List of cultural monuments in Kleinzschocher

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

Legend

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

List of cultural monuments in Kleinzschocher

image designation location Dating description ID
monument
monument (Map) 1820 (monument) So-called friendship stone with inscription, sandstone monument on a two-tiered base, of local history 09260778
 
Wikidata-logo.svg
Apartment building in half-open development Altranstädter Strasse 8
(map)
1887–1889 (tenement house) Plaster and clinker facade, important from an architectural point of view

Shortly before Christmas 1887, a building application was made for a residential building, and private man Franz Moritz Brückmann secured the structural implementation by carpenter F. Sachse. The protocols for the final inspection are dated June 19, 1889. For property number 10, a retaining wall to the garden was built by builders Erich Seyffert and Josef Popp for Bennes heirs in 1941/1942 in view of the sloping slope. In 1997 a preliminary building permit was issued for a new building to close the gap on the property just mentioned at Altranstädter Straße 10. Building number 8 in question received two apartments per floor as well as three of them behind the sold attic. The facade has the classic historical structure. Here two two-axis side projections encompass the four-axis central section. On the upper floors, clinker surfaces characterize the picture, the ground floor is plastered and the stone plinth is stone-visible. Prefabricated dividing elements and some stucco consoles that can still be found (the eaves zone is smoothed) complement the street-side image of the house, some of which have been preserved. The house entrance door and staircase window to the courtyard have been redesigned in a modern way. Local historical and architectural value. LfD / 2014, 2018

09298657
 
Apartment building in half-open development Altranstädter Strasse 10
(map)
1907–1908 (tenement house) Clinker facade with sandstone structure, the high-quality tenement building in the closed street has a building-historical and a site-historical value

In 1907/1908, a three-storey residential building was built on a narrow, but about 16-meter-deep floor plan within a year. Nitzschke commissioned. Mason foreman Robert Weber implemented plans by the architect Otto Schmidt. A corridor on the first floor led to the stairwell arranged at the rear, with only one apartment on each floor. A small apartment was built for the top floor. In 2004, the approval for the renovation in line with listed buildings was issued and work on the balconies took place in 2006–2007, as well as an attic conversion. The charming facade with a sandstone cladding reaching up to the first floor and further sandstone structuring elements such as sills, window frames and a profiled eaves. Clinker bricks can be found on the two upper floors above. The high-quality tenement building in the closed street has a historical and site-historical value. LfD / 2014

09263461
 
Apartment building in today's half-open development Altranstädter Strasse 11
(map)
1905 (tenement) Plastered facade, the residential building in the closed street has an architectural and a historical value

The tenement house was built in 1905 on behalf of Anna Marie Weber by the executor Robert Weber, based on planning documents from builder Richard Rammelt. In April the old building on the property was demolished and use was permitted on October 11, 1905. The project to modernize the functional area was probably not implemented in 1988. In 2006, the client Dr. Poser Immobilien GmbH in Berlin received the approval under redevelopment law for the “redevelopment of the residential building”, at about the same time approval for the balcony system. Behind the façade with different plaster structures on a sandstone base are two apartments on each floor; an apartment on the top floor that was applied for was not approved in 1905. Molded artificial stone parts and sandstone frames on the ground floor divide the facade, which only extends over three storeys but is eight axes wide. A so-called commercial passage is inserted in the basement on the left. The residential building in the closed street has a historical and a historical value. LfD / 2014

09263462
 
Apartment building in closed development Altranstädter Strasse 13
(map)
before 1915 (tenement) Sandstone facade, residential building with a rare natural stone facade and significance in terms of building history 09263463
 
Double tenement house in closed development Altranstädter Strasse 15; 17
(map)
1913/1914 (double tenement house) Plastered facade with a rich structure, historically important as an apartment building in a closed ensemble 09263464
 
Apartment building in closed development Altranstädter Strasse 19
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) with gate passage, formerly with a shop, plastered clinker brick facade, of architectural significance, characterizing the street space 09298822
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Altranstädter Strasse 20
(map)
around 1910 (tenement) Plastered facade, historically important as a residential building of the reform style period 09263465
 
Apartment house in closed development with stairs to the garden at Altranstädter Straße 23 and wrought iron railings in the courtyard Altranstädter Strasse 21
(map)
1890 (tenement house) Plastered facade, of importance in terms of building history and the history of local development 09263466
 
Residential building in closed development Altranstädter Strasse 23
(map)
1895–1896 (residential building) Villa-like residential building with historicizing clinker brick facade, rear facing frame with clinker brick infill, significant in terms of building history and local development 09263468
 
Apartment house designed in closed development Altranstädter Strasse 28
(map)
1900–1901 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade, wooden panels and painting as well as stucco and stencil painting in the entrance area, of importance in terms of building history

The building files kept in the archive begin with the addition of a “Gewelb” (shop) to the single-storey house owned by Johanna Auguste, who is married to Günther. On December 22nd, 1900, private man Franz Anton Günther applied for the construction of a tenement house and wash house on the property “in place of buildings to be demolished”. According to the building permit issued in February 1901, the house will be built between March and August. In 1917, businessman Ernst Paul Seltmann bought the property at a foreclosure auction and sold it to master blacksmith Hermann Bernhard Hentzschel and Max Alfred Fischer in 1919. The planned installation of an attic apartment in 1929 is not approved. The four-storey apartment building, which was designed in the style of the Wilhelminian style, has a plastered ground floor and a clinker-clad facade on the upper floors. Overall, strict facade structure with structure through concrete blocks and stucco decor, which partly shows influences of Art Nouveau, house passage. LfD / 2010

09263470
 
Residential house in open development Altranstädter Strasse 34
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (residential building) Single-storey half-timbered building, plastered, facing the street, noteworthy in terms of building history and local development, one of the oldest surviving houses in Kleinzschocher 09263472
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Altranstädter Strasse 41
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) with gate passage, formerly with shop, plastered facade, of importance in terms of building history and local development 09263474
 
Two houses on a farm Altranstädter Strasse 42
(map)
around 1800 (residential building), around 1850 (residential building) Single-storey clay building followed by a two-storey residential building, plastered half-timbering, of architectural significance as one of the last testimonies to the farming village of Kleinzschocher 09263475
 
Apartment building in half-open development in a corner, with fencing on Altranstädter Straße Altranstädter Strasse 46
(map)
1895/1900 (tenement) with shop, clinker brick facade, historically significant residential building in a striking urban location 09263476
 
Park
More pictures
Park Antonienstraße
(map)
1931 (park area) At the entrance to the park a monument to the Battle of Nations (see object 09263623), designed system with path system, roundabout, hedges, playground, including kitchen alley and kitchen wood, of importance in terms of gardening and urban planning 09263624
 
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Memorial to those who died in the Battle of Leipzig in 1813 and a green space designed
More pictures
Memorial to those who died in the Battle of Leipzig in 1813 and a green space designed Antonienstraße
(map)
marked 1913 (monument), facility before 1910, later changes (jewelry place) Double crowned bronze eagle on a high pedestal, plate stolen in 2012, of local historical and artistic importance, memorable value, value for popular education, in memory of the Austrians who fell in the Battle of Nations 09263623
 
Two apartment buildings in half-open development, an embankment with stairs to the entrances Antonienstraße 3; 5
(card)
1900/1905 (tenement house) Tenement houses in an elevated position, opposite the confluence with Einsteinstrasse, with a gate passage at number 5, plastered facades, residential buildings with architectural significance due to their elevated position 09263614
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Antonienstraße 7
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09264287
 
Apartment building in closed development and front garden Antonienstraße 9
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Plaster clinker facade, of importance in terms of building history and site development 09298842
 
Apartment building in closed development in a corner and front garden facing Klarastraße Antonienstraße 11
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) with shop, clinker brick facade, historically significant corner building with a large urban presence 09263615
 
Open-plan cinema Antonienstraße 21
(map)
marked 1928 (cinema), 1929 (enclosure and porches) Plastered building in expressionistic forms, of architectural, artistic and local historical importance as a rare testimony to a film theater of the 1920s, worth remembering

The first building application for a movie theater with 1001 seats was submitted on December 6, 1927 by the architect Hermann Mäding (Mölkau and Leipzig). Revised plans took into account the requirements of the building supervision: the almost 958 square meter building was oriented differently on the planned property, the number of spaces was only 917. The Hanoverian Professor Vierthaler was won over for the artistic design. Against the energetic protest of teachers and parents from the 50th elementary school opposite, the groundbreaking ceremony took place on April 16, 1928, the shell test on July 20, and the final inspection on September 12. Master builder Rudolf Müller and the iron construction company Grohmann & Frosch were responsible for the execution. The client was Rudolf-Film-Verleih Inh. Benndorf & Rudolph (Karlstrasse 1). The enclosure was completed in 1929. Unfortunately, the intended ceramic cladding was not used in the facade design and granite plaster was applied instead. In terms of design, the simple building with stepped gable is based on Art Déco. The large hall impressed with its simplicity, good visibility and, as a result of the drawn-in "hall ceiling in Rabitz or Monier construction", also good acoustics. A low-pressure steam heating system provided the necessary heating. The edition of the Leipziger Neuesten Nachrichten of June 24, 1928 mention in connection with the report on the Schauburg cinema of a total of 41 movie theaters in Leipzig with 25,925 seats. In 1932 the Schauburg-Lichtspiele property was acquired by the merchant Alois Hecht. Repairs to the roof and false ceiling were made urgent in 1955 by VEB Kreis-Lichtspielbetrieb Leipzig-Land and the construction company Walter Aurich planned to carry out the work. In 1961 and 1962 there was a changeover to new playback technology (anamorphic widescreen display) and renovation with the installation of a Sparterie acoustic ceiling. The Cinerama system, which cost a total of 136,000 marks, was the first of its kind in the GDR. As the “Panoramakino Schauburg” the film theater gained national importance and was one of the first German cinemas to show a Soviet 3-D film. In 1995 it was converted into a multi-room cinema with three halls and 432 seats. LfD / 2005

09263616
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Antonienstraße 41
(map)
1899–1900 (tenement) With corner shutter, plastered facade, corner building that is effectively perceptible in the street space and relevant to the history of the building

After an initially unsuccessful application process in 1898, Messrs. B. Kuntzschmann and M. Tischendorf, with the power of attorney of the building association for the procurement of inexpensive apartments in Leipzig eGmbH, made another attempt at the corner property in the following year. Statics provided by Mr. Hermsdorf, who was probably also responsible for the plans. In April 1900, after only one year of construction, the final revision was carried out by the building authorities. Two apartments and a shop apartment were installed on the ground floor, the floors above were also designed to be three-horse. A side fence was built in May 1900 (not preserved). For the turn of the year 1918/1919 the installation of an attic apartment - consisting of a kitchen, living room and two chambers - is documented. The approval for the division of the floors into four apartments each dates from May 1920, a time of great housing shortage in the city. The application for a renovation and a complex repair of the Storch pharmacy on the corner was made in the fall of 1960. Today the house on Antonienstraße has another shop fitting. The house, which was simply renovated in the 1990s, is completely plastered, has a clinker base, a broken corner with a box bay attached here and a striking roof house over the corner. Broad bands on the ground floor and a cornice above the ground floor give a very horizontal view, the view of the upper floors is characterized by strong window frames and window roofing as well as a continuous cornice band under the sills of the 3rd floor. It is a shame that the plastic windows of the sophisticated architecture of late historicism take a lot of their effect and the upper floors are completely covered with a uniform color. The striking corner building with a corner shop has a historical architectural value and, in the immediate location opposite the town square, also has a prominent urban space-defining function. LfD / 2018, 2019

09263617
 
Multi-family houses in a residential complex, with a green inner courtyard and lateral green spaces Antonienstraße 43; 43a; 43b; 45; 47; 49; 49a; 49b
(card)
around 1900 (apartment buildings) with shops, plastered building with plastered structure, upper floor partly clad in clinker, recessed corner towers above the stairwells and facing the street, two gabled risalits, shop front at number 49 original, at number 43 heavily changed, on the back balconies with wrought iron bars, laundry piles in the courtyard, urban planning and socio-historical significant 09263618
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Antonienstraße 51
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Formerly with a corner restaurant, clinker-plaster facade, historically significant and as an initiative building also socially and historically significant 09263619
 
Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner Antonienstraße 53
(map)
1903–1905 (tenement house) with two staircases, clinker-plaster facade, effective corner building, important from an architectural point of view

With initially two planned entrances and two stairwells, the apartment building was built in an exposed corner location between 1903 and 1905. In 1903, private man Emil Geilhufe from Keuschberg near Soolbad Dürrenberg acted as an entrepreneur, in 1904 the private man Ernst Emil Thiess from Leipzig-Gohlis took over, but only Wilhelmine used. Paasche born Lösche awarded the contract to master bricklayer Richard Reinhold in 1905. Numerous changes of ownership in the following years are also unusual. In 1936, the rooms on the ground floor used by the welfare police were converted into residential areas. The first draft drawings showed the entrances to two apartments on each floor, the ground floor had two residential and two commercial units. The design by the architect Otto Lehmann was carried out in autumn 1904. Access to the street is (today) only from Antonienstraße, the four-axis oriel structure protruding far from the broken corner is characteristic of the half-open house. The side facades of the upper floors are clad with clinker bricks, while otherwise plastered surfaces are structured by grooves and decor. What is of interest is the architect's endeavors to find new forms at the end of the Art Nouveau period. The equipment has been preserved in parts. The effective corner building has an architectural historical value, it documents the development of apartment building architecture at the beginning of the 20th century. LfD / 2015

09263620
 
Historic gazebos of an allotment garden Antonienstraße 63
(map)
1920s / 1930s (garden pavilion) individual historical arbors with architectural significance (glazed wooden garden pavilion of a former rose garden can no longer be found) 09263580
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Baumannstrasse 1
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Formerly with shop, plastered facade, significant in terms of building history and characterizing the cityscape 09263477
 
Apartment building in closed development Baumannstrasse 7
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important as a residential building in the closed ensemble of the urban expansion area 09263478
 
Apartment building in half-open development Baumannstrasse 9
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically significant as an apartment building in the extension area 09263479
 
Apartment building in closed development Baumannstrasse 10
(map)
1905 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, of importance in terms of building history and local development 09263480
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Baumannstrasse 11
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Formerly with a wash house in the courtyard, formerly with a corner store, clinker brick facade, a corner building that is important in terms of architectural history and urban planning 09263481
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Baumannstrasse 14
(map)
1899 (tenement house) formerly with a corner store, clinker brick facade, historically important

Building contractor Ernst Hermann Grafe (financing and execution) as well as construction technician and architect Carl F. Roßbach (plan drawings) were the initiators of the house, which was built in 1899. The approval phase was delayed somewhat because of the location of the property near the railway and the plans for Bahnhofstrasse. Three apartments were proposed for each of the upper floors, while on the ground floor a rental apartment as well as a business unit suitable for residential purposes was to be set up. The corner store was probably used by the product dealer Friedrich Albert Schneider (property owner from 1901), as evidenced by the master shoemaker Oskar Theil from 1914. In 1922, on behalf of A. Dietze, an apartment on the top floor was built for the Baessler & Bomnitz sawmills. In 1939, master baker Ernst Hermann Paul Weise intended “plastering and painting the front sides”, which was probably accompanied by the removal of stucco parts over the windows and over the windows. In 1963 there were plans to convert the shop into residential use. The clinker building, structured by a cornice, plaster pilasters, a plastered ground floor area and artificial stone window frames, characterizes the wide street and square on the corner of Klingen and Rolf-Axen-Straße. LfD / 2014, 2015

09263482
 
Apartment building in half-open development Campestrasse 2
(map)
1904 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, of importance in terms of building history and site development, assembly group with number 4 and number 6

In December 1903, master builder J. Richard Porsche from Lindenau provided plans for the front and rear residential buildings, which master bricklayer Carl Hermann Eulitz from Stünz implemented as the builder in the following year (until March 31, 1940 at Campestrasse 10). A two-time foreclosure auction in 1905 resulted in a rapid change of ownership, and Johanna Elsbeth Wassermann was followed by the Bank für Grundbesitz Leipzig. In 1908 the businessman Paul Ernst Wilhelm Julius Beiersdorf is the owner, two years later Agnes Helma Rudolph and from 1913 three well-known owners. Demolition of the two-storey courtyard building in 1979; a building application for renovation, modernization and conversion of the front building was submitted in February 2006. The three-storey apartment building in a half-open development with access from the courtyard. Yellow brick facade above the plastered ground floor with rich stucco and artificial stone structure, eaves with magnificent stucco consoles. Two apartments on each floor with a corridor, kitchen, living room and two chambers, the toilets halfway up the stairs. Courtyard front with disfiguring design after the renovation. Ensemble with numbers 4 and 6 LfD / 2009

09263483
 
Apartment building in closed development with a rear building Campestrasse 4
(map)
1902–1904 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade, part of an assembly, of significance in terms of building history and site development

(Campestrasse 12 to 31.03.1940) The married couple Thusnelda Kirsten and Maximilian Oskar Kirsten, who lived at Klingenstrasse 25, commissioned architect F. Otto Gerstenberger to implement the plans that he had certainly made himself for a three-storey apartment building and a two-storey rear residential building on the property of At that time Campestrasse 12. Even before construction began in the summer of 1902, the project stalled, on May 11, 1903 the market helper Hugo Max Gersdorf from Leipzig-Volkmarsdorf bought the property, which was under compulsory administration. Gerstenberger, who lives in Leipzig-Connewitz (Bornaische Strasse 74), was again commissioned with the execution, began the foundation work in June and applied for the final revision on December 7, 1903. The authorities issued an additional request for the modified facade in April 1904. Renovation and modernization work was carried out in 1995, including the loft extension. Application for balcony extensions to the front and rear building in 1999. Yellow clinker facade structured with stucco and artificial stone decor above the plastered ground floor with street-side access and elaborate Wilhelminian style consoles in the eaves area. In both buildings there are two apartments on each floor with a corridor, kitchen, one room, two chambers and an AWC. The group of houses 2/4/6 with a uniform appearance. LfD / 2009, 2018

09263484
 
Apartment building in half-open development with garden and rear building Campestrasse 6
(map)
1904–1905 (tenement house) Plastered facade, of importance in terms of building history and the history of local development

In 1904, businessman Richard Hermann Beyer commissioned the master builder and architect Gustav Glauche to design and build a three-story front and a two-story rear residential building (at that time Campestrasse 14). The final acceptance took place on December 12, 1905 and the permission to use it on April 1, 1906. In April 1998 building approval for the building application for modernization and renovation, with loft extensions and minor floor plan changes. Yellow brick facade with rich stucco and artificial stone decor above the plastered ground floor, access via the courtyard side. The group of houses 2/4/6 with a uniform appearance. LfD / 2009, 2018

09263485
 
Apartment house in open development in a corner Campestrasse 8
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) with corner shop, clinker brick facade, street-characterizing tenement building with architectural and historical significance 09263486
 
Apartment house in open development in a corner, with fencing Creuzigerstrasse 1
(map)
1870 (tenement) with shop / pharmacy, plastered facade, corner building that is significant in terms of architectural and local history in the area of ​​expansion 09263487
 
Apartment house in open development and in a corner Creuzigerstrasse 2
(map)
after 1870 (tenement) with shop, plastered facade, original shop front, residential and commercial building with significant architectural and local history in an exposed corner location 09263488
 
Apartment building in open development and outbuildings in the courtyard Creuzigerstrasse 3
(map)
1885 (tenement house) with shop, plastered facade, of architectural and socio-historical importance, testimony to the development of the place, a former bakery building in the courtyard 09263489
 
Apartment building in open development and courtyard paving Creuzigerstrasse 4
(map)
1870 (tenement) Plastered facade, of importance in terms of building history and the history of local development 09263490
 
Apartment building in closed development Creuzigerstrasse 16
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered facade, significant in terms of building history and development history as part of the urban expansion area 09263494
 
Hand lever pump and well shaft and cover plate Dieskaustraße
(map)
before 1890 (hand lever pump) in front of number 51, opposite number 36/38, of local historical importance 09294874
 
Hand lever pump with well shaft and cover plate Dieskaustraße
(map)
before 1890 (hand lever pump) before number 12, type dolphin, of local significance 09294873
 
Hand lever pump with well shaft and cover plate Dieskaustraße
(map)
before 1890 (hand lever pump) before number 50, of local history 09290217
 
Railway bridge Dieskaustraße
(map)
1906 (railway bridge) Steel girder bridge on the Leipzig-Plagwitz - Markkleeberg-Gaschwitz railway line (6379, see PG) with wrought-iron railing, artificial stone pillars, granite ashlar wall, embankment and stairway to the Kleinzschocher S-Bahn stop, of value in terms of technology and significant in terms of local development at the interface between Groß- and Kleinzschocher 09263495
 
Apartment building in closed development Dieskaustraße 7
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) with shops, plastered façade, of importance in terms of building history and development, evidence of the urbanization of the district 09299053
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Dieskaustraße 8
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) with shops, plastered façade, historically significant rental apartment building on the main road, evidence of urbanization 09298998
 
Apartment building in closed development Dieskaustraße 10
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) with shops, plastered facade, see also number 12, historically important as a document of the Wilhelminian expansion of the site 09263497
 
Apartment building in closed development Dieskaustraße 11
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) with shops, plastered façades, historically significant rental housing as evidence of the expansion of the site during the Wilhelminian era 09263498
 
Apartment building in closed development Dieskaustraße 12
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) with shops, plastered facade, see also number 10, historically important as a rental apartment building on the main road 09263499
 
Apartment building in half-open development (with company advertising) and workshop building in the courtyard Dieskaustraße 13
(map)
1890-1892 (tenement), presumably 1906 (advertising), 1898–1899 (workshop) Front building with gate passage and shop, plastered facade, the tenement house of architectural and local historical value, the studio building is a rarity for Saxony and is of national importance

Carpenter and building contractor Friedrich Eduard Sachse appeared in personal union with regard to the construction of an apartment building on what was then Plagwitzer Straße. Within a good two years, the building was built from 1890 to 1892 with a shop apartment and passage on the ground floor, two living areas each on the upper floors and three small apartments under the roof. FW Weithaas Nachf provided static calculations. As one of the small so-called craftsmen's houses built on the arteries or main thoroughfares from around 1865 is still on the neighboring property, the structural development of the community is particularly clear at this point in Kleinzschocher. Artificial stone moldings and stucco decor structure the plaster facade. The photo studio in the courtyard from 1898/1899, also by Sachse, is a rarity. The "building with a photographic studio" was built in such a way that "the roof and the upper part of the northern side of the upper floor ... should be made entirely of glass in and attached to iron T-beams". From October 1906 the photographer Max Karl Ernst Petermann took over the property, his company advertising is still visible on the gable of the front building. As recently as February 2014, the house was not renovated. Max Petermann was one of a handful of photographers and publishers in the postcard production who worked in Kleinzschocher. The photo studio in the courtyard is particularly valuable in terms of architectural history and the history of the area, with a technical and historical significance. The studio building is a rarity for Saxony and is of national importance. LfD / 2014

09263500
 
Residential house in semi-open development Dieskaustraße 15
(map)
around 1860 (residential building) Plastered facade, the small residential building is one of the last suburban houses to be built on the new main roads, away from the old rural areas, and therefore significant in terms of building history and the history of local development

It is one of the oldest houses on Dieskaustraße, probably built around 1860, two-storey with a loft and plastered facade. The construction file begins in 1873 when Friedrich Karl Winkler commissioned the master carpenter Friedrich Sachse to add a wash house to his residential building. Master bricklayer Richard Rammelt was commissioned in 1903 to install a shop for master baker Gustav Adolf Heidrich. On record are a courtyard-side lavatory extension for 1935 and a shop renovation in 1956, the top floor underwent a minor renovation after 1960. The two-storey plastered brick building is typically simple and represents the new building structure in Kleinzschocher that began with the expansion of the area in the years around the founding of the German Empire: suburban houses and craftsmen's houses were built on the larger local roads. So the structure of the old location with the rural courtyards was not yet penetrated, residential buildings and handicraft businesses emerged away from the village. The house, which lies between a classic historicism facade and a residential and commercial building from the 1930s, has a picturesque effect. It documents the structural development on the former Plagwitzer Strasse in an extraordinarily clear manner. LfD / 2014

09305111
 
Apartment building in closed development, with courtyard paving and outbuildings in the courtyard Dieskaustraße 17
(map)
1930s (tenement) with house passage and shop, plastered clinker facade, residential and commercial property that is significant in terms of local development and architectural history 09263501
 
Apartment building in open development in a corner, formerly with a post office Dieskaustraße 20
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) in the corner of Hirzelstrasse, with shops, plastered clinker facade, historically important and evidence of the development of the site during the Wilhelminian era, as a former post office the house is worth remembering 09298827
 
Two schools (address: Dieskaustraße 26 and Gießerstraße 75) and two gyms, fencing and paving of the school yard and the access path, with a lime tree avenue and ancillary building between the two schools
More pictures
Two schools (address: Dieskaustraße 26 and Gießerstraße 75) and two gyms, fencing and paving of the school yard and the access path, with a lime tree avenue and ancillary building between the two schools Dieskaustraße 26
(map)
1890–1894 (school), 1866–1874 (school), around 1900 (gym) predominantly plastered buildings, of importance in terms of local history and building history as well as social history, defining the appearance of the town 09263502
 
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Apartment building in half-open development and rear building Dieskaustraße 28
(map)
1901–1902 (apartment building), 1902–1903 (rear building = residential building) with gate passage, with shops, clinker brick facade, rear building with plastered facade, of importance in terms of building history and site development

The Plagwitz carpenter Ernst Pfefferkorn acted as client, draftsman and executor for a two-storey house planned in 1874 with a loft and shop. On New Year's Eve in 1901, carpenter Friedrich Ernst Pfefferkorn submitted designs for a front building and a rear building, for which the building architect Richard Müller was responsible. In May there are tectures relating to a shop fitting, the execution will be carried out by master bricklayer Richard Rammelt from Kleinzschocher until December 1902. The courtyard building, which was initially not approved, was mainly built in 1903. The fact that the residents of the courtyard building had to use toilets in the front building is a special feature here ten toilets were available for only eight apartments. 1947 Building application for the extension of the attic storey in the front building "in self-help" according to the planning of the architect Erich Roesner. 1998 Project renovation, modernization and balcony extension for the tenement house. The building, which was still shaped by the Wilhelminian style, has a rhythmic facade through different window roofs, mainly in the central and side axes. The curved, grooved consoles in the eaves area, under the window roofs and as keystones in the window arches of the third floor are modern. Formerly three, now two shops. In the courtyard building two apartments with two rooms, a room and a kitchen on the upper floor and only one room on the ground floor, as a room for the laundry room was provided here. LfD / 2008

09263503
 
Equipment of a former butcher shop Dieskaustraße 29
(map)
around 1900 (equipment) Glass ceiling and floor tiles of a shop, technically and artistically important 09263504
 
Apartment building designed as a closed development and workshop building in the courtyard Dieskaustraße 36
(map)
1905/1910 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade with shop, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history 09263505
 
Residential building in formerly open development Dieskaustraße 40
(map)
around 1870 (tenement) with shops, plastered façades, of importance in terms of building history and the history of local development as evidence of the early urbanization of the place 09263507
 
Apartment building in closed development Dieskaustraße 42
(map)
around 1910 (tenement) With shop, plastered facade, of importance in terms of building history and site development, especially due to the neighborhood to number 40 09263509
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Dieskaustraße 59
(map)
marked 1908 (tenement house) with shops, clinker brick façade, an impactful building that is significant in terms of building history and local development on the important arterial road 09263510
 
Apartment building in closed development Dieskaustraße 63
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) with gate passage, with shops, plastered façade, of importance in terms of building history and site development 09298830
 
Apartment building in closed development Dieskaustraße 67
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) with shops, clinker facade, as a tenement house in the structure of local development and architectural significance 09263513
 
Apartment building in closed development Dieskaustraße 73
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Plastered clinker facade, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history as an apartment building from the turn of the century around 1900 09263515
 
Apartment building in closed development Dieskaustraße 75
(map)
around 1910 (tenement) With shop, plastered facade, building and development-historically valuable tenement building in the extension area 09263516
 
School, gym, porches, connecting corridors, toilet building in the courtyard and enclosure wall
School, gym, porches, connecting corridors, toilet building in the courtyard and enclosure wall Dieskaustraße 76
(map)
1904–1906 (school) Facades with plaster and clinker brick structure, structural elements artificial stone, porches and connecting corridors as wooden constructions with clinker brick infills, of local and architectural importance as well as socio-historical importance, defining the townscape, memorable 09263517
 
Open-plan gymnasium Dieskaustraße 79
(map)
1912 (gym) in the rear of the property, plastered facade, of architectural and social historical importance, testimony to the development of the area at the beginning of the 20th century, built as a cinema building

The reform style facade of the tenement house built from 1906 on, for whose appearance / conception / statics architect Karl Poser and the financing of the master carpenter Friedrich Franz Winter was responsible. An earlier building project by the landowner Friedrich Wilhelm Pfeil in 1901 was not carried out. But the current project also stalled after the shell had been checked and in the course of a foreclosure auction in October 1907 it passed into the hands of the timber merchant Selma Elise Jordan, née Vetter (a head bow in the building file names the timber dealer Martin Hans Jordan). The carpenter Hermann Otto was entrusted with the further construction, the architect Becker with construction management and other design work. In the spring of 1908 the completion of the two-in-hand car was announced, while the construction of a farm or factory building in the courtyard, which was requested in 1906, had still not begun. The municipal LWB applied for demolition of the plastered front building in 2001, which was approved in 2002 and carried out in 2003/2004. The rear building built in 1912 on behalf of Elise Jordan has been preserved on the property: a cinematograph theater. Despite direct competition from the Sicks film houses in Dieskaustraße 8 and Johann Martin in Windorfer Straße 28, the house was built by the builder Richard Rammelt, who is based in Kleinzschocher, and the company CF Weithaas Nachf, who was called in for the statics high steam chimney erected, a canopy by the company Knopf & Mucke attached to the front building for the cinema entrance that is now set up here. After the final exam on October 25, 1912, gaming began the following day. Ms. Jordan initially remained the owner before carpenter Carl August Schmidt from Erfurt took over the property almost twelve months later. On April 1, 1919, Max Otto Raschke is well-known as the owner of the cinematograph, who commissioned the architects Max Bösenberg & Sohn to renovate the Union-Theater Leipzig-Kleinzschocher in 1925 and initially submitted plans for 762 seats. By the way, the consent of the neighbor, the general gymnastics club Leipzig-Kleinzschocher (gymnasium destroyed in the war) had to be obtained. In 1945, the architect Morgenstern took over the supervision of repair work that was necessary due to the effects of a bomb hit on April 6th on the neighboring property. Executives were Hermann Borchardt's stucco and Rabitz business as well as Knopf & Mucke for the steel roof trusses according to plans by the engineering office Lipper & Co. A massive staircase to the projection room was to be built in 1958 to 1960, before the decision was made to convert it into a ball game hall two years later . The hall, which has been empty for a few years, is to be converted into a table tennis hall by LTTV Leutzscher Füchse by 2018. The formerly historical furnishings worthy of protection include, among other things, the Rabitz ceiling (remains of the stucco edges in the projection room have been preserved), parquet, some doors and four larger pictures from 1960 depicting athletes. The former cinema and later building used for popular sport has a high historical and documentary importance as well as rarity, memorable value and is important for popular education. LfD / 2017

09263518
 
Residential house in open development with front garden Dieskaustraße 83
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around 1860 (residential building) Plastered facade, picturesque residential building with value in terms of local development and architectural history 09263519
 
Apartment house in open development in a corner Dieskaustraße 86
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1898–1900 (tenement house) Formerly with shops, plastered façade, head building that is significant in terms of local development and architectural history as evidence of the rental apartment building with a ground floor used for business, built immediately before the turn of the century around 1900 09263520
 
Two apartment buildings in closed development Dieskaustraße 87
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marked 1890 (tenement house) Plastered facade, of importance in terms of building history, significant in terms of local development 09263521
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner, with outbuildings in the courtyard Dieskaustraße 90
(map)
marked 1888 (tenement house) Formerly with a corner shutter, plastered facade, historically important and a corner building that is valuable in terms of local development 09263522
 
Tram depot of the Leipzig Electric Tramway, with two car halls (Dieskaustraße 92), residential and administrative building (Kötzschauer Straße 1) including annex as well as courtyard paving and track remains Dieskaustraße 92
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1898 opening (tram depot), 1897–1898 (wagon hall), 1912 (wagon hall), 1897–1898 (residential and office building) Former tram depot with courtyard area, laid out as an overnight depot with a wagon hall, later expanded for workshop operations and expanded by a second hall, evidence of the early days of public electrical local transport in Leipzig with two competing tram companies and each independent rail networks and depots, from Significance, roof structures of the car halls of interest in terms of construction history

A horse-drawn tram was running in downtown Leipzig as early as 1872, and the surrounding districts were gradually connected to the rail network. In 1893, the horse-drawn railway company - trading as the Great Leipzig Tramway (GLSt) from 1896 - received competition from a second tramway company, the Leipzig Electric Tramway (LEst), which was also known as the “Red” because of its vehicle color. The fact that joint use of the rails was denied led to the establishment of a separate rail network with partly parallel routing and separate depots. After the line opened in 1896 with a depot and workshop on Wittenberger Strasse, the Leipziger Electric Tramway submitted a preliminary building request in May 1897 (legally binding signed by Messrs Heise and Köhler) for the construction of a sub-depot with overnight accommodation for the property on hand, which has been on the site since 1867 The stable of the art gardener Carl Hermann Wolf was located. The detailed description names a 42-meter-long and 15-meter-wide wagon hall for twenty motor vehicles with inspection pits, a small workshop with warehouse and a three-storey civil servants' residence on the corner of today's Kötzschauer Strasse. In 1898, the final acceptance of the depot took place, which stood out in terms of design with its façade made of yellow clinker bricks with plaster and red clinker strips. A fencing wall designed by Mackay with the typical “red” color scheme on the southeast corner of the company premises with two (later three) gates to connect the courtyard tracks to the Großzschochersche tram route was completed in the same year. In the courtyard, the individual wagons were distributed to the parking and maintenance tracks in the courtyard and in the wagon hall using switches. In the corner building there was an apartment on the ground floor as well as office space with adjoining rooms, two apartments each on the upper floors and a laundry room in the basement, the commercial space was converted into a rental unit just over three months after completion. In 1912 the entrance to Kötzschauer Strasse was relocated - along with the relocation of the final stop of tram line 5, which ran from Schönefeld (Löbauer Strasse) via Johannisplatz, Bayrischen Bahnhof and Beethovenstrasse. The car hall with four tracks - originally designed as a storage hall for tram cars - soon also included a workshop and was supplemented in 1912 by a second car hall over four additional tracks. At the same time, the corner building received an extension to the new car hall. Another ground floor renovation in the corner house took place in 1953. Both car halls differ from one another in terms of their construction. The first was made of twelve-layer masonry in a steel framework construction and with a representative gable made of yellow exposed brickwork. From the elaborate design with a glazed gable triangle and a beam decorated with crossed iron profiles and rosettes over four gates (as can still be seen in the car hall of the central depot in Wittenberger Straße), unfortunately, only the corner pillars with crowns have survived. Inside, however, the hall impresses with the filigree roof structure made of riveted iron trusses with lateral struts to the base of the side walls. The younger wagon hall, which in principle represented a courtyard roof between the existing hall and the property boundary on Kötzschauer Straße, shows itself inside with mighty hanging and trussing made of wood, with a narrow wall shell on the side wall of the older hall and one of the existing buildings The design-based yellow brick facade with red brick strips parallel to the side street. The design of the gable remained comparatively simple. While in 1913 a new overnight depot was opened by the Leipzig Electric Tram in Paunsdorf, it had to merge with the Great Leipzig Tram in 1916. Gradually, the route network, which was often laid out in side streets due to the former competitive situation, was shut down. Some of the depots remained in use, but also lost some of their importance. After the opening of the nearby Angerbrücke tram station in 1925, the Kleinzschocher tram station was mainly used to store damaged wagons, it was only occasionally used in regular service and was finally sold in 1959. Despite subsequent use by a workshop, the former tram station with its buildings, large parts of the track system in the courtyard and in both halls and the enclosure wall (changed) have been preserved. As evidence of the early days of local electrical public transport in Leipzig, in which two competing tram companies were rapidly pushing ahead with the replacement of horse-drawn trams, they document a decisive phase in community and urban development. The remarkable, meanwhile rare roof structures in both car halls are also significant in terms of construction history and, given their narrow structural context, are of great visual value. Together with the associated residential and administrative building, which is located in a corner and is important in terms of urban planning, the car halls have a value in terms of architectural, site development and traffic history. LfD / 2018

09263593
 
Apartment building in a residential complex Dieskaustraße 94
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1936 (tenement) Plastered facade, residential complex with Kurt-Kresse-Strasse 2–16, of urban and socio-historical importance, typical testimony to the building structures in the 1930s 09299454
 
Apartment building in closed development and side wing in the courtyard Dieskaustraße 101
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1888 (tenement house) with gate passage, formerly with a shop, plastered facade, of architectural historical importance, of particular interest is the location of the Wilhelminian-style house between two older residential buildings behind the current street

For a long time, the through lot (see also Windorfer Strasse 144), which had been listed under Plagwitzer Strasse 39, was built on with a small two-storey residential building with five axes. Master carpenter Julius Werner managed renovation work on behalf of master roofer Friedrich Richard Schinke in 1883 and built a new stable building in the courtyard. Today's apartment building, along with the rear bakery extension, was built in 1888 in place of the old residential building. Master carpenter F. Sachse was responsible for the execution. Master baker Emil Arthur Thomas and his wife are the owners of the property in 1922, and the bakery was converted in 1924. From May 1975, plans were made to convert the shop into a residential area. The elegant and delicately decorated plastered facade shows forms from the Wilhelminian style repertoire, both of the immediate neighboring houses still come from the pre-Wilhelminian building phase and are located on the old building line of the local exit road. The house only had a shop apartment on the ground floor, and the passage made it possible to deliver flour across the courtyard. Horse stables also built in the courtyard in 1888 refer to the self-delivery of the baking products. The location of the Wilhelminian style house between two older residential buildings behind the current street level is of interest in terms of urban planning and building history. LfD / 2011

09263523
 
Residential house in formerly open development, with outbuildings in the courtyard
Residential house in formerly open development, with outbuildings in the courtyard Dieskaustraße 103
(map)
1860s & around 1870 (residential building) Plastered facade with a late classicistic appearance, of architectural significance, testimony to the architecture and building structure in the immediate Wilhelminian era 09263524
 
Apartment building in half-open development Dieskaustraße 105
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around 1912 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered facade, of interest in terms of building history and local development 09298832
 
Club house (so-called block house) and upstream central place of an allotment garden Diezmannstrasse 4
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1897–1898 (club house) Spartenheim is a two-storey building in the Swiss style with a one-storey hall extension in the manner of a log house, implemented in 1901 from the site of the industrial and commercial exhibition in the Palmengarten by the FA Ullrich brewery, of architectural and socio-historical importance, memorable, testimony to the festival and celebration culture 09263525
 
Individual monument belonging to the Meyersche Houses Kleinzschocher (Obj. 09304994): 20 apartment buildings
More pictures
Individual monument belonging to the Meyersche Houses Kleinzschocher (Obj. 09304994): 20 apartment buildings Diezmannstrasse 61; 63; 65; 67; 69; 71; 73; 75; 77; 79; 81; 83; 85; 87; 89; 91; 93; 95; 97; 99
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1907/1937 (apartment building) Tenement houses for social housing, see also Schönauer Strasse 172–178, Herrmann-Meyer-Strasse 1–43, 43a – 85 and 2–6, 10–46, Ratzelstrasse 51–59, of importance in terms of urban planning, building history and social history 08967683
 
Material entirety of Meyersche houses Kleinzschocher, with the individual monuments: Housing complex Diezmannstrasse 61, 63, 65, 67, 69, 71, 73, 75, 77, 79, 81, 83, 85, 87, 89, 91, 93, 95, 97, 99 with 20 apartment buildings (Obj. 08967683), residential complex Herrmann-Meyer-Straße 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19 , 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 43a , 44, 45, 46, 47, 49, 51, 53, 55, 57, 59, 61, 63, 65, 67, 69, 71, 73, 75, 77, 79, 81, 83, 85 with 46 rental houses ( Obj. 09263556), residential complex Ratzelstrasse 47, 49, 51, 53, 55, 57, 59, 61, 63, 65, 67, 69, 71, 73, 75, 77, 79, 81, 83, 85, 87, 89 , 91, 93, 95, 97, 99, 101 with 28 tenement houses (Obj. 09263557), residential complex Schönauer Strasse 172, 174, 176, 178, 180, 182, 184, 186, 188, 190, 192, 194, 196, 198, 200, 202, 204, 206, 208, 208a, 210, 212, 214, 216, 218 with 25 tenement houses (Obj. 09263653) as well as front gardens, courtyard design, avenues and roundabout with plants as well as entrance halls and candelabra Diezmannstrasse 61; 63; 65; 67; 69; 71; 73; 75; 77; 79; 81; 83; 85; 87; 89; 91; 93; 95; 97; 99
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1907–1914 (residential complex) Tenement houses in social housing, of importance in terms of urban planning, building history and social history 09304994
 
Wikidata-logo.svg
kindergarten Diezmannstrasse 87a
(map)
1962, according to information (kindergarten) Two-storey plastered building, open staircase at the entrance, colored plaster reliefs above the entrance, of architectural and socio-historical importance, architecturally remarkable building 09263599
 
Apartment building in closed development Eythraer Strasse 1
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1894–1895 (tenement house) Plastered facade, historically significant residential building in the closed street

First of all, a building application was signed in April 1893 by the building contractor Anton Uhlemann (owner and execution), a building application submitted in January of the following year now shows Richardt Leonhardt, the master mason working in Kleinzschocher, in both functions. According to the files, the residential building was approved on May 30, 1895 and the final inspection was carried out on October 29. Subsequent owners included bricklayer Albert Emil Leonhardt (from 1899), wage laborer Karl Moritz Gatsche and product dealer Franz Alwin Crvikla. In 1984 the VEB GWL intended to modernize the functional area. Behind the cautiously decorated Wilhelminian style plastered facade over a clinker base there are two apartments per floor. Facade design through axially different window sizes, a cornice, plaster and artificial stone structure and stucco consoles on the second floor. LfD / 2008

09302185
 
Apartment building in closed development Eythraer Strasse 3
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) Plastered facade, historically and locally significant rental apartment building from the turn of the century around 1900 in the closed, preserved street 09263529
 
Row of tenement houses (with Schwartzestrasse 31) of a residential complex and courtyard green Eythraer Strasse 5; 7; 9; 11; 13
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1919–1920 (apartment building) Plastered facade, see also Schwartzestraße 21–31, Luckaer Straße 4–10, Hartmannsdorfer Straße 1–7, 1a, 2–8, document of social housing immediately after the First World War, of interest in terms of the history of the district, historically significant and inexpensive housing construction that characterizes the street

Together with houses on Schwartzestrasse and Planstrasse VIII, the buildings were built as recognized small apartment buildings; in August 1919, plans were submitted by architect Gustav Skuhr from Leipzig on behalf of the Dresden-based engineer Richard Hippner. Twelve months later, it was completed, used and sold to the Eisenbahner-Bau-Genossenschaft mbH Leipzig, which later became the non-profit Eisenbahner-Baugenossenschaft eGmbH Leipzig. Smooth plastered facades with a simple structure of the house entrances and the first staircase window, as well as a curved dwelling crowned with a triangular gable. Number 13 and Schwartzestraße 31 each as a corner building in a semi-open development with a simple courtyard-side entrance. The folding shutters on the windows of the upper floors show the careful reference to the home style, two apartments per floor with two rooms plus a chamber, kitchen-living room, bathroom, toilet and loggias on the courtyard side, the laundry room was housed in the attic. Refurbishment in 2009/2010, with the stairwell painting largely based on findings. LfD / 2010

09263657
 
Apartment building in closed development Eythraer Strasse 6
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around 1900 (tenement) Plastered facade, building history testimony to the site expansion, part of a formative ensemble 09298810
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner, with a front garden Eythraer Strasse 12
(map)
1910/1915 (tenement house) with shops, plastered facade, leaded glass windows, historically significant reform style building in the closed street 09263530
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Eythraer Strasse 14
(map)
1910/1915 (tenement house) Plastered facade, historically significant reform style building in a closed ensemble 09263531
 
Apartment house in open development in a corner Eythraer Strasse 15
(map)
1912 (tenement) Formerly with a corner shutter, plastered facade, historically important, part of the closed ensemble

The application for the construction of a corner residential building with four small apartments per floor, submitted by the freight forwarder Gustav Reiche, dated November 25, 1911. He put the design, execution and construction management in the hands of the architect and construction business owner Richard Leonhardt. From February 1912 Miss Luise Emma Leonhardt acted as an entrepreneur, at the end of August of the same year the building was ready for occupancy. The street-side balconies on the gable front had to be closed by the building authorities in 1988, a refurbishment applied for in 2002 along with an attic extension was only implemented in 2004. Towards Kulkwitzer Strasse, a central projecting slightly protruding from the front of the building with a dwarf house characterizes the simple, light-colored plastered facade, while the gable front on Eythraer Strasse has a box oriel with attached balconies protruding strongly into the street space on the upper floors; the corner store has been converted for residential purposes. Indispensable for the effect of the house are the windows with their small-scale structure in the skylights and the stone-covered red clinker plinth, the furnishings of the stairwell have been preserved. The house is a testimony to privately financed social housing and a document of local expansion and thus has a building-historical significance. LfD / 2014, 2015

09263598
 
Apartment building in closed development with a front garden Eythraer Strasse 16
(map)
around 1910 (tenement) Formerly with shops, plastered facade, of importance in terms of building history and site development, part of a closed, preserved row of buildings 09263532
 
Apartment building in closed development with a front garden Eythraer Strasse 18
(map)
around 1910 (tenement) with gate passage, formerly with a shop, plastered facade, historically important as part of a closed row of tenement houses 09263533
 
Apartment building in open development Eythraer Strasse 19
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Plastered clinker facade, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history 09298813
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Eythraer Strasse 20
(map)
1910/1915 (tenement house) Formerly with a shop, plastered facade, reform style building with value in terms of local development and architectural history 09263534
 
Apartment house in open development in a corner Eythraer Strasse 21
(map)
1910–1911 (tenement house) with corner shutter, plastered facade, historically significant corner building in the extension area

Master bricklayer Wilhelm Kother submitted a building application for the construction of a corner house on May 14, 1910, contracted an architect to draw up the plan and the bricklayer foreman Emil Zechendorf with regard to execution and construction management. Immediately after the building permit was granted in July, Miss Agnes Lippold acquired the property. The architect ME Reichardt, who was particularly active in Gohlis, made the tectures and Paul Bernhardt took over the construction work. The protocol of the final inspection for the residential building and its annex, which included a bakery and laundry room, was dated January 21, 1911. Between 1956 and 1959, a wash-off was installed, in 1997/1998 the building permit process for an attic extension and in 2001 for facade work was in progress. The plaster structures and a three-axis central projection with a dwelling in Campestrasse characterize the reform style building, which has a corner shop. Parts of the equipment have been preserved. The bakery extension has changed a lot and is therefore not a monument. The residential and commercial building is significant in terms of building history and the development of the district. LfD / 2013

09263535
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Eythraer Strasse 22
(map)
1910/1915 (tenement house) Plastered facade, historically important, part of a closed, preserved row of buildings 09263536
 
Apartment building in closed development and front garden Eythraer Strasse 24
(map)
1910/1915 (tenement house) with gate passage, plastered clinker facade, historically significant rental apartment building in a closed ensemble 09263537
 
Apartment building in closed development and front garden Eythraer Strasse 26
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) with a gate passage, formerly with a shop, plastered clinker facade, the apartment building in the closed street is important in terms of building history 09298811
 
Apartment building in closed development and front garden Eythraer Strasse 28
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) with gate passage, clinker brick facade, significance in terms of local history and building history 09298841
 
Apartment building in closed development, with a front garden and paving in front of the former shop Eythraer Strasse 30
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) with a gate passage, formerly with a shop, plastered clinker facade, in the closed preserved street, an old residential building with architectural value 09298812
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Eythraer Strasse 32
(map)
1900/1905 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade, of importance in terms of building history and local development 09299152
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Eythraer Strasse 34
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Plastered facade, historically important, evidence of the development of the place 09263538
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Eythraer Strasse 36
(map)
1913–1915 (tenement) Plastered facade, the residential building is part of the effective row of tenement houses on Eythraer Strasse, therefore significant in terms of architectural history, the history of local development and the design of the street space

There were many unused months between the receipt of the building application in August 1913 and the granting of the permit in April 1914; the final inspection took place on March 27, 1915. The builder was the Reudnitz timber merchant Carl Friedrich Traugott Rühl, who entrusted himself to the architecture of the master builder and building business owner Richardt Leonhardt from Kleinzschocher. In August 2002 it was found that various works on the building had been carried out without official and therefore also without permission under monument protection law. For the extension of the balcony, the permit was issued on October 8, 2002, and the final completion notice was given in summer 2004. Here Treuconsult GmbH Leipzig acted as an entrepreneur and Dipl.-Ing. Dr. Siegfried Axtmann from Nuremberg as the project manager. At the end of 2003, two apartments in the attic were built. The simple plastered building is based on the contemporary reform style and has an artistic approach to the exterior based only on the well-balanced façade and a front door portal, parts of the furnishings have been preserved. In competition with the four-storey facade today, the large dormer windows installed in 2003. The residential building is part of the effective row of tenement houses on Eythraer Strasse, and has significance in terms of building history, the history of local development and the design of the street. LfD / 2014

09299403
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Eythraer Strasse 40
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around 1905 (tenement) Plaster clinker facade, significance for the building history and the local development 09263539
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Eythraer Strasse 42
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Plaster clinker facade, of importance in terms of building history and site development 09263540
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Eythraer Strasse 44
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1903 (tenement) Plastered clinker facade, significance in terms of urban district development history

Maurer Friederich Hermann Heyne was responsible for the execution of the facade, which is strictly structured by molded artificial stone parts. At the rear, the property is affected by the Royal Saxon State Railway. The couple with wash house extension was built in 1903 and was renovated by Uni Finanz GmbH in 2001–2002. The landowners were landlord Johann Karl Schütze (from 1904), master builder Otto Emil Leonhardt, AG for house and property (1922) and the city of Leipzig (1935). The apartment building, built in a transition style to Art Nouveau, with a grooved ground floor, clinkered upper floors and now smooth eaves, the furnishings in parts. As a testimony to the development of the district of scientific and documentary value, characterizing the cityscape in the tenement ensemble of the curved street. LfD / 2011

09263541
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Eythraer Strasse 46
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around 1905 (tenement) Plastered clinker facade, valuable for building history and local development history 09263542
 
Apartment building in closed development and front garden Eythraer Strasse 50
(map)
1898–1901 (tenement house) with gate passage, plastered clinker facade, of architectural significance, part of a closed row development

Master bricklayer Christian Friedrich Wilhelm Hoffmann took over the property from D. Trautschold and applied for the construction of a tenement house in 1899. With a new building application in autumn 1900 by the bricklayer and building contractor F. Gustav Haferkorn, the project at least managed to complete the shell. A good six months later, the expansion work was resumed, now sponsored by the brickworks owner Ernst Kummer and the landlord Johann Carl Schütze. The final examination took place on August 31, 1901. Bertha Anna Kubik b. In 1927, Fischer commissioned the architect Curt Rost and the construction company Otto Mucke to furnish an attic apartment, which was ready for occupancy in the same year (construction of a four-axle attic house). Bennewitzer R. & M. Bauträgergesellschaft mbH submitted a building application for renovation, modernization, further loft extensions (including a dormer on the street side) as well as a balcony extension and a change in the apartment floor plans (this also involved widening the passage due to the parking facility for cars in the yard). A clinker brick facade with a plastered ground floor zone characterizes the house in the closed street with emphasis on the two middle floors. Here molded artificial stone and historicist stucco are characteristic, the eaves are smoothed, the house has a rear entrance. LfD / 2014, 2015

09298814
 
Apartment building in closed development and front garden Eythraer Strasse 52
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around 1905 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered clinker facade, important in terms of local development and architectural history 09263543
 
Apartment building in closed development and front garden Eythraer Strasse 54
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered clinker facade, of architectural significance, evidence of the town's expansion 09263544
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Eythraer Strasse 56
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Plastered clinker facade, historically important as evidence of the town's expansion at the turn of the century around 1900 09263545
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden and courtyard paving Eythraer Strasse 58
(map)
1900–1902 (tenement house) Gate passage, with a shop, building an apartment building in the impressively closed street front with architectural and local development value

A first building application in 1898 from general agent and local judge Friedrich Wilhelm Trautschold is not pursued any further, at the end of 1900 Friedrich Hermann Lägel from Gautzsch submitted a building application, for which Gustav Oehlert contributed static calculations. It was to be the last house in the impressive row of tenement houses on the western side of Eythraer Strasse for a long time to come. Because space was lost on the ground floor due to the passage, only one apartment with an adjoining shop was set up here. On the upper floors there were two apartments with a corridor, kitchen, chamber and two rooms. Only when the shell was finished, the builder and contractor Lägel got into financial difficulties and the property was foreclosed. The owners were the master glazier Wilhelm Karl Mahn in Gaschwitz and the master plumber Bernhard Koch in Gautzsch. Master mason Gustav Oehlert from Zwenkau was now responsible for the execution. The final test took place in May 1902, including the enclosure and the washhouse at the rear. A first apartment in the attic was built in 1926–1927 for the chief tax secretary Erich Springsguth by the architect Wilhelm Helmholz, and from 1997–1998 a second loft apartment. A yellow clinker brick facade rises above the plastered ground floor - after a renovation, the shop is used for residential purposes, which is structured by green-glazed brick strips, molded artificial stone parts and attractive Art Nouveau decor. Parts of the equipment as well as the gate of the passage have been preserved. In the line of sight of Kötzschauer Strasse, a tenement house with architectural and local development value. LfD / 2014

09305117
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Gießerstraße 63
(map)
around 1907 (tenement) with corner shutter, plaster clinker facade, residential and commercial building in an important corner situation, document of the development of the district, of importance in terms of building history 09298790
 
Two schools (address: Dieskaustraße 26 and Gießerstraße 75) and two gyms, fencing and paving of the school yard and the access path, with a lime tree avenue and ancillary building between the two schools Giesserstraße 75
(map)
1890–1894 (school), 1866–1874 (school), around 1900 (gym) predominantly plastered buildings, of importance in terms of local history and building history as well as social history, defining the appearance of the town 09263502
 
Apartment building in closed development Giesserstraße 79
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around 1905 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered clinker facade, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history 09298794
 
Apartment building in closed development Giesserstraße 81
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around 1905 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered clinker facade, significance in terms of architectural and local development 09298793
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Giesserstraße 82
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) with corner shutter, clinker brick facade, architectural significance 09260909
 
Apartment building in closed development Gießerstraße 83
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered clinker facade, of architectural significance 09298792
 
Apartment building in closed development and rear building Giesserstraße 84
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1888–1889 (tenement house), 1888–1889 (rear building) with gate passage, with shop, plastered facade, historically important

The master baker August Oehn sold the property formerly Gustav-Adolf-Straße 22 to the carpenter Karl Friedrich Ferdinand Wurl, who in autumn 1888 submitted a building application for the construction of the front, back and side buildings. The master carpenter Fr. Gustav Heine contributed static calculations for the iron structures. The final test was carried out on June 21, 1889: a bakery was set up in the rear building in addition to living rooms and a stable and laundry room in the side building. On the first floor of the front building there is a shop and the passage. In 1908 it is noted that Karl Wurl took over the post of poor relief worker between 1902 and the beginning of 1908 and owns eight houses. Master baker Friedrich Otto Wurl works on the property here. Renovations in 1928 and 1937 affect the rear buildings. The street-side facade is plastered over three floors and was formerly adorned with delicate stucco decoration in selected places, in particular around the windows of the piano nobile and in the form of stucco consoles under the eaves box. The mansard floor was intended for residential use from the start and has standing dormers. After (unauthorized) renovation, presumably 2010–2013, almost nothing remained of the elegance of the historicist plastered facade - the applied, probably newly poured stucco elements appear powerless and incoherent. The multi-storey courtyard building has been solidly renovated. Architecturally of value as evidence of a residential and commercial property in the Kleinzschocher expansion area. LfD / 2014, 2015

09263553
 
Apartment building in semi-open development and courtyard paving Giesserstraße 98
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered clinker facade, of architectural significance 09298795
 
Material entirety of the Kleinzschocher railway estate, with the following individual monuments: apartment building (Hartmannsdorfer Straße 1a - Obj. 09301914), apartment building (Luckaer Straße 2 - Obj. 09301918), apartment buildings (Schwartzestraße 21, 23 - Obj. 09263656) and with the aggregate parts: further apartment buildings of a residential complex (Hartmannsdorfer Strasse 1, 3, 5, 7 and Hartmannsdorfer Strasse 2, 4, 6, 8) and Hofgrün Hartmannsdorfer Strasse 1; 1a; 2; 3; 4; 5; 6; 7; 8
(card)
1919–1922 (residential complex) of importance in terms of urban planning and social history

The Eisenbahner-Bau-Genossenschaft eGmbh acted as the builder of the four houses with a total of 24 small apartments and commissioned the Lindenau architect and builder Erich Heiser with the planning and construction management. The execution period extended between the submission of a first, non-executed draft in October 1920 and the final acceptance in August 1921. A building application for renovation and modernization including balcony glazing was submitted in October 1990 by the Deutsche Reichsbahn and carried out until 1992. Accentuated in the center, the design of the plastered facades breaks away from the conception of reform style architecture and clearly shows the desire to create affordable living space, which is particularly evident through the lack of any decoration. The open construction of the tenement group allows two courtyard-side entrances, two house entrances are on the street side and each have a brick frame and a large granite step. LfD / 2010

09305384
 
Individual monument belonging to the Kleinzschocher railway settlement (Obj. 09305384, Hartmannsdorfer Straße 1–8): part of a row of tenement houses (with Schwartzestraße 21/23 and Luckaer Straße 2) of a residential complex Hartmannsdorfer Strasse 1a
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1920 (apartment building) Plastered facade, see also Schwartzestraße 25–29, 31, Eythraer Straße 5–13, Hartmannsdorfer Straße 1–7 and 2–8, Luckaer Straße 2, 4–10, of importance in terms of urban planning and social history 09301914
 
Apartment house in open development in a corner Hartmannsdorfer Strasse 9
(map)
1913–1914 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

Well-known names are behind the residential building built in 1913/1914: construction technician Gustav Leonhardt for the design, the construction business Richard Leonhardt for the execution of the work and Gustav Reiche as the initiator and financier. The permit was issued “for the construction of a free-standing three-storey corner residential building with an apartment on the top floor” on Albersdorfer Strasse, corner of Strasse VIII of the planned area. Four small apartments were built on each full floor, because “the workers prefer the smallest and cheapest apartments”. Along with the renovation and the extension of the balcony, residential units were merged: now only seven instead of the previous fourteen. Dipl.-Ing. Architect Werner Tepasse from Bocholt delivered documents to the Uni Finanz GmbH represented by Josef Möllmann. The plastered facade looks extremely elegant and is closed off at the top by a remarkably refined attic. Bas-reliefs show children or children sitting on animals as well as cornucopia and vegetable forms. The high-quality facade renovation in 2001/2002 should be emphasized. The free-standing corner building has a historical and local development value. LfD / 2014

09263554
 
Apartment house in open development in a corner Hartmannsdorfer Strasse 10
(map)
1912–1913 (tenement house) Plastered facade, iron cellar barrier, lead glass windows in the stairwell, of architectural significance

In 1912/1913, the freight forwarder Gustav Reiche had the detached, plastered new apartment building built on the corner of the former Albersdorfer Straße (now Kulkwitzer Straße). In doing so, he assured himself of the technical qualifications of the Leonhardt construction business based in Kleinzschocher, represented by Messrs Gustav Leonhardt and the architect and master mason Richard Leonhardt. Immediately before construction began in May 1913, Miss Minna Leonhardt took over the role of building contractor. A building application for renovation, conversion with changes to the ground plan, loft extension and balcony extension was submitted in September 2000, and the building permit was granted in February of the following year. L + S Assekuranz Service GmbH from Mühldorf am Inn is on the entrepreneurial side, interior designer and Dipl.-Ing. Rudolf Merge provided the planning documents. The tenement house is characterized by a slightly protruding risalit on the main facade facing Kulkwitzer Strasse, over which a representative roof house towers. Parts of the furnishings have been preserved, including lead-glazed staircase windows and the wooden staircase. The fencing on both street fronts has been lost. The corner building of architectural value, evidence of the local expansion before the 1st World War. LfD / 2013

09263555
 
Fan housing of a gas works Herrmann-Meyer-Strasse
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1926 (pump house) served to supply Markranstädt with gas, a small clinker brick building with a rich expressionist structure, of technological and artistic importance, rarity 09263558
 
Individual monument belonging to the Meyersche Houses Kleinzschocher (Obj. 09304994): 46 tenement houses
More pictures
Individual monument belonging to the Meyersche Houses Kleinzschocher (Obj. 09304994): 46 tenement houses Herrmann-Meyer-Strasse 1; 2; 3; 4; 5; 6; 7; 9; 10; 11; 12; 13; 14; 15; 16; 17; 18; 19; 20; 21; 22; 23; 24; 25; 26; 27; 28; 29; 30; 31; 32; 33; 34; 35; 36; 37; 38; 39; 40; 41; 42; 43; 43a; 44; 45; 46; 47; 49; 51; 53; 55; 57; 59; 61; 63; 65; 67; 69; 71; 73; 75; 77; 79; 81; 83; 85
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1907 (apartment building) Tenement houses for social housing, see also Ratzelstrasse 51–59, Kurt-Kresse-Strasse 61–99 and Schönauer Strasse 172–178, of importance in terms of town planning, building history and social history 09263556
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Hirzelstrasse 1a
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1900–1901 (tenement house) with shop, plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09263559
 
Apartment building in semi-open development, workshop building in the courtyard and side gate entrance Hirzelstrasse 3
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around 1880 (tenement) Plastered facade, with shop, wrought-iron gate, of architectural significance 09263560
 
Apartment building in closed development with an outbuilding in the courtyard Hirzelstrasse 5
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1880s (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09263561
 
Apartment house in half-open development with an outbuilding in the courtyard Hirzelstrasse 7
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1880s (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09263562
 
Apartment building in formerly half-open development Hirzelstrasse 15
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around 1890 (tenement) Plastered facade, with wrought iron gate, of architectural significance 09263563
 
Apartment building in a formerly closed development Hirzelstrasse 22
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around 1905 (tenement) Plastered facade, stucco and painting in the entrance, leaded glass windows in the stairwell, of architectural significance 09263566
 
Apartment building in closed development Hirzelstrasse 24
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around 1900 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered facade, staircase window with remnants of colored lead glazing, of architectural significance 09299050
 
Apartment building in closed development Hirzelstrasse 26
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around 1900 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered facade, historically important 09263568
 
Apartment building in closed development and workshop building in the courtyard Hirzelstrasse 28
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around 1900 (tenement) with gate passage, shop, clinker brick facade, vestibule door and painting in the entrance, of architectural significance 09263569
 
Apartment building in closed development Hirzelstrasse 31
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered facade, historically important 09298791
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Hirzelstrasse 34
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around 1900 (tenement) with corner shutters, clinker brick facade, wooden panels and stucco in the entrance area, important from an architectural point of view 09263570
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Hirzelstrasse 36
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around 1900 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, wooden panels and stucco in the entrance, of architectural significance 09263571
 
Villa with enclosure, front yard and garden with plastic Kantatenweg 13b
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1899–1900 (villa), 1900 (enclosure) Clinker brick facade, historically and locally of importance as part of the old town center development

The building application for a “detached family home”, signed by the master baker Friedrich August Oehm and released for use in the summer of the following year, dates from September 5, 1899. In 1900, the fence was also implemented, with a base made of cyclops masonry with a picket fence attached above and a closed section of brick wall on both sides. Two outlets were added in 1935 by Rudolf Rammelt, owner of the construction business of builder Richard Rammelt. The financier was master baker August Emil Oehm. Both floors each had a spacious apartment. Already old-fashioned for the time of construction, the structure corresponds to the classic type of the villa in the heyday of historicism, with an exposed natural stone base, an effectively protruding central projection, a hipped roof with slate covering. Corner blocks frame the edges, horizontal cornices create a balance to the ornate window frames. The molded artificial stone parts and the plastered surfaces have a representative effect in contrast to the closed surfaces of the red clinker brick facade. Parts of the furnishings have been preserved, the roof has been slightly changed. The high-quality, picturesque historic building near the old Gutsanlagen von Kleinzschocher with architectural and local development historical value. LfD / 2014

09263648
 
Apartment building in closed development Kantatenweg 21
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, wooden panels, stucco and landscape painting in the entrance, vestibule door, leaded glass windows, of architectural significance 09263649
 
Apartment building in closed development Kantatenweg 25
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1895/1900 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09263651
 
Individual monument and aggregate: caretaker's house, gate system, enclosure wall and access gate as well as a memorial plaque on the right gate pillar Kantatenweg 31
(map)
around 1820 (farmyard), 1962 (memorial plaque) As a former manor with high value for the local and regional history, gate pillars with coats of arms holding lions (stolen in 1999), scientific, documentary and local image value 09263652
 
Material collection of the Kleinzschocher manor, with the individual monuments: caretaker's house, gate system, enclosure wall and access gate as well as memorial plaque (object 09263652, cantata path 31), manor building (orangery) (object 09263646, cantata path 38) as well as the former manor park and Hahnholz with friendship stone (object 09260778) Kantatenweg 31; 38; 38 (at)
(card)
Mid 19th century and older (manor) As a former manor with a high value for the local and regional history, scientific-documentary and local image-defining value 09304997
 
Individual monument belonging to the Kleinzschocher manor (Obj. 09304997): manor building (orangery) Kantatenweg 38
(map)
Mid 19th century (orangery) Plastered facade, as part of the former manor with high value for the local and regional history, scientific-documentary and local image-defining value 09263646
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner, with a front garden Klarastraße 21
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Clinker-plaster facade, important in terms of building history 09298750
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Klarastraße 23
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1898 (tenement house), 1899 (front garden) Clinker brick facade, wooden panels, important in terms of building history 09263572
 
Apartment building in closed development and front garden Klarastraße 24
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) with gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important 09298838
 
Apartment building in closed development and courtyard paving Klarastraße 25
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) with gate passage, clinker brick facade, vestibule door, historically important 09263573
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Klarastraße 26
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, stucco and wooden panels in the entrance, of architectural significance 09263574
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Klarastraße 28
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Plastered facade, wooden panels, stucco and painting in the entrance, of importance in terms of building history 09263575
 
Apartment building in closed development and front garden Klarastraße 29
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) with gate passage, clinker brick facade, stucco and stencil painting in the gate passage, of architectural significance 09263576
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Klarastraße 30
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Plastered facade, wooden panels, important in terms of building history 09298839
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Klarastraße 31
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, stucco structure in the entrance, see also Klarastraße 33, historically important 09263577
 
Apartment building in closed development with front garden Klarastraße 33
(map)
1905 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, stucco in the entrance, see also Klarastraße 31, historically important 09263578
 
Apartment building in closed development Klarastraße 39
(map)
1911 (tenement) Plastered facade, in the reform style, document of upscale housing construction at the beginning of the 20th century in Kleinzschocher, of architectural significance

A preliminary residential project in 1908 by Margarete Hellwig born Zocher and the builder Ernst Schlieder did not come to the execution. At the beginning of 1911, the lithographer Gottlieb Zocher, who also commissioned Ernst Schlieder from Gohlis with the production of documents and then also with the execution, made a new attempt at the beginning of 1911. The four-storey front residential building with an attic apartment was completed in September 1911. The high basement, the strong box bay, the roof house with high gable and the house entrance portal are characteristic. Decorative elements of the reform style are sparingly attached to the plastered facade, the covering was created as a double-tile roof. There was a shop on the ground floor until 1959, and the laundry room was relocated from the top floor to the basement as early as 1934. Spacious apartments - only one per floor - promised the best possible comfort. In 1997 renovation, repair and balcony extension took place. LfD / 2014, 2015

09305336
 
Apartment building in closed development Klingenstrasse 39
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Formerly with a shop, plastered facade, vestibule door, historically important 09263582
 
Double tenement house in closed development Klingenstrasse 41; 43
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around 1905 (double tenement house) Plastered clinker facade, porch door, etched glass in the stairwell, of importance in terms of building history 09263581
 
Apartment building in closed development Klingenstrasse 46
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around 1905 (tenement) with shop, clinker brick facade, of importance in terms of building history 09298775
 
Apartment building in closed development Klingenstrasse 48
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around 1900 (tenement) with a shop, clinker brick facade, stucco and painting in the entrance, important in terms of building history 09263583
 
Apartment house in half-open development and courtyard paving Klingenstrasse 49
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1898–1899 (tenement house) with gate passage, plastered facade, historically important

At the same time between August 1898 and October 1899 a front residential building, wash house and a courtyard building were built for and by the construction business Friedrich Zechendorf & Wilhelm Gödicke. Each floor of the street-side building had only one apartment with two rooms, two chambers, kitchen, corridor and the outside toilet, on the ground floor a smaller apartment because of the passage. The building in the courtyard with wagon shed, horse stable, crockery room and hay and straw floor above, together with the port chamber (garage conversion 1973). Josef Fritsch had master builder Paul Heilemann set up a shop at the turn of the year 1907/1908, which was dismantled again in 1983. 2001 Rejection of a demolition application, renovation planned in 2013/2014. The narrow, only five-axis facade with smooth plastering, an axially symmetrical conception on the upper floors and historicist stucco decor, the furnishings have largely been preserved. Originally preserved historicism building in the Kleinzschocher expansion area, of importance in terms of building history and the history of the district's development. LfD / 2013

09298782
 
Apartment building in closed development Klingenstrasse 51
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Plastered facade, wooden panels, freehand painting and stucco fillet in the entrance area, original staircase lamp, of importance in terms of building history 09298783
 
Apartment building in closed development Klingenstrasse 52
(map)
marked 1899 (tenement house) Plastered facade, vestibule door in the entrance area, of architectural significance

Initially, Otto Heller from Möckern commissioned architect Albert Wolf to build a new house, but sold the permit including the plot to the restaurateur Adolph Hermann Kleine from Paunsdorf before construction began - the project was nevertheless implemented within 1899. Further property owners were subsequently Johann Heinrich Höhn, the station assistant Johannes Friedrich Czschasche in Werdau, private man Karl Gustav Louis Dammer in Gautzsch, telegraph assistant Karl Hermann Bornschein from Böhlitz-Ehrenberg. The tenement house, almost unchanged for 110 years, should not be extensively renovated until 2009/2010. The plastered façade rises above a clinker base with rich historic stucco decor, especially relief panels under the sills and window canopies, as well as consoles and toothed cutting strips on the eaves. On both sides, two side projections protruding only slightly from the facade grasp the strict structure. Only the keystones with female head reliefs remain from the grooves on the ground floor. At the time of recording, the building's equipment was largely preserved: front door, staircase, floor tiles, porch door and apartment doors. The dark, overpowering dormers of the roof extension appear grandiose inappropriately to the light facade. For the tenement house in the closed quarter there is a historical building and district development value. LfD / 2016

09263584
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Klingenstrasse 53
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around 1900 (tenement) Formerly with a shop, clinker brick facade, stucco in the entrance area, historically important 09263585
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner, with restaurant Klingenstrasse 54
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1898–1899 (tenement house) Formerly a shop, clinker brick facade, historically important, evidence of the development of the district

The neighboring tenement houses at Klingenstrasse 52 and Wigandstrasse 44 were built in 1899/1900 according to plans by the architect Albert Wolf. Klingenstrasse 54 was designated as the building site of the entrepreneur and master bricklayer Johann Moch from Möckern, who probably also took over the execution of the house in 1899 himself. A historical building file was not available in July 2015. The documents begin with the test notification for the modernization of the functional area of ​​July 24, 1987. The extension of the top floor was applied for in 1995, but the applicant only received construction approval after submitting and checking the statics in autumn 1998. In 2000, plans were submitted for renovation and conversion as well as a balcony extension that has already been carried out. During the construction period, three apartments were definitely planned for the upper floors, only one tenant on the ground floor and a restaurant across the corner. This restaurant is still mentioned in 1987 in the inventory, named in 1992 as "Kittlers Gaststätte" under the operator Kuschke, a photo in 2008 shows advertising for "Pub P". The two-tone clinker brick facade rises above the plastered ground floor with structures made of cast artificial stone, late-historic stucco decoration in window roofs and numerous consoles under the sills and roofs, the eaves are now simplified. A slightly protruding corner and a side elevation in Klingenstrasse enliven the multi-axis front. The furnishings include wood paneling, stucco and floor tiles in the entrance area, house and apartment entrance doors, and the stairwell. The visually very effective corner building with architectural and site development significance and urban value. LfD / 2016

09263586
 
Apartment building in closed development Klingenstrasse 55
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around 1900 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, stucco and wooden panels in the entrance, lead glass windows in the stairwell, of architectural significance 09263587
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Klingenstrasse 56
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around 1905 (tenement) Plaster and clinker facade, important from an architectural point of view 09298781
 
Apartment building in closed development Klingenstrasse 57
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around 1905 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09299004
 
Apartment building in closed development Klingenstrasse 58
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around 1900 (tenement) with passage through the house, plastered facade, wooden panels in the entrance area, historically important 09299026
 
Apartment building in closed development Klingenstrasse 60
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around 1900 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, stucco and wooden panels in the entrance, stencil painting in the stairwell, of architectural significance 09263588
 
Apartment building in closed development Knauthainer Strasse 4
(map)
1892–1895 (tenement house) Unique plastered facade as an imitation clinker brick, high-quality front door, significant in terms of building history and urban planning

The first plans for the construction of residential buildings were available in August 1892, and in November 1894 tectures for the facade and the apartment floor plans were submitted. Instead of a lavishly decorated front side, each with two-axis side projections and an extended mansard storey, a Wilhelminian style façade that has been greatly reduced in terms of stucco and waiver of attic apartments. Only the center of the nine-axis building is still accentuated by the house entrance and the different types of window roofing, use of molded artificial stone parts. Emphasis on the second floor with stucco consoles under the roofing windows (shed motif and rose window) and the sills. The plastered façade, which imitates the clinker facing of the building on the three upper floors, is a rarity! The final acceptance took place in June 1895. Initially, the owners of a coal and building materials dealership in Kleinzschocher, the Geidel brothers, and brickworks owner Osmar Strobel from Crimmlitz were named as building contractors.In 1893, the property was transferred to Carl Richard Leonhardt in Kleinzschocher, who, as a master bricklayer, took over the execution himself. Hedwig Oehm is named as the owner in 1908, and in 1947 the businessman Alfred Meier. In August 1988 project creation for functional area modernization by VEB GWL Leipzig. On the upper floors three apartments per floor, very beautiful double-leaf front door with skylight and the interior fittings have been preserved. Important urban development location. LfD / 2009

09298785
 
Apartment building in half-open development Knauthainer Strasse 26
(map)
marked 1913 (tenement) Plastered facade, original hallway lamps, front door with cut glass, important in terms of building history 09299002
 
Apartment building in closed development Knauthainer Strasse 28
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09299151
 
Apartment building in closed development Knauthainer Strasse 30
(map)
1900/1905 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09263589
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Knauthainer Strasse 32
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) with a former shop, clinker brick facade, historically important 09263590
 
Apartment building in half-open development Knauthainer Strasse 33
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1900/1905 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09263591
 
Apartment building in semi-open development, with garden, balustrade, pool and gazebo and garden gate Knauthainer Strasse 36
(map)
1897–1898 (tenement), 1922, loft extension (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

Between October 1897 and June 1898 the house was built by master bricklayer Richard Leonhardt, who took on the undertaking himself and also signed the structural calculations. In 1899 a wooden veranda was added. The relocation of the house entrance in 1903, however, was not carried out, so the gate passage was retained. Under the property owner Marie Werner geb. Leonhardt is on record in 1922 the installation of an attic apartment by master builder and architect Gustav Spatzier, and for 1938 the plan to renovate the facade with high-grade plaster, whereby all plaster consoles and decorations should be knocked off. Refurbishment, balcony extension, floor plan changes and roof extensions were applied for in 1999. The accent of the facade design is on the left axis with the gate of the house passage, otherwise a cornice and window frames structure. Parts of the furnishings are likely to have been preserved, the wooden balcony construction is of particular interest. An interest in the history of the building and the development of the district can be registered for the unusually simple tenement building, which can be classified under historicism. LfD / 2016

09263592
 
Tram depot of the Leipzig Electric Tramway, with two car halls (Dieskaustraße 92), residential and administrative building (Kötzschauer Straße 1) including annex as well as courtyard paving and track remains Kötzschauer Strasse 1
(map)
1898 opening (tram depot), 1897–1898 (wagon hall), 1912 (wagon hall), 1897–1898 (residential and office building) Former tram depot with courtyard area, laid out as an overnight depot with a wagon hall, later expanded for workshop operations and expanded by a second hall, evidence of the early days of public electrical local transport in Leipzig with two competing tram companies and each independent rail networks and depots, from Significance, roof structures of the car halls of interest in terms of construction history

A horse-drawn tram was running in downtown Leipzig as early as 1872, and the surrounding districts were gradually connected to the rail network. In 1893, the horse-drawn railway company - trading as the Great Leipzig Tramway (GLSt) from 1896 - received competition from a second tramway company, the Leipzig Electric Tramway (LEst), which was also known as the “Red” because of its vehicle color. The fact that joint use of the rails was denied led to the establishment of a separate rail network with partly parallel routing and separate depots. After the line opened in 1896 with a depot and workshop on Wittenberger Strasse, the Leipziger Elektrical Tram submitted a preliminary building request in May 1897 (legally binding signed by Messrs Heise and Köhler) for the construction of a sub-depot with overnight accommodation for the property on which it has been located since 1867 The stable of the art gardener Carl Hermann Wolf was located. The detailed description names a 42-meter-long and 15-meter-wide wagon hall for twenty motor vehicles with inspection pits, a small workshop with warehouse and a three-storey civil servants' residence on the corner of today's Kötzschauer Strasse. In 1898, the final acceptance of the depot took place, which stood out in terms of design with its façade made of yellow clinker bricks with plaster and red clinker strips. A fencing wall designed by Mackay with the typical “red” color scheme on the southeast corner of the company premises with two (later three) gates to connect the courtyard tracks to the Großzschochersche tram route was completed in the same year. In the courtyard, the individual wagons were distributed to the parking and maintenance tracks in the courtyard and in the wagon hall using switches. In the corner building there was an apartment on the ground floor as well as office space with adjoining rooms, two apartments each on the upper floors and a laundry room in the basement, the commercial space was converted into a rental unit just over three months after completion. In 1912 the entrance to Kötzschauer Strasse was relocated - along with the relocation of the final stop of tram line 5, which ran from Schönefeld (Löbauer Strasse) via Johannisplatz, Bayrischen Bahnhof and Beethovenstrasse. The car hall with four tracks - originally designed as a storage hall for tram cars - soon also included a workshop and was supplemented in 1912 by a second car hall over four additional tracks. At the same time, the corner building received an extension to the new car hall. Another ground floor renovation in the corner house took place in 1953. Both car halls differ from one another in terms of their construction. The first was made of twelve masonry in a steel framework construction and with a representative gable made of yellow exposed brickwork. From the elaborate design with a glazed gable triangle and a beam decorated with crossed iron profiles and rosettes over four gates (as can still be seen in the car hall of the central depot in Wittenberger Strasse), unfortunately only the corner pillars with crowns have survived. Inside, however, the hall impresses with the filigree roof structure made of riveted iron trusses with lateral struts to the base of the side walls. The younger wagon hall, which in principle represented a courtyard roof between the existing hall and the property boundary on Kötzschauer Straße, however, shows itself inside with mighty hanging and trussing made of wood, with a narrow wall shell on the side wall of the older hall and one of the existing buildings The design-based yellow brick facade with red brick strips parallel to the side street. The design of the gable remained comparatively simple. While in 1913 a new overnight depot was opened by the Leipzig Electric Tram in Paunsdorf, it had to merge with the Great Leipzig Tram in 1916. Gradually, the route network, which was often laid out in side streets due to the former competitive situation, was shut down. Some of the depots remained in use, but also lost some of their importance. After the opening of the nearby Angerbrücke tram station in 1925, the Kleinzschocher tram station was mainly used to store damaged wagons, it was only occasionally used in regular service and was finally sold in 1959. Despite subsequent use by a workshop, the former tram station with its buildings, large parts of the track system in the courtyard and in both halls and the enclosure wall (changed) have been preserved. As evidence of the early days of local electrical public transport in Leipzig, in which two competing tram companies were rapidly pushing ahead with the replacement of horse-drawn trams, they document a decisive phase in community and urban development. The remarkable, meanwhile rare roof structures in both car halls are also significant in terms of construction history and, given their narrow structural context, are of great visual value. Together with the associated residential and administrative building, which is located in a corner and is important in terms of urban planning, the car halls have a value in terms of architectural, site development and traffic history. LfD / 2018

09263593
 
Apartment building in half-open development Kötzschauer Strasse 2
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around 1905 (tenement) Plastered clinker facade, stucco structure and stucco fillet, vestibule door, apartment doors with supraports, iron cellar barrier, important from an architectural point of view 09298815
 
Apartment building in half-open development Kötzschauer Strasse 4
(map)
around 1920 (tenement) Plastered facade, cellar window grilles, eaves with remains of painting, iron cellar barrier, of architectural significance 09298816
 
Double apartment house in open development in a corner Kötzschauer Strasse 5a; 5b
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1910/1915 (double tenement house) Plastered facade, reform style architecture, important in terms of building history 09263594
 
Apartment house in open development in a corner Kötzschauer Strasse 7
(map)
1912–1913 (tenement house) built in the manner of a double tenement house, plastered facade, verandas to the courtyard, reform style architecture, historically important

In February 1912, building tradesman Paul Beck and building business owner Albin Wunderlich submitted an application for a corner residential building with four apartments per floor, which should be accessed via two stairwells. The architect Carl Wolf contributed drawings to the project, who was also commissioned with the construction management. The company stamp of the executing company reads Paul Beck & Co., Baugeschäft, Leipzig-Schleußig, Stieglitzstraße. After the shell inspection was carried out in September, the property and the house became the property of master plumber Xaver William Pittschaft. Now the execution was in the hands of Gustav Kampf and the construction management was in the hands of the architect Artur Werner, the final examination was dated March 19, 1913. On July 28, 1994, the building permit was issued with building approval for renovation and modernization. The three-storey corner building facing Luckaer Strasse is accessed from the rear, has a plastered facade over a clinker base that extends to the window sills on the ground floor, slightly protruding risalits on both facades and little decor, as well as an attic extension with vertical dormers. After the last renovation phase in 1994/1995, the coarse windows and the grilles of the cellar windows do not seem very advantageous. As a corner building in the expansion area, the house has a building-historical and street-characterizing value. LfD / 2014

09263595
 
Double apartment house in open development in a corner Kötzschauer Strasse 9a; 9b
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1910/1915 (double tenement house) Plastered facade, partly leaded glass windows in the stairwell, of architectural significance 09263596
 
Apartment house in a formerly closed development in a corner
Apartment house in a formerly closed development in a corner Kulkwitzer Strasse 1
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) with gate passage and shop, plastered clinker facade, etched glass in the stairwell, of architectural significance 09263597
 
Multi-family houses in a residential complex, with front garden at No. 8–16
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Multi-family houses in a residential complex, with front garden at No. 8–16 Kurt-Kresse-Strasse 2; 4; 6; 8th; 10; 12; 14; 16
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1936–1938 (apartment building) Plastered facade, row of houses with Dieskaustraße 94, of urban and socio-historical importance 09299453
 
Apartment buildings in a residential complex Luckaer Strasse 1; 3; 5; 7
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1929–1931, number 5/7 (apartment building), 1931, number 1/3 (apartment building) Plastered facade with clinker brick design, see also Schwartzestraße 17/19, echoes of the New Objectivity style, of importance in terms of building history 09263655
 
Individual monument belonging to the Kleinzschocher railway settlement (Obj. 09305384, Hartmannsdorfer Straße 1–8): part of a row of tenement houses (with Schwartzestraße 21/23 and Hartmannsdorfer Straße 1a) of a residential complex Luckaer Strasse 2
(map)
1921–1922 (apartment building) Plastered facade, see also Schwartzestraße 25–29, 31, Eythraer Straße 5–11, Luckaer Straße 4–10, Hartmannsdorfer Straße 1a, 1–9 and 2–8, of importance in terms of urban development and social history 09301918
 
Group of tenement houses in a residential complex, with fencing and courtyard green Luckaer Strasse 4; 6; 8th; 10
(card)
1921–1925 (apartment building), 1926 (enclosure) Plastered facade, see also Luckaer Straße 2, Schwartzestraße 21–29, Eythraer Straße 5–11, Hartmannsdorfer Straße 1–7 and 2–8, of importance in terms of urban planning and social history 09263658
 
Apartment house in open development in a corner Luckaer Strasse 12
(map)
1921–1923 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09263602
 
Apartment house in open development in a corner, with fencing Luckaer Strasse 20
(map)
1910/1915 (tenement house) Plastered facade, leaded glass windows in the stairwell, of architectural significance 09263603
 
Apartment building in open development Luckaer Strasse 22
(map)
around 1910 (tenement) Plastered facade, half-timbered gable, stucco valley in the entrance, leaded glass windows in the stairwell, of architectural significance 09263604
 
Apartment house in open development in a corner Luckaer Strasse 24
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Formerly with a corner store, plastered clinker brick facade, formerly original store door, historically important 09299052
 
Apartment house in open development in a corner Luckaer Strasse 26
(map)
1910/1915 (tenement house) with shop, plastered facade, remnants of leaded glass windows in the stairwell, of architectural significance 09263605
 
Residential house in formerly half-open development, with courtyard paving Neue Strasse 4
(map)
1874 (residential building) Plastered facade, document of the district development in the transition from the rural structure to urbanization, of architectural significance

The small building dating from the early early years shows the change in the villages around Leipzig, in which residential and commercial properties are now in newly created short side streets to the farms lined up along the main streets. Franz Erler had the front and rear buildings built in 1874, each with one apartment per floor in the front building, consisting of two rooms, a chamber and a kitchen. A toilet building was in the yard. Hermann Heilemann commissioned an extension in 1886. Two years later he had a roller house with an annex built, which was translated in 1930. Anna Bertha, widowed Hartmann née Breitenborn, commissioned a courtyard-side extension for water-flush toilets in 1937, and a roof window was added to the street in 1951. Renovation and modernization measures 2010/2011 according to plans by architect Doreen Graumann on my own behalf. LfD / 2010

09263610
 
Residential house in semi-open development Neue Strasse 9
(map)
around 1900 (residential building) with gate passage, plastered facade, historically important 09298840
 
Residential house in semi-open development Neue Strasse 10
(map)
1874 (residential building) Plastered building with field stone base, significance in terms of building history, document of the early village expansion

The small two-storey house with a plastered facade over rubble stone plinth was built in 1874 as a semi-detached house for Messrs. Wilhelm Sachse and Gustav Wurl, typical of the first Wilhelminian expansion in the immediate outskirts in the villages around Leipzig. Master carpenter Friedrich Sachse from Kleinzschocher is renowned for the execution. For number 10 there is evidence of an extension on the courtyard side for August Schulze in 1886 under contractor Richard Müller. The appearance in the data collection year 1993 with standing dormers in the attic and the facade completely with winter windows. In the meantime, this type of house has to be certified as a rarity in major Saxon cities. LfD / 2011

09263611
 
Memorial to victims of fascism Nikolai Rumyantsev Street
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1960 (monument) Granite monolith with inscription, document for the resistance at the end of fascism with historical value and memory value

Memorial in memory of what is probably the largest German-Soviet resistance group in Germany under the leadership of the German Max Hauke ​​and the Russian lathe operator and kidnapped foreign worker Nikolai Rumjanzew, who lived in the Hauke ​​family's gazebo not far from the memorial stone. The resistance group against fascism was formed by communists in the years 1942–1944, before part of them fell into the hands of the Gestapo, the Soviet citizens were murdered in Auschwitz, the German resistance fighters were sentenced to death in Dresden. However, they managed to escape in connection with the air attack by Allied bomber groups on the city. The granite memorial stone was inaugurated on the 15th anniversary of the liberation on May 8, 1960. The flag of the Soviet Union is depicted above the inscription.

09263612
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner and gazebo in the courtyard Panitzstrasse 1
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Formerly with shops, plastered facade, wooden panels, vestibule door, historically important 09263625
 
Apartment house in open development in a corner Panitzstrasse 2
(map)
1906–1907 (tenement house) with corner shutter, plastered facade, historically important as evidence of the town's expansion, urban planning indispensable on the corner of Rolf-Axen-Straße and Ruststraße

The building application for the three-storey residential building in an exposed corner location was submitted on December 8th, 1906 by the master bricklayer Karl Richard Leonhardt and the same was approved for use at the end of September 1907. One apartment and one shop apartment were installed on the ground floor and three apartments each on the upper floors. Noteworthy for the time is the establishment of bathrooms with toilets in the two apartments on the side; the middle rental area was accessible via the hallway. In 1908 a restaurant with a lounge and billiard room in the shop was set up, which was replaced in 1913 by a baker's shop, then a café and a bicycle shop. Since the owner of the bicycle shop Hermann Schuster also had a petrol station license, the ground floor balcony on today's Gießerstraße was to be converted into a petrol station room in 1940. The installation of a petrol pump by Rhenania-Ossag, Mineralölwerke AG on the property is documented as early as 1926/1927 (the demolition of the petrol station was planned in 1998). The house is completely plastered, with Art Nouveau pilaster strips and exposed framework in the eaves area characterizing the striking corner building. Today there is a restaurant again in the corner area of ​​the ground floor. The furnishings of the building have largely been preserved. Head building at the intersection of Panitzstrasse, Ruststrasse and Rolf-Axen-Strasse, an indispensable part of urban planning, is of architectural significance as a document of the town's expansion. LfD / 2014

09299025
 
Apartment building in closed development and gazebo in the courtyard Panitzstrasse 3
(map)
1901–1902 (tenement house) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history

Master bricklayer Albert Leonhardt submitted a building application for the construction of a residential house on June 8, 1901, which he also intended to carry out himself; the final examination took place on June 25, 1902. Other property owners can be named below: master builder Otto Emil Leonhardt (from 1907), chief postman Karl Eduard Louis Schneider (1912), later the Schneider heirs and from 1937 Johannes Lohse, Maria verw. Dittmann and Elisabeth ehl. Kreutzburg. The plastered building with grooves and artificial stone structures without extensive decor, two apartments per floor with two rooms each facing the street, a chamber and kitchen facing the courtyard, a central corridor and a toilet that is not locked. Preserved the solid craftsmanship of the stairwell and the entrance area along with a later painting. In 1934, plans were submitted by architect Walter May for the extension of the attic. Formerly a gazebo in the garden, which was built by Louis Schneider in 1914 as a chicken coop. In the years 1995/1996 renovation accompanied by a further loft extension. Significant in terms of building history and local history. LfD / 2012, 2013

09263626
 
Apartment building in half-open development Panitzstrasse 4
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Plastered facade, apartment doors with supraports, of importance in terms of building history 09298796
 
Apartment building in closed development Panitzstrasse 7
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, stucco and vestibule door in the entrance, of architectural significance 09263627
 
Double apartment building in open development Panitzstrasse 10; 12
(card)
1905/1910 (double tenement house) Plastered facade, lead glass windows in the stairwell, in the Reform and Art Nouveau style, of importance in terms of building history 09263628
 
Apartment building in closed development Panitzstrasse 11
(map)
around 1907 (tenement) with house passage, plastered facade, historically important 09298797
 
Apartment house in open development in a corner Panitzstrasse 14
(map)
around 1910 (tenement) Formerly with a corner shutter, plastered facade, lead glass window in the stairwell, of significance in terms of building history 09263629
 
Apartment building in closed development Panitzstrasse 19
(map)
1902 (tenement) Plastered facade, stucco in the entrance area, of importance in terms of building history

Strangely enough, identical facade drawings can be found in the building files for nos. 15, 17, 19, although the execution periods and the builders of the apartment buildings are different. Master bricklayer Karl Richard Leonhardt from Kleinzschocher initiated number 19 on October 5, 1901, sold the property and building permit on January 1, 1902 to the bricklayer and building business owner Johann Karl Krell from Knautkleeberg. He carried out the construction until July 1902. From 1906 the house is owned by bricklayer Friedrich August Burkhardt, in 1914 by innkeeper Paul Friedrich Burkhardt, in 1936 it belongs to Marie Gottschalk geb. Burkhardt, who sold it to master locksmith Johannes Lux that same year. Less than three months later, master butcher Wilhelm Kasparek takes over, who fails with the application for the installation of an attic apartment in 1937. On April 3, 1989, the test notification for a functional area modernization was issued. The plastered facade typical of a workers' suburb with balanced proportions, cornice, accentuating window roofs on the 1st floor and stucco-decorated eaves. Keep the simple original equipment. Building historical value. LfD / 2012, 2013

09263630
 
Apartment building in open development and courtyard paving Pörstener Strasse 1
(map)
1900–1902 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade, verandas on the back, residential and commercial property with historical value

In 1894, the building concession granted to master stonemason Karl Oehm two years earlier was used by his widow Anna. Oehm returned. A building application submitted by architect Bruno Seyfferth in the summer of 1898 was also not implemented. It was not until 1900 that a residential project was initiated by the building contractor Carl Schmidt and the architect Richard Müller, who was contractually bound by him and who was also the site manager. In March 1902 the final acceptance took place for the building with two apartments per floor, a clinker brick facade above the grooved ground floor and a wash house that is no longer available today. The bel étage is highlighted by more elaborate window frames, the eaves zone is accentuated by historical stucco decor. The equipment is only partially preserved, renovation and modernization - along with a balcony extension and loft extension with sunbathing windows - in 1999 for Guldner & Hawly from Munich based on their own templates. Disturbing the plastic windows and the same rear entrance door. As part of the planned expansion of the area, it is of importance in terms of the development and history of the district. LfD / 2012

09263607
 
Apartment building in half-open development Pörstener Strasse 3
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Plastered facade with imitation clinker brick, historical value of the district 09298819
 
Apartment building in semi-open development with wash house and courtyard paving Pörstener Strasse 8
(map)
1889–1890 (tenement house) Plastered facade, document of the district development, of architectural interest

Green goods dealer August Heinrich Skuhr coveted to build a house and a stable in 1889, contracted Richard Leonhardt with the design / execution and in February 1890 held the building revision protocol of the final acceptance in his hands. Bricklayer Ernst Skuhr was involved in the project. In the back building, next to the laundry room, there was a vaulted horse stable, shed and a hayloft. In the front building there are two apartments on each floor; the mansard floor, which was designed for residential purposes, had not been approved. 1997/1998 a non-executed building application for balcony extension and attic extension by Helmut Völker. The clinker brick courtyard building and the historic courtyard paving have been preserved, the facade of the front building is plastered and has a restrained stucco decoration. As a document of the local expansion, the simple building including the ancillary facilities is of value in terms of architectural history and the history of local development. LfD / 2014

09298818
 
Double apartment building in open development Pörstener Strasse 13; 15
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around 1910 (double tenement house) Facade with clinker brick and plaster structure, wooden verandas on the back, of architectural significance 09263609
 
Apartment house in open development in a corner Pörstener Strasse 14
(map)
1902–1904 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade, formerly with a corner shutter, the corner building has a historical value and a historical value

Paul Schaaf, together with the architect Josef Miller, initiated the construction of a residential building in the autumn of 1896, which was rejected and which was then not pursued any further. It was not until 1902 that private Carl Fehse made a renewed attempt to develop the property, for which the Connewitz architect F. Otto Gerstenberger was called in with regard to design and execution. After the building permit was granted in October 1902, the property was sold on to the bricklayer Herrmann Lewandowsky, who involved master bricklayer Max Bernhardt and master builder Julius Richard Porsche in the implementation of the project. During the work in 1903 the project stalled, the property was passed on to businessman Hermann Josef Kaiser, who had the house completed in spring 1904. The shop with two shop windows was installed in 1907 under the construction business owner Ernst Schlegel, who took over the financing, execution, construction management and design. The building stands effectively on the corner of Luckaer Strasse, with two clinker-clad upper floors above the ground floor, which is now smoothed and plastered. The window frames made of artificial stone, in the transition between historicism and art nouveau, are remarkable. The equipment is partly outdated. The building in the corner has a historical and a historical value. LfD / 2014

09305112
 
Apartment building in open development Pörstener Strasse 16
(map)
1909–1910 (tenement) Plastered facade, part of the district development, of district history of interest

Architect ME Reichardt from Leipzig-Gohlis, who had initially been contracted by master bricklayer Wilhelm Kother, presented plans for the tenement house from 1901/1910 with a rather unusual facade. However, the property passed into the possession of cement merchant Friedrich Paul Bernhardt and master bricklayer Theodor Fahnert even before construction work began. An unusual note can be found in the building file, where the supervisory authority notes: “Fahnert has already had many houses, e. Currently also in Kleinzschocher, built and belongs to those who have to be closely monitored ”. In August 1910, the architect ME Reichardt presented tectures for the facade before the final building handover took place on September 30th. In 1923 a building application was submitted for the installation of an attic apartment with documents from the architect and builder Gustav Spatzier for the client Arthur Hartung, who had a second residential unit built in the roof from 1926–1927. Roof apartment number 3 follows in 1931/1932 as well as a conversion of the middle apartments from 1935 to 1938. Application for extension of pointed floor, new balcony extension, floor plan changes, installation of a passenger elevator in 1998 by WF Bauträger GmbH from Eching and plan production by Dipl.-Ing. Architect Uwe-Michael Hönle from Leipzig. The smooth plaster facade of the house has fine grooves and two-tone plastering. Among other things, the stairwell and vestibule are retained from the furnishings. Significance in terms of building history and district development history, part of the closed ensemble of the Kleinzschocher expansion area. LfD / 2011, 2013

09298820
 
Apartment house in open development in a corner Pörstener Strasse 17
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Plastered facade, corner building, of interest in terms of the history of the district and building history 09298999
 
Residential house (with two house numbers) in closed development and courtyard paving Ratzelstrasse 10; 10a
(card)
1928 (residential building) three- and four-storey building with shops and gate passage, richly structured clinker brick facade, committed to expressionism, lead-glass windows in the stairwell, built as a consumer outlet, of architectural significance 09263631
 
School, with gymnasium, fountain in the courtyard and enclosure as well as school yard Ratzelstrasse 26
(map)
1928–1929 (school) School as a U-shaped system, plastered building with clinker brick structure, architect: City Planning Officer Hubert Ritter, stylistically between traditionalism and modernism, of importance in terms of building history and art history 09263632
 
Individual monument belonging to the Meyersche houses Kleinzschocher (Obj. 09304994): 28 apartment buildings
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Individual monument belonging to the Meyersche houses Kleinzschocher (Obj. 09304994): 28 apartment buildings Ratzelstrasse 47; 49; 51; 53; 55; 57; 59; 61; 63; 65; 67; 69; 71; 73; 75; 77; 79; 81; 83; 85; 87; 89; 91; 93; 95; 97; 99; 101
(card)
1907–1908 (apartment building) Tenement houses for social housing, see also Hermann-Meyer-Strasse 1–85 and 2–46, Schönauer Strasse 172–178 and Kurt-Kresse-Strasse 61–99, of importance in terms of town planning, building history and social history 09263557
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Rolf-Axen-Strasse 2
(map)
1906–1908 (tenement house) with shops, plastered facade with corner tower, wall tiles and vestibule door in the entrance, lead glass windows in the stairwell, of architectural significance

As a head building that is indispensable in terms of urban planning, the tenement building fits in between the former train station and Gustav-Adolf-Strasse, today Rolf-Axen-Strasse and Gießerstrasse. The building contractor Moritz Arras called in the architect Carl Wolf as initiator and executor, who provided him with drafts and was supposed to take over the construction management, but this task was later given to Georg Reinhold Kühn. In October 1906, the building authority approved the “front residential building with shops and storage rooms on the ground floor plus washhouse extension”, for which architect Max Günther submitted static calculations. At the beginning of April 1908, use was permitted after the final examination. Expansion of an attic apartment in 1922 by Gustav Spatzier for Franz Sander. In 1925, the same Spatzier received the order for repair work on the plastered facades. The draft plans show a large dwarf house, clamped between two corner bay windows with tower attachments and slotted tower domes that point very effectively into the wide intersection area. Various plaster structures, molded artificial stone parts and decor from the late Art Nouveau adorned the clearly gridded and, unfortunately, heavily smoothed facade today. Architectural, urban and district development significant head building in the expansion area, renovation 2015 LfD / 2014, 2017

09263633
 
Apartment building in closed development with fencing to the rear of Gießerstraße Rolf-Axen-Strasse 4
(map)
around 1906 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, wooden panels and vestibule door in the entrance, of architectural significance 09263634
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Rolf-Axen-Strasse 5
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) With a former corner shop and formerly other shops, plastered clinker facade, of architectural significance 09263635
 
Apartment building in closed development Rolf-Axen-Strasse 6
(map)
around 1909 (tenement) Formerly plastered clinker facade, of importance in terms of building history 09299024
 
Apartment building in closed development Rolf-Axen-Strasse 7
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, stucco framing in the entrance area, important in terms of building history 09299003
 
Apartment building in half-open development Rolf-Axen-Strasse 8
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Plaster clinker facade, wooden panels in the entrance area, of architectural significance 09299023
 
Apartment building in closed development Rolf-Axen-Strasse 14
(map)
around 1907 (tenement) formerly with a shop, clinker brick facade, of importance in terms of building history 09299051
 
Apartment building in closed development Rolf-Axen-Strasse 16
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Plastered facade, wooden panels and stucco valley in the entrance area, of importance in terms of building history 09298784
 
Apartment building in closed development Rolf-Axen-Strasse 20
(map)
around 1910 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, wall tiles in the entrance and leaded glass windows in the stairwell, of architectural significance 09263636
 
Apartment building in closed development Rolf-Axen-Strasse 25
(map)
around 1909 (tenement) Plastered facade, stucco valley, vestibule door with colored textured glass, apartment doors with grilles and overhangs, leaded glass windows in the stairwell, remains of stencil painting, of importance in terms of building history 09298788
 
Apartment building in half-open development Rolf-Axen-Strasse 27
(map)
around 1909 (tenement) Plastered facade, stairwell window with remnants of colored lead glazing, original hallway lamp, significant from an architectural point of view 09298787
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Rolf-Axen-Strasse 33
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Plastered facade, stencil painting, wooden panels, iron cellar barrier, of importance in terms of building history 09298779
 
Locomotive shed, service building and goods building of a former depot and signal box at the depot (to the west, near Diezmannstraße 23) Ruststrasse
(map)
1901–1902 (engine shed), around 1890 (signal box) Clinker buildings in historicist forms, clinker brick structures, originally the railway depot of the Royal Saxon State Railways, evidence of regional railway development, see also Leipzig-Plagwitz train station (Leipzig-Plagwitz, Engertstraße 36/38) and Leipzig-Plagwitz industrial train station (Röckener Straße 2-38) as well Prussian part of the Leipzig-Plagwitz depot (Leipzig-Kleinzschocher, Schönauer Straße 113), of importance in terms of traffic and technology 09305780
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Ruststrasse 1
(map)
1890/1895 (tenement house) Formerly with a corner shutter, plastered facade, historically important 09263637
 
Apartment building in half-open development Ruststrasse 2
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, wooden panels, stucco and vestibule door in the entrance, lead-glass windows in the stairwell, of architectural significance 09263638
 
Apartment building in closed development Ruststrasse 3
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Plastered facade, wooden panels and stencil painting in the entrance, of architectural significance 09263639
 
Apartment building in closed development and courtyard paving Ruststrasse 5
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) with gate passage, shop, plastered facade, wooden panels, historically important 09298802
 
Apartment building in closed development and courtyard paving Ruststrasse 7
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered facade, historically important 09298803
 
Apartment building in closed development Ruststrasse 8
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Plaster clinker facade, wall tiles with end strips, stucco framing and valley in the entrance area, vestibule door, apartment doors with grilles and overhangs, of importance in terms of building history 09298798
 
Apartment building in closed development Ruststrasse 9
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) with gate passage, shop, plastered facade, remnants of stencil painting in the stairwell, of architectural significance 09290725
 
Apartment building in closed development Ruststrasse 10
(map)
1900–1901 (tenement house) Plaster clinker facade, blinds, wooden panels, vestibule door, stencil painting, of importance in terms of building history

In addition to a residential building, a glass workshop and a wash house were applied for, and Rob. Weber commissioned with the construction management. The initiator was the glazier Karl Kleine, who lives in Kleinzschocher. Almost two months later, in June 1900, the property came into the possession of the building contractor Maximilian Oscar Kirsten in Schleußig through sale, who started construction and completed the building, except for the interior work, in spring 1901. After the foreclosure auction in May 1901, private man Franz Hermann Heller from Möckern had the last work carried out and the workshop building was dispensed with. Subsequent approval of the plans changed by the architect ME Reichardt in February. The following can be named in the succession of ownership: butcher Max Paul Müller (1903), landowner Robert Reinhold Trauschel from Altenroda (1903), inn owner August Franz Hartmann in Weißenfels (1904), carpenter Gustav Otto Reichardt in Lindenau (1910). In 1956 Otto Reichardt submitted an application to convert the shop into living space. The design of the plastered clinker facade of the two-in-hand apartment building shows a splendid stucco decoration on the first floor and less elaborate window frames on the two upper floors above. This strictly classically formulated facade architecture with emphasized side axes, initially conceived by Weber, was not implemented. Today the facade of the implemented design has unfortunately been smoothed on the first floor, the entrance to the house with a portal frame that is quite rare in this form. The original equipment includes the staircase, the front door was rebuilt based on the historical model, the standing dormer windows disturb the view of the closed street. Significance in building history. Current / 2012

09298799
 
Apartment building in closed development Ruststrasse 11
(map)
1895/1900 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered facade, etched glass in the stairwell, wooden panels in the gate passage, of architectural significance 09263640
 
Apartment building in closed development Ruststrasse 12
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Plaster and clinker facade, important from an architectural point of view 09298800
 
Apartment building in closed development and gazebo in the courtyard Ruststrasse 13
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) Apartment building with gate passage and with shop, plastered facade, of architectural significance 09263641
 
Apartment building in closed development Ruststrasse 14
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, stucco in the entrance, of architectural significance 09263642
 
Apartment building in closed development Ruststrasse 16
(map)
1899–1900 (tenement) Plaster clinker facade, historically important as a tenement house in a closed street

First of all, building contractor Robert Weber from Großzschocher tried to obtain a building license for a residential building and a wash house to be built separately in the courtyard - upon receipt, Weber ceded the permit and the property to the mason foreman (or master mason?) Wilhelm Theodor Fahnert. Architect Albert Wolf was involved in the work that ended with the application for the final inspection. Repair work was planned in 1955 and the functional area modernization in 1989. Behind the structure of the “classic” facade in a very strict grid, an apartment with four and one apartment with three rooms along with the usual functional rooms were planned on each floor, toilets still via the stairs. The two middle floors are emphasized by window frames made of artificial stone elements and some roofs in which stucco (shell motifs) lie. Formerly more stucco decoration here, which was also present in the eaves area. The furnishings include elements of the stairwell, while floor tiles and the stairwell windows, for example, have been renewed. The apartment building in the closed street is a building-historical testimony to the local expansion. LfD / 2014

09299000
 
Apartment building in closed development and courtyard paving Ruststrasse 17
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) with gate passage, formerly with shop, plastered facade, wooden panels, historically important 09298804
 
Apartment building in closed development Ruststrasse 18
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Plaster clinker facade, wooden panels, of importance in terms of building history 09298801
 
Apartment building in closed development Ruststrasse 19
(map)
1895/1900 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered facade, historically important 09263643
 
Apartment building in closed development Ruststrasse 21
(map)
1890–1891, marked 1891 (tenement house) with gate passage, with shops, plastered clinker facade, stucco frieze in the gate passage, of architectural significance

The tenement building presents itself in the closed street with a veritable exuberant facade decoration - the ground floor opens through arched windows to the restaurant behind. First, in 1890, the Schleußiger building contractors, the Kabisch brothers, submitted a building application for two residential buildings and two wash houses and commissioned the architect and master mason FW Heine with plans for them. As a kind of semi-detached house, the tenement houses were to be designed as couples, with a passage and a large shop apartment on each ground floor. The painter Karl Hermann Fleischer, who lives on the opposite side of the street, took the initiative for Schönauer Weg or Straße 11 (today Ruststraße 21), although he did not have a valid building permit. In March 1891 a subsequent building permit was granted and a fine was imposed. Architect Heinrich Lindemann produced a new facade design, who also submitted plans for courtyard buildings: wash house and sausage kitchen as well as a colonnade for the restaurant visitors located in the small garden. The rear outbuildings were rebuilt, expanded and used several times. The “social room” was later transformed into a workshop. The use of the machine building factory Oskar Hübner & Oskar Schulze is known. Refurbishment and modernization in 1992–1994. Two red clinker side projections with coupled windows and lavish historic stucco decoration frame the central, yellow clinker brick facade above the plastered ground floor, the repertoire includes fruit garlands and grotesques, acanthus leaves, masks, tooth-cut frieze, kymation and, as a reference to the inn, a cheerfully drinking “beer king”. The equipment is largely preserved. As a restaurant, the building has a memorable value, it is of architectural and local history and, because of the splendid stucco decoration, it is also of architectural importance. LfD / 2014

09263644
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Ruststrasse 22
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Formerly with a corner shutter, plastered facade, etched glass in the stairwell, of importance in terms of building history 09263645
 
Apartment building in closed development Ruststrasse 24
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, blinds, stucco framing and stucco fillet, of importance in terms of building history 09298807
 
Apartment building in half-open development Ruststrasse 26
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) with gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important 09298808
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Ruststrasse 27
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Plaster clinker facade, stencil painting, vestibule door, of importance in terms of building history 09298805
 
Apartment building in closed development Ruststrasse 29
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09298806
 
Apartment building in closed development Ruststrasse 31
(map)
1885–1886 (tenement house) Plastered facade, apartment building in the ensemble of the expansion area, significant in terms of building history

The building application for a residential building with a wash house attached to the courtyard was submitted on May 22, 1895. The contractor and client was master carpenter August Mätzschker. In addition, master bricklayer Paul Richardt Leonhardt was involved in the company, which ended with final acceptance on April 2, 1896. Two apartments with two rooms facing the street as well as a chamber and kitchen were planned per floor. The axially symmetrical façade on the upper floors with smooth plaster over clinker base, artificial stone structure, stucco consoles under the window roofs and a toothed frieze on the eaves. Formerly built-in shop on the ground floor, still in ruin in July 2013 when almost all of the original equipment was lost. Architecturally of value, part of a closed historic tenement district in the urban expansion area. LfD / 2012, 2013

09304161
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Ruststrasse 33
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) with a former corner store, plastered facade, historically important 09298809
 
Locomotive shed I and water tower of a former railway depot as well as a collection of rail vehicles, steam locomotives and railway wagons from a railway museum Kurt-Kresse-Strasse
(map)
around 1890 (railway operations facility), around 1900 (water tower), 1959 (BR 35 1113-6), 1961 (51 50 88-40 115-0 / dining car), 1963 (51 80 59-40 091-2 / couchette car) Locomotive shed clinker building in historicist forms, water tower with clinker shaft and boarded-up container, originally depot of the Royal Prussian State Railways, evidence of regional railway development, see also Leipzig-Plagwitz train station (Leipzig-Plagwitz, Engertstraße 36/38) and Leipzig-Plagwitz industrial train station ( Leipzig-Plagwitz, Röckener Straße 2–38) as well as the former Saxon part of the Leipzig-Plagwitz depot (Leipzig-Kleinzschocher, Ruststraße or number), steam locomotives 52 5448 and 52 8154-8 of the 52 series, passenger locomotive with a tender class 35 1113-6, Passenger coaches 51 50 88-40 115-0 (WRme), 51 80 39-40 043-8 (A / B), 51 80 59-40 091-2 (Bc), 51 80 19-40 153-9 (A) , 51 80 20-40 062-9 (B), 51 80 82-45 001-7 (B / D), city express coach 5680 19-40 153-4, of importance in terms of traffic and technology 09299595
 
Individual monument belonging to the Meyersche Houses Kleinzschocher (Obj. 09304994): 25 apartment buildings
More pictures
Individual monument belonging to the Meyersche Houses Kleinzschocher (Obj. 09304994): 25 apartment buildings Schoenauer Strasse 172; 174; 176; 178; 180; 182; 184; 186; 188; 190; 192; 194; 196; 198; 200; 202; 204; 206; 208; 208a; 210; 212; 214; 216; 218
(card)
1911–1914 (apartment building) Apartment buildings for social housing, see also Ratzelstrasse 51–59, Kurt-Kresse-Strasse 61–99 and Herrmann-Meyer-Strasse 1–85 and 2–46, of importance in terms of urban planning, building history and social history 09263653
 
Memorial stone for Friedrich Eduard Förster Schwartzestrasse
(map)
probably 1874 (memorial stone) in sandstone, the teacher Friedrich Eduard Förster died in 1874, memorable, testimony to local history 09263282
 
Former cemetery, now a park Schwartzestrasse
(map)
from 1892 (cemetery) of local importance 09263661
 
Double apartment building in a residential complex Schwartzestrasse 17; 19
(card)
1931 (double tenement house) Plastered facade with clinker brick design, see also Luckaer Straße 1–7, echoes of the New Objectivity style, significant in terms of building history 09263654
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Schwartzestrasse 20
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) with corner store, historicizing clinker brick facade, historically important 09263660
 
Individual monument belonging to the Kleinzschocher railway settlement (Obj. 09305384, Hartmannsdorfer Straße 1–8): apartment buildings (with Hartmannsdorfer Straße 1a and Luckaer Straße 2) in a residential complex Schwartzestrasse 21; 23
(card)
1921–1922 (apartment building) Plastered facade, see also Eythraer Straße 5–13, Hartmannsdorfer Straße 1a, 1–7, 2–8, Luckaer Straße 2, 4–10 and Schwartzestraße 25–29, 31, of importance in terms of urban planning and social history 09263656
 
Row of tenement houses in a residential complex and courtyard green Schwartzestrasse 25; 27; 29
(card)
1919–1920 (apartment building) Plastered facade, see also Eythraer Straße 5–13, Hartmannsdorfer Straße 1a, 1–7 and 2–8, Schwartzestraße 21–23 and 31, Luckaer Straße 2, 4–10, of importance in terms of urban planning and social history 09304996
 
Part of a row of tenement houses (with Eythraer Strasse 5–13) of a residential complex and courtyard green Schwartzestrasse 31
(map)
1919–1920 (apartment building) Plastered facade, see also Schwartzestraße 21–31, Luckaer Straße 4–10, Hartmannsdorfer Straße 1–7, 1a, 2–8, document of social housing immediately after World War I, of interest in terms of the history of the district 09302618
 
Totality of Kleinzschocher cemetery, with the following individual monuments: cemetery chapel and mortuary, enclosure wall and tombs (Obj. 09263546) as well as horticultural designed cemetery complex Schwartzestrasse 33
(map)
1915 Opening of the burial ground (cemetery) Cemetery with many hereditary burial wall sites and numerous grave sculptures, of architectural and local significance 09305002
 
Memorial to the fallen of World War 1 Schwartzestrasse 33
(map)
after 1918 (Monument to Fallen) Significant in local history, monolith, surrounded by small boulders, on a suggested hill under a pine tree 09263547
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Wigandstrasse 2
(map)
marked 1902 (tenement house) with gate passage, shops, plastered clinker facade, painting in the entrance, of architectural significance 09263664
 
Apartment building in half-open development Wigandstrasse 3
(map)
around 1880 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09263665
 
Double tenement house in closed development Wigandstrasse 4; 6
(card)
1888 (double tenement house) with gate passage and shop, plastered facade, stucco pilasters in the gate passage, historically important

The bricklayer Friedrich August Rammelt from Kleinzschocher submitted the building application for the two residential buildings at the beginning of 1888, as well as for wash houses at the rear. The final acceptance was carried out in autumn. Both houses were designed for two horses, with toilets halfway up the stairs, and number 4 was fitted with a shop in 1900. The passage for this shop was taken after renovation in 1913, which is why the access to both houses on the courtyard side has been via the passage from number 6. At the same time, builder Richard Rammelt built a plumber's workshop in the courtyard of property number 4 for his son-in-law, master plumber Karl Scannewin. Above the base of the main building made of quarry stone masonry and (today) plastered basement window frames, the sixteen-axis facade with plastered window frames and ( !) painted brick masonry. Such a design can only be found in a dozen houses in Leipzig and is therefore rare. The stucco decoration was knocked off by the Edmund Wiegleb company during facade work in 1939, modern placeholders are the fictitious eaves brackets that were attached during the last renovation. The facade inscriptions and paintings on the 3rd floor and in the passage also come from this renovation phase. The residential and commercial property, which is effectively present in the street space, has a building-historical value. LfD / 2017, 2019

09263666
 
Apartment building in closed development Wigandstrasse 5
(map)
1895 (tenement) with gate passage, shops, clinker brick facade, historically important 09263667
 
Apartment building in closed development Wigandstrasse 7
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) with gate passage, shop, clinker brick facade, historically important 09263668
 
Apartment building in closed development Wigandstrasse 8
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered facade, rich stencil painting in the stairwell, of architectural significance 09298823
 
Apartment building in closed development Wigandstrasse 9
(map)
marked 1891 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade, wooden panels in the entrance, of architectural significance 09263669
 
Apartment building in closed development and courtyard paving Wigandstrasse 11
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered clinker facade, of architectural significance 09298826
 
Apartment building in closed development Wigandstrasse 12
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) Plastered facade with shop and gate passage, of architectural significance 09263670
 
Apartment building in closed development Wigandstrasse 13
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Plastered facade, beautiful stucco structure in the entrance area, important in terms of building history 09263671
 
Apartment building in closed development Wigandstrasse 14
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered facade, historically significant 09263672
 
Apartment building in closed development and courtyard building Wigandstrasse 16
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered facade, colored etched glass in the stairwell, important from an architectural point of view 09263673
 
Apartment building in closed development Wigandstrasse 17
(map)
before 1900 (tenement) with gate passage, formerly with shops, plastered facade, historically important 09263674
 
Apartment building in closed development and courtyard paving Wigandstrasse 19
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered clinker facade, wooden panels, of architectural significance 09298825
 
Apartment house in open development in a corner Wigandstrasse 21
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Formerly with a corner store, plastered clinker brick facade, stairwell eye, iron cellar barrier, historically important 09299049
 
Apartment building in closed development Wigandstrasse 23
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Formerly with shops, plastered facade, stucco and wooden panels in the entrance area, historically important 09263675
 
Apartment building in closed development Wigandstrasse 24
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Plaster and clinker facade, important from an architectural point of view 09298824
 
Apartment building in closed development Wigandstrasse 25
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) with gate passage, shop, clinker brick facade, historically important 09263676
 
Apartment building in closed development Wigandstrasse 27
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered facade, etched glass in the stairwell, of architectural significance 09263677
 
Apartment building in closed development Wigandstrasse 29
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09263678
 
Apartment building in closed development and courtyard building Wigandstrasse 30
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) with gate passage, formerly with shop, clinker brick facade, painting in the stairwell, in the gate passage painting and clinker brick structure, historically significant 09263679
 
Apartment building in closed development Wigandstrasse 31
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) Plastered facade, colored etched glass in the stairwell, vestibule door, important from an architectural point of view 09263680
 
Apartment building in closed development Wigandstrasse 32
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) with gate passage, with shop, clinker brick facade, stucco structure in the gate passage, of architectural significance 09263681
 
Apartment building in closed development Wigandstrasse 33
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) Clinker-plaster facade, important in terms of building history 09263682
 
Apartment building in closed development Wigandstrasse 34
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) with house passage, with shop, clinker brick facade, stucco and wooden panels in the gate passage, of architectural significance 09263683
 
Apartment building in closed development Wigandstrasse 36
(map)
1895/1900 (tenement) with gate passage, shop, clinker brick facade, stucco structure and wooden panels in the gate passage, historically important 09263684
 
Apartment building in closed development Wigandstrasse 38
(map)
after 1895 (tenement) with gate passage, shop, clinker brick facade, historically important 09263685
 
Apartment building in closed development Wigandstrasse 39
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) Formerly with a shop, clinker brick facade with stucco and artificial stone structure, stucco in the entrance area, of importance in terms of building history 09263686
 
Apartment building in closed development Wigandstrasse 40
(map)
after 1900 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, stucco valley, wooden panels and vestibule door in the entrance area, of significance in terms of building history 09263687
 
Apartment building in closed development Wigandstrasse 41
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, historically important 09298780
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Wigandstrasse 42
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) with passage through the house, formerly with a corner store, plastered clinker brick facade, of architectural significance 09298776
 
Apartment building in closed development Wigandstrasse 44
(map)
1899–1900 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, floor tiles with ornament, wooden panels, stucco valley, stairwell window with etched glass, stencil painting, of importance in terms of building history

Slightly protruding side elevations, each with two axes, frame the structure of the clinker brick facade of the house, which was built between 1899 and 1900. The initiator was the building contractor and master bricklayer Johann Moch from Möckern (at about the same time also in charge of the neighboring house at Klingenstrasse 54), who engaged the architect Albert Wolf for the plan drawings (also at Klingenstrasse 52), but took on the execution work himself. Because of the even number of axes, the street-side entrance to the house is shifted from the central axis, creating two apartments of different sizes on each floor of the building. The ground floor and the eaves have been smoothed, the viewing area on the upper floors is structured and decorated with molded artificial stone. The furnishings that have been preserved include the entrance door, windows, floor tiles and wooden panels as well as stucco in the entrance area next to a staircase with stencil painting. Well-known house owners are from 1901 brewery representative Hermann Reinhold Freilang (later also hotel owner), businessman and beer wholesaler Andreas Martin Zeh in Schleußig (1909) and from summer 1909 the brewery FA Ulrich OHG. The test notification for the modernization of the functional area dates from February 13th, an application for renovation and loft conversion made by H. Vogel from Lauf in 1995 was extended several times and only implemented in 2001, along with the poorly placed dormers on the top floor. The historical tenement house in the closed quarter is of significance in terms of building history and the history of the district's development. LfD / 2016

09298777
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner Wigandstrasse 45
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) formerly with a shop, clinker brick facade, of importance in terms of building history 09263688
 
Apartment building in closed development and workshop building in the courtyard Wigandstrasse 46
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Front building with gate passage and shop, clinker brick facade, wooden panels in the passage, historically important 09263689
 
Apartment building in closed development Wigandstrasse 48
(map)
around 1907 (tenement) with gate passage, former shop fitting, plastered facade, advertising inscription "Gramma" formerly, of historical importance 09298778
 
Apartment building in closed development Wigandstrasse 50
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, building with gate passage, stairwell window with etched glazing, of architectural significance 09263690
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner and courtyard building with insufficient laundry Wigandstrasse 52
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) with house passage, with corner shutter, clinker brick facade, of importance in terms of building history 09263691
 
Hand lever pump with well shaft and cover plate
Hand lever pump with well shaft and cover plate Windorfer Strasse
(map)
before 1890 (hand lever pump) before number 46/48, type Delphin, of local importance 09294865
 
Hand lever pump with well shaft and cover plate Windorfer Strasse
(map)
before 1890 (hand lever pump) before number 46/48, type Delphin, of local importance 09294865
 
Hand lever pump with well shaft and cover plate Windorfer Strasse
(map)
1891 (hand lever pump) before number 55, type dolphin, of local history 09294871
 
Memorial to those who fell in the Franco-Prussian War 1870/1871 Windorfer Strasse
(map)
1876–1877 (German-French War Memorial) Erected by the community of Kleinzschocher, formerly set up in front of the old village church, of local history, memorable value, importance for popular education 09263579
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Windorfer Strasse 1
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) with shops, plastered facade, of importance in terms of building history 09263692
 
Apartment building in open development Windorfer Strasse 3
(map)
1886 (tenement house) With a shop, plastered facade, in the immediate vicinity of the Adler traffic junction and opposite the former Adler restaurant, of urban planning interest, of interest in terms of town planning and district development

From 1913 onwards, the property, which was effectively built on to the “Adler” intersection, ran under Windorfer Straße 3, previously the address was “extended Hauptstraße” and Hauptstraße 83c (fire register number 101, Section A). In 1886, cigar sorter (and later milk merchant) Friedrich Hermann Jäger commissioned the master carpenter Friedrich Sachse to design and build the building in the extended main street; the community objected to the new building with a view of the neighboring property of Baron von Tauchnitz. Two apartments were designed per floor, each with two rooms, a chamber, a kitchen, a corridor and a lavatory via the stairs, while a side building with an oven, wash house, wagon depot and places for pigs and poultry (no longer available today) was built in the courtyard. Some owners: Marie Anna married Bode geb. Hunter and Gen. (from 1905), then iron merchant Heinrich Friedrich Rehse and from 1948 the underage Liselotte Ruth Rehse and co-owner. Redevelopment of the house in the formally defined redevelopment area in 1998/1999 by GbR Commercial Houses Leipzig according to plans by Michel & Galfe, architects and engineers, including some unfortunate changes to the plastered facade and roof area. The simple building with slightly protruding side projections, grooves, cornice, window canopies over stucco consoles in the two middle floors and consoles in the eaves area as well as partially preserved furnishings. Opposite was the well-known restaurant "Adler", which the traffic junction owes its name to, until it was demolished. Cultural monument value for reasons of town planning and district development, of interest in town planning. LfD / 2011

09264593
 
Apartment building in closed development Windorfer Strasse 8
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, terracotta tiles and stucco in the entrance, of architectural significance 09263694
 
Apartment building in open development Windorfer Strasse 13
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, stucco and wall tiles in the entrance, of architectural significance 09263697
 
Apartment building in closed development Windorfer Strasse 14
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered facade, historically important 09298837
 
Apartment building in closed development Windorfer Strasse 16
(map)
around 1909 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered facade, historically important 09298836
 
Apartment building in formerly half-open development Windorfer Strasse 19
(map)
marked 1899 (tenement house) with gate passage, plastered facade, historically important 09298835
 
Apartment building in half-open development Windorfer Strasse 31
(map)
1903 (according to information) Plastered facade, wrought iron wall anchors, of architectural significance 09263699
 
Apartment building in half-open development Windorfer Strasse 32
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) Clinker brick facade, wooden panels and vestibule door, historically important 09263700
 
Residential house in semi-open development Windorfer Strasse 34
(map)
1870/1880 (residential building) formerly with a shop, plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09263702
 
House, barn, side building and gate system of a farm Windorfer Strasse 35
(map)
1860s (farmhouse), 1860s (farm) Courtyard complex with suburban residential building with built-in shop and historicizing plastered facade, barn: brick building, side building: probably a half-timbered building, with a grain floor, beautiful gate pillars, of historical importance 09263701
 
Apartment house in half-open development and courtyard paving Windorfer Strasse 39
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered clinker brick facade, apartment doors with over-portals and grilles, historically important 09298833
 
Apartment building in originally open development Windorfer Strasse 43
(map)
around 1870 (tenement) Plastered facade, important in terms of building history 09263704
 
House, barn and enclosure of a farm, as well as chestnut tree in the courtyard Windorfer Strasse 44
(map)
1674, first mentioned (farmhouse), around 1820/1830 (farmhouse) Half-timbered house plastered, of architectural significance 09263705
 
Parish hall in semi-open development (with church hall), with garden and enclosure Windorfer Strasse 45a
(map)
1926 (parish hall) Plastered facade with a rich clinker brick structure, high-quality furnishings, of importance in terms of building history 09263706
 
Rectory, courtyard paving and enclosure Windorfer Strasse 47
(map)
1830, later redesigned (rectory) Upper floor half-timbered partially plastered, of local and architectural significance 09263707
 
Church (with furnishings) as well as church square with enclosure and terrace
More pictures
Church (with furnishings) as well as church square with enclosure and terrace Windorfer Strasse 49
(map)
1902–1904 (church), 1904 (parish stalls), 1904 (confessional seating), 1904 (patronage stalls), 1904 (wall cupboard in the confessional room), 1904 (cupboard), 1904 (offering box) of local, architectural and artistic importance 09263708
 
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Apartment building in closed development and workshop building in the courtyard Windorfer Strasse 54
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) with gate passage, clinker brick facade, cellar window grilles, historically important 09263710
 
Villa with villa garden, coach house and enclosure Windorfer Strasse 55; 55a; 55b
(card)
1872–1873 (villa), 1872–1873 (coach house), 1896–1897 (enclosure) Plastered facade, residence of the publisher Christian Karl Bernhard Freiherr von Tauchnitz (1816–1895), historical value, memorable value, evidence of popular education 09303776
 
Apartment building in half-open development Windorfer Strasse 56
(map)
around 1905 (tenement) with gate passage, plastered facade, gate passage with skylight, Prussian cap and paving, stairwell window with etched glass, historically important 09298834
 
Apartment building in open development Windorfer Strasse 62
(map)
around 1905/1910 (tenement house) with gate passage, plastered facade, lead glass window in the stairwell, stencil painting and wooden panels in the gate passage, of architectural significance 09263713
 
Memorial for those who died in World War I among the Saxon cyclists Windorfer Strasse 63
(map)
1921 (War Memorial 1st World War) historically significant, porphyry granite monolith on a tiled base, inscription: "1914–1918 / SEINEN / GEFALLEN HELDEN / SAXON CYCLIST ASSOCIATION" 09263715
 
Arena, covered grandstands, building with restaurant Windorfer Strasse 63
(map)
1949, sports field (stadium), 1952 (stadium) Urban and sport-historically significant complex, rarity and memorable value, importance for popular education 09263714
 
Residential building of a former courtyard with an extension Windorfer Strasse 74
(map)
1905–1906 (residential building) Extension from 1935, building that shapes the cityscape, significant in terms of local development and architectural history

The farm in the immediate vicinity of the former village church (and the Tabor Church that stands there today) was supplemented by a cow and horse stable in 1862, and the barn was extended in 1877. The landowner and farmer Emil Kirschbaum is named as the initiator. As early as 1919, the barn on the rear property line was demolished. In 1905, Kirschbaum submitted plans for a new residential building on the street side to the building police authorities. With regard to the execution, Karl Michael is named and the architect A. Wurl is entrusted with the construction management, who presumably also provided the designs. It was completed in 1906 and in the same year an enclosure to the village street was built. Four rooms and a loggia were built into the first floor, while the kitchen, salon, dining and living room, master's room and toilet were accessed via the hallway on the ground floor. There was also a pantry and a veranda, the girls' room was under the roof. In 1923 the house was first divided into two independent apartments, although the old house of the farm was still there and it was rebuilt in 1924. The appealing residential building from 1905/1906, which has the character of a villa and whose decorative visible framework, in addition to the multi-segmented roof landscape in the extended street space, was given the single-storey plastered extension of a doctor's practice in 1935, which lost much of its architectural charisma. Architect Alfred Staub worked here for the general practitioner Dr. med. Wilhelm Carl Berthold Maerker. In 1955, the stone setting master Alfred Sonnekalb applied for the courtyard building to be rebuilt for residential purposes. Building that shapes the cityscape, significant in terms of local development and architectural history. LfD / 2014

09305113
 
Double tenement house in a semi-open development Windorfer Strasse 76; 78
(card)
around 1915 (double tenement house) Plastered facade, stairwell window with remnants of colored lead glazing, stucco in the entrance area, historically important 09299161
 
Residential house, annexed side building, barn and courtyard paving of a farm Windorfer Strasse 82
(map)
around 1820/1830 (farmhouse), marked 1874 (barn) Half-timbered and brick buildings, historically important 09263716
 
Residential house in semi-open development Windorfer Strasse 84
(map)
1880/1890 (tenement) Plastered facade, historically important also with regard to the location in the old town center in the immediate vicinity of the church and the former palace area

The plastered two-storey residential building in the old town center, in the immediate vicinity of the former castle and the church, was probably built around 1865 and received an extension from 1872 to 1874. As early as 1870, the building contractor Heinrich Voigt built a washing and stable building for master tailor Friedrich August Schmidt; The tailoring business, which was probably flourishing, required a further extension to the workshop in 1888 (architect FW Heine). The house formerly had a shop fitting and a street-side entrance. A gable roof completes the building; Until the renovation (probably around 2000), the original windows and largely the winter windows were preserved. As one of the oldest preserved residential buildings on Windorfer Strasse and near the Taborkirche, there is a documentary and architectural value. LfD / 2014

09263717
 
Apartment house in half-open development with garden Windorfer Strasse 104
(map)
marked 1903 (tenement house) Plastered facade, cellar window grilles, iron cellar barriers, stucco and wooden panels in the entrance, magnificent residential building, historically important 09263718
 

Former cultural monuments

image designation location Dating description ID
Tenement house Altranstädter Strasse 25
(map)
around 1870 (tenement) Apartment building in originally open development (plastered facade) 09263469
 
Workshop building Creuzigerstrasse 6
(map)
around 1900 (workshop) Workshop building (clinker brick facade) 09263491
 
Tenement house Dieskaustraße 62
(map)
around 1860 (tenement) Apartment building in a formerly closed development (plastered facade) 09291014
 
Workshop building Dieskaustraße 65
(map)
around 1900 (workshop) Workshop building in the courtyard (clinker brick facade) 09263511
 
Residential building Giesserstraße 69
(map)
1877 (residential house) Residential house in open development with workshop building (plastered facade; winter window) 09298789
 
Residential building Gießerstraße 86
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century (residential building) Residential house in semi-open development with gate passage and shop fitting (plastered facade) 09299005
 
Water tower at the freight yard Kurt-Kresse-Strasse
(map)
around 1900 (water tower) Water tower at the Plagwitz freight yard; in the lower part with clinker brick structure; boarded up in the upper third 09263600
 
kindergarten Diezmannstrasse 93a
(map)
1962, according to information (kindergarten) Kindergarten (two-story plastered building, outside staircase at the entrance, colored plaster reliefs above the entrance) 09263599
 
Tenement house Pörstener Strasse 6
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) Apartment building in closed development with gate passage and former shop as well as courtyard paving (plastered facade); of interest in terms of building history and district development history 09298817
 
House sign of the former restaurant Windorfer Strasse 2
(map)
around 1890 (accessory) House sign of the former restaurant "Goldener Adler" 09263693
 
Tenement house Windorfer Strasse 9
(map)
1865/1870 (tenement house) Apartment building in originally open development with front garden and fencing (plastered facade) 09263695
 
Portal with niches Windorfer Strasse 51
(map)
17th century (part of the building) Portal with niches (sandstone, plastered; partly below the level of the sidewalk) 09263709
 
Rural house Windorfer Strasse 58
(map)
around 1800 (residential building) Rural house, front garden, courtyard with paving, fence, barn and factory building (half-timbered house with clay infills, formerly an inn) 09263711
 

swell

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

Web links