List of cultural monuments in Karlsruhe-Daxlanden

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Daxlanden coat of arms

The list of cultural monuments in Karlsruhe-Daxlanden lists all immovable architectural and art monuments in Daxlanden that are listed in the city's "Database of Cultural Monuments" .

This list is not legally binding. Legally binding information is only available on request from the Lower Monument Protection Authority of the City of Karlsruhe.

Daxlanden

image designation location Dating description
Rheinstrandsiedlung (aggregate) Am Anger 1-26 (without 6 ac)

Feldblumenweg 1-11, 2-8
Grillenweg 1-3
Karl-Delisle-Str. 3-14
Karl-Delisle-Straße
Kiebitzweg 1, 9-19, 2-4
Kleiner Anger 2
Lindenallee 5-29
Panoramaweg 9-19
Pappelallee 2-14
Schmetterlingweg 1-3
Wiesenblumenweg 1-11
Zikadenweg 1-3

1936 2. Small house settlement from 1936–1939, built by the tenants and building association (entity)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


crossroads Daxlander Strasse, in the cemetery (Flst. 7549) 1952 Way Cross, 1952 by Hans Graef.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


A house Federbachstr. 12 (floor 15494) second half of the 18th century Transversely closed single house, second half of the 18th century.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


A house Federbachstr. 14 (floor 15493) second half of the 18th century Transversely developed single house, second half of the 18th century
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


A house Federbachstr. 22 (floor 15482) second half of the 18th century Transversely closed single house, second half of the 18th century
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Federbach School Federbachstr. 28 (floor 15474/1) 1881 Federbachschule, built 1881–1882 according to plans by the Grand Ducal District Building Inspectorate under Karl Philipp Dyckerhoff.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Corner post inscription Federbachstr. 47 (Flst. 15437) 1787 Corner post inscription from 1787
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Daxlanden wayside cross
Daxlanden wayside cross Fritschlachweg (Flst. 17324) 1776 Wayside cross, marked 1776
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential house of a former agricultural property Hahnenstrasse 6 (floor 15925) 1st half of the 18th century House of a former agricultural property, first half of the 18th century, in the 19th and early 20th centuries it was the home of the Daxlander children's school.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Ornithological station Rappenwört Hermann-Schneider-Allee 47 (Flst. 19529/12) 1928-1929 Rappenwört ornithological station, 1928–1929 by the municipal building construction office, draft Walter Merz
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Rheinstrandbad Rappenwört Hermann-Schneider-Allee 50-54 (Flst. 19479) 1928-1929 Rheinstrandbad Rappenwört with restaurant buildings, changing rooms, kiosks, natural pools, green areas.

The large lawn parterre east of the baths, the "ice meadow" and the immediately adjoining tram turnaround also belong to it. Preliminary planning since 1925, created 1928–1929, overall planning for city building officer Karl Pflästerer, all buildings from the municipal building construction office, Robert Amann
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Small house settlement Holländerstr. 5-17, Valentinstr. 2-16 (Flst. 18359) 1918-1919 Small house settlement, built 1918–1919 by the municipal building department, planning by Robert Amann
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


crossroads Im Jagdgrund (Flst. 17433) 1732 Wayside cross, marked 1732
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


House of a former courtyard Inselstrasse 17 (floor 15510) 1723 Residential building of a former courtyard, marked 1723
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Catholic Church of St. Valentin Inselstrasse 25 (floor 15514) 1713 Catholic Church St. Valentin, built 1713–1723 by Johann Michael Ludwig Rohrer, extended to the west in 1834–1835 according to plans by Johann Ludwig Weinbrenner, new facade and gallery, baroque interior design.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Daxlanden war memorial Inselstr., St. Valentinsplatz (Flst. 15514) 1870 War memorial 1870/71, erected in 1895 on the initiative of the local military association
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Daxlanden Fallen Memorial Kastenwörtstrasse / Kirchplatz (Flst. 15319) 1914 Monument to the fallen 1914–1918, 1939–1945. Erected by sculptor Carl Egler from 1930–1932 on the initiative of a local monument committee. Extended inscription after the Second World War
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Evangelical Thomaskirche Daxlanden (entity) Kopernikusstr. 2-4 (floor 15040) 1939, 1958–1960 completion Evangelical St. Thomas Church, construction started in 1939, built 1958–1960 according to completely revised plans by Otto Bartning. With a parsonage and a kindergarten based on Bartning's concept, built by Hermann Zelt

It is the first Protestant church in the predominantly Catholic Daxlanden outside the old town center in a charming location on the Albgrün, built 1958–1960 by Otto Bartning (1883–1959), who came from Karlsruhe and mainly worked in Berlin and Heidelberg, the most important Protestant church builder of the 20th century Century in Germany.

After the Markuskirche and the 'Notkirche' in Weiherfeld (Friedenskirche) it is the architect's third church in Karlsruhe, one of the architect's last works alongside the fountain room at the Brussels World Exhibition and the German school in Lisbon. The original plans date from 1938, but were only carried out up to the basement ceiling because of the outbreak of war in 1939. Only after Bartning's death was it completed (slightly modified) by his long-time colleague Otto Dörzbach. The attached kindergarten and the rectory were built by Hermann Zelt according to Bartning's concept.

The Thomaskirche is a three-aisled, basilical building with a complex choir solution. The tower stands as a campanile next to the entrance front. The special position in church construction is that for the first time modern building materials such as concrete, steel and glass were used without cladding, alternating with wood, natural stone and brick. With 600 seats, it is one of the major churches in Karlsruhe. It is mainly used for church services and concerts. The Wagner organ from 1961/65 has three manuals with 44 registers and an auxiliary that is rare these days.

The building shows Bartning's striving to give the Protestant church building of the late 1950s new impulses after an exemplary 50-year building activity, aiming at symbolic and metaphysical accentuation. On the one hand, with the choir head pulled upwards like a ship's bow, he draws on an idea from his expressionist phase of the 1920s (competition design for the Swedish Church in Berlin 1923), on the other hand, he tries with the choir window dominating the interior (colored glazing by Klaus Arnold, Karlsruhe) to emphasize the spiritual character of the worship space. Like in a ship or like Jonah in a fish, the community should also experience security sensually.

As a late work by Otto Bartning and as an important testimony to Protestant church building, the St. Thomas Church is a cultural monument, primarily for artistic and scientific reasons.

Text: Dr. Gerhard Kabierske, Southwest German Archive for Architecture and Civil Engineering, Pastor Rolf Weiß
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Inscription stone Kornweg 29 (Flst. 7554) 1829 Inscription stone on the outer wall of today's Appenmühle building, part of an old millstone, marked 1829
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


crossroads Lindenallee, Brunnenäckerweg (Flst. 18462) 1792 Wayside cross, marked 1792
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


House of a former courtyard Malvenstrasse 13 (floor 15451) 2nd half of the 17th century Residential building in a former courtyard, second half of the 17th century
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Primary and secondary school in Daxlanden Pfalzstrasse 8 (floor 15318) 1903 Primary and secondary school in Daxlanden, 1903–1915 based on plans by Friedrich Häußler, extension based on a design by Robert Amann, Municipal Building Department
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


House of a former courtyard Pfarrstr. 12b (Flst. 15520) Late 18th century Residential building in a former courtyard, end of the 18th century
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Gasthaus Krone Pfarrstr. 18 (Flst. 15518) early 19th century Gasthaus Krone, early 19th century, renovations between 1903 and 1920s in the form of a picturesque building ensemble with interior fittings based on designs by the painter Wilhelm Volz
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


House of a former courtyard Pfarrstr. 30 (floor 15467) 1707 Residential building of a former courtyard, marked 1707
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Old town hall Daxlanden Pfarrstr. 51 (floor 15474) around 1850 Town hall, around 1850 according to plans by building inspector Müller, since 1910 Federbach School
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


House of a former courtyard Pfarrstr. 53 (floor 15443) 1711 Residential building of a former courtyard, marked 1711
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


crossroads Pfarrstraße, next to the Federbach School (Flst. 15474) 1870 Wayside cross, 1870s
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Appenmühle air raid shelter
More pictures
Appenmühle air raid shelter Rheinhafenstrasse 47 (floor 15079) 1942 Appenmühle air raid shelter, built 1942–1943 according to plans by City Planning Officer Paul Brömme
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Wayside shrine Rheinstrandallee, Gewann Mordheck (Flst. 18947/1) 1792 Wayside shrine, marked 1792
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Semi-detached house with enclosure Römerstrasse 20-22 (Flst. 15161, 15161/1) 1924 Double dwelling with enclosure, 1924–1925 by Betzel & Langstein
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential house with enclosure Römerstrasse 24 (floor 15153) 1912 House with enclosure, 1912 by Gustab Koch
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


crossroads St. Valentins Platz (Flst. 15440) 1816 Wayside cross, marked with "Daxlandt 1816"
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


crossroads Turnerstrasse 6 (floor 15321) 1792 Wayside cross, marked 1792
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Catholic Heilig-Geist-Kirche with rectory Daxlanden (entity) Turnerstrasse 6, Kastenwörtstr. 23 (floor 15321) 1910 Catholic Holy Spirit Church with rectory, built 1910–12 by senior building officer Johannes Schroth

The Daxlander Valentine's Church had become too small at the beginning of the 20th century. Therefore, the new Catholic parish church of the Holy Spirit was built in the center of the village. The foundation stone was laid on June 4, 1911.

As is so often the case, financial obstacles stood in the way of the new building of the Holy Spirit Church. From the number of 3,500 Catholics, the need for around 1,000 places in the new building was calculated. Such a house of worship was available for around 200,000 marks. The community, however, only had around 30,000 marks in its account. The remainder should be financed through mortgages, which did not meet with approval from all parishioners.

When Daxlanden was incorporated into Karlsruhe on January 1st and the community no longer belonged to the Ettlingen deanery, but suddenly found itself in the diaspora, the St. Bonifaz Association raised around 120,000 marks. This secured the new church building based on a design by the architect Johannes Schroth from the archbishop's building administration in Freiburg. The Bonifatius Church in Weststadt and the Catholic Board of Trustees, today the police headquarters, also come from Schroth.

The Heilig-Geist-Kirche in the style of a neo-Romanesque basilica, which was built on the area of ​​a former cemetery, is characterized, among other things, by its large dimensions, an open vestibule and an unusually high tower. The church was consecrated in 1912.
Protected according to §§ 2 (aggregate) DSchG


crossroads Valentinstr., At the confluence with Agathenstr. (Flow 18465) 1795 Wayside cross, marked 1795
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Vorderstr. 59 (Flst. 15562) 18th / early 19th century Residential house, single-storey half-timbered house, 18th / early 19th century
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Westwall bunker Waidweg / Großgrund (Flstnr. 19527/8), "Großgrund", on the Old Rhine, north of the Rheinstrandbad 1939 Westwall bunker 72, Regelbau 20, reinforced concrete structure, blown up by American forces after World War II, built in 1938/39
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


crossroads Waidweg, Lilienstr. (Flst. 16869/3) 1885 Wayside cross, marked 1885
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


See also

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Karlsruhe: cultural monuments