List of cultural monuments in Lauter-Bernsbach

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Coat of arms of Lauter-Bernsbach

The list of cultural monuments in Lauter-Bernsbach contains the cultural monuments in Lauter-Bernsbach .

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

Legend

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

Bernsbach

image designation location Dating description ID
"Villa Landmann" - villa with villa garden (garden monument), plus a pavilion, ancillary building, lamp post and gate system At Lauterer Bahnhof 1
(map)
1906 according to information A building built for the paper manufacturer Friedrich Arno Landmann from Lauter and authentically preserved with its surroundings in a sophisticated design under the influence of Art Nouveau, in a single location in the Schwarzwassertal that defines the townscape; Significance: in terms of building history, social history and local history, partly artistically and landscape design of importance.

Monument text:

  • Factory owner's villa in country house style, dominant and with a view of the nearby former factory (and near the railway in the Schwarzwassertal) for the paper manufacturer Friedrich Arno Landmann built in 1906 by the Schwarzenberg builder Hermann Adler.
  • Demanding, very authentic two-storey plastered building with a relatively compact, almost square floor plan. Excitingly designed, heterogeneous facade and roof landscape, the valley-side view side with a semicircular bay window with exit from the upper floor, above it a roof house with laterally adjoining dormers, at three corners balconies, exits and a winter garden, on the back a wide and relatively short T-shaped extension, the Roofed over it and a little roof house on the wide hipped roof, the entrance retracted from the northwest under a canopy, in front of it two-flight stairs, the basement protruding relatively high on the valley side, its openings with beautiful wrought-iron grilles, the facade surfaces smoothly cleaned and only sparsely decorated / structured ( cleaned window sills, stylized flower ornaments in the parapet area of ​​the exit on the stand bay, wide and flat plaster tape under the eaves, etc.), the ground floor windows with original hinged shutters.
  • Inside, too, there is a completely original inventory of solid furnishings (stairs, doors, lead glass windows with motifs, ceiling, etc.).
  • Pavilion: To the east of the villa on a high pedestal, a half-timbered construction, the rear, roughly square part, closed boarded and windowed, the front, valley-side with openwork fields and open areas, flat pyramidal roof with gables on all sides, the front area under such a protruding one Gable.
  • Farm building: boarded half-timbered construction on a brick-masonry base with a kinked plan, a slightly eccentric flat risalit on the valley side.
  • Garden: with orchards and a park-like part, with old trees, contemporary lamp posts, pathways.
  • Gate: clinker pillar with cover and wrought iron wings.
09238548
 


Residential stable house, courtyard trees and courtyard paving of a farm Am Steinkamp 19
(map)
Mid 17th century Upper floor half-timbered with largely original construction (St. Andrew's crosses, head braces), farmhouse typical of the time and landscape, one of the oldest buildings in the village and one of the few examples of the surrounding construction method once widespread in the region, of architectural and regional significance.

Quite stately two-storey building, twice (probably 19th and 20th centuries) extended by two window axes each with a steep pitched roof without superstructures, the ground floor in the living room area with preserved surrounding structure with straight headbands, and in the rest of the area solid rubble masonry (this partially unplastered ), around the entrance and stable door made of stone door jambs with simple straight and profiled roofs, the half-timbered upper floor with predominantly original opening sizes (partly also added or widened), clad asbestos panels on the back and on the street-side gable, visible on the courtyard side (profiled ship throats on protruding filler and filler timbers, headbands, straight St. Andrew's crosses, single-bar construction), the first building extension with a half-timbered upper floor, the second completely solid, the roof with dark Preolit ​​shingles (after 1989), door and window stock more recent (GDR and post-war era), some large ones in the courtyard area Natural stone slabs and three tall trees (two ash trees, one sycamore).
Of particular value for regional farmhouse research.

09238545
 


Residential building Beierfelder Strasse 2
(map)
2nd half of the 18th century With shop fitting, upper floor half-timbered clad, largely in the original appearance, building typical of the time and landscape in a picture-defining crossroads location in the center of the village, part of the old village structure, of architectural significance.

Simple and relatively small two-storey building with a squat rectangular floor plan with a steep pitched roof without superstructures, the massive ground floor plastered, with a shop built probably in the first third of the 20th century, a flat and gabled extension at the intersection, the half-timbered upper floor partly with vertical boarding Cover strips, some with simple decorative slate (on the street-side gable), the roof with asbestos sheet covering, door and window stock predominantly from the first half of the 20th century, in the eastern triangle of the gable two older windows (probably the second half of the 19th century, two-winged with four panes each)

09238516
 


Residential building Beierfelder Strasse 7
(map)
around 1900 Historicizing plastered facade, villa-like building largely preserved in its original appearance, good example of the Wilhelminian style will to represent, of architectural significance.

Relatively small, villa-like single-storey residential building, plastered building with four by two window axes, jamb and extended protruding crooked hipped roof, two-axis central projecting on the street side, also with a steep and protruding crooked hipped roof, two separate dormer windows with analogous roofing, probably artificial stone window walls in part with straight and partial walls Triangular gable roofs on brackets, some arched window overlappings in brick and artificial stone, shell ornaments in the resulting semicircles, smooth, probably original plaster, the paintwork new, decorative boards on the gable ends on the purlin heads, claws sawn on the dormer windows, door and window stockings from the GDR period (no structure), artificial slate roofing.

09238528
 


Two production buildings (with connecting extensions) of a former sheet metal factory Beierfelder Strasse 14; 16
(card)
after 1900 Plastered buildings with brick structure, of architectural and local significance.

Two three-storey, elongated structures, connected by a one-storey "interlocking", probably steel skeleton construction with plastered facade, here pilaster structure by brick, segmented arch style, brick eaves, very flat gable roof, towards the main street (Beiersdorfer Str.) Through crowning optically indicated central projection, in the similar structure for the parallel building facing away from the street of the same size.

09235677
 


Residential house, with paving on the house Beierfelder Strasse 18
(map)
marked 1833 Upper floor half-timbered clad, largely original building typical of the time and landscape, probably the starting point for the development of the adjoining factory location of the sheet metal factory, of architectural and local significance.

For the type of construction, a relatively stately two-storey building with four by six axes and with a steep hipped roof, granite base (facing?), The massive ground floor with original window and door walls made of stone, the door walls with a straight roof and a central writing field with an anchor representation in the middle and on the side the designation: "D. (?) 1833 F (?)", the two windows to the right of the door are larger and without cladding, probably originally wooden or half-timbered room at the point, the upper floor probably partly solid, partly half-timbered, on the entrance side with simple ornamental slate, on the gable side plastered (on the back additions), the roof with three individually standing dormers, expanded and covered with asbestos, door and window stock mostly early 20th century, partly younger, beautiful three-tiered in front of the entrance Stairs and decking with large granite slabs, the courtyard paved.

09238530
 


Parish hall of the regional church community Narrow Alley 2
(map)
1927 according to the building file Plastered building with pointed arched windows, largely original building typical of the time, evidence of religious life in the area, of architectural, social and local significance.

Single-storey, relatively elongated solid plastered building over the valley side, relatively high protruding natural stone ashlar masonry base, with a steep crooked hip roof, five ogival window openings on each of the long sides, on the gable side a central round-arched entrance with a simple, diagonally incising and bulging choir building on the south-facing plaster frame Corners and curved roofing, cranked plastered Karnis profile in the eaves area, the roof with original roof pikes with bevels on both sides (shifted from the center to the entrance side), half removed, covered with asbestos panels, the original door, window and plastering stock (the box windows with two by four transverse panes and radial skylight as well as simple colored lead glazing inside, the plaster executed as scratch plaster), the stairwell and the hall with simple, original construction-proof furnishings.

09238512
 


Residential building Narrow Alley 10
(map)
2nd half of the 18th century Upper floor timber-framed, relatively stately building typical of the time and landscape, part of the old village structure, of importance in terms of building history and site development.

Residential house with half-timbered upper floor, in front of it Heiste, quite a stately building with a steep gable roof (reclining chair), the ground floor massive (more recently plastered), slightly protruding to the left of the door (probably under later), right with stone window walls, the half-timbered upper floor relatively tall with probably original opening sizes and vertical younger boarding with cover strips. On the sloping gable, abort bay bay, the gable boarded up in a V-shape, baroque wooden eaves profile, the roof with three individually standing dormer windows, the middle, wide, relatively young old German slate covering, door and window stock younger (partly early 20th century, and also 2nd half of the 20th century), inside large gneiss staircase, the building (possibly a former residential stable) is part of the old village structure and is of architectural and urban significance.

09238514
 


Former stable house and side building of a two-sided courtyard Grünhainer Strasse 5
(map)
around 1800 Both buildings, upper floor, timber-framed, typical farm of the time and landscape, parts of the old village structure, of architectural significance.
  • Residential stable house: Two-storey building with a squat rectangular floor plan with a steep pitched roof without superstructures, the ground floor solid and plastered with mostly original opening sizes, the half-timbered upper floor with original, partially clogged openings, clad all around with vertical planking, the roof expanded and covered with slate, loud Literature, the local church community was founded in this house in 1913.
  • Side building: Certainly older and smaller, behind the gable of the main house facing away from the street and with the ridge perpendicular to this standing building on a rectangular floor plan with a pitched roof without superstructures, parts of the ground floor solid and plastered quarry stone masonry, the other areas in boarded half-timbered construction, remarkable the former on the eaves side facing the main house, the upper floor protruding far - possibly originally an open upper arbor? The roof with old slate covering.
09238529
 


Residential house (without extensions) of a farm Grünhainer Strasse 19
(map)
18th century Upper floor half-timbered, typical building preserved in largely original appearance, part of a group of houses staggered along the street and the old village structure, historically important.

Simple two-storey building with a squat rectangular floor plan with a steep pitched roof without superstructures, the massive ground floor with GDR plaster and original opening arrangement (probably later massive undercut), the half-timbered upper floor and the gable triangles with largely original opening sizes and with simple decorative slate, the roof with slips Covered with asbestos panels, inventory of doors and windows in the middle / second half of the 20th century.

09238527
 


Former residential stable of a two-sided courtyard and retaining walls facing the street Grünhainer Strasse 23
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century Upper floor half-timbered, typical building in an elevated position preserved in largely original appearance, part of a group of houses staggered along the street and the old village structure, of architectural significance.

Relatively broad-based building with four by five window axes over a squat rectangular floor plan with a steep to moderately inclined gable roof, solid ground floor with ashlar window walls and more recent plaster (GDR era), the half-timbered upper floor with relatively large original openings on the street side with half-timbered panels on the gable, the roof is covered with three probably original, single dormers, pre-political shingle, door and window inventory GDR period (no structure).

09238526
 


House of a farm, with factory extension and retaining wall facing the street Grünhainer Strasse 25
(map)
18th century Residential building upper floor half-timbered clad, factory building plastered facade with brick structure, largely original, each time-typical building in an elevated position that characterizes the townscape, part of a group of houses staggered along the street and the old village structure, good example of a first structural expansion of an expanding domestic metal goods factory, both historically and locally significant.

Simple two-storey building with a squat rectangular floor plan with four by four window axes and a steep pitched roof without superstructures, the ground floor with solid green colored fine plaster (probably 1920s), the door with work or artificial stone walls, the half-timbered upper floor with original window opening sizes and that Roof (with slats) with asbestos panels, rear two-storey six-axis factory extension with segmented arched window openings, artificial stone window walls on the ground floor and facade structure with brick strips, cornices and ribbons, German tape, tooth-cut frieze under the eaves, flat saddle roof, the door of the residential building in the middle of the 20th century , the windows on the house and the factory are younger and without structure, according to literature around the turn of the century Siebstemmerei H. Beuthner, most recently sheet metal factory G. Beuthner (according to the sign at the entrance).

09238525
 


Residential building Lauterer Strasse 2
(map)
1st half of the 18th century Upper floor half-timbered clad, classicist door frame, largely authentically preserved building typical of the time and landscape with beautiful details, in a picture-defining location in the center of the village, part of the old village structure, of architectural significance.

For the type of building, a relatively stately, two-storey and relatively broad building with a steep pitched roof, the ground floor is solid and plastered, in some cases probably only undercut later (probably in 1867), with stone window frames and beautiful door frames (straight, profiled roof, two rosettes, name) , the half-timbered upper floor slightly protruding, with mostly original window opening sizes, asbestos-clad, in the eaves area a wooden baroque profile, the roof with slips and three street-side dormers (probably 1867), the middle ones wider with beautiful original skylights (three penetrating semicircles), the Double-leaf entrance door with ornaments on the profile-framed panels and with a skylight from 1867, historical cross-frame windows and window bars (stable or workshop part) to the left of the door, other windows younger, relatively young old German slate roofing.

09238510
 


Stable house (former forge) with house tree, paving slab on the house and retaining wall facing the street Lauterer Strasse 4
(map)
at its core probably 17th century Upper floor half-timbered clad or plastered, largely authentically preserved building typical of the time and landscape in the center of the town, of particular interest due to its former function as a village blacksmith, of architectural and local significance.

Relatively elongated two-storey building with a gable roof without superstructures, the ground floor massive, obviously undercuts in the living room area in the first half of the 19th century, the ashlar window frames and the door frames with simple straight roofing have also been preserved from this time, the stable part with original opening sizes, the half-timbered upper floor with probably original window opening sizes (arranged relatively high up - probably single-bar framework) plastered, on the slope-side gable in front of the back a cantilevered toilet bay, valley-side gable slated, slope-side gable boarded up and clad with aluminum panels in the gable triangle, on the back an annex with tailcoat roof Without slips with a relatively young old German slate covering, the entrance door and the segmental arched hallway window probably from the middle of the 19th century, the rest of the windows are younger, two rings to the right of the entrance to tie the horses have been preserved, above them two vertical stripes with younger ones He repaired plaster at the places where a cantilevered canopy was previously attached, according to literature set up as a forge in 1676, the forge was in operation until 1943 (according to literature, p. 36).

09238509
 


Villa with villa garden (garden monument) Lauterer Strasse 12
(map)
1929 Plastered facade with jewelry in Art Deco style, stately, but in a simple architectural language kept building in an authentic condition, historically important.

Relatively stately two-storey and massive plastered building over a squat rectangular floor plan with a relatively far protruding and fully hilted roof, the base in granite polygonal masonry, the façades with yellow-ocher colored original fine plaster with a simple structure (short clinker strips on the building corners, cornice at the upper floor parapet height simple roofing and plaster ornaments over the ground floor windows), on the valley side (towards the garden), two-storey standing bay windows in the shape of a segment of a circle with two groups of three windows (narrow windows), the roof with a strongly angled foot and three individually standing dormers on the valley side, pre-political clapboard, completely original door and window inventory (Gallows windows divided into six), shutters with lamellas on the ground floor and upper floor windows, inside colored glass windows, numerous original doors, in the garden partly historical wood and hornbeam hedge.

09238532
 


Residential building Lauterer Strasse 15
(map)
around 1800 Half-timbered building typical of the time and landscape, part of the old village structure, historically important.

Simple two-storey building with a steep gable roof without superstructures, the massive ground floor with probably partially modified openings, on the street side paneling with cover strips and simple window coverings, the upper floor with original opening sizes slated on the street side, the valley side gable side from the ground floor up to and including the top floor clad with asbestos panels, the roof with three small horizontal windows expanded and covered with pre-political clapboards.

09238533
 


Residential building Lauterer Strasse 18
(map)
18th century Upper floor half-timbered clad, construction typical of the time and landscape, part of the old village structure, historically important.

Simple two-storey building on a rectangular floor plan with a moderately to steeply sloping gable roof without superstructures, the ground floor solid and newly plastered, in the former stable part of the garage, no stone walls visible, the half-timbered upper floor with original, small window openings arranged high above (probably single-bar framework), facing the street with planking and simply slated on the gable ends including the attic, the roof slated, new doors and windows with a vertical division, suggesting a rising post, appealing new color scheme, a good example of a renewal that preserves the character of the house.

09238535
 


Residential building with paving slabs on the house and retaining wall facing the street Lauterer Strasse 20
(map)
1st half of the 18th century or older With some details and a relatively rare ground floor half-timbered building in the living room area, largely authentically preserved half-timbered building, part of the old village structure, allegedly the office of the builder was located in the house, of architectural and local significance, of particular value for regional house research.

Relatively simple two-storey building with a steep gable roof, the ground floor to the left of the door solid and plastered, the door walls made of Hilbersdorf porphyry tuff with a straight roof and the designation "1674" (walls, however, new or revised!), Right of the door pair of windows in block frames, the half-timbered upper floor Overhanging the living room area and visible from the street (a few storey-high struts, relatively high window openings, double-transom), the remaining sides including the attic floor slated or boarded up, the roof with slips and three individually standing dormer windows (the middle one, wide and double-stranded) with old German slate covering, the eaves area with roof box (profile underneath?), the double-leaf entrance door from the second half of the 19th century with beautiful cast-iron window grilles, the windows probably mostly from the first half of the 20th century, on the top floor of the second half of the 19th century, granite step in front of the entrance and a beautiful, large-plate covering .

09238536
 


Residential building Lauterer Strasse 23
(map)
around 1800 Upper floor half-timbered, construction typical of the time and landscape, part of the old village structure, of architectural significance.

Simple two-storey building with 4 × 3 axes over a squat rectangular floor plan and a steep pitched roof, the massive ground floor with original window opening sizes, plastered (GDR spray plaster), possibly stone walls (?) Preserved under the plaster, the entrance on the back with a younger porch, the half-timbered upper floor with original opening sizes partly clad asbestos panels, partly with simple decorative slate (on the street-side gable), the well-developed roof slated with slates, door and window stock more recent (GDR era) and without partitions.

09238537
 


Former stable house of a farm, with enclosure of the front garden Lauterer Strasse 24
(map)
18th century Stately and widely spread building typical of the time and landscape in a picture-defining location on the street, inside significant historical substance, part of the old village structure, of architectural significance.

Stately building with four by eight axes over a rectangular floor plan (presumably former residential stable house) and with a steep pitched roof without superstructures, the massive ground floor and the insulated (and therefore somewhat protruding) half-timbered upper floor with smooth new plastering, largely preserved wall opening Ratio, the door with work or artificial stone walls with straight and simply profiled roofing, the roof not expanded with probably the original roof framework, covered with asbestos and with slate or artificial slate clad gable triangles, the wrought iron enclosure on a retaining wall renewed in concrete.

09238538
 


Residential building Lauterer Strasse 35
(map)
18th century Upper floor half-timbered clad, construction typical of the time and landscape, part of the old village structure, historically important.

Simple two-storey building on a roughly square floor plan with originally four by four axes and a steep pitched roof without superstructures, the massive ground floor recently plastered, with split brick plinth and a framed arched entrance, original wall-opening ratio, no cladding visible, the half-timbered upper floor except for two clogged openings with original opening sizes, these relatively far below the eaves (single-bar framework?), baroque wooden eaves profile, the upper floor, the attic and the roof with asbestos panels, door and window inventory from the GDR era, some windows from the end of the 19th century / beginning of the 20th Century.

09238539
 


Residential building Lauterer Strasse 67
(map)
2nd half of the 18th century Upper floor half-timbered clad, relatively towering building typical of the time and landscape, part of the old village structure, of architectural significance.

A simple two-storey building with a relatively high ground floor with an almost square floor plan (originally probably four by five axes) with a steep pitched roof without superstructures, the massive ground floor with stone window walls, rear entrance and GDR spray plaster probably later (19th century) in the Today's shape changed, the half-timbered upper floor clad, the valley side including the gable triangle with slate, the remaining sides (as far as can be seen) with asbestos panels, the roof with stenciled slate covering, window stock on the ground floor from the period after 1989, on the upper floor and in the gable triangles older, probably original Cross-frame window with a central transom, at least two cross-frame windows with a raised transom, gallows window from the second half of the 19th century, semicircular windows in the gable top on the valley side, a historical single-axis extension with a sloping roof on the valley side (probably around 1900).

09238541
 


Residential building
Residential building Lauterer Strasse 77
(map)
2nd half of the 17th century Relatively old building typical of the time and the landscape, curved St. Andrew's crosses visible on the gable end, part of the old village structure, of architectural and domestic importance.

Relatively simple two-storey building with a squat rectangular floor plan with a steep pitched roof, the massive ground floor with GDR and post-war plastering, no window walls but probably original opening conditions, the half-timbered upper floor slated on the street side, facing the slope and down the valley as well as the rear with extensions, the upper floor slightly in the visible area Overhanging with a simple boat throat on the threshold, the half-timbered construction with two bars, with headbands and curved St. Andrew's crosses (in the form of so-called firebucks), the windows here widened and probably two half-timbered stands removed, two upper floor windows probably added on the street side, the roof probably with it Slate-covered slats and three individually standing dormers, window stock from the GDR era, entrance to the rear, in the gable triangle the central post of the single-standing chair originally crossing struts can be seen (so-called riser), now two foot struts v he changes. historical window stock, despite small changes, building largely preserved in its original form.

09238542
 


Reception building and toilet block of a former train station
More pictures
Reception building and toilet block of a former train station Obere Bahnhofstrasse 18
(map)
1900 (reception building) Clinker buildings typical of the time and purpose preserved in their original appearance, almost the last structural references to the former railway connection of the place, high memory value, of local and railway historical importance.
  • Reception building: Two-storey brick building with jamb and extended, moderately sloping, overhanging saddle roof without superstructures, the base with large granite slabs (or cuboids?), The openings with segmented arches, the lintels emphasized by yellow bricks, as well as the building corners above the base and on the upper floor - Parapet height also yellow brick bands, in the gable in the verge area glare-arch-like yellow deposits, in the facades decorated wrought-iron tie-rod heads, curved sawn rafter and purlin ends, the original double-winged street-side entrance door with two smaller side windows, the staircase broken off, mostly original gallows window inventory.
  • Toilets: One-storey building in an analogous design (red brickwork with yellow highlights), the inscription “Bernsbach” faded on both buildings.

1900 opening of the railway line.

09238553
 


School building with open space design Schulstrasse 9
(map)
marked 1927 Largely authentically preserved, architecturally appealingly designed building in a location that defines the townscape, architect: Paul Beckert in Liechtenstein / Sa., Testimony to the economic heyday of the place, highly memorable, of architectural and historical importance.

Representative and stately, elongated three-storey plastered building, in a position parallel to the slope delimiting a triangular square, with a hipped roof with numerous structures and extensions, natural stone masonry base (slate granite), to the square central and representatively designed entrance (artificial stone arched portal with plastic representations on the inclined reveal surface under a wide canopy mounted on consoles), on both sides of the portal polygonally stepping out of the facade, the stairwells receiving stand bay windows with separate and "jagged" roofing, the roof with differently wide, relatively high towers on all sides, on the sides of the same small triangular dormers, in the center roof turret with eight-sided curved hood, knob with compass rose and clock - all slated, between the first and second floors around the gable sides to the stairwells and on the valley side continuous roof aprons, underneath and actually In the eaves area, relatively strong profiles, on the valley side the windows of the top floor (above the roof apron) are higher and rounded (probably the auditorium behind), all windows with structure renewed (probably based on the original, but made of plastic), the gates (garage on the North side etc.) and doors inside and outside original and in an appealing design, on the building corners original lamps with copper curved hoods, building renovated and painted light (probably contrary to the original).
Design probably by Paul Beckert, architect (Lichtenstein-Callnberg)

09238549
 


Methodist church with piers on the property Schulstrasse 15
(map)
marked 1931 Architecturally appealingly designed church building that has been preserved in its original form down to the details, with a long-distance effect that defines the image, and is of importance in terms of building history and church history.

Plastered building facing the street over a squat rectangular floor plan with a steep gable roof, entrance porch facing southeast and a small choir on the SW gable, the high plinth and the frames of the tall, pointed arched hall windows in flat natural stone masonry, the plastered surfaces with the original old pink-red colored fine plaster, the roof with an eight-sided roof turret arranged over the street-side gable (this one with a hood and a helmet-like tip crowned with a cross on it) and small triangular dormer windows covered with asbestos panels (colored green), original door and window stock (beautiful three-winged entrance door with a "jagged" top) Glazing).

09238550
 


House and enclosure wall of the garden
House and enclosure wall of the garden Concern 17
(card)
around 1800 Upper floor half-timbered, with its surroundings authentically preserved, time and landscape typical building, part of a historical expansion of the site, of historical importance.

Relatively high two-storey building with three by four window axes and a steep pitched roof without superstructures as well as possibly original commercial extension on the northeast corner, the massive ground floor partly with stone window walls partly with block frame window frames, historical plaster preserved, the visible layer probably around 1900, the Door jambs removed, the half-timbered upper floor with original openings on the entrance and the south side including a gable triangle with simple (slightly more complex) ornamental slating and on the other sides including a gable triangle and annex boarded up, in the angle between the house and the lavatory bay annex Roof covered with asbestos, baroque wooden profile in the eaves area, the door probably from the middle of the 20th century, the windows from the beginning of the 20th century (only a few older cross-frame windows with raised transom etc.), in front of the south gable remains of the farmer's garden with a beautiful enclosure (quarry stone masonry - Base, natural stone pole ten, wooden picket fence).

09238543
 


Residential building Unit 1 Street
(Map)
inscribed 1774 Upper floor half-timbered, stately building typical of the time and landscape, preserved with original details, in a picture-defining location in the center of the village, of architectural significance.

Inscribed "1774" (lintel on the gable side), stately and broadly laid out two-storey building in an image-defining corner position with a steep gable roof, the ground floor massive with almost completely preserved stone door and window walls, on both sides of the street probably original entrances with walls with double lintels (each in the lower Keystone carved out, the one on the gable side with initials and label on the side 1774), the upper one above the skylight, the half-timbered upper floor with probably original openings, the ground floor and upper floor plastered, the upper floor slightly protruding on the gable side, beautiful on the rear gable on the upper floor and attic Ornamental slate and toilet stand bay, the roof rebuilt to two storeys, valley side with wide dormer window, asbestos panel-covered, one entrance door probably 1920s, other door and window stock younger, no eaves profile, possibly roof renewed at the beginning of the 20th century.

09238511
 


Residential building, former school Unit 2 Street
(Map)
probably 18th century Upper floor half-timbered clad, stately and largely original building, forming an ensemble with the church and the rectory, school until 1886, high memorial value, of architectural and local significance.

Stately, broadly laid out, two-storey building over a squat rectangular floor plan with a steep pitched roof without superstructures, the massive ground floor with more recent plastering, no door or window walls visible, the entrance probably originally in the middle of the street, the half-timbered upper storey clad with original opening sizes asbestos panels, the west gable with simple ornamental slate, the roof with asbestos sheet covering, inventory of doors and windows from the middle of the 20th century, on the back a more recent approximately one meter wide extension with a sloping roof, in the western corner probably the original stable part with correspondingly small windows.

09238521
 


Former stable house Unit 3 Street
(Map)
18th century With built-in shop, upper floor timber-frame clad, in a location that characterizes the townscape next to the town hall, original baroque door and window stock on the stable part, part of the old village structure, of architectural significance.

Relatively stately two-storey building, with the gable facing the street, with a squat, rectangular floor plan with a steep pitched roof without superstructures, the ground floor solid and with GDR plaster, the openings in the street-side half changed (shop installation, in part probably clogged), those on the valley-side half original (two stable windows with wooden block frames and probably original window grilles, left of the shop door stable door with basket arch lintel, skylight and board-clad block frame, left of the stable door a small niche, formerly probably for the light), the half-timbered upper floor with original, in part probably blocked openings, the gable triangles and the roof with asbestos panels, on the west side a younger staircase with a separate upper floor access, the beautiful stable door with diamond-shaped doubling and probably also the stable windows from the construction period, in the street-side gable triangle two different cross-stock windows (center and raised transom, figure eight and six Division), ü other doors and windows younger.

09238517
 


Rectory with Heiste
Rectory with Heiste Unit 4 Street
(Map)
probably 18th century, parts possibly older Upper floor half-timbered clad, extremely stately and largely authentically preserved building, forming an ensemble with the church and the second village school, of architectural and local significance.

Stately, broad and elongated two-storey building with a steep pitched roof, the ground floor solid and plastered with granite window frames in the living room area (left of the door and on the street-side gable) as well as door and window frames made of Hilbersdorfer Porphyrtuff in the rest of the area, the door frame with simple straight roofing and rounded edge, the half-timbered upper floor with original openings on the long side with asbestos panels and on the gable sides including the gable triangles clad with slate, the roof with four younger, separate dormers on the entrance side covered with asbestos panels, double-leaf entrance door with paneling ornaments from the first half of the 19th century Century, window stock partly 1930s, partly younger, according to the pastor from around 1680 parsonage, before that so-called Beuthner-Gut (according to literature Bernsbach was parish after Beierfeld up to this time).

09238520
 


town hall Unit 5 Street
(Map)
1927 Appealingly designed plastered building typical of the time with roof turrets, municipal office in largely original appearance, structural evidence of the economic heyday of the place, architectural and special local historical significance.

Building set back from the street and with its broad gable oriented towards the forecourt created in this way (with linden tree), two-storey solid plastered building with a steep pitched roof and various structures, natural stone ashlar masonry base (granite), the entrance area portico-like, the ground floor plain, the upper floor with Pilaster structure and simple cornices at parapet height and in the eaves area, the eaves profile drawn over the gable sides under the roof aprons, followed by a tooth-cut frieze at the bottom, two-story polygonal bay windows on the east side (upper floor, attic) and two other powerful dormers, on the west side one wide and two narrower ones Dormers, on the ridge end above the entrance, octagonal stepped roof turrets with a curved eight-sided hood and weather vane, slate covering.

09238518
 


Church (with furnishings) , old churchyard with retaining wall, two tombs on the church and a memorial for those who fell in the world wars Unit 6 Street
(Map)
1679-1681 Towering baroque church building, one of the early central church buildings in Saxony, with a high roof turret characterizing the townscape, two baroque stone epitaphs, of architectural, local and art historical significance.

(Church and epitaphs: see Dehio, Sachsen II, p. 72/73)

  • Enclosure and tree: Probably as part of the church renovation in 1881 (see Dehio) in front of the main entrance facing south-east, a typical wrought-iron enclosure on a broken stone plinth that balances the slope, to the right of the entrance and within this enclosure, an oak tree of the same age,
  • War memorial: In the cemetery not far from the church and on the side of the main path, a complex with a wide, quarry stone rear wall. In front of it, a square-like area with a wide, three-step flight of stairs, the middle section of the rear wall higher and slightly forward, again in the middle in front of it a squat, rectangular slab made of limestone, about 30 cm deep, with a central plastic (three male figures, standing upright). All-round and diagonally cutting framing and large writing fields on each side of the figures, three-sided and three-step stairs in front of the plate.
09238519
 


Garden pavilion Unit 41 Street
(Map)
around 1910 Authentically preserved, idiosyncratic building in a clearly visible villa plot, of architectural significance.

Construction probably in timber frame construction, glazed above a closed wooden parapet area with windows typical of the time, erected over an equilateral octagonal floor plan, with a round, probably sheet metal mansard roof with knob, the upper half of the roof almost hemispherical, the lower half curved and broken on four sides by semicircular windows protruding into the roof surface whose semicircular canopies also protrude far.

09238552
 


Former gas works (with two house numbers) Devil stone 4; 6
(card)
marked 1907 Clinker brick facade, typical public functional building in largely original appearance, from 1913 to 1919 there was also a public bathing establishment here, of importance in terms of building history and local history.

On a hillside and parallel to the street, one- and two-storey building composed of three structures in exposed brickwork, the wooden structure probably also two-storey inside and with a ridge oriented transversely to the longitudinal direction of the complex between the other two, three-axis towards the street Viewing gable with pilaster strips, round window in the gable and verge area with double serrated frieze, small crowns above the pilaster strips, the middle axis with segmental arching, the right axis with gate entrance, moderately inclined gable roof, single-storey building with three axes and a flat towing roof to the north, also to the south Single-storey building with a central area raised by about half a storey (in the longitudinal direction of the building), this structure on the side with ventilation lamellas (three-aisled from the outside), all eaves and verge areas designed in the same way (see above), all window openings original and with segmental arches s, door and window inventory younger (after 1989), last use: restaurant.

09238546
 


House with garden
House with garden Teufelstein 19
(card)
around 1900 Typical clinker brick building in a picture-defining location at the entrance to the village, villa-like building largely in its original appearance, a good example of the Wilhelminian style will to represent, of architectural significance.

Single-storey clinker brick building with jamb and extended attic over a squat rectangular floor plan, in front of the west gable transept and thus a cross-shaped roof, this area is thus two-storey, the transept on the long sides over flat side projections, each with two coupled windows, round windows in all four gable tips, natural stone masonry plinth, the yellowish facing surfaces interrupted by the facade structure in plaster (building corners, simple bands between the windows, parapet areas) as well as artificial stone and profiled door and window walls typical of the time, all windows with straight lintels, over the openings of the single-storey part segment arch-shaped relief arches, on the protruding, steep to Moderately sloping roof, three individually standing dormer windows, probably later applied, rafter and purlin ends with curved saws with ornamental cleats, ornamental rafters, old German slate covering, the doors and windows are new (GDR period), probably original Building belonging to the Landmann company.

09238547
 


Villa, pavilion, former garage, enclosure and villa garden (with old trees, swimming pool, retaining walls and stairs, garden monument) Thälmannstrasse 31
(map)
1934, according to the building file A building built for the sheet metal manufacturer Schneider and authentically preserved with its surroundings in an appealing, functional design typical of the time, building and local history, partly of importance in terms of garden art.
  • Villa: Two-storey on a hillside and a squat rectangular floor plan as a clear cubic body, built plastered building with a high, protruding and developed hipped roof, base in irregular, natural stone masonry, protruding storey-high on the valley side, more powerful, centrally arranged on the valley-side facade Semicircular standing bay window with an exit accessible from the upper floor, a simple, open and off-center entrance porch on the street side with a rectangular floor plan, the pillars and closed parapets in brick masonry, above a flat roof, extensively preserved original gray high-grade plaster stock with sparse structures or recesses (simple cornice between the floors, simple profiled window parapets, large cove in the eaves area with an edge as well as a few accentuating plaster grooves on the stand bay and around the larger, street-side staircase window across all floors), the original slate-covered Da ch on the street side with a polygonal roof house and dormer window with three stripes on the valley side, each arranged in the central axes, completely preserved original door and window stock (two and three pane wide and four pane high box windows with squat rectangular format of the individual panes), the windows with slat shutters,
  • Inside, the original, solid furnishings (stairs, doors with fittings, built-in cupboards, lead glazing in the stairwell and ceilings - in the hallway with a false vault - as well as floors and, especially on the built-in cupboards or on the ceiling of the bay window, neo-baroque ornaments with flat relief - probably made of wood or plaster?).
  • Garden: The hillside facility with terraced areas, natural stone retaining walls and stairs, previously pruned small-crowned trees, large old trees and various small buildings integrated into the design (swimming pool,
  • Octagonal, formerly probably closed pavilion with a curved mansard roof with knob, etc.),
  • Fences with natural stone plinths and pillars have been preserved on both sides of the street, small-crowned hawthorn trees planted on the property along Thälmannstrasse, each arranged behind the pillars;

Erected as a house for Mr. Rudi Schneider.

09238551
 

volume up

image designation location Dating description ID
Railway bridge over Schwarzwasser and culverts of the Hakenkrümme hydropower plant (including abutments and adjacent fortification or bank retaining walls) (Map) 1884 On a curved floor plan, of importance in terms of railway history and building history.

Monument text: The imposing railway bridge, which characterizes the course of the Schwarzwasser river at the so-called Hakenkrümme, was built together with another railway bridge located just a little downstream (see object 08957256) in 1884 during the course of the railway line between Schwarzenberg and Zwickau built between 1855 and 1858, Width originally only designed for single-track traffic.

The line was expanded to double-track in parts as early as 1900, but the present section of the line was only built on the orders of SMAD in 1950/1951, as the line gained enormous importance during this time due to the emerging uranium ore mining in Aue through the bismuth. Not only the transport of uranium ore to the processing plant in Crossen near Zwickau was carried out over the route, but also the commuter traffic for the employees of the Wismut. Accordingly, in 1951 the bridges of the existing section of the route were widened for double-track operation and a reinforced concrete structure based on the shape of the existing bridges was added to the north side of each bridge. The railway bridge still has the original granite masonry on its south side, while the north side is exposed to formwork concrete. Segmented arched openings span the river and a right-hand control path, as well as a culvert on the left bank belonging to the nearby hydropower station, which is fed from a water tower above. The overflow belonging to the moated castle runs parallel to the southern side of the bridge in the direction of Schwarzwasser and is bordered by quarry stone walls that are integrated into the bank masonry existing on both sides of the river.

The bridge structure is a testimony to the development of the cities of Aue and Schwarzenberg in terms of traffic engineering. The expansion of both railway bridges in the early 1950s with the existing adapted construction method also testifies to the importance of the line and is therefore not only relevant in terms of architectural history, but also of urban history. (LfD / 2014).

To the history of the route:

Schwarzenberg – Zwickau railway line (route abbreviation SZ), Saxon main line, the starting point was the Zwickau – Bockwa coal line built in 1854 to transport the Zwickau hard coal, also the Zwickau-Kainsdorf state coal line, 1855 to 1858 construction of the Upper Ore Mountains state railway between Schwarzenberg and Zwickau using the existing state coal line Cainsdorf and Zwickau, route between Schwarzenberg (Erzgeb) station and Aue along the Schwarzwasser, from Aue in the valley of the Zwickauer Mulde (with the only tunnel on the route just before Schlema station and Bf), connection to Zwickau main station from the south-east, initially single-track extension , around 1900 partial conversion to double-track operation (between Hartenstein and Aue straightened re-routing with route shortening as a result), 1946 dismantling of the second track between Aue and Zwickau as a reparation payment for the Soviet Union, from 1946 the route gained great importance for the commuter traffic of Wismut AG as well as for the removal of the extracted uranium ores, therefore in 1948/1950 reconstruction of the second track with material from the dismantling of unimportant side tracks, 1950/1951 construction of a three-track section between Schwarzenberg and Schwarzenberg-Neuwelt, around 2000 start of the line renovation, partly dismantling on one track to be able to enlarge curve radii for the purpose of increasing speed.

09305377
 


Five landmarks 09248143
 


42 boundary stones (Map) 1694-1717 Rainsteine ​​to demarcate the Zwickau part from the electoral forest on Rennweg, of local history.

The stones, some with the Zwickau coat of arms (three swans) and the Saxon coat of arms (crossed swords), mark the border over a length of about three kilometers, to the Schwarzwasser.

09248142
 


Mining facility with collapse funnel, Bingen, Halden and Maßenstein (Map) 17th century (mining facility) Testimony to the historical ore mining of the region, of importance in terms of location and mining history.

Located in the forest area above the Zwickauer Mulde in steeply sloping terrain, moving terrain profile with heaps, funnels and ditches, the Maßenstein (approx. 20 × 20 × 30 centimeters) historically with a carved cross as a boundary marker.

09238618
 


Mining system with all preserved parts such as the main shaft, trenches, funnels, heaps and stone blocks (Map) 17th century (mining facility) Testimony to the historical ore mining of the region, of importance in terms of location and mining history.

Two pit fields that cannot be delimited from one another, moving terrain profile in the forest area with ditches, funnels and heaps, St. Margaretha measuring stones are partly new (measuring stones delimit a pit or a tunnel from neighboring ones).

09238617
 


Weir system with inlet structure, associated gates, water tunnels, water lock with overflow and drainage ditch and culvert (Map) 1924-1925 Continuation of the pipeline system to the Hakenkrümme power plant in the urban area of ​​Aue, significant testimony to the Aues electricity supply, ensemble in good original condition, as a water intake for the first state hydropower plant construction of great technical and architectural significance, also shaping the landscape of the Schwarzwasser floodplain.

Associated systems extend partly in the area of ​​Aue, city, district Aue, parcels 1950, 1953e (see also object 08957257).

Weir system constructed as a two-field flap weir (in Götze 2012, see literature, referred to as double segment weir), adjustable weir with two movable shields as weir locks, which are rotatably mounted on the underwater side by means of a support structure and can be moved from the machine house by means of a rack, So-called jet rippers on the overflow edges of the shields, which tear open the falling water band and avoid undesirable vibrations, in order not only to allow a flow below the shield, but also to enable a more precisely adjustable overflow operation, weir piers in the middle of the river on an oval floor plan, probably made of concrete, with granite The machine house is clad and plastered over it with a straight or semicircular hipped roof on the front sides, depending on the base area, can be reached from both river banks via weir bridges (each designed as iron truss girder bridges), given in the machine house if original technical equipment has been preserved, flanking bank retaining walls.

Inlet structure (water intake of the Hakenkrümme power plant) and associated multi-span gate on the left bank of the Schwarzwasser, on the right bank behind the original bank retaining wall a fish ladder, probably built in 2004.

The water supply to the power plant was carried out using several tunnels and pipes:

  • Water tunnel (pressure tunnel, height 3 m, width 2.6 m, length 601.75 m), begins at the inlet structure of the weir system and leads under the Burkhardtswald through to the moated castle.
  • Brick moated castle, brick basin with wooden cover and laterally adjoining, cascade-like overflow with branch ditch to the black water (overflow can be regulated by means of a slide), the overflow ditch is flanked by a hillside retaining wall that merges into a bank retaining wall at the black water, and by the railway embankment retaining wall, which is the abutment of the The railway bridge over the Schwarzwasser leads, downstream from this inlet of the trench, the water lock with a free water level within the pressure pipeline system serves to compensate for pressure fluctuations when the water is discharged into the adjoining culvert.
  • Culvert pipeline, already partly in the area of ​​the town of Aue (length 103.8 meters), pipeline under the tracks and over the bed of the black water made of partly riveted steel pipe segments with granite supports (river piers), on the right valley slope transition to a second water tunnel, which leads into a second surge tank with a computer system above the Hakenkrümme power station, where the turbines in the turbine house are operated via downpipes (see also object 08957257).

Classification:

Commissioning of the power plant Hakenkrümme on May 17, 1925 after 11 months of construction, construction costs 1,050.00 RM, between 2000 and 2007 extensive renovation measures by the "Envia" Mitteldeutsche Energie AG, by shortening the waterway at the Hakenkrümme and the upstream river loop by passing through the Mountains, a gradient of 15.2 meters could be made usable, the energy generated was fed into the network of the Obererzgebirge power station (interconnected operation), first considerations for a hydropower station for Aue as early as 1909, implementation and operation finally by the AG Sächsische Werke (ASW - The sole shareholder was the Saxon state) as a result of the program for the promotion of Saxon hydropower use decided by the Saxon state parliament in 1923 (secondary purpose of job creation), the Hakenkrümme hydropower plant was the first state facility within the program should the industrial boom in the post-war period by providing cheap power.

09305340
 


villa Alte Auer Strasse 13
(map)
1897–1898, designated 1897 Home of the factory owner Guido Gnuechel, largely authentically preserved plastered building with decorative framework, early work by the architect Albert Gessner, Berlin, of local and architectural importance. 09306228
 


Post mileage Alte Auer Straße 15 (opposite)
(map)
marked 1724 Copy of a distance column (approx. 3 m high granite obelisk, inscriptions on the shaft, column numbered with the number 48), significance for local history and traffic history.

Monument text:
The all-mile column number 48 made of reddish granite from the quarry near Wiesenbad was erected in 1724 on Poststrasse from Schneeberg via Schwarzenberg to Annaberg. The middle section of the column, which has since been broken off and built in, was found in 1922 and then placed at the entrance of the Auer Stadthaus, later broken off again and found again in 1957. It was restored two years later, given a new base and a new top made of Blauenthal granite, and placed in front of the Auer city library. After 1990 the column was moved to Auer Straße in Lauter.

In 1722, the Electorate of Saxony began to erect the Saxon post-mile pillars. Elector Friedrich August I wanted to build a modern traffic and transport control system in the electorate in order to promote trade and economy. He entrusted Magister Adam Friedrich Zürner (1679 - 1742) with the implementation. The system of post mile pillars comprised distance pillars, quarter milestones, half and full mile pillars. The distance columns should be set up in the cities in front of the city gates, later only on the marketplaces. Quarter milestones, half and full mile pillars were set up along the Poststrasse. They received a consecutive numbering (row number), starting from the beginning of the measurement. The all-mile columns were set up outside the cities on the post roads at a distance of 1 mile (= 9.062 km). The distance pillars were marked with the monogram "AR" for "Augustus Rex", the Electoral Saxon and Polish-Lithuanian double coat of arms and the Polish royal crown. The full mile, half mile columns and quarter milestones were all similarly labeled, none of them had a coat of arms, but the monogram "AR". The distances were given in hours (1 hour = ½ post mile = 4.531 km).

This mile system was the first European traffic management system. The pillar considered here is of great importance in the history of traffic as part of the nationally significant postal system.

09238590
 


House and three elevated drinking water tanks At elevated tank 1
(map)
Early 1950s Authentically preserved complex as a testimony to the regional water supply, technical-historical significance.
  • Residential building: One-storey, solid plastered building on a granite ashlar base over a squat rectangular floor plan with a high pitched roof and a wide dormer window, the structural plaster is still original, the window openings on the street side are almost square, with three-part box windows, the other rectangular windows have two sashes, the original front door and apartment doors, the roof slated,
  • Elevated water reservoir: three cubic buildings built on a mound, adapted to the course of the building, in granite ashlar masonry (pre-glare?) And with a flat roof, rectangular window openings and a rectangular door.
09238616
 


Water house Antonsthaler Straße 5 (near)
(map)
1930s Authentically preserved small functional building, evidence of the local water supply, of local history.

Small stone-faced building with arched window, door and niche as well as a gable roof.

09238595
 


Residential building Bahnhofstrasse 7
(map)
around 1900 Typical clinker brick building in a location that shapes the townscape, evidence of the Wilhelminian transformation of the place, of importance in terms of building history and development.

Two-and-a-half-storey solid building made of clinker facing masonry over an irregular floor plan (almost square with various risalits), the otherwise smooth facade is only structured around the segmental arched window openings by shaped stones as well as tooth cut and German band in the eaves and gable areas, on the eastern corner of the building small oriels with sandstone dividing elements In the southeast corner there is an octagonal turret and a glazed wooden balcony on the first floor, mostly original windows (gallows windows and three-part windows), original double-winged entrance door with barred glass fields, original apartment doors, terrazzo floor and wrought-iron banisters.

09238585
 


Villa with villa garden (with old trees and hedge enclosure, garden monument), enclosure and garden gate Bahnhofstrasse 15
(map)
1907 Villa of the mill owner Oskar Freitag, representative plastered building with echoes of Art Nouveau, wrought iron fence as enclosure, in an authentic state of preservation, of local and architectural significance.

Two-storey solid plastered building over an almost square floor plan, expanded by risalit, porches and bay windows on a granite base with a baroque mansard roof and roof core, roof turrets with Welscher hood and oval dormer windows, plain tile roof covering, on the extensions copper or tin roofs, structural elements on the porch and some of the ground floor Sandstone, the smooth plaster on some windows and the bay console enriched with plaster reliefs, the wooden roof box painted in color, the initial "F" in the weather vane on the fence, original windows and doors, original leaded glass windows in the stairwell.

09238586
 


Villa with villa garden (garden monument), fence and gate entrance Bahnhofstrasse 17
(map)
1907-1908, designated 1908 Villa of the mill owner Alfred Freitag, extremely representative and typical Art Nouveau building preserved in excellent original condition, of local and architectural importance as well as artistically.

Two-storey solid plastered building on an angular floor plan with various facade projections and openings (risalits, bay windows, winter garden, loggias, etc.), entire building on sandstone ashlar plinth and with mansard roof and individual dormer windows, the partially richly structured window and door walls as well as the cornices, the floral and figural decorative elements as well as pillars and volutes in sandstone, originally preserved smooth plaster on the wall surfaces, the wall openings very different, for example slit-shaped windows, multiple coupled rectangular windows or windows in the gable that taper upwards, original windows and doors, windows with split skylights, partly very richly grooved or articulated or as lead glass windows, original balustrade grille on the loggia, grating of the cellar windows, interior also largely authentic, enclosure made of granite ashlar masonry with wrought iron fence, gate passage with segment-arched opening and two wrought iron gate wings, volute-shaped sandstone decorations on the sides and eaves profile on consoles.

09238587
 


Residential building Bahnhofstrasse 22
(map)
around 1905 Belonging to the former estate at the pond of the Freitag-Mühle, plastered building typical of the time in a location that defines the townscape in the context of two villas and the train station, of importance in terms of the history of the site.

Single-storey solid plastered building (brick masonry) on a rectangular floor plan on a hillside with a gable roof, profiled window frames made of sandstone, with window aprons and apex stones, round windows in the top of the gable, plaster possibly renewed with the extension (corner grooves), historical gallows window (around 1900) on the eaves side the gable side probably from the 1920s or 1930s, the slate-covered saddle roof with a standing dormer.

09238588
 


Cottage Bockauer Strasse 24
(map)
around 1800 Upper floor half-timbered clad, construction typical of the time and landscape, part of the former old village, historically important.

The ground floor is solid, plastered quarry stone masonry, the base is stone-visible, the back side with toilet, half-timbered upper floor slightly protruding, clad with asbestos panels and slate (rear side), gable roof covered with asbestos-cement panels, some historical gallows windows (probably 1920s) have been preserved, double-leaf shutters on the ground floor.

09238612
 


Cottage Bockauer Strasse 35
(map)
2nd half of the 18th century Upper floor half-timbered, authentically preserved building typical of the time and landscape, part of the former old village, of architectural significance.

Two-storey building facing the street, solid ground floor, plastered quarry stone masonry with granite window frames, upper floor half-timbered, double-transom with storey-high struts, street-side gable with loading opening boarded up and half-timbered construction visible in places (pegs with clay plastering), on the back with toilet extension Sliding, slate covering, profiled eaves board (thick planks), historical double-leaf door with skylight (second half of the 19th century), some windows from the 1920s and older gallows windows.

09238613
 


Residential building Bockauer Strasse 60
(map)
in the core of the 2nd half of the 18th century Typical plastered building with a basket arch-shaped door, of architectural significance.

Two-storey solid plastered building with a central arch-shaped door with apex stone, window frames on the ground floor in prophyrtle tuff, in the western part of the building a gate, plaster probably around 1915, ground floor windows covered with round arch plaster, upper floor window lying just below the eaves, high-plank wooden eaves profile, saddle roof with slider, Slate roofing and two standing dormer windows, two-winged front door with skylight, second half of the 19th century, gallows window with grooved skylight and louvre shutters from the deformation phase, slate flooring in the hallway.

09238614
 


Residential house (Umgebung), later an inn Forststraße 2
(map)
1624 Dendro Upper floor half-timbered plastered, stately building with surrounding construction, one of the few examples in the village, of architectural historical importance, as an inn of local historical value and, due to its location in the intersection area, of urban development importance.

Elongated two-storey building with a gable roof, with rear stables, the ground floor in solid quarry stone masonry with natural stone window walls, in the surrounding part block frame window walls, the entire ground floor and half-timbered upper storey plastered, half-timbering and framework construction not more clearly visible, in the street-side boarded gable dovecote Slate covering, historical windows as far as can be seen not available, on the ground floor double-leaf shutters with lamellas in the upper quarter, a door (probably 1930s) with a split glass panel.

09238607
 


Post office Hauptstrasse 11
(map)
last third of the 19th century Typical clinker brick building, historically relevant building in a prominent location at a street intersection.

Clinker brick building built on a sandstone polygonal masonry base, flat central projectile with two window axes, above it a crooked hipped roof, window sills and parts of the overhanging arch in cast stone, strong cornice, roof overhang with sawn purlins.

09238581
 


Cottage (with extension) Hauptstrasse 16
(map)
18th century Upper floor half-timbered clad, construction typical of the time and landscape, part of the old town structure, building structure in a corner position that defines the townscape, of architectural significance.

Simple little cottage with a barn or shed on the back and two gable-side barn additions with apartment extensions on the upper floor, the cottage with a smooth plastered ground floor with door and window walls made of stone, the door walls with profiled straight roofing, the half-timbered upper floor with original opening sizes and arrangement is clad with asbestos panels, strong wooden eaves profile, the steep pitched roof with a single dormer window in the axis of the entrance is covered with asbestos panels, the door from the 1920s, some older windows (early 20th century), but mostly new windows (GDR era) without Sprout, the two two-storey barn extensions a little higher and in an analogous design, half-timbered upper floor slated, the barn window structure preserved on the ground floor, the shed or barn extension is broad (building-wide), but not deep, the ridge transverse to the main building, simply vertical Boarded half-timbered construction, small orchard preserved.

09238574
 


Residential building with shop extension Hauptstrasse 38
(map)
18th century Upper floor half-timbered clad, construction typical of the time and landscape, part of the old local structure, historically important.

Two-storey, relatively high building, with the gable facing the street, with a steep pitched roof without superstructures, broken stone plinth, the plastered ground floor possibly later (probably 1930s scratch plaster) with stone window frames with a simple fold, the door without cladding with a basket-arched lintel (baroque?), the half-timbered upper floor with original opening sizes and arrangement as well as the gable triangles are slated, the roof is covered with preolite shingle and partly extended to the street, the windows on the ground floor partly in the early 1920s, on the upper floor and the door younger (after 1989), smaller single-storey towards the west Massive shop extension with shop window and door frames made of sandstone (each with edge profile), parapet with a small attachment with simple volutes on the side (formerly probably a writing area in it), door to the shop with etched glass (probably 1970s) and writing “Salon Schubert”.

09238577
 


Residential building (without extension) Hauptstrasse 39
(map)
marked 1832 Upper floor half-timbered clad, classicist door frame, authentically preserved half-timbered building that characterizes the townscape, of relevance to architectural history.

An eaves building located at an angle in the building line, the ground floor made of broken stone and field stones, porphyry tufa garments, profiled door roofing with tooth cut, underneath "CAF 1832", original Biedermeier door with fine relief, two-winged with skylight, shutters, the clad half-timbered upper floor slightly protruding, Mostly original window sizes, profiled eaves, half-hip roof, slate with five standing dormer windows, protruding towards the upper floor courtyard.

09238582
 


Cinema building Hauptstrasse 45
(map)
1928, according to the building file Stately cinematic theater that characterizes the townscape in an authentic state of preservation, of architectural and site historical importance.

Plastered building on a relatively high quarry stone base over a squat rectangular floor plan, the south-east corner retracted with the entrance area, the exit with an open staircase on the street side, the entrance areas with quarry stone frames and granite open stairs, the facade with a gable on the south side and a bay-like (polygonal) protruding staircase (with figurative lead glazing) loosened up, strong angular and cranked eaves profiles, the gable stepped and with triangular windows, original door and window stock, the relatively flat saddle roof with ridge-like ventilation attachment with lamellas preolitic clapboard, empty building, in the architectural files also invalid design by Willy Schönefeld Chemnitz) from 1928.

09238579
 


School with a gym
School with a gym Hermann-Uhlig-Platz 2
(map)
1899 Historic clinker brick building, located in the center of the town, historically relevant building, of architectural and urban significance.
  • Mighty three-storey building complex in clinker facing masonry over a U-shaped floor plan with broken corners and a central bay window with clock, segmented gable and top, built on granite ashlar plinth, the elaborately designed historic sandstone portals on the building corners on the square side, structural parts (cornices) in sandstone, richly profiled cornices new, original the double-leaf doors with barred glass fields and radiant skylights.
  • Sports hall (without extension): One-storey brick hall with hipped roof, three-axis central projection with stepped gable and spherical attachments, the former entrance added, the window openings in the form of segment arches and doubly coupled as a kind of cross-storey window, lined with glass stones (probably 1970s).
09238602
 


Factory owner's villa with enclosure and villa garden (garden monument) Industriestrasse 12
(map)
1910 according to the building file Villa of the machine manufacturer Gebr. Götz, typical building in reform style, of local and architectural relevance.
  • Stately two-storey plastered building built over a squat T-shaped floor plan on a hillside with a high and steep saddle roof, facade structure through bay-like porches with separate roofs, plaster pilasters and mirrors or plaster ornaments typical of the time in the parapet areas, in the eaves area structured by bay windows or porches Probably engineered stone window sills, granite polygonal masonry plinths, the verge areas and the eaves areas running through the gable are clad in wood, original entrance door with beautiful ornamental grille, almost completely preserved original windows (some with skylights, with capital-like rising central posts, in the stairwell colored lead glazing), inside predominantly original, non-building furnishings (doors, wall panels, spacious stairs with wooden railings).
  • Garden on a slope with old trees, particularly noticeable a large copper beech arranged on the street side, some smaller GDR-era additions and conversions to the building, the roof without superstructures and with a Preolit ​​clapboard, wooden fence.
09238578
 


Former machine factory with administration building, workshops and factory extension on the valley side Industriestrasse 17
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century and later (factory building) Predominantly clinker buildings, in the context of the former factory owner's villa opposite, factory building relevant to the local history and building history (originally the manufacture of sheet metal processing machines).
  • The last structural remains of the factory, in clinker brick, nine-axis administration building on a sandstone polygonal base, between the flat-arched closed windows with shaped stones, pilasters on both floors with Corinthian cast capitals, additionally structured by yellow clinker in band form, on the first floor the keystones designed as semi-plastic women's heads, parapet floor with baluster , coats of arms with festoons in both middle compartments.
  • Second building: stand-alone, two-and-a-half-storey cube in clinker brick, pilaster strips, plaster strips, on the first floor original multi-sectioned windows, double windows in the jamb, all flat-arched, triple stepped cornice, iron tie rods, the adjoining building (production hall) one and two-storey building Storey with thermal windows, molded stone frame, toothed cornice, the segment gable made of profiled artificial stone, the side buildings each with double windows.
09238583
 


Villa with retaining wall, enclosure and front garden Johann-Koehler-Strasse 32
(map)
around 1900 Historic clinker brick facade, authentically preserved, typical residential building of architectural significance.

Two-storey solid construction on a square floor plan with an extended mansard roof and in red clinker facing brickwork, in sandstone the ashlar plinth and the structural elements (corner blocks, embossed strips on the ground floor, cornices and profiled window frames with straight roofs, in the middle two axes with triangular gable roofing, slate roofing, profiled eaves roofing without historical windows and doors.

09238615
 


Residential stable house and barn of a two-sided courtyard Kirchstrasse 9
(map)
probably 18th century Stable house upper floor half-timbered, boarded up barn, farm complex typical of the times and the landscape, in a central location in the old village center, historically important.
  • Residential stable house: Elongated two-storey building with rear extension over the entire eaves side, saddle roof, the massive plastered ground floor made of quarry stone masonry with natural stone window walls and door walls with profiled roofing, the asbestos-clad half-timbered upper floor probably older (window axes of the first floor and upper floor not regular), window openings relatively small, annex on the street side view of stone, roofing asbestos, no historical inventory of windows and doors,
  • Barn: Boarded-up half-timbered construction with a gable roof and three standing dormers, an extension with a tailcoat roof on the eaves side at the southeast corner.
09238596
 


Residential house with side fence Kirchstrasse 11
(map)
around 1900 With a shop, an authentically preserved clinker brick building typical of the time, evidence of the Wilhelminian reshaping of the old village center, of architectural significance.

Two-storey solid construction in yellow clinker facing masonry with a two-axis central projectile, roof core and mansard roof with standing dormers, base made of natural stone polygonal masonry, original shop fitting on the ground floor, structural elements such as base and belt cornices, corner cubes (embossed), window frames and roofs in sandstone with upper storey windows Basket arch-like lintel and straight roofing, partly clinker strip at the height of the lintel and sill, the eaves cornice with tooth cut in alternating red / yellow clinker bricks, some Wilhelminian gallows windows with decorated posts and transverse wood have been preserved, windows otherwise from GDR times, shop window and door around 1920.

09238609
 


Pigeon house in the yard Kirchstrasse 16
(map)
around 1930 Object designed in a local style, of economic and historical value.

Octagonal wooden body standing on a wooden support with curved claws with a folding roof and roof turret with louvred window, on which purchase, curved sawn board cladding as decoration on the verges of the roof and the coverings of the openings of the dovecote as well as on the corners of the wooden body, sheet metal roof.

09238611
 


Residential house and rear barn annex of a farm and well house Short Alley 3
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Upper floor half-timbered clad, construction typical of the time and landscape in good original condition, part of the old local structure, of architectural significance.

Massive plastered ground floor made of quarry stone masonry, repaired with bricks, the half-timbered upper floor clad with asbestos panels, visible on the east gable side, single-bar with storey-high struts, compartments lined with clay bricks, the gable roof covered with slate, barn annex at the rear, partly solid, partly timber framed , original double-leaf door with skylight, historical cross-frame windows, some of the windows from the 1930s (gallows window).

09238594
 


Villa with gate entrance, shed and villa garden (garden monument) Ludwig-Jahn-Strasse 2
(map)
1922, according to the building file Villa belonging to the Götz family of manufacturers, in a typical local style, of local and architectural significance.
  • Villa: One-storey solid plastered building with an L-shaped floor plan on rubble stone plinth with a very high, two-storey saddle roof, the eaves-side entrance covered and with wooden pillar, on the south gable side small semicircular "winter garden", on the ground floor block-frame window frames and shutters with slats, south gable cladding , North gable boarded up, the gable roof covered with slate with dormers,
  • Interior: original doors, some with the original color, banisters (board or turned balusters), stucco ceiling,
  • Wood shed: Small wood-clad building with a gable roof, board cladding around door and window openings, original historical windows.
09238589
 


Residential building Market 4
(map)
Late 19th century Typical plastered construction in the center of the village, example of a small-town Wilhelminian-style house, of importance in terms of building history and development.

Two-storey building over a squat rectangular floor plan with a moderately sloping gable roof, the entrance in the middle on the ground floor, a Wilhelminian and a later (GDR era) shop window installation, plastered corner blocks, cornice, plastered corner pilasters on the first floor, here the window openings with straight profiled roofing above the two coupled central windows with triangular gable roofing, further decorative elements such as stucco reliefs, consoles and sills on the windows, cranked eaves, three round windows in the gable triangle, roofing Preolit ​​shingles.

09238571
 


Residential house, with outbuildings in the courtyard Market 11
(map)
marked 1901 Historic clinker brick facade with bay window, lavishly decorated, urban-looking Wilhelminian style house, of architectural significance.

Stately three-storey building, broken corner, plaster base, design of the facade alternating between yellow brick and plastered elements, risalit at the corners, corner cuboid, on the first floor strong triangular or segmented gables above the windows, strong cornice, two-storey corner bay window on volute Consoles, stepped gables with oculi later attached over the risalits, mansard roof (cardboard), garage: two-storey yellow clinker building, ground floor changed, cast stone walls with segmental arches, oculus in the stepped gable, corner pilasters with plastering elements, on the gable sandstone acroteries with weathered year "19 (?)".

09238580
 


Residential building Markt 17
(map)
18th century With shop fitting, upper floor half-timbered plastered, one of the few older buildings in the town center, home of the local poet and singer Alfred Schädlich (1883–1933), of architectural and local significance.

Two-storey building with a squat rectangular floor plan with a steep gable roof and a wide, somewhat eccentric three-pronged roof house, the massive ground floor with younger shop fittings, the door probably still in its original location, the half-timbered upper floor with probably original window opening sizes, some as coupled windows (probably later) , Ground floor and upper floor plastered (rough or structured plaster), strongly profiled eaves cornice, the roof with two individually standing dormer windows on the side of the roof shed covered with slate and the gable triangles and the gable of the roof shed clad with asbestos panels, on the back probably older extensions (house widening and small, massive barn-like building ), the upper floor windows probably around 1920/1930, the door more recent.

09238572
 


Former stable house with barn extension Marktgasse 10
(map)
marked 1829 Upper floor half-timbered clad, classicist door frame, building typical of the time and landscape in a prominent location in the village, part of the old village structure, of historical importance.

Stately, probably former residential stable house with a small annex to the rear and a transept-like barn annex, both with a gable roof, the ground floor solid and plastered (GDR friction plaster), window walls probably partly present, but plastered over, natural stone door walls with profiled roofing with tooth cut, the half-timbered upper floor cantilevered, profile of the threshold not visible because it is plastered, timber-framed, gable slated, gable roof covered with slate, double-winged front door with skylight, windows partly probably 1930s (gallows window) and more recent (GDR period), barn extension with solid plastered ground floor and visible half-timbered Upper floor, double-bar with storey-high struts, gable triangles clad with asbestos panels, roof covering with Preolit ​​shingles, old wooden gates.

09238591
 


Residential building Pestalozzistraße 5
(map)
subsequently referred to as 1748, in the core (residential building) Upper floor half-timbered clad, classicist door frame, construction typical of the time and landscape, part of the historical development of the place, of architectural significance.

Two-storey building with a rectangular floor plan (five times three axes) with a half-hipped roof and two standing dormers, stone door and window walls on the massive plastered ground floor, door with very flat gable roofing, the half-timbered upper floor with original window opening sizes, clad with asbestos panels, in the gable a lying one Windows, roofing in slate. Inside quarry stone barrel vault, after a fire around 100 years ago, a new upper floor and roof were built.

09238603
 


Unity of the village church and cemetery Lauter / Sa. (Garden monument) Pfarrstrasse
(map)
1628 (church) Material entirety, with the individual monuments: Church , enclosure wall with hereditary burials and several crypt houses in the cemetery, gate pillar of the churchyard and war memorial for the fallen soldiers of the First World War (bell memorial) - (see individual monument 09238599), plus the aggregate part: mortuary, as well as churchyard and the adjoining cemetery with old trees

Local, architectural and art historical importance, with the rectory and the old church school forming an attractive ensemble in the center of the village.

  • Church: see Dehio II, p. 470 f.
  • War memorial / bell tower: Expressionistically designed crypt system made of stone-faced quarry stone masonry (gneiss) with a barrel-vaulted, grotto-like hall, there shell limestone relief with life-size figures of a soldier and mother with child, the structure in the structure stepped and with a very steep open gable (on the western gable side a lancet window) , which reveals a view of the wooden construction and the bell, in front of it a life-size wood carving of the crucified with three soldiers at his feet, attic with bell, leaded glass window on the ground floor area (eaves side).

Hereditary funerals, tombstones and wall tombs:

  • Gravestone Schubert: part of a wall grave, mid-19th century.
  • Hereditary funeral Friday: Representative crypt house, three-bay hall structured in Corinthian order and with rich stucco decoration, in the center a roof bay with triangular gable, inside a stucco head of Christ with a crown of thorns, also on the ceiling rich decorations in stucco as well as framed ceiling paintings, inscribed "1885" (inscription panel inside Rear wall).
  • Gnuechel hereditary burial: tomb over a curved floor plan with a semicircular outside staircase, wrought-iron gate and two gate pillars, the back wall in sandstone ashlar masonry triple-tiered with pilaster strips and cornice as well as peg-like attachments, in the middle aedicula with niche, around 1900.
  • Hildebrand's hereditary burial: three-bay crypt house in yellow clinker brickwork with gable roof, gable with volute decoration and coat of arms relief in the gable triangle, inscribed "1897" (inscription panel gable).
  • Göthel hereditary burial: area enclosed by sandstone pillars and back wall made of sandstone ashlar masonry, with column frieze, the middle compartment slightly higher with a relief in pilaster frame, architrave, decorative band and cornice, the relief depicting an ancient man and an angel, around 1920/1925.
  • Blechschmidt wall tomb: early 20th century.
  • Wall grave Götz: Around 1930.
09305706
 


Village church and cemetery Lauter / Sa. Pfarrstrasse
(map)
1628 (church) Individual monuments of the aggregate: Church , enclosure wall with hereditary burials and several crypt houses in the cemetery, gate pillars of the churchyard and war memorial for the fallen of the First World War (bell memorial) - (see also aggregate 09305706)

Local, architectural and art historical importance, with the rectory and the old church school forming an attractive ensemble in the center of the village.

Description see above under entity.

09238599
 


Rectory, with retaining wall of the front yard and garden Pfarrstrasse 2
(map)
marked 1738 Upper floor half-timbered, baroque arched portal, authentically preserved building typical of the time and landscape, charming ensemble with church and old church school, of local and architectural importance.

Stately, hillside building with regular facade structure (six times four axes) and a gable roof with two standing dormers, the massive plastered ground floor made of quarry stone masonry with natural stone window walls, the central entrance door segmented arched with apex and ear marked "1738" (lintel), the half-timbered upper floor slated, profiled eaves area, roof covered with slate, double-winged door with grooved skylight in the middle of the 19th century, the windows newly imitated as cross-storey windows, groin and barrel vaults on the ground floor.

09238598
 


Former school and cantor's council, with a retaining wall in the front garden Pfarrstrasse 3
(map)
marked 1829 Upper floor half-timbered, classicist door frame, authentically preserved building typical of the time and landscape, charming ensemble with church and rectory, of local and architectural significance.

Gable facing the street and on a hillside two-storey building (seven times four axes) with a crooked hipped roof with three standing dormers, the massive ground floor made of plastered quarry stone masonry with natural stone window frames, door frames with straight, profiled roofing and tooth cut marked "1829" (door frame, lintel) , the half-timbered upper floor slated on all sides, profiled eaves area, roof covered with slate, the double-leaf door with skylight classicistic, the windows based on historical models are imitated as cross-storey windows (today single-leaf).

09238597
 


Former school, now town hall Rathausstrasse 11
(map)
1875, later reshaped Plastered building typical of the time, with a tower, historically relevant building in an authentic state of preservation, part of the town center, also of importance in terms of architectural history.

Relatively stately and high two-storey solid plastered building with a moderately inclined gable roof without superstructures and an approximately square stair tower with a high eight-sided pyramid roof with a weather vane, base made of polygonal natural stone masonry, at the tower the main entrance, this axis through coupled windows on the first floor and arched windows ( with the city coat of arms attached later) on the second floor, segment-arched on the ground floor, straight closing windows in a regular arrangement on the upper floor (three axes each on the side of the tower and four axes on the gable sides), in the gable triangles a triple-coupled window group and above small round windows, the Corners with simple flat plaster pilasters, the heavily profiled eaves area cranked, the verge more simply profiled, all architectural elements (profiles, door and window walls) made of stone (sandstone), around the upper floor windows simple edge profiles and small ne brackets, door and windows probably renewed at the beginning of the 20th century, inside still original solid furnishings and details (walls, doors, motto in the entrance area).

09238570
 


Forest house with annex and outbuildings in the courtyard Rathausstrasse 12
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Until 1945 forest office, later restaurant, plastered building typical of the time and landscape in good original condition, part of the center of the village, of local historical importance.

Two-storey, broadly supported, massive plastered building with six by five axes and a steep to moderately inclined half-hip roof, the facades smoothly plastered, simple ashlar window frames and door frames (porphyry tufa) preserved on the ground floor and upper floor, the door frames with a flat-gable roof, tooth-cut profile on the underside and with a lancet shape Leaves (palmettes) in relief capitals, strongly profiled wooden eaves cornice, to the right of the door a corridor window and a window arranged between two axes (shop or forestry office), the roof with three individually standing dormers covered with asbestos sheets, door and window stock more recent (GDR period ), the angular extension (probably at the same time) somewhat lower, with a clad half-timbered upper floor and with a crooked hip, on the ground floor a stable part, in the courtyard a single-storey shed (probably also 19th century), partly solid rubble stone masonry, partly timber-framed, asbestos sheet cover.

09238569
 


Residential house, with extension Röderstrasse 1
(map)
around 1900 With a shop, clinker brick construction typical of the time, evidence of the Wilhelminian reshaping of the old village center, of importance in terms of building history and local development.

Two-storey solid construction in red clinker facing masonry on a polygonal masonry base in granite, with a central projectile and roof bay as well as a mansard roof with standing dormer windows, two large shop windows on the ground floor, the window walls probably natural stone (painted over), richly profiled and in different designs, for example with segment-arched or straight roofing the triple-coupled upper floor windows with triangular gable roofing, belt cornice, eaves cornice with tooth cut, double-coupled arched windows in the roof core, original window stock lost, roof covering Preolit ​​shingles.

09238610
 


Villa with garden and gate Schwarzenberger Strasse 12
(map)
1899-1900, designated 1899 Villa of the director Alexander Röhling (on the board of the “Sächsische Emaillier- und Stanzwerke, formerly Gebr. Gnüchtel”), largely authentically preserved clinker brick building of the time, of relevance to local history and building history.

Two-storey clinker-clad building (marked "1899" on the corner cuboid on the southern risalit) with an almost square floor plan with various additions and risalits, saddle roof with overhanging roof, windowed through the base, very high rectangular window openings with sandstone lintels, the jamb in ornamental framework, on the west side a semicircular winter garden with original Lift windows, Preolit ​​shingles roofing, original and refurbished doors and windows or well refurbished according to historical models, the gallows windows with decorated posts. Gate pillar in clinker brick with wrought iron gate.

09238593
 


Residential house with retaining wall, enclosure and front garden Schwarzenberger Strasse 17
(map)
1903, according to the building file Historical clinker building typical of the time with half-timbered drapery, echoes of the Swiss style, testimony to the influence of the villa architecture at the same time on the local building process, of architectural significance.
  • One-and-a-half-storey clinker-clad solid building on a rectangular floor plan with a central projectile, dormer and half-hipped roof with two standing dormers, on a flat sandstone base, the walls of the rectangular windows and the base cornice in artificial stone parts, in the risalit double-coupled windows with reliefs in the round arched trusses, the jamb Beam heads, green-glazed tiles in between, the roof with overhang and profiled Kanggen, original windows lost, the two-winged entrance door with barred glass fields and skylight during the construction period,
  • Wrought iron fence on retaining wall.
  • Pavilion: Small wooden pavilion on a square floor plan with a pyramid roof (today probably part of house number 15, area 363).
09238592
 


Cottage Waldstrasse 2
(map)
around 1800 Upper floor half-timbered, construction typical of the time and landscape, part of the historical development of the place, of architectural significance.

Two-storey building, the massive ground floor with new spray plaster (1990s), natural stone window frames partly segment arch-shaped, the half-timbered upper floor slated, wall openings in original size, wooden eaves profile, gable roof with artificial slate covering.

09238605
 


Stable house of a farm Waldstrasse 7
(map)
probably 18th century Upper floor half-timbered, residential building typical of the time and landscape, part of the rural local structure, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor, plastered (around 1900 courtyard side), solid on the north and west side, partly natural stone window frames preserved, small wooden entrance porch, granite door frames, also a water house and oven extension at the entrance on the rear side, the half-timbered upper floor is double-bar with storey-high struts , plastered, half-timbering translucent, in places the original plaster still visible, gable triangles boarded up on the south and west sides, gable roof with slate covering, windows and doors largely new, a shutter (single-leaf) preserved on the ground floor.

09238606
 

Oberpfannenstiel

image designation location Dating description ID
Residential house with extension Alte Strasse 1
(map)
around 1800 Upper floor half-timbered, building typical of the time and the landscape in a central location next to the church , which is of importance in terms of building history and development.

Simple two-storey building built on a street corner with two by four axes and a moderately to steeply sloping pitched roof without superstructures, the massive plastered ground floor in brickwork with stone door frames and window sills, the half-timbered upper floor with original opening sizes, slated and partly clad with asbestos , the roof covered with slate, the roof structure like a carpenter - for example wooden nails and wind panes in the rafter area, the entrance door around 1920, the ground floor windows at the end of the 19th century (gallows window with profiled spar and capital on the rising post), the upper floor windows in the middle of the 20th century , shutters on the street side on the ground floor (end of the 19th century), on the rear an appealingly designed extension (around 1920) with a mansard roof (one and a half story), original door and window stock, small single-storey polygonal standing bay and partly preserved original slate roofing.

09238561
 


Residential building Alte Strasse 3
(map)
probably 18th century Upper floor half-timbered clad, construction typical of the time and landscape, part of the planned built-up alley, of architectural significance.

Small two-storey building directly on the street with four times two axes and a built-up, steep pitched roof without superstructures, the ground floor, which was probably subsequently massively underlaid, plastered (GDR spray plaster), the entrance on the back, the window opening sizes adapted to the building, as far as can be seen no stone walls, the half-timbered upper floor, the gable triangles and the roof clad with asbestos panels, profiled wooden eaves area (baroque), two horizontal skylights and the rest of the doors (?) and windows are new (GDR period), the monument value mainly relates to the urban development effect the cubature of the building in the ensemble.

09238566
 


Residential house without extension Alte Strasse 7
(map)
subsequently referred to as 1719 Upper floor half-timbered clad, building typical of the time and landscape preserved largely in its original appearance, part of the planned built-up alley, of architectural significance.

Small two-storey building erected on the street with a squat, rectangular floor plan with a steep to moderately inclined gable roof without superstructures, the ground floor was probably subsequently massively driven under and plastered, as far as can be seen no stone cladding, around the door wooden cladding with straight, profiled roofing with tooth cut and simple Diamond coatings in the upper corners (probably in the middle of the 19th century), the half-timbered upper floor with probably original window openings (not arranged in axes with the openings of the ground floor) and partly covered with asbestos panels, including the gable triangles and the roof, the gable triangles slightly protruding, wooden baroque eaves profile, door and window stock 20th century.

09238565
 


House and Heiste Alte Strasse 8
(map)
Mid-19th century, probably older in the core Upper floor half-timbered, relatively elongated and largely original, building typical of the time and landscape in an outstanding hillside location, part of the planned built-up alley, of architectural significance.

As part of a Häuslergasse on a rising street, relatively narrow and elongated two-storey building with three by seven axes, steep pitched roof and historical, possibly partly original rear extensions, the ground floor as far as can be seen in brick masonry, plastered, with ashlar door frames and window frames in symmetrical arrangement, the door lintel with roofing and tooth cut, the half-timbered upper floor with original opening sizes and new all-sided slats, the additions partly half-timbered, the roof with three individually standing dormers and the gable triangles covered or clad with slate, door and window stock different, but everything 20th century (plastic windows on the expanded upper floor), beautiful Heisten retaining wall made of quarry stone facing the street, two granite stone steps in front of the door, the decorative boards on the overhanging verges probably younger (mid / late 19th century).

09238563
 


Former inn and side building Auer Strasse 55
(map)
marked 1796, perhaps older Upper floor half-timbered clad, basket arch portal, mansard roof, one of the most stately buildings in the village, with some beautiful details inside, in a picture-defining location, historically significant, as a former inn on the old Schönberg-Saxon border, regionally important.

Marked "1796" (keystone door), parts of the ground floor possibly older, stately two-storey building built directly on the street with a high mansard roof with a crooked hip, the massive ground floor (plastered quarry stone masonry) partly with original stone walls around the door and windows Door and the two street-side windows to the right of it with flat arched lintels, above the door with keystone (designation: "FH 1796 No 41") and stylized scales or anchor? as a house sign, the half-timbered upper floor with original opening sizes, partly slated, partly clad with asbestos panels, the eaves areas with baroque wooden profiles, the roof on the street side with three individually standing dormers and covered with slate, in two of the dormers probably still original windows (two-winged, two times four panes, fixed central post), the entrance door (probably around 1900) with two leaves with original skylight with beautiful baroque ornamental grille, the rising central post with an ornamented fighter possibly still original, inside the hallway and the adjoining room on the right with brushed groin vaults and a wicker door - and window reveals as well as a wrought iron door in between (with an old snap lock), possibly an older area ?, the stable building built parallel to the main building behind it is a single-storey quarry stone building with a more recent extension.

09238556
 


Residential building Auer Strasse 57
(map)
probably 18th century With shop fitting, upper floor half-timbered, stately building that has largely been preserved in its original appearance, part of the old local structure, of architectural significance.

Relatively stately two-storey building with a steep pitched roof, the ground floor massive (probably partly undercut later), above the former entrance door (now window) a classicist stone lintel with a roof and the name "A.Vetter1867" between two small rosettes Half-timbered upper floor slated all around, the window opening sizes probably original, partly clogged, baroque wooden eaves profile, the roof slated including gable triangles with three individually standing dormers on the gable sides slightly protruding.

09238557
 


Residential building Auer Strasse 71
(map)
18th century Upper floor half-timbered, largely original building typical of the time and landscape, part of the old village structure, of architectural significance.

Two-storey building on the street with a steep gable roof, the massive ground floor in quarry stone masonry, plastered and, as far as can be seen, stone walls, original opening sizes, the half-timbered upper floor with original, relatively small openings including the gable triangles slated (decorative slate on the valley side), the roof with two individually standing dormers on the street side covered with asbestos panels, door and window inventory among other things first half of the 20th century, in the gable two older windows (probably end of the 19th century) and in the parlor more recent (GDR period), the openings of the ground floor and the Upper floor not arranged in axes (ground floor probably subsequently massively driven under?).

09238560
 


Rectory Auer Strasse 77
(map)
Early 19th century Upper floor slated, stately building largely preserved in its original appearance in a curve that defines the image in the center of the town, of architectural and local significance.

Probably about the same time the church erected, handsome two-story building with six by four window axes and high hip roof, the massive ground floor with new plaster (probably the original oriented sleet plaster with smooth door and Fensterfaschen) well-timbered, verschiefert, the upper floor (and probably recently insulated), profiled wooden eaves cornice, the roof with three individually standing dormer windows and new old German slate covering, the two-winged entrance door with skylight, probably first half of the 19th century, the wooden windows newly divided into six, building renovated.

09238555
 


Church, war memorial for the fallen of World War I and memorial tree (oak) next to the church
More pictures
Church , war memorial for the fallen of World War I and memorial tree (oak) next to the church Auer Strasse 81
(map)
1818-1819 The largely original church building as the earliest neo-Gothic sacred building in today's Saxony of architectural and regional historical importance.
  • Church : see Dehio,
  • War memorial: granite cuboid standing on two steps, about 2.5 meters high over a base area of ​​around 40 by 50 centimeters, the upper end stepped twice with a helmet also made of granite, entwined with laurel, on the sides of the cuboid the names of the fallen and dedication.
  • Oak: Planted between the church and the war memorial, probably 100–200 year old oak.
09238554
 


Mill house and courtyard tree Mühlweg 2
(map)
probably 18th century Upper floor half-timbered, classicist door frame, one of the most stately and probably oldest buildings in the village, of architectural and local significance.

Stately and wide-spread building with a steep gable roof, the massive plastered ground floor with a legible division in the living and business area (stable or mill room?) And stone door walls with profiled roofing (mid-19th century), the half-timbered upper floor slated and partly clad with asbestos panels (included the gable triangles) with relatively large, but probably original window opening sizes, the roof with old German slate covering, a loading hatch in the top of the gable and a roof bay-like over the business section, door and window stock from the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th century, shutters in the living room area (around 1900 ) and then a single-storey shed and garage extension (no monument), a large courtyard tree (beech) assigned to the house.

09238559
 


Cottage Waldweg 16
(map)
around 1800 Upper floor half-timbered, largely original building typical of the time and landscape, part of the old village structure, of architectural significance.

Simple two-storey and probably only two-zone building with two by four axes and a steep to moderately inclined gable roof without superstructures, the massive ground floor in quarry stone masonry, plastered, with stone door walls, no stone walls visible around the windows, side entrance door on one gable side (possibly angled Corridor?), The half-timbered upper floor with original opening sizes as well as the gable triangles and the roof completely slated (on the street side with simple horizontal bands), the entrance door with skylight and the windows around 1920, ground floor shutters from around 1900, on the back area on the upper floor pushing (exit from the upper floor?).

09238562
 

Remarks

  1. The list may not correspond to the current status of the official list of monuments. This can be viewed by the responsible authorities. Therefore, the presence or absence of a structure or ensemble on this list does not guarantee that it is or is not a registered monument at the present time. The State Office for the Preservation of Monuments in Saxony provides binding information .

Web links

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