open development Baudissinstrasse 2
(map)
1900 (tenement) Historic building from 1900 with clinker brick facade typical of the time and plastered ground floor with built-in shop, architectural significance 09217669
 
Double apartment building (Baudissinstrasse 11 and Peschelstrasse 15) with fencing in a corner and open development
Double apartment building (Baudissinstrasse 11 and Peschelstrasse 15) with fencing in a corner and open development Baudissinstrasse 11
(map)
1899, marked Wetterfahne (double tenement house) Late historical residential building, weather vane dating from 1899, plastered ground floor with built-in shop, clinker stone facade typical of the time, ornamental gable and roof turret, significance for building history 09217671
 
Apartment building in open development
Apartment building in open development Baudissinstrasse 18
(map)
1902 (tenement) striking, lavishly designed plastered building with ornamental framework in the regionally typical forms of Art Nouveau, significance in terms of building history 09217670
 
Double tenement house (Emilienstraße 1 and Rankestraße 76) in a corner location and in open development
Double tenement house (Emilienstraße 1 and Rankestraße 76) in a corner location and in open development Emilienstraße 1
(map)
around 1900 (double tenement house) Distinctive historicizing residential building around 1900 with characteristic clinker stone architecture, the neo-baroque decorative elements especially on the rounded corners, significant in terms of architectural history, location: near the entrance to Radebeul, of urban development importance, as such head positions with neo-baroque gestures are rather rare, especially in the district Kaditz. 09218549
 
Apartment house in open development, with enclosure Emilienstraße 7
(map)
marked 1898 (tenement house) Representative late founding building with clinker and stone facade typical of the time, marked in relief with 1898, largely authentic state of preservation, important material evidence of the building history of the city of Dresden, near the Radebeul location. 09217672
 
Feldschlößchen;  Youth club Rudi Arndt;  Twenty five;  Der Rudi: Gasthaus (formerly)
More pictures
Feldschlößchen; Youth club Rudi Arndt; Twenty five; Der Rudi: Gasthaus (formerly) Fechnerstrasse 2a
(map)
1897–1898 (inn) Historicizing building with partially preserved ballroom, in the 1920 / 30s renowned family and club bar, in an exposed urban development location, in the typical, late historical clinker stone manner, regionally significant in terms of building history, local history and social history.

Feldschlößchen, in the time of the GDR "Rudi Arndt Youth Club", temporarily "Twenty Five" in the 1990s, since then until today "Der Rudi"

09217673
 
Wikidata-logo.svg
Residential house in open development
Residential house in open development Fechnerstrasse 4
(map)
around 1860 (residential building) Small, eaves, single-storey residential building, simple, unadorned plastered building with a steep pitched roof, tangible evidence of urban development and the building history of Dresden. 09217674
 
Residential house in open development
Residential house in open development Fechnerstrasse 6
(map)
around 1860 (residential building) Small, eaves, single-storey residential building, simple, unadorned plastered building with a steep pitched roof, tangible evidence of urban development and the building history of Dresden. 09217675
 
Residential house in open development
Residential house in open development Fechnerstrasse 7
(map)
around 1860 (residential building) Small, eaves, single-storey residential building, simple, unadorned plastered building with a steep pitched roof, tangible evidence of urban development and the building history of Dresden. 09217676
 
Residential house in open development
Residential house in open development Fechnerstrasse 14
(map)
around 1860 (residential building) Eaves, two-storey plastered building without subdivision elements, formerly located on the outskirts, one of the few buildings still characterized by a village at that time, tangible evidence of urban development and the building history of Dresden. 09217677
 
Double residential building (Fechnerstrasse 27 and Wächterstrasse 39a) with part of the enclosure in the corner and open development Fechnerstrasse 27
(map)
around 1912 (twin house) Two-storey, mighty plastered building with a mansard floor, a typical example of the regionally shaped reform architecture, characterizing the streetscape and significant in terms of building history. 09217716
 
Double house (Fechnerstrasse 28 and Wächterstrasse 39b) in a corner location and open development, with part of the enclosure Fechnerstrasse 28
(map)
around 1912 (twin house) Two-storey, mighty plastered building with a mansard floor, a typical example of the regionally shaped reform architecture, characterizing the streetscape and significant in terms of building history. 09217717
 
The collective settlement of Kaditz, area on Kötzschenbroder Straße, with several individual monuments Fürstenhainer Strasse 26; 28
(card)
1936–1939 (settlement) The collective settlement of Kaditz, area on Kötzschenbroder Straße, with numerous individual monuments; Enclosure is an exemplary testimony to the construction of small apartments and settlements in the 1930s, and also vividly documents the urban development of Dresden since the Weimar Republic, when numerous settlements emerged on the outskirts of the city, which are significant in terms of building history and urban development history. 09305940
 
Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: semi-detached house (individual monument for ID no. 09305940)

Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: semi-detached house (individual monument for ID no. 09305940)
Fürstenhainer Strasse 26; 28
(card)
1936–1939 (twin house) Part of an exemplary testimony to the construction of small apartments and settlements in the 1930s, it also vividly documents the urban development of Dresden since the Weimar Republic, when numerous settlements emerged on the outskirts of the city, which are important in terms of building history and urban development history. 09217678
 
Multi-family house in a residential complex of the Pieschen consumer association with fencing and gate entrance with pavilion and gate pillar
Multi-family house in a residential complex of the Pieschen consumer association with fencing and gate entrance with pavilion and gate pillar Geibelstrasse 1
(map)
1913–1926 (apartment building) Housing complex made up of three buildings along the street and one building as internal development, see also Geibelstrasse 3-9, 11-19, neoclassical and reform style elements , the houses with lavish roofscapes, significant in terms of building history, local history and social history. 09217679
 
Apartment building in a residential complex of the Pieschen consumer association
Apartment building in a residential complex of the Pieschen consumer association Geibelstrasse 3; 5; 7; 9
(card)
1913–1926 (apartment building) Housing complex made up of three buildings along the street and one building as internal development, see also Geibelstrasse 1 and 11-19, neoclassical and reform style elements, the houses with lavish roofscapes, significant in terms of building history, local history and social history. 09217800
 
Apartment building in a residential complex of the Pieschen consumer association with a fence and two gate entrances with a pavilion and a gate pillar
Apartment building in a residential complex of the Pieschen consumer association with a fence and two gate entrances with a pavilion and a gate pillar Geibelstrasse 11; 13; 15; 17
(map)
1913–1926 (apartment building) Housing complex made up of three buildings along the street and one building as internal development, see also Geibelstrasse 1, 3-9 and 19, neoclassical and reform style elements, the houses with elaborate roofscapes, significant in terms of building history, local history and social history. 09217801
 
Multi-family house in a residential complex of the Pieschen consumer association with fencing and gate entrance with pavilion and gate pillar, gate system
Multi-family house in a residential complex of the Pieschen consumer association with fencing and gate entrance with pavilion and gate pillar, gate system Geibelstrasse 19
(map)
1913–1926 (apartment building) Housing complex consisting of three buildings along the street and one building as inner quarter development, see also Geibelstrasse 1, 3-9, 11-17, neoclassical and reform style elements, the houses with lavish roofscapes, significant in terms of building history, local history and social history. 09217802
 
Individual monument belonging to the Volksheim Kaditz settlement: semi-detached / multi-family house (individual monument for ID no. 09305942)

Individual monument belonging to the Volksheim Kaditz settlement: semi-detached / multi-family house (individual monument for ID no. 09305942)
Grimmstrasse 46; 48
(card)
1927–1930 (twin house) as a characteristic example of small-scale housing and settlement construction around 1930, with expressionistic design elements, as well as part of a settlement complex that emerged during the Weimar Republic and then in large numbers on the outskirts of the city, significant in terms of building history, social history and urban development history. 09217680
 
Individual monument belonging to the Volksheim Kaditz settlement: group of residential buildings (individual monument to ID no. 09305942)

Individual monument belonging to the Volksheim Kaditz settlement: group of residential buildings (individual monument to ID no. 09305942)
Grimmstrasse 50; 52; 54
(card)
1927–1930 (apartment building) as a characteristic example of small-scale housing and settlement construction around 1930, with expressionistic design elements, as well as part of a settlement complex that emerged during the Weimar Republic and then in large numbers on the outskirts of the city, significant in terms of building history, social history and urban development history. 09217803
 
Village smithy (former)
Village smithy (former) Grimmstrasse 88
(map)
End of 18th century (blacksmiths) one of the oldest buildings in Kaditz, half-timbered construction, significance as a technical monument and significant in terms of local history and urban development history. 09217681
 
Individual monument belonging to the Volksheim Kaditz settlement: residential building / apartment building (individual monument for ID No. 09305942)

Individual monument belonging to the Volksheim Kaditz settlement: residential building / apartment building (individual monument for ID No. 09305942)
Gustav-Schwab-Strasse 7
(map)
1927–1930 (apartment building) as a characteristic example of small-scale housing and settlement construction around 1930, with expressionistic design elements, as well as part of a settlement complex that emerged during the Weimar Republic and then in large numbers on the outskirts of the city, significant in terms of building history, social history and urban development history. 09217683
 
Individual monument belonging to the Volksheim Kaditz settlement: residential building / apartment building (individual monument for ID No. 09305942)

Individual monument belonging to the Volksheim Kaditz settlement: residential building / apartment building (individual monument for ID No. 09305942)
Gustav-Schwab-Strasse 9
(map)
1927–1930 (apartment building) as a characteristic example of small-scale housing and settlement construction around 1930, with expressionistic design elements, as well as part of a settlement complex that emerged during the Weimar Republic and then in large numbers on the outskirts of the city, significant in terms of building history, social history and urban development history. 09217684
 
Individual monument of the residential complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein": Friedrich-August-Haus (Kolbestrasse 1 and Roscherstrasse 2, individual monument for ID No. 09305974)
Individual monument of the residential complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein": Friedrich-August-Haus (Kolbestrasse 1 and Roscherstrasse 2, individual monument
for ID No. 09305974)
Kolbestrasse 1
(map)
marked 1899 (double house) Individual monument of the whole of the residential complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein für Arbeiterwohnungen": representative building with rich Art Nouveau ornamentation, part of a residential complex built at the end of the 19th century in the course of industrial development away from the old Kaditz village center, consisting of eight two-storey semi-detached houses with simple half-timbered and clinker brick facades and saddle roofs based on the north German model, one of the first cooperative building projects in Dresden, after the liquidation of the Dresden building association for workers' apartments, taken over by the Dresden savings and building association and combined with Friedrich-August-Haus to form a residential complex, significant in terms of building history, local history and social history, possibly also artistically by Concern. 09217702
 
Aggregate housing complex of the Dresdner Bauverein for workers' apartments with several individual monuments Kolbestrasse 1; 3; 5; 7; 9; 11; 13; 15; 17
(map)
1887–1899 (residential complex) Aggregate housing complex of the Dresden building association for workers' apartments with numerous individual monuments; Consisting of eight two-storey semi-detached houses with simple half-timbered and clinker brick facades and pitched roofs based on the North German model, one of the first cooperative building projects in Dresden, taken over by the Dresden savings and construction association after the liquidation of the Dresden building association for workers' housing and combined with Friedrich-August-Haus to form a residential complex, Significant in terms of building history, local history and social history, possibly also of artistic importance. 09305974
 
Single monument of the residential complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein": Doppelhaus (single monument for ID no. 09305974)
Single monument of the residential complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein": Doppelhaus (single monument
for ID no. 09305974)
Kolbestrasse 3; 5
(card)
1887–1899 (twin house) Individual monument of the collective housing complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein für Arbeiterwohnungen"; Significant in terms of building history, local history and social history, possibly also of artistic importance. 09217688
 
Single monument of the residential complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein": Doppelhaus (single monument for ID no. 09305974)
Single monument of the residential complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein": Doppelhaus (single monument
for ID no. 09305974)
Kolbestrasse 7; 9
(card)
1887–1899 (twin house) Individual monument of the collective housing complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein für Arbeiterwohnungen"; Significant in terms of building history, local history and social history, possibly also of artistic importance. 09217763
 
Single monument of the residential complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein": Doppelhaus (single monument for ID no. 09305974)
Single monument of the residential complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein": Doppelhaus (single monument
for ID no. 09305974)
Kolbestrasse 11; 13
(card)
1887–1899 (twin house) Individual monument of the collective housing complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein für Arbeiterwohnungen"; Significant in terms of building history, local history and social history, possibly also of artistic importance. 09217764
 
Single monument of the residential complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein": Doppelhaus (single monument for ID no. 09305974)
Single monument of the residential complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein": Doppelhaus (single monument
for ID no. 09305974)
Kolbestrasse 15; 17
(map)
1887–1899 (twin house) Individual monument of the collective housing complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein für Arbeiterwohnungen"; Significant in terms of building history, local history and social history, possibly also of artistic importance. 09217765
 
Motorway stele on pedestal
More pictures
Motorway stele on pedestal Kötzschenbroder Strasse
(map)
1939 (obelisk) Towering obelisk with the Dresden coat of arms and the inscription "Autobahn", reminds of the forced construction of the Autobahn in the 1930s, historically and technologically significant, historical testimony of the high-cost autobahn construction during the Nazi era. 09217687
 
Wikidata-logo.svg
Tenement house
Tenement house Kötzschenbroder Strasse 142
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Historicizing, representative plastered façade with rusticated ground floor and central projecting, local history and exemplary importance for the architecture of late historicism around 1900 in the then still independent community of Kaditz. 09217685
 
Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: semi-detached house (individual monument for ID no. 09305940)

Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: semi-detached house (individual monument for ID no. 09305940)
Kötzschenbroder Strasse 160; 162
(card)
1936–1939 (twin house) Part of an exemplary testimony to the construction of small apartments and settlements in the 1930s, it also vividly documents the urban development of Dresden since the Weimar Republic, when numerous settlements emerged on the outskirts of the city, which are important in terms of building history and urban development history. 09217686
 
Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: residential building (individual monument for ID No. 09305940)

Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: residential building (individual monument for ID No. 09305940)
Kötzschenbroder Strasse 164
(map)
1936–1939 (apartment building) Part of an exemplary testimony to the construction of small apartments and settlements in the 1930s, it also vividly documents the urban development of Dresden since the Weimar Republic, when numerous settlements emerged on the outskirts of the city, which are important in terms of building history and urban development history. 09217804
 
Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: semi-detached house (individual monument for ID no. 09305940)

Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: semi-detached house (individual monument for ID no. 09305940)
Kötzschenbroder Strasse 166; 168
(card)
1936–1939 (apartment building) Part of an exemplary testimony to the construction of small apartments and settlements in the 1930s, it also vividly documents the urban development of Dresden since the Weimar Republic, when numerous settlements emerged on the outskirts of the city, which are important in terms of building history and urban development history. 09217805
 
Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: residential building (individual monument for ID No. 09305940)

Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: residential building (individual monument for ID No. 09305940)
Kötzschenbroder Strasse 170
(map)
1936–1939 (apartment building) Part of an exemplary testimony to the construction of small apartments and settlements in the 1930s, it also vividly documents the urban development of Dresden since the Weimar Republic, when numerous settlements emerged on the outskirts of the city, which are important in terms of building history and urban development history. 09217806
 
Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: semi-detached house (individual monument for ID no. 09305940)

Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: semi-detached house (individual monument for ID no. 09305940)
Kötzschenbroder Strasse 172; 174
(map)
1936–1939 (twin house) Part of an exemplary testimony to the construction of small apartments and settlements in the 1930s, it also vividly documents the urban development of Dresden since the Weimar Republic, when numerous settlements emerged on the outskirts of the city, which are important in terms of building history and urban development history. 09217807
 
Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: residential building (individual monument for ID No. 09305940)

Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: residential building (individual monument for ID No. 09305940)
Kötzschenbroder Strasse 176
(map)
1936–1939 (apartment building) Part of an exemplary testimony to the construction of small apartments and settlements in the 1930s, it also vividly documents the urban development of Dresden since the Weimar Republic, when numerous settlements emerged on the outskirts of the city, which are important in terms of building history and urban development history. 09217808
 
Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: semi-detached house (individual monument for ID no. 09305940)

Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: semi-detached house (individual monument for ID no. 09305940)
Kötzschenbroder Strasse 178; 180
(card)
1936–1939 (twin house) Part of an exemplary testimony to the construction of small apartments and settlements in the 1930s, it also vividly documents the urban development of Dresden since the Weimar Republic, when numerous settlements emerged on the outskirts of the city, which are important in terms of building history and urban development history. 09217809
 
Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: residential building (individual monument for ID No. 09305940)

Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: residential building (individual monument for ID No. 09305940)
Kötzschenbroder Strasse 182
(map)
1936–1939 (apartment building) Part of an exemplary testimony to the construction of small apartments and settlements in the 1930s, it also vividly documents the urban development of Dresden since the Weimar Republic, when numerous settlements emerged on the outskirts of the city, which are important in terms of building history and urban development history. 09217810
 
Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: semi-detached house (individual monument for ID no. 09305940)

Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: semi-detached house (individual monument for ID no. 09305940)
Kötzschenbroder Strasse 184; 186
(card)
1936–1939 (twin house) Part of an exemplary testimony to the construction of small apartments and settlements in the 1930s, it also vividly documents the urban development of Dresden since the Weimar Republic, when numerous settlements emerged on the outskirts of the city, which are important in terms of building history and urban development history. 09217811
 
Ranke drugstore (formerly): residential building with a semicircular waiting hall in a corner and open development
Ranke drugstore (formerly): residential building with a semicircular waiting hall in a corner and open development Leipziger Strasse 199
(map)
1920s (residential and commercial building) in an urban planning location at the intersection of Leipziger and Rankestrasse, emphasis on the corner location by round, single-storey front building (formerly waiting hall) and the formation of the facade in this area, simple plastered construction, staircase design from the period of construction, exemplary for architectural development around 1930, significant in terms of building history and architectural history. 09217689
 
Apartment building in open development
Apartment building in open development Leipziger Strasse 203
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) One of four residential buildings, built at the end of the 19th century along Leipziger Strasse by Kaditz architect and master builder FH Jähnig, two-storey plastered building with a mansard floor and historicizing style elements, of architectural value, in cooperation with the three neighboring residential buildings built at the same time, urban value. 09217690
 
Apartment building in open development
Apartment building in open development Leipziger Strasse 205
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) One of four residential buildings, built at the end of the 19th century along Leipziger Strasse by Kaditz architect and master builder FH Jähnig, two-storey plastered building with a mansard floor and historicizing style elements, of architectural value, in cooperation with the three neighboring residential buildings built at the same time, urban value. 09217691
 
Apartment building in open development
Apartment building in open development Leipziger Strasse 207
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) One of four residential buildings, built at the end of the 19th century along Leipziger Strasse by Kaditz architect and master builder FH Jähnig, two-storey plastered building with a mansard floor and historicizing style elements, of architectural value, in cooperation with the three neighboring residential buildings built at the same time, urban value. 09217692
 
Apartment building in open development
Apartment building in open development Leipziger Strasse 209
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) One of four residential buildings, built at the end of the 19th century along Leipziger Strasse by the Kaditz architect and master builder FH Jähnig, two-storey plastered building with a mansard floor and historicizing style elements such as corner reinforcement and window frames, of architectural value, in cooperation with the three neighboring residential buildings erected at the same time Value. 09217693
 
To Rankeschlößchen: residential and commercial building (Rankestrasse 21 and Leuckartstrasse 2) in open development and corner location with a restaurant on the ground floor
To Rankeschlößchen: residential and commercial building (Rankestrasse 21 and Leuckartstrasse 2) in open development and corner location with a restaurant on the ground floor Leuckartstrasse 2
(map)
1903 (residential and commercial building) Distinctive, three-storey plastered building with a mansard roof, characterizing the street through a tower-like corner solution with ornamental half-timbered gable and roof turret, originally "Zum Rankeschlößchen" restaurant, facade design with historicizing and Art Nouveau elements, important from an architectural point of view, also an urban development value due to the exposed location. 09217694
 
Tenement house with fencing in a corner and open development
Tenement house with fencing in a corner and open development Leuckartstrasse 3
(map)
1902 (tenement) Three-storey plastered building with sloping building corner and roof turrets in a location that characterizes the street scene, historicizing elements, historical significance. 09217812
 
Double tenement house (Leuckartstrasse 12 and Wächterstrasse 50) in a corner and open development
Double tenement house (Leuckartstrasse 12 and Wächterstrasse 50) in a corner and open development Leuckartstrasse 12
(map)
around 1900 (half of a double apartment building) three-storey, simple clinker stone building with historicizing elements, sloping building corner with emphasis by roof turrets, building historical significance and characterizing the street scene. 09217813
 
Double apartment building (Baudissinstrasse 11 and Peschelstrasse 15) with fencing in a corner and open development Peschelstrasse 15
(map)
1899, marked Wetterfahne (double tenement house) Late historical residential building, weather vane dating from 1899, plastered ground floor with built-in shop, clinker stone facade typical of the time, ornamental gable and roof turret, significance for building history 09217671
 
Transformer house
Transformer house Rankestrasse
(map)
around 1910 (transformer station) In a crossroads that characterizes the plaza, it is of significance in terms of technology and local history. 09217695
 
Rental villa
Rental villa Rankestrasse 6
(map)
after 1900 (rental villa) Representative plastered building with high, developed mansard roof with gable gables, facade decor between historicism and Art Nouveau , important for the city of Dresden in terms of architectural and local history. 09217696
 
To Rankeschlößchen: residential and commercial building (Rankestrasse 21 and Leuckartstrasse 2) in open development and corner location with a restaurant on the ground floor
To Rankeschlößchen: residential and commercial building (Rankestrasse 21 and Leuckartstrasse 2) in open development and corner location with a restaurant on the ground floor Rankestrasse 21
(map)
1903 (residential and commercial building) Distinctive, three-storey plastered building with a mansard roof, characterizing the street through a tower-like corner solution with ornamental half-timbered gable and roof turret, originally "Zum Rankeschlößchen" restaurant, facade design with historicizing and Art Nouveau elements, important from an architectural point of view, also an urban development value due to the exposed location. 09217694
 
Apartment house in a corner and open development
Apartment house in a corner and open development Rankestrasse 26
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Three-storey, simple plastered building with a concise location in the street area, emphasis on the corner of the building with a tower-like structure, historical decorative shapes, of architectural significance. 09217697
 
Three multi-family houses in a residential complex with fencing and gate entrance
Three multi-family houses in a residential complex with fencing and gate entrance Rankestrasse 28a; 28b; 28c
(card)
after 1912 (apartment building) System of five three-storey buildings grouped around a narrow entrance strip and inner courtyard, traditionally designed buildings with distinctive mansard roofs and few, accentuated facade decorations, typical example of the regionally influenced reform architecture, see also Rankestrasse 28d-f, 28g, 30a-f, urban planning relevant for Kaditz , Plant with social history, architectural history and local history significance. 09217814
 
Three apartment buildings in a residential complex
Three apartment buildings in a residential complex Rankestrasse 28d; 28e; 28f
(card)
after 1912 (residential part) System of five three-storey buildings grouped around a narrow entrance strip and inner courtyard, traditionally designed buildings with distinctive mansard roofs and few, accentuated facade decorations, typical example of the regionally influenced reform architecture, see also Rankestrasse 28a-c, 28g, 30a-f, urban planning relevant for Kaditz , Plant with social history, architectural history and local history significance. 09217815
 
Apartment building in a residential complex
Apartment building in a residential complex Rankestrasse 28g
(map)
after 1912 (apartment building) System of five three-storey buildings grouped around a narrow entrance strip and inner courtyard, traditionally designed buildings with distinctive mansard roofs and few, accentuated facade decorations, typical example of the regionally influenced reform architecture, see also Rankestrasse 28a-f, 30a-f, urban planning relevant for Kaditz, annex with social history, architectural history and local history significance. 09217816
 
Three multi-family houses in a residential complex with fencing and gate entrance
Three multi-family houses in a residential complex with fencing and gate entrance Rankestrasse 30a; 30b; 30c
(card)
after 1912 (apartment building) System of five three-storey buildings grouped around a narrow entrance strip and inner courtyard, traditionally designed buildings with striking mansard roofs and few, accentuated facade decorations, typical example of the regionally shaped reform architecture, see also Rankestrasse 28a-g, 30d-f, urban planning relevant for Kaditz, annex with social history, architectural history and local history significance. 09217817
 
Three apartment buildings in a residential complex
Three apartment buildings in a residential complex Rankestrasse 30d; 30e; 30f
(card)
after 1912 (apartment building) System of five three-storey buildings grouped around a narrow entrance strip and inner courtyard, traditionally designed buildings with striking mansard roofs and few, accentuated facade decorations, typical example of the regionally shaped reform architecture, see also Rankestrasse 28a-g, 30a-c, urban planning relevant for Kaditz, annex with social history, architectural history and local history significance. 09217818
 
Rental villa with enclosure
Rental villa with enclosure Rankestrasse 43
(map)
around 1900 (rental villa) Historicizing, representative clinker stone building with side projections and a flat hipped roof, significant in terms of both building history and local history due to its stylistic characteristics. 09217698
 
Double tenement house (Emilienstraße 1 and Rankestraße 76) in a corner location and in open development Rankestrasse 76
(map)
around 1900 (double tenement house) Distinctive historicizing residential building around 1900 with characteristic clinker stone architecture, the neo-baroque decorative elements especially on the rounded corners, significant in terms of architectural history, location: near the entrance to Radebeul, of urban development importance, as such head positions with neo-baroque gestures are rather rare, especially in the district Kaditz. 09218549
 
Thomas-Müntzer-Oberschule: School building
Thomas-Müntzer-Oberschule: School building Riegelplatz 2
(map)
marked 1894 (school) distinctive, three-storey clinker brick building with risalit and tower top, elaborately structured with sandstone elements, characterizing the square and an impressive testimony to the school architecture around 1900 with an interior from the period of construction, historical, local and socio-historical significance. 09217700
 
Rental villa with enclosure
Rental villa with enclosure Riegelplatz 4
(map)
1890 (rental villa) representative, three-storey rental villa with clinker stone facade and objectified, historicizing elements and Art Nouveau influence, significant in terms of building history and urban development history. 09217701
 
Individual monument of the residential complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein": Friedrich-August-Haus (Kolbestrasse 1 and Roscherstrasse 2, individual monument for ID No. 09305974)
Individual monument of the residential complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein": Friedrich-August-Haus (Kolbestrasse 1 and Roscherstrasse 2, individual monument
for ID No. 09305974)
Roscherstraße 2
(map)
marked 1899 (double house) Individual monument of the whole of the residential complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein für Arbeiterwohnungen": representative building with rich Art Nouveau ornamentation, part of a residential complex built at the end of the 19th century in the course of industrial development away from the old Kaditz village center, consisting of eight two-storey semi-detached houses with simple half-timbered and clinker brick facades and saddle roofs based on the north German model, one of the first cooperative building projects in Dresden, after the liquidation of the Dresden building association for workers' apartments, taken over by the Dresden savings and building association and combined with Friedrich-August-Haus to form a residential complex, significant in terms of building history, local history and social history, possibly also artistically by Concern. 09217702
 
Single monument of the residential complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein": Doppelhaus (single monument for ID no. 09305974)
Single monument of the residential complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein": Doppelhaus (single monument
for ID no. 09305974)
Roscherstrasse 4; 6
(card)
1887–1899 (twin house) Individual monument of the collective housing complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein für Arbeiterwohnungen"; Significant in terms of building history, local history and social history, possibly also of artistic importance. 09217703
 
Single monument of the residential complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein": Doppelhaus (single monument for ID no. 09305974)
Single monument of the residential complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein": Doppelhaus (single monument
for ID no. 09305974)
Roscherstrasse 8; 10
(card)
1887–1899 (twin house) Individual monument of the collective housing complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein für Arbeiterwohnungen"; Significant in terms of building history, local history and social history, possibly also of artistic importance. 09217760
 
Single monument of the residential complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein": Doppelhaus (single monument for ID no. 09305974)
Single monument of the residential complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein": Doppelhaus (single monument
for ID no. 09305974)
Roscherstrasse 12; 14
(card)
1887–1899 (twin house) Individual monument of the collective housing complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein für Arbeiterwohnungen"; Significant in terms of building history, local history and social history, possibly also of artistic importance. 09217761
 
Single monument of the residential complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein": Doppelhaus (single monument for ID no. 09305974)
Single monument of the residential complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein": Doppelhaus (single monument
for ID no. 09305974)
Roscherstrasse 16; 18
(card)
1887–1899 (twin house) Individual monument of the collective housing complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein für Arbeiterwohnungen"; Significant in terms of building history, local history and social history, possibly also of artistic importance. 09217762
 
Kaditz sewage treatment plant: Sewage treatment plant with an underground sewage system and high-rise buildings
More pictures
Kaditz sewage treatment plant: Sewage treatment plant with an underground sewage system and high-rise buildings Scharfenberger Strasse 152
(map)
1908–1913 (water supply and sewage system) Kaditz sewage treatment plant: Sewage treatment plant with an underground sewage system and high-rise buildings, such as supply structure, pre-cleaning, two rake buildings including sand trap, pumping station, boiler house, workshop, residential building A, residential building B, residential building C / D, digestion towers and bridge crane; Most modern facility in Europe at the time of its creation, homeland security architecture, significant in terms of building history, industrial history and local history, also unique. 09217704
 
Wikidata-logo.svg
Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: residential building (individual monument for ID No. 09305940)

Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: residential building (individual monument for ID No. 09305940)
Seewiesenweg 1
(map)
1936–1939 (apartment building) Part of an exemplary testimony to the construction of small apartments and settlements in the 1930s, it also vividly documents the urban development of Dresden since the Weimar Republic, when numerous settlements emerged on the outskirts of the city, which are important in terms of building history and urban development history. 09217705
 
Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: residential building (individual monument for ID No. 09305940)

Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: residential building (individual monument for ID No. 09305940)
Seewiesenweg 2
(map)
1936–1939 (apartment building) Part of an exemplary testimony to the construction of small apartments and settlements in the 1930s, it also vividly documents the urban development of Dresden since the Weimar Republic, when numerous settlements emerged on the outskirts of the city, which are important in terms of building history and urban development history. 09217819
 
Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: semi-detached house (individual monument for ID no. 09305940)

Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: semi-detached house (individual monument for ID no. 09305940)
Seewiesenweg 3; 5
(card)
1936–1939 (twin house) Part of an exemplary testimony to the construction of small apartments and settlements in the 1930s, it also vividly documents the urban development of Dresden since the Weimar Republic, when numerous settlements emerged on the outskirts of the city, which are important in terms of building history and urban development history. 09217820
 
Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: Row of houses (individual monument for ID No. 09305940)

Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: Row of houses (individual monument for ID No. 09305940)
Seewiesenweg 4; 6; 8
(card)
1936–1939 (apartment building) Part of an exemplary testimony to the construction of small apartments and settlements in the 1930s, it also vividly documents the urban development of Dresden since the Weimar Republic, when numerous settlements emerged on the outskirts of the city, which are important in terms of building history and urban development history. 09217821
 
Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: residential building (individual monument for ID No. 09305940)

Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: residential building (individual monument for ID No. 09305940)
Seewiesenweg 7
(map)
1936–1939 (apartment building) Part of an exemplary testimony to the construction of small apartments and settlements in the 1930s, it also vividly documents the urban development of Dresden since the Weimar Republic, when numerous settlements emerged on the outskirts of the city, which are important in terms of building history and urban development history. 09217822
 
Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: residential building (individual monument for ID No. 09305940)

Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: residential building (individual monument for ID No. 09305940)
Seewiesenweg 10
(map)
1936–1939 (apartment building) Part of an exemplary testimony to the construction of small apartments and settlements in the 1930s, it also vividly documents the urban development of Dresden since the Weimar Republic, when numerous settlements emerged on the outskirts of the city, which are important in terms of building history and urban development history. 09217823
 
Emmausfriedhof Kaditz;  Serkowitzer Strasse cemetery
Emmausfriedhof Kaditz; Serkowitzer Strasse cemetery (Map) 1862 (enclosure), 1870–1871 (soldiers' grave) Serkowitzer Strasse cemetery: cemetery enclosure with gate system, gravesite for French prisoners of war and other monumental tombs; served from 1862 as an extension of the churchyard of the Emmauskirche, artistically, landscaping as well as important in terms of local history and personal history. 09216971
 
House and side building of a farm
House and side building of a farm Serkowitzer Strasse 33
(map)
inscribed 1768 (farmhouse), inscribed 1768 (side building), inscribed 1768 (farm) Both buildings are two-story, with half-timbered over a massive ground floor and a gable roof, the side building with an inscription plaque, part of the historically grown, authentically preserved village structure, of importance in terms of building history and urban development. 09217706
 
Kaditz Cemetery;  Spitzhausstrasse cemetery
Kaditz Cemetery; Spitzhausstrasse cemetery Spitzhausstrasse 24
(map)
1878 (cemetery chapel), 1878 (enclosure), 1879 (German-French war memorial) Spitzhausstraße cemetery: cemetery enclosure with gate system, war memorial and monumental tombs; From 1878 it served as the third Kaditz cemetery, an important testimony to cemetery culture, artistically, landscape design, local history and personal history. 09216970
 
Stable house of a small farm
Stable house of a small farm Übigauer Strasse 4
(map)
marked 1868 (stable house) Local, massive residential building, inscription on the gable, part of the historically grown, authentically preserved village center of Kaditz, significant in terms of building history and urban development history. 09217708
 
Path pillar Übigauer Straße 10 (in front)
(map)
1845 (Wegestein) remarkable example with carved head and inscription, sandstone, significant in terms of local history and traffic history. 09217707
 
Group of houses with fencing
Group of houses with fencing Wächterstrasse 33; 35; 37
(card)
around 1912 (apartment building) Functionally designed row of houses with a balanced facade structure, dominated by triangular gables, revitalization by folding shutters from the time of origin, the fence forms a functional and design unit with buildings, significant examples of reform architecture at the beginning of the 20th century. 09217710
 
Residential house in open development with fencing
Residential house in open development with fencing Wächterstrasse 39
(map)
around 1912 (apartment building) Executed in an appropriately designed form with the neighboring buildings (Wächterstrasse 33-37), exemplary example of regional reform architecture at the beginning of the 20th century, significant in terms of building history and local history. 09217709
 
Double residential building (Fechnerstrasse 27 and Wächterstrasse 39a) with part of the enclosure in the corner and open development
Double residential building (Fechnerstrasse 27 and Wächterstrasse 39a) with part of the enclosure in the corner and open development Wächterstrasse 39a
(map)
around 1912 (twin house) Two-storey, mighty plastered building with a mansard floor, a typical example of the regionally shaped reform architecture, characterizing the streetscape and significant in terms of building history. 09217716
 
Double house (Fechnerstrasse 28 and Wächterstrasse 39b) in a corner location and open development, with part of the enclosure
Double house (Fechnerstrasse 28 and Wächterstrasse 39b) in a corner location and open development, with part of the enclosure Wächterstrasse 39b
(map)
around 1912 (twin house) Two-storey, mighty plastered building with a mansard floor, a typical example of the regionally shaped reform architecture, characterizing the streetscape and significant in terms of building history. 09217717
 
Residential house with enclosure in open development
Residential house with enclosure in open development Wächterstrasse 42
(map)
around 1912 (apartment building) Two-storey plastered building with decorative shapes, mansard floor, staircase with original colored glass windows, exemplary example of regional reform architecture at the beginning of the 20th century, significant in terms of building history and local history 09217711
 
Double tenement house with fencing in open development
Double tenement house with fencing in open development Wächterstrasse 44; 46
(card)
around 1900 (double tenement house) with historical clinker stone facade typical of the time, shop fittings on the plastered ground floor, typical example of late historical construction around 1900 in Dresden, of architectural significance. 09217712
 
Residential house in open development
Residential house in open development Wächterstrasse 47
(map)
1929 (apartment building) four-storey residential building with plastered facade with only a few expressionist stylistic devices, balanced facade design, of architectural significance. 09217713
 
Tenement house with fencing in a corner and open development
Tenement house with fencing in a corner and open development Wächterstrasse 48
(map)
1904 (tenement) With a sloping corner of the building emphasized by the roof turret, the first floor visible from the plaster, the two upper floors in the clinker and stone facade typical of the time with historicizing elements, building historical significance, characterizing the street scene in connection with Wächterstraße 50 and Leuckartstraße 12 opposite. 09217714
 
Residential house in open development with fencing
Residential house in open development with fencing Wächterstrasse 49
(map)
around 1912 (apartment building) Two-storey plastered building with decorative elements, expanded mansard floor, largely originally preserved and exemplary structural evidence of architecture after 1900 in Dresden, of architectural historical importance and of architectural value due to high-quality facade design. 09217715
 
Double tenement house (Leuckartstrasse 12 and Wächterstrasse 50) in a corner and open development Wächterstrasse 50
(map)
around 1900 (half of a double apartment building) three-storey, simple clinker stone building with historicizing elements, sloping building corner with emphasis by roof turrets, building historical significance and characterizing the street scene. 09217813
 
Double tenement house with fencing in open development
Double tenement house with fencing in open development Waldemarstrasse 7; 9
(card)
around 1900 (double tenement house) two-storey, extended mansard storey, clinker stone facade typical of the time with historicizing elements, characteristic example of the architectural development of the late 19th and early 20th centuries in Dresden, significant in terms of building history. 09217719
 
Double tenement house with fencing in open development
Double tenement house with fencing in open development Waldemarstrasse 12; 14
(card)
around 1904 (double tenement house) two-storey, extended mansard storey, with clinker and stone facade typical of the time, design through decorative color change of the clinker brick and historicizing elements, characteristic example of the architectural development in Dresden at the beginning of the 20th century, significant in terms of building history and local history, increased informative value due to neighboring buildings that were built at the same time. 09217720
 
Double apartment building with fencing in a corner and open development
Double apartment building with fencing in a corner and open development Waldemarstrasse 16; 18
(card)
marked 1904 (double tenement house) two-storey, extended mansard storey, with clinker and stone facade typical of the time, design through decorative color change of the clinker brick and historicizing elements, characteristic example of the architectural development in Dresden at the beginning of the 20th century, significant in terms of building history and local history, increased informative value due to neighboring buildings that were built at the same time. 09217721
 
Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: residential building (individual monument for ID No. 09305940)

Individual monument of the Kaditz community settlement: residential building (individual monument for ID No. 09305940)
Zitzschewiger Strasse 30
(map)
1936–1939 (apartment building) Part of an exemplary testimony to the construction of small apartments and settlements in the 1930s, it also vividly documents the urban development of Dresden since the Weimar Republic, when numerous settlements emerged on the outskirts of the city, which are important in terms of building history and urban development history. 09217824
 

Former cultural monuments

image designation location Dating description ID
archway
archway Altkaditz 4
(map)
marked 1899
 
Transformer house Rankestrasse 35
(map)

 

See also

Remarks

  • This list is not suitable for deriving binding statements on the monument status of an object. As far as a legally binding determination of the listed property of an object is desired, the owner can apply to the responsible lower monument protection authority for a notice.
  • The official list of cultural monuments is never closed. It is permanently changed through clarifications, new additions or deletions. A transfer of such changes to this list is not guaranteed at the moment.
  • The monument quality of an object does not depend on its entry in this or the official list. Objects that are not listed can also be monuments.
  • Basically, the property of a monument extends to the substance and appearance as a whole, including the interior. Deviating applies if only parts are expressly protected (e.g. the facade).

Detailed memorial texts

  1. The two-storey, elongated stable house of the three-sided courtyard Altkaditz 1 dates from the first half of the 19th century. The gable-side building is built on the courtyard side in the area of ​​the first three window axes in massive construction, at the rear there is a framework part with a cantilevered upper arbor on the upper floor. This is followed by a more recent addition ending at eaves height. The gable roof on the courtyard side with three bat dormers. In terms of design, the gable, oriented towards the green, is determined by decorative elements (plastered corner rustication, window canopies), which were probably added at the end of the 19th century. The traditionally built residential building is part of the historically grown, authentically preserved and nationally important village structure of Altkaditz. It is also important for the city of Dresden in terms of building and urban development.
  2. Erected in the 1st half of the 19th century, the two-storey, gable-facing building Altkaditz 2 has been operated as a small wine tavern since 1844. The restaurant function ("Schneider's beer and wine bar") was maintained until 1975, since then it has been used as a residential building. Inscription on the gable on the plastered support “Weinschank von CG Findeisen, Willkommen. All of you who come here. You will be refreshed with a good glass of wine. " The half-timbered construction is still preserved on the street side and in the rear part of the courtyard, the gable and the first three courtyard-side window axes were "petrified" in solid construction. The roof overhang on the courtyard side in a construction typical of the period (cantilever roof). Traditional design elements such as twin windows in the attic with elaborate window frames were probably added in the course of the adjacent, single-storey extension (1885). As part of the nationally important historical village center of Altkaditz, the building is of high social and architectural value.
  3. Built in the first half of the 19th century as the entrance area for a stately courtyard complex at Altkaditz 4, the imposing archway and adjacent wall areas have been preserved in their position and design to this day. The historic building structure fell victim to a barn fire, the courtyard was rebuilt around 1905. The broad, brick archway with sandstone plinth , wheel deflectors (curbstones) and generous vaulting bears the designation "JBF 1899" in the keystone . The archway is important evidence of the typical courtyard and enclosure systems and has a decisive influence on the traditional, authentically preserved appearance of the supraregional important village center of Altkaditz.
  4. The distinctive house in the Dreiseithof was rebuilt in January 1906 after a major fire in the village. A cantilevered, two-storey half-timbered area rises above the massive ground floor with a double, broadly mounted gable. Formation of a massive fire gable to the neighboring property. The architectural influences of the urban villa construction are clearly recognizable. The cubature and design (window structure, ornamental framework) of the building that characterizes the townscape correspond to the construction-time requirements of modern living, and a change in use in the area of ​​folk architecture occurs. Like the other buildings at the rear (none of which are cultural monuments), the side building dates from the construction period around 1880. The Altkaditz 7 farm complex is an exemplary example of structural adaptations after 1900 in the rural suburbs of Dresden. As part of the supra-regionally important Altkaditz village complex and as a tangible testimony to the history of construction and urban development, the courtyard complex is of high value.
  5. The two-storey, elongated stable house of the Altkaditz 8 farm complex dates from the first half of the 19th century. The gable-independent building has a massive construction on the ground floor and half-timbered on the upper floor, with the exception of the fully bricked gable. Cantilevered roof overhang (saddle roof) on the courtyard side. A new building is attached to the rear. Typical window design in the gable with two window axes on the ground floor and first floor, formerly twin windows in the attic. The installation position of the windows on the gable presumably changed due to recent thermal insulation measures. The traditionally built residential building is part of the historically grown, authentically preserved, nationally significant village structure of Altkaditz. It is also important for the city of Dresden in terms of building and urban development.
  6. With a wide, elaborately designed gable, the two-story half-timbered house, presumably from the 18th century, stands on the Kaditz village green. Three window axes are formed by the massive ground floor and half-timbering on the upper floors, the closed pitched roof is covered with plain tiles in a crown covering. The rear, also two-storey building extension was built after the major fire of 1906 in a massive, plaster-exposed construction. The ridge and storey heights were changed compared to the older front building, which led to more spacious living spaces. The two parts of the building are separated by a fire gable. In addition to its architectural and urban development history, the Altkaditz 9 building is of great value as part of the historic village center, which is also of national importance.
  7. Built as the entrance area of ​​a spacious courtyard from the 1st half of the 19th century, the archway that characterizes the townscape, including the adjacent wall areas, has been preserved in its position and design to this day. The bricked, plastered archway with remains of sandstone plinth and wheel deflectors (curbstones) bears the year 1799 in the keystone. The keystone was restored in 2000. The archway of Altkaditz 10 is an important evidence of the typical local courtyards and enclosures and has a decisive influence on the traditional, authentically preserved townscape of the nationally important village center of Altkaditz.
  8. The two-storey residential stable of the Altkaditz 11 farm complex stands at the gable facing the Anger area. It was built in the 18th century and is to be regarded as the oldest part of the courtyard. The parts of the building that adjoin to the rear are of more recent date (no monument status) and were probably built after the major fire of 1906 in a different cubature. The construction of the stable house is typical of the time and place: the ground floor is solid, the upper floor is a half-timbered construction. The wide, courtyard-side roof overhang and the upper arbor extending over two window axes are architectural features. In addition to its architectural and urban development history, the farmhouse is of great value for the city of Dresden as part of the historical village center of Kaditz, which is also of national importance.
  9. The old farmhouse Altkaditz 14 dating from the first half of the 19th century shows the rural way of life at that time. The building is functionally and creatively divided into several areas. The plastered gable, under which the half-timbering has presumably still been preserved, with its typical, round-arched twin windows, extends over two window axes on the courtyard side. Subsequently, in a set-back flight, half-timbered training on the upper floor with upper arbor. The skylights of the twin windows have been preserved in situ with a delicate division. The courtyard is closed off by a wide, roofed gate with a generously vaulted driveway and a side gate to the Anger (marked 1803 in the keystone adorned with initials, old house number and crossed plow knives). In addition to its significance for the city of Dresden in terms of building and urban development, the building and its ancillary facilities, which characterize the townscape, are of great importance as part of the historic village center of Kaditz, which is also of national importance.
  10. The spacious courtyard complex, with its historical building structure and the imposing gate area, impressively conveys the demands made on large-scale farms during the construction period and is therefore one of the most authentic complexes in Altkaditz. The entrance to the courtyard with a generously vaulted gate entrance, baffle stones and adjoining gate has the initials “JCG 1816” in the keystone, including a peasant symbol consisting of a crossed fork and flail. The keystone above the gate is decorated with crossed sixes. The house and side building are two-storey, facing the green on the gable. The window formats on the ground floor, which were changed in the 20th century, have a disruptive effect on the residential building, otherwise the typical local construction of the plaster-facing building with a gable roof. The narrower, plaster-visible side building (former pull-out house) is provided in the gable with local arched twin windows, in the rear area in a visible half-timbered structure. In addition to its architectural and local historical significance for the city of Dresden, the Altkaditz 15 courtyard, which characterizes the townscape, is of great importance as part of the nationally important historical village center.
  11. Hof Altkaditz 17 is one of the few historical courtyards that have been preserved in their overall historical structure from the first half of the 19th century as a three-sided courtyard. The main building (former stable house), the side building (former stable and pull-out house) and the rear barn closing the courtyard can now be experienced as authentically as possible. The year of renovation 1894 is known for the two-storey house with a gable roof and a plaster-view house. The upper floor was designed as a cantilevered half-timbered construction in the manner of an upper arbor or a closed arcade and the attic, provided with dormers, was expanded for residential use. The pull-out house with a massive ground floor was renovated in 1995/96. The farm is an example of the historically grown, uniform settlement structure of the supra-regionally important village center of Altkaditz with its deep, three-sided courtyards open to the village center. Its high architectural and local historical importance derives from this.
  12. The barn with a high pitched roof, which was probably built around 1800 and closes the back of the courtyard, is an impressive evidence of the former economic use of the courtyard. Similar in location and cubature to the barn building at number 17, these two structures are examples of a barn belt that used to be closed around the village center. The monument property of the barn Altkaditz 19 results from the building and economic historical value of the building and the supra-regional importance of the historic village center of Altkaditz.
  13. The two-storey, gable-facing house of the former three-sided courtyard Altkaditz 22 was built in the first half of the 19th century. Solid construction on the ground floor, half-timbered construction on the upper floor. In the last few years (around 2000) the building was renovated and the attic floor was extended with dormer windows. The building has a special design feature due to the open upper arbor on the courtyard side, located in the rear area of ​​the upper floor, and the roof overhang on both sides with a wide flared extension. The residential building, which characterizes the village, is important both in terms of architecture and local history for the city of Dresden as well as nationally as part of the historic village center of Altkaditz.
  14. The striking three-sided courtyard, consisting of a residential stable, side building, gate and gate to the Anger as well as fencing on the field side, is one of the most authentic rural structures in the village of Altkaditz despite the high loss of substance in the 1990s. Buildings at this point were named as early as 1547. The gable-facing residential stable house on the property is one of the oldest and most valuable half-timbered houses in the historic village center, lavishly designed with half-timbered on the upper floor with a remarkable ten-bay arcade and cantilevered roof. On the gable between the windows of the first floor there are two oval inscription surfaces framed with ears of corn and laurel leaves, one dated 1799. The texts of the medallions were borrowed from a song known at the time (“Satisfaction with His Stand” by Christian Fürchtegott Gellert ) . The entrance to the stable house on the courtyard side is marked with 1802. The massive side building was probably built in the middle of the 19th century and was changed several times. In 1993 the Evangelical Lutheran Free Church acquired the manor and expanded it into a community center. Today the buildings are used for residential purposes. The Altkaditz 23 complex, which characterizes the townscape, is an outstanding testimony to the rural architecture of the early 19th century in this region in terms of building and urban development history. In addition, the property is of great importance as part of the nationally significant historical village complex of Altkaditz.
  15. South of the church is the stately, local parish Altkaditz. The broad, two-storey rectory (number 25) is solid on the ground floor, and built in half-timbering on the upper floor, which is only partially visible, above it a crooked hip roof . The baroque building bears the date 1686 in the keystone of the rusticated round arched door. Inside, the most extensive preservation of the construction time arrangement: the rooms are grouped around the central entrance hall and the stairwell. The two-storey outbuilding (number 23a), erected as a half-timbered upper storey above the massive ground floor, with a gable roof and bat dormers, stands, like the rectory, in a gable-independent position to the village green and consequently continues the local development. Its creation can be dated to the first half of the 19th century. The roof overhang on the courtyard side and the rear upper arbor construction with access give the building its special design character. Comprehensive renovations took place around 2005. Both buildings are connected by a sandstone enclosure with two gates (sandstone columns with decorative attachments) on the opposite side. The distinctive rural property Altkdaditz 23a / 25 is of great national importance in terms of building and urban development and as part of the historic village center of Kaditz.
  16. The church, which can be seen from afar, is a hall building with a distinctive west tower and , as it was first mentioned in a document in 1237, it can be proven that it is one of the oldest sacred buildings in Dresden. The Emmauskirche (Laurentiuskirche until 1904) was destroyed in the Hussite Wars in 1429/30, then rebuilt. Around 1500 the church building was rebuilt as a late Gothic hall with a striking west tower. The oldest, late Gothic parts of the building date from this time. Badly damaged by fire around 1637 and rebuilt, extensive renovations took place in the Baroque period from 1750–56 (including the interior design). Around 1680 the tower gables were redesigned in the Renaissance style. At the beginning of the 19th century, extensive repairs were carried out by master carpenter Johann Christian Ziller . In 1869 the exterior renovation of the church in the neo-Gothic style began by the Ziller brothers . They redesigned the interior in a neo-Gothic style in 1887/1888. A large number of interiors that are significant in terms of art history have been preserved, including a wooden pulpit altar by Johann Gottfried Knöffler (1756) and the Jehmlich organ with a neo-Gothic prospect. The bells of the church tower were cast in 1676/77 and originally hung in the Dresden Sophienkirche. The park-like cemetery with imposing large greenery (court linden tree), bordered by a wall with three entrances and gates, shows in an exemplary way, both in its structure and its design, a cemetery culture that has grown over centuries. The oldest historical tombs date from the years 1730–1750. A number of high-quality tombs from the 19th century have also been preserved, as well as a war memorial for those who died in the two world wars. The Protestant Emmaus Church and the surrounding cemetery are of great importance in terms of local history and landscape design, as well as being of supraregional importance in terms of art and building history.
  17. The church, which can be seen from afar, is a hall building with a distinctive west tower and, as it was first mentioned in a document in 1237, it can be proven that it is one of the oldest sacred buildings in Dresden. The Emmauskirche (Laurentiuskirche until 1904) was destroyed in the Hussite Wars in 1429/30, then rebuilt. The oldest, late Gothic parts of the building date from this time. Badly damaged by fire around 1637 and rebuilt, extensive renovations took place in the Baroque period from 1750–56, including the interior design. In 1869 the Emmaus Church was heavily redesigned by the Ziller brothers in the neo-Gothic style, and the interior was also redesigned by Ziller in 1887/88. A large number of art-historically significant interior parts have been preserved, including a wooden pulpit altar by Gottfried Knöffler (1756) and the Jehmlich organ with a neo-Gothic prospect. The bells of the church tower were cast in 1676/77 and originally hung in the Dresden Sophienkirche . The park-like cemetery with imposing large greenery (court linden tree), bordered by a wall with three entrances and gates, shows in an exemplary way, both in its structure and its design, a cemetery culture that has grown over centuries. The oldest historical tombs date from the years 1730–1750. A number of high-quality tombs from the 19th century have also been preserved, as well as a war memorial for those who died in the two world wars. The Protestant Emmaus Church and the surrounding cemetery are of great importance in terms of local history and landscape design, as well as being of supraregional importance in terms of art and building history.
  18. The two-storey diaconate is directly adjacent to the Kaditz churchyard, acting as part of the enclosure around the churchyard. The simple, late Baroque plastered building, built on a rectangular floor plan, with a hipped roof and symmetrically structured facade is designed with sandstone surrounds of the portal and windows, marked 1719 in the keystone of the entrance portal. Due to its architectural and local historical value, the Altkaditz 29 building is of high regional importance to. In addition, its urban location in connection with the church and churchyard is important for the historically inherited appearance of Kaditz.
  19. The distinctive Dreiseithof is one of the few properties in Altkaditz that, thanks to the preservation of the historical building structure and cubatures, despite various structural changes to the buildings, impressively reflects the rural working and living conditions of the rural population in the early 19th century in the vicinity of Dresden convey authentically. The residential house (Altkaditz 30) and the stable house (Altkaditz 30a) show the twin windows in the gables typical of the area. On the street side there are two inscription panels on the eaves facade of the house. The stable house, half-timbered upper floor with a gable roof over the massive ground floor, shows the construction type common to the period. The single-storey, former barn (Altkaditz 34) has now been converted for residential purposes and impresses in the gable view with the effect of the deep saddle roof. The courtyard complex is of great importance as an important material testimony to the development of the local and architectural history and as part of the historically nationally important village of Altkaditz.
  20. The former Kaditz church school ("old school"), opposite the church building, was built in 1853/54, presumably using a previous building by Christian Gottlieb Ziller and master mason Götze ( repaired beforehand by master carpenter Johann Christian Ziller ). Today the massive, two-storey building with a gable roof and gable roof dormers is used for residential purposes. On the symmetrically aligned plastered facade, the cantilevered portal framing in sandstone with an inner overhang (marked 1854), tooth frieze and acroteria is particularly striking. There are biblical words that corresponded to the educational content of that time. The Altkkaditz 32 school building is an important witness to the history of urban development in Dresden and is significant in terms of both building and social history.
  21. The row of houses built based on modern social buildings by the city building councilor Hans Erlwein, who was active in Dresden at the time, was completed in 1912. The two-storey, elongated group of five houses has a mansard roof typical of the construction period , clearly emphasized on the street side by three gables and on both corners of the building by wide mid-height buildings. The side and rear views of the building are also very lively due to roof structures (hipped roofs to the side, triangular gables to the rear ) and false roof areas. The two deeply indented house entrances number 5 and 9 on the street side are highlighted by means of arched portals, with the inscription "AD 1912" above them. The centrally located entrance number 7 was given a special structural accent through a risalit-like projection and false balustrade on the upper floor. Rearward extension of balconies and reinforced roof extension through renovation in recent times. Only a rudimentary solid base of the original enclosure has been preserved. The row of houses at An den Hufen 3-9 is a typical example of Dresden housing from the time before the First World War, which found its own stylistic expression. The mixture of traditionalist forms and Reformation demands resulted in a very unique character of this type of living. Due to the well-preserved structural condition, its high-quality workmanship and the urban presence, the building complex is of great importance in terms of urban, architectural and social history.
  22. Collection of the Volksheim Kaditz housing estate with the following individual monuments: the An den Hufen 12/14 twin house (ID No. 09217666), the An den Hufen 13/15 twin house (ID No. 09217796), the An den Hufen 16 residential house (ID no. No. 09217795), the residential building An den Hufen 17 (ID No. 09217797), the semi-detached house Andersenstraße 2/4 (ID-No. 09217667), the semi-detached house Andersenstraße 15/17 (ID-No. 09217798), the semi-detached house Andersenstraße 16/18 (ID-Nr. 09217668), the semi-detached house Grimmstraße 46/48 (ID-Nr. 09217680), the row of houses Grimmstraße 50/52/54 (ID-Nr. 09217803), the residential building Gustav-Schwab-Straße 7 ( ID No. 09217683) and the residential building Gustav-Schwab-Straße 9 (ID No. 09217684) as well as the outdoor facilities as part of the whole; Enclosed example of the construction of small apartments and settlements around 1930, also vividly documents the urban development of Dresden since the Weimar Republic, when numerous settlements emerged on the outskirts of the city, significant in terms of building history and urban development history.
  23. a b c d e f g h i j k The "Volksheim Kaditz settlement", which is a listed building as a whole, consists of a total of 11 buildings with enclosing walls and landscaping between An den Hufen, Andersenstrasse, Grimmstrasse and Gustav-Schwab-Strasse. The residential complex of the building cooperative Volksheim Dresden, built in 1927–1930 according to plans by the architect Martin Mitzscherling, consisted of approx. 210 residential units. Due to the fact that the apartments were equipped with a bathroom, internal toilet and loggia, as well as the provision of small gardens that were used for private purposes, in keeping with the social reformation concept of the time, the buildings were among the most progressive, modern residential buildings in the city. The three-storey, traditionally designed buildings with axial perforated facades and hipped roofs are enlivened by expressionist elements such as clinker strips, triangular skylights and cantilevered bay windows. The settlement is considered to be significant in terms of building history, social history and urban development history. On the one hand, the houses are exemplary testimonies to the construction of small flats and settlements in the 1920s, and on the other hand, they vividly document the urban development of Dresden.
  24. The broad double apartment building is located in open development and in a corner on the widened street corner Emilienstraße / Rankestraße over an irregular floor plan, today closed off by a flat hipped roof that was formerly provided with small roof structures. The striking, late historical building was built around 1900 with a clinker stone facade typical of the time. In addition to the characteristic window frames and roofing, the numerous historicizing decorative elements (neo-baroque) are particularly noteworthy, which are mainly on the rounded corners and in the plastered fields above the windows (figurative representations) on the first floor. The building was renovated in 2013. In addition to its historical significance as a testimony to the architectural style described, the building is also of high urban value.
  25. Located on the city limits of Radebeul, the representative late-founding rental villa rises as a three-storey building over an almost square floor plan in the characteristic brick and stone architecture. The first floor is emphasized by a broad, street-side balcony and window canopies as well as a rectangular stucco relief. In this a symbol similar to the Aesculapian staff can be seen, but here crowned with two snakes and wings, next to it on the tapes the year of construction "Anno 1898" is named. The side facades are designed similarly. On the southern side facade there is a wooden bay construction on two massive clinker pillars that extends over both upper floors. The original fence made of gate posts and wrought iron fence panels is still partially preserved. Due to its largely authentic state of preservation and the characteristic, very high-quality facade design, the rental villa is an important material evidence of the building history of the city of Dresden.
  26. A previous building ("Gasthof zu Neukaditz") was located in the same place from 1874, and since 1894 operated under FE Leipert with the name "Feldschlößchen". Leipert had a new inn built in 1897/98 according to the plans of the Radebeul architect Carl Käfer (1856–1910). During the 1920s and 30s, the restaurant was one of the renowned family and club bars along Leipziger Straße. From 1957 it was run as the “Rudi Arndt Youth Club”, since 1990 the establishment of the city's cultural office. In 1997 extensive renovation and renovation measures took place, the former dance hall was converted into a theater hall. Since then, the district culture house has been called "Rudi". The former inn is in a prominent urban development location with a wide facade facing Leipziger Strasse, on the upper floors in the typical late-historical clinker stone style. The three-story main structure has a mansard roof with some roof structures. The rear, single-storey part of the building with today's theater hall has a basement and other flat extensions. The historicist building with ballroom is the most striking building on Fechnerstrasse and, due to the above, is of regional importance in terms of urban planning as well as building and social history.
  27. a b c Small, eaves-standing, single-storey residential building, simple, unadorned plastered building with a steep pitched roof, formerly located on the outskirts, one of the few buildings still characterized by a village at that time, tangible evidence of urban development and the building history of Dresden. The eaves-standing, single-storey small residential building in Fechnerstrasse, probably built around 1860, is open-plan. The gable roof is characterized by two narrow, street-side gable roof dormers, which were probably added later towards the end of the 19th century. (The wide, street-side barbed roof dormer window at No. 4 was added later.) Formerly located on the outskirts of Dresden, the building is one of the few buildings of the time that still had a rural character in cubature and design and survived into the 20th century. The residential building is important as a material testament to the urban development and building history of Dresden, and in connection with the cultural monuments Fechnerstraße 4, 6 and 7 in the same street, it is also of urban value.
  28. The eaves, two-storey residential building has a rectangular floor plan in open development. The windows on the first and second floors are arranged in strict axial alignment, and the facade of the building has no further structural elements. Formerly located on the outskirts of Dresden, today it is one of the few buildings of that time that still had a rural character in terms of cubature and design and which survived into the 20th century. The residential building is important as a material testament to urban development and the building history of Dresden.
  29. The double apartment building, built around 1912 in the corner of Fechnerstrasse / Wächterstrasse, which appears monumental in its cubature, has two differently designed fronts. The two-storey plastered building with a mansard storey was built on an approximately U-shaped floor plan using the open construction method. The elongated façade facing Fechnerstrasse is largely characterized by the two raised dwelling houses above the slightly recessed façade, the plastered window frames connecting the floors and the folding shutters. The facade facing Wächterstrasse, on the other hand, is continued upwards in the mansard area via three window axes. The “broken” corner solution in the entrance area of ​​the two shops with stairs is architecturally attractive. The side entrances are covered by roof structures. Moving formation of the roof landscape also in the rear views. The enclosure of simple, solid posts and wooden fence panels.Thanks to its design, the house is a typical example of the regionally influenced reform architecture from the beginning of the 20th century and, due to its location, especially together with the neighboring buildings, is also of urban significance.
  30. The double tenement house at Fechnerstrasse 28 and Wächterstrasse 39b, built around 1912, has two sides, depending on its exposed location in the street. The two-storey plastered building with a high mansard floor was built on a U-shaped floor plan using the open construction method. The street-side facades are conspicuously accentuated by mighty dwelling houses with hipped roofs that extend over four window axes. The simple facade without any architectural decoration is only enlivened by the cleaning flask around the windows and doors. The cubature of the building experienced an idiosyncratic turning point due to the sloping corner solution, which can also be found as a crooked hip in the attic. The fencing from the construction period (simple, massive posts with wooden fence panels) is still there on Wächterstrasse. The structural features mentioned are characteristic of the contemporary style of regional reform architecture in Dresden and are expressed in the building in an exemplary manner. This justifies the architectural and historical importance of the residential building. Due to its location and in connection with the neighboring buildings, the building is also of great importance for urban development.
  31. ↑ The collective housing estate of Kaditz, area on Kötzschenbroder Strasse, with the following individual monuments: the twin house Fürstenhainer Strasse 26/28 (ID no. 09217678), the twin house Kötzschenbroder Strasse 160/162 (ID no. 09217686), the residential house Kötzschenbroder Strasse 164 (ID-Nr. 09217804), the semi-detached house Kötzschenbroder Straße 166/168 (ID-Nr. 09217805), the residential house Kötzschenbroder Straße 170 (ID-Nr. 09217806), the semi-detached house Kötzschenbroder Straße 172/174 (ID-Nr. 09217807) , the residential building Kötzschenbroder Straße 176 (ID-Nr. 09217808), the semi-detached house Kötzschenbroder Straße 178/180 (ID-Nr. 09217809), the residential building Kötzschenbroder Straße 182 (ID-Nr. 09217810), the semi-detached house Kötzschenbroder Straße 184/186 ( ID No. 09217811), the residential building Seewiesenweg 1 (ID No. 09217705), the residential building Seewiesenweg 2 (ID No. 09217819), the semi-detached house Seewiesenweg 3/5 (ID No. 09217820), the row of houses Seewiesenweg 4 / 6/8 (ID No. 09217821), the residential building Seewiesenweg 7 (ID No. 09217822), the residential building Se ewiesenweg 10 (ID no. 09217823) and the residential building at Zitzschewiger Strasse 30 (ID no. 09217824), plus the outdoor facilities, including the design of the square at the intersection of Seewiesenweg and Zitzschewiger Strasse, as a whole; Enclosure is an exemplary testimony to the construction of small flats and settlements in the 1930s, and it also vividly documents the urban development of Dresden since the Weimar Republic, when numerous settlements emerged on the outskirts of the city, significant in terms of both building history and urban development history.
  32. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r In the "Kaditz community settlement" (also called "people's houses"), which is a listed entity as a whole, 17 two-story single and double houses were built as so-called "people's apartment buildings" , along Kötzschenbroder Straße, between Fürstenhainer Straße and Seewiesenweg, grouped around green inner courtyards and a square. The planning of the 1936–1939 facility was the responsibility of the Dresden City Planning Office. At that time, the well-known architect Paul Wolf was responsible for building construction and urban renewal as the town planning officer. The buildings with people's apartments were given preference to large families with low incomes. The complex, now known as the “Kaditz Family Residential Park”, was extensively renovated in 1998–2000. Balcony extensions and external thermal insulation were attached. The elongated multi-family houses in traditional construction with a gable roof are characterized by their simple, harmonious-looking construction. The residential complex conveys traditional values ​​using design elements such as rubble stone plinths, smooth plastered surfaces, framing of the shop fittings with clinker bricks and color-contrasting shutters. The area is accessed from Kötzschenbroder Straße through a gate situation made up of two buildings with shop fittings on the ground floor. Behind it, the Seewiesenweg widens into a small square, the green areas are separated from the traffic areas by hedges. In Seewiesenweg 8, there was formerly a shop on the ground floor, now residential use. The property of the complex results from its architectural and local historical significance as well as its urban development value. On the one hand, the settlement is an exemplary and significant testimony to the construction of small flats and settlements in the 1930s; on the other hand, the “Kaditz community settlement” with the neighboring settlement areas clearly documents the urban development of Dresden.
  33. a b c d The residential complex built by Konsumverein Pieschen around 1920 consists of three buildings accompanying Geibelstrasse as well as a further building that is located in the depths of the property as an inner-district development. The beginning and end of Geibelstraße are framed by structures of almost the same size and design, each of which is followed by a driveway designed with a pavilion and a gate pillar. Between the two entrances there is a compact twenty-axis structure made up of four houses. Its central part is set off like a risalit and shows both the central center of the complex and the center of Geibelstrasse through a four-axis balcony system that extends over three floors and is framed like a pilaster. The rhythmically structured facades have architecturally high-quality shapes and details in the style of neoclassicism, such as fluted half-columns, pilaster strips, pillars and characteristic door designs. The buildings have an idiosyncratic and varied roof landscape. The Geibelstrasse 1–19 residential complex is a rare, if not unique, example of small apartments and housing developments from the period after 1918 in Dresden. In addition to this local and social historical significance, the residential buildings are examples of the neoclassical architectural trend that emerged at the beginning of the 20th century also historical value.
  34. The homestead of the former village smithy, now a residential building, is one of the oldest buildings in Kaditz (probably built on the site at the end of the 18th century). Originally built as a village smithy on the outskirts of Kaditz, the building survived the multitude of fires in the village unscathed. The long sides of the two-storey house with a gable roof in half-timbered construction, the gables in quarry stone masonry. Typical building-time elements of the local folk architecture can be found in the simple building: on the courtyard side, the typical cantilever roof and arrangement of arched windows in the gable. On the gable front on the Elbe side, heavily profiled sandstone walls have been preserved in the window areas. In addition to its importance as a technical monument, the building is also of great importance in terms of local and urban development history.
  35. The stately residential building on Leipziger Strasse with address Kolbestrasse 1 and Roscherstrasse 2 was built in 1899 by the "Dresdner Spar- und Bauverein eGmbH" according to plans by the architect Hermann Thume (1858–1941). The three-storey tenement house with a loft was named "Prinz-Friedrich-August-Haus" after its patron at the time. In 1993 the building was extensively renovated. Together with eight other residential buildings on Kolbestrasse and Roscherstrasse (see also Kolbestrasse 3-17 and Roscherstrasse 4-18) taken over by the Dresden Construction Association for Workers' Housing, it was combined into one residential complex. The elongated plastered building with the main facade facing Leipziger Strasse impresses with the elaborate plaster structure and color design on the main and secondary facades. Red brick structure and ornamental or floral stucco tendrils, which stylistically take up the contemporary forms of Art Nouveau, are arranged between the windows across floors and form the frame for writing tapes. The half-hip roof is raised above the central projection and has a small hood on the side. As one of the oldest cooperative buildings in Dresden, the “Prinz-Friedrich-August-Haus” is of great social, local and architectural significance. Furthermore, the facade design is to be regarded as artistically significant for the city.
  36. Property group of the Dresdner Bauverein for workers' apartments with the following individual monuments: Friedrich-August-Haus Kolbestraße 1 (double house with Roscherstraße 2, ID No. 09217702), the double house Kolbestraße 3/5 (ID No. 09217688), the double house Kolbestraße 7 / 9 (ID No. 09217763), the double house Kolbestraße 11/13 (ID No. 09217764), the double house Kolbestraße 15/17 (ID No. 09217765), the double house Roscherstraße 4/6 (ID No. 09217703 ), the semi-detached house Roscherstraße 8/10 (ID-No. 09217760), the semi-detached house Roscherstraße 12/14 (ID-No. 09217761) and the semi-detached house Roscherstraße 16/18 (ID-No. 09217762); Residential complex built at the end of the 19th century in the course of industrial development away from the old Kaditz village center, consisting of eight two-story semi-detached houses with simple half-timbered and clinker brick facades and pitched roofs based on the North German model, one of the first cooperative building projects in Dresden, after the liquidation of the Dresden building association for Workers' apartments taken over from the Dresdner Spar- und Bauverein and combined with Friedrich-August-Haus to form a residential complex, significant in terms of building history, local history and social history, possibly also of artistic importance.
  37. a b c d e f g h Individual monument of the collective housing complex of the "Dresdner Bauverein für Arbeiterwohnungen" (Dresden Building Association for Workers' Housing): Part of a housing complex built at the end of the 19th century in the course of industrial development away from the old Kaditz village center, consisting of eight two-storey semi-detached houses - and clinker facades and saddle roofs based on the North German model, one of the first cooperative building projects in Dresden, after the liquidation of the Dresden construction association for workers' apartments, taken over by the Dresden savings and construction association and combined with Friedrich-August-Haus to form a residential complex, possibly significant in terms of building history, local history and social history also of artistic importance.
    Away from the old Kaditz village center, a number of residential buildings were built in the Neukaditz district at the end of the 19th century, supported by the industrial development in the neighboring towns, some of which were built by cooperatives. Noteworthy is the housing estate between Kolbe and Roscherstrasse, which was built from 1887 and was one of the first cooperative building projects in Dresden. The residential complex built by the “Dresdner Bauverein für Arbeiterwohnungen” (after its liquidation by the “Dresdner Spar- und Bauverein”) consists of eight semi-detached houses, which are symmetrically arranged according to the model of a colony built in the village of Welle near Bremen. In 1929 the houses were given the nickname "Heinrich Koch Houses". The two-storey double houses with gable roofs are characterized by simple facades designed with clinker brick elements and half-timbering. As probably the first, still preserved workers' settlement in the city of Dresden, which was built on a cooperative basis, the small residential complex, which is formed together with the Prinz-Friedrich-August-Haus on Leipziger Strasse, is of architectural, local and social historical importance .
  38. The towering obelisk with the Dresden city coat of arms and the inscription "Autobahn" (formerly "Reichsautobahn" and the year 1937 and national emblem, removed after 1945) is a reminder of the forced construction of the Autobahn in the 1930s. In June 1937 the official inauguration of the Dresden-Meerane motorway took place at the Dresden-Altstadt junction in Kemnitz. The colossal monument designed in 1939 by the sculptor Max Grünert based on the exterior of the Saxon post mile pillars was intended to indicate the construction of this section of the motorway at the Dresden-Neustadt motorway junction. The approximately 13.5 m high stele, composed of 15 sandstone blocks, which was originally located in a roundabout at the eastern motorway access and was moved to its current location in 1998, stands on an approximately 12 × 12 m large pedestal that has two Steps is to be committed. The motorway stele is historically and technologically significant and is a historical testimonial of the high-cost motorway construction of the Nazi era.
  39. The three-storey tenement house at Kötzschenbroder Straße 142 was built around 1900 in open development. Based on the cube-shaped cubature over an almost square floor plan and the symmetrical design of the facades with rusticated ground floor and raised triangular gable over slightly protruding central projection, the building is reminiscent of buildings from around 1800. The window roofing and framing on the first floor are also to be named as historicizing shapes . The monumental property of the residential building results from its local historical significance and its exemplary significance for the architecture of late historicism around 1900 in the then still independent community of Kaditz.
  40. The striking, three-storey residential building, built by the municipality between 1929 and 1930, is in an open development at the intersection of Rankestrasse and Leipziger Strasse in an outstanding location in terms of urban development. Architecturally, this is particularly emphasized by the round, single-storey front building (formerly the waiting hall) and the concave wall formation of the upper floors, which gives the building with its flat hipped roof and dormers a dynamic effect. The unadorned facade is only enlivened by the colored design of the cleaning bottles around the window and door openings. Only the entrance facade on the north side of the building is somewhat more distinctive in terms of design thanks to narrow, vertically offset window / plastered areas and different window sizes with horizontal bars. The large windows on the ground floor are highlighted by round and basket arches. Staircase design (railings, steps, etc.) still available at the time of construction. The municipality owned and built the house. According to the address books, the master basket maker Arthur Wenzel held the business premises on the ground floor after completion, and the drugstore Alfred Mißbach followed in 1932. From this the well-known "Ranke drugstore" developed, which moved to Industriestrasse around 2000. The semicircular extension on the corner served as a waiting hall from the beginning, before it was integrated into the “La Dolce Vita” restaurant during the last renovation. The architectural development around 1930 can be seen in this building as an example: the opposing, expressionistically pronounced structural forms give the building an architecturally unmistakable charisma while almost completely dispensing with other design elements. The residential building, which is effective in terms of urban planning due to its location and building structure, is therefore significant in terms of building history.
  41. a b c d At the end of the 19th century, the Kaditz architect and master builder FH Jähnig built four residential buildings along Leipziger Strasse in open development, some of which were given nicknames because of their facade decoration. The two-story tenement house number 203 with a mansard floor was called the "Kaiser Wilhelm House". The street-side facade is dominated by a risalit-like, three-axis dwelling, the side facades are emphasized in the middle by single-axis dwelling. The upper floors rise above the natural stone basement with a plastered facade with historicizing stylistic elements such as corner rustication and window frames. The rear facade was later changed (loggia installation in the roof, balconies). The Kaiser-Wilhelm-Haus is an exemplary testimony to the phase of late historicism in Dresden and is therefore of architectural historical value. In addition, the interaction with the three neighboring residential buildings built at the same time results in an urban development value.
  42. Since it was built in 1903, there has been a restaurant in the striking, three-storey corner house with a mansard roof at Leuckartstrasse 2 / Rankestrasse 21. The building, which characterizes the townscape, is open-plan and, thanks to its half-timbered, partly tower-like roof structures with ridge turrets, is very characteristic of the street scene. The Mickten architect Benno Hübel (1876–1926) was responsible for the design , and the building was constructed by the Radebeul- based contractor Wilhelm Tennert. The residential and commercial building consists of two parts, the northern building at Rankestrasse 21 and the part of the building at Leuckartstrasse 2, in which the restaurant "Zum Rankeschlößchen" was originally located. In its facade design, the building combines new stylistic forms of Art Nouveau with traditional historical elements. The interior was gutted in the 1990s. The building of the restaurant “Zum Rankeschlößchen”, which was once known far beyond the local borders, is of architectural importance as a testimony to the building era around 1900, and an urban value lies in its exposed arrangement in the street area.
  43. The apartment building at Leuckartstrasse 3, which was probably built around 1902, is located in a corner location that defines the cityscape and is open-plan at the intersection of Leuckartstrasse and Schenkendorfstrasse. The date (1998) on the weather vane of the roof turret emphasizing the corner of the building indicates the most recent renovation. The three-storey plastered building with a sloping building corner and balcony on the first floor is enlivened by historicizing elements such as window canopies with internal stucco. The historical fencing of massive posts and wooden fence panels has been preserved in parts. The property of the tenement as a monument results from its architectural significance as an exemplary example of late historic architecture around 1900 in Dresden.
  44. The corner-facing twin residential building Wächterstrasse 50 / Leuckartstrasse 12, built around 1900, was built in an open development over an L-shaped floor plan. The sloping corner of the three-storey apartment building is emphasized by a high roof turret and a ground floor entrance. The ground floor is exposed to plaster, the two upper floors have a clinker and stone facade typical of the time. The first floor in particular is designed with historicizing elements such as window canopies and frames. The dormers in the flat hipped roof were added later. Only a rudimentary massive post remains from the original enclosure. The property of the apartment building as a monument results from its historical significance as an exemplary example of historicist housing construction after 1900. Together with the similarly designed Wächterstraße 48 opposite, the urban development effect is increased even further.
  45. The transformer house, which is protected as a technical monument, is located at the intersection of Rankestrasse, Leuckartstrasse and Baudissinstrasse. The single-storey building on an L-shaped floor plan has a flat hipped roof with a cantilevered roof overhang and a hatch. The location of the transformer house on the intersection defines the space. Today's exterior view was carried out by street artists on the initiative of the owner ( DREWAG ). The transformer house, which was built around 1910 as part of the structural urban development of the Dresden district of Kaditz, is of technical and local significance.
  46. The prestigious rental villa Rankestrasse 6 was built around 1900 for Mr. Paul Johann Haase (architect: Emil Rösler, Trachau). The two-storey house has a high, expanded mansard roof with various roof structures. The south-facing corner of the building is dominated by an elevated, tower-like structure, ending in a curved gable and highlighted by a staggered window in the attic that is decorated with a rounded plaster band. The side facade has a dwarf gable with a crooked hip. Facing the street is a flat bay window above an exit on the ground floor, on which there is a balcony with a balustrade for the top floor. The differently designed window formats and the decorative facade elements of the plastered building, floral stucco parts, are stylistically located between the regional Heimat style and forms of the neo-Renaissance. The historical enclosure is no longer preserved today. The striking villa is of architectural and local significance for the city of Dresden.
  47. Since it was built in 1903, there has been a restaurant in the striking, three-storey corner house with a mansard roof at Leuckartstrasse 2 / Rankestrasse 21. The building, which characterizes the townscape, is open-plan and, thanks to its half-timbered, partly tower-like roof structures with ridge turrets, is very characteristic of the street scene. The Mickten architect Benno Hübel (1876–1926) was responsible for the design, and the building was constructed by the Radebeul-based contractor Wilhelm Tennert. The residential and commercial building consists of two parts, the northern building at Rankestrasse 21 and the part of the building at Leuckartstrasse 2, in which the restaurant "Zum Rankeschlößchen" was originally located. In its facade design, the building combines new stylistic forms of Art Nouveau with traditional historical elements. The interior was gutted in the 1990s. The building of the restaurant “Zum Rankeschlößchen”, which was once well-known far beyond the local borders, is of architectural significance as a testimony to the building era around 1900, and an urban development value lies in its exposed arrangement in the street area.
  48. The three-storey tenement house with a mansard floor is in a corner and open development on Ranke- and Peschelstrasse and was probably built around 1900. According to its striking location in the street area, the corner of the plastered building was emphasized by a mighty-looking tower-like structure with a tent roof, formerly the entrance on the ground floor available. The symmetrically laid out facade and individual dormer windows were decorated with figurative or ornamental stucco reliefs in the window roofs (for example head depictions). Historical windows have been preserved in some areas (double windows). Apart from its urban development effect, the tenement at Rankestrasse 26 is of architectural importance due to its testimony to the architecture of its time.
  49. a b c d e The residential complex of the so-called "Gruppe Sluka", which was built around 1915, consists of five three-storey houses that are grouped around a designed courtyard in the rear of the property. It was first mentioned in writing in 1925/26, when Karl Sluka, a businessman from Coswig / Sa. became the owner. and the "Gemeinnützige Bauverein (AG) (F), Jahnstraße 3" mentioned. You enter the area from Rankestrasse through a wide gate system (on which "Sluka Group" was previously read above a now broken archway). The traditionally designed, simple buildings with their striking mansard roofs have little, but emphasized, facade decoration. The stairwells in particular set design accents with their idiosyncratic closings. In addition to the windows, the doors are also a bit more elaborate, the wings of which are decorated with profiled frames and glass parts. Due to its design, the residential complex is a typical example of the regionally shaped reform architecture from the beginning of the 20th century and is relevant to Kaditz in terms of urban planning due to its urban location. The entire complex, which is divided into houses 28a / 28b / 28c, 28d / 28e / 28f, 28g, 30a / 30b / 30c and 30d / 30e / 30f, is of great regional importance due to its social, architectural and local history .
  50. The rental villa, built around 1900, has a monumental appearance thanks to its strict, three-storey cubature with slightly advanced side elevations and cantilevered roof. In a historicizing way, elements of the Italian palace building of the Renaissance are taken up and mixed with traditional-regional style elements. The plaster-exposed ground floor, structured by rustication, rises above a base made of polygonal natural stone. Separated by a cornice, the two upper floors were erected in a strict clinker-stone facade, with the cross-floor window design of the side elevation striking. The final hipped roof is flat. The rear façade is clear of the plaster, the stairwell a little disengaged. The house was reconstructed in 1990. In addition to the building, the protected property also includes the fencing of massive goal posts and wrought iron fence panels (gate system was renewed). The rented villa in Rankestrasse 43 is significant in terms of both architectural and local history, particularly due to its stylistic characteristics.
  51. The broad double apartment building is located in open development and in a corner on the widened street corner Emilienstraße / Rankestraße over an irregular floor plan, today closed off by a flat hipped roof that was formerly provided with small roof structures. The striking, late historical building was built around 1900 with a clinker stone facade typical of the time. In addition to the characteristic window frames and roofing, the numerous historicizing decorative elements (neo-baroque) are particularly noteworthy, which are mainly on the rounded corners and in the plastered fields above the windows (figurative representations) on the first floor. The building was renovated in 2013. In addition to its historical significance as a testimony to the architectural style described, the building is also of high urban value.
  52. The imposing school building, erected in 1894 under the direction of the master builder FH Jähnig, has a major impact on the appearance of Riegelplatz. In three-storey clinker brick construction with a symmetrical facade, crowned by a gable with a tower top (clock tower) and elaborately structured with sandstone elements such as the pillars on the central projection and the window crowning, the building is an impressive testimony to the school architecture around 1900 (the installation of sanitary rooms during the construction period. Shower bath ”) in the high basement testifies to the progressiveness of the building process. As early as 1900, the school building was expanded by adding the second side wing (now a U-shaped floor plan) and the rear gymnasium was built in the same year. In 2007 and 2010 extensive renovation measures were carried out in connection with the structural expansion of the main building into the courtyard area and extensions to the gymnasium. Inside, the school building has an abundance of interiors from the time of construction (interior doors, partly floor coverings, pieces of furniture, etc.). In addition to its architectural, local and socio-historical importance, the school building is also of high urban value due to its exposed location.
  53. On July 14, 1890, the Radebeul architect Carl Käfer received the building permit for the representative, three-storey rental villa on what was then Bismarckplatz on behalf of his client, the last Kaditz municipality chairman Christian Friedrich Findeisen. The cubature of the residential building, which has an almost square floor plan, looks very lively thanks to the oriel extensions, recesses across corners and the timber-framed, far cantilevered half-timbered house, the semicircular building niche on the first floor and the pointed dormers on the sides. On the massive, sandstone-clad ground floor, there are two upper floors with a clinker-stone facade, above a hipped roof with a roof terrace. Design details, such as arched friezes over the windows, floral elements, etc., are carried out as objectified historicizing elements and point to the stylistic influence of Art Nouveau. From the original enclosure, base stones and gate pillars (clinker bricks), which have a design unit with the building, have been preserved. In terms of architectural history, the rental villa at Riegelplatz 4 is an exemplary testimony to the end of late historicism. In addition, as one of the buildings erected between 1875 and 1915, which, in contrast to its then rural surroundings, gave the square an urban character, it also has significance in terms of urban development history.
  54. The stately residential building on Leipziger Strasse with address Kolbestrasse 1 and Roscherstrasse 2 was built in 1899 by the "Dresdner Spar- und Bauverein eGmbH" according to plans by the architect Hermann Thume (1858–1941). The three-storey tenement house with a loft was named "Prinz-Friedrich-August-Haus" after its patron at the time. In 1993 the building was extensively renovated. Together with eight other residential buildings on Kolbestrasse and Roscherstrasse (see also Kolbestrasse 3-17 and Roscherstrasse 4-18) taken over by the Dresden Construction Association for Workers' Housing, it was combined into one residential complex. The elongated plastered building with the main facade facing Leipziger Strasse impresses with the elaborate plaster structure and color design on the main and secondary facades. Red brick structure and ornamental or floral stucco tendrils, which stylistically take up the contemporary forms of Art Nouveau, are arranged between the windows across floors and form the frame for writing tapes. The half-hip roof is raised above the central projection and has a small hood on the side. As one of the oldest cooperative buildings in Dresden, the “Prinz-Friedrich-August-Haus” is of great social, local and architectural significance. Furthermore, the facade design is to be regarded as artistically significant for the city.
  55. On July 15, 1910, the Kaditz sewage treatment plant in Dresden, one of the most modern and architecturally attractive sewage treatment plants in Europe at the time of its construction, went into operation. The sewage treatment plant with an underground sewage system and various high-rise structures, such as supply structure, pre-cleaning, two rake buildings including sand trap, pumping station, boiler house, workshop, bridge crane and some residential buildings for employees was built in 1908–1913. The digestion towers were built in 1936 and 1952. In the former official residence at Scharfenberger Strasse 150 (built in 1910, now used as an office), a bust commemorates the builder of the entire facility, Oberbaurat Hermann Klette (1847–1909), who was then head of the municipal civil engineering department and responsible for the facility's technology. The design of the high-rise buildings was in the hands of the well-known Dresden city planner, Hans Erlwein (1872–1914). The high-rise buildings of the sewage treatment plant, which is still in use today, were renovated in the 1990s and integrated into the Elbe landscape as a harmonious complex. The commercial and residential buildings are valuable examples of the objective architecture that has prevailed since the beginning of the 20th century. The facility, which is designated as a technical monument, is significant in terms of building history, industrial history and local history; in addition, due to its singularity, it is also of supraregional importance as an important testimony to technical development in Saxony.
  56. According to the chronicle of the Emmauskirche Dresden-Kaditz, the cemetery around the church served as a general burial place until 1862. After that, an expansion was necessary. A second cemetery was created on Serkowitzer Strasse, this cemetery is also called the “Franzosenfriedhof” (or “Middle Cemetery”). French prisoners of war who had died in a barrack camp near Übigau were buried here in 1870/71 . A collective grave for 114 soldiers and individual graves for 2 NCOs still exist today. This grave complex consists of a grave field (lawn) with a simple metal fence and hedge and, in particular, a stone cross on a base and was inaugurated on November 1, 2000 by the French War Graves Commission after its complete restoration. The 0.8 hectare cemetery is supported by the Evangelical Lutheran Laurentius Church Community Dresden- Trachau . The cemetery is protected by the fencing with gates and individual tombs with monument status. The cemetery is characterized by valuable trees that can be seen from afar, and the exposed location provides wide views of the Elbe landscape. The cemetery complex is of artistic, landscape design, location and personal history.
  57. The former farm Serkowitzer Straße 33, which belongs to the old village center of Kaditz, consists of a residential house and a side building. Originally built around 1800, both two-storey buildings have half-timbered over a massive ground floor and a closed saddle roof. On the street-side gable of the side building there is the oldest house inscription in Kaditz on a sandstone plaque: "God the Lord protect this house ...". The sandstone plaque indicates the previous owner and the year of construction with the letters MIGT and the year 1768. Two more inscriptions have been preserved on the property. The traditionally built buildings are part of the historically grown, authentically preserved village structure of Kaditz. They are also important for the city of Dresden in terms of building and urban development history.
  58. After the second cemetery in Kaditzer on Serkowitzer Strasse was also occupied, the third Kaditzer cemetery on Spitzhausstrasse, with its surrounding wall and celebration hall, was consecrated on July 7, 1878. A memorial was erected in front of this hall in 1879 to commemorate those who died in the wars of 1866 and 1870/71. The solemn inauguration of the war memorial, which was made by the sculptor Louis Hartenstein in Pieschen , took place in September 1879 by the local priest. The celebration hall was extensively renovated in 2001. The approx. 1.7 hectare large cemetery is supported by the Evangelical Lutheran Laurentius Church Community Dresden-Trachau. The cemetery's protected property includes the enclosure wall with gate system, the war memorial and individual tombs. The cemetery forms an important testimony of the cemetery culture in its grown functional and design unit with the monumental graves and the surrounding historical enclosure wall. The large number of old trees, which give the complex a park-like character, is impressive. The exposed location of the cemetery provides a wide view of the Elbe landscape. The cemetery complex is therefore of artistic, landscape design and local and personal history.
  59. The narrow, elongated house on the small farm at Übigauer Straße 4, marked 1868, is a massive, two-story building with a gable roof. The street-side gable shows the twin windows typical of the area above the two sandstone-walled window axes, the skylights of which have been preserved in a delicate historical division. An inscription on the roof cantilever refers to the builder IC Vogel and the date 1868. The traditionally built residential building is part of the historically grown, authentically preserved village structure of Kaditz. It is also important for the city of Dresden in terms of building and urban development.
  60. The sandstone pillar stands - only visible to a limited extent due to the surrounding vegetation - on the fence around the property at Übigauer Straße 10 on the edge of the Kaditz district. The remarkable way stone, preserved in good condition, consists of a square sandstone column with a carved head section and profiles. The stone shows lettering with location information on three sides (north side: Übigau, west side: Kaditz, south side: Mickten) and on the east side the year 1845. The road stone, which is protected as a technical monument, is important in terms of location and traffic history due to its earlier use as a signpost.
  61. The factually designed row of houses at Wächterstrasse 33-37, laid out around 1912 on a U-shaped floor plan, formerly formed the western end of the residential area on Rankestrasse, which was known as Neukaditz. The two-storey, plastered apartment building with a mansard floor has a balanced, symmetrical facade structure, dominated by several triangular gables over false roofs and enlivened by folding shutters. The simple façade without any architectural decoration is only artistically enhanced by ornamentation on the roof overhang and corner rustication. The fence, consisting of massive fence posts and picket fence, forms a functional and design unit with the elongated residential building. As a striking example of regional reform architecture at the beginning of the 20th century, the group of houses on Wächterstrasse is significant in terms of architecture, local history and urban development.
  62. The house at Wächterstrasse 39 was probably built around 1912 in connection with the neighboring buildings (numbers 33-37). Designed in an adequate form, the building, standing in open development over an almost square floor plan, illustrates the demands in terms of form and functionality of its construction time on high-quality apartment building architecture. As an exemplary example of regional reform architecture at the beginning of the 20th century in Dresden, the residential building is significant in terms of building and local history.
  63. The double apartment building, built around 1912 in the corner of Fechnerstrasse / Wächterstrasse, which appears monumental in its cubature, has two differently designed fronts. The two-storey plastered building with a mansard storey was built on an approximately U-shaped floor plan using the open construction method. The elongated façade facing Fechnerstrasse is largely characterized by the two raised dwelling houses above the slightly recessed façade, the plastered window frames connecting the floors and the folding shutters. The facade facing Wächterstrasse, on the other hand, is continued upwards in the mansard area via three window axes. The “broken” corner solution in the entrance area of ​​the two shops with stairs is architecturally attractive. The side entrances are covered by roof structures. Moving formation of the roof landscape also in the rear views. The enclosure of simple, solid posts and wooden fence panels.Thanks to its design, the house is a typical example of the regionally influenced reform architecture from the beginning of the 20th century and, due to its location, especially together with the neighboring buildings, is also of urban significance.
  64. The double tenement house at Fechnerstrasse 28 and Wächterstrasse 39b, built around 1912, has two sides, depending on its exposed location in the street. The two-storey plastered building with a high mansard floor was built on a U-shaped floor plan using the open construction method. The street-side facades are conspicuously accentuated by mighty dwelling houses with hipped roofs that extend over four window axes. The simple facade without any architectural decoration is only enlivened by the cleaning flask around the windows and doors. The cubature of the building experienced an idiosyncratic turning point due to the sloping corner solution, which can also be found as a crooked hip in the attic. The fencing from the construction period (simple, massive posts with wooden fence panels) is still there on Wächterstrasse. The structural features mentioned are characteristic of the contemporary style of regional reform architecture in Dresden and are expressed in the building in an exemplary manner. This justifies the architectural and historical importance of the residential building. Due to its location and in connection with the neighboring buildings, the building is also of great importance for urban development.
  65. The elongated, open-plan, double apartment building with a rectangular floor plan is structurally accentuated on the street side by two tower-like roof structures over the corners of the building. The ground floor is plastered and fitted with shop fittings, the two upper floors have a clinker and stone facade typical of the time. The first floor in particular is designed with historicizing elements such as window canopies and frames, and the profiled eaves cornice of the flat hipped roof is adorned with a frieze made of two-tone clinker bricks. The property is demarcated on the street side by a fence made of massive fence posts and picket fence fields. The double tenement house at Wächterstrasse 44/46 is a typical example of late historical construction around 1900 in Dresden of architectural importance.
  66. The house built in 1929 in open development is a four-storey, almost unadorned, but in its proportions harmoniously designed residential building with a rectangular floor plan. According to the address book, the postman W. Ernst Heinze owned the building. The symmetrically arranged plastered facade has a creatively accentuated entrance axis, emphasized by a flat, pointed-gable roof structure in the flat hipped roof with small square windows. The central risalit is adorned with clinker brick framing to emphasize the entrance to the house. To the right and left of the central axis, a perforated facade with regularly set, consistently large window openings as well as striking horizontal plaster strips. With just a few expressionist stylistic devices, a very impressive, balanced facade design is achieved. The property of the residential building as a monument results from the testimony value for the expressionist architectural style described.
  67. The residential building, which was built around 1900 and is located in the corner on Wächterstrasse and Leuckartstrasse, was built in open-plan development over an L-shaped floor plan. The sloping corner of the three-story apartment building is emphasized by a high roof turret and the house entrance. The ground floor is exposed to the plaster and on the street side is provided with round-arched plaster fields above the windows, therein small figure reliefs, the two upper floors are designed in clinker-stone facade typical of the time. The first floor in particular is designed with historicizing elements such as window canopies and frames. The flat hipped roof without roof structures. The enclosure consists of a clinker wall in the area of ​​the intersection and wooden fence panels between solid posts. The monumental property of the apartment building at Wächterstrasse 48 results from its architectural significance as an exemplary example of historicist residential construction after 1900. Together with the similarly designed Wächterstrasse 50 opposite, the urban impact is increased.
  68. The two-storey residential building at Wächterstrasse 49 with an extended mansard was built around 1910 in open development. The striking six-axis street front is accentuated by a central projection with a semicircular gable end and folding shutters. A few, carefully arranged decorative elements reinforce the effect of the clear structure of the facade. The repertoire of shapes includes plaster surrounds, small stylized ornaments and mirrors in concave corners. The windows show the grooved skylight typical of the period. The design scheme is repeated in a weakened form on the narrow sides of the building. The slightly highlighted entrance area with staircase is on the south side. The massive pillars of the street-side fence, which can clearly be assigned to Art Nouveau, are still there. As a largely originally preserved and exemplary structural testimony to architecture after 1900 in Dresden, the tenement is of architectural significance. The architectural value results in particular from the high-quality facade design.
  69. The corner-facing twin residential building Wächterstrasse 50 / Leuckartstrasse 12, built around 1900, was built in an open development over an L-shaped floor plan. The sloping corner of the three-storey apartment building is emphasized by a high roof turret and a ground floor entrance. The ground floor is exposed to plaster, the two upper floors have a clinker and stone facade typical of the time. The first floor in particular is designed with historicizing elements such as window canopies and frames. The dormers in the flat hipped roof were added later. Only a rudimentary massive post remains from the original enclosure. The property of the apartment building as a monument results from its historical significance as an exemplary example of historicist housing construction after 1900. Together with the similarly designed Wächterstraße 48 opposite, the urban development effect is increased even further.
  70. The two-storey double apartment building with an extended mansard floor is open-plan on a rectangular floor plan. Above the plastered ground floor is the upper floor with its clinker and stone facade typical of the time. Historicizing elements such as window frames and roofs sometimes show floral motifs on the upper floor. The building corners and the street front are structured by pilasters made of clinker brick with capitals made of sandstone. The simpler garden side of the house is plastered. The property is bounded by a fencing that is typical of the construction period and consists of massive posts with wooden fence panels. The rental building at Waldemarstrasse 7/9 is a characteristic example of the architectural development of the late 19th and early 20th centuries in Dresden and is therefore significant in terms of building history.
  71. The two-storey double tenement house at Waldemarstrasse 12/14, built around 1904, with an extended mansard storey is located in an open development over a rectangular floor plan. The symmetrically designed facade is dominated by two risalits with balconies (1st floor) and an elevated triangular gable. Above the plastered ground floor, the upper floor sits in the typical clinker-stone formation, emphasized by the yellow-red color change of the clinker. The side fronts are also structured by risalits. The plain garden side of the house is plastered. Massive goal posts at both entrances as well as the high quality ironwork of the fence and balcony grilles are relevant to the monument. The enclosure forms a functional and design unit with the residential building. The complex is a characteristic example of the architectural development in Dresden at the beginning of the 20th century and is therefore significant in terms of building and local history. The monumental quality of the individual building is increased by the increased informative value together with the neighboring buildings that were built at the same time, in particular Waldemarstrasse 16/18.

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Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. Klaus Brendler: Street names in the north-west of Dresden: The Andersenstrasse in Kaditz. In: Pieschener Zeitung (Dresdner district newspaper ), 7/2015, p. 9, PDF (2.7 MB) ( Memento from July 29, 2015 in the Internet Archive ).
  2. ^ "Rudi" district culture house on Dresdner-Stadtteile.de
  3. ^ Streets and squares in Kaditz. Grimmstrasse. In: Dresdner-Stadtteile.de. Retrieved July 29, 2015 .