List of cultural monuments in Knautkleeberg-Knauthain

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The list of cultural monuments in Knautkleeberg-Knauthain contains the cultural monuments of the Leipzig district "Knautkleeberg-Knauthain" with the districts Knautkleeberg and Knauthain , which were recorded in the list of monuments by the State Office for the Preservation of Monuments in 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 Knautkleeberg-Knauthain

image designation location Dating description ID
Mill moat Am Mühlgraben
(map)
19th century (Mühlgraben) of local importance 09298587
 
Mill (No. 14), storage building (No. 12a-d), stable building and enclosure as well as courtyard paving of a mill property
Mill (No. 14), storage building (No. 12a-d), stable building and enclosure as well as courtyard paving of a mill property Am Mühlgraben 12a; 12b; 12c; 12d; 14
(card)
according to information 1908–1910 (mill) old location Knauthain, clinker buildings, the mill has occupied since 1417, of local and architectural significance 09292386
 
Villa and paving Am Mühlgraben 16
(map)
1891-1892 (villa) Belonging to the mill property, historicistic plastered facade, of architectural and local significance 09292387
 
Apartment building in open development Dieskaustraße 328
(map)
1902 (tenement) Plastered facade, rare paintings and wooden panels in the entrance, of architectural significance

In 1902 the three-story plastered residential building for the mechanical engineer Karl Richard Spindler was built on the property at Leipziger Strasse 46 in Knautkleeberg. Six family apartments were planned, as well as a free-standing wash house in the courtyard. A rather large roof structure commissioned by Henriette Martha Mix in 1930/1931 according to the planning of the master builder Erich Ebert under the construction management of Paul Brösdorf created additional living space, which underwent structural changes in 1936. The owners were now Oskar Robert Mix and from 1940 Helma Hedwig Thiel born. Mix. The house has a flat, unspectacular facade structure and largely preserved furnishings from the time it was built. Unfortunately, the ground floor structure of the plastered facade has not been preserved, in 1994 another apartment under the roof was installed. Wall paintings by Osowicki and Sasse in the entrance area with depictions of local views, including the Knauthain Church in the state before the fire in 1944, are unique. In particular, the free-hand painting inside is the reason for the building's monumental value. LfD / 2012, 2014

09264632
 
Apartment building in open development with front garden Dieskaustraße 354
(map)
1937–1938 (tenement) traditionalistic plastered facade, see also number 356, of architectural significance

The plans for a three-group house brought in by the architect Max Beer (design and builder) in July 1937, which would have resulted in a very wide, strict street front, were not implemented. A second proposal in August for two apartment buildings with a storefront stretched between them met with approval and was implemented in the years 1938–1939 - albeit without the stores. The builder was Albin Kretzschmar from Rehbach under the direction of builder and architect Richard Grafe. At the rear, the Leipzig – Zeitz Reichsbahn bordered the residential property. There are three small apartments per floor with living room and bedroom, kitchen and toilet. Symmetrical facade structure with emphasis on the central stairwell axis as well as a "German" hipped roof and an artificial stone front door frame characterize the plastered building typical of the time. Plaster reliefs (ears of corn and pheasant [?]) Decorate the stairwell projections, which only protrude slightly on the upper floors. In the last third of 2009 application for redevelopment and loft extension, floor plan changes to the two-in-hand car and rear balcony extensions by Henry Böttger with the involvement of engineer Rainer Rösner. Interior equipment largely preserved. Building history testimony to the expansion of the town in the 1930s of good quality. LfD / 2012

09291941
 
Apartment building in open development with front garden Dieskaustraße 356
(map)
1937–1939 (tenement), 1938 (under construction) traditionalistic plastered facade, see also number 354, of architectural significance

The plans for a three-group house brought in by the architect Max Beer (design and builder) in July 1937, which would have resulted in a very wide, strict street front, were not implemented. A second proposal in August for two apartment buildings with a storefront stretched between them met with approval and was implemented in the years 1938–1939 - albeit without the stores. The builder was Albin Kretzschmar from Rehbach under the direction of builder and architect Richard Grafe. At the rear, the Leipzig – Zeitz Reichsbahn bordered the residential property. There are three small apartments per floor with living room and bedroom, kitchen and toilet. Symmetrical facade structure with emphasis on the central stairwell axis as well as a "German" hipped roof and an artificial stone front door frame characterize the plastered building typical of the time. Plaster reliefs (ears of corn and pheasant [?]) Decorate the stairwell projections, which only protrude slightly on the upper floors. In the last third of 2009 application for redevelopment and loft extension, floor plan changes to the two-in-hand car and rear balcony extensions by Henry Böttger with the involvement of engineer Rainer Rösner. Interior equipment largely preserved. Building history testimony to the expansion of the town in the 1930s of good quality. LfD / 2012

09290831
 
Two gateways to residential building lots Dieskaustraße 360; 362
(card)
1908 (gate entrance) Clinker pillars with artificial stone knobs, wrought-iron gates and door leaves in between, of architectural significance

The wrought-iron Art Nouveau enclosure was built in 1908 on behalf of the milk merchant Karl August Mustopf, who was responsible for the two neighboring houses as the client: In 1901 the two-story residential building (number 362) was built by the Albin Kretzschmar construction business and the three-story apartment building (number 360) under the leadership of master bricklayer Robert Gleitsmann. While both houses have changed significantly, the high-quality craftsmanship in the form of the wrought-iron gates stretched between yellow clinker pillars with molded concrete blocks has been preserved to this day. Architectural significance. LfD / 2011

09292372
 
Apartment house in open development in a corner, with a front garden Dieskaustraße 371
(map)
1909–1910 (tenement) Plastered building with a half-timbered gable, in the reform style of the time around 1910, of architectural significance

In an important corner situation, the free-standing reform style building erected in 1909 and 1910 rises above a high clinker base that extends to the first floor. The building, which was built for and by master bricklayer Friedrich Max Lägel, is divided into plaster structures imitating visible half-timbering in the diaphragm projections, the use of different plaster and a multi-part roof landscape as well as former folding shutters on the ground floor. The architectural office of the building inspector Lubowski provided the plans. There are three apartments on each floor, the wash house formerly separate in the courtyard. Refurbishment probably in 2009 accompanied by the installation of an annoying balcony system on the broken corner. The staircase, including the stencil painting, is still in its original state today. Corner building, which is important in urban planning, as an entrance to the apartment building area. LfD / 2011

09292373
 
Double apartment building in open development, with front garden and garden pavilion Dieskaustraße 373; 373a
(card)
1912–1914 (double tenement house) at a junction of Dieskaustraße, plastered facade, in the reform style of the time around 1910, of architectural significance

The double tenement house, registered in the land register since 1949 as property of the people, was built between August 1912 and March 1914 by master bricklayer Friedrich Max Lägel on his own behalf. The Gohlis architectural office of the building inspector Lubowski provided drawings and static calculations. In 1933, the plastered reform style building was given an attic apartment, and the installation of flush toilets was approved in 1958. Advertisement for the start of construction for renovation and floor plan changes, further loft extensions with courtyard-side loggias, conversion of balconies to winter gardens and the addition of large balconies on the east side took place in 2008/2009. Residential building Dieskaustraße 373 with a wide open plan and courtyard-side entrance designed as a couple, number 373a with a staircase plan on the side with groups of three windows and also a mid-house and only one apartment per floor. Special effect of the house in the extension area through corner location and green areas in front. Parts of the furnishings have been preserved, including staircase windows and apartment entrance doors. Building history evidence of residential construction immediately before the beginning of World War I in the Knautkleeberg extension area. LfD / 2011

09294299
 
Residential house in open development and outbuildings in the courtyard Dieskaustraße 384
(map)
1914–1915 (civil servants' residence), 1914–1915 (auxiliary building) Clinker brick building of architectural significance, to be viewed in direct connection with Knauthain station, built for railway subordinates

In 1914, the Royal Railway Directorate Halle (Saale) commissioned the property department of their technical office with the conception of the construction of a civil servants' residence and a stable building, the implementation took place in the following year, the completion of the simple fencing in 1916. The buildings in connection with the not far away had become necessary Knauthain station. The statement of the State Association of Saxon Homeland Security with regard to the architectural design was also positive. The clinker brick facade of the residential building was given a half-hipped roof with dormer windows, the windows segmented arched ends and the ancillary building at the rear of the property has visible frameworks in the attic, the 3rd floor is effectively separated from the two floors below. In 1975 the building authorities prohibited further use of the rear balconies. Building history and site development history testimony in direct connection with the traffic-related delivery of the site by the railway and the nearby Knauthain station. LfD / 2012

09292375
 
Station with reception building (Dieskaustraße 392) with waiting room extension, platform roofing, farm building, loading ramp with paving and two signal boxes at level crossings (signal box B1 Emil-Teich-Straße at 2 and signal box W2 Rehbacher Straße at 24) and the gatekeeper house (Rehbacher Straße at 24)
More pictures
Station with reception building (Dieskaustraße 392) with waiting room extension, platform roofing, farm building, loading ramp with paving and two signal boxes at level crossings (signal box B1 Emil-Teich-Straße at 2 and signal box W2 Rehbacher Straße at 24) and the gatekeeper house (Rehbacher Straße at 24) Dieskaustraße 392
(map)
1871–1873 (station building), 1934 (signal box B1), 1909 (signal box W2), around 1909 (gatekeeper house), 2nd third of the 20th century (level crossing) clinker brick buildings typical of railways, building and transport historical value 09292380
 
Memorial to the fallen of World War I Dieskaustraße 392 (bei)
(map)
around 1920 (Monument to the Fallen) historically significant 09292381
 
Apartment house in half-open development and front garden Dieskaustraße 445
(map)
1902 (tenement) clinker brick facade typical of the time, of architectural significance

Another sign of the increasing urbanization of Knautkleeberg is the three-storey tenement house of the master builder and mason Robert Gleitsmann, who supervised the masonry foreman Karl Hermann Härtig in 1902 with the building supervision. 2001 Renovation, careful loft extension and extension of balconies on the courtyard facade on behalf of Eckhardt & Harter GbR. The street front is still rhythmized by a few plaster and artificial stone structures as well as dark clinker bricks; inside, two residential units are designed on each floor with two rooms, a chamber and a kitchen. Formerly an extension to the building and a small stable building built to the rear between 1902/1903. Building history testimony to the local development in Knautkleeberg. LfD / 2011

09292378
 
Station with reception building (Dieskaustraße 392) with waiting room extension, platform roofing, farm building, loading ramp with paving and two signal boxes at level crossings (signal box B1 Emil-Teich-Straße at 2 and signal box W2 Rehbacher Straße at 24) and the gatekeeper house (Rehbacher Straße at 24) Emil-Teich-Strasse 2 (near)
(map)
1871–1873 (station building), 1934 (signal box B1), 1909 (signal box W2), around 1909 (gatekeeper house), 2nd third of the 20th century (level crossing) clinker brick buildings typical of railways, building and transport historical value 09292380
 
Residential house, barn, two side buildings and the entrance to a farm Fortunabadstrasse 13
(map)
around 1850 (farmhouse), around 1860 (stable), 1872 (stable), around 1860 (barn) old location Knautkleeberg, courtyard that defines the townscape, of architectural significance

One of the few remaining four-sided courtyards in Knautkleeberg is courtyard number 26, the core of which was probably created around 1830 and also derives its effect from the uniform roof covering with tiles. In 1872 a cow and horse stable with hayloft, wagon shed and milk vault was commissioned by the landowner Karl August Müller from master carpenter Robert Lehmann. The mud walls of the residential building were replaced by the property owner Paul Müller in 1949 with brickwork and new windows were installed, while the hallway was to be built with a basement (design by Otto Rudert, executed by Heil & Sterz). The farm is effectively located in the middle of the old location Knautkleeberg, the house gable shows itself in a street curve with a slightly protruding ground floor, a crooked hip roof closes the building. The visible framework of the barn building also has a defining effect; the ensemble rounds off the manure place and parts of the courtyard paving. Rare value, of architectural interest, testimony to local development. LfD / 2011

09292382
 
Residential house in open development Fortunabadstrasse 17
(map)
1869 (residential house) old location Knautkleeberg, plastered half-timbered building with an urban planning function at a point of intersection of the historicistic development of the town, of architectural interest

The half-timbered house built in the corner of Seumestrasse in 1869 belongs to the historic town center of Knautkleeberg, has a plastered facade and a tiled roof with crooked hipped roof with a later dormer, to which a second was added as part of the renovation. Diagonally across the intersection is the Knautkleeberger Gasthof (number 20), which, together with the likewise historicist corner tenement house number 18, sets an urban accent that is well worth seeing. The wooden property fencing that had been preserved until the property was renovated was rare. Pleasing and thoroughly successful building renovation in 2010/2011, building historical value and testimony to the old building structure of the location. LfD / 2011

09292383
 
Apartment building in a semi-open area in a corner Fortunabadstrasse 18
(map)
marked 1902 (tenement house) old location Knautkleeberg, formerly with shops, clinker brick facade, stencil painting in the stairwell, historically important

In 1902, carpenter Friedrich Hermann Fleck obtained the building permit for a representative corner residential building on Seumestrasse and also undertook the construction himself. Behind the clinker brick facade there are two apartments per floor and a corner shop on the ground floor that can be accessed via the broken corner. Simple cast concrete window frames and a corner risalit structure the building, inside of which the wooden staircase and historical stencil painting have been preserved. The house is accessed via the courtyard. Corner building that defines the townscape opposite the former inn, historically significant. LfD / 2011

09292384
 
Apartment house in closed development in a corner, formerly with a restaurant Fortunabadstrasse 20
(map)
1898–1899 (tenement house) old location Knautkleeberg, plastered facade, striking corner building with architectural, local and social historical significance, as an inn also worth remembering

A residential building with restoration and a shop on the ground floor were applied for by the innkeeper Friedrich Bernhard Enge in November 1898 and completed by master mason Gleitsmann and O. Möttig from Knautkleeberg until August 1899. Transfer of the property in 1907 after a foreclosure auction to the innkeeper Anne Auguste Zschoau born. Lindner in Cossen, 1912 the steam brewery Zwenkau AG is called. The building application for a gymnasium was submitted in May 1927 by the Verein für Leibesübungen Knautkleeberg eV, for which architect Oswald Weber provided the drawings and calculations. The builder Kurt Friedrich, formerly Bastänier Nachf. Dipl.-Ing. Seidel. In 1929, building inspector Paul Göldel was called in for the statics of the roof, the final inspection took place in December 1929. At the end of 1932, innkeeper Paul Otto Schmidt bought the property after foreclosure and in 1937 Horst and Werner Pleier intended to set up a new movie theater in the gym, as if from a letter to the film theater specialist group of the Reichsfilmkammer. The designs came from master builder and architect B. Arno Höfer, which were put into practice by the building manager W. Kocker from Connewitz. On November 4th, the use of what is now the Ratskeller light show was permitted. In May 1941 it was planned to relocate the restaurant entrance from the broken corner to Seumestrasse and in 1957 the fundamental renovation of the cinema along with an additional extension. Master builder and architect Willy Grafe from Dresden provided plans for the VEB Kreislichtspiele Leipzig-Stadt and the executing company Fritz Aey. The corner building with an effective historical facade is the first building that set an urban accent in the village situation and was intended to give the intersection of Seumestraße / Fortunabadstraße a completely new face. The broken corner was given a tower top, and gables rose at the ends of the two wings of the building. A little later, the counterpart opposite was the building at Fortunabadstrasse 18, which is also quite representative for a Leipzig suburb, but the historicist building structure was not consistently continued. With the extension of the gymnasium to the establishment “Zum Ratskeller” (1912), as well as with the conversion to a film theater, the needs of the local population were responded to - thus the ensemble has a high memory and historical value. The furnishings in the corner building have largely been preserved. Refurbishment planned for 2017/2018. LfD / 2012, 2017

09292385
 
Pavement of both sidewalks Gleitsmannstrasse
(map)
around 1900 (plaster) with shell ornament, historical traffic value 09292395
 
Residential house in open development Gleitsmannstrasse 1
(map)
1903 (residential building) Formerly with a shop, plastered facade with clinker brick structure, significant in terms of building history, of value in terms of local development

Carl Eduard Rehm initiated the construction of a house in May 1903, the work was carried out by master bricklayer Robert Gleitsmann until August 14 of the same year. Two apartments are planned on each floor, only one in the roof area. In addition, a washing and equipment house was built, and after October 1903 a pig slaughterhouse was set up. A plastered facade protects the traditional brick building from the weather, and visible clinker arches span some windows as decorative elements. The otherwise quite simple building has a clinker base, a broken corner with a shop entrance and two gables with an open space. A central projection on the façade facing Seumestrasse emerges weakly and ends in a dwelling. Unfortunately, unsuitable new plastic windows detract from the appearance of the building. Rental villa in a corner location, historically significant and of value for the representation of the local development history. LfD / 2013

09292393
 
Residential house in open development Gleitsmannstrasse 2
(map)
1900–1901 (residential building) in the country house style, clinker brick facade, of architectural and site development significance

Based on the type of a country house, a detached house was built by master mason Robert Gleitsmann in 1900–1901 on behalf of Karl Gottfried Schöne. There was an apartment on each floor. Above the plastered ground floor, set off by a cornice, yellow clinker bricks characterize the appearance. A mid-sized building with an open space rises above the two-storey, four-axis facade. Numerous details inside show a formerly dignified equipment. The stable building, which was built in the courtyard at the same time, was translated in 1919 by Paul Bösdorf on behalf of Bernhard Schubert (no memorial, received 8/2013). As part of the residential area in the area of ​​the town extension facing the train station, of importance in terms of architectural and development history. LfD / 2013

09292764
 
Residential house in open development with front garden Gleitsmannstrasse 6
(map)
1896–1897 (residential building) Clinker brick facade with plaster structure, has an architectural and site development historical value

In 1896, construction began on the small residential building for the school principal Heinrich Arnold in Knautkleeberg, for whom master bricklayer Robert Gleitsmann provided designs and implemented them himself until spring 1897. Behind the single-storey clinker brick facade as well as in the converted attic, an apartment was set up, remarkable, for example, that a bathroom was also planned within the living area, but the privet was still accessible via the stairwell. At the rear, as can be seen in the building files, a small wooden porch protected the actual house entrance. The file drawing also reveals a balcony on the right-hand gable front, and a wash house was in the basement. A two-axis central protrusion steps effectively in front of the front of the house, which ends in a dwelling with an open chevron (and formerly wrought-iron lightning rod). The hipped roof with brick covering, the base consists of clinker masonry. A report about the taking of the property in trust dated January 2, 1959. The picturesque building in the street leading to the train station is of architectural and historical value. LfD / 2013

09292394
 
Half of a double rental house in open development Hohenthalstrasse 2
(map)
1914–1915, half of a double tenement house (tenement house) Plastered facade, reform style architecture, important in terms of building history 09299201
 
Residential house, side building and barn of a farm (formerly forge), house tree on the property Knuthstrasse 1
(map)
around 1820 (residential building), 1883–1884 (side building), 1876–1877 (smithy) Residential building with half-timbered upper floor, stables as earthen construction, of importance in terms of local building history and village development history, as a former blacksmith's shop with memorable value 09292398
 
House, barn, side building and enclosure of a farm Knuthstrasse 3
(map)
around 1860 (farmhouse), 1862 (cow and horse stable), 1893 (barn) Half-timbered residential building, courtyard complex that has been preserved largely closed, of architectural significance

The small courtyard in the old town center of Knauthain, bordering the Mühlgraben at the back, was built on an irregular plot of land in the first half of the 19th century. Archives began with the construction of a new cowshed in 1862 for landowner Johann August Kluthmann, this building received a translation in 1877/1878 and a horse stable extension on the right. In addition to the aforementioned Kluthmann, the Knauthainer master mason Friedrich Knoch, who was responsible for the design and implementation, is also named. In the corner of the property street / Mühlgraben a washing and baking house building was built in 1891 instead of a pigsty formerly intended for the same location. The barn, which still stands today, was built in two stages as a replacement building in 1893 and in 1896 in an enlarged form for execution by the well-known actors Kluthmann and Knoch. In 1949, landowner and farmer Max Zechendorf arranged for a dilapidated wooden ceiling in the cowshed to be replaced with a solid ceiling and awarded the contract to the construction company Otto Weichold. The oldest development therefore includes the small, massive shed building with a tile-roofed gable roof and the residential building with a shed extension that appears with exposed framework on the upper floor, which derives its architectural and site development significance, as a closed complex in the bend of the road of particular urban value. LfD / 2012

09292399
 
Residential house with extension and front garden Knuthstrasse 8
(map)
1876 ​​(residential building) Rural half-timbered house with commercial annex, characterizing the ensemble of farm number 3 opposite and the old forge Knuthstraße 1, significant in terms of building history and scientific and documentary importance

In 1876 the two-storey stable building with a half-timbered upper floor and saddle roof was built for master baker A. Jung by the Knauthain master mason Friedrich Knoch. In the street-side part of the house there used to be a cow and horse stable on the ground floor and a feed floor above. In 1877–1878, the building was fitted with an apartment and in 1893 a rear extension, also for residential purposes. The builders for the first-mentioned renovation were Oekonom JA Barthmuß and Friederike Emilie Barthmuß with regard to the expansion in 1893, which also included an oven in the garden. A chimney installation (1895) and the lavatory extension in the years 1928/1929, this by master builder Albin Kretzschmar for Liddy Barthmuß, can be seen in the building file. The low part of the barn (brick roof) contained a stable as well as banse and threshing floor. Originally included in the larger courtyard with location list number 38 a tile-roofed house (today number 10, already in place in 1867) as well as a shed to the right of the property line and to the garden area. As a rural courtyard, it is an indispensable part of the development structure of the historic town center, it is a defining urban development in the ensemble of farm number 3 opposite and the old forge Knuthstrasse 1. LfD / 2012

09294932
 
Station with reception building (Dieskaustraße 392) with waiting room extension, platform roofing, farm building, loading ramp with paving and two signal boxes at level crossings (signal box B1 Emil-Teich-Straße at 2 and signal box W2 Rehbacher Straße at 24) and the gatekeeper house (Rehbacher Straße at 24) Rehbacher Strasse 24 (near)
(map)
1871–1873 (station building), 1934 (signal box B1), 1909 (signal box W2), around 1909 (gatekeeper house), 2nd third of the 20th century (level crossing) clinker brick buildings typical of railways, building and transport historical value 09292380
 
Tower Dutchman Rehbacher Strasse 83
(map)
1874 (mill) Landscaping windmill, plastered brick building, technical history monument 09292415
 
enclosure Ritter-Pflugk-Strasse
(map)
before 1800 (enclosure) Brick wall, characterizing the townscape of importance 09292410
 
Memorial to Kurt Reinicke and designed green space Ritter-Pflugk-Strasse
(map)
probably 1978 (monument) Truncated pyramid made of natural stone, with a steel plate on it, in memory of the anti-fascist resistance fighter Kurt Reinicke (1891–1938), of historical importance 09292411
 
Residential house, side building, barn, enclosure, gate entrance and garden of a farm Ritter-Pflugk-Strasse 1
(map)
1869 (residential house), 1869 (side building), 1869 (barn), 1869 (enclosure), 1869 (house garden / residential garden) Residential house with a plastered facade typical of the time, of significance in terms of local development

In 1869, the building application for residential buildings, barns and stable buildings as well as a fence and gate entrance were issued by master bricklayer Johann Friedrich Knoch from Knauthain, who also acted as builder, designer and executor. The bustling bone can be found on countless construction sites in the villages in the west of Leipzig, so his own property near the Knauthain church was also intended as an advertisement for his construction company. With a two-storey, finely structured plastered facade, the representative house presents itself in the style of late classicism with a generous green area in front (including an impressive walnut tree), and the elegant stucco decoration has also been preserved. At the end of 1886, the building was given a small washhouse extension at the rear. In the side building, which was also plastered, there was an oven and, next to it, a first wash house as well as a wooden barn, paint room and pigsty. As a property of the most famous and most active mason of the time in Knauthain and the surrounding area of ​​particular architectural and historical value, evidence of "modern" building in the village in the years immediately before the German Empire was founded in 1871, documentation value, importance for popular education. LfD / 2012, 2013

09292402
 
House and gate of a farm Ritter-Pflugk-Strasse 12
(map)
around 1840 (gate entrance), around 1800 (farmhouse) the residential building is one of the oldest houses in Knauthain, gate entrance with sandstone pillars, architectural and local historical value

In 1869, the building application for residential buildings, barns and stable buildings as well as a fence and gate entrance were issued by master bricklayer Johann Friedrich Knoch from Knauthain, who also acted as builder, designer and executor. The bustling bone can be found on countless construction sites in the villages in the west of Leipzig, so his own property near the Knauthain church was also intended as an advertisement for his construction company. With a two-storey, finely structured plastered facade, the representative house is presented in the style of late classicism with a generous green area in front (here, among other things, an impressive walnut tree), the elegant stucco decoration has also been preserved. At the end of 1886, the building was given a small washhouse extension at the rear. The installation of flushing toilets in 1915 on the initiative of Johanna Ida Freygang from Eythra. 1967 threatening description of the condition of the barn and demolition request, two years later change of the project with submission of conversion plans by owner Charlotte Meltzer / Moltzer born. Freygang and the planner Paul Brösdorf (no memorial). In the side building, which was also plastered, there was an oven and next to it a first wash house as well as a wooden barn, paint room and pigsty. Parts of the enclosure, which was also built in 1869, have been preserved; the spacious garden in front of the building is significant for the effect of the courtyard and, in particular, the residential building. LfD / 2012, 2014

09292403
 
Inn with side building Ritter-Pflugk-Strasse 16
(map)
1899 (inn), 1899, stable (adjoining building) old location Knauthain, plastered clinker facade, historically significant, as an inn property with local historical memory value

In the place of an older house (merchant Louis Benedikt Fritsch is the owner of the house in 1882), the living and guest house that still exists today is built for the innkeeper Wilhelm Knust based on a design by master bricklayer Friedrich Knoch, who was conveniently entrusted with the execution. An apartment was set up on the upper floor, while the first floor had two dining rooms, a kitchen, a meat room and a hall. In 1905 restaurateur Curt Rauschenbach is mentioned as the property owner, in 1935 the innkeeper and butcher Paul Liebing. Incidentally, at the same time as the front building, an outbuilding with a stable and toilets was built on an angular floor plan. In 1992, when it was recorded, “Recovery” could still be read on the building and the menu was posted in the display case, plastering on the ground floor and clinker facing on the upper floor and in the plinth area. The furnishings were largely preserved until the renovation in 2004, for example the wooden internal stairs. At the rear there is a former functional building, also from 1899, including toilets for the restaurant visitors. Remarkable in terms of building history, local history and urban development, the property also has a memorable value as a restaurant. LfD / 2012, 2013

09292404
 
Former sheep farm of a manor, with two stable buildings, house and courtyard pavement Ritter-Pflugk-Strasse 17
(map)
End of the 19th century (sheep farm) of local importance 09292405
 
Residential house in open development
Residential house in open development Ritter-Pflugk-Strasse 20
(map)
1723 (residential house) Plastered half-timbered building, former office building (mayor Müller's house), of architectural and personal significance, indispensable for the site in the immediate vicinity of the former manor, one of the oldest buildings in the old location 09292406
 
Individual monument belonging to the Knauthain Manor (Obj. 09304498, Ritter-Pflugk-Straße 22–28): farmyard with manor house, stables and farm buildings, courtyard paving and enclosure wall Ritter-Pflugk-Strasse 22; 22a; 22b; 22c; 22d
(card)
from 1850 (farmyard), around 1850 (manor house), 1860s-1870s (farm buildings) Important manor complex in the Leipzig area, of architectural and local significance 09292407
 
Subject aggregate Knauthain manor, with the following individual monuments: Castle and bridge over the Elster, gate, sculpture, three memorial stones in the manor park (Obj. 09292408, Ritter-Pflugk-Straße 24), farm yard with manager's house, stables and farm buildings, courtyard paving and enclosure wall (Obj . 09292407, Ritter-Pflugk-Straße 22–22d), farm workers' house (Obj. 09292409, Ritter-Pflugk-Straße 26–28) as well as the palace gardens and enclosure
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Subject aggregate Knauthain manor, with the following individual monuments: Castle and bridge over the Elster, gate, sculpture, three memorial stones in the manor park (Obj. 09292408, Ritter-Pflugk-Straße 24), farm yard with manager's house, stables and farm buildings, courtyard paving and enclosure wall (Obj . 09292407, Ritter-Pflugk-Straße 22–22d), farm workers' house (Obj. 09292409, Ritter-Pflugk-Straße 26–28) as well as the palace gardens and enclosure Ritter-Pflugk-Strasse 22; 22a; 22b; 22c; 22d; 24; 26; 26a; 26b; 26c; 26d; 26e; 26f; 28
(card)
1703 chronogram (palace complex) important baroque palace complex, of architectural and regional significance 09304498
 
Individual monument belonging to the Knauthain Manor (Obj. 09304498, Ritter-Pflugk-Straße 22–28): Castle and bridge over the Elster, gate, sculpture and three memorial stones in the manor park
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Individual monument belonging to the Knauthain Manor (Obj. 09304498, Ritter-Pflugk-Straße 22–28): Castle and bridge over the Elster, gate, sculpture and three memorial stones in the manor park Ritter-Pflugk-Strasse 24
(map)
1703 Chronogram (castle (manor)), 2nd quarter of the 20th century, basalt paving of the bridge (road bridge), inscribed 1875 (memorial stone) important baroque palace complex, memorial stones marked 1875 a. 1877 for Carl Adolph von Hohenthal a. Bergen as well as for Karoline von Hohenthal u. Bergen and memorial stone for Paul and Marie, of architectural and local significance 09292408
 
Individual monument belonging to the Knauthain Manor (Obj. 09304498, Ritter-Pflugk-Straße 22–28): farm workers' house Ritter-Pflugk-Strasse 26; 26a; 26b; 26c; 26d; 26e; 26f; 28
(card)
around 1840/1850 (residential building) at the entrance of the castle along the Mühlgraben, presumably half-timbered building in the core, of architectural and local significance 09292409
 
Enclosure and tombs in the cemetery Schönbergstrasse 2
(map)
from 1868 (cemetery), predominantly 20th century (grave complex) of local importance 09292420
 
Former church school (two parts of the building), with forecourt, gymnasium and school yard as well as toilet building Schönbergstrasse 2a; 4
(card)
marked 1836 (school) plastered facade typical of the time, later municipal office, of architectural and local significance 09292419
 
Apartment house in open development in a corner, with restaurant Seumestrasse 2
(map)
1902–1906 (tenement house) Plastered facade, opposite is the former Großzschocher gas station, indispensable in terms of urban development, on the border with Großzschocher, historically valuable, memorable

A restaurant is still located on the ground floor of the detached residential building, which is important in terms of urban planning, and construction work lasted from 1902 to 1904. Opposite is the Großzschocher gas station (Dieskaustraße 290 / 290b). First of all, Ferdinand Vorsatz is named as the client and executor, who was supported by the architect R. Teichmann. Tectures submitted in February 1904 bear the signatures of Richard Peitzschke as entrepreneur and executor and the building architect Bruno Seyfferth. In April 1904 the house was "brought under a roof". The master mason and carpenter Emil Reiche is responsible for the final construction. The owners of the house registered for a final inspection in April 1906 are innkeeper Carl Emil Oskar Zeißler and / or Bernhard Pröhl. The property bears the name "Zum Forsthaus", later at times also "Forsthaus Knautkleeberg". In 1941, innkeeper Friedrich Gustav Pöger applied for a new property fence. Work on the roof, the visible framework and plastering of the front are planned in 1951 and the staircase to the restaurant changed in 1952. In the years 2005/2006 renovation and renovation accompanied by a balcony extension and an extension of the attic. Architect Hans-Otto Beck from Leipzig-Eutritzsch is making plans for this. There are now 70 seats in the restaurant and 48 in the patio. The facades of the house are plastered, the upper floor has exposed framework. The generous windows on the ground floor indicate the use of the house for gastronomic purposes. The corner building facing Dieskaustraße is exposed in urban planning terms, and is of importance in terms of building history and development. As a restaurant there is also a memorable value. LfD / 2013

09292422
 
House of a farm Seumestrasse 33
(map)
1874–1875 (farmhouse) old location Knautkleeberg, one of the last remaining farmhouses in the district and therefore of particular local and architectural value, characterizing the locality 09291128
 
Residential building, side building (with extension) and enclosure of a two-sided courtyard
Residential building, side building (with extension) and enclosure of a two-sided courtyard Seumestrasse 48
(map)
around 1840 (farmhouse), around 1840 (farm) old location Knautkleeberg, half-timbered house, historically important

The two-storey farmhouse was probably built around 1840, with two storeys facing the street and in the immediate vicinity of the Knautkleeberger mill. Half-timbering is visible on the upper floor of the living area, while the ground floor with its thick walls suggests clay masonry. The small stable building opposite the house was given its appearance by order of the landowner Carl Schulze in the last third of the 19th century. The narrow layout of the property of a rural economy is quite unusual. Both buildings have numerous original equipment details. One of the last authentic farmsteads on Seumestrasse, in an exposed corner location, therefore of architectural and scientific-documentary importance, structural part of the old Knautkleeberg town center. LfD / 2013

09292426
 
House of a farm Seumestrasse 54
(map)
around 1850 (residential building) old location Knautkleeberg, plastered facade, documentation value, of interest in terms of local development

On the property, which was used as a gardening shop for a longer period of time, a residential house, which was probably built in the middle of the 19th century, was added and an additional storey was added in the transition from 1886 to 1887. The builder was the nursery owner, who was a professional gardener and commercial gardener Carl August Zapf. Master bricklayer Robert Gleitsmann took on the design and execution. 1930 transfer of the property to the savings and loan bank for house and landowners eGmbH in Leipzig and 1938 to master butcher Emil Erhard Görlitz and his wife Marie Elisabeth born. Knöfel. The site was not sold to factory owner Gustav Adolf Schwabe and businessman Ernst Raymund in 1922. The building, which was remodeled in 1886/1887, has a plastered facade, a gable roof and a house entrance with a double-winged classicistic front door, accessed via three large sandstone steps. Unfortunately, the high-quality original door has been replaced by a primitive replica. The built-in new windows are also disruptive to the appearance of the house. The entrance steps and a gate pillar of the former driveway were made of sandstone, probably from the 1840s and are no longer preserved today. The clinker base probably dates from 1938/1939. The restaurant "Weißes Roß" was formerly located on the neighboring property number 52, the mill area directly opposite Seumestrasse 54 has been preserved. Despite the blatant loss of original substance, the house has a character that characterizes the district, is architectural, historical and, as opposed to Knautkleeberger Mühle, also urban significant. LfD / 2012, 2013

09292427
 
Mill with residential house, ancillary building facing Seumestrasse, on Mühlgraben extension building on the former barn, outer walls of the silo and storage buildings on Mühlgraben and two gates to Seumestrasse
Mill with residential house, ancillary building facing Seumestrasse, on Mühlgraben extension building on the former barn, outer walls of the silo and storage buildings on Mühlgraben and two gates to Seumestrasse Seumestrasse 55
(map)
1885–1886 (Müllerwohnhaus), 1867–1969 (mill), reconstruction in 1901 (mill), 1875 (storage), around 1860 (side building facing the street) (until 2012 also half-timbered barn monument as well as mill turbines and accessories in the turbine house, which was demolished in 2012), old location Knautkleeberg, miller's house with historicizing plastered facade, former mill complex with regional importance and historical value, technical monument 09292428
 
Residential house in open development Seumestrasse 62
(map)
Early 19th century (residential building) old location Knautkleeberg, single-storey building with a crooked hip roof and roof house, of social and historical importance 09292430
 
Residential house in open development
Residential house in open development Seumestrasse 64
(map)
around 1850 (residential building) old location Knautkleeberg, single-storey building with a roof house, of social and historical importance 09292431
 
Residential house, courtyard pavement and gate entrance of a former four-sided courtyard Seumestrasse 65
(map)
before 1800 (farmhouse), 1839 (farmhouse) old location Knautkleeberg, remnants of a formerly representative courtyard in an exposed location in terms of urban planning, the classicist residential building of architectural and local historical value

The two-storey residential building of a former four-sided courtyard with a plastered facade and crooked hip roof, the preserved entrance pillars and the rare sandstone staircase, probably from around 1840, as well as the classicist house entrance door with skylight are located in a prominent corner location. As part of the renovation in 2012-2013, the front door was rebuilt and the access steps, which are not unimportant for the appearance of the house, were removed. The barn was initially applied for as complete demolition in 1920, but escaped this through a change of plan and the resulting renovation on behalf of the landowner Karl Stoye (construction master Paul Brösdorf). As early as 1874, a new stable building and an extension to the house for landowner Johann Friedrich August Lehmann had been built by the carpenter Robert Lehmann. A new residential building in 1893/1894 by the Counts of Hohenthal and Bergesche Rittergutsverwaltung zu Knauthain was not implemented, the plans show a rather stately two-storey building with four axes and a hipped roof. After the yard was recorded in 1992, structural losses can be noted in the period that followed. A construction of 18 row houses after the complete land clearance by the investor Kurt Stoye from Oldenburg was refused in 1997. Today only the residential building, which characterizes the street space and was renovated from 2012 to 2013, has been preserved; instead of the rural outbuildings, a hodgepodge of single-family homes with very different designs has arisen around the former courtyard, which is not very aesthetically advantageous. The house with a plastered facade and a sandstone plinth that is rarely found in this form. Architectural history, town planning and district development historical value, testimony to the classical building culture in the Knautkleeberg area. LfD / 2012, 2013

09292432
 
School with enclosure and courtyard paving
School with enclosure and courtyard paving Seumestrasse 93
(map)
1907–1908 (school) Plastered facade, architectural and socio-historical value, significant evidence of local development

Building permission for a school and a separate toilet building was issued on August 24, 1907, and the Leipzig architects Reichel & Kühn were in charge of the project. Towards the end of the year mentioned, the installation of a director's apartment on the 2nd floor and the fence around the property are planned. A public bath (bath tub) and a school bath are set up in the basement. In 1916, the project to connect the building to the power grid was pushed forward, but this was not implemented until 1924. Repairs to the plaster on the facade and the establishment of teacher's apartments in the attic are documented for 1927. In the school year 1962/1963 ten classes were accommodated in eight classrooms, which resulted in the establishment of so-called hiking classes. The conversion of the auditorium into a physics room and preparation room was applied for in 1969 and in 1973 the construction of a multi-purpose barrack on the property (this was demolished in 2006). The somewhat reduced decoration, but still representative and effective plastered facade rises above a clinker base, the special accent of which is the large sandstone portal. Two children's heads made of cast artificial stone can also be seen here, each looking at an open book - their open mouths indicate a loud reading or singing. On the two upper floors there is a central projection that merges into a roof house. Original equipment elements of what is now the 60th elementary school in Leipzig have been preserved, but the historic courtyard pavement has not. As a school building with memorable value, as a testimonial for the development of the place and of significance in terms of building history. LfD / 2012/2013

09292433
 
Villa with villa garden and coach house Seumestrasse 97
(map)
1892–1894 (villa), 1903–1904 (coach house) Clinker brick facade, free chevron in the gable, value in terms of building history and district development history

The final revision of the new house that was applied for in October 1892 was not carried out until October 1894; the builder and contractor was master mason Robert Gleitsmann. At the same time, a new stable was built with a wagon parking space, workshop, shed and horse stable, in 1903/1904 a new stable building and an apartment for the crockery operator were built. An extension had already been added to the house in 1901, a veranda was built in 1916 and a planning template for adding to the extension from 1901. In the design from 1892, the country house building appears with a clinker facade, free chevron in the gable, a rather far projecting slate roof and the the east-facing veranda is extremely picturesque. In addition to living rooms, there was a bathroom, a separate dining room and an office. As a part of the villa area that characterizes the street image, the building has a building and site development historical value. LfD / 2014

09292434
 
Enclosure, gate entrance and coach house building on a villa plot Seumestrasse 99
(map)
1902 (garden fence) Enclosure with wrought iron grating in Art Nouveau style, of architectural significance 09292435
 
Residential house in open development in a corner, with enclosure and front garden Seumestrasse 104
(map)
1901–1902 (tenement house) Clinker brick facade, historically important

On the plot in the corner of Gleitsmannstrasse, the late historical detached house building for Karl Theodor Schade, who had confidently placed himself in the renowned hands of the renowned builder Robert Gleitsmann, was built in the years 1901–1902 with an extended mansard floor and a total of three floors. An apartment with two rooms, three chambers and a kitchen on each floor, a wash house at the rear of the building. The historical enclosure has been preserved. The ground floor is characterized by the use of plaster, while the upper floor is highlighted by clinker bricks and profiled window frames made of artificial stone. There are remarkable wooden decorations on the standing dormer windows. Incidentally, the street has been named after the Gleitsmann family from Knautkleeberg since 1909. Building showing the type of rental villa with architectural and site development value. LfD / 2012, 2013

09292436
 
Post office building Seumestrasse 105
(map)
1914 (post) Plastered facade, lead-glazed window, vestibule door, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history and local history

Two apartments were planned on the upper floor for the residential building approved by the Royal Government in April 1914, while Franz Pauli had a car shed with a laundry room built in the courtyard. The plans mention A. Mühglitz, who may have provided the designs. A complete post office was set up over the entire ground floor with a counter hall, a packing room, one room each for the headmaster and the postman, toilets and mail, money and telegraph acceptance. Above the floor plan is noted: "Plan for a post office for Knauthain-Knautkleeberg". The simple, plastered reform style building has a hipped mansard roof, entrance porch to the post office and gable. Small front garden with new fencing. 2001/2002 conversion of the post office to residential purposes. Environmental protection was used when the courtyard building was converted into a single-family house in 2002. LfD / 2012

09292437
 
Residential house in open development, with enclosure, front garden and garden Seumestrasse 114
(map)
1900–1901 (residential building) historicizing plaster clinker facade, of architectural significance

The blueprint for a detached two-storey residential building for teacher Franz Emil Sack, who had contracted master builder Robert Gleitsmann, looks old-fashioned and representative. Building permit granted on November 22, 1900, final inspection on November 21 of the following year for the residential building and the rear small stable building with wash house. Clinker brick facade above the plastered ground floor with historic stucco decor and mezzanine, there an extraordinarily decorative fruit garland and ribbon frieze. One apartment on each floor with a central aisle, from which four rooms, a chamber and the kitchen with pantry branch off, the toilet on half the stairs. Iron bars over clinker plinths form the street-side fence. The representative villa building in Knautkleeberg is of architectural and artistic significance. LfD / 2011

09292439
 
Residential house in open development, with garden, wash house and front garden Seumestrasse 116
(map)
1894–1895 (tenement house), 1894–1895 (wash house) Typical plaster facade of the time, of architectural significance

In May 1894, master mason Carl Friedrich Knoch from Knauthain delivered a late Classicist design for a new residential building and a stable with a wash house. At the same time he acted as financier and executor: on June 5, 1894, building permit was granted and on January 9, 1895 the completion of the project was announced. One apartment was planned per floor with a corridor, two rooms, two chambers, a kitchen, a toilet and a pantry. Landowner August Otto had water closets connected to the local lock pipe network in 1916. In April 2004, approval under monument protection law was granted for the intended renovation (only window renewal and new roofing carried out by 10/2014). Particularly distinctive is the representative projecting central projection, the dwelling of which merges into a triangular gable. The plastered facade also has window frames made of artificial stone and rises above a Cyclops masonry base. The high-quality, double-leaf house entrance door looks stately. As part of the Knauthain villa district, the house, which is effectively located along the street, has a historical value in terms of both building history and local development. LfD / 2014

09292440
 
Rectory with enclosure and well
Rectory with enclosure and well Seumestrasse 127
(map)
1696 and later (rectory) Half-timbered construction with K-struts, of local and architectural importance 09292444
 
Residential house in semi-open development Seumestrasse 128
(map)
1866 (residential building) Typical plaster facade of the time, of architectural significance

The small pre-founding house was built by the local master mason Friedrich Knoch in 1866 on behalf of Karl Wilhelm Julius Müller. At the same time, the outbuilding with wash house, wooden stables, pigsty and storage cellar was built. The residential building, which was extremely typical for the Leipzig suburbs in the 1860s, was given a plastered façade emphasized by corner pilasters and a four-axis central projecting with a triangular gable, disfiguring windows as a result of a partial renovation. Significant for the characterization of the place and the representation of the development of the place, of structural and historical value. LfD / 2012, 2013

09292443
 
Church (with furnishings), green space and enclosure of the churchyard as well as Anton Edler von Schellenbauer's grave plaque
Church (with furnishings), green space and enclosure of the churchyard as well as Anton Edler von Schellenbauer's grave plaque Seumestrasse 129
(map)
1845 (church), 1951–1955 (reconstruction), after 1760 (Gottfried Hildner), 1846 (middle bell), 1886 (big bell) Plastered facade, in the arched style of the 19th century, church hall in the unusual, octagonal floor plan, architect: Ernst Zocher, of importance in terms of building history, the history of the place and the townscape

The foundation stone for the new Knauthain Church was laid on May 20, 1845 - on November 9, 1846, Pastor Karl Höhne gave the sermon for the inauguration of the building designed by Ernst Wilhelm Zocher (early work of the architect), an octagon in the arched style with a bell tower in front. The local builders Bergner and Knoch were contractually bound for the execution. From the previous Romanesque building, a round arch portal was reused in the north wall of the choir, in the tympanum of which the upper part of a lecture cross was visible as a flat relief, and some grave slabs from the old church were erected. During the Allied air raid on February 24, 1944, the church burned down to the surrounding walls. In October, work began on rebuilding the church, which was used provisionally in 1952 and was completed three years later. The main changes were the walling up of the two side entrances to the nave and the renouncement of the reconstruction of the slender octagonal upper floor of the tower and its pointed end (total height formerly 40 m). Instead, the square tower substructure was completed with a truncated pyramid roof. New plastering in 1971/1972 as well as in 1972/1973 interior renovation with lowering of the ceiling and artistic equipment by Matthias Klemm. The character of a central system is preserved, however, with a choir-like, rectangular extension for the sacristy and Christian teaching room added to the east. At the choir the reconstruction of a Romanesque portal with inserted original parts. In the immediate vicinity the parish with its stately parsonage, the former first school (Seumestrasse 133), in front of the church a memorial stone for those who fell in World War I and opposite the second school in town. Architecturally, historically and artistically of importance. LfD / 2012, 2013

09292451
 
Memorial to the fallen of World War 1 Seumestrasse 129 (near)
(map)
around 1925 (Monument to the Fallen) Monument made of Rochlitzer Porphyrtuff, of local historical importance, 09299710
 
Residential house, parts of a side building, barn and gate entrance of a farm Seumestrasse 141
(map)
1905–1906 (farmhouse), marked 1885 (side building), 1876 (barn) Residential building, historicized plastered building, in the immediate vicinity of the church, characterizing the townscape and of importance in terms of building history 09292446
 
Residential house in open development in a corner Seumestrasse 146
(map)
1906–1907 (tenement house) clinker brick facade typical of the time, stairwell windows with remains of colored glazing, of architectural significance

In 1884 the chimney was installed in the house of Mrs. F. Barthel by the Knauthain mason Friedrich Knoch and in 1898 the farm property, now owned by Mrs. Emma, ​​was used. Pfeffer, a new washhouse was built and all of the clay corrugated walls were replaced with massive brickwork. Incidentally, this applies to both the single-storey, gable-end residential building and the stable barn at an angle to it. A building application for the new construction of a residential and a side building by the confectioner Alwin Ritter from Lindenau in March 1906 was still denied, the renewed building application then approved in September of the same year. The architect Paul Luge, who worked at Lindenauer Markt 22, provided the drafts (minor changes in the execution phase); the floor plans show two apartments on each floor. In autumn 1928, Hermann Fischer had the access to the hairdresser's shop moved to the broken corner. Visible clinker brickwork extends over both floors, adorned with strong and elaborate window frames as molded concrete blocks and a remarkable frieze in the eaves area. Due to the exposed corner location (Rehbacher Straße) and diagonally opposite a decorative square, special effect within the local situation, structurally remarkable is the multi-part roofscape covered with artificial slate, the tower top on the broken corner and the side elevation with gable on Rehbacher Straße. LfD / 2012

09292447
 
House of a farm Seumestrasse 150
(map)
around 1850 (farmhouse) Plastered building with a crooked hipped roof and sandstone open staircase, of architectural significance 09292448
 
Barn, courtyard paving, gate and courtyard wall of a farm Seumestrasse 156
(map)
marked 1898 (barn) Typical commercial building of a farm that creates the appearance of the site, entrance gate with three sandstone pillars, of architectural significance

After the demolition of the picturesque residential building opposite the village pond in 2001/2002 as well as an extensive replacement of the stable building, the appearance of the courtyard is severely disturbed. A half-timbered floor lay between a massive ground floor and a tiled half-hipped roof - the house faced the Dorfstrasse without the gable and was behind a very narrow front garden. The house had a barrel vaulted cellar and was probably built at the beginning of the 19th century. On the other hand, the directly adjacent former cow and horse stable building from the turn of the year 1876/1877, by master mason Friedrich Knoch for the landowner Christian Voigt, is larger in dimensions. A vault with Prussian caps rested here on pillars (some still preserved). In 1998, Carsten Hagendorf and Grit Sonnekalb applied for the entire structure to be demolished and rebuilt as a residential building with the help of architect Regina Schöber in the office of Hoffmann & Hofmann GmbH from Leipzig, but the historic ground floor masonry was included in the course of construction from 2000–2001. In 1898, master bricklayer Robert Gleitsmann sent plans for landowner Hermann Arnold for the large new barn on the rear property line, and a cellar with Prussian caps is built into the massive and plastered building. The barn and three pillars of the former driveway made of sandstone blocks are entered in the list of cultural monuments. Significant in terms of building history. LfD / 2012, 2013

09292449
 
Residential building
Residential building Seumestrasse 160
(map)
around 1850 (residential building) Single-storey clay building with a half-hipped roof and half-timbered gable, evidence of the village structure, of social and architectural significance

From the small courtyard opposite the village pond, the one-story farmhouse, built around 1840 with clay masonry and a crooked hip roof, has been preserved. In 1879 a chimney was added here by master bricklayer Friedrich Knoch for Paul Winkler and at the turn of the year 1935/1936 a shop for trader Arthur Steyer under the direction of master builder Albin Kretzschmar. An application for the demolition and rebuilding of the property in 1998 was refused. One of the oldest Knauthain houses has been preserved to this day as a testimony to the village structure and development, the facades are plastered, and a gable front shows half-timbered roofs. At the end of the hallway with a staircase to the top floor was the kitchen with an oven, on the right there was a living room and bedroom and on the left another room and the pantry with access under the stairs. Significant in terms of building history, rarity as an earth building in the town center, of great value in terms of urban development. LfD / 2012

09292450
 

Former cultural monuments

image designation location Dating description ID
barn Am Mühlgraben 21
(map)
1888 (barn); 1893 (stable); 1927–1929 (enclosure); around 1840 (residential building) Barn of a courtyard, formerly with a store, stables, shopfitting and fencing; Of scientific and documentary interest, building history testimony to the rural economic culture in the old location 09292388
 

swell

  • State Office for the Preservation of Monuments Saxony Dynamic web application: Overview of the monuments listed in Saxony. The location “Leipzig, Stadt, Knautkleeberg-Knauthain” 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