List of cultural monuments in Leutzsch (A – K)
The list of cultural monuments in Leutzsch contains the cultural monuments of the Leipzig district of Leutzsch , which were recorded in the list of monuments by the State Office for Monument Preservation Saxony as of 2017.
This list is divided for reasons of space. This list contains the cultural monuments in the streets beginning with the letters A – K. The cultural monuments in the streets L – Z are listed in the list of cultural monuments in Leutzsch (L – Z) .
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 ; this leads to information on this cultural monument at Wikidata .
List of cultural monuments in Leutzsch
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Double apartment building in open development, with front garden | At the long field 1; 3 (card) |
1898 (double tenement house) | Historicizing plastered facade, a tower-like porch facing the street, verandas on the back with remnants of lead glazing , apartment doors with colored skylights , of architectural significance |
09292236 |
|
Apartment buildings of a residential complex, with front garden and side Einfriedungs wall | At the long field 2; 4; 6 (card) |
1930 (block of flats) | Plastered facade, echoes of the modern style , stairwell windows with etched glazing, of architectural significance (see also Georg-Schwarz-Straße 95-99) |
09292237 |
|
Villa Buchheim with enclosure, gate entrance and gate as well as villa garden with gazebo | At the long field 7 (map) |
1901–1902 ( villa ) | named after the doctor Paul Buchheim as the client; one of the most important Art Nouveau buildings in Leipzig; richly designed plastered facade, rear terrace, lead-glazed windows in the salon and in the stairwell, original furnishings, garden with pond, plastic, old trees and path system; of importance in terms of building history and local history |
09292238 |
|
Villa with front garden and enclosure | At long field 8 (map) |
around 1915 (villa) | Plastered facade, a large leaded glass window, wrought-iron balcony grilles, reform architecture, important from an architectural point of view |
09297852 |
|
Residential house in open development, with front garden and fence | At long field 10 (map) |
1937–1938 (residential building) | Typical plaster facade of the time, lead-glazed staircase windows, terrazzo in the entrance area, of architectural significance |
09292239 |
|
Villa with fencing, gate entrance, gate and garden (with curiosity / viewing point) | At long field 13 (map) |
1896 (villa) | Country house style villa, plastered facade, boarded gable, of architectural significance |
09291885 |
|
Villa with garden and enclosure | Am long field 15 (map) |
1896 (villa) | in a country house style, plastered facade with boarded gable, terrace, lead-glazed porch door, of architectural significance |
09291886 |
|
Rental villa, with front garden | At the long field 17 (map) |
1896 (rental villa) | historicizing plaster clinker facade with veranda, of architectural significance |
09291887 |
|
Rental villa in a semi-open development with a front garden | Am long field 19 (map) |
1921 (rental villa) | Plastered facade, corner bay window, see also at Am lange Felde 21, important in terms of building history |
09291888 |
|
Rental villa in a semi-open development with a front garden | At long field 21 (map) |
marked 1896 (rental villa) | historicizing plastered facade, with corner tower, see also Am lange Felde 19, of architectural significance
In a row with other picturesque country house buildings, the residential building of a semi-detached house was built in what was then Lindenstrasse 21 for the teacher Gustav Otto Max Dalbazi, who secured himself the important Leipzig architect Georg Wünschmann. The building application of March 7, 1896 was already implemented eight months later, so that the final examination could be carried out on November 20 and the building was approved for use. The house, in the middle of the Leutzsch villa colony (the term country house colony can also be read), fits tastefully into the green property. An unplastered quarry stone base with a final brick roll layer contrasts with the light plastering of the two upper floors ( unfortunately provided with unsuitable clinker cladding during the renovation ). Another residential floor is cleverly set up in the multi-part roof area behind visible framework and a tower that accommodates the stairwell. Located in the corner, on the other side of the street on Rosenstrasse, a double residential building was built (number 23/25), for house number 19 the teacher Heinrich Theodor Louis Tillich is known as the builder in 1896. The renovation result achieved without the involvement of the monument protection authorities is very unsatisfactory, does not do justice to the architecture and the well-known architect Georg Wünschmann (plastic windows, hardware store door, roofing with roofing felt shingles). The corner building, which helped shape the small villa district, is of architectural historical value as well as of artistic importance as a component in the oeuvre of the renowned architect Georg Wünschmann. LfD / 2019 |
09297867 |
|
Double apartment building in open development, with front garden, fence and paved path | On the long field 23; 25 (card) |
1896–1898 (double tenement house) | historicistic plastered facade, verandas, of architectural significance |
09291889 |
|
|
Villa, with front garden and enclosure | At long field 29 (map) |
1898–1900 (villa) | historicizing clinker brick facade with tower, lead-glazed windows, representative building of historicism , of architectural significance |
09291890 |
Railway house as well as lateral front garden and enclosure | Am Ritterschlößchen 1 (map) |
1883 (railway house) | Belonging to the Leutzsch station area at Am Ritterschlößchen 3, brick buildings, of importance in terms of traffic and local development |
09291891 |
|
More pictures |
Station with reception building , platform constructions, railway maintenance office, signal box , social building of the railway maintenance office, water tower , bunker, water cranes as well as front garden at the railway maintenance office and enclosure | Am Ritterschlößchen 3 (map) |
1856 (station building), 1905–1906 (signal box), 1881–1883 (railway depot), 1881–1883 (locomotive shed), 1881–1882 (water tower) | Brick buildings typical of the time, signal box opposite the confluence with Robert-Koch-Straße, water tower near Philipp-Reis-Straße 14, of importance in terms of traffic and local history (railway workers' house, see Am Ritterschlößchen 1) |
09291892 |
Factory building, with a front garden | Am Ritterschlößchen 22 (map) |
marked 1894 (factory) | clinker brick facade typical of the time, of architectural, technical and local significance |
09292213 |
|
More pictures |
Sports facility with stadium, clubhouse, grandstand and stairs | Am Sportpark 2 (map) |
1920 (sports field), 1925–1926 (club house) | of local and architectural significance |
09292216 |
Apartment building in closed development, with two inscription panels | Am Tanzplan 4 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | with gate passage, historicizing clinker brick facade with bay window, stencil painting in the stairwell, stucco and terrazzo in the entrance area, historical inscription panels to commemorate a harmonium factory (Hörügel company) in the courtyard, of architectural and local significance |
09291894 |
|
Apartment building in closed development (structural unit with No. 8) | Am Tanzplan 6 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | representative clinker brick facade, stairwell window with remnants of colored lead glazing, wooden panels, stucco and vestibule door in the entrance area, historically important |
09291895 |
|
Apartment building in half-open development (structural unit with No. 6) | Am Tanzplan 8 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | representative clinker brick facade, stairwell window with remains of colored lead glazing, wooden panels and stucco in the entrance area, of architectural significance |
09291916 |
|
Former manor park of a manor | At the moated castle (map) |
around 1700, later reshaped (manor park), in the core 11th century (Wall) | formerly a saddle yard with a manor house (located between Hans-Driesch-Straße and William-Zipperer-Straße), green area of local historical importance |
09291896 |
|
House of a farm with a front garden | Am Wasserschloß 4 (map) |
around 1850 (farmhouse) | Residential building, partly made of earth, of significance in terms of local development |
09291898 |
|
Stable house of a farm | Am Wasserschloß 8 (map) |
1860 (farmhouse) | Upper floor half-timbered, important in terms of building history and local development |
09291899 |
|
|
Apartment building in half-open development | Am Wasserschloß 12 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | historicizing clinker brick facade, of architectural significance |
09291900 |
Apartment building in half-open development | An der Lehde 1 (map) |
1906 (tenement house) | Clinker brick facade, wooden panels and terrazzo, wall and ceiling stucco in the entrance area, of architectural significance |
09291901 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | An der Lehde 2 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | formerly with a shop, clinker brick facade, of importance in terms of building history |
09262416 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | An der Lehde 3 (map) |
1907 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, wooden panels, wall and ceiling stucco in the entrance area |
09291902 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | An der Lehde 4 (map) |
1902 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, historically important |
09297853 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | An der Lehde 5 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | with house passage, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09291903 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | An der Lehde 6 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | with gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09297854 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | An der Lehde 7 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, stucco valley in the entrance area, of importance in terms of building history |
09291904 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | An der Lehde 8 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) |
09297855 |
||
Double tenement house (An der Lehde 9 and William-Zipperer-Straße 98a) in a semi-open development and in a corner location | An der Lehde 9 (map) |
marked 1939 (double tenement house) | Typical plaster facade of the time, colored glazed staircase windows, corner bay windows, of architectural significance |
09292159 |
|
Sewage treatment plant and associated residential building with engine house and connecting building as well as front garden | At the doll 2 (map) |
1910 (sewage treatment plant), 1926 (sewage treatment plant) | historical sewage treatment plant (acetylene developer from 1910, pumping station with copper float, mixing well with gas hood, trickling filter made from Upper Silesian blast furnace slag), of local and technological importance |
09292224 |
|
Residential house in open development, with side enclosure wall, gate and gate entrance | Baumgarten-Crusius-Strasse 4 (map) |
1932 (residential building) | Plastered facade with clinker brick structure, etched staircase windows, winter gardens, apartment doors with etched glazing, important from an architectural point of view |
09291905 |
|
Double apartment building in open development with two side gate entrances and courtyard paving and courtyard building | Baumgarten-Crusius-Strasse 7; 9 (card) |
1910–1911 (double tenement house) | Front house plastered facade, with two box cores and balconies, staircase window with remains of colored lead glazing, reform architecture, of importance in terms of building history |
09291906 |
|
|
Apartment building in open development | Baumgarten-Crusius-Strasse 8 (map) |
1911–1912 (tenement) | Plastered facade, lead-glazed staircase windows, reform architecture, important in terms of building history
Initially, in 1908, a residential building was planned as a group house with only one stately apartment per floor, requested by Adolf Coppius as the client and the designing architect William Jonas. An implementation of the project did not take place, however, new plans were carried out from 1911 to the beginning of 1912 by the architect Oscar Schade by the building contractor and master mason Alfred Günther ("Company of high, deep, stamped concrete and cement buildings of all kinds") acted as client. A veranda extension was approved, but not the use of basement rooms as a caretaker's apartment. Unsuccessfully it was submitted that a househusband on the property was essential for the tenants, since it was a "villa-like, open-plan, noble building with residents who belong to the first tax class". Another advance in 1936 was rejected because “the apartment would be of inferior quality”. The rental apartments - just one per floor - comprised six living rooms, a kitchen, a bathroom, a separate toilet, a centrally arranged hallway, an exit to the garden and a street-side bay window or balcony on the two upper floors. All facades were plastered, protrusions and (not preserved) wooden trellises on the two gable sides characterized the building as a modern reform style architecture, an elaborately decorated vestibule with staircase leads to the stairwell on the north side. The second floor rises prominently (formerly with narrow window shutters), joined into a "hipped roof on all sides with massive gable-like extensions on the street front and south-west gable (as) ... purlin roof with double standing chair, roofing including tile apron double beaver covering with interior lining and longitudinal joint with crosscut ”. Renovation work, along with Grundrißänderungen, further loft conversion and partial top-up were made from 1997 to 1999. Important components of the above-average equipment have been preserved. The property borders on the rear of Villa Buchheim (1901–1902 by Paul Möbius and Arthur Starke) and the associated high-quality villa garden. The noble residential building Baumgarten-Crusius-Straße 8 has architectural historical value. LfD / 2019 |
09291907 |
Villa (Baumgarten-Crusius-Straße 10), with attached garage house, fence, remaining areas of the garden as well as fence along Pufendorfstraße and the street Am Lange Felde (today with address: Am Lange Felde 11 / 11a) | Baumgarten-Crusius-Strasse 10 (map) |
1906–1907 (villa) / 1910–1911, marked 1911 (garage) | Stately plastered building, stairwell windows with colored lead glazing, marble fittings in the entrance area, reform architecture, of importance in terms of building history, relics of the garden design of the time of construction of garden art importance |
09291908 |
|
More pictures |
Apelstein No. 24 (V) | Benediktusstrasse (map) |
1862 (memorial stone) | Apelstein ; Memorial stone in memory of the battles of the Battle of the Nations near Leipzig in 1813, positions of the Austrian field marshal lieutenant Prince von Hessen-Homburg on October 16 in the battle near Lindenau, historically significant |
09263621 |
Residential building (formerly a fire station, with hose tower and garages) in open development | Benediktusstrasse 1 (map) |
1907 (fire station) | Location: next to the Leutzsch cemetery on Rückmarsdorfer Straße, clinker brick building, significance for the history of the district |
09292112 |
|
Apartment building in a residential complex | Benediktusstrasse 2 (map) |
1928 (tenement) | Typical plaster facade of the time, see also Hans-Driesch-Straße 45–51 and Wohlgemuthstraße 14, of architectural significance |
09292268 |
|
Apartment building in half-open development | Benediktusstrasse 3 (map) |
1901 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, vestibule door, historically important |
09291909 |
|
Double tenement house (with 8 Sattelhofstrasse) in open development | Benediktusstrasse 5 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | Plastered facade, lead-glazed staircase windows, important in terms of building history |
09297845 |
|
Apartment building in open development and in a corner, with a front garden on Sattelhofstrasse | Benediktusstrasse 7 (map) |
marked 1908 (tenement house) | Plastered facade with corner accentuation, terrazzo, stucco and wooden panels in the entrance area, historically important |
09291910 |
|
Multi-family house in a residential complex with a front garden on Sattelhofstrasse and fencing on Benediktusstrasse | Benediktusstrasse 8 (map) |
around 1925 (apartment building) | Plastered facade with brick structure, see also Sattelhofstrasse 7-13 and Wohlgemuthstrasse 8, of architectural significance |
09292264 |
|
Double apartment building in open development | Benediktusstrasse 9; 11 (card) |
1935–1937 (double tenement house) | Typical plaster facade of the 1930s, with clinker brick structure of the house entrances, stencil painting in the stairwell, of architectural significance
The first residential projects on the property (number 9) of the master mason and construction business owner Arthur Müller - who incidentally owned a large number of pieces of land in the neighborhood - failed in 1912 and 1930. It was not until the 1935 plans for numbers 9 and 11, which were now to be built as a twin house, were implemented in 1936–1937 as “tax-exempt small housing construction”. In 1938, Müller received approval for an emergency apartment to be expanded in the attic. The very simple plastered facade only with clinker base and front door frames made of clinker, balconies presented on the courtyard side. Because an intended single-storey office building was not implemented, the client set up his company's office - a company for civil engineering - on the ground floor of the house on the left. The separate access with a roof and the double-flighted staircase at the gable were removed in 1974/1975 as part of the renovation for residential purposes. LfD / 2007 |
09297846 |
|
Double apartment building in open development, with side fencing | Benediktusstrasse 10; 12 (card) |
around 1935 (double tenement house) | Typical plaster facade of the 1930s, with natural stone integration of the house entrances, stairwell windows with polished and etched glazing, of architectural significance |
09297847 |
|
Apartment building in a residential complex | Benediktusstrasse 13 (map) |
1939–1940 (apartment building) | Typical plaster facade from the 1930s, front door with lead-glazed skylight, see also Weinbergstrasse 18–22, of architectural significance |
09297848 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Bischofstrasse 2 (map) |
1900–1901 (tenement house) | Clinker brick facade, stucco valley and wooden panels in the entrance area, of importance in terms of building history |
09291911 |
|
Apartment building in half-open development | Bischofstrasse 2a (map) |
marked 1936 (tenement) | Plastered facade, natural stone front door framing, above sgraffito, of architectural significance |
09297827 |
|
Residential house in semi-open development | Bischofstrasse 3 (map) |
1872 (residential building) | Plastered facade, of importance in terms of local development |
09297828 |
|
Residential house in half-open development, with side gate entrance | Bischofstrasse 5 (map) |
1880 (residential building) | Plastered facade, original iron gate, significant in terms of local development
In January 1880, a building application for the construction of a residential building with restoration on the ground floor and a side building was submitted for the former property at Weststrasse 5. On September 6th, restaurateur Christian Friedrich Endert was able to announce the completion and thank the building contractor Louis Vogel for planning and execution. The outbuilding, which was only completed in 1881, housed the wash house, horse stable and pigsty. In 1905, double windows and a water pipe were installed in the front building, and the facades were re-plastered in 1930/1931. Between autumn 1935 and summer of 1936 Friedrich Paul Leipnitz left as the holder of the front house an abortion add -Anbau and facing courtyard erect a single storey garage building. The six-axis, two-storey house with a dwelling shows - together with the house at Bischofstrasse 3, for example - the transformation of the suburban development towards the architectural conception of historicism. (see also houses at Bischofstrasse 2, 7 and 9) The brick building plastered over the natural stone plinth documents a type of house that was widespread in Leipzig and its suburbs from around 1860 onwards and is increasingly rare today. This is a structural document of the increasing urbanization at the time, from which a historical value in terms of building and district development can be read. LfD / 2014, 2017 |
09291913 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Bischofstrasse 6 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with gate passage, clinker brick facade, etched staircase windows, of architectural significance |
09292207 |
|
Apartment building in half-open development | Bischofstrasse 7 (map) |
1886 (tenement house) | with gate passage, historicizing plastered facade, historically important |
09291914 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Bischofstrasse 8 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | with gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09262418 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Bischofstrasse 9 (map) |
1895 (tenement) | with gate passage, historicizing plastered facade, wooden panels in the gate passage, of architectural significance |
09291915 |
|
Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner | Bischofstrasse 11 (map) |
around 1935 (tenement) | Typical plaster facade from the 1920s / 1930s, house entrance with clinker brick structure, front door with polished panes, stencil painting in the stairwell, of importance in terms of building history |
09297825 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Bischofstrasse 12 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, stairwell window with etched glazing, of architectural significance |
09297395 |
|
Apartment building in half-open development and in a corner location with a front garden on Brehmestrasse | Bischofstrasse 13 (map) |
around 1935 (tenement) | Typical plaster facade from the 1920s / 1930s, house entrance with clinker brick structure, front door with polished panes, of historical importance |
09297824 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Bischofstrasse 14 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, etched staircase windows, wooden panels and stucco structure in the entrance area, of importance in terms of building history |
09292206 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Bischofstrasse 15 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | Plastered facade, etched staircase windows, vestibule door, important in terms of building history |
09292209 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Bischofstrasse 17 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with house passage, plastered facade, historically important |
09292208 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Bischofstrasse 18 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09297822 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Bischofstrasse 20 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, historically important |
09297821 |
|
Double tenement house (Bischofstrasse 22 and Franz-Flemming-Strasse 76) in closed development and in a corner | Bischofstrasse 22 (map) |
around 1895 (double tenement house) | Formerly with a corner store, plastered clinker brick facade, stucco in the entrance area, of importance in terms of building history |
09291130 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Bischofstrasse 33 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, stucco valley in the entrance area, of importance in terms of building history |
09292203 |
|
Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner | Bischofstrasse 35 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with corner shutter, historicistic plastered facade with stucco decoration, of importance in terms of building history |
09297820 |
|
Rental villa with front garden | Blüthnerstraße 1 (map) |
1903–1904 (villa) | historicizing plastered facade, vestibule door, of architectural significance |
09291945 |
|
Villa, with garden and enclosure | Blüthnerstraße 2 (map) |
1912 (villa) | varied plastered facade, reform architecture, of importance in terms of building history |
09291946 |
|
Double apartment building in open development, with front garden | Blüthnerstrasse 6; 8 (card) |
1902–1903 (double tenement house) | Plastered facade, front doors with etched glass, important in terms of building history |
09292781 |
|
Villa, with villa garden, garden pavilion and enclosure with gate | Blüthnerstraße 10 (map) |
1906 (villa) | Plastered facade, partly lead-glazed staircase windows, between Reform and Art Nouveau, of importance in terms of building history |
09291948 |
|
|
Individual monument belonging to the urban housing complex Hubert-Ritter-Siedlung (Obj. 09305261, Heimteichstrasse 16–40): apartment buildings in a housing complex | Blüthnerstrasse 11; 13; 15; 17; 19; 21; 23 (card) |
1925–1930 (apartment building) | Plastered buildings with bay windows in the traditionalist style of the 1920s (see also: Hellerstraße 1–9, Heimteichstraße 16–24 and Pfingstweide 10–16), of importance in terms of urban planning and social history |
09292250 |
Individual monument belonging to the urban housing complex Hubert-Ritter-Siedlung (Obj. 09305261, Heimteichstrasse 16–40): apartment buildings in a housing complex | Blüthnerstrasse 14; 16; 18; 20 (card) |
around 1930 (apartment building) | Plastered buildings with clinker brick structure, echoes of the modern style, see also Heimteichstraße 26–32a and Karl-Schurz-Straße 17–23, of importance in terms of urban planning and social history |
09292254 |
|
|
Individual monument of the collective housing complex Gemeinnützige Baugenossenschaft Leipzig-Lindenau (Obj. 09305263, Karl-Schurz-Straße 25–39): apartment buildings in a residential complex | Blüthnerstrasse 22; 24; 26; 28; 30 (card) |
1927 (apartment building) | Plastered buildings in the traditionalist style of the 1920s, see also Karl-Schurz-Straße 25–39 and Heimteichstraße 25–33, of importance in terms of urban development and social history |
09292252 |
Multi-family houses in a residential complex, with a front garden to the side and a gate to the Heimteichstrasse apartment block | Blüthnerstrasse 25; 27; 29 (card) |
around 1930 (apartment building) | Plastered facade with clinker brick structure, in the style of the 1920s, see also Heimteichstrasse 13–23, of architectural significance |
09292251 |
|
Double tenement house (with Georg-Schwarz-Straße 194) in half-open development | Blüthnerstraße 32 (map) |
around 1900 (double tenement house) | Clinker brick facade, historically important |
09292305 |
|
Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner | Brehmestrasse 1 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | Formerly with a corner shop (restaurant), clinker brick facade, staircase window with remains of etched glazing |
09297830 |
|
Apartment building in closed development and in a corner | Brehmestrasse 4 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, historically important |
09297829 |
|
Apartment block in open development, with front garden | Brehmestrasse 6; 8th; 10 (card) |
1938 (tenement) | Plastered facade, in the traditionalist style of the 1930s, painting at the front door entrance of number 8, of architectural significance |
09292210 |
|
Double tenement house in a semi-open development | Ellernweg 10; 12 (card) |
1930–1931, for number 10 (double apartment building), 1931–1932, for number 12 (double apartment building) | Plastered facade, see also Ellernweg 11/13, as a testament to social housing construction from the beginning of the 1930s of importance in terms of building history
As a joint construction group with Ellernweg 11/13, the semi-detached house with eleven small apartments was built in 1930 and 1931 by the owner of a construction business, Mr. Alwin Böhme, who also took over the financing. Construction management and design was the responsibility of the Leutzsch-based architect Richard Müller. Older plans by the architect William Jonas for Georg Friedrich's building sites from 1925 were not followed up at the time. In 1931 the architect and client had to fight for the planned four-story construction, as the authorities initially only permitted three floors. In the spring of 1932, Böhme applied for “the issuance of a certificate ... on the exemption from taxes and fees for residential buildings”. Two apartments with an antechamber were planned for the ground floor in each house, to which a kitchen, chamber, toilet and two rooms facing the street were added. The upper floors were designed as a three-in-hand with room, chamber, kitchen, vestibule and toilet, the laundry rooms were in the basement. “Good, stable clay soil on which it was allowed to build” was the conclusion of the subsoil test applied for in the protocol. With regard to the design, a change of attitude can be noted, because initially it was planned to "execute the views in a modern plastering manner with a dark facing stone base" - the appearance of the finished building shows (e) a dark plastered facade with an artificial stone base and striking front door frames. The two oval skylights with leaded glazing above the entrances, the narrow, rectangular windows in the toilets for the middle apartments and the continuous cornice on the top floor are striking. An imaginary further development of the street did not take place on either side in the following period. Renovation, etc., take place in 1996/1997, the balcony extension on the courtyard side in 2011. For the semi-detached house, a historical value must be recorded. LfD / 2019 |
09292191 |
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Double tenement house in a semi-open development | Ellernweg 11; 13 (card) |
1932–1936 (double tenement house) | Plastered facade, lead-glazed staircase windows, see also Ellernweg 10/12, of importance in terms of building history
On June 1, 1932, the owner of the building business, Alwin Oswald Böhme, submitted drawings for both four-storey residential buildings, and an application was made to build them “with a subsidy from rent tax”. It was also mentioned: “The planned new buildings are exactly opposite the two houses that I built last year” (number 10/12). For number 11, two three-room apartments with a toilet and antechamber on the ground floor and three two-room apartments each on the floors above were planned, while house 13 was to have only two apartments with a living room, chamber, kitchen, antechamber and bathroom / toilet on each floor, and not intended for expansion were the top floors (expansion first 1996/1997). Due to the neighboring services that had not been regulated for years - Böhme retained the building application - the company did not move again until the end of 1935 / beginning of 1936. Architect Alfred Staub presented revised plans and was entrusted with the construction management, while Grohmann & Frosch took over the execution of the iron structures. Böhme, who was also a master bricklayer, took over the execution and was able to rent out the apartments in October 1936. The layout of the apartment changed fundamentally in number 13, where there was now a two-room and a three-room apartment. The colored plastered facades have a mirror image of the semi-detached house number 10/12 opposite, only a second look reveals small differences. Particularly striking are the colored windows of the staircase at number 13 on the street side and over the eaves. On the back of the property, a retaining wall with a centrally mounted wooden picket fence was built in 1937, a previously further planned rental house development was omitted. The sibling house is one of the few houses from the 1930s in the neighborhood that has a historical value. LfD / 2018, 2019 |
09291917 |
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Factory with administration building, chimney and workshops | Franz-Flemming-Strasse 5 (map) |
1898 (administration building), 1905, workshops of the iron foundry (factory building) | Clinker brick facades, of importance in terms of building history, technology history and local history |
09291918 |
More pictures |
Factory building, with a front garden and enclosure | Franz-Flemming-Strasse 9 (map) |
1905 (factory) | Plastered facade, reform architecture, of building history, industrial history and local history of importance |
09291919 |
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Office building with side gates of a factory | Franz-Flemming-Strasse 11 (map) |
1905–1906 (factory with office building) | Clinker brick construction, of importance in terms of building history, technology history and local history |
09291920 |
Apartment building in closed development | Franz-Flemming-Strasse 12 (map) |
1925–1926 (tenement) | Plastered facade, terrazzo in the entrance area, in the style of the 1920s, of architectural significance
Ernst Böttcher's company took on the execution of the residential building commissioned by Theodor Max Schneider and designed by the architect Gustav Emil Reiche. The building permit was issued on November 28, 1925 (after the excavation work had already started in August) and the final inspection was carried out on July 22 of the following year. Immediately afterwards, the shop was installed on the ground floor, and in 1931 a sausage kitchen was set up in the basement. The shop was dismantled for residential purposes in 1961 by KWV Leipzig. Refurbishment and modernization as well as disfiguring attic expansion 2002-2003. The second, implemented design shows a strong reduction in the Art Deco facade decoration. Emphasis on the central axis through the house entrance with a slightly protruding bay window above the two upper floors. Refurbishment with disfiguring attic expansion 2002–2003. LfD / 2008 |
09262703 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Franz-Flemming-Strasse 14 (map) |
around 1910 (tenement) | with gate passage, formerly with a shop, plastered facade, lead-glazed staircase windows, terrazzo in the entrance area, reform architecture, of importance in terms of building history |
09291922 |
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Administration building of a factory, with side entrance gate | Franz-Flemming-Strasse 15 (map) |
1913 (administration building) | Administration building with granite plinth and plastered facade, reform architecture, on the courtyard side, formerly factory building with clinker brick facade, of importance in terms of architectural, technical and local history |
09291924 |
More pictures |
Entrance wing of a factory (address: Hans-Driesch-Straße 54) with workshop, water tower and turntable of the former operating track, furthermore an apartment building (address: Franz-Flemming-Straße 16) in open development | Franz-Flemming-Strasse 16 (map) |
1936, partly older (factory hall), 1904 (apartment building) | Main building plastered building with accentuated entrance facade, distinctive, colorfully designed water tower, apartment building with plastered facade in reform style, of architectural, technical and historical importance |
09291923 |
The office and residential building of a factory, with side fencing and gate entrance | Franz-Flemming-Strasse 23 (map) |
around 1910 (office building) | Plastered facade with a box core, in the style of a tenement house, staircase windows with colored lead glazing, reform architecture, of architectural and local significance |
09291927 |
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Factory with main building on the street, attached workshop and chimney | Franz-Flemming-Strasse 25 (map) |
around 1895 (factory building) | Clinker buildings, of architectural, technical and local significance |
09291928 |
Factory complex with residential building (No. 39a), factory gate (No. 39) and factory halls with chimney | Franz-Flemming-Strasse 39; 39a (card) |
around 1895 (factory hall) | Clinker buildings, of architectural, technical and local significance |
09291929 |
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Main building of a factory (head building) | Franz-Flemming-Strasse 41 (map) |
1895 (administration building) | Clinker brick construction, of importance in terms of building history, technology history and local history |
09291930 |
More pictures |
Factory with main building facing the street, first workshop, second workshop and administration building in the courtyard | Franz-Flemming-Strasse 43 (map) |
between 1890 and 1910 (factory building), formerly marked 1906 (administration building) | Clinker brick buildings that shape the street scene, of architectural, technical and local significance |
09291932 |
Administration building | Franz-Flemming-Strasse 45 (map) |
1897 (administration building) | Imposing administrative building, clinker brick building, arc lamp factory of Körting & Mathiesen Aktiengesellschaft, important lamp manufacturer for railway and city lighting, of architectural, industrial and local significance |
09291933 |
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Apartment building in half-open development | Franz-Flemming-Strasse 58 (map) |
around 1930 (tenement) | Elaborately structured plastered facade in the traditionalist style, built as a workers' residence for the HF Flemming piano-mechanics factory, of architectural significance |
09291934 |
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Five apartment buildings in closed development | Franz-Flemming-Strasse 60; 62; 64; 66; 68 (card) |
around 1910 (tenement) | Plastered facades, some with stencil paintings in the stairwells, built as workers' houses for the HF Flemming piano mechanics factory, of social and historical importance |
09291935 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Franz-Flemming-Strasse 70 (map) |
around 1885 (tenement) | with gate passage, strongly structured, historicizing plastered facade, of architectural significance |
09297819 |
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Apartment building in closed development and courtyard building | Franz-Flemming-Strasse 72 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | Front building with gate passage, strongly structured, historicizing plastered facade, staircase window with colored lead glazing, of architectural significance |
09291936 |
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Apartment building in half-open development | Franz-Flemming-Strasse 74 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, wooden panels in the entrance area, of architectural significance |
09297818 |
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Double tenement house (Bischofstrasse 22 and Franz-Flemming-Strasse 76) in closed development and in a corner | Franz-Flemming-Strasse 76 (map) |
around 1895 (double tenement house) | Formerly with a corner store, plastered clinker brick facade, stucco in the entrance area, of importance in terms of building history |
09291130 |
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Individual monument belonging to the urban housing complex Hubert-Ritter-Siedlung (Obj. 09305261, Heimteichstrasse 16–40): apartment buildings in a housing complex | Gaussstrasse 21; 23; 25; 27; 29; 31; 33 (card) |
1925–1930 (apartment building) | Plastered buildings with bay windows in the traditionalist style of the 1920s, see also Hellerstrasse 19–27, Karl-Schurz-Strasse 22–28 and Heimteichstrasse 34–40, of importance in terms of urban planning and social history |
09292260 |
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Individual monument belonging to the Leutzsch residential complex of the Bauverein for the procurement of inexpensive apartments (Obj. 09305608, Philipp-Reis-Straße 85-99): Apartment building in a residential complex (structural unit with Philipp-Reis-Straße 85-99) | Gaußstrasse 55 (map) |
1937 (apartment building) | Typical plaster facade from the 1930s, see also Karl-Schurz-Strasse 58–66 and Philipp-Reis-Strasse 85–99, of architectural and social significance |
09292262 |
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Apartment building in closed development and in a corner | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 59 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | with gate passage and corner pub, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09292148 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 61 (map) |
around 1885 (tenement) | historicizing clinker brick facade, of architectural significance |
09292149 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 63 (map) |
around 1885 (tenement) | with gate passage and shops, historicizing clinker brick facade, historically important |
09292150 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 65 (map) |
1899 (tenement house) | with gate passage, historicizing clinker brick facade, of architectural significance |
09292151 |
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Residential building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 67 (map) |
around 1880 (residential building) | with house passage and shop, plastered facade with sandstone structure, of importance in terms of local development |
09292145 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 69 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | with house passage, historicizing plastered facade, historically important |
09292146 |
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Apartment building in closed development and in a corner | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 70 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | with corner shop, historicizing clinker plaster facade, wooden panels and stucco in the entrance area, iron cellar barrier, of architectural significance |
09297860 |
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Apartment building in half-open development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 71 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | with house passage and with shop, historicizing plastered facade, original shop front, significant in terms of building history |
09292147 |
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Apartment building in closed development and in a corner | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 72 (map) |
marked 1902 (tenement house) | with gate passage, formerly with corner store, clinker brick facade, apartment doors with overhangs, of architectural significance |
09297861 |
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Apartment house designed as a closed development, as well as workshop building in the courtyard and ancillary building in the backyard | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 84 (map) |
Inscribed 1905 (tenement), 1904–1905 (factory building), 1902–1905 (outbuilding) | Front building with gate passage and shop, historicizing clinker plaster facade with Art Nouveau decor, of architectural significance
In mid-April 1902, a building application was made for the construction of a front, back and workshop building by Franz Stirwocky, who intended to demolish a residential building and wash house on the property at the time at Hauptstrasse 73 in Leutzsch. After changes to the plan and approval in 1903, the design engineer Gustav Schubert supervised the project until the final examination (gable marked 1905). In the front building there were two apartments each on the upper floors and, due to the passage, only one shop apartment on the ground floor. The tenants upstairs received two rooms, a chamber, kitchen, balcony, corridor and AWC - the top floor remained undeveloped and was intended for attic chambers and drying floors. In 1904 a workshop building was built in the courtyard with a plumbing shop on the upper floor, a carpenter's workshop on the ground floor and storage rooms in the basement. From 1906–1908 the company Högner & Weller, a factory for electrical equipment and consumables, was located on the property. The project of an extension "for the operation of a cinemathegraphic theater" in 1909 was probably not carried out, but in 1914/1915 the establishment of a coffee shop did. Renovation and renovation work was carried out between 2006 and 2010 according to plans drawn up by architect Ramona Blaha and in 2014/2015. Above the generously windowed business zone on the ground floor (in a modification of the original plans), two-axis side projections ending in gabled mid-buildings encompass the clinker-clad Art Nouveau facade. Artificial stone moldings and in particular the floral decorative panels between the 1st and 2nd floors as well as the reliefs with women's heads on the pilaster strips on the third floor are part of the structuring decoration. 2015 renovation of the courtyard buildings. One of the architecturally prominent tenement buildings on Georg-Schwarz-Strasse, historically significant, testimony to the development of the town. LfD / 2014, 2015 |
09292143 |
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Apartment building in a formerly closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 87 (map) |
around 1880 (tenement) | with gate passage and formerly with the original shop front from around 1910, plastered facade, historically important |
09292320 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 89 (map) |
around 1880 (tenement) | with passage through the house, installation of shops around 1900, plastered facade, historically important |
09292321 |
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Apartment building in half-open development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 91 (map) |
around 1880 (tenement) | with shop fitting around 1910, plastered facade, historically important |
09292322 |
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Apartment building in a formerly half-open area and in a corner | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 93 (map) |
1884 (tenement) | with corner shutter, plastered facade, still of late classicistic effect, of architectural significance
With a plastered facade extending over three floors and a broken corner, a residential building for a total of six families was built in 1884, initiated by bricklayer Friedrich Eduard Jänicke, who was also the executor and site manager. The building file does not provide any information about a designing builder or architect. The base consists of a natural stone base with brick-framed cellar windows. At the same time, an outbuilding with a laundry room was built at the rear - here later a smokehouse and slaughterhouse - to which a small toilet extension was added, because the residential building itself had no toilets. The construction period 1933–1934 stands for this, when an extension for toilets was added to the stairwell, and in 1897 a shop was set up on the corner. Temporarily vacant - successful, coherent renovation 2015/2016. With its plaster structures, the simple corner building facing today's street Am Lange Felde clearly shows the intention of a simple tenement house aimed at socially disadvantaged tenants. There is a historical value in terms of building history and local development. LfD / 2015, 2016 |
09292323 |
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Multi-family houses in a residential complex, with a front garden | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 95; 97; 99 (card) |
1930 (block of flats) | Plastered facade, echoes of the modern style, see also Am Lange Felde 2–6, important in terms of building history |
09292263 |
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Residential house in a formerly closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 104 (map) |
around 1880 (residential building) | simply structured plastered facade, mansard roof , significant in terms of local development |
09292280 |
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Tenement house in half-open development, with a side front garden and enclosure | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 105 (map) |
marked 1905 (tenement house) | with shop, plastered facade with wooden bay window and half-timbered gable, lead-glazed windows, of architectural significance |
09292326 |
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Apartment building in half-open development, rear building and side gate entrance | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 107 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | Front building with shops, strongly structured plastered facade with box bay window, between neo-baroque and reform architecture, wooden paneling in the entrance area, apartment doors with colored glass, elaborate gate entrance with artificial stone pillars and wrought iron grating, of architectural significance |
09292327 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 109 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | with shops, historicizing plastered facade with Art Nouveau echoes, fronts of the shops original, vestibule door in the entrance area, historically important |
09296908 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 110 (map) |
1902–1903 (tenement house) | with gate passage, formerly with shop, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09292278 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 111 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | formerly with a shop, richly decorated clinker brick facade, of architectural significance |
09292331 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 112 (map) |
1902–1903 (tenement house) | with gate passage and with shop, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09299432 |
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School building, with enclosure and gate system on Georg-Schwarz-Strasse and front garden and enclosure on Sattelhofstrasse | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 113 (map) |
1901 (school), expanded in 1906 (school) | representative plastered facade, vestibule door, see also 157th school (Hans-Driesch-Straße 41/43), of local and architectural importance |
09292121 |
Apartment building in closed development and in a corner | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 114 (map) |
1903–1906 (tenement house) | with a shop zone, historicizing plastered facade with bay windows and balconies, rich stucco structure and painting inside, of architectural significance |
09292277 |
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Apartment building in closed development and in a corner | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 120 (map) |
after 1895 (tenement) | with gate passage, with corner store and with store, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09292276 |
Apartment building in closed development and in a corner | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 122 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with corner store and shop, representative plastered clinker brick facade, stucco in the entrance area, formerly some blinds, of importance in terms of building history |
09262419 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 125 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | with shop fitting, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09292285 |
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Apartment building in half-open development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 126 (map) |
1898 (tenement) | with doorway and shop, clinker brick facade, original shop front, significant in terms of building history
For the construction of the four-story house and a one-story laundry and storage building in 1898, master carpenter Max Scheller was the initiator, financier and executor, he was also the owner of the neighboring property on the right. On the left of August Brehmer's property there was a fruit wine restaurant. Next to the passage on the ground floor of the residential building (at the time) Hauptstraße 25, there was only one apartment with an integrated shop on the ground floor, while the upper floors had two apartments with toilets halfway up the stairs. The bill for kerbstones and day channels dates from December 14, 1898, while the final completion of the paving work specified by the municipality did not take place until the summer of 1900. In the same year, master plumber Rudolf Ernst arranged for an extension to the workshop (translation and extension), which he did not submit to the application until an official request was made. Master builder Carl Brömme drew here, further modifications in 1931 and 1934 for residential purposes. On August 11, 1913, work began on an electrical house connection - the board of the municipal association for the Leipzig-Land electricity company was responsible. Plans for the installation of a wash-off system are dated 1940, a confirmation by the VEB (K) Wasserwirtschaft Leipzig, however, only dates from 1964. Between the clinker base and the clinker-clad upper floors there is now a smooth, plastered ground floor. Artificial stone moldings were used as cornices and roofs, and the two outer parts of the house, which has only six axes, are highlighted by structures; at the end of 2019 the house was still unrenovated. In addition to the two original shop posts on the shop front, numerous details from the time of construction have also survived inside; the courtyard building is not of monumental value. Building historical value. LfD / 2018, 2019 |
09297851 |
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Apartment building in a formerly closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 127 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with gate passage, with shops, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09292286 |
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Villa with villa garden | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 128 (map) |
around 1885 (villa) | historicizing clinker brick facade, echoes of the Swiss style, memorable as a former excursion restaurant with restaurant garden, for a while children's library in Leutzsch, of architectural and local significance |
09292275 |
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Apartment house in open development and in a corner | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 130 (map) |
1929–1934 (house number 130) | Plastered facades, in the style of the 1930s, of architectural significance
In autumn 1929 Arthur Müller acted as the builder for the house, who also intended to take over the execution and construction management and signed the static calculations. The first draft was not implemented. According to local law, a four-storey construction without an attic apartment was planned for the property, which was then Friedrich-Ebert-Straße 62. The authorities thought about widening the street from 13.50 meters to 18.00 meters. Even the deck drawings sent at the end of November did not lead to the start of construction. At the beginning of 1932 Müller was able to widen the property by two meters, since he also owned the neighboring property (today number 132 / 132a). Now a three-in-hand car was planned, with two shop apartments on the ground floor and one apartment under the roof, the basement was to have a laundry room and three shared bathrooms. The tectures probably came from the builder Charles Dähne. Again new plans, which were submitted in accordance with the guidelines of the “Program for 600 Small Apartments of the Council” in 1933, showed three small apartments on the floors, two living areas on the ground floor and an undeveloped attic. Finally, in 1934, the building, recognized as a tax-exempt small apartment building, was built. All tenants could use an indoor toilet, a shared bathroom and the laundry room in the basement. The house, which was not renovated in January 2020, has a plastered facade over clinker plinth and a structural connection with the adjacent semi-detached house on the left. The house entrance door has a clinker brick frame, above which not the stairwell windows but the narrow toilet windows of the middle apartments are arranged. In addition to the interior, almost all the old windows on the front and rear have been preserved in their original form. The building shows the break of the historicist and Wilhelminian style street development, is an example of social housing at the beginning of the 1930s and thus has a building historical value. LfD / 2020 |
09292274 |
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Apartment building in a formerly closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 131 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | with gate passage, clinker brick facade, etched staircase windows, facing bricks and floor tiles in the gate passage, of architectural significance |
09292289 |
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Double apartment building in open development and in a corner | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 132; 132a (card) |
1929–1935 (double tenement house) | Plastered facade, in the style of the 1930s, of architectural significance |
09306938 |
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Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 134 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | with corner shutter, plastered facade with bay windows, reform architecture, significant in terms of building history |
09292328 |
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Apartment building in closed development (structural unit with Georg-Schwarz-Straße 137) | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 135 (map) |
around 1910 (tenement) | with shop, plastered facade, important in terms of building history |
09292296 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 136 (map) |
around 1910 (tenement) | with shop, plastered facade with two bay windows, reform architecture, of importance in terms of building history |
09292329 |
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Apartment building in closed development (structural unit with Georg-Schwarz-Straße 135) | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 137 (map) |
around 1910 (tenement) | with shop, plastered facade, important in terms of building history |
09291947 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 138 (map) |
around 1910 (tenement) | with shops, plastered facade with two bay windows and balconies, reform architecture, terrazzo and stucco in the entrance area, lead-glazed staircase windows, magnificent apartment doors, of architectural significance |
09292330 |
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town hall | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 140 (map) |
1903–1904, marked 1903 (town hall) | richly structured neo-renaissance building with corner tower, with built-in shop and gate passage on Hans-Driesch-Strasse, porch door and interior doors with etched glazing; Significant in terms of local history, character of the townscape and architectural history |
09292332 |
Apartment building in half-open development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 146 (map) |
1924–1928 (tenement) | The site belongs to the Leutzsch Church, unusually designed plastered facade, all interior fittings are original, including lead-glazed staircase windows, of architectural significance
The first drafts for a residential building were commissioned by Dr. W. Praetorius represented the non-profit construction company Leutzsch at the architect J. Hesse, office for architecture and construction management, but the plans were not carried out. Hesse also stayed in business when in 1927 the parish of Leutzsch, represented by the church council, took over the property and planning. Revised plans submitted in 1928 were implemented with two four-room apartments on each floor and one apartment under the roof. The company Knopf & Mucke presented static calculations. Acceptance of use took place on December 14th of that year. The semi-open building, quite compact structure with plastered facade, expressionistic Art Deco decoration in the eaves area and completely preserved, extraordinarily high-quality furnishings. Particularly noteworthy is the wall structure of the entrance area and the original lamps. Unusual facade design and the high number of original details indicate a building-historical value. LfD / 2013, 2015 |
09292281 |
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Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 147 (map) |
around 1915 (tenement) | with shutters, plastered facade with two corner cores, terrazzo and wooden panels in the entrance area, stairwell window with remains of etched glazing, of architectural significance |
09297831 |
Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 150 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with shop, clinker brick facade, etched staircase windows, of architectural significance |
09292282 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 151 (map) |
around 1915 (tenement) | Plastered facade, terrazzo in the entrance area, of architectural significance |
09297832 |
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More pictures |
Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 153 (map) |
around 1935 (tenement) | Typical plastered facade with balconies, natural stone on the ground floor, plaster relief in the entrance area, of architectural significance |
09292298 |
Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 155 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | historicizing clinker brick facade, of architectural significance |
09292293 |
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Apartment building in closed development and in a corner | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 157 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with corner shop and two shops (including a former bakery), representative clinker brick facade, etched staircase windows, of architectural significance |
09292292 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 159 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, stucco valley and ceiling painting in the entrance area, important from an architectural point of view |
09292291 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 161 (map) |
1899–1901 (tenement house) | Clinker brick facade, stucco valley in the entrance area, of importance in terms of building history
At the same time as the neighboring house on what was then Barneckerstraße (today Georg-Schwarz-Straße 163), the building application was submitted in September 1899 by Carl Albert Hönemann, who acted as the client. For number 161, Otto Gäperd received the order for execution and construction management. The completion of the house at Barneckerstraße 19 dragged on until March 1901, under the new owner, Mrs. Marie Stender, since 1900. Then in 1902 master glazier Karl Friedrich Leopold Endert from Böhlitz-Ehrenberg took over the property. Behind the axially symmetrical façade facing the street, there were two three-room apartments with an outside toilet on each floor. Unfortunately, the ground floor has been smoothed today, the brick plinth has been painted over, the surface of the upper floors is still originally veneered with reddish clinker bricks. Concrete artificial stone and rich stucco from the repertoire of forms of historicism above the windows and as a tooth-cut console cornice under the eaves give the house a festive appearance. In the middle is the house entrance with a skylight and a wooden door dating from the time of construction, the historical furnishings have largely survived. In September 2019, the majority of the historic wooden windows on the street side were still preserved! With its extensive original inventory, the building documents a decisive phase in the development of the suburb of Leutzsch and has an architectural historical value. LfD / 2019 |
09292290 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 165 (map) |
1899–1900 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, stucco valley in the entrance area, of importance in terms of building history
On the property at Barneckerstraße 15 (later number 21), a four-storey rental apartment building with a laundry room was built for and by Carl Albert Hönemann from the summer of 1899 following a building application. The final acceptance took place on January 20, 1900, and on June 28 of that year the announcement that the footpath had been completed with mosaic paving was announced. For the 432 square meter property - consisting of a residential house, wash house and garden - several changes of ownership are on record in the following years. In each of the two apartments on each floor there were two rooms, a chamber and the kitchen around a corridor. In 1928, the owner Margarethe, widowed Flemming, received the permit she had requested for a shop fitting, which apparently did not take place. On October 13, 1940, “the location of the wall breakthrough to be made” was determined after the inspection. These breakthroughs, most of which were only made in the entire city area in 1941, affected the fire walls in the basement immediately adjacent to the neighboring houses and served as further preparations for war. Documents for the installation of the drainage system, i.e. conversion of the toilets to flush toilets, date from 1980. The middle floors are highlighted with historicist decorative panels above the lintels and historicist decor in the roofs of the two lateral window axes. The window frames are made of artificial stone. The base area and the upper floors are clinkered, the ground floor is plastered and provided with strong grooves. The eaves area was deprived of its ornamentation before the renovation in 2018-2019 (replica of the stucco decoration according to analogies). The original features of the house with a round-arched skylight behind the entrance door were still evident in autumn 2008. The building in closed row development has a historical value. LfD / 2019 |
09292299 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 166 (map) |
marked 1900 (tenement house) | with gate passage and with shop, clinker brick facade, gable with rafter, of architectural significance |
09292319 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 168 (map) |
marked 1912 (tenement) | Plastered facade, wall and ceiling stucco, lead-glazed staircase windows, iron staircase, reform architecture, of importance in terms of building history |
09292318 |
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Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 169 (map) |
1899 (tenement house) | with corner shutters, clinker brick facade, stucco valley in the entrance area, important in terms of building history |
09292302 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 170 (map) |
1912 (tenement) | with shop, plastered facade, lead-glazed staircase windows, terrazzo in the entrance area, reform architecture, of importance in terms of building history |
09292317 |
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Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 171 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | with corner shutter, clinker brick facade, wooden panels, stucco valley and Art Deco painting in the entrance area, vestibule door, fully painted staircase, of architectural significance |
09292283 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 172 (map) |
1912 (tenement) | with two shops, plastered facade, lead-glazed staircase windows, original shop front, reform architecture, significant in terms of building history |
09292316 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 173 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with gate passage and with shop, clinker brick facade, etched staircase windows, historically important |
09291152 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 174 (map) |
1912 (tenement) | with shop, plastered facade, lead-glazed staircase windows, reform architecture, of importance in terms of building history |
09292315 |
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Apartment building in closed development, workshop building in the courtyard and courtyard paving | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 175 (map) |
1899–1900 (tenement), 1900–1901 (workshop), 1924–1925 (workshop) | Front building with gate passage and shop, clinker brick facade, original shop front, of architectural significance
In the years 1899 and 1900, the apartment building was built in the closed street for and by the building contractor Friedrich Hermann Rödiger with a passage, shop apartment, another residential unit on the ground floor and two rental areas on the upper floors. The facade on the upper floors and the plinth are clinker-facing, the ground floor is plastered (now smoothed). Elaborate historic stucco decor shows the roofing of the windows on the two middle floors, the eaves are smoothed. In the courtyard a wash house as well as a farm building and shed were built, initially for a bakery and horse stable, but also a carpenter's workshop and a forge, which was later supplemented by a cartwright and a defeat. In 1939, the Carl Brehme mechanical workshop is located on the property. The historic shop front was largely preserved in July 2016. Disruptive factors for the appearance of the historic house are the smoothing and color of the ground floor as well as the completely unsuitable gate of the passage. Overall, the building documents the expansion process in Leutzsch, and the tenement has a historical value in terms of building history and the history of the district. LfD / 2015, 2016 |
09297817 |
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Apartment building in closed development and in a corner | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 176 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with corner bar and shop, clinker brick facade with corner accentuation, wooden panels in the entrance area, historically important |
09292314 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 177 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | with doorway and shop, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09297816 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 178 (map) |
1901–1902 (tenement house) | with shops, clinker brick facade, wall and ceiling stucco in the entrance area, of importance in terms of building history |
09292313 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 180 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with gate passage, with shop, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09292312 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 182 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | with gate passage and shop, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09292311 |
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Apartment building in closed development and two adjacent workshop buildings in the courtyard | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 184 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | Front building with gate passage and with two shops, clinker brick facade, color-etched staircase windows, of architectural significance |
09297834 |
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Factory building | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 185 (map) |
1910 (factory) | remarkable plastered facade, architects: Schmidt & Johlige, reform architecture, important in terms of building history, technology history and local history; Formerly Photographische Fabrik Hoh & Hahne , VEB Polygraph Reprotechnik |
09298615 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 186 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | with gate passage and shop, clinker brick facade, lead-glazed staircase windows, of architectural significance |
09292310 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 188 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | with gate passage and with shop, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09291015 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 190 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | with shop, clinker plaster facade, original shop front, painting in the entrance area, remnants of lead-glazed staircase windows, of architectural significance |
09292301 |
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Apartment building in closed development and in a corner | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 192 (map) |
1903–1904 (tenement house) | A corner building characterizing the street scene with formerly two corner shops, clinker brick facade, historically significant
In 1903/1904 a semi-open residential building was built for master carpenter Herman Alfred Mai from Kleinzschocher by Robert Geißler, who was named as the executor, on a corner property tapering to today's Blüthnerstraße. After the foreclosure auction, the stove and stove manufacturer Hezinger from Crimmitschau submitted architectural plans for the ground floor division as well as the laundry and flower house in 1905; the upper floors with three apartments each were designed according to the planning documents from 1903. A shop was set up in 2008 on the triple broken corner (formerly two shops), but the artificial stone window frames, which were unusual for the Art Nouveau period, have been preserved. The facade has a plastered, in the meantime smoothed parterre between the clinker base and visible facing masonry on the upper floors. While the technically solid interior of historicism and art nouveau has been preserved, the shop front, house entrance door and all windows were replaced by unappealing plastic products in the 1990s, during the (after fire damage) extremely meritorious renovation in 2017/2018 this was corrected, one New front door based on the style of the building period. The business areas and shop fronts, however, have been lost and are now rented as living space. For the corner building, which is very effective in terms of urban development, a historical value must be recorded. LfD / 2018, 2019 |
09292300 |
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Double tenement house (with Blüthnerstraße 32) in semi-open development and in a corner | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 194 (map) |
around 1900 (double tenement house) | with corner store and store, clinker brick facade, painting in the entrance area and stucco structure, of importance in terms of building history |
09292304 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 196 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | with gate passage, formerly with a shop and restaurant, clinker brick facade, etched staircase windows, historically important |
09292309 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 198 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | with gate passage, clinker brick facade, lead-glazed staircase windows, of architectural significance |
09292308 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 200 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | with doorway, clinker brick facade, etched staircase windows, of architectural significance |
09292307 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 202 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | with shop, clinker brick facade, etched staircase windows, stucco valley in the entrance area, of architectural significance |
09292306 |
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Double tenement house (with Karl-Schurz-Straße 41) in half-open development and in a corner | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 204 (map) |
around 1905 (half of a double tenement house) | with two shops, historicizing plastered facade, stucco fillet in the entrance area, beautiful stairwell, of architectural significance |
09292303 |
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Two railway workers' houses in open development | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 222; 224 (map) |
around 1910 (railway house) | Located between two railway underpasses, plastered clinker facade typical of the time, of importance in terms of building history, traffic history and the history of local development |
09297863 |
Garden pavilion | Grabaustrasse (map) |
around 1895 (garden pavilion) | Wilhelminian style garden pavilion, half-timbered construction with brick infill, rarity, formerly part of the property at Hans-Driesch-Straße 18, of architectural significance |
08967481 |
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Residential house in open development, with garden, fencing walls of the garage entrance and fencing with gate entrance and gate | Grabaustraße 11 (map) |
1937 (residential building) | Typical plaster facade of the time, lead-glazed staircase windows, in the traditionalist style of the 1930s, beautiful garden, of architectural significance
As a recognized tax-exempt home, a compact-looking two-storey building with a plastered facade (Munich rough plaster) and a beaver-tail-covered hipped roof was built in 1937 according to the plans drawn up by architect Arthur Naumann the previous year . The client was the engineer Alfred Witte, the contractor Eduard Steyer. The living and dining rooms were given parquet, the other living rooms wooden floors and the hallway a paving. The inner access staircase was made of wood. Double-frame window frames according to the Wagner system were used, as well as a Tempo system sliding window in the dining room. The wash house and garage were located in the basement, and an air raid shelter was added over the course of the year. The enclosure consists of natural stone masonry with wrought iron bars, gate and entrance gate. The elegant house gets the reserved-friendly effect from the harmony of the red roof covering, light nested plaster, as well as a plinth and structure through dark natural stone slabs and, last but not least, the windows with bars and shutters. A building historical value is to be claimed for the residential property from the 1930s. LfD / 2012, 2016 |
09292099 |
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Villa with villa garden, garden pavilion and enclosure | Grabaustraße 15 (map) |
around 1910 (villa) | Typical plastered facade with a winter garden, lead-glazed staircase windows, reform architecture, rare Siberian elm in the front garden, of local and architectural importance |
09292098 |
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Former excursion restaurant with an annex | Gustav-Esche-Strasse 1 (map) |
1889–1890 (inn), 1894 (extension) | Plaster clinker facade with half-timbered upper floor, in the country house style, of architectural significance |
09291938 |
Former forester's house, outbuilding (horse stable with tool shed and game room), workshop building (woodworking workshop) as well as courtyard paving and extensive gardens | Gustav-Esche-Strasse 2 (map) |
1887–1888 (forester's house), 1887 (garden) | Urban forester's house in Leutzscher Holz, on the Thuringian Railway, plastered facade with natural stone and half-timbered elements, architect: City planner Hugo Licht, garden design by council gardener Carl Otto Wittenberg, of importance in terms of art history and building history
The former forester's house in Burgaue, built from 1887 to 1888 on behalf of the City Council of Leipzig according to plans by the architect and head of the Leipzig Building Department Hugo Licht, shows a picturesque historical appearance influenced by the Heimat style. The residential building, which is effectively set in scene by a corner tower attachment (unfortunately still without a reconstructed top), looks like a villa, to which a farm building with a stable, equipment room, game room and rooms for receiving game feed is attached to the side. The buildings are embedded in a garden designed by council gardener Carl Otto Wittenberg. The natural stone paved driveway and the outer fringed woody planting, a kitchen garden area recognizable by the fruit trees, landscaped areas in particular with ornamental shrubs, further structures and edges of the formerly water-bound paved paths and plazas, a semicircular seating area and main lines of sight from the forest house over the now silted and partially buried pond. The house shows influences of the castle style, among other things through the natural stone base made of Cyclops masonry and the sometimes strong window frames, the fact that the stone made of Rochlitz porphyry tuff is left visible. The ideas of the Heimat style show visible frameworks and wooden shutters on the windows. The white plastered wall surfaces and the different colored glazed roof tiles from the construction period (see here the Predigerhaus at Leipzig's Nikolaikirchhof) were rich in contrast. In addition to the living rooms, the house had a service room and anteroom on the ground floor. A pillar-supported vestibule facing the street has a tooth-cut frieze, to the left of it a coat of arms made of Rochlitz porphyry tuff with the Leipzig city coat of arms, referring to the urban property of the forester's house. Remarkable the preserved building-related equipment of above average quality. There is a historical, architectural, urban and forest historical value, and a rarity value can also be recorded. LfD / 2017, 2019 |
09292270 |
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Police barracks, with a guard building on the street | Hans-Driesch-Strasse 1 (map) |
1938 (police barracks) | Barracks in an enclosed area on the side of the street, plastered facade typical of the time, of local significance |
09292053 |
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Villa with coach house, fencing and villa garden (with pond) | Hans-Driesch-Strasse 2 (map) |
1902 (villa) | representative, historicizing plastered building with tower, built for the Leipzig merchant family Anton Mädler , co-owner of the Moritz Mädler suitcase and leather goods factory, of local and architectural importance; Architect Julius Zeißig |
09292052 |
Schützenhaus (with restaurant, hall and club room) | Hans-Driesch-Strasse 2b (map) |
1919–1920, much older (Schützenhaus) | Schützenhof of the Leipziger Schützengesellschaft, plastered building with echoes of the Swiss style, of local history |
09292244 |
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Coach house on a villa plot | Hans-Driesch-Strasse 4 (map) |
around 1900 (coach house) | Plastered facade with half-timbered bay, originally belonging to the Mädlervilla Hans-Driesch-Straße 2 or the Villa Hans-Driesch-Straße 6, historically important |
09292051 |
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Villa with front garden and enclosure | Hans-Driesch-Strasse 6 (map) |
around 1910 (villa) | Plastered facade, between historicism and reform style, of importance in terms of building history |
09292050 |
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Villa with front garden and enclosure | Hans-Driesch-Strasse 10 (map) |
1912 (villa) | Plastered facade, leaded glass windows, original furnishings, reform architecture, significant in terms of building history |
09292049 |
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Villa with villa garden, two garden pavilions, coach house and enclosure | Hans-Driesch-Strasse 17 (map) |
1909 (villa), 1937–1938 (coach house), 1909 and 1920 (enclosure) | Typical plaster facade of the time, reform architecture , inside marble furnishings, stucco and original painting, windows with lead glazing and stained glass, temporary residence of engineer and factory owner Karl Michler (co-owner of the iron foundry Edmund Becker & Co.), pond and curiosity in the garden, local history, architectural history and personal history significant
Jenny Jacob born Auerbach acquired the property from the city council widow Marie Karoline Louise Fiedler b. Matthai in Leipzig and signed the building application for a country house in April 1909, the construction and statics of which was carried out by the builder F. Schirmer. The final examination took place in mid-November of the same year. The J. Jacob Rauchwaren-Commission operated internationally and was the sole representative of the tobacco dyeing and blending factory Gurchowitch & Cie. in Asnières near Paris for Germany, Russia and Austria. In 1919, architect Reinhold Kretzschmar created the street side of an urban green area in front of the property. At that time, the property was owned by the factory director Carl Brunn. In 1920 he arranged for the “establishment of two cloakroom rooms with a roof over the outside staircase and a veranda extension at the rear”, for which architect Hermann Knaus was brought in, and at the same time new plans for an enclosure were submitted. The next owner is the iron foundry Edmund Becker & Co.AG for General Director Konsul Carl Michler [also Karl Michler] in the land register , who in 1939 applied for a rear veranda extension with conversion to a winter garden . In 1940 this was completed, according to the design and under the construction management of the renowned architectural office of Emil Franz Hänsel and his son-in-law Gero Schilde. Immediately after the end of the war, in 1945/1946 the apartments were divided on the 1st floor and on the ground floor (architect E. Steindorf). In 1993 the villa building still offered an impressive appearance with a plastered façade in the style of reform architecture and neo-baroque , picturesquely embedded in the middle of the spacious property, as a building mass with different extensions and refined transitions into the designed garden with a small pond (garden monument). The spacious hall area of the villa originally has partially colored marble cladding, wooden panels, lead glass windows and original doors, stucco decoration and painting. The monument includes the villa, the fence and the ruinous pavilions due to a lack of maintenance. The terraced horticultural complex has also been preserved along with the structure-giving trees, network of paths and curiosity between the property boundary and the entrance, but the numerous sculptures and sculptures in the complex have been lost. Poplars with pyramids set vertical accents, especially at the property boundaries, around the formerly wood-free central garden area in front of the back of the building, pedunculate oaks , lime trees, silver maples, and the structure-forming hornbeam hedges, which mostly contain paths and flower beds (now overgrown). The property with the land register number 259a was later added to parcel 79a, in May 1937 the architect Curt Schiemichen designed a garage building for it, but this was never implemented. Shortly thereafter, plans for a guest house with a greenhouse and water basin by the Leutzsch architect Richard Müller followed. Another eight weeks later, new plans for a garage were submitted, which in turn came from Hansel and Schilde and were carried out by the Arno Müller construction company by July 1938. The garage house has been preserved with an impressive slated mansard hipped roof, a textured plaster facade over natural stone plinths and standing windows with wooden folding shutters on both sides. The strikingly rich interior design speaks for the function of a noble guest house, among other things with paneling, ornamented doors and painting. The house was seriously damaged by arson in 2004 and by fire accelerators in 2017. A project planned at the beginning of 1938 for a spacious greenhouse consisting of three wings, intended to be opposite the palm house, was not carried out. Arcades and ancillary rooms were attached to a massive neo-baroque pavilion. As a wooden structure, the two greenhouses would have taken on the function of connecting structures: "Plants and flowers are to be grown in the greenhouse, which will be used to equip the Becker & Co. company and factory rooms". For the prominent architectural ensemble of buildings with a park, there is a value in terms of building history, garden art and personal history. LfD / 2017, 2018 |
09291952 |
Villa with enclosure, courtyard paving and garden | Hans-Driesch-Strasse 18 (map) |
1913–1914 (villa) | Richly structured plastered facade, marble and stucco furnishings, vestibule door, wooden panels and paintings, reform architecture, of importance in terms of building history
The master builder and “academic architect” Heinrich Mossdorf, with the help of Queckenstedt, made plans for a new villa for the owner of the grand piano and piano mechanics factory Hermann F. Flemming. A plastered structure with a high, steep roof was built in 1913/1914 on the corner plot of today's Paul-Michael-Straße. The covered veranda was added to the design by the architect Hesse in 1924. Relief panels, small bay windows and plaster structures of the reform architecture structure the facades. Inside, in addition to the kitchen, laundry room, pantry and pantry, there was also a homemaker's apartment in the basement ; on the ground floor, a vestibule led to the hallway from which the reception, living room and dining room with sideboard could be reached. To the north was a veranda with arbor, and two cloakrooms and two toilets were also planned. The private rooms took up the upper floor and the architect planned the girls' room and guest room under the roof. The above-average fencing and the embossed paving of the driveway, which was laid in 1914 by the stone setting master Otto Schwabach, also date from the construction period. The property is of great importance in terms of architectural history, and it is also of great urban interest. LfD / 2012, 2016 |
09291951 |
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Apartment building in open development, formerly with a post office, with garden and remains of the enclosure | Hans-Driesch-Strasse 24 (map) |
1898 (post) | representative clinker brick facade, painted eaves boards, stucco and wooden panels in the entrance area, of local and architectural significance |
09291949 |
Residential house in half-open development, with side fencing and gate entrance | Hans-Driesch-Strasse 34 (map) |
essentially around 1860 (residential building), 1882 (residential building) | Formerly with a restaurant, plastered facade with mansard roof, staircase around 1900, of local history |
09292245 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Hans-Driesch-Strasse 36 (map) |
1909 (tenement) | Plastered facade, stucco structure in the entrance area, reform architecture, important in terms of building history |
09292246 |
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Apartment building in half-open development | Hans-Driesch-Strasse 38 (map) |
1911 (tenement) | Plastered facade, wall and ceiling stucco in the entrance area, reform architecture, of importance in terms of building history |
09292247 |
Apartment building in closed development | Hans-Driesch-Strasse 40 (map) |
1910 (tenement) | with shops, wall and ceiling stucco in the entrance area, reform architecture, of importance in terms of building history |
09292248 |
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School (Hans-Driesch-Straße 41), with old and new gymnasium (Hans-Driesch-Straße 43), courtyard paving, front garden and enclosure to the front garden and school yard | Hans-Driesch-Strasse 41; 43 (map) |
1881 (school), 1906 (school gym) | Typical plastered facade of the time (see also 57th school, Georg-Schwarz-Straße 113 / Sattelhofstraße 2), of local and architectural importance |
09291981 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Hans-Driesch-Strasse 42 (map) |
1910 (tenement) | Plastered facade, wall and ceiling stucco in the entrance area, important in terms of building history |
09291982 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Hans-Driesch-Strasse 44 (map) |
1898 (tenement) | historicizing plastered facade, staircase with stencil painting, closed street, of architectural significance |
09291983 |
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More pictures |
Multi-family houses in a residential complex, with a front garden on Wohlgemuthstrasse and green areas in the courtyard | Hans-Driesch-Strasse 45; 47; 49; 51 (card) |
1929–1931 (apartment building) | Typical plaster facade of the time, emphasized by bay windows and loggias , see also Benediktusstraße 2 and Wohlgemuthstraße 14, of importance in terms of building history, of importance in terms of building history |
09291985 |
Apartment building in closed development | Hans-Driesch-Strasse 46 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | historicizing clinker brick facade, closed street, of architectural significance |
09291984 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Hans-Driesch-Strasse 48 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | historicizing clinker brick facade, closed street, of architectural significance |
09297836 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Hans-Driesch-Strasse 50 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | historicizing clinker brick facade, closed street, of architectural significance |
09297837 |
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Apartment building in closed development and in a corner | Hans-Driesch-Strasse 52 (map) |
1899–1900 (tenement) | historicizing clinker brick facade, closed street, of architectural significance
The building permit was granted on October 23, 1900, and the striking corner residential building was already used on October 5: Wilhelm Tischendorf from Leutzsch is known as the client for submitting the drawings to Arthur Müller. A wash house was built next to the three-story apartment building and a pig slaughterhouse was approved. While a tenant and an apartment with a shop on the corner were planned on the ground floor, three apartments were set up on the upper floors. At the end of 1990, the application was made to convert the apartment building into a hotel with a sauna (design by architect Dipl.-Ing.Necati Dogan). The completely clinkered facade of the corner building on Benediktussstrasse is friendly, structured by cornices, window frames made of artificial stone and Art Nouveau stucco decor enriches the roofing of the bel étage. The top on the broken corner, covered with a high tile roof, is extremely effective, while the coarse windows and the large dormers on the converted attic storey have a rather disruptive effect , and the courtyard front has been changed. Due to its effective corner location and its building history, the house has an urban, district development and architectural history significance. LfD / 2014, 2017 |
09291986 |
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Entrance wing of a factory (address: Hans-Driesch-Straße 54) with workshop, water tower and turntable of the former operating track, furthermore an apartment building (address: Franz-Flemming-Straße 16) in open development | Hans-Driesch-Strasse 54 (map) |
1936, partly older (factory hall), 1904 (apartment building) | Main building plastered building with accentuated entrance facade, distinctive, colorfully designed water tower, apartment building with plastered facade in reform style, of architectural, technical and historical importance |
09291923 |
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Double tenement house in closed development, with front garden | Hans-Driesch-Strasse 75; 77 (card) |
around 1915 (double tenement house) | Plastered facades in reform style, stencil painting in the entrance area, lead-glazed staircase windows, of importance in terms of building history |
09297839 |
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Apartment building in closed development and in a corner location with a front garden on Hans-Driesch-Straße | Hans-Driesch-Strasse 79 (map) |
around 1915 (tenement) | Formerly with restaurant "Zum Wasserturm", plastered facade in reform style, lead-glazed staircase windows, stencil painting in the entrance area, of architectural significance |
09297840 |
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Multi-family houses in a residential complex, with front gardens and lateral fencing | Heimteichstrasse 8; 10; 12 (card) |
1927–1928 (apartment building) | Plastered facade with clinker brick structure, echoes of the modern style, house entrance with lead glazing, see also Heimteichstraße 14 and Pfingstweide 15, important in terms of building history
Architect Walther R. Beyer made the drawings for the construction of the group house in what was then Teichstrasse 8-12, on behalf of the Leipzig-Lindenau eGmbH building cooperative. First of all, the preliminary draft submitted on February 4, 1927 was rejected and only a modified construction plan was approved at the beginning of August. The final examination is dated May 30, 1928. In each house there were two apartments with three rooms, kitchen, bath / toilet, hall and balcony, in number 12 there was the laundry room and a rolling chamber. Cornices and the rhythm of the windows give the houses their face, the frames around the front doors are strong. The central axis is emphasized by a staircase protrusion in exposed brickwork that protrudes from the line of the broad facade. The lawns in front of the façade, curb stones, cut hedges, the poplars flanking the entrances and clinker brick fences also contribute to the appearance. Belonging to the "Red Ox" in the vernacular, the triplet house is a very representative example of social housing from the end of the 1920s; it has a value in terms of building history and local development. LfD / 2014, 2017 |
09291994 |
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Multi-family houses in a residential complex, with front gardens | Heimteichstrasse 13; 15; 17; 19; 21; 23 (card) |
1930 (apartment building) | Plastered facade with clinker brick structure, in the style of the 1920s, see also Blüthnerstraße 25–29, of architectural significance |
09291990 |
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Multi-family house in a residential complex (with Pfingstweide 15), with a front garden and lateral fencing | Heimteichstraße 14 (map) |
1927–1928 (apartment building) | Plastered facade with clinker brick structure, echoes of the modern style, house entrance with lead glazing, see also Pfingstweide 15 and Heimteichstraße 8–12, important in terms of building history |
09305262 |
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Individual monument belonging to the urban housing complex Hubert-Ritter-Siedlung (Obj. 09305261, Heimteichstraße 16–40): apartment buildings in a housing complex and archway to the Blüthnerstraße apartment block | Heimteichstrasse 16; 18; 20; 22; 24 (card) |
1925–1930 (apartment building) | Plastered buildings with bay windows in the traditionalist style of the 1920s, see also Blüthnerstrasse 11–13, Hellerstrasse 1–9, Heimteichstrasse 16–24 and Pfingstweide 10–16, of importance in terms of urban planning and social history |
09291989 |
Unity of the urban residential complex Hubert-Ritter-Siedlung Leutzsch, with the individual monuments: Apartment buildings with three residential complexes and four archways to the inner courtyards - (Blüthnerstraße 11, 13, 15, 17, 19, 21, 23 - Obj. 09292250, Blüthnerstraße 14, 16, 18 , 20 - Obj. 09292254, Gaußstraße 21, 23, 25, 27, 29, 31, 33 - Obj. 09292260, Heimteichstraße 26, 28, 30, 32, 32a - Obj. 09291992, Heimteichstraße 34, 36, 38, 40 - Obj. 09292259, Hellerstraße 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 - Obj. 09292249, Hellerstraße 19, 21, 23, 25, 27 - Obj. 09291997, Karl-Schurz-Straße 30 - Obj. 09301153, Karl-Schurz-Straße 17, 19, 21, 23 - Obj. 09292255, Karl-Schurz-Straße 22, 24, 26, 28, 30 - Obj. 09292258, Pfingstweide 10, 12, 14, 16 - Obj. 09292014 and Heimteichstraße 16, 18, 20 , 22, 24 - Obj. 09291989) as well as front gardens and the residential green of three inner courtyards, some with rows of trees and courtyard paving and as a whole: three play pavilions and laundry bars in the inner courtyards | Heimteichstrasse 16; 18; 20; 22; 24; 26; 28; 30; 32; 32a; 34; 36; 38; 40 (card) |
1925–1930 (residential complex) | Two residential complexes, stylistically uniform plastered buildings with bay windows in the traditionalist style of the 1920s, the second residential complex plastered buildings with clinker brick structure and echoes of the modern style, of importance in terms of urban planning and social history |
09305261 |
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Individual monument of the collective housing complex Gemeinnützige Baugenossenschaft Leipzig-Lindenau (Obj. 09305263, Karl-Schurz-Straße 25–39): apartment buildings in a residential complex | Heimteichstrasse 25; 27; 29; 31; 33 (card) |
1927 (apartment building) | Plastered buildings in the traditionalist style of the 1920s, see also Blüthnerstraße 22–30 and Karl-Schurz-Straße 25–39, of importance in terms of urban planning and social history |
09291991 |
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Individual monument belonging to the urban housing complex Hubert-Ritter-Siedlung (Obj. 09305261, Heimteichstrasse 16–40): apartment buildings in a housing complex | Heimteichstrasse 26; 28; 30; 32; 32a (card) |
around 1930 (apartment building) | Plastered buildings with clinker brick structure, echoes of the modern style, lead-glazed staircase windows, see also Blüthnerstraße 14-20 and Karl-Schurz-Straße 17-23, of importance in terms of urban planning and social history |
09291992 |
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Individual monument belonging to the urban housing complex Hubert-Ritter-Siedlung (Obj. 09305261, Heimteichstrasse 16–40): apartment buildings in a residential complex and archway to the Gaußstrasse apartment block | Heimteichstrasse 34; 36; 38; 40 (card) |
1925–1930 (apartment building) | Plastered buildings with bay windows in the traditionalist style of the 1920s (number 38/40), three houses (Heimteichstraße 34/36 and Karl-Schurz-Straße 30) Plastered buildings without bay windows in stylistically older reform architecture, see also Gaußstraße 21–33, Hellerstraße 19–27 and Karl-Schurz-Straße 22–30, of importance in terms of urban planning and social history |
09292259 |
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Multi-family houses in a residential complex, with front gardens | Heimteichstrasse 42; 44; 46; 48 (card) |
1928–1929 (apartment block) | Typical plaster facade of the time with leather-yellow clinker brick structure, historically important |
09291993 |
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Individual monument belonging to the urban housing complex Hubert-Ritter-Siedlung (Obj. 09305261, Heimteichstraße 16–40): apartment buildings in a housing complex and archway to the Blüthnerstraße apartment block | Hellerstrasse 1; 3; 5; 7; 9 (card) |
1925–1930 (apartment building) | Plastered buildings with bay windows in the traditionalist style of the 1920s, see also Blüthnerstraße 11–23, Heimteichstraße 16–24 and Pfingstweide 10–16, of importance in terms of urban development and social history, of importance in terms of building history |
09292249 |
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Individual monument belonging to the urban housing complex Hubert-Ritter-Siedlung (Obj. 09305261, Heimteichstrasse 16–40): apartment buildings in a residential complex and archway to the Gaußstrasse apartment block | Hellerstrasse 19; 21; 23; 25; 27 (card) |
1925–1930 (apartment building) | Plastered buildings with bay windows in the traditionalist style of the 1920s, see also Gaußstrasse 21–33, Heimteichstrasse 34–40 and Karl Schurz-Strasse 22–30, of importance in terms of urban planning and social history |
09291997 |
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Multi-family houses in a residential complex, with front gardens and fencing | Hellerstrasse 29; 31; 33 (card) |
1927–1928 (apartment block) | Plastered facade in Art Deco style, of importance in terms of building history |
09291998 |
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Double apartment building in open development, with front garden | Hellerstrasse 48; 50 (card) |
1949 (double tenement house) | simple plastered facade in traditionalist style, as so-called activist apartments of particular importance for the Leipzig housing construction after the 2nd World War, of importance in terms of local development |
09263721 |
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Factory owner's villa, with side gate entrance | Junghanßstrasse 1 (map) |
around 1890 (manufacturer's villa) | Clinker brick facade, front door with lead-glazed skylight, formerly part of a foundry factory site (factory building demolished in 2004), of architectural and local significance |
09292000 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Junghanßstrasse 20 (map) |
marked 1912 (tenement) | Plastered facade, reform architecture, significant in terms of building history |
09292001 |
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Double tenement house in closed development | Junghanßstrasse 22; 24 (card) |
around 1910 (double tenement house) | Plastered facade between historicism and reform architecture, number 22 with staircase decoration, number 24 wooden panels and rich stucco structure in the entrance area, of architectural significance |
09290230 |
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Villa (formerly garden house), with villa garden | Karl-Schurz-Strasse 4 (map) |
1902 (villa) | Sandstone facade with tower, in the form of a castle, as a garden house to Villa Rathenaustraße 17a for Dr. Hahn erected, valuable in terms of garden art, local history and architectural history |
09292045 |
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Residential house in open development, with garden and fence | Karl-Schurz-Strasse 8 (map) |
around 1930 (residential building) | Typical plaster facade of the time, of architectural significance |
09297833 |
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Residential house in open development, with front garden and fence | Karl-Schurz-Strasse 12 (map) |
1912 according to information (residential building) | Plastered facade with half-timbered elements, partly lead-glazed windows, in the Heimat style, of architectural significance |
09292046 |
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Residential house in open development, with front garden | Karl-Schurz-Strasse 14 (map) |
1910–1911 (residential building) | Plastered facade, inside marble staircase, staircase window with remains of colored lead glazing, eaves box with painting, reform architecture, of importance in terms of building history
The client was Miss Emmy Auguste Wilhelmine Schlimpert, who later married the factory owner Schlobach; the designs were provided by the Leipzig architect and master builder Oscar Schade in 1910. In the following year, the plastered building with a mansard hipped roof was built as a nurses' home, which lost its function between 1920–1922 . After that, independent apartments were set up on the two floors and in the attic. 1922 Execution of a balcony extension by Arthur Müller. The Schlobach company was based in the house (at that time Georg-König-Straße 14) and was active in the wholesale of German and foreign wood distillation products / wood charring. LfD / 2007 |
09292047 |
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Individual monument belonging to the urban housing complex Hubert-Ritter-Siedlung (Obj. 09305261, Heimteichstrasse 16–40): apartment buildings in a housing complex | Karl-Schurz-Strasse 17; 19; 21; 23 (card) |
around 1930 (apartment building) | Plastered buildings with clinker brick structure, echoes of the modern style, see also Blüthnerstraße 14-20 and Heimteichstraße 26-32a, of importance in terms of urban development and social history |
09292255 |
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Individual monument belonging to the urban housing complex Hubert-Ritter-Siedlung (Obj. 09305261, Heimteichstrasse 16–40): apartment buildings in a housing complex | Karl-Schurz-Strasse 22; 24; 26; 28 (card) |
1925–1930 (apartment building) | Plastered buildings with bay windows in the traditionalist style of the 1920s, see also Gaußstrasse 21–33, Hellerstrasse 19–27, Heimteichstrasse 34–40 and Karl-Schurz-Strasse 30, of importance in terms of urban development and social history |
09292258 |
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Individual monument of the collective housing complex Gemeinnützige Baugenossenschaft Leipzig-Lindenau (Obj. 09305263, Karl-Schurz-Straße 25–39): apartment buildings in a residential complex | Karl-Schurz-Strasse 25; 27; 29; 31; 33; 35; 37; 39 (map) |
1927 (apartment building) | Plastered buildings in the traditionalist style of the 1920s, see also Blüthnerstrasse 22–30 and Heimteichstrasse 25–33, of importance in terms of urban development and social history |
09292253 |
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Totality of housing complex, non-profit building cooperative Leipzig-Lindenau, with the individual monuments: Apartment buildings in a housing complex (Blüthnerstraße 22, 24, 26, 28, 30 - Obj. 09292252, Heimteichstraße 25, 27, 29, 31, 33 - Obj. 09291991 and Karl-Schurz- Straße 25, 27, 29, 31, 33, 35, 37, 39 - Obj. 0929253) as well as the front gardens and residential green of the inner block courtyard and with the aggregate part: Enclosure between the residential buildings on Blüthnerstraße and Karl-Schurz-Straße | Karl-Schurz-Strasse 25; 27; 29; 31; 33; 35; 37; 39 (map) |
1927 (residential complex) | Plastered buildings in the traditionalist style of the 1920s, important in terms of urban planning and social history |
09305263 |
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Individual monument belonging to the urban housing complex Hubert-Ritter-Siedlung (Obj. 09305261, Heimteichstrasse 16–40): Apartment building in a residential complex | Karl-Schurz-Strasse 30 (map) |
1925–1930 (apartment building) | Head building of the row of residential buildings Heimteichstrasse 34-40, three of these houses (Heimteichstrasse 34/36 and Karl-Schurz-Strasse 30) plastered buildings without bay windows in stylistically older reform architecture, see also Gaußstrasse 21–33, Heimteichstrasse 34–40, Hellerstrasse 19-27 and Karl -Schurz-Straße 22–28, of importance in terms of urban planning and social history |
09301153 |
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Double tenement house (with Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 204) in half-open development | Karl-Schurz-Strasse 41 (map) |
around 1905 (half of a double tenement house) | historicizing plastered facade, of architectural significance |
09299646 |
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Individual monument belonging to the Leutzsch residential complex of the building association for the procurement of inexpensive apartments (Obj. 09305608, Philipp-Reis-Straße 85-99): apartment buildings in a residential complex | Karl-Schurz-Strasse 58; 60; 62; 64; 66 (card) |
1937 (apartment building) | Typical plaster facade of the 1930s, etched staircase windows, see also Gaußstrasse 55 and Philipp-Reis-Strasse 85-99, of architectural and social significance |
09292003 |
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Residential house in open development, with garden and fence | Kietzstrasse 4 (map) |
around 1925 (residential building) | Plastered facade, lead-glazed staircase windows, important in terms of building history |
09292096 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Landwaisenhausstrasse 2 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | historicizing plastered facade, stairwell with stencil painting, terrazzo, wooden panels, stucco and painting with Altleutz motifs in the entrance area, of architectural significance |
09292004 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Landwaisenhausstrasse 3 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | with house passage, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09292005 |
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Apartment building in closed development (structural unit with Landwaisenhausstraße 6) | Landwaisenhausstrasse 4 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, stairwell windows with colored lead glazing, stucco and wooden panels in the entrance area, of importance in terms of building history |
09292007 |
Apartment building in closed development | Landwaisenhausstrasse 5 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | with courtyard passage, formerly with a shop, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09292006 |
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Apartment building in closed development (structural unit with Landwaisenhausstraße 4) | Landwaisenhausstrasse 6 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, lead-glazed staircase windows, vestibule door and stucco in the entrance area, of importance in terms of building history |
09297838 |
Apartment building in closed development | Landwaisenhausstrasse 7 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | with courtyard passage, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09292008 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Landwaisenhausstrasse 8 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | Formerly with a shop, clinker brick facade, staircase with Art Déco painting, of significance in terms of building history |
09292009 |
Apartment building in closed development and in a corner | Landwaisenhausstrasse 9 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | with courtyard passage, formerly with corner shutter, clinker brick facade with corner bay window, ceiling stucco in the courtyard passage, historically important |
09292010 |
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Apartment building in closed development and in a corner | Landwaisenhausstrasse 12 (map) |
around 1910 (tenement) | Plastered facade with box core and corner accentuation, stucco structure and painting with Altleutz motifs in the entrance area, reform architecture, important in terms of building history |
09292011 |
swell
- State Office for the Preservation of Monuments Saxony Dynamic web application: Overview of the monuments listed in Saxony. The location "Leipzig, Stadt, Leutzsch" must be selected in the dialog box, after which an address-specific selection is made. Alternatively, the ID can also be used. As soon as a selection has been made, further information about the selected object can be displayed and other monuments can be selected via the interactive map.
- Thomas Noack, Thomas Trajkovits, Norbert Baron, Peter Leonhardt: Cultural monuments of the city of Leipzig. (Contributions to urban development 35), City of Leipzig, Department of Urban Development and Construction, Leipzig 2002
Individual evidence