List of cultural monuments in Karlsruhe-Durlach

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Coat of arms of Durlach

The list of cultural monuments in Karlsruhe-Durlach lists all immovable architectural and art monuments in Durlach 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. In addition, the list is divided into streets based on their size.

Durlach

image designation location Dating description
Entire facility in the old town of Durlach
Entire facility in the old town of Durlach Durlach Overall complex of old town Durlach, townscape, square and street scene in the area of ​​the historic old town of Durlach, basic urban structure with an oval town center in the suburbs and the castle area, large historical public and private buildings, the course of the town wall and moat, medieval parcelling, shaped by the historical development Streets and squares with profiles, coverings, furnishing of the public space and the green areas, building facades with their proportions resulting from the size of the parcel and eaves height, structures, roof zones, individual designs on the facades, choice of color and material, window formats, window divisions and shutters, door - and gate leaves.
Protected according to § 19 DSchG


City fortifications from the city wall and the Zwingermauer Durlach City fortifications made up of the city wall and the Zwingermauer, the overbuilding of the medieval facilities began at the end of the 18th century, the masonry was incorporated into residential developments in the 18th and 19th centuries (parts of an entity, individual objects). Wall parts are also mentioned separately in individual entries (totality)
Protected according to § 12 DSchG


Old Karlsruher Strasse

image designation location Dating description
Untermühle Durlach Alte Karlsruher Str. 4 1404 Untermühle, the oldest mill in Durlach, the mill room on the ground floor, re. on the basement arch PH J KB 1771. First mentioned in 1404, awarded in 1516 by the city to Melchior Güntz. From the end of the 16th century until 1679 in the possession of the Margraves of Baden. In 1739 Egidius Bittrolff was the owner (d. 1744). Building changed considerably in the 19th century, associated warehouse with cellar from the 17th century. The property was used as a railway workshop and official residence after the Pfinz was transferred (water power ceased).
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Switchman's residence Alte Karlsruher Str. 6 1911 Switchman residence for six switchmen, three-storey massive dwelling house, associated one-storey and six-part stable house with crooked hip roof.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Road maintenance department, today motorway maintenance department Alte Karlsruher Str. 40 1937 Road maintenance department, today motorway maintenance depot, administration building and vehicle hall, single-storey solid buildings made of red sandstone, 1937–39 based on plans by Paul Schmitthenner from Stuttgart (material entity)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Old Weingartener Strasse

image designation location Dating description
Residential building Alte Weingartener Str. 3 1884 Residential house, single-storey brick building with flat hipped roof, decorative neo-renaissance shapes, 1884 by architect Simmler for the wine merchant Friedrich Kindler
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Rental housing group Alte Weingartener Str. 4 and 6, Neuensteinstr. 1908 Group of rental houses, three-storey plastered buildings in corner location, associated front gardens with walls and iron bars, by architect Adolf Wüst from Durlach for master plasterer Johann Aicher, 1908/09
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Rental house Alte Weingartener Str. 10 1906 Rental apartment building, three-storey, rusticated basement, associated front garden with iron fence, architect and builder master mason Karl Höfel, 1906
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Alte Weingartener Str. 12 1907 Three-storey residential and commercial building, both basement floors rusticated, shop, balcony bay window on consoles, heavy decorative shapes, by the architect Adolf Wüst for the master locksmith August Müller, marked 1907
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Rental house Alte Weingartener Str. 20 1912 Rental apartment building, three-storey with a mansard roof and arbor with Doric columns, 1912 by the architect Adolf Wüst for the privateer Jean Lurz.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Upper mill Durlach Alte Weingartener Str. 37 1479 Obere Mühle, mentioned as early as 1479, on the plastered main building portal of the 17th century with frame framing, next to it entrance to the cellar vaulted with a transverse barrel, keystone: "ANDREAS SCHROTT / MARIA IULIANA / 1753" and mill wheel emblem, on the wall a plaque with two inset Cannon balls from 1849, from the battle near Durlach. Keystone of the barn archway: "IFM 1803". 1893 Replacement of the street-side gable facade in connection with the demolition of the Pfinzbrücke (damage), 1923 Demolition of the sawmill building, part of the mill was shortened by a piece by the municipality in 1927 due to road construction. In municipal ownership since 1909, not in use in the 1930s. In 1988 the Durlach tourist association "Friends of Nature" was granted heritable building rights and renovated the building. Today clubhouse. Mill wheel for energy generation in operation again since 1992
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Pfinzkraftwerk near the Obermühle Durlach Alte Weingartener Str. 39 1929 Pfinzkraftwerk bei der Obermühle, power station, two-storey building with hipped roof and cornice, gardens planned, enclosure wall with iron grilles, engine duct, protected in 1929 by the municipal building construction office
according to § 2 DSchG


Inscription board Old Weingartener Strasse 39 1787 Inscription plaque made of red sandstone, denotes renovations of the weir, first time in 1787.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Margrave barracks Alte Weingartener Str. 49, 49a, Funkerstr. 2 1914 Markgrafenkaserne, also Trainkaserne, 1914-16 according to plans of the government master builder Seebold under specifications of the Kgl. Ministry of War, 1915 entry of soldiers from Karlsburg, 1922 until remilitarization in 1935 city hospital, then radio battalion. The team building and the chamber building were converted for the hospital in 1923. The Durlach tax office was also housed in parts of the barracks at the end of the 1920s. After the war, state police school, motorway police, riot police. Associated are: portal system, enclosure wall, parade ground with the adjoining buildings, including team houses, family house, blacksmiths, stables, riding house, vehicle, chamber and farm buildings, hospital stables, associated Villa Storch (Funkerstr. 2). Subject entirety
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Old ditch

image designation location Dating description
Residential complex Alter Graben 1-7, Blattwiesenstr. 1, 3, 5, 7, Auer Str. 35, 37, 39, 41, 43, 45, 47, 49 1922 Housing complex, building of the tenants and building association Karlsruhe, by Hermann Reinhard Alker, 1922/23, destroyed in the World War, were Blattwiesenstr. 1, 5, 7 and Auer Str. 35 rebuilt in 1951 true to the work (totality)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


At the cemetery

image designation location Dating description
Durlach mountain cemetery
More pictures
Durlach mountain cemetery At the cemetery 6 1902 Cemetery portal and cemetery chapel, chapel in neo-Gothic shapes, 1902 by the municipal building department. Honorary grave for the victims of the air raids on Karlsruhe, 1916. Grave of Mayor Reichardt and Mrs. Emma, ​​tombstone with vase, 1915. Grave of the Alker family, also of the architect Hermann Reinhardt Alker, tombstone in classicist shapes. Grave of the Steinmetz family, including Mayor Heinrich Steinmetz, gravestone, marked 1881. Grave of the Rommel family, including factory director Albert Rommel, gravestone with vase, around 1910. Grave of the Eglau family, including brewery director Max Eglau, tombstone, broken column with a figure of a mourner, probably 1935 .
managed to § 2 DSchG


At the moat

image designation location Dating description
Remnants of the kennel wall Am Stadtgraben 11 see also city wall; Remnants of the kennel wall
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


At the kennel

image designation location Dating description
Residential building At the kennel 1 1735 Residential house, model house, on the upper floor a plaster mirror between and under the windows, doorway, windows with ear panels; The gable house can still be seen in the floor plan, built before 1742, probably 1735 by JD Schütz from Pforzheim as a town clerk, in his possession in 1739, later in the possession of the court secretary Jacob Cuon
Protected according to § 28 DSchG


Residential and commercial building At the kennel 3 1706 Residential and commercial building, model house with hipped roof, former Gasthaus zum Weinberg, door with skylight, drilled window frames, cellar of various previous buildings, floor plan based on the construction period on the upper floor and partly ceiling plaster and floors, inscription re-modeled: AN 1702 NO, 1706 by the stone carver Sebastian Hemberger newly built (cf. Martin Bachmann, Der barocke Wiederaufbau, p. 134 ff.), after 1739 owned by the cooper Johann Leonhard Meyer, 1843 Schildwirtschaft Zum Weinberg
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Courtyard At the kennel 5 1680 Courtyard, already 1680 and up to 1730 tax-free aristocratic residence of the von Bellin and von Schell families, seat of the court councilor and personal physician Lamprecht in the middle of the 18th century, daughter's school from 1844-1912, later land registry and building construction office, today Protestant community center, model house with hipped roof and vaulted cellar, Courtyard enclosure and outbuildings, arched courtyard entrance, next to it portal with segment-shaped lintel, cube fighter, console-like profiled attachment above both keystones, side entrance via two-flight staircase with skylight, frame profiles with ears, diamond cut below, lateral arched cellar entrance, inscribed AN 1702 NO, 1702 von at the apex High Commissioner von Schell built, referred to as a model house in 1716, the property belonging to it was then a garden area (Bellinscher Garten), (entity).
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


see Am Zwinger 9 and 11; Residential building At the kennel 7 1800 see Am Zwinger 9 and 11; Residential house, two-storey and eaves, three-axis with gate drive, 1st half of the 19th century; Up until the fire, the Illustre grammar school stood here from 1586, parts of which are still in the building, around 1800 (cf. Martin Bachmann, Der barocke Wiederaufbau, p. 166). The back of the building stands on the foundation of the former eaves side of the grammar school, the back of the outbuildings and the property on the foundation of the back. Remnants of the building partially visible.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


see Am Zwinger 7 and 11; Residential building At the kennel 9 1800 see Am Zwinger 7 and 11; Residential building, two-storey and eaves, triaxial with a doorway, the back of the building probably sits on the walls of the Illustre high school from 1586, around 1800 (cf. Martin Bachmann, Der barocke Wiederaufbau, p. 167). The back of the building stands on the foundation of the former eaves side of the grammar school, the back of the outbuildings and the property on the foundation of the back. Remnants of the building partially visible.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building with gate drive At the kennel 11 1810 see Am Zwinger 7 and 9; Residential building with doorway, eaves and two-storey, windows with drilled walls, keystone in the archway marked CF Zachmann 1810 and baker's emblem (= master baker Carl Friedrich Zachmann), solid facade, is on the grounds of the illustrious grammar school. (See Martin Bachmann, Der barocke Wiederaufbau, p. 163 f.). The back of the building stands on the foundation of the former eaves side of the grammar school, the back of the outbuildings and the property on the foundation of the back. Remnants of the building partially visible.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building At the kennel 12 Before 1716 Residential house, model house above the high cellar, built by Mayor Schumm's widow, owned by several master craftsmen in the 18th century, cellar probably older and accessible from the street via a round arched gate.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building At the kennel 14 Before 1716 Residential house, model house with gate drive, built before 1716 by the master builder JG Frohmüller, in the core probably older.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building At the kennel 15 1716 Residential house, model house with gate drive, driveway with fighter and base profile, grotesque leaf mask at the apex, well-preserved half-timbered structure, after 1716 by the stone cutter B. Rösch, after 1739 owned by the gunsmith Michael Kröhner and the Dragoons Corporal Johannes Lindenmann
Protected according to § 28 DSchG


Residential building with a bakery At the kennel 17 Residential house with bakery, one-storey in a corner position with a right-angled rear annex (bakery with oven, around 1900), former shop (bakery) in the front building, loft extension in 1886, building overformed around 1900, probably older structural core, owned by barber Sebastian Burckhard Lindenmann in 1739 . Well-preserved interior from the 19th century.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Amalienbadstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Residential building Amalienbadstr. 6th 1890 Residential building, two-storey building on the eaves with a doorway, neo-renaissance forms, around 1890
protected according to § 2 DSchG


Rental house Amalienbadstr. 13 1898 Rental apartment building, three-storey clinker brick building with neo-renaissance forms, gate drive, 1898 by the architect A. Semmler for the building contractor Jakob Semmler
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Amthausstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Residential and commercial building Amthausstr. 1 circa 1787 Residential and commercial building, two-storey and eaves, three-axis, on the ground floor remains of a groin vault (in the house taxation from approx. 1787: has a vault, later called a magazine), marked on the lintel 16 ED 98, built by mayor and trader Engelhard Diener
Protected by § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Amthausstr. 2 1706 Residential and commercial building, model house, two-storey and eaves, five-axis, front door with skylight, built between 1706 and 1716 by master shoemaker Friedmann Hoelscher
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


City pharmacy Amthausstr. 3 1679 City pharmacy, residential and commercial building, three-storey, on the lintel anchors, coat of arms and antlers, inscription: IPZ 1698 (= IP Zachmann the Younger (1679-1755)), location of the Zachmannsche pharmacy, inside a valuable baroque spiral staircase over three floors (see Martin Bachmann, Der barocke Wiederaufbau, p. 30 f.)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Amthausstr. 6th 1706 Residential house, two-storey, model house, built between 1706 and 1716 by Pastor Blum from Gundelfingen as a private house, acquired in 1764 by the margraves as a parsonage, again named as a Protestant parsonage in 1899, converted into a tax collector's building in 1904
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


House in a corner Amthausstr. 7, corner of Bäderstr. House in a corner, two-storey with a hipped roof, privately owned until around 1700, then until 1739 Specialathaus or Gn. Herrschaft Stadtpfarrhaus, official seat of the church council Eisenlohr (repair files and plan from 1720 in the General State Archives Karlsruhe)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Amthausstr. 8, 10, 12, 14 1759 Residential house, two-storey model house with a gate passage, little house in the back of the property, balcony facing the courtyard, marked 1759 (probably renovation), no.8 built in 1706 at the latest by the carpenter H. Fr. Bauer, no. 12 at the latest in 1706 by the butcher B. Fr. Treffinger built, No. 14 built by the widow of the carpenter Weygand in 1706 at the latest.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Amthausstr. 9 1706 Residential and commercial building, corner location, two-storey with shop, hipped roof, built between 1706 and 1712 as a private residence, from 1843 bakery
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Fischersches house Amthausstr. 11 Fischersches Haus, since 1786 office building, today police, reconstruction of the new building shortly before 1706 for privy councilor FW von Weimar, older in core, back of the area bounded by partially preserved city wall, the middle part of the house rests on a ribbed vault with heavy sandstone pillars, it has survived the fire of 1689 and probably dates from the late 16th century, extensive renovation work in the main building in 1900, rear building with decorative truss elements added in 1899. (See Martin Bachmann, Der barocke Wiederaufbau, pp. 53-76)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Facade of a residential building Amthausstr. 13 1706 Façade of a residential building, two-storey model house with a doorway, marked 1706 on the archway, built by Rentkammerrat Christoph Meerwein, windows with drilled stone walls, associated massive economic building on the courtyard side, including parts of the city wall, cellar of the previous building, demolished in 1987 except for the massive street facade, one of Durlach's earliest model houses
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Amthausstr. 15th 1706 Residential house, model house with gate drive, archway with Renaissance fittings, on the keystone a cartouche with antler rod and anchor, marked 1661 IPZ (= IP Zachmann the Elder (1608-1678)), rebuilt shortly before 1706 by Dionysius Hamburger, trader in Frankfurt, then regimental quartermaster
Protected according to § 28 DSchG


Old school house Amthausstr. 16 1702 Old schoolhouse, residential building, model house with gate drive, basement with plastered stucco, built in 1702 on the foundations of the school that burned down in 1689, the t-shaped house behind it today built between 1706 and 1716 by valet J. Ph. Sontag, sold to the city as Another school building was built, the entire area served as a primary school until 1878, one room was also used as a Catholic school from 1837 to 1876, and the entrance to the school buildings was a public alley until the 19th century.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Organ factory
More pictures
Organ factory Amthausstr. 17, 19 1764 Organ factory - residential buildings with adjoining factory buildings; Organ factory (until 1925), then Herlan machine factory (1936-1971); Organ factory founded in 1764 by Johann Heinrich Stein from Heidelsheim, 1794 by marriage to the organ builder Volkmar Voit; Building no.17 was built in 1700 for the princely privy councilor and consistorial director Ernst Friedrich Boch (arcades at the rear), sold by widow Boch to Georg Max Stein in 1770, no.19 with portal foil, inscribed 1666, 1706 by the church council secretary and later councilor Johann Georg Grundler rebuilt, acquired from Voit to the organ factory as an office before 1887, top floor expanded in the 19th century (cf. Martin Bachmann, Der barocke Wiederaufbau, p. 156); the organ hall was probably built a little before 1886, in the rear area older vaulted cellars with well holes as parts of older buildings (entity)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Amthausstr. 18th 1672 Residential house, two-storey model house, curved facade, round arched portal with profiling and leaf volutes, marked 16 CB 72, CB = Claude Bresson or Pressant, margravial court cook, rebuilt after the fire in 1706 at the latest by Councilor JL Me (i) nzer
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Amthausstr. 21st 1698 Residential house, model house with doorway, half-timbered building with baroque spiral staircase, built for Privy Councilor Heinrich Wilhelm Mahler, 1698, at that time a house and a courtyard were named, then a second house was added in 1706 (see Amthausstr. 21 b), various cellars from previous buildings, cartouche with a lion above the archway, a symbol of the Eglau brewery based on baroque models (meanwhile user), arcade to the courtyard, wing extension added to the rear in the 19th century (cf. Bachmann, Der barocke Wiederaufbau, p. 137 f.)
Protected by Section 28 DSchG


Residential building Amthausstr. 21 b 1706 see also Amthausstr. 21; Residential house, model house, plastered half-timbered building on a massive basement; Cellar with beamed ceiling, courtyard-facing arcade, well-preserved historical interior, including a baroque spiral staircase, 1706 for privy councilor Heinrich Wilhelm Mahler
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Amthausstr. 22nd 1698 Residential house, model house with gate drive, portal (in the upper third renewed), the walls of the gate and the portal profiled and provided with leaf volutes, rebuilt before 1716 by master locksmith Adam Oßwald, structure probably older, in 1698 the property serves as a court cellar for Michael Hermann
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Amthausstr. 23 1840 see Amthausstr. 25; Residential house, two-storey and eaves, four-axled, around 1840, building probably older (basement), farm extensions in 1892, the parcel formed a plot of land with Amthausstrasse until around 1842. 25 and was his garden


Residential building Amthausstr. 24 1706 Residential house, two-storey model house, gate drive with dice fighters, baroque staircase spindles inside, glazed arcade, probably older structural core (cellar), built between 1706 and 1716 by Pastor Dornheck zu Berghausen, at the end of the 19th century Weinstube Deutscher Hof, then to the watering can (cf. Martin Bachmann, Der barocke Wiederaufbau, p. 30 f.)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Amthausstr. 25th 1706 see Amthausstr. 25; Residential house, two-storey and eaves, four-axled, around 1840, building probably older (basement), farm extensions in 1892, the parcel formed a plot of land with Amthausstrasse until around 1842. 25 and its garden was
protected according to § 28 DSchG


Residential building Amthausstr. 26th Residential building


Residential building Amthausstr. 27 1706 see Amthausstr. 29, see also city wall; Residential house, two-storey and eaves, four-axis, window over the front door, built between 1706 and 1716 by the merchant Reinöhl, on the property at Amthausstr. Until around 1800 there were 29 barns and stables, part of the city wall
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Amthausstr. 29 1800 see Amthausstr. 27, see also city wall; Residential building, two-storey and eaves with arched gate, three-axle, built around 1800, previously to Amthausstr. 27 Properly
protected according to § 2 DSchG


House and outbuildings Amthausstr. 31 and 33 Late 18th century see also city wall; Courtyard, residential house and outbuildings connected by an archway, massive main house, late 18th century, cellar of the previous building that burned down in 1689, remodeled around 1850.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


At the city wall

image designation location Dating description
Residential building At the city wall 1 Mid 18th century Residential house, two-storey and gable with a half-hip roof.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Parts of the city wall Durlach At the city wall 5 see also Durlach, city fortifications
Protected according to § 28 DSchG


Residential building At the city wall 7 18th century see also Durlach, Stadtbefestigung;

Residential building, two-storey and eaves, on the ground floor arcade arch of the city wall
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Economy building in the courtyard At the city wall 8 1873 Economy building in the courtyard, inscription panel: Built in 1873 Kath: Meier by Chr. Bull Mstr., Wall belonging to the alley An der Stadtmauer in the north.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building At the city wall 9 see also Durlach, Stadtbefestigung;

Residential building, two-storey and eaves, on the ground floor arcade arch of the city wall
Protected according to § 28 DSchG


Old slaughterhouse At the city wall 10 1659 Old slaughterhouse, built in 1574, rebuilt after being destroyed in the Thirty Years War 1659–1664, interior of the ground floor laid out as a six-part hall with cross vaults resting on two pillars, Renaissance fragments of the original building preserved, upper floor destroyed in 1689, only renewed in 1749, on the upper floor Apartments for cattle herders, slaughterhouse until 1938, the quarry stone wall on the street is connected to the slaughterhouse (today also part of the An der Stadtmauer 6 and 8 plots), a historic well was found on the property.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building At the city wall 11 see also city wall; Residential building, two-storey and eaves, from the first floor in 1986, the arcade arch of the city wall was renewed on the ground floor, the associated manure
protected according to § 28 DSchG


Residential building At the city wall 13 see also Durlach, Stadtbefestigung; Residential house, two-storey and eaves, arcade arch of the city wall on the ground floor, building significantly changed
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building At the city wall 15 see also Durlach, Stadtbefestigung; Residential building, two-storey and eaves, on the ground floor arcade arch of the city wall, rebuilt in the late 20th century
Protected according to § 28 DSchG


Residential building At the city wall 17 18th century see also Durlach, Stadtbefestigung; Residential building, two-storey and eaves, on the ground floor arcade arch of the city wall
Protected according to § 28 DSchG


Residential building At the city wall 19 18th century see also Durlach, Stadtbefestigung; Residential building, two-storey and eaves, parts of the city wall on the ground floor
Protected according to § 28 DSchG


Residential building At the city wall 21 18th century see also Durlach, Stadtbefestigung; Residential house, two-storey and eaves, arcade arch of the city wall on the ground floor, half-timbered upper storey
Protected according to § 28 DSchG


Residential building At the city wall 23 19th century see also Durlach, Stadtbefestigung;

Residential building, three-storey and eaves, parts of the city wall on the ground floor
Protected according to § 28 DSchG


Residential building At the city wall 25 18th century, see also Durlach, Stadtbefestigung;

Residential building, two-storey and eaves, upper floor half-timbered, on the ground floor arcade arch of the city wall
Protected according to § 28 DSchG


Residential building At the city wall 27 19th century see also Durlach, Stadtbefestigung;

Residential building, two-storey and eaves, parts of the city wall on the ground floor
Protected according to § 28 DSchG


Residential building At the city wall 29 19th century see also Durlach, Stadtbefestigung;

Residential building, corner location, two-storey with hipped roof, arcade arches of the city wall on the ground floor
Protected according to § 28 DSchG


Anton-Bruckner-Strasse

image designation location Dating description
Dornwaldsiedlung Anton-Bruckner-Str., Dornwald-Str., Johann-Strauss-Str. 1924 Dornwaldsiedlung, settlement, from 1924 by the non-profit building cooperative, 1927/28 according to plans by Hermann Reinhard Alker, by Georg Dünkel. (Totality). Realization of the settlement concept with self-sufficiency by the families: gardening and keeping small animals. A similar architectural style continued in the 1930s and after World War II.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Auer Strasse

image designation location Dating description
Residential and commercial building Auer Str. 1 1895 Residential and commercial building, three-storey, corner bay window with loggia, large stepped gable, 1895 by Otto Hofmann for the privateer JW Hofmann
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Auer Str. 3 1899 Residential house, three-storey and eaves, late Gothic ornamental forms of historicism, 1899 by Otto Hofmann for the privateer JW Hofmann
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Auer Str. 5 1899 Residential house, three-storey and eaves, late Gothic ornamental forms of historicism, 1899 by Otto Hofmann for the privateer JW Hofmann
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Block of flats Auer Str. 21, 23, 25, 27, 29, 31, Ernst-Friedrich-Str. 12, 13, 14, 16, Steinmetzstr. 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 1919 Block of flats, closed perimeter block development in neo-baroque style, by Emil Valentin Gutmann for the non-profit building cooperative (founded in 1913, taken over in 1941 by the tenant and building association), start of construction delayed by World War I.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential complex Auer Str. 51, 53, 55, 57, 59, 61, 63, Blattwiesenstr. 2, Grenzstr. 1 1924 Housing complex, three groups of houses with then 30 three-room apartments, 1924 by the architect Schweiger for the municipal building department
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


At the Schlössle

image designation location Dating description
Winzerschlössle On the Schlössle 1 Winzerschlössle
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Badener Strasse

image designation location Dating description
Conservation building Badener Str. 4 1874 Conservation building, grand ducal administration building of the domain administration, two-storey and eaves solid construction with central entrance and balcony, erected in 1874 by church builders and Seufert, rebuilt in 1905 after fire,
protected according to § 2 DSchG


Volksbank Durlach Badener Str. 5 1908 Volksbank, bank building, two-storey solid building with hipped roof, two side projections with neo-baroque curved gables, portal on the left risalit, the building replaced an earlier office of the Volksbank, founded in Durlach in 1877, protected in 1908/09 by the architect Adolf Wüst,
according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Badener Str. 6 1880 Residential house, single-storey and eaves solid construction with saddle roof, return to the gable, rear extensions in half-timbered construction, around 1880 for the missionary J. Knobloch, conversions 1900
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building in a corner Badener Str. 8 1927 Residential and commercial building in a corner location, bank since 1965, three-storey solid building with mansard floor, corner bay, 1927 by the architect Gustav Dünkel for the delicatessen dealer Emil Fischer.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Margrave High School
Margrave High School Badener Str. 9 1903 Markgrafengymnasium, school building with gym and caretaker's house, 1903-1907 by Heinrich Wellbrock from Karlsruhe. In an air raid in 1941 the roof structure and the top floor of the grammar school burned out. Original plans in the Karlsruhe City Archives. 1955 heightened, 1979/80 heightened the gym. Well-preserved interior. (Entirety)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Badener Str.9a Single-storey residential building with a gable roof, 2nd half of the 19th century, conversion 1900 (dormer window, at that time the farmer Friedrich Maier lived here), probably also part of the Krappfabrik (Badener Str.9b)


Krappfabrik (founded in 1753 at the instigation of Margrave Karl Wilhelm) Badener Str.9b 1753 Krappfabrik (founded in 1753 at the instigation of Margrave Karl Wilhelm), later a residential building, two-storey and eaves, in 1892 by Heinrich Schumacher for Gabriel Rittershofer, during the construction of the B3 the building was shortened
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Boulder Badener Str.9b 1679 Boulder lying in front of it, boulders washed down by the Dürrbach in 1679, inscription Anno Dni 1679, on September 19th this stone was blown through the Geweser for half an hour
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Rental house Badener Str.11a 1902 Rental apartment building, three-storey solid construction, dwarf house with two-storey hanging bay window, 1902 by the architect A. Semmler for the master carpenter Johann Semmler
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Badener Str. 17 1893 Residential house, two-storey clinker brick building with sandstone ornaments in neo-renaissance style, stairs to the mezzanine floor, mansard hipped roof, back plastered with glazed balcony loggias, by the architect A. Wüst for the wine merchant Carl Steinmetz.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Well house Badener Str. 18 1823 Brunnenhaus, by Friedrich Weinbrenner. Confluence of the seven springs of the Turmberg, unused since 1968, at that time Durlach was connected to the Karlsruhe water network. Above the entrance inscription: BUILT IN 1823 RENOVATED 1895. On the occasion of the relocation of the water pipe from Durlach to Karlsruhe at the beginning of the 19th century, Friedrich Weinbrenner built this new building in place of the dilapidated fountain room.
Protected according to § 28 DSchG


Rental house Badener Str. 21 1898 Rented apartment building, three-storey solid building with asymmetrically arranged dwarf house, two bay windows, associated courtyard building in half-timbered construction, 1898 by the architect Adolf Wüst for the master painter Karl Goldschmidt
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Rental house Badener Str. 29 1899 Rental apartment building, three-storey solid construction, large bay window with attached balconies, by Hugo Slevogt for Arthur Manecke.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Badener Str. 31 1860/7 Residential house, two-storey solid building in the forms of late classicism, dormer bands from 1932
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Beer and ice cellar Badener Str. 67 19th century Beer and ice cellar


Beer and ice cellar Badener Str.69a 19th century Beer and ice cellar
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Beer and ice cellar Badener Str. 79 19th century Beer and ice cellar, once used as an air raid shelter, today a garage


Beer and ice cellar Badener Str. 113 19th century Beer and ice cellar, larger facility with two entrances.


Bäderstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Model house Bäderstrasse 1 18th century see also Durlach, Stadtbefestigung;
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Bäderstrasse 3 Residential building
Protected according to § 28 DSchG


Remnants of the city wall Bäderstrasse 3 see also Durlach, city fortifications
Protected according to § 28 DSchG


Odelhaus Bäderstrasse 4th 1716 see also Durlach, Stadtbefestigung; Odellhaus, two-storey gateway house with shutters, built before 1716, major renovations between 1758 and 1774, Margrave Carl August's apartment in the 1760s, later rectory
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Model house Bäderstrasse 8th 18th century Model house, two-storey with a crooked hip, floor cornice.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Basler-Tor-Strasse

image designation location Dating description
Basel Gate
More pictures
Basel Gate Basler-Tor-Strasse 1760 Basler Tor - the last preserved city gate of the margravial residence town. Set on fire in 1689, destruction of the roof and first floor. Rebuilt in 1760/61. The small walls in front of the gate originally served as bridge railings, the arches under the bridge have been preserved but are now filled in.
Protected according to § 28 DSchG


Residential building Basler-Tor-Str. 1 1707 Two-storey residential building with a hipped roof, built in 1707 as the house of the extra messenger or messenger master Johann Jacob Müller.
Protected according to § 28 DSchG


Gatekeeper House Basler-Tor-Str. 4th 1739 see also city wall; Gatekeeper house, today residential house, half-timbered building, basement massive, plastered, in 1739 mentioned in the inventory book as in municipal possession, in the basement probably once official rooms, here customs and road money were collected.
Protected according to § 28 DSchG


Old Durlach cemetery
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Old Durlach cemetery Basler-Tor-Str. 6th 1577 In use from the middle of the 16th century until November 4th, 1900, first mentioned in 1577. Before that, the cemetery was by the town church (later so-called “Saumarkt”). The Nikolauskapelle was originally moved together with the cemetery in front of the city wall and burned down in 1689. 1862 Extension of the cemetery parallel to the Steckgraben. The cemetery wall attached to the chapel had to be demolished, as did the wall that surrounded the gardens in the south, as the Allmend strip leading to the cemetery along the moat was also added. Tombs that were based on this section were moved. The new wall bordered directly on the moat. In the city archives there is a site plan from 1862, there also a grave record plan from 1922. When the Palmaienstrasse and Gärtnerstrasse were rebuilt in 1939, the old cemetery wall was moved in two places and the entire wall height was reduced to allow passers-by to view the complex. All panels, including those on the cemetery wall, were originally set into the floor of the chapel and covered the graves there. Most of the 19th century tombstones have disappeared. Some graves have meanwhile been transferred to the mountain cemetery upon request.
Protected according to § 28 DSchG


Chapel of St. Nicholas Basler-Tor-Str. 6th 1712 St. Nikolaus Chapel, rebuilt in 1712/13 according to plans by the engineer Jacob Friedrich Batzendorf and the clerical administrator Friedrich Bürklin, changed several times in the meantime, baroque furnishings not preserved. Remarkable roof construction: a longitudinal girder, which is supported by two hanging trusses, therefore a column-free covering of the room. Original roof turret disappeared. 1823 installation of a carriage shed, reorientation of the prayer room, installation of two neo-Gothic windows, 1946 rented the shed to the photo shop Theo Karch, who carried out a renovation, sacred space divided by walls in 1949/50, ceiling suspended, two chimneys. Lease to workers welfare, tombstones from the inside were placed on the outer wall.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Rental house Basler-Tor-Str. 45 1893 Rental apartment building, two-storey solid building with a half-hip roof, 1893 by Karl Löffler for Christian Rittersdorfer
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Bergbahnstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Director of the residential building of the Badische Maschinenfabrik Bergbahnstrasse 16 1928 Director's residence, factory manager villa of the Badische Maschinenfabrik, villa with garden fence, two-storey solid construction, semicircular and rectangular arbor, expressionist stucco ceilings, lead glass window with allegorical figure in the stairwell, 1928 by H. Dörr for the Badische Maschinenfabrik
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Bergwaldstrasse

image designation location Dating description
villa Bergwaldstrasse 2 1909 Villa, one to two-storey solid construction, stair tower with bell roof, mansard and hip mansard roofs, garden with garden wall, 1909 by the architect Adolf Semmler for Carl Ruckstuhl.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


House with garden Bergwaldstrasse 6th 1924 Residential house with garden, two-storey solid construction with hipped roof, plastered rustics on the corners of the building, neo-baroque decorative shapes over the windows, very well-preserved interior, fence on the street side, retaining wall on the garden side, by the architect Gustav Dünkel for the building contractor Franz Aicher.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Bergwaldstrasse 10 1925 Residential building, two-storey, gable-independent solid construction in neoclassical forms, roof with recurrence, portico-like entrance, 1925 by the architect Gustav Dünkel for Sophie Charlotte Leichtlin


Residential building Bergwaldstrasse 11 1908 Residential house, single-storey solid construction on a hillside, mansard roof with crooked hip, bay window and staircase tower with ornamental framework, 1908 by the architect Rudolf Meeß for the chemist Hugo Meeß
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Beer cellar Bergwaldstrasse 14th Mid 19th century, Beer cellar, cellar 1 (lower cellar), also on the street side closure in the adjacent rock, single-row cellar, narrow access stairs and elevator shaft, mid-19th century, cellar 2 (upper cellar), two-row cellar, only one entrance, second entrance closed, narrow stairs, Elevator shaft.


Beer cellar Bergwaldstrasse 14a, Lußstr. 5b Mid 19th century, Beer cellar, two-storey and two-line, ramp to the driveway, two entrances to a cellar, extends under the property, Bergwaldstrasse 14a and Lußstrasse 5b.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Beer cellar Bergwaldstrasse 16 1840 Beer cellar, cellar 1 (lower cellar), transverse offset, connecting passage to a destroyed rear cellar section, access through modern room, cellar 2 (upper cellar): two-line cellar with two entrances, access via wide stairs, 1840s
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Beer cellar Bergwaldstrasse 18th 1840 Beer cellar, inscription panel, modern entrance door, 1840s
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Beer cellar Bergwaldstrasse 20th Mid 19th century Beer cellar, cellar 1 (lower cellar), bricked-up access, mid-19th century, cellar 2 (upper cellar), bricked-up access, mid-19th century
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Beer cellar Bergwaldstrasse 22nd 1840 Beer cellar, cellar 1 (lower cellar), built by Karl Weiß from Karlsruhe, inscription panel, cellar 2 (upper cellar).
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Beer cellar Bergwaldstrasse 23 Mid 19th century, Beer cellar, cellar 1 (lower cellar), cellar 2 (middle cellar), used as a garage, cellar 3 (upper cellar).
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Beer cellar Bergwaldstrasse 26th 1844, Beer cellar, cellar 1 (lower cellar), built by Heinrich Fels from Karlsruhe (inscription panel), cellar 2 (middle cellar), access walled in, cellar 3 (upper cellar).
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Bienleinstorstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Gateway house Bienleinstorstr. 2 1832 Gateway building, two-storey with a mansard hipped roof, two large barrel vaults in the basement, built in 1832, associated two-storey side building on the courtyard side (additional storeys in 1911).
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Remains of the city wall Durlach Bienleinstorstr. 3 see also city fortifications; Remnants of the city wall in the cellar (outer cellar wall)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Model house Bienleinstorstr. 4th 18th century Model house, gateway house, two-storey with a gable roof, cornice, associated rear building, protruding wall edge at the gate.


Model house Bienleinstorstr. 5 1706 see also city wall; Model house, two-storey with a cornice, first mentioned in 1706, wooden shutters in the basement, city wall with battlement here at a height of approx. 5 m.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Model house with gate drive Bienleinstorstr. 7th 1716 Model house with gate drive, named 1716, built by Johann Joseph Zahnt, pastor of Linkenheim


Model house with gate drive Bienleinstorstr. 9 1706 Model house with doorway, cartouche on the archway with carpenter's emblems, inscription GFH 1780, first mentioned in 1706 as the house of joiner Johann Jacob Frick, inhabited after 1742 by joiner Georg Friedrich Haury.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Model house Bienleinstorstr. 10 1718 Model house, inscription HAH 1718 (= Hans Adam Herzog, lordly box servant and flour crap), modern paneling on the upper floor.


Model house Bienleinstorstr. 11 Late 18th century two-storey house
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Model house with gate drive Bienleinstorstr. 13 1725 Model house with gate drive, cartridge on the keystone of the gate drive, labeled ANNO 1725
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Model house with gate drive Bienleinstorstr. 14th 18th century Model house with gate drive, two-storey.


Residential building with gate drive Bienleinstorstr. 21st 1716 Single-storey residential building with a doorway with a half-timbered gable, first mentioned in 1716, mentioned in 1766 as the house of the schumacher Georg Friedrich Zachmann.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building
More pictures
Residential and commercial building Bienleinstorstr. 23 1896 Residential and commercial building, three-storey solid construction, built in 1896 by the architect Otto Hofmann for Karl Leussler, the property previously also included Bienleinstorstrasse. 25 (see there).


see also city wall;  Model house with gate drive
More pictures
see also city wall; Model house with gate drive Bienleinstorstr. 25th 1716 see also city wall; Model house with gate drive, the property formerly also included Bienleinstorstr. 23, built before 1716, client was Pastor Jacob Friedrich Zandt, parts of the city wall in the rear part of the property.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Model house with gate drive Bienleinstorstr. 27 1706 Model house with doorway, marked on the keystone of the archway JG 1772, (= Jacob Gaum), the inscription refers to structural changes at that time, originally built in 1706 by Johannes Wagner, valet and body tailor of the Margravine Magdalena Wilhelmine (until 1742).
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Inn of the former brewery Zum Roten Löwen Bienleinstorstr. 30th 1712 Inn of the former brewery Zum Roten Löwen, ballroom (19th century), marked 1712 on the wedge of the archway, built by the carter Jacob Kuhn at that time, the cellar survived the fire of 1689, as did part of the massive street facade. Behind the facade half-timbered, the basement is now perpendicular to the facade due to the model house ordinance, the facade was probably heavily changed in the 19th century (Martin Bachmann, Der barocke Wiederaufbau, pp. 34 ff. And 122-125), the property only becomes available in the 19th century attached to the adjacent brewery property.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


City wall Durlach Bienleinstorstr. 31 see city wall; City wall, rear part of the property (house demolished in 1992) (cf. Martin Bachmann, Der barocke Wiederaufbau, p. 152 f.)
Protected according to § 28 DSchG


Model house with gate drive Bienleinstorstr. 32 1716 Model house with gate drive, arched entrance with dice fighters, locksmith emblems (hammer and crossed keys), marked 1716 JMM (= Johann Michael Müller, locksmith), the cellar has probably survived the fire of 1689, lies across the facade because of the model house ordinance (cf. Martin Bachmann, Der barocke Wiederaufbau, p. 34 ff. And 129 f.)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Model house with gate drive Bienleinstorstr. 34 Early 18th century Model house with doorway, half-timbered from the upper floor, basement of the previous building (cf. Martin Bachmann, Der barocke Wiederaufbau, p. 34 ff. And 139 f.)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Dyer's house Bienleinstorstr. 35 1706 Färberhaus, built in 1706, probably by the dyer Caspar Minderer


Model house with gate drive Bienleinstorstr. 36 1706 Model house with doorway, two-storey with wooden shutters, changed door area, half-timbered from the upper floor, windows on the ground floor with drilled stone walls, in 1706 a newly built house by the stone carver Sebastian Hemberger is mentioned, in 1716 there are two model houses here (at that time the Bienleinstorstrasse 33 parcel was part of it) Property of the Jew Kaufel, barrel cellar of the previous building.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Model house with gate drive Bienleinstorstr. 38 1713 Model house with doorway, archway with dice fighters, there on the Keilstein a cartouche with carpenter's emblems (compass, chisel and plane), inscribed IDG 1713 (= Johann Daniel Gambs, carpenter), from 1757 in the possession of the carpenter Philipp Heinrich Gambs, from the upper floor half-timbered, large dwarf house , the cellar probably survived the fire of 1689, is due to the model house ordinance across the facade (Bachmann, Der barocke Wiederaufbau, p. 34 ff. and p. 126-128)
Protected according to § 28 DSchG


Model house with gate drive Bienleinstorstr. 39 1718 Model house with gate drive, at the top of the archway: PS AM 23/17 THE LORD IS MY SHEPHERD 22 / I WILL LACK OF NOTHING / IMS. (1722). On the lintel of the adjacent window on the right, the year 1718, two winged angel heads, a cartouche with a pointed hammer, two crossed chisel irons (stonemason emblems) and IMS (= Johann Michel Scheerle). Weathered inscription WIR BAVEN ALLE on the basement plinth. The angel heads are probably an indication of an early Catholic prayer room. Under the right half of the house is the remainder of a vaulted cellar, there were probably originally two houses on the lot.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Bienleinstorstr. 41 Residential house, single-storey plastered building with a gable roof, reconstruction after the city was destroyed at the beginning of the 18th century using older components, probably remodeled in the middle of the 19th century, early access from the street, large north-south vaulted cellar in the form of the late Renaissance (probably 16th century), Kellerhals on the back of the building, on the outside of the unusually massive solid wall, bracket stones of an earlier or adjacent building, economic building not belonging to it.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Model house with gate drive Bienleinstorstr. 43 Late 18th century Model house with doorway, two-storey, vaulted cellar probably from the previous building, still undeveloped in 1764.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Half-timbered house
More pictures
Half-timbered house Bienleinstorstr. 45 1697 Half-timbered house, rare visible half-timbering on the upper floor, probably spared the fire in the lower part, marked 1697 on the lintel, at that time a deviation from the model house regulations, probably also because of the location of the cellar, built before 1706 by Rentkammerrat Engelhard Sonntag, owned by the manorial fruit knife around 1760 Leonhard Zittel.
Protected according to § 28 DSchG


Residential building Bienleinstorstr. 47 1588 Residential house, marked 1588 on the lintel of the driveway, portal with cutting framework, doors inside all low, side entrance with grooved walls, house sign in the lintel probably changed during renovation, building probably rebuilt from the first floor after the fire, will be newly built in 1706 Rentkammerrat Jakob Christoph Zandt mentioned (Martin Bachmann, Der Wiederaufbau, p. 110 ff.)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Blumentorstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Residential building Blumentorstr. 2 1850 Residential house, two-storey plastered building on the eaves with wooden shutters and dormer windows, around 1850.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Street facade of a residential building Blumentorstr. 14th 1706 Street facade of a residential building, model house, two-storey and eaves with gate, four-axis, keystone in the top of the archway designated IGH 1721, 1706 as a newly built dwelling of the hatter Johann Georg Hornus (= IGH), who is still the owner in 1721, 1782 conversion to a beer brewery, in the 19th century Century Gasthaus Zum Kreuz, the building was rebuilt in 1985 while maintaining the street facade.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Blumentorstr. 16 1890 Residential house, three-storey villa building, neo-renaissance forms, balcony alcove, associated wall and gate with iron bars.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Brühlstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Evangelical Trinity Church Bruehlstrasse 37 1962 Evangelical Trinity Church in Durlach-Aue with parish center, 1962/64 according to plans by Friedrich Remspecher from Freudenstadt, church with a rectangular floor plan with seven concrete supports placed across, filled with brickwork up to the skylight, exposure with concrete lattice, free-standing tower, decorative glazing in blue and white -Red according to a design by K. Arnold from Karlsruhe, thin supports carry the steel truss construction in the interior, wooden belt cladding of the ceiling with a tent-like character, the rear wall of the choir with clinker brick wall and glazed cross.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Christofstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Residential and commercial building Christofstrasse 9, 11 1897 Residential and commercial building, at that time with a bakery and workshop building, corner house, three-storey with a two-storey corner bay window above the shop entrance, two dwelling houses, labeled 1897, by the architect Gustav Bader for Fritz Kindler (same building application)


Pestalozzi School Christofstrasse 23 1914 Pestalozzi School (since 1947), originally Hindenburg School, later at times Goethe School, plans in 1912 by Wilhelm Sackberger from Durlach, a student of Hermann Billing , built in 1914/15, Sackberger won 3rd prize in the city competition, associated outbuilding with gym.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Dietrichstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Residential building Dietrichstrasse 13 1928 Residential house, two-storey and eaves, sandstone facade with gate, mansard roof, courtyard building, by the architect Adolf Meier for the engineer Oskar Ruffert.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Dürrbachstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Residential building Dürrbachstrasse 3a 1964 Residential house, two-storey flat roof building, large-scale glazed windows, 1964 by the architects and builders Degenhard Sommer and Charlotte Sommer


Residential building Dürrbachstrasse 10 1926 Residential house, two-storey eaves solid construction, mansard roof with crooked hip, arbor, 1926 by the architect Rudolf Krieger for the businessman Karl Brutzer.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Dürrbachstrasse 17th 1915 Residential house, two-storey solid construction, hipped roof with bat dormers, decorative bezels over the windows, arbor, 1915 by Heinrich Helmle as client and architect
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Dürrbachstrasse 20th 1923 Residential house, two-storey solid construction with hipped roof, mid-level house, cornice, decorated parapet panels, 1923 by the architect Georg Dünkel for the master locksmith Friedrich Klingmann.


Employee residence of Gritzner AG Dürrbachstrasse 22nd 1924 Gritzner AG employee residence, two-storey with a mansard hipped roof, arbor with balcony grilles, facade with colossal pilasters, historical enclosure wall and garden, 1924 by the Gritzner AG company.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Dürrbachstrasse 23 1922 Residential house, single-storey solid construction on a high basement, hipped mansard roof with gable gables, cove under the eaves, 1922 by the architect Hermann Zelt for the craftsman Franz Ed. Goller


Employee residence of Gritzner AG Dürrbachstrasse 24-26 1923 Employee residence of Gritzner AG, double rented residence for six families, two-storey neo-baroque solid construction with mansard hipped roof, plaster pilaster, arbor, 1923 by the company Gritzner AG
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Vineyard cottage Dürrbachstrasse 27 at the end of the 19th century Vineyard house, small single-storey wooden building with a small roof turret, hillside in the mountain-side part of the property.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Dürrbachstrasse 28 1913 Residential house, two-storey with hipped roof, windows with decorative fields, sentry box with gable and segmented arch fields, garden wall, interior fittings partially preserved; Remarkable box windows from the period of construction, associated garden with terrace, path and historical planting, architect and client Gustav Kärcher, 1913
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Dürrbachstrasse 32 1924/5 Residential house, single-storey and gable, mansard roof with hip foot, garden wall, by the architect Hermann R. Alker for Oskar Gorenflo.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Villa with garden plot Dürrbachstrasse 38 1910 Villa with garden plot, single-storey two-wing building with hipped roofs, associated enclosure wall, around 1910.


Residential building Dürrbachstrasse 40 1910 Residential house, single-storey and gable-independent, mansard roof with crooked hip, neo-baroque decorative elements, around 1910 (architect and client unknown)


Eichelgasse

image designation location Dating description
Model house Eichelgasse 1 1706 Model house, five-axis with cornice, dormer windows, first run in 1706 as the property of the can founder Daniel Heidenreich
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Model house Eichelgasse 2 1706 see also city wall; Model house, three-storey and eaves, half-timbered, late baroque windows, 1706 as a newly built dwelling of the former princely mouth cook Joachim Schuhmann, later of the war commissarius Brendel, parts of the city wall contained in the rear part
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


see also city wall; Hofbeamtenhaus Eichelgasse 4 1706 see also city wall; Hofbeamtenhaus, model house, three-storey with cornices, facade made of plastered timber, door with skylight and arched gate, 1706 as a newly built house by privy councilor (1716 also Obervogt) named Daniel Dietrich Scheidt, later the house is still owned by high court officials, the inscriptions 1796 and WSR 1797 are high water marks, parts of the city wall are
protected according to § 2 DSchG


Model house with gate drive Eichelgasse 6 2nd half of the 18th century Model house with doorway, two-storey with floor cornice, lot undeveloped until 1764.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Model house with gate drive Eichelgasse 18 1706 Model house with doorway, two-storey with cornice, built in 1706 from the white basin Wendel Schumann
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Eleven morning break

image designation location Dating description
Two stone posts of the old weir Elfmorgenbruch (Gewann), western Pfinzufer, at the bridge north of the Tiefentalgraben junction 1818 Two stone posts of the old weir, inscription: ZUM WIESSEN WAESSERN ERECTED BELOW UPPER BMSTR: DUMBERTH AND STADTBMSTR: FUX 1818
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Ellmendinger Strasse

image designation location Dating description
Catholic Johannes Baptista Church and Community Center Ellmendinger Str. 1 1964 Catholic community center St. Johannes Baptista (according to the development plan as a whole planned as early as 1962) with associated paths, open spaces and buildings.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Elsa-Brandström-Strasse

image designation location Dating description
Four season fountain Elsa-Brandström-Strasse (near the shop center) 1987 Four seasons fountain, fountain column made of stacked cuboids with an abstract bust made of stainless steel, by Heinz Mohl .
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Elsa-Brandström-Str. 14, 16 1973/74 Residential and commercial building with a row of shops and square design, two-storey building made of unplastered sand-lime brick masonry, additional lighting via glass pyramid, room division on the upper floor flexibly arranged, space connection via pergolas, by Heinz Mohl (also served as a separate studio).
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Fridtjof-Nansen-Strasse

image designation location Dating description
Group of terraced houses in the mountain forest Fridtjof-Nansen-Str. 26, 26a, 26b 1973 Group of terraced houses, bungalow construction, by Heinz Mohl from Karlsruhe, two-shell sand-lime brick masonry, 1973-1975, planning over a space grid of 4.125 m
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


House Schönberger Fridtjof-Nansen-Str. 54 1967 Schönberger House, residential house, brickwork and exposed concrete, flat roof construction with multiple cubic formulations, integrated garages, by Heinz Mohl from Karlsruhe, 1967/68
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Geigersbergstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Beer cellar Geigersbergstrasse 2 Mid 19th century Beer cellar, cellar 1 (lower cellar), mid-19th century, cellar 2 (middle cellar), mid-19th century, cellar 3 (upper cellar), mid-19th century
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Gritznerstrasse

image designation location Dating description
villa Gritznerstrasse 7th Mid 19th century Villa, two-storey building complex in neo-Gothic style, corner bay window with a pointed hood, gable with ornamental framework, by the architect Emil Sickinger for the factory director Oskar Hunger, marked 1900, marked Ott.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Post Office Durlach Gritznerstrasse 8th 1915 Post office, two-storey neo-baroque solid building with mansard hipped roof, on the long side a risalit structure designed as a portico, surrounding colossal pilasters made of plaster, around 1915 (architect and client unknown)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Grötzinger Strasse

image designation location Dating description
Rental house Grötzinger Str. 30 1896 Rental apartment building, three-storey with a colorful clinker facade, dormer windows, rear building, by the architect Otto Hofmann for the locomotive driver Christoph Schmitt, 1896
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Grötzinger Str. 33 1898 Residential and commercial building, today residential building, originally a shop on the ground floor, by Hugo Slevogt for Leonhard Müller.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Roman manor
Roman manor Grötzinger Str. 83 115/120 AD Roman manor, foundations and cellar walls of the stone cellar, exposed 1991-1993, erected in 115/120 AD.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Gymnasiumstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Rental house Gymnasiumstr. 6a 1905 Rental apartment building, three-storey corner house, facade structure rich in plastic, by the architect Karl Kreutz for the building contractor Jakob Kreutz.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Haldenwangstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Duplex house Haldenwangstrasse. 2-4 1904 Double house, by the architects Karl Kreutz and Willy Schorkopf for Willy Schorkopf.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Villa with garden and enclosure Haldenwangstrasse. 5 1906 Villa with garden and enclosure, two-storey with a mansard hipped roof, neo-baroque curved gable to the street, ornamental half-timbered gable to the garden side, by the trade school director Gustav Bader for his own use.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Duplex house Haldenwangstrasse. 6-8 1905 Double dwelling, by the architect Karl Kreutz for the master locksmith H. Haas.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Director's residence for the Badische Maschinenfabrik Haldenwangstrasse. 7th 1923 Director's residence, villa with garden and enclosure, historical interior, by the architect Hermann Bull for the Badische Maschinenfabrik.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Hauptbahnstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Durlach train station
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Durlach train station Hauptbahnstr. 1 1911 Durlach station, reception building (renovations in the 1960s), associated small outbuilding to the west, warehouse to the east, platform roofing, 1911
protected according to § 2 DSchG


Heinrich-Weitz-Strasse

image designation location Dating description
Terraced house group Heinrich-Weitz-Str. 16, 18, 20, Red Cross Street 57, 59, 61 1965 Group of terraced houses, residential houses with monopitch and flat roofs, sand-lime brick masonry, exposed concrete and wood paneling, associated garden walls, floor plan structure in square units on three levels, 1965-1966 by Heinz Mohl from Karlsruhe
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Heinrich-Weitz-Str. 22nd 1972 Residential house, two-storey low-rise building on a hillside, unplastered sand-lime brick masonry and exposed concrete, by the architects Karl Bauer and Dietrich Weigert for Rudolf Henn.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Stallion place

image designation location Dating description
Stallion Monument Stallion place 1896 Hengst memorial, sandstone obelisk with fountain basin, portrait relief and cherubs, memorial for mayor and city architect Christian Hengst (1804-1883), founder of Germany's first volunteer fire brigade in 1846, built in 1896 for 6,000 marks, through donations from volunteer fire brigades from all over Germany, design by Hermann Götz, bronze parts by sculptor Heinrich Baiser, architectural parts by fireman and stonemason Ulrich Kleiber
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Apartment building Stallion place 7 1930 Apartment building, four-storey and eaves solid construction with a gable roof, well-preserved interior fittings, the building permit required adjustment to the neighboring building at Hengstplatz 11, 1930 according to plans by A. Wüst for master bricklayer and building contractor Josef Six, including storage sheds and garages.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Facade of a rental apartment building Stallion place 9 1930 Facade of a rented apartment building, three-storey with a mansard floor, central portal with four symbolic relief panels, around 1930, rear extension for the Allgemeine Ortskrankenkasse (AOK) 1953 not included
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Stallion place 11 1935 Residential and commercial building, four-storey, plastered and eaves solid construction with doorway, well-preserved interior, 1935 by Georg Dünkel for the dentist Hugo Granget (monogram on facade bay)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Lifting line

image designation location Dating description
Hubwegbrücke Durlach Lifting line 1908 Hubwegbrücke, road bridge over the railway line, iron framework construction, length 31 m, (route number 4200, Karlsruhe-Mühlacker, km 0.931).
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Road bridge over the Pfinz
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Road bridge over the Pfinz Hubstraße, Won "At the Stone Bridge" 18th century Road bridge over the Pfinz, sandstone construction with arching
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Jaegerstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Merchant Ungersches Haus Jägerstrasse 1 1714 Handelsmann Ungersches Haus, five- and four-axle corner house with hipped roof. Inscription: Auxiliante Deo Gratia Principis Magnoque Labore Aedificarunt Me JG + CBG ANNO Domini 1714. Door with ears and coat of arms, Israel Gebhardt (died 1731) had the elaborate coat of arms affixed, he was a valet and personal surgeon at the court of Carl Wilhelm. The letters CBG stand for his wife Catharina Barbara Gebhardt, geb. Foeckler. The inside of the building was largely renovated.
Protected according to § 28 DSchG


Model house Jägerstrasse 2 1706 Model house, three-storey house, portal with ears and skylight, inscription: "IHST 1763" (= Jakob Heinrich Störzinger). House sign of a master builder: Bricklayer emblems such as compass, hammer, angle, wooden hammer, surface, trowel, named as "newly built dwelling" of the umbrella Jew Emanuel Reutlinger, who came from Pforzheim in 1706 and 1716, in 1763 heightened from 2 to 3 floors as a "model".
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Jägerstrasse 7th Late 18th century Residential house, arched gate with historic gate wings, still undeveloped in 1764 and as a garden to Jägerstrasse. 9 due.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Jägerstrasse 9 1706 Residential house, known in 1706 as a newly built dwelling of the Kammer-Lakais Caspar Beydeck, later a long locksmith's shop.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Jägerstrasse 10 1706 Residential house, door with skylight, on the corner of Eichelgasse sandstone with inscription: Hans Adam Oswald 1687, next to it coat of arms and designation 1705 NG DCGB (= Nikolaus Gräbner, riding blacksmith in princely services), 1706 named as a newly built dwelling, rear economic building.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Jägerstrasse 15th 1708 Residential house, door with skylight and cooper emblems, inscription CS 1708 (= Christoph Sulzer, Küfer), cooper hammer and crossed strap hooks, associated economic building
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Jägerstrasse 19, 19a 19th century Residential house, two-storey corner house, built in 1706 by the heirs of Oberjäger Kießling, utility building.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential house with arched gate Jägerstrasse 20th Between 1698 and 1706 Residential house with arched gate, part of the building with a raised ridge, house sign Schere (Schneider), branch with acorn and roots, inscription "WE 1686" (= Wilhelm Eichler, Schneider and Zoller, later Eichelwirt).
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Model house with gate drive Jägerstrasse 21st 1706 Model house with doorway, two-storey and eaves, stairwell from the 19th century, arcade to the courtyard side, the middle two window axes probably come from the previous building, doorway added later, named 1706 as the newly built dwelling of the castle guard Ulrich Meybacher (cf. Martin Bachmann, Der barocke Reconstruction, p. 154 f.)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Jägerstrasse 22nd 18th century Residential building, two-storey and eaves, four-axis with mansard roof, later shop installation (early 20th century)


Model house Jägerstrasse 32 18th century Model house, two-storey and eaves, public gate drive, exposed half-timbering on a massive basement.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Model house Jägerstrasse 38 1716 Model house, residential house, two-storey and eaves, three-axis, half-timbering exposed on the upper storey, mentioned in 1716 as the model dwelling of Maria Häußer


Model house Jägerstrasse 40 18th century Model house, residential house with doorway, two-storey and eaves, four-axis.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Margravial hunter's house Jägerstrasse 48a see also city wall; "Jägerhaus", also "Spinnhaus", model house with gate drive, originally probably the margrave's hunter's house and named for the street, originally 17th century, with many additions from the 18th century, at the time of the fire the Obervogt von Türckheim lived on the upper floor, In 1781 the building was sold to private by the forestry department, and in the 19th century there was a spinning house and a straw hat factory where the poor lived and stretched for a living or made straw hats. Rear of the building with the remains of the Zwinger Wall.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Jean-Ritzert-Strasse

image designation location Dating description
signpost Jean-Ritzert-Strasse, Rittnertstrasse 2nd half of the 19th century Signpost, shape of a tree stump with inscriptions, solid.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Rittnerthof Jean-Ritzert-Str. 3 1903/05 Rittnerthof, homestead, by the architects Curjel and Moser , baroque economic building and parts of the building, 2nd half of the 18th century (totality). Remains of the wall of the manor house, 1902 by Curjel & Moser from Karlsruhe (broken off, Jean-Ritzert-Str. 1). The courtyard was built in the second half of the 18th century at the instigation of Margravine Karoline Louise. 1902 sold to Eduart Merton from Frankfurt, who set up a horse breeding facility here. 1933 sold to the Mannheim farmer Fritz Gebhardt.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Kanzlerstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Bismarck Monument
More pictures
Bismarck Monument Kanzlerstrasse 1907 Bismarck Monument, 1907, bronze relief reconstruction from 2002, the original probably melted down during World War II.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Catholic parish church of St. Peter and Paul with rectory
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Catholic parish church of St. Peter and Paul with rectory Chancellor Street 2, Palmaienstr. 15th 1898 Catholic parish church St. Peter and Paul with rectory, 1898-1900 by diocesan master builder Max Meckel. (Totality). Altars by the Mezger brothers from Überlingen; Glass painter Helmle and Merzweiler from Freiburg created some of the church windows (1899-1902), bells from B. Grüninger from Villingen, in 1921 further glass windows from Protz and Ehret from Freiburg, first interior renovation in 1938, at that time also the Way of the Cross by Emil Sutor from Karlsruhe, von Sutor 1927/38 also figures of St. Konrad von Parzham and St. Theresa vom Kinde, 1965 new organ by Wolfgang Scherpf from Speyer, 1983 choir room design by Horst Leyendecker, interior renovation at the same time. 1985 new celebration altar and ambo made of red sandstone.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Festhalle Durlach Chancellor Street 13 1895 Festival hall, guest house with a large attached event hall, three-storey solid guest house building in the eaves position in the style of the neo-renaissance (increase around 1925), directly attached a large event hall with stage and galleries, cantilevered, vaulted and decorated wooden truss construction; 1895 by the architect Karl Steinmetz - the add-ons and extensions from the post-war period are not included.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Apartment building Chancellor Street 14th 1897 Apartment building, four-storey brick and stone building with eaves, elaborate architectural decorations, around 1900.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Karl-Weysser-Strasse

image designation location Dating description
Rental houses Karl-Weysser-Str. 1, 3 1910 Rental houses, each three-storey with a mansard floor, balconies with iron bars, preserved entrance doors, 1910 by Hermann Bull for the master carpenter Karl Richter (joint building application)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Double rental house Karl-Weysser-Str. 5 and 7 1898 Double rented apartment building, two-storey solid construction with continuous plastered rustics and sculptural decorative elements made of sandstone (balconies, walls, dormer), gable, mansard slate roof (partly with rare cover) with dormers, marked 1898, built as a double residential building according to plans by the architect A. Wüst for the master carpenter Karl Dumberth , No. 7: 1907 Two-storey veranda was added to the building contractor Karl Dumberth by Karl Wüst, in 1919 shop fitting in the postman Max Vetter by A. Wüst, in 1938 the roof tower on the street side replaced by a hipped roof, architect Gustav Dünkel for Max Vetter.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Karl-Weysser-Str. 6th 1854 Residential house, today an evangelical rectory, two-storey solid building with a mansard roof, sandstone facade, vaulted cellar, built in 1854, marked 1891 (extensive renovation by the architect and client Christian Bull), remise converted into an office in 1936/37
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Karl-Weysser-Str. 9 1899 Residential house, two-storey clinker brick building with ornamental framework elements, wooden balcony loggia, interior Art Nouveau paintings, 1899 by Christoph Bull for the tiled stove master Friedrich Bull
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Apartment building Karl-Weysser-Str. 10 1900 Apartment building, four-storey plastered building with gate drive, dormer windows, associated rear building.


Rental house Karl-Weysser-Str. 12 1910 Rental apartment building, three-storey solid building with bay windows and balconies, by Wilhelm Sackberger for master cooper Albert Roos
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Karl-Weysser-Str. 18th 1911 Residential house, two-storey solid construction with corner pilasters, tree representation in sgraffito technique in the gable, marked 1911.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Villa Maria Karl-Weysser-Str. 19th 1927 Villa Maria, three-storey solid construction with hipped roof and round corner tower, storeys divided by cornices, plastered rustics on the ground floor, by the architect Gustav Dünkel for Maria Weidner
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Karlsburgstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Model house Karlsburgstrasse 1 1800 Model house, residential house, five-axis and eaves building with balcony, Catholic parsonage from 1843 to 1900.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Model house Karlsburgstrasse 2 1820 Model house, five-axis residential building with arched gate, around 1820, plans in the General State Archives in Karlsruhe, around 1810–30, possibly once the location of the mint
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Model house Karlsburgstrasse 3 Around 1820 Model house, four-axle residential building with arched gate, plans in the General State Archives Karlsruhe
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Model house Karlsburgstrasse 4th Around 1850 Model house, today residential and commercial building, five-axis and two-storey, gate drive richly decorated with paintings and stucco, very complete interior, modern shop fitting
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Karlsburgstrasse 5 1840 Residential house, five-axis and eaves, arched windows and arched gate, rear building, very well preserved interior. The building stands on the foundation of the Zwingermauer (settlement crack visible in the street facade).
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Karlsburgstrasse 6th 1840 Residential house, five-axis with arched windows on the ground floor, balcony, in the meantime the command office of the castle barracks (see Pfinztalstrasse 9).
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Karlsburgstrasse 7th 1907 Residential building, two-storey and eaves, curved gables, ornate bay windows and balconies, conversion of an older two-storey gateway building (1st half of the 19th century) in Art Nouveau forms, 1907 by the architect A. Semmler for the Grand Ducal Auditor Ludwig Waag
Protected under Section 2 DSchG


Residential building Karlsburgstrasse 8th Around 1850 Residential building, six-axle and three-storey gateway house in a corner position, the third storey was added later.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Karlsburgstrasse 9 Around 1850 Residential house, two-storey in corner position, cornice, doorway.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


District court Durlach
More pictures
District court Durlach Karlsburgstrasse 10 District court, three-storey solid building with cornice, arched windows, ground floor rusticated, plans of the grand ducal building inspection from 1868 in the General State Archives in Karlsruhe.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Karlsburgstrasse 12 1908 Residential house, two-storey solid construction with mansard hipped roof, balcony, conversion of a building from the 1st half of the 19th century by the architects Curjel and Moser for director Max Eglau, 1908.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Karlsruher Allee

image designation location Dating description
Karlsruher Hof Karlsruher Allee 1 (Karlsruher Hof) 1890 Karlsruher Hof, residential building with restaurant, three-story corner house with cornice.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Karlsruher Allee 11 1897 Residential house, three-storey with two narrow dwelling houses, facade in colored handles and ornamental framework, by the architect Otto Hofmann for JW Hofmann.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Kastellstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Residential building Kastellstrasse 6th 1899 Detached house, two-storey with rich ornamental framework, by the architect Adolf Wüst for the authorized signatory Karl Jörger, 1899, two-storey bay extension 1935
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Käthe-Kollwitz-Strasse

image designation location Dating description
Single family home Käthe-Kollwitz-Str. 3 1966-67 Single-family dwelling, low-rise building on a hillside made of several cubic elements, by Reinhard Gieselmann from Karlsruhe for Rudolf Seitz
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Kelterstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Residential building Kelterstrasse 1 1739 Residential house, model house with doorway, two-storey solid construction, window over archway, younger shop fitting, marked 17 WS 09 (= Wilhelm Schumm, trader and court relative) 1739 owned by the treasurer Johann Philipp Weghaubt.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Model house with gate drive Kelterstrasse 3 1778 Model house with doorway, keystone on the straight lintel of the side cellar entrance with wheel, built-in shop 1986, plow shovel and inscription IK 1778
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Model house with gate drive Kelterstrasse 8th 1715 Model house with doorway, two-storey and eaves, loft extension, inscription IC 1715 A, flower vase on the keystone, probably the guild mark of the potters or Hafner, this was the potter Johann Christof Andrecht
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Model house with gate drive Kelterstrasse 14th 1706 Model house with doorway, two-storey and eaves, 1706 by the carter Johann Georg Rittershoffer, part of the city wall in the garden.
Protected according to § 19 DSchG


Residential building Kelterstrasse 15th 1739 Residential building, gateway house, marked FK 1827, 1739 (stock book) on the arched gate, the property was owned by the glazier Elias Weigel


See also Durlach Kelterstrasse 20th 1739 See also Durlach, city fortifications. Residential house, two-storey, utility building, half-timbered buildings, beginning of the 18th century, (material entirety), owned by the day laborer Joseph Diefenbacher in 1739, city wall
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


See also Durlach Kelterstrasse 22nd 1707 See also Durlach, city fortifications. Model house with gate drive, two-storey, high window openings on the upper floor, 1707, 1739 owned by day laborer Philipp Heinrich Altfelix, city wall
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Kelterstrasse 23 1739 Two-storey house, corner location, ornamental framework on the upper floor, beginning of the 18th century, in the inventory book 1739 as a courtyard (at that time still together with Kelterstr. 21) owned by Küblers Johann Michael Kottler, property split up later in the 18th century
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


See also Durlach Kelterstrasse 24 1724 See also Durlach, city fortifications. Residential house, model house with doorway, two-storey and eaves, low upper storey, inscription on the keystone ICL 1724 (= probably Conradt Lang, shoemaker), city wall (material entirety)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Kelterstrasse 26, 26a 1739 Residential house, model house with central doorway, two-storey and eaves, marked GPK 1779 (factual entity), named in the inventory book of 1739 owned by the carter Jakob Kleiber. See also Durlach, city fortifications.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


see also city wall; Residential building Kelterstrasse 28 19th century see also city wall; Residential building, set back, two-storey and eaves with attached economic building, paved forecourt, 19th century, parts of the city wall
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Barn on the city wall Kelterstrasse 30th 18th century. Stable barn on the city wall, two-storey unplastered half-timbered building with a gable roof, ground floor with stables, well-preserved roof structure with double chair and columns with double headbands, 18th century.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Parts of the city wall Durlach Kelterstrasse 30th See also Durlach, city fortifications. Parts of the city wall on the back wall of the shed attached to the barn
Protected according to § 28 DSchG


see also city wall; Residential building Kelterstrasse 32 1706 see also city wall; Residential house, model house, eaves and two-storey, windows with ear flaps, recessed half-timbered economic building, early 18th century (between 1706 and 1742), owned by the carter Andres Öder in 1739, parts of the city wall
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Farmhouse or rear dwelling Kelterstrasse 33 1871 Farmhouse or rear dwelling, two-storey plastered half-timbered building over a solid ground floor, round arched cellar exit on the west side, large, building-wide cellar with barrel vault, marked W. Barthlott 1871 on the lintel, two-part and separately accessible roof structure with different ridge heights, the economic part for the southern part of the building became in 1871 the farmer Wilhelm Barthlott expanded it into a house, the core of the building dates from the 2nd half of the 18th century, at that time still in the margravial property, the farmers who settled here were the backs of the landlord.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building
More pictures
Residential building Kelterstrasse 35 1894 Residential house, single-storey and eaves with a mansard roof, balcony loggia in Swiss house style, colorful clinker brick facade, by the architect Adolf Wüst for Karl Dumberth, 1894
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Parts of the city and Zwingermauer Kelterstrasse 38 see also city wall; Parts of the city and Zwingermauer (building not belonging to it)
Protected according to § 28 DSchG


Killisfeldstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Rental house with gate drive Killisfeldstrasse 4th 1897 Rental apartment building with doorway, three-storey and eaves, clinker brick facade with ornamental-figural relief representations in the parapet fields of the 2nd floor, gate, by the architect Karl Kreutz for the Kreutz siblings.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Double rental house Killisfeldstrasse 10 and 11 1908 Double rented apartment building, three-storey and eaves, axially symmetrical facade with plastic-convex structure, two house entrances, large gable, associated rear buildings with attached sheds.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Repair and electricity works of the Grand Ducal Baden State Railway Killisfeldstrasse 42, 42b, Ottostr. 4a, 6 1902 Repair and electricity works of the Grand Ducal Baden State Railway: repair hall (large elongated clinker building, Killisfeldstrasse 42), canteen building (today residential building with office, Killisfeldstrasse 42 b), power station (large clinker brick building in neo-Gothic form, marked 1902, Ottostr. 4a.), Boiler cleaning hall (single-storey clinker brick building, now plastered, Ottostr. 6), see also Karlsruhe-Südstadt, Wielandstr. 27: Canteen building and water tower (entity).
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Koenigstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Model house with gate drive in corner position Koenigstrasse 1 18th century Model house with doorway in corner position, two-storey, plastered mirror on the 1st floor, back with exposed half-timbering.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Koenigstrasse 2 1769 Residential building, two-storey residential building with four axes, entrance door with rectangular skylight, gable roof with dormer windows.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Model house with gate drive Koenigstrasse 3 1769 Model house with doorway, two-storey and eaves, labeled Ch. Kr. 1842, but the core was probably built after 1769 (at that time the property was sold to private), together with the property at Königstr. 5 the house is on the site of the hospital church, which was demolished in 1749.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Lamprechtstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Rental house Lamprechtstrasse 6th 1905 Rental apartment building, three-storey solid building on the eaves, rusticated ground floor, central projectile with curved gable, by the architect Karl Kreutz for Karl Hornecker.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Lamprechtstrasse 7th 1900 Residential and commercial building, formerly a bakery, three-story neo-renaissance building in a corner, corner bay window with a slate-shingled hood, labeled ANNO 1900 / J. WIDMANN, by the architect Hermann Bull for the plasterer Jakob Widmann.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Rental house Lamprechtstrasse 8th 1905 Rental apartment building, three-storey solid building in a corner position, mansard hipped roof, architecturally and sculpturally remarkable design in Art Nouveau forms, designated 1905, by the architect Karl Kreutz for the manufacturer Johann Bortoluzzi.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Rental house Lamprechtstrasse 9 1900 Rental apartment building, three-storey solid building on the eaves, neo-Gothic and neo-renaissance facade forms, dwarf house, marked 1900, by the architect Gustav Bader for Joseph Stippel.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Rental house Lamprechtstrasse 13 1905 Rental apartment building, three-storey solid building on the eaves, rusticated ground floor, window and door walls in plastic Art Nouveau forms, by the architect Karl Kreutz for the building contractor Johann Bortoluzzi.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Lamprechtstrasse 15th 1905 Residential and commercial building, three-storey solid building with a driveway, ground floor rusticated, window and door frames in plastic Art Nouveau shapes, shop (former butcher), by the architect Karl Kreutz for the master painter Adolf Bauer.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Rental house Lamprechtstrasse 22nd 1911 Rental apartment building, three-storey solid building on the eaves, rusticated ground floor, window parapets with classicist decorative shapes, by the architect Hermann Bull for the privateer Leonhard Müller.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Rental house Lamprechtstrasse 24 1905 Rental apartment building, three-storey solid building on the eaves, two-storey bay window with remarkable sculptural mask shapes, by the architect Karl Kreutz for the master carpenter Friedrich Höfel.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Lederstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Three residential and commercial buildings Lederstr. 3, Seboldstrasse. 26, 28 1908 Three residential and commercial buildings, two-storey solid building in a corner location with a shop (Lederstr. 3), hipped mansard roof with attic house, well-preserved interior furnishings, walled-in spoilage of the previous building on the courtyard side. 1778 MW (keystone), immediately afterwards two associated two-storey residential buildings with a mansard roof and a large attic house (Seboldstrasse 26 and 28), all buildings planned by the architect Adolf Wüst for the master bricklayer Ludwig Schweizer.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Liebensteinstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Rental house Liebensteinstrasse 4th Around 1905 Rental apartment building, three-storey, eaves solid construction with mansard roof, basement natural stone, pilaster structure.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Lortzingstrasse

image designation location Dating description
House with garden Lortzingstrasse 16 1936 Residential house with garden, two-storey plastered single-family house, part of a semi-detached house, half-hipped, terrace and garden, garage, particularly fully preserved furnishings from the period of construction (windows, folding shutters, doors, built-in cupboards, stairs, floors, plaster, etc.), 1936 by the architect Georg Dünkel for the Durlach merchant and men's outfitter Otto Matheis.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Lussstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Residential building Lussstrasse 7-7a, Lyonel Feininger Weg 1903 Residential house, two-storey and eaves solid construction with a gable roof, window frames with decorative shapes, older vaulted cellar, by the architect Rudolf Hengst for the auditor Heinrich Laub, roof shop 1934, garage 1935 (Lußstr. 7)


Residential building Lussstrasse 11 1903 Residential house, single-storey and eaves, mansard roof with crooked hip, eaves-side stand bay window with ornamental framework forms, associated retaining walls and stairs to the building, by the architect Johannes Billing for Thomas Spengler.


Marstallstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Residential and commercial building Marstallstrasse 2, Pfinztalstr. 11 1706 Residential and commercial building, inner courtyard with half-timbered arcade, 1706 by Hofsattler Roman


Residential and commercial building Marstallstrasse 10 1st half of the 18th century Residential and commercial building, half-timbered building on a massive basement, hipped roof, rebuilt in the 1st half of the 18th century, eaves-side facade design around 1870, in the courtyard a remarkable wooden column from the Renaissance, probably earlier open loggia, associated small courtyard building, building in the core probably 1st. Half 17th century.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Row of tenement houses "Schlossstrasse", Marstallstrasse 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, Weiherstrasse 19, 20 1910 Row of tenement houses "Schlossstrasse", eight three-storey plastered buildings in the neo-baroque style, mansard roofs with slate roofing, colossal pilasters with capitals, house entrances with intricately sculptural decoration - designed as a representative, symmetrical row of houses stylistically based on urban ensembles of the Baroque, with emphasis on the corner and central buildings, 1910-1914 planned, conceived, built as an entrepreneur and several times also as a builder by the Durlach architect Wilhelm Sackberger.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Mittelstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Residential and commercial building Mittelstrasse 3 2nd half of the 16th century Residential and commercial building, door frames with late Gothic framework, protruding half-timbered upper floor with decorative elements (today plastered).
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Economic building Mittelstrasse 4th 1st half of the 18th century Economy building, today residential and workshop building, two-storey half-timbered building, fire walls in solid masonry, eaves-sided arcade with open stairs, in front of the building a round-arched basement entrance (formerly belonged to the building Mittelstr. 6).
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Back cabin Mittelstrasse 5 Early 18th century Rear dwelling house, single-storey and eaves solid construction with a gable roof, early 18th century, owned by the Hintersassen Ehrensperger in 1739, later by the day laborer Jacob Albrecht Philipp, dormer built in 1904
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Model house Mittelstrasse 6th Around 1800 Model house, two-storey half-timbered and solid construction, spoilage of the destroyed predecessor building at the rear of house A 16 JAWR 90 (formerly part of building Mittelstrasse 4)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Mittelstrasse 9a Between 1706 and 1716 Residential house, two-storey half-timbered and solid construction, associated economic building, courtyard wall with arched gate, owned by the wife of the operator Zachmann (at that time it belonged to today's Mittelstr. 11), in 1739 owned by the cooper Georg Christian Renck
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Mittelstrasse 11 17th century Residential house, two-storey half-timbered and solid construction with hipped roof, upper floor with decorative framework elements (plastered), drilled side doors with volutes, rosettes and diamond cut, 17th century. Originally used as a city palace, it is said to have belonged to the Prince Diocese of Speyer, later it was used as an agricultural courtyard. The property was divided into inheritance (see Mittelstr. 9 a, the coat of arms above the gate was removed there, originally Baden coat of arms with orb above the spangenhelm and rich acanthus tendrils)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Duplex house Mittelstrasse 12-14 1706 Semi-detached house, model house, two-storey gateway house with arched gate and window parapets, 1706 in separate ownership, 1739 in separate ownership of the armourer Philipp Crameter and the widow of the shoemaker Israel Hegel (scooter No. 86 and 87)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Mittelstrasse 16 1739 Residential house, gateway house, two-storey, exposed half-timbering on a solid ground floor, decorative half-timbered form in a parapet, early 18th century, owned by the weaver Leonhard Fischer and the shoemaker Caspar Schenck in 1739, changes made in the 19th century
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Bull's armory Mittelstrasse 18th 1st half of the 18th century Bull's armory, residential house, model house with gate drive, two-storey, plastered half-timbered building with workshop part, associated outbuilding, 1st half of the 18th century. The house is said to have survived the city fire, which is why its structural core is probably older. 1706 and 1739 owned by the carpenter Georg Friedrich Allas (Allaß) and the rider Christoph Gabriel Brunner (1739)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Neßlerstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Augustenberg
Augustenberg Neßlerstrasse 23, 25, 29 1830 Augustenberg (entity)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Neuensteinstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Residential and commercial building Neuensteinstrasse 5 1905 Residential and commercial building, today a rental building, three-storey solid building in a corner, strict Art Nouveau forms, the door to the shop is now walled up, Karl Kreutz as architect and builder, 1905
protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Neuensteinstrasse 6th 1901 Residential and commercial building, today rented apartment building, three-storey solid building in sweeping neo-renaissance forms, remarkable console sculptures, shop entrance closed in 1934, associated wash house in the courtyard, by the architect Hermann Bull for the plasterer Jakob Wichmann, 1901
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Neuensteinstrasse 9 1904 Residential and commercial building, today a rental apartment building, three-storey solid building in a corner, asymmetrical facade design in strict Art Nouveau forms, shop entrance at the corner of the building walled up in 1938, by the architect Gustav Dünkel for Wilhelm Dill, marked 1904
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Rental house Neuensteinstrasse 10 Around 1905 Rental apartment building, three-storey solid building in neo-Gothic forms, three-dimensional decorative fields in the window parapets, dwarf house with crooked hip and ornamental half-timbered gable.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Rental house Neuensteinstrasse 12 1904 Rental apartment building, three-storey solid construction with doorway, curved gable, two-storey bay window with sculpted ornamental forms and coat of arms, master bricklayer Karl Höfel as architect and client.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Nonnenbühl

image designation location Dating description
Duplex house Nonnenbühl 5 and 7 1910 Double residential building, single-storey, mansard roofs with crooked hip, balcony alcove, 1910 by the architect Adolf Wüst for Georg Schumacher (No. 5) and Philipp Krieger (No. 7)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Nonnenbühl 6 1910 Single-storey house with a clapboard mansard roof and curved gable, bay window on the eaves side, by the architect Hermann Bull for the master tailor Fritz Ungewitter.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Oberwaldstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Luther Church Durlach Oberwaldstrasse 37 1927 Luther Church with rectory, three-storey main building on the eaves, Luther sculpture in front of the bell tower, pointed arched gates, church hall with geometrically decorated stucco ceiling, on the back wall mural depicting the crucifixion by Carl Vocke, 1927–30 by Georg Dünkel
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Ochsentorstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Bridge over the moat Ochsentorstr. see also city wall; Bridge over the city moat (no longer visible today)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building
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Residential building Ochsentorstr. 4th Between 1700 and 1706 Residential house, originally a blacksmith's shop, today a residential building with a restaurant, two-storey with hipped roof, solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, decorative motifs in the parapets, newly built by farrier Peter Geibel
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


House and back building Ochsentorstr. 5 19th century Residential house and rear building, two-storey and eaves solid construction.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Ochsentorstr. 8th Early 18th century Residential house, model house, archway attached to the side, two-story building in corner position, hipped roof, named in 1716 as a model dwelling of the tailor Vögtlin
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Duplex house Ochsentorstr. 9 Around 1860 Double residential building, two-storey with two separate entrances, plaster band structure, rounded lintels, two cellars of the previous building (Zum Rappen inn built in 1699 as a purely half-timbered building, then used as a high school or pedagogy building until 1781)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Ochsentorstr. 11 1689 Residential house, one of three buildings that were built as drip houses between two alleys, massive ground floor before the city fire of 1689, reconstruction as a model house, roof with double chair around 1700, southern extension around 1750
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Ochsentorstr. 17th 1706 Residential house, today residential house with restaurant, two-storey and eaves, massive ground floor, exposed half-timbering with decorative shapes in the parapet fields on the upper floor, rebuilt in 1706 by the blacksmith Wendel Goldschmid, owned by the family until at least 1842, then several generations of the Schumacher family Groner
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Ochsentorstr. 17 a 17th century Residential and commercial building, two-storey and eaves, gable roof with hip hip.


Residential building Ochsentorstr. 18th 1711 Residential house, model house with doorway, today a restaurant, two-storey and eaves, marked 1711, 1716 owned by the widow of the chamberlain merchant, later butcher Kindler, 1835 beer business, 1888 brewery
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Ochsentorstr. 19th 1899-1900 Residential building, two-storey eaves and unplastered brick building with dormers and wooden shutters, very completely preserved interior, 1899-1900 according to plans by A. Wüst for the carpenter Gustav May, the building was erected over the moat, which later fell dry and made another cellar room possible.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Gasthof Zum Pflug Ochsentorstr. 24 1661 Gasthof Zum Pflug, model house with doorway in corner position, tavern sign, upper floor half-timbered, courtyard-sided arcade, in the doorway door with timber frame, marked 1661. The inn was founded as a shield economy in 1723 by Johann Georg Hager, the economy was initially set up on the upper floor of the house. Ground floor rebuilt in the 19th century, barrel cellar facing Jägerstrasse, building wing facing Jägerstrasse only built in the 2nd half of the 18th century.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


City wall Durlach Ochsentorstr. 26, 28 City fortification made of city wall and Zwingermauer
Protected according to § 28 DSchG


Palmaienstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Residential building Palmaienstrasse 7th Around 1900 Residential house, two-storey and eaves solid construction, unplastered and multi-colored clinker brick facade with mansard roof.


Residential building Palmaienstrasse 10 1898 Residential house, three-storey solid building on the eaves, dwarf house with stepped gable, Emil Sickinger as architect and client.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Pfinzstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Faience Manufactory Pfinzstrasse 66 1728 Faience manufactory, today a dormitory, two-storey plastered building on the eaves with a doorway and half-hipped roof, six-axis building facing the street, at the corner of the house a bracket with the inscription 1664 IIBMSR, two wing structures with hipped roofs on the courtyard side, 1728 by the porcelain painter Johann Heinrich Wachenfeld and court goldsmith Johann Ernst Croll established. The Durlach faience lasted until the 1820s, then the chicory and shoe factory from 1901. Basic renovation in 1993.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Pfinzstrasse 69 1906 Residential and commercial building, window and door frames in neo-Gothic design, three-story solid building, eaves with a mansard roof, shop and gate, by the architect Alfred Hornung for the master carpenter Ludwig Falkner.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Pfinzstrasse 71 Around 1900 Residential and commercial building, window and door frames in neoclassical design, three-storey solid construction, eaves with a mansard roof, shop and gate, by the architect Adolf Wüst for the master painter Joseph Stix.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Pfinzstrasse 73 1909 Residential and commercial building, today residential building, three-storey solid construction with a mansard hipped roof in a corner, large mid-height houses, two-storey bay windows at the corner of the building, by the architect Adolf Wüst for the building contractor Franz König, inscribed 1909
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Pfinztalstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Durlach market fountain
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Durlach market fountain Pfinztalstrasse 1862 Market fountain, 1862/65. The previous fountain was built here in 1567, in honor of Margrave Charles II (died 1577), who made Durlach a residence. The earlier fountain figure is believed to be Margrave Karl II in Durlach, possibly a Roland figure. This figure was renovated in 1911 and brought to the town hall. Today there is a copy on the Rathausaltan, the original is in the Pfinzgau Museum. In 1929 the cast iron attachment was destroyed. 1992 redesign as a love fountain by Klaus Ringwald.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Train memorial
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Train memorial Pfinztalstrasse (Palace Square) 1928 Train memorial, memorial for the soldiers of the Durlach Train Battalion who fell in World War I, obelisk on a flat square base, inaugurated in 1928, built according to a design by the architect Hermann R. Alker. Originally involved in a garden redesign by Alkers of the former parade ground.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Durlach waterworks
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Durlach waterworks Pfinztalstrasse 1 1896 see also Wolfweg; Waterworks, two-storey solid construction with decorative forms of the Neo-Renaissance, ashlar or brick-clad on the upper floor, stone window crosses, bay windows and gable structures, gate wall with windows, associated one-storey economic building with knee floor, half-timbered construction with brick filling, loading dome. Erected in 1896. (Totality), (see also Wolfweg, water elevated tank). The gargoyles next to the gate probably once belonged to Karlsburg. The fountain tower from 1699, which was rebuilt in 1824 and demolished in 1895, was previously located at the site of today's waterworks. The modern pumping station transported the water from the spring on Badener Strasse to a high reservoir on the western slope of the Turmberg. The drive took place with water from the Brunnenhaus canal, later with a gas engine. In 1897 a modern water supply network with the first house connections was put into operation. In 1967 the plant was shut down. 1942–63 Durlach library on the upper floor.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Gasthaus zur Blume Pfinztalstrasse 2 1700 Gasthaus Zur Blume, two-storey plastered building in a corner position with a doorway, classicist decorative shapes, keystone with the inscription EJM (probably from the renovation in 1966 by E. Müller), rebuilt around 1700 after fire, rebuilt around 1800. Roof originally with rows of dormers in three storeys, removed around 1900. Margrave Friedrich Magnus transferred the land post to the Herzog family in 1677. Until 1841 post office on the Basel-Frankfurt route. Upper floor converted into a flower cafe in 1927.
Protected according to § 28 DSchG


Eastern old Durlach city wall Pfinztalstrasse 3 1692 see. Pfinztalstrasse 7 and 9; see also Durlach, city fortifications. Eastern wall of the margraves' mint building with window frames, the building belonged to the Renaissance castle that burned down in 1692.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Pfinztalstrasse 4th Mid 18th century Residential and commercial building, two-storey and eaves, mid-18th century (mentioned in the fire insurance book of 1758), mid-gable with a wide gable field and new shop built in 1912 by the architect Karl Kohler for the bookseller Ferdinand Metzler
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential house with side wing and courtyard-side outbuildings Pfinztalstrasse 7th 1560 see. Pfinztalstrasse 9; Residential building with side wing and outbuildings on the courtyard side, contains extensive structural evidence of the Karlsburg castle of the 1560s. Margrave Karl II. (Karle mit der Tasch) moved his residence from Pforzheim here in 1565. He expanded the hunting lodge using the existing foundations and wall lines. The Karlsburg became a magnificent Renaissance building. Today a classicist street facade, around 1810. Once a residential and farm building in the old Karlsburg, there are two spindled stair towers here. Arcades, some of which are still visible, continue to Pfinztalstrasse. In the courtyard there are wings of the building, originally connected by a central section, which still show parts of the old Karlsburg. Double-angled arbor on the half-timbered wing facing Pfinztalstrasse, including a large vaulted cellar. Later construction as a barn (18th century), south wing on the ground floor with ribbed vaults. Since 1811 Gasthof Carlsburg, later the hotel of the same name. Parts of the building once housed the margravial mint. The increase in the Karlsburgstrasse (around 1885) contains the former restaurant hall with stucco and painting on the ceiling, a former beer hall (?) In the southeast corner of the property, around 1900.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Pfinztalstrasse 8th 18th century Residential and commercial building, two-storey with arched openings on the ground floor, associated rear building, 18th century, conversions and extensions from 1887/88 (gate closed, floor plan changed) by the architect Rudolph Hermann for the widow Louis Morlock
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Durlach Castle and Castle Garden, today Karlsburg
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Durlach Castle and Castle Garden, today Karlsburg Pfinztalstrasse 9 1562 Palace complex with palace garden, renaissance buildings and baroque cavalier building (totality)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


see also city wall; Residential and commercial building Pfinztalstrasse 10 1703 see also city wall; Residential and commercial building, corner building with a hipped roof, door with ear covers and inscription. Renovated by GAUM ANNO 1787, probably formerly Gasthaus Zur Traube, Schildwirtschaft 1703-1811, shop renovation 1913 by the architect Hermann Bull for the purveyor to the court Oskar Gorenflo, parts of the city wall in the East wall preserved
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


basement, cellar Pfinztalstrasse 13 16./17. Century Cellar, high, solidly bricked barrel vault, flooring made of large sandstone slabs.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Pfinztalstrasse 15th 1706 Residential and commercial building, model house, three-storey and eaves, modern shop fitting, mentioned by the cooper Hans Georg Renck, in 1758 as a three-storey building, in 1842 a soap factory in the back building.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Pfinztalstrasse 16 1706 Residential and commercial building, three-storey in a corner location with a hipped roof, attached rear building, originally two buildings that were combined after 1800, the eastern one was built by Schumacher Oeder in 1716, the western one in 1706 by Secretary Seubert, in the 19th century the Gasthaus Zum Anker


Residential building Pfinztalstrasse 17th 1706 Residential building, three-storey and eaves, facade changed in the 1950s, main building mainly half-timbered construction with balcony loggias, erected shortly after 1706 by postmaster Seutz (Seitz) (see Roller 22), one of three cellar vaults previously preserved, rear building with bakery 1911 from Architect Hermann Bull for master baker Heinrich Kleiber, chimney from 1910, preserved historical interior probably around the same time.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Pfinztalstrasse 18th 1698 Residential house, later a rear house, two-storey and eaves, plastered half-timbered building on a massive basement with large barrel vault, round-arched walls to the basement exit, inscription on the lintel of the front door Johann Conr. Zachmann (= surgeon and valet) with the emblems anchor and antlers and the year 1698.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Pfinztalstrasse 20th 1706 Residential and commercial building, two-storey plastered building in a corner position with a hipped roof, arched gate in the courtyard wall, rebuilt in 1706 by Johann Conrad Zachmann, surgeon and valet


Residential and commercial building Pfinztalstrasse 21st 1698 Residential and commercial building, three-storey and eaves, spiral staircase in the house from the 17th century, rebuilt in 1698 by the widow of the wealthy trader Hans Adam Wetzel, at that time still together with Pfinztalstrasse. 23, when the city was renovated in 1764, both still have fountain and access rights in common), redesigned around 1800 in classical forms; Draw well, in the courtyard of the building with two square supports over a round basin, marked 17 AC W 01 on the crossbar.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Pfinztalstrasse 24 1703 Residential and commercial building, model house, three-story and plastered half-timbered building in a corner position on a massive basement, mansard hipped roof, modern shop fitting, galleries on wooden consoles on the courtyard side, marked 1703, built by the court goldsmith E. Groll
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Pfinztalstrasse 25th 1698 Residential and commercial building, model house with doorway, three-storey, plastered visible framework, modern shop fitting, 1698, 1706 as the newly built house of the merchant, councilor and later mayor JM Bürcklin, trading house until the middle of the 19th century
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Pfinztalstrasse 27 Around 1700 Residential and commercial building, model house, three-storey, plastered visible framework, 1706 owned by the merchant and court relative Wilhelm Schumm, trading house until the middle of the 19th century
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Pfinztalstrasse 29 1689 Residential and commercial building, at the corner of the building a polygonal bay window with bell dome, windows with ear framing, tower ground floor 17th century, the rest of the inventory 18th century. The structural core of the house probably dates from the time before the fire of 1689, in the 1930s it was renovated and returned to its supposed original condition. Originally there were two houses here: The eastern one was built between 1706 and 1716 for the merchant W. Schumm and in 1729 went to the Hofaktor Fein, the owner of the adjacent corner house, where the bay window was already mentioned in 1680 and has been owned by the merchant and since 1656 later court factors family Fein was.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Evangelical town church Durlach
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Evangelical town church Durlach Pfinztalstrasse 31 1255 Evangelical town church, first mentioned in 1255, dedicated to St. Consecrated to Stephan, Protestant since 1556. The oldest part is the base of the tower, which probably dates back to the 12th century; it was continued in the octagonal Gothic style. The nave was originally flush with the tower, it was widened at the end of the 15th century. 1689 tower helmet and nave destroyed. Reconstruction inaugurated in 1700 according to a design by Domenico Egidio Rossi, at that time the choir was built on old foundations and a sacristy was added to the south side. The tower was not completed until 1739 by Benedikt Burtscher. An important crucifix made of sandstone, originally in the old cemetery (around 1500, attributed to the school of Nikolaus von Leyden). Pulpit with rich rocailles decoration, font from the 18th century. Margraves Karl August Johann Reinhard and Christoph are buried in the choir (tombstones), the sons of the city's founder, Margrave Karl Wilhelm. Epitaph of Baroness Dorothea von Pelcke, 1768. Further tombstones are in the Pfinzgaumuseum and on the west wall inside the church, cf. also other important tombs in the church. Organ brochure by Johann Philipp and Johann Heinrich Stumm, 1755
Protected according to § 28 DSchG


Lion pharmacy Pfinztalstrasse 32 Around 1900 Löwenapotheke, formerly possibly court pharmacy, residential and commercial building, four-storey solid building in a corner, decorative neo-renaissance forms, a plastic lion with a heraldic cartouche and aesculapian staff in a blown gable, around 1900, a pharmacy can be identified at this point as early as 1706.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Town hall Durlach
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Town hall Durlach Pfinztalstrasse 33 1551 Town hall, mentioned for the first time in 1551, rebuilt by court architect Johann Heinrich Schwartz after the town fire in 1714–17, fundamental redesign in 1845 by Jakob Hochstätter. Bell in the tower from 1718 (inscription). The balcony figure is a copy from 1929 of the fountain figure in the market square, the original today in the Pfinzgau museum. Hunger table in the foyer, originally at the Bienlein gate, which was broken off in 1841. Large vaulted cellar. Staircase renewed in 1950/51.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Pfinztalstrasse 35 and 37 1698 Residential and commercial building, model house, today three-storey in corner position, roof hipped, number 35 is GCO 1710 AMO (= Georg Orth, on the rear building in Rathausgässchen the renewed inscription CS 1765 (= Carl Steinmetz, Dreher), door lintel after renovation on two metal supports , Facade with plastered visible framework. Corresponding one-storey extension on the courtyard side, No. 37 built by the butcher Christoph Schweitz before 1698
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Wild house Pfinztalstrasse 38 1706 Wildisches Haus, residential and commercial building, model house, two-storey corner location, wrought-iron grille in the skylight of the door to Rappenstrasse, named after Mayor Wild (1680), built in 1706 by the three sons of the stable master and personal surgeon Friedrich Cornelius Föckler, who died in 1705, renovated in 1739, Described as a solid construction in 1758
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Pfinztalstrasse 39 1719 Residential house, model house, since around 1840 Zum Kranz tavern, two-storey corner location, upper storey timber frame with decorative elements, plastered over, built before 1719 by the Wagnerians Christoph and Hans Simon Fröhlich
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Model houses Pfinztalstrasse 40, 42 Early 18th century Model houses, double properties with gate, today residential and commercial buildings, two-storey and eaves, at the beginning of the 18th century, No. 40 was rebuilt in 1706 by the lathe operator HG Satzger, in 1912 shop fitting (No. 40) by the architect Hermann Bull for the master baker Karl Kayser
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Pfinztalstrasse 43 1706 Residential and commercial building, model house with doorway, two-storey, ornamental framework on the 1st floor (exposed), 1706 by the butcher Niclaus Leutz, extended in 1933
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Pfinztalstrasse 44 1st half of the 18th century. Residential building, two-storey plastered half-timbered house, outside staircase and gallery in the block interior.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Pfinztalstrasse 45 2nd half of the 19th century Residential and commercial building, today an inn, three-storey and eaves-standing solid construction.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building
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Residential and commercial building Pfinztalstrasse 52 1689 Residential and commercial building, model house, formerly an inn and café, three-storey and eaves, plastered half-timbered facade, rebuilt before 1706 by pastry baker Johann Leonhardt Laiblin, 1756 until at least 1888 Zum Engel signage, increased after 1782, 1915 Café-Restaurant Fürstenberg
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building
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Residential and commercial building Pfinztalstrasse 54 1706 Residential and commercial building, half-timbered building in corner location, arched gate to Zunftstrasse, visible half-timbering (exposed in 1982) with decorative elements, originally separate houses, jointly owned since 1752, after 1802 also structurally combined under a single house number, the eastern one rebuilt in 1706 for the city master builder Pfullinger, The more ornate corner house is already in the possession of the pastor Johann Martin Halbusch in 1680 and serves as a dwelling in 1698, since 1716 in changing ownership of merchants (Schumm, Stuber, Nußberger, Weber)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Schildwirtschaft Zur Krone Pfinztalstrasse 56 and 56a 1698 Schildwirtschaft Zur Krone, today a bank and residential building, was partially rebuilt in 1698-1700 by the new owner, Mayor and Kronenwirt Johann Michael Lamprecht, as a three-story house, the Chamber Council Lamprecht sold the inn in 1744, which had been the seat of the Neue Durlacher Reading Society with reading room since 1842. The inn is later in the Pfinztalstr. 58, then in dien Pfinztalstr. 60 have been relocated. On the 1st floor No. 56: figurative stucco ceilings with the sacrifice of Isaac and a shepherd scene, early 18th century. Cellar No. 56a: Medieval cellar vault, there a round arched door to the neighboring cellar (Pfinztalstrasse 56)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Gasthaus Zur Krone Pfinztalstrasse 58 and 60 1835 Gasthaus Zur Krone with extension, today residential and commercial buildings, No. 58 built after 1835, No. 60 was added to the inn as a historicist hall with guest rooms in 1895, architect Adolf Wüst for Friedrich Steinbrunn (material entity)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Pfinztalstrasse 64 1901 Residential and commercial building, four-storey and eaves solid building with a richly decorated facade of the neo-renaissance, by the architect Camill Frei for the brewery owner Carl Meyer, marked 1901.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Gasthaus zum Ochsen Pfinztalstrasse 64 1901 Gasthof Ochsen, two-storey, eaves half-timbered and solid building with a half-hipped roof, a cooper's emblem (cooper's hammer and two crossed strap hooks) and inscription IH IA KOCH 1746 (= Johann Jakob Koch) on the lintel. The Ochsengasse, which led to the horse pond on the Pfinz, once opened next to the building. The inn was first mentioned in 1664, today's house was sold in 1702, the building inscription indicates a renovation. The property originally consisted of a stable, barn, courtyard and garden. The owner from 1746-1773 was one of the largest landowners in Durlach.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Pfinztalstrasse 69 1901 Residential and commercial building, four-storey solid building in a corner, two-storey corner bay window with loggia, decorative forms of neo-Gothic and neo-renaissance, by the architect Adolf Wüst for Gustav May, designated 1901.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Pfinztalstrasse 76 and 76a 1904 Residential and commercial building, three-storey solid building in a corner, house stone and plaster facade in heavy Art Nouveau forms, 1904 by the architect Friedrich Bader for the plasterer Wilhelm Herrmann.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Pfinztalstrasse 77 1906 Residential and commercial building, three-storey and eaves solid construction, large dwarf-like bay window, by the architect Friedrich Sackberger for the plasterer Jakob Widmann.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


United schools
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United schools Pfinztalstrasse 78 1872 School building with gym and fountain, built by Heinrich Lang, 1872-1878. (Totality). 1876 ​​after the demolition of the official cellar and warehouse, a new school was built as a United Schools, Pro and Realgymnasium, elementary and trade school, called Friedrich School since 1913, in the Weimar Republic Schiller School. After World War II, a branch of secondary school was introduced, since 1964 pure secondary school. On the building marked Vereinigteschulen 1878.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Fallen monument for the dead in the war of 1870/71 Durlach
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Fallen monument for the dead in the war of 1870/71 Durlach Pfinztalstrasse 78 1878 in front of the school building; Fallen monument to the dead in the war of 1870/71, statue of Mars on a high pedestal with inscription plaque, inaugurated together with the school in 1878.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Imperial Post Office Pfinztalstrasse 79 1890 Imperial post office, today residential and commercial building, two-storey unplastered solid building with hipped roof, on the gable structure an imperial eagle with imperial crown and flying ribbons, as breast shield the Prussian eagle covered with the Hohenzollern shield, above this a crown, 1890/91
protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Pfinztalstrasse 81 1913 Residential and commercial building, three-storey solid building with a mansard hipped roof in corner position, corner bay window with sculptural decorations, well-preserved staircase furnishings, by the architect Karl Kohler for Heinrich Meyer, 1913-14
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Pfinztalstrasse 82 2nd half of the 19th century Residential and commercial building, two-storey and eaves, late classicist decorative elements.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Two residential and commercial buildings Pfinztalstrasse 83, 85 1927 Two residential and commercial buildings, previously partly a hotel (No. 85); three-storey plastered buildings in baroque style, in 1927 both buildings were planned by the Karlsruhe architect G. Dünkel, the modern reinforced concrete structures probably by H. Dörr from Karlsruhe. No. 85 was significantly redesigned inside, in 1927 here building application for a hotel with café and restaurant, later Hotel Post (1929). No. 83 with a well-preserved interior.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Pfinztalstrasse 86 18th century Residential and commercial building, model house, two-storey and eaves, dwarf house and shop installation with the gate closed in 1899, color design of the facade according to findings
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Gasthaus Gruener Hof Pfinztalstrasse 92 2nd half of the 19th century Gasthaus Grüner Hof, two-storey and eaves solid building with a gable roof, late classicist facade decorations, wall paintings inside.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Pfistergrund

image designation location Dating description
House Schneider Pfistergrund 25 1987-1991 Haus Schneider, two- to three-storey residential building on a hillside, wooden scaffolding, based on designs by Heinz Mohl from Karlsruhe, built by Berthold Rosewich.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Pforzheimer Strasse

image designation location Dating description
Railway bridge over the Pfinz
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Railway bridge over the Pfinz Pforzheimer Strasse 1920 Railway bridge over the Pfinz, reinforced concrete suspension structure with machined surfaces.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Posseltstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Residential building Posseltstrasse 4th Around 1905 Residential house, two-storey solid construction with a half-hipped roof, eaves-side stand bay window, decorative truss elements.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Posseltstrasse 8th 1905 Residential building, two-storey, gable-independent solid construction, stone-faced with a slate-covered roof, dwarf house, gable-sided bay window with balcony, by the architect Hugo Slevogt for the laboratory director Arthur Loos.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Reseda villa Posseltstrasse 9 1905 Villa Reseda, residential building, one- and two-storey solid construction with staircase tower, hipped roofs, building plastic with strict Art Nouveau forms, rustic masonry, enclosing walls with iron grating
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Posseltstrasse 15th 1909 Residential house, two-storey and gable-independent solid construction with a dwarf house, gable field with slate and half-timbered elements, associated retaining wall with iron grating and garden gate, by the architect Adolf Wüst for Gustav Petry.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Garden pavilion Posseltstrasse 17a 1919 Garden pavilion, open wooden construction with curved roof, unplastered sandstone base on a hillside, 1919 by Hermann Bull from Durlach
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


State winery Posseltstrasse 19th 1911 State winery (totality): main building and pre-greenhouse, initially single-storey, 1911/12 by the grand ducal district building inspection, including new terracing and wall renovations of the vineyards, 1929/30 structural enlargement of the buildings, including heights and wing extensions on the main building, enlargement of the refining room, second floor in the lower floor Driving room, larger vine wood cellar, new administration rooms on the upper floor. In 1832, Margrave Wilhelm set up a vineyard here; in 1875 it went to an innkeeper in Durlach, in 1887 to the city of Durlach, and in 1903 to the state of Baden. Establishment of a vine processing plant, which was subordinate to the Agricultural Research Institute Augustenberg until 1921 and then went to the Freiburg Wine Institute. Since 1946, the Durlach facility has been an independent institution for the wine-growing region of the North Baden regional council. Basement facilities meanwhile comprehensively modernized.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Raiherwiesenstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Block of flats and single buildings Raiherwiesenstr. 2, 2a, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16 / Hauptbahnstr. 8th Around 1920 Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Rappenstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Residential building Rappenstrasse 1 1716 Residential house, model house, two-storey and eaves, rebuilt in 1716 by the baker Johann Jakob Korn, dormers 1925
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Rappenstrasse 2 1758 Residential house, in the 20th century Gasthaus "Zum Rappen", two-storey and eaves, massive staircase in the ground floor hall with cast-iron balusters, mid-house with two narrow mid-height buildings, steep roof with a simple chair, three chimneys with a rare support structure, on the ground floor round arched windows (center 19th century), at the apex of the cellar arch, heraldic cartouche with two crossed hammers and the inscription "16 HM 18", probably rebuilt in the 1st half of the 18th century, called tannery since 1758, used by one white and one Rotgerber
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Rappenstrasse 3 1704 Residential house, model house, two-storey and eaves, solid ground floor, above half-timbered, arched door, window on the upper floor with ear cape, inscribed on the window "1704" with coat of arms (double butcher's ax with initials JGN = (Johann / Hans) Georg Niclaus, butcher), the cellar still comes from the previous building
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Craftsman residence Rappenstrasse 8th 1706 Craftsman's house, today a house, two-storey plastered half-timbered building in a distinctive spur position, solid base, knee floor, workshop on the ground floor, named in 1706 as the new home of the saddler HG Muncke, remodeled in the 19th century and used as a wagon workshop.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Rappenstrasse 9 Residential house, model house, single-storey and eaves, doorway, associated workshop building of a shoemaker, well-preserved historical furnishings, owned by the shoemaker Johann Schuh in 1716, nail smithy from 1758 to 1808
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Gasthof Rappen, now a residential building Rappenstrasse 13 17th and 18th century Gasthof Rappen, today a residential building, two-storey model house with a doorway, half-timbered construction with an open arcade to the courtyard side, single-storey rear building with a large, barrel-vaulted cellar, associated small stable house, courtyard paving with cobblestones.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Rappenstrasse 15th 1706 Residential house, once the Zum Löwen inn (1706 to around 1735), then the goldsmith family's blacksmiths, probably built by the landlord HM Hecht, two-storey and gable-free with a gable roof, probably an older structural core
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building (No. 25) Rappenstrasse 23 and 25 Residential house (No. 25), two-storey model house in a corner position, arched gate, arcades in the inner courtyard, until the middle of the 18th century two houses were distinguished here, in 1716 the white baker Matthias Deeg built the southern part, around 1800 to around 1840 it is located here a street restaurant, associated smaller house (no. 23), beginning of the 18th century (totality)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Vine Road

image designation location Dating description
Residential building Rebenstrasse 1 1st half of the 19th century Residential building, two-storey and eaves, four-axle, gate drive with straight lintel.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Rebenstrasse 3 18./19. century Residential house, two-storey and eaves, four-axle, 1900 extension, workshop building on parallel street.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Rebenstrasse 4th 19th century Residential house, two-storey plastered building with hipped roof in corner position, rusticated basement.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Rebenstrasse 6th 1st half of the 18th century Residential house, two-storey plastered building with hipped roof in corner position, dormer windows.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Gateway house Rebenstrasse 10 Gateway building, two-storey and eaves, five-axis with half-timbered houses, arched gate, door frame with skylight, massive balcony (probably from the Renaissance), drilled window frames, rear houses, one of them with arcade, 17th and 18th centuries. Some components date from before the city fire.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Rebenstrasse 10a 17th century Residential house, three-storey plastered half-timbered house, dwarf house, there loggia with wooden columns, it was originally probably a visible framework.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Reichardtstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Turmberg ruin
More pictures
Turmberg ruin Reichardtstrasse 22-24 12th century Turmberg ruin, today lookout tower, castle complex from the 12th century, destroyed in 1279, keep with humpback blocks from the late 13th century, stair tower with spiral staircase from the 16th century, two barrel-vaulted rooms in the tower, cistern, tower was used in the 15th / 15th century 16. Century as a watchtower, at that time the rectangular pillar to set up an alarm cannon was built, burned out in 1644 and 1689, each time restored, in the late 19th century repair, reconstruction and addition of components (retaining walls with a small tower)
Protected according to § 12 DSchG


Drinking fountain (Turmberg ruin) Reichardtstrasse 22-24 19th century Drinking fountain, sandstone fountain with pump handle, rectangular basin.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Memorial to those who fell in World War I (Turmberg ruin) Reichardtstrasse 22-24 1914 Memorial for the fallen of World War I, relief plate on the north side of the keep, representation of a soldier with a steel helmet wearing a wounded comrade, inscribed 1914/1918 / In memory of the fallen soldiers of the medical comp. 1. XIV. AK San. Komp. 34 San. Komp. 24
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Reichenbachstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Double rental house Reichenbachstrasse 22 and 24 1928 Double rented apartment building, three-storey and eaves solid construction with mansard hipped roof, ground floor rusticated with arched gates, upper storey plastered with pilasters, well-preserved interior, No. 22 for the businessman Gustav Gorenflo, No. 24 for the electrician Wilhelm Kiefer, by architect Adolf Meier.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Rittnertstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Residential building Rittnertstrasse 8th 1900 Residential house, single-storey and eaves solid construction, one-sided crooked hip, eaves-sided dwarf house with ornamental framework in the gable, by the architect Gustav Bader for Amalie Gettert.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Rittnertstrasse 9 1899 Residential house, two-storey and eaves-standing polychrome clinker brick building with a crooked hip roof, eaves-sided gable with ornamental framework, by the architect Richard Hengst for the authorized signatory Carl Schick, 1899, 1904 associated garden wall with iron mesh fence and gate.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Basement systems Rittnertstrasse 14th Probably 2nd half of the 19th century. Cellars, high retaining walls made of quarry stone:

Beer and ice cellar of the brewery inn "Zur Guten Quelle", access from Strählerweg, here also window opening, three large barrel vaults in the air raid shelter, access at the corner of Strählerweg / Rittnertstrasse, deep corridor system with gas lock and several concrete barrel vaults, connected to the beer cellar via corridors, around 1938 .
managed to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Rittnertstrasse 12 1898 Residential house, two-storey, eaves and polychrome clinker brick building, ornamental elements made of sandstone, eaves-sided dwelling with balcony, historical window fittings, associated retaining wall and iron fence, by the architect Christian Bull for the widow Karl Genter.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Rittnertstrasse 13 1899 Residential house, single-storey and gable-independent with a half-hipped roof, clinker brick building with ornamental framework elements, associated retaining wall with garden gate, Bruno Urban as the client and architect.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Rittnertstrasse 38 1914 Residential house, two-storey and gable-independent solid construction, two-storey polygonal stand bay with balcony, hipped dwarf house with house entrance, by the architect Wilhelm Sackberger for Wilhelm Eiermann.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Rittnertstrasse 42 1914 Single-storey residential building with a mansard roof, entrance loggia, semicircular arbor with columns, associated garden wall, by the architect Karl Magenau for the chief accountant C. Miltner.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Rittnertstrasse 44 1923 Residential house, two-storey solid construction with hipped roof, one-storey bay window with balcony, sill cornice, associated garden wall, by the architect Hermann Wüst for August Burkardt.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Rittnertstrasse 57 1926 Residential house, two-storey plastered building with gable ends, saddle roof with hip foot, bright, expressive decorative shapes and wide corner pilasters on rough plaster, eaves side gable, half-timbered garden house, garden wall with lattice inserts, by the architect Max Dürr for the savings bank controller Christian Oeder.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Rittnertstrasse 61 1923 Residential house, single-storey and gable-free on a high basement, pointed arched roof with bat dormers, associated garden wall, by the architect Hermann Reinhardt Alker for the chemist Paul Lederle -
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Country house with garden Rittnertstrasse 70 1919 Country house with garden, single-storey and gable-independent solid construction on a high basement, mansard roof with crooked hip and balcony loggia glazed on the gable side, east gable, well-preserved interior (doors, floors, stairs), associated, agriculturally used garden with economic and stable construction, later built garage construction at the residential building , by the architect Hermann Bull for the farmer Heinrich Leussler.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Apartment building Rittnertstrasse 81 1964 Apartment building, two- to three-storey, cubic structure with flat roofs on a hillside, plastered and partly wood paneling, associated dry stone walls of the historic vineyard, 1964–65 by Reinhard Gieselmann as architect and client
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Rittnertstrasse 103 1965 Residential house, single-family house on a hillside, red brick masonry, associated outdoor facilities, by Gernot Kramer and G. Pfaue, 1965–66


Lamprechtshof Rittnertstrasse 202 Lamprechtshof, Hofanlage, Vierseithof, laid out by Durlach's mayor and councilor Johann Friedrich Erhard Lamprecht (1709-1777), he contributed to the reclamation of swampy soil and the clearing of forest areas, for which he received the honorary title of Princely Chamber Councilor from the margrave. Courtyard area closed on three sides with residential and utility buildings, half-timbered buildings on a massive basement, gate entrance on the narrow eastern side with stone gate posts adorned with small obelisks. Running fountain with a massive trough, marked 1892. (Subject entity)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Scooter Street

image designation location Dating description
Residential building Rollerstr. 4th Around 1925 Residential building, today city administration, three-storey plastered building on the eaves.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Rollerstr. 6th 1718 Residential house, model house with doorway, two-storey and eaves, four-axis, inscription on the keystone of the archway JK 1718 (= Johann Jakob Kiefer, shoemaker)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Rollerstr. 8th 1706 Residential and commercial building, model house, two-storey and eaves, five-axis, modern shop fitting, built by the gunsmith Matthias Bull, long owned by the Bull family's gunsmiths.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Schlesier Strasse

image designation location Dating description
Memorial to those who fell in the war of 1870/71 Schlesier Str. 47, at the Aue cemetery Late 19th century Memorial to those who fell in the war of 1870/71, eagle figure on obelisk, pedestal with inscriptions, signed "Hermann Durlach".
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Seboldstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Administration building Badische Maschinenfabrik Seboldstrasse 1 1922 Administration building Badische Maschinenfabrik, today the start-up center, three-storey solid building in corner position, structure through a frescoed colossal pilaster, third storey separated by a console cornice, saddle roof with triangular gable, gate drive, by the architect Hermann Walder, 1922
protected according to § 2 DSchG


Former Evangelical Peace Church, today part of a free church community center in Durlach Seboldstrasse 4th 1866 Evangelical Peace Church, three-axis small church building in neo-Gothic style, three pointed arched windows on the street side, inside a small gallery, inaugurated on September 26, 1875 after the establishment of the Durlach Evangelical Community in 1866, renovated in 1933 and 1949, used by the community until 1965, today part of a free church community center
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building with gate drive Seboldstrasse 6th 2nd half of the 19th century Residential building with a doorway, two-storey and eaves, mansard roof, two hatches with triangular gables, late classicist facade structure, conversion of the attic in 1912 by Adolf Wüst
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Duplex house Seboldstrasse 18, 20 1897 Double house, later a restaurant and hotel, today Hotel Stadt Madrid, three-storey solid building, plaster structure in the neo-renaissance style, by the architect Adolf Wüst for Karl Leussler.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential houses Seboldstrasse 22-24 1902 Residential houses, exposed sandstone, by the architect Bader for Karl Leussler.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Spitalstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Courtyard Spitalstr. 6th 1750 Courtyard, model house with gate drive, two-storey and eaves, four-axis, one-storey annex with pent roof attached to the side, still undeveloped in 1716, the house is owned by the weaver A. Krebs in the middle of the 18th century.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Spitalstr. 11 Around 1860/70 Residential building, two-storey and eaves, four-axis with high window openings, arched lintels on the ground floor, diamond-shaped decorative fields on the window parapets.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Spitalstr. 12 1st half of the 18th century Residential house, two-storey and eaves, two-axis with knee stick.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Spitalstr. 13 1890 Residential house, model house, two-storey and eaves, three-axis, front door with skylight, inscription 17 MCK 09 (= Catharina Keller), installation of a shop in 1890


Residential building Spitalstr. 15th Residential house, model house, two-storey and eaves, five-axis, still undeveloped in 1716, later owned by city rifleman Wilhelm Beck


Residential building Spitalstr. 17th Residential house, model house, two-storey and eaves, five-axis, half-timbered from the upper floor, basement of the previous building preserved, 1706 residence of Rentkammersecretary J. Christoph Kessel, at that time with courtyard and garden, 1756 property of War Commissioner Kessel
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Vaulted cellar Spitalstr. 18th Vaulted cellar, two large barrel vaults connected to one another in the east under the residential building on the street, which was rebuilt above it in the 18th century after the city was destroyed in 1689, 17th century
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Spitalstr. 20th 1662 Residential house, model house, today a commercial building, two-storey and eaves, twelve-axis front building, of which the part to the west of the arched gate and the upper floor have been renewed. Inscription on the portal: Mr. Johann Georg Dörr Sofia Katharina Dörr built it because of God's blessing everything is located 1788. Profiled portal with volutes, marked in the arched area.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Spitalstr. 25, 27 1721 Residential house, gable-free and two-story, half-hipped roof, plastered half-timbered building with cellar exit, 1735/1721. Post at the entrance to the courtyard (No. 27) marked 1721
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Steinlesweg

image designation location Dating description
Residential building Steinlesweg 1 1923 Two-storey residential building with a hipped roof, bay window with balcony, by the architect Gustav Dünkel for Otto Steponath.


Residential building Steinlesweg 2 1923 Residential house, single-storey solid construction in neo-baroque forms on a high basement, hipped mansard roof, three dwelling houses, associated garden wall with gate and entrance staircase, by the architect Hermann Reinhard Alker for Peter Rech.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Alker house Steinlesweg 3 1925 Alker residential building, single-storey and eaves on a high rusticated basement, pointed arched roof with two large attic houses, standing bay window with balcony, by the architect Hermann Reinhard Alker from Karlsruhe for personal use (interior renovation and expansion by Dietrich Oertel from Karlsruhe in 1978)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Steinlesweg 9 1963-1966 Residential house, two-storey plastered masonry construction with elongated monopitch roof, split level, staggered floor plan, 1963-1966 according to plans by Karlsruhe architect Reinhard Gieselmann for the well-known nuclear physicist Wolf Häfele
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Strählerweg

image designation location Dating description


Residential building Strählerweg 19 1962-65 Residential house, one- and two-storey solid construction with two wings, flat roofs, sand-lime brick masonry, partly wood paneling, terrace with swimming pool and changing room, garden wall and gate, by Rudolf Büchner and Klaus Zimmermann.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Single family home Strählerweg 55 1960 Single-family dwelling, two-storey on a hillside with a protruding upper floor, ribbon windows, roof terrace on the flat roof, associated garden wall and staircase, 1960 by Reinhard Gieselmann
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Strählerweg 57 1961-63 Two-storey residential building on a hillside with a protruding upper floor, terrace on the flat roof, by Edwin Burkart and Erwin Bertsche from Karlsruhe for August Kurzenhäuser.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Red Cross Street

image designation location Dating description
Bungalow with garage Red Cross Street 41 1968 Bungalow with garage, exposed brickwork made of yellow bricks, flat roof construction on internal steel supports, eaves with wooden panels over a continuous light strip, split level, garden and front yard, by the Karlsruhe architect Hermann Helmut Wiechmann from Karlsruhe for Horst Hommel.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Stupferich way

image designation location Dating description
Garden shed Stupfericher Weg 1 (behind) Around 1900 Garden house, single-storey polygonal central building with pyramid roof, continuous lighting with windows from the period of construction, Art Nouveau styles.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Tiefentalstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Monument group Friderichstein, Werderstein, Scheffelstein and Naeherstein Tiefentalstrasse 1876 in the Tiefentalgraben in the mountain forest, southern roadside: "Friderichstein", a low, roughly hewn stone block with the inscription "Friderich Stein", commemorates the Durlach innkeeper Carl Friderich (d. 1894), ran the inn "Karlsburg", politically in 1848 / 49 committed, 1850–94 member of the second chamber of Baden, 1872–76 member of the German Reichstag, 1876 mayor of Durlach, monument erected around 1900. “Scheffelstein”, a low, roughly hewn stone block with the inscription “Scheffel Stein”, commemorates to the poet Joseph Victor von Scheffel (1826-1886), born and deceased in Karlsruhe, monument erected around 1900. “Werderstein”, a low, roughly hewn stone block with the inscription “Werder Stein”, commemorates Karl August Graf von Werder (1808-1887 ), commanded the Baden troops in the war of 1870/71, after that he was commanding general in Karlsruhe, became an honorary citizen of the city after the battle of Belfort in 1870, memorial erected around 19 00. Naeherstein: memorial stone, natural stone with inscription: inherited in 1876 by G government St. Durlach Fhr v. Schilling G Hohenwettersbach d. Jng. Closer.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Turmbergstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Residential building Turmbergstrasse 7th 1927 Residential house, two-storey and gable-free, mansard roof with crooked hip, two-storey standing bay window with balcony, by the architect Adolf Wüst for Karl Metzger, marked KM 1927
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Turmbergstrasse 10 1904 Residential house, two-storey solid construction in a corner location, associated iron grilles, 1955 apartment division and gable change, 1904 according to plans by the architects Kreutz and Schorkopf for the architect K. Kreutz
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Turmbergstrasse 17th 1891 Residential house, two-storey with hipped roof, booth tower, retaining wall to delimit the property, spolie with post horn inserted there, by the architect August Siegrist for Max Bleidorn, designated MB 1891, extension 1897
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


villa Turmbergstrasse 19th 1904 Two-storey villa with a hipped roof, raised rustication, standing bay tower, outside staircase with lion sculptures, enclosure wall with decor, very completely preserved interior, associated garden, 1904 by Wilhelm Sackberger as architect and client.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Turmbergstrasse 21st 1912 Two-storey residential building with a hipped roof, attic house, bay window with balcony, enclosure wall, 1912 by Wilhelm Sackberger for the director Thorwald Bruun.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Turmbergstrasse 23 1904 Residential house, single-storey and gable-independent timber construction on a massive basement, crooked hip roof, balcony loggias, shingled external walls, 1904 by the architects Curjel and Moser for the chief engineer Karl Delisle.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Duplex house Turmbergstrasse 26, 28 1898/99 Double dwelling house, two corner oriels with a pointed hood in the style of the Neo-Renaissance, decorative framework elements, in No. 26 very complete interior with stucco ceilings and overhangs (here in 1911 heightened storeys on the garden side and standing bay), associated retaining walls with iron lattice fence, 1898/99 by the architect Adolf Wüst for the client Carl Steinmetz and Ferdinand Heep
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Turmbergstrasse 27 1892 Residential house, two-storey with hipped roof, eaves-side portholes, one-storey bay window with balcony, rich structure with decorative forms of the Neo-Renaissance, associated garden wall, by the architect Adolf Wüst for Ms. L. Schmelzle, 1892, roof construction in 1911 by the architect Hermann Bull for Franz Veit.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Turmbergstrasse 29 Around 1900 Residential house, two-story polychrome clinker brick building, hipped roof, two-story wooden stand bay, iron arbor with bell roof in the garden, iron fence with decorated archway, by the architect Adolf Wüst for Karl Steinmetz.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Grötzinger Weg

image designation location Dating description
Boat and raft landing Down at Grötzinger Weg (next to) 1766 Boat and raft landing on the southern Pfinzufer east of the Obere Mühle, walled bank fortifications made of yellow sandstone blocks with mooring poles. Here, stone blocks brought in from the Pfinztal could be unloaded from flat boats and reloaded below the Upper Mill, and raft wood could also be moved here. The permanent expansion of the Pfinz began at the instigation of the margraves in 1766/67 at the latest, in order to bring building material to Durlach and from there to Karlsruhe via the stone ship canal. In 1828, rafting and shipping on the Pfinz were stopped.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Weiherstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Garden pavilion Weiherstrasse 1a see also city wall; Garden house Lamprecht, single-storey garden pavilion, raised central building, probably built in the middle of the 18th century by the Lamprecht family, side wings added in the 19th century by the Eglau brewery, baroque door and window frames, fireplace inside, terrace with outside staircase, garden, parts of the City wall (entity), rear extension 1955.
Protected according to § 28 DSchG


Residential building Weiherstrasse 1c 1927 Residential house, today a kindergarten, two-storey solid building with hipped roof, large risalit building with vestibule, enclosed wall, 1927/30 by the architect Gustav Dünkel for Eugen Scherer
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Weiherstrasse 17th 1900 Residential and commercial building, three-storey solid building in a corner, eaves with light natural stone and plastered facade, bay window and corner projectile.


Westmarkstrasse

image designation location Dating description
Residential building Westmarkstrasse 27 Around 1910 Residential house, two-storey, unplastered solid construction in closed development with gate drive, sandstone facade, window bay on the upper floor with balcony in the attic, mansard roof, portico with triangular gable, sculptured decorative elements.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Town hall Aue Westmarkstrasse 69 1811 Aue town hall, two-storey and eaves, saddle roof with bell tower, 1811. Official seat until the incorporation in Durlach in 1921, the last mayor of Au acted here as a registrar until the 1930s.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Wolf way

image designation location Dating description
High reservoir Wolf way 1896 Elevated water tank, single-storey, unplastered portal building on a hillside, rich neo-renaissance decorative forms, gable with Durlach coat of arms, labeled Hochreservoir / built in 1896, created by the company Dyckerhoff & Widmann (see also Pfinztalstrasse 1, waterworks)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Tenth Street

image designation location Dating description
Storage scouring and residential building (totality): Zehntstrasse 1 1772 Storage scouring and residential building (entity):
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Zehntstrasse 2 1850 Residential and commercial building, two-storey and eaves solid construction with console cornice, doorway, associated rear building with courtyard and workshop building, remarkable roof construction with knee-height and large drying roof open to the rear with pike dormers, large vaulted cellar, 1850, modern window installation for shop (1964).
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Vaulted cellar of a craftsman's house Zehntstrasse 3 Vaulted cellar of a craftsman's house, early modern; After the town fire, the house was rebuilt, at that time probably built for a blacksmith. In 1912 the Kiefer property was converted into a caretaker's apartment for the adjacent school after the official cellar was demolished.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Wilhelm Heuss brewery Zehntstrasse 5 1888 Wilhelm Heuss brewery, business and warehouse, two-storey brick building with gable ends, associated wing on the eaves, 1888 by the architect Friedrich Wahl
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building with gate drive Zehntstrasse 6th Mid 19th century Residential building with doorway, two-storey and eaves in corner position, arched lintels in the basement, house entrance walled up.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Zehntstrasse 7th 2nd half of the 18th century Residential house, model house with doorway, two-storey and eaves, built-in shop in 1905 (today dismantled)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Two-storey residential building Zehntstrasse 7a 1925 Two-storey, eaves-standing residential building with doorway, solid construction, ground floor rusticated, upper floor plastered, central bay window with triangular gable and wrought iron balcony, modern roof structures on both sides of the bay window, around 1925.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Guild Street

image designation location Dating description
Residential and commercial building Zunftstrasse 2 Mid 18th century Residential and commercial building, model house, two-storey and eaves, four-axis, on the upper floor decorative plaster with pilaster strips and parapet fields, built in the middle of the 18th century by the bookbinder, councilor and mayor G. Ph.Singeisen and the confectioner CJ Daler
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building model house with gate drive Zunftstrasse 3 1730 Residential and commercial building model house with doorway, two-storey corner building, from the upper floor half-timbered, drilled window frames, base areas of the previous building, in the archway wedge stone with keystone as an emblem, portal with inscription: This building was built by Hans Jacob Becker Shuldhausen zu Berghausen and his wife Anna Eeva 1730, stucco ceilings on the 1st floor, basement facing Spitalstrasse, back to the courtyard half-timbered, here portal with timber frame, inscribed 1581, stump in the courtyard.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Zunftstrasse 4th 1802 Residential building, two-storey and eaves, five-axis, doorway, neo-Renaissance facade structure, associated rear building, property in 1716 owned by pastor Christian Halbusch, 1754 owned by butcher Frühholz, first mentioned as Gasthof Sonne in 1802, reconstruction for Wilhelm Krauss in 1895.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Zunftstrasse 8th 1706 Residential and commercial building, model house, two-storey and eaves, six-axis, gateway building, shop fitting, owned by brewer WB May in 1706, later tailors, glaziers and hat makers are based here. Corresponding half-timbered courtyard building.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Zunftstrasse 9 1707 Residential and commercial building, model house, two-storey and eaves, four-axis, shop fitting in the gate passage, marked MD 1707 (= Michael Duncke, court gardener), since the late 1770s the painter J. Ludwig Kießling lived here,
protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential and commercial building Zunftstrasse 10 1706 Residential and commercial building, model house, two-storey and eaves, six-axis, 1706 new building by the tailor Sigmund Rühl (Riele), gate drive later probably closed with new shop and house entrance, new building courtyard side 1965, shop installation 1899.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Zunftstrasse 11 1716 Residential house, model house, two-storey and eaves, five-axis, exposed half-timbering on the upper floor, massive ground floor, marked HDG (= Hans Daniel Gaum, Färber), owned by him in 1716, associated economic building, in 1764 a color mangle in the courtyard is called
protected according to § 2 DSchG


More pictures Palace of the Baron von Uexküll Zunftstrasse 12 1706 Palais des Freiherrn von Uexküll, residential building, three-storey and eaves, roof structure with ventilation dormers, rear open arcade as a connection to the servants' house, courtyard with rear dwelling, economic building, property before the fire in the possession of Freiherr von Wittersheim, 1706 a house place whereupon a house was built and at the back owned by the forest manager N. Chr. Langenhaag, then rebuilt by Johann Nikolaus von Nidda from Grötzingen, 1716 is called Haus, Scheuer, Garten und Hofreuth, Nidda bequeathed the property in 1722 to his nephew, the regimental field detective Friedrich Christoph Föckler, who bought it from his heir 1747 Baron von Uexküll, President of the Privy Councilor and Prince Educator, the property. Parts of the buildings may date from before 1689, like the trusses at the back. Arched portal and rectangular entrance with vase-like console, which served as a climbing aid in the saddle. Late Gothic spiral staircase from a single trunk inside, floor-to-ceiling wall paneling, late baroque fireplace. Alois Adolph Michael Feininger, grandfather of the painter Lionel, ran a porcelain shop on the property until he emigrated to the USA after the Baden Revolution. In the rear terrace house (parts from the 17th century) there was a cooperage (Schnapswagner) until the mid-1920s. (Entirety)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building
More pictures
Residential building Zunftstrasse 14th 1706 Residential house, model house with doorway, two-storey and eaves, four-axis, exposed half-timbering on the upper floor with decorative elements in the parapet fields, arcade on the courtyard side, cellar of the previous building preserved, 1706 named as a new building by the coppersmith Carl Bauer, associated barn, solid construction with knee stick and ventilation slats, Designated Built in 1848 by Ch. Beller Master Baker (material entirety)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Zunftstrasse 16 Residential house, model house, two-storey and eaves, doorway with a straight lintel, half-timbered construction, street facade replaced by solid masonry in the 19th century, basement of the predecessor buildings present, arcade open to the courtyard side, Spolie in the passage designated 1770, 1716 as a model house of Jacob Heinrich Lindauer , until 1768 owned by the baker family Lindauer, redevelopment 1987/88 by a working group of the Deutscher Werkbund
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Zunftstrasse 18th 1706 Residential house, two-storey with hipped roof, three-axis to the street, portal with skylight, 1706 as a house owned by the former mayor GS Steinmetz (see Zunftstrasse 20)
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Zunftstrasse 20th 1698 Residential house, two-storey and gable-free, half-timbered, partly solid masonry, multi-storey building, 1698 as a house owned by the mayor GS Steinmetz (see Zunftstr. 18), marked PBSTM 1767 (= Philipp Bernhard Steinmetz, Rotgerber) on the keystone of the courtyard arch. The building is an example of the older Durlach house type with stair spindles, St. Andrew's crosses as decorative elements in the window parapet fields. Before 1689, the half-timbered building was probably unplastered, but most of it was rebuilt during the reconstruction. The trunk of the spiral staircase inside was made from one piece.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Zunftstrasse 22, At the city wall 6 1716 Residential house, two-storey with gable and hipped roof, plastered half-timbering on a massive ground floor, built in 1716 by the pastor Wendelin Schütz from Eggenstein, since the 1716s in the margrave's possession as a clerical administration, associated rear building (on the city wall 6), two-storey clinker brick building and chimney, 1901 for the master baker Heinrich Driver, associated wall to the alley An der Stadtmauer.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


See also

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Karlsruhe: cultural monuments