List of cultural monuments in Leutzsch (L – Z)
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 L – Z. The cultural monuments in streets A – K are listed in the list of cultural monuments in Leutzsch (A – K) .
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 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Villa (with equipment), garden and enclosure | Laurentiusstrasse 1 (map) |
1901–1902 (villa) | Moving designed, monumental-looking plastered facade, one of the most important Art Nouveau buildings in Leipzig, architect: Paul Möbius, of importance in terms of art history and building history |
09291954 |
Group of houses in open development, with front garden and fencing (also fencing at Karl-Schurz-Straße 3) | Laurentiusstrasse 2; 4; 6 (card) |
1932–1933 (residential building) | Plastered facade, in the traditionalist style of the 1920s / 1930s, of architectural significance |
09291955 |
|
Semi-detached house in open development, with front garden | Laurentiusstrasse 5; 7 (card) |
1934–1935 (twin house) | Plastered facade, important in terms of building history |
09291956 |
|
Two outbuildings (garage house and staff building) of a double villa (see Paul-Michael-Straße 12/14), with a front garden, fencing and connecting walls between the buildings | Mathiesenstrasse 1 (map) |
1927 (outbuilding) | Plastered buildings in the traditionalist style of the 1920s, of local and architectural significance |
09292261 |
|
Residential house in open development and in a corner, with front garden and enclosure | Mathiesenstrasse 8 (map) |
1929–1930 (residential building) | Typical plaster facade from the 1920s, side verandas, of architectural significance
The new country house built between 1929–1930 for Mr. Kommerzienrat Dr. Wilhelm Mathiesen, which was built on a corner plot under the care of the renowned architects Schmidt & Johlige. The construction business of Paul George came under contract for the execution, static calculations were provided by the iron construction factory and iron foundry Franz Mosenthin from Eutritzsch. The villa construction has a living space of over 200 square meters plus a little more than 50 square meter house on the top floor. In addition to the usual and necessary private rooms on the residential floors, there were rooms in the basement for the central heating, as well as a coal cellar, laundry and tiling room and a "bicycle room". In 1956, the building permit was issued for an extension of the verandah extension with a winter garden. In 1998 the splendid building was broken up into six residential units by the Gesellschaft für Baumanagement Kaiser GmbH according to plans by the architect Herbert Weiß from Oberlainder. Incidentally, the demolished double garage was from 1930. The house with plastered facades and a distinctive mansard hipped roof, the staircase projection with house entrance has Art Deco decor and is presented to the facade facing the courtyard. The enclosure looks trimmed to look “old”. In particular, there is a personal history and architectural history value. LfD / 2013, 2016 |
09292055 |
|
Residential house in open development, with front garden, fencing and outbuildings | Mathiesenstrasse 12 (map) |
after 1910 (residential building), around 1900 (auxiliary building) | The plastered façade typical of the time with folding shutters and trellises, remains of lead-glazed staircase windows, Art Deco painting, outbuildings (garage and coach house) originally belonged to Villa Zum Harfenacker 8 (see there), of local and architectural importance |
09292054 |
|
Rental villa, with front garden and enclosure | Otto-Schmiedt-Strasse 1 (map) |
1902 (rental villa) | historicizing plastered facade, with corner bay window, lead-glazed staircase windows, of architectural significance |
09292078 |
|
Outbuilding (garage house) of a villa | Otto-Schmiedt-Strasse 2 (map) |
1897 (outbuilding) | Plastered facade with brick structure and half-timbering, former remise of the Thorer villa on Rathenaustraße, see also Rathenaustraße 40, of architectural significance |
09292080 |
|
Residential house in open development, with front garden and fence | Otto-Schmiedt-Strasse 2b (map) |
1937 (residential building) | Typical plaster facade of the time, historically significant as a private residential building in the second half of the 1930s
Johannes Schneider, a doctor of medicine from Böhlitz-Ehrenberg, had a tax-exempt home built on a separate part of Theodor Kurt Thorer's property in 1937, with a kitchen and dining room on the ground floor, as well as a master and living room and a winter garden. The upper floor accommodated three bedrooms and the girls' room, while in the basement two car storage rooms and an air raid shelter were set up. The architect in charge was Arthur Naumann from Leutzsch, execution by the construction company Hugo Reichardt from Böhlitz-Ehrenberg. Strict structure of the slightly tinted high-grade plaster facades with axial symmetry to the street, access stairs made of shell limestone, oak front door and a high hipped roof with double covering, as a fence formerly a picket fence between artificial stone pillars. Architecturally significant as private residential construction in the second half of the 1930s. LfD / 2012 |
09292079 |
|
Villa, with front garden and gate entrance | Otto-Schmiedt-Strasse 4a (map) |
around 1910 (villa) | Stately building, plastered facade, reform style architecture, named after the owner manufacturer Christian Möller (co-owner of the Springer & Möller company, factory of chemical paints and varnishes), of local and architectural importance |
09292081 |
|
|
Villa, with front garden and enclosure | Otto-Schmiedt-Strasse 5 (map) |
1902 (villa) | historicizing plastered facade, terrace on the back, wooden panels, stucco and vestibule door in the entrance area, historically important
Villa garden, heavily shaped, with a representative fence system, in the front garden the old copper beech that characterizes the street |
09292082 |
Villa with villa garden, fencing with gate entrance and gate, as well as a coach house with an archway connection to the villa | Otto-Schmiedt-Strasse 12 (map) |
1901–1902 (villa), 1901–1902 (coach house) | varied plastered facade with half-timbered elements, named after regional court director Dr. Otto Stohwasser, important in terms of building history
On July 9, 1901, District Court Director Dr. jur. Otto Stohwasser submitted the building application for a villa with an outbuilding, for which the renowned architects Schmidt & Johlige from Leipzig contributed designs. The same took over the execution of the country house on the corner property, for stone setting the construction business Klingler & Schröter is named. The building revision protocol for the final acceptance is dated March 26, 1902. From 1918, electrical light in the house was available from the Leipzig-Land electricity company, and in 1932 the property is mentioned as owned by the engineer and factory owner Oskar Liebner. The elegant Art Nouveau building has a plastered façade and flirts with a multi-part roof and façade design that is fabulous. Despite the loss of some decorative elements, the sophisticated architecture is recognizable and the spaciousness of the interior can be seen. A living room with a veranda, a ladies' room, a man's room with a library and the son's room were designed on the upper floor, five bedrooms and a bathroom with toilet under the roof, the kitchen and dining room, sideboard and people's room were on the ground floor. The buildings were embedded in a remarkable garden, surrounded by fencing typical of the time. For the representative property with two buildings built around the turn of the century, the connecting arched arcade as well as the fence and the garden, there is an architectural and personal historical value, as well as a relevance to the history of local development. LfD / 2014, 2016 |
09292084 |
|
Residential house in open development, with front garden and fence | Otto-Schmiedt-Strasse 16 (map) |
1914 (residential building) | Plastered facade, country house in reform style, outside staircase and winter gardens after 1920, of architectural significance |
09292089 |
|
Residential house in open development, with front garden and fence | Otto-Schmiedt-Strasse 18 (map) |
marked 1914–1915 (residential building) | Plastered facade with half-timbered elements, country house in Reform and Heimat style, of architectural significance |
09292088 |
|
Residential house in open development, with front garden | Otto-Schmiedt-Strasse 20 (map) |
1937–1938 (residential building) | Plastered facade typical of the time, terrace at the rear, of architectural significance |
09292087 |
|
Residential house in open development, with garden and enclosure | Otto-Schmiedt-Strasse 24 (map) |
1937 (residential building) | Plastered facade typical of the time, terrace to the garden, front door with traffic light, of architectural significance |
09292086 |
|
Residential house in open development, with front garden and fence | Otto-Schmiedt-Strasse 26 (map) |
1935 (residential building) | Typical plaster facade of the time, some lead-glazed windows, of architectural significance
For tax-exempt home construction, the building application was submitted in June 1935 and the registration for the final building examination in October of the same year. The Raschwitz architects Fischer & Fiedler were under contract to design and manage the construction for their client, Director Hanns Steinhaus. The executing company was that of the builder August Morgenstern. The “single-family house with car storage room” typical of the time received almost 150 square meters of living space, the plastered structure on a clinker base is closed off by a steep, tile-covered roof. In 1955, a sculptor's studio based on plans by the architect Herbert Becke was to be built in the rear corner of the property. Among other things, the high-quality wrought-iron window grilles and some lead-glazed windows are to be mentioned of the house furnishings. The new roof covering and the newly manufactured windows as part of the current renovations does not seem very happy, the removal of the small pointed arch window in the gable to Otto-Schmiedt-Straße is regrettable. The house, which is situated on a corner plot, has an architectural value and is part of the high-quality Leutzsch villa district. LfD / 2012, 2016 |
09292070 |
|
Residential house in open development, with front garden and fence | Otto-Schmiedt-Strasse 28 (map) |
1938 (residential building) | Plastered facade, important in terms of building history |
09292072 |
|
Residential house in open development, with front garden and fence | Otto-Schmiedt-Strasse 30 (map) |
marked 1938 (residential building) | Typical plastered facade, rear winter garden, inside built-in kitchen from the time of construction, of architectural significance |
09292073 |
|
Villa with front garden, fence and gate system | Otto-Schmiedt-Strasse 32 (map) |
around 1925 (villa) | Plastered façade, outside staircase, porch door, winter garden and terrace, original furnishings, building still influenced by the reform style of the time around 1910, historically important |
09292075 |
|
Villa, with enclosure and front garden | Otto-Schmiedt-Strasse 34 (map) |
around 1925 (villa) | Plastered facade, terrace and winter garden, lead-glazed staircase windows, rich original interior fittings, building still influenced by the reform style of the time around 1910, of architectural significance |
09292077 |
|
Villa with villa garden, outbuildings and fencing | Otto-Schmiedt-Strasse 39 (map) |
1914 (villa) | Plastered facade, some lead-glazed windows, reform style architecture, named after the owner manufacturer Max Röder, of local and architectural importance |
09292085 |
|
Villa with front garden, enclosure with gate entrance and gate and well in the garden | Otto-Schmiedt-Strasse 41 (map) |
around 1910 (villa) | historicizing plastered facade, lead-glazed windows, original furnishings, wine cellar, named after the owner manufacturer Fritz Springer (co-owner of the Springer & Möller company, factory of chemical paints and varnishes), of local and architectural significance |
09292071 |
|
Enclosing a property | Otto-Schmiedt-Strasse 43; 43a (card) |
after 1910 (enclosure) | The garden belonged to number 41, fencing with wrought-iron grating and cleaning posts, significance in the history of handicrafts |
09292074 |
|
Villa, with front garden and enclosure | Otto-Schmiedt-Strasse 45 (map) |
1927–1928 (villa) | Plastered facade, rich original interior, building still influenced by the reform style of the time around 1910, named after the book printer owner Ernst Fischer, of local and architectural importance
The single-family house built between 1927 and 1928 for factory owner Ernst Fischer, owner of a book printing company, is compact and clearly structured. For this, the Raschwitz architects Fischer & Fiedler drafts, the Münnich & Hedrich company contributed static calculations and the Emil Bödemann GmbH experience regarding the implementation. Later, builder G. Alfred Schurich, owner of a timber and carpentry business, was called in for the execution and statics of the roof structure for a hipped roof. In 1960 the intention was to have a second, self-contained living area, in 1973 minor alterations were made and in 1980 the porch ceiling on the ground floor collapsed. The monument protection approval for a renovation dates from October 1996. As clear as the structure appears, a vestibule with the house entrance, at the back a veranda with a transition to the spacious garden, a booth bay on the south side and a bay-like porch slightly protruding towards the street loosen the facades . Covers and cornices made of artificial stone structure the structure, very few decorative elements of Art Deco enrich the appearance (including iron balcony grilles, a keystone above the house entrance, molded parts in lunettes above some windows). The basic idea behind the design of the facade and design seem to be structures of the reform style - but the interior is impressed by the exuberant furnishings in the confession of the 1920s. The front garden, enclosure and the generous rear garden contribute greatly to the noble appearance of the property, which is in pleasant correspondence with Otto-Schmiedt-Straße 32. The brutal looking residential complex at Otto-Schmiedt-Straße 43, which was completed at the end of 2019, has an extraordinarily negative effect on the entire street section, the design of which the architects and financiers were unwilling to show any understanding for the elegance of the neighboring and opposite historic houses. The role of urban planning is questionable for the classification of these houses in the high-quality Leutzsch villa district. For Otto-Schmiedt-Straße 45 there is a historical and artistic value. LfD / 2018, 2019 |
09292076 |
|
Residential house in open development, with garden | Paul-Michael-Strasse 1 (map) |
1930 (residential building) | Typical plastered facade, rear winter garden and terrace, important in terms of building history |
09291962 |
|
Villa with garden | Paul-Michael-Strasse 2 (map) |
1903 (villa) | Plastered facade with half-timbered gable, balcony, terrace, veranda, original interior fittings, including wall cupboards, named after the factory owner Max Thorer, probably a member of the Thorer tobacco shop family, of local and architectural importance |
09291964 |
|
Villa with attached outbuilding (originally a coach house with horse stable) as well as front garden (with driveway), garden and fencing | Paul-Michael-Strasse 3 (map) |
1880 (villa) | Clinker facade, stucco in the rooms, ancestral home of the Thorer family (Leipzig tobacco merchant company Theodor Thorer, also tobacco goods finishing and dyeing), of local and architectural importance |
09291963 |
|
Villa with villa garden, gate and fence | Paul-Michael-Strasse 4 (map) |
1903 (villa) | Plastered facade with half-timbered gable, terrace and outside staircase, named after the Klinkhardt family of publishing booksellers, of local and architectural importance |
09291965 |
|
Villa with villa garden and enclosure | Paul-Michael-Strasse 5 (map) |
1895 (villa) | Plastered facade, with floating gable and tower, some lead-glazed windows, probably built for Ernst Thorer, family member of the Thorer family of tobacco merchants, of local and architectural importance |
09291966 |
|
More pictures |
Villa with villa garden, fence with gate system and garage house in the garden | Paul-Michael-Strasse 6 (map) |
1903–1904 (villa) | Remarkable stately Art Nouveau villa, magnificent glazing of the stairwell windows, stucco structure inside, architect: Paul Möbius, named after the client, factory owner Friedrich Görke, of local and architectural significance |
09291967 |
Villa with villa garden and enclosure with gate | Paul-Michael-Strasse 7 (map) |
marked 1908–1909 (villa) | Plastered facade with half-timbered elements, balcony, very beautiful wooden fence, rich interior fittings, including a mosaic fountain and wooden ceilings, villa named after Andreas Fischer-Thorer (owner of the Pietro Del Vecchio Gallery, Royal Court Art Dealer in Leipzig), of local and architectural importance |
09291968 |
|
Villa with villa garden and enclosure with gate | Paul-Michael-Strasse 8 (map) |
around 1915 (villa) | stately plastered building, rear terrace, reform style architecture, named after the old owner, factory owner Dr. jur. Walther Flemming (co-owner of the grand piano and piano mechanics factory HF Flemming), of local and architectural importance |
09291957 |
|
|
Villa with outbuilding (garage house) and connecting building, garden and fencing with gate system | Paul-Michael-Strasse 9 (map) |
1912–1914, marked 1914 (villa), 1912–1914 (garage) | Stately plastered building, inside marble and stucco decoration, lead-glazed windows, porch door, wood paneling, open fireplace and stucco, wall cupboards, on the outer wall fountain on the partition wall, reform style architecture, villa named after the owner Consul General Dr. hc Paul Hollender, co-owner of the tobacco goods company Theodor Thorer and son-in-law of the company founder, of local and architectural importance |
09291959 |
Villa with villa garden, garden pavilion, enclosure and gate system | Paul-Michael-Strasse 10 (map) |
1908 (villa) | Plastered facade, lead-glazed windows, marble cladding and vestibule door in the entrance area, reform style architecture, named after businessman Fritz Thorer, family member of the Thorer family of tobacco merchants, of local and architectural importance |
09291958 |
|
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Villa with garden and enclosure with gate system | Paul-Michael-Strasse 11 (map) |
1912 (villa) | Plastered facade, partially lead-glazed windows, wooden panels and vestibule door in the entrance area, reform style architecture, named after the factory owner Arthur Dietzold, of local and architectural importance |
09291960 |
|
Double villa with forecourt and gardens (with pond and terrace), garden pavilion and enclosure (two outbuildings belonging to it, see Mathiesenstraße 1) | Paul-Michael-Strasse 12; 14 (card) |
1923–1925 (residential building) | Two-wing prestigious residential complex with a passage to the outbuildings on Mathiesenstrasse, plastered facade in the traditionalist style of the 1920s, stucco ceilings in some interiors, outside staircase to the garden, generously designed gardens, architect: Heinrich Straumer, Berlin, important in terms of local history, garden art and architectural history |
09291969 |
|
Villa with garden and enclosure with gate | Paul-Michael-Strasse 15 (map) |
marked 1895 (villa) | representative clinker brick facade, wooden verandas, roof with rich chevron gables, of local and architectural importance |
09292043 |
Residential house (with two house numbers) in open development, with front yard and enclosure | Pentecostal Willow 4; 4a (card) |
1936–1937 (twin house) | Plastered facade, important in terms of building history |
09291974 |
|
Villa with front garden | Pfingstweide 7 (map) |
around 1910 (villa) | Plastered facade, half-timbered gable, corner tower, half-timbered bay window, of importance in terms of building history |
09292012 |
|
Multi-family houses in a residential complex, with front gardens | Pentecostal Willow 9; 11; 13 (card) |
marked 1926 (apartment building) | Plastered facade in the traditionalist style of the 1920s, of architectural significance |
09292013 |
|
Individual monument belonging to the urban housing complex Hubert-Ritter-Siedlung ( Obj. 09305261, Heimteichstrasse 16–40 ): apartment buildings in a housing complex | Pentecostal Willow 10; 12; 14; 16 (card) |
1925–1930 (apartment building) | Plastered buildings with bay windows in the traditionalist style of the 1920s, colored glazed staircase windows, see also Hellerstraße 1–9, Blüthnerstraße 11–23 and Heimteichstraße 16–24, of importance in terms of urban planning and social history |
09292014 |
|
Multi-family house (with Heimteichstrasse 14) in a residential complex with a front garden | Pfingstweide 15 (map) |
1927–1928 (apartment building) | Plastered facade with clinker brick structure, echoes of the modern style, see also Heimteichstrasse 8–12 and Heimteichstrasse 14, important in terms of building history
At the beginning of 1927, architect Walther R. Beyer submitted plans for a three-story double residential building as a preliminary project. A striking feature of the view drawing was a sturdy, expressionist-style corner tower in exposed clinker construction, based on a shop front that ran across the side. Due to expert opinions, special requests, a discussion of the architecture and building structure as well as a new layout plan, a new application and architectural drawings were necessary, which was approved on August 25, 1927. Construction work began on September 5, and the final inspection took place in June 1928. A shop zone has now been completely dispensed with, the corner appears compact and is partially four-story. Clinker strips and cornices structure the otherwise unadorned plastered facade. The base and the strong frames of the house entrances at the rear are also made of iron clinker bricks. In 1938/1939 a shop and garage building was built alongside the street as an intermediate building to the tenement block boundary at Pfingstweide 13 (these extensions were demolished before 2018). The architect Kurt Schwarze was in charge of construction for the non-profit building cooperative Leipzig-Lindenau eGmbH, which at the time was also the initiator of the housing construction. Lawns, pavement and fences and the front gardens with curb stones contribute just as much to the characteristics of the complex as preserved details of the historical interior. The corner house is popularly called "The Red Ox" because of the strong coloring of the plaster. Significance in terms of building history and the history of local development, evidence of social housing construction at the end of the 1920s. LfD / 2014, 2017 |
09292256 |
|
Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner | Pfingstweide 23 (map) |
around 1910 (tenement) | Formerly with corner store and shop, plastered facade with corner bay window, terrazzo in the entrance area, of architectural significance |
09292272 |
|
Residential house in open development, with front garden, enclosure and garage extension on Rathenaustraße | Philipp-Reis-Strasse 1 (map) |
marked 1937–1938 (residential building) | Plastered facade, lead-glazed staircase windows, iron traffic lights at the entrance, in the same construction, neighboring house at Rathenaustraße 19a, of architectural significance |
09291970 |
|
Residential house in open development, with a garage extension, front yard and enclosure as well as plastic | Philipp-Reis-Strasse 3 (map) |
around 1940 (residential building) | Typical plaster facade of the time, of architectural significance, part of the Leutzsch villa district |
09291971 |
|
Residential house in open development, with garage extension, front garden and enclosure | Philipp-Reis-Strasse 5 (map) |
around 1940 (residential building) | Typical plaster facade of the time, of architectural significance |
09291972 |
|
Residential house in open development, with front garden and fence | Philipp-Reis-Strasse 7 (map) |
around 1940 (residential building) | Typical plaster facade of the time, of architectural significance |
09229351 |
|
Residential house in open development, with front garden and fence | Philipp-Reis-Strasse 9 (map) |
1936 (residential building) | Typical plaster facade of the time, terrace on the garden side, of architectural significance |
09229354 |
|
Villa (address: Rathenaustraße 23), enclosure with gate system, villa garden and ancillary building (address: Philipp-Reis-Straße 10) | Philipp-Reis-Strasse 10 (map) |
1896 (villa) | Villa a multi-part structure, clinker brick facade with half-timbered elements, lead-glazed stairwell windows, rear terrace, outbuilding for servants' house and coach house, villa built for the manufacturer Max Gräbner, later the home of the Leipzig mayor and anti-fascist resistance fighter Carl Goerdeler (1884–1945), historically important |
09292038 |
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Residential house in open development, with front garden and fence | Philipp-Reis-Strasse 11a (map) |
1936–1937 (draft residential building), before 1948 (residential building) | Typical plaster facade of the time, of architectural significance |
09292746 |
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Residential house in open development, with front garden and fence | Philipp-Reis-Strasse 11b (map) |
1936–1937 (draft residential building), before 1948 (residential building) | Typical plaster facade of the time, terrace on the garden side, of architectural significance |
09229353 |
|
Residential house in open development, with front garden and fence | Philipp-Reis-Strasse 11c (map) |
1937 (draft residential building), 1954 (residential building) | Typical plaster facade of the time, of architectural significance |
09292706 |
|
Villa (Rathenaustraße 21) with fencing and garden as well as remise building (Philipp-Reis-Straße 12) | Philipp-Reis-Strasse 12 (map) |
1892 (villa) | Plastered building with tower, echoes of the Swiss style, significant in terms of building history |
09292037 |
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Residential house in open development, with front garden and fence | Philipp-Reis-Strasse 13 (map) |
around 1940 (residential building) | Typical plaster facade of the time, of architectural significance |
09229352 |
|
Two adjoining multi-family houses (No. 73/75 and No. 77-83) in a residential complex, with front gardens and a fence facing Hellerstraße | Philipp-Reis-Strasse 73; 75; 77; 79; 81; 83 (map) |
1927–1928 (apartment block) | multicolored plastered facade in Art Deco style, with loggias on the courtyard side, of architectural significance |
09292016 |
|
Individual features of the totality of the Leutzsch residential complex of the Bauverein for the procurement of inexpensive apartments (Obj. 09305608, Philipp-Reis-Straße 85-99): Apartment buildings in a residential complex (structural unit with Gaußstraße 55) | Philipp-Reis-Strasse 85; 87; 89; 91; 93; 95; 97; 99 (card) |
1937 (apartment building) | Typical plaster facade from the 1930s, staircase windows with etched glazing, see also Gaußstrasse 55 and Karl-Schurz-Strasse 58-66, of architectural and socio-historical importance |
09292015 |
|
Unity of the Leutzsch residential complex of the Bauverein for the procurement of inexpensive apartments, consisting of the individual monuments: Apartment buildings Philipp-Reis-Straße 85–99 (Obj. 09292015), Gaußstraße 55 (Obj. 09292262) and Karl-Schurz-Straße 58-66 (Obj. 09292003 ), also front gardens on Philipp-Reis-Straße and Gaußstraße and Hofgrün | Philipp-Reis-Strasse 85; 87; 89; 91; 93; 95; 97; 99 (card) |
1937 (residential complex) | Buildings with plastered façades typical of the 1930s, remarkable courtyard design, important in terms of local development, social history and architectural history |
09305608 |
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Allotment garden complex Prießnitz-Morgenröte: with club house / amusement arcade of an allotment garden and numerous historical gazebos, with enclosures, gate frames and bed frames of allotment gardens (all elements of the whole) | Prießnitzstrasse 1 (map) |
1907–1908 (allotments) | Formerly founded by two associations (Naturheilverein Priessnitz-Leipzig-West and Verein Morgenröte), merger of the associations in 1957, well-preserved historical character of the facilities, once with an outdoor pool (Priessnitzbad closed in 1988), of local historical importance |
09299242 |
|
Double tenement house (Prießnitzstrasse 22 and William-Zipperer-Strasse 83) in closed development and in a corner | Prießnitzstrasse 22 (map) |
marked 1902 (double tenement house) | Historicizing plaster clinker facade, partly Art Nouveau decoration, corner accentuation, vestibule door, historically important |
09292202 |
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Double tenement house in closed development | Prießnitzstrasse 24a; 24b (card) |
around 1900 (double tenement house) | Plaster and clinker facade, important from an architectural point of view |
09297857 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Prießnitzstrasse 26 (map) |
marked 1914 (tenement) | with gate passage, plastered facade with bay window, stucco reliefs in the entrance area, apartment doors with overhangs, of architectural significance |
09297858 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Prießnitzstrasse 28 (map) |
1914 (tenement) | Plastered facade with box oriel, stucco reliefs and terrazzo in the entrance area, apartment doors with overhangs, important from an architectural point of view |
09297859 |
|
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Apartment building in closed development | Prießnitzstrasse 32 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with shop, historicizing clinker brick facade, historically important |
09292017 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Prießnitzstrasse 34 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | with gate passage, formerly with a shop, clinker brick facade, Prussian caps in the gate passage and stencil painting, staircase window with remains of etched glazing, of architectural significance |
09297862 |
Apartment building in closed development | Prießnitzstrasse 36 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | with gate passage, formerly with shop, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09292018 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Prießnitzstrasse 38 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | with house passage, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09297864 |
|
Apartment building in half-open development | Prießnitzstrasse 40 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, wall and ceiling stucco in the entrance area, of architectural significance |
09292019 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Prießnitzstrasse 42 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | A variedly structured clinker-plaster facade, wall and ceiling stucco in the entrance area and painting, of importance in terms of building history |
09292020 |
|
Apartment building in half-open development | Prießnitzstrasse 44 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, stucco valley in the entrance area, of importance in terms of building history |
09297865 |
|
Apartment building in half-open development | Pufendorfstrasse 1 (map) |
1898 (tenement) | Plastered facade, important in terms of building history
Two richly decorated and strongly structured side elevations and a representative ground floor were intended to structure the Wilhelminian style apartment building designed by architect Erhardt K. in 1898. Unfortunately, only a very reduced facade decoration was carried out without the risalit formation. Initially, the client was Emil Geilhufe, later the master painters Raulf & Ehlers. 1904 Acquisition of the property by the bricklayer Emil Richard Klein after a foreclosure auction. A building advertisement from April 26, 1939 reports on "external plastering and painting work on the front" on behalf of Mr. A. Görlitz from Miltitz. The executing company was builder Karl Skuhr's construction business. The simple plaster facade with artificial stone structures, especially in the first two upper floors. The interior has been fully furnished including the stairwell painting. Refurbishment planned in 2010. LfD / 2009 |
09302868 |
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Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner | Pufendorfstrasse 3 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, corner accentuation, stucco valley and vestibule door in the entrance area, of importance in terms of building history |
09292021 |
|
|
Apartment building in closed development and in a corner | Pufendorfstrasse 4 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, painting in the stairwell, wall and ceiling stucco in the entrance area, of importance in terms of building history |
09292022 |
Apartment building in closed development | Pufendorfstrasse 5 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | with house passage, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09292023 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Pufendorfstrasse 6 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | with gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09292024 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Pufendorfstrasse 8 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with gate passage, clinker brick facade, stairwell window with remains of etched glazing, historically important |
09292025 |
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Apartment building in closed development | Pufendorfstrasse 10 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, stairwell windows with remains of etched glazing, wooden panels, wall and ceiling stucco with painting in the entrance area, of architectural significance |
09292026 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Pufendorfstrasse 12 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, wooden panels and stucco structure in the entrance area, important in terms of building history |
09292027 |
|
|
Transformer house | Rathenaustraße (map) |
marked 1910 (transformer station) | on the area of the road extension from Rathenaustraße to Blüthnerstraße, plastered facade with slate roof and copper hood, of importance in terms of building history and technology history |
09291975 |
More pictures |
Apartment building in open development and front garden | Rathenaustraße 1 (map) |
1889 (tenement house) | Formerly with two shops, historicizing clinker brick facade, historically important |
09292028 |
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Rental villa, with enclosure and front garden | Rathenaustraße 6 (map) |
around 1890 (rental villa) | historicizing clinker brick facade, of architectural significance |
09292029 |
Villa with villa garden (with grotto and pond) as well as enclosure with gate | Rathenaustraße 8 (map) |
1896–1897 (villa) | historic clinker brick facade, of local and architectural importance |
09292030 |
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Residential house in open development, with enclosure | Rathenaustraße 11 (map) |
marked 1927 (residential building) | Typical plaster facade of the time, of architectural significance |
09292031 |
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More pictures |
Villa with front garden, enclosure, garden and garden pavilion | Rathenaustraße 14 (map) |
1899 (villa) | historicizing plastered facade, vestibule door, staircase around 1925, historically important |
09292032 |
Villa, with front garden and enclosure | Rathenaustraße 15 (map) |
1887 (villa) | Clinker brick facade with rafter gable, echoes of the Swiss style, important from an architectural point of view |
09292033 |
|
Villa, with front garden and fence (fence also at Rathenaustraße 15b and Laurentiusstraße 2a) with three gates and gate entrance | Rathenaustraße 15c (map) |
1926 (villa) | Elaborate plastered façade typical of the time, magnificent staircase with original furnishings, lead-glazed staircase windows, of architectural significance |
09291978 |
|
|
Villa, with garden and enclosure | Rathenaustraße 15d (map) |
1923–1925 (villa) | Elaborate plastered facade typical of the time, lead-glazed staircase windows, architect: Georg Staufert, of importance in terms of building history |
09291979 |
More pictures |
Villa, with villa garden, pavilion and gazebo and gate | Rathenaustraße 17a (map) |
1909–1911 (villa), 1907 (gazebo) | Picturesque rendered building, in the reform and Heimat style of the time around 1910, large landscaped gardens with pond, see also the former garden house at Karl-Schurz-Straße 4, named after the first owner of the property, the general practitioner Dr. med. Ludwig Hahn, of importance in terms of local history, garden design and architectural history |
09292034 |
More pictures |
Villa with garden and enclosure | Rathenaustraße 19 (map) |
1893 (villa) | Clinker brick facade with half-timbered elements, terrace at the rear, of local and architectural importance
Description of the monument (Landschaftsarchitekturbüro Franz, December 5, 2012) Villa garden in the landscape style with curved paths, but these have been comprehensively renewed and very probably no longer in the original course, some valuable old trees, large hexagonal wooden pavilion in the northwest corner of the garden (possibly relocated ), parking spaces in the front garden area, newer tool shed on the southern border of the garden. The garden was probably once part of a large landscaped garden, which also included the properties at Rathenaustraße 17a (Villa Hahn) with Karl-Schurz-Str. 4 as well as Rathenaustraße 23 and 23 a (presumably owned by the X-ray doctor Dr. Hahn). Vegetation numerous old trees, particularly noteworthy an old copper beech and an old scarlet oak (Quercus coccinea), in addition maple, linden, black pine, yew, rhododendron small architecture, open, hexagonal pavilion, wooden construction, roof covered in copper, external stairs made of Wood, four inclines, a surrounding bench and a central, also hexagonal table, both made of wood, floor: wooden planks. Pavilion possibly relocated Enclosure: Fence system with three gates, clinker posts and wrought iron fence panels, everything renewed Impairments: comprehensive renewal, thereby reshaping the historical substance, use of unsuitable materials (concrete paving, plastic honeycomb, plastic path borders) |
09292035 |
Residential house in open development, with enclosure and front garden | Rathenaustraße 19a (map) |
marked 1937–1938 (residential building) | Typical plastered facade of the time, lead-glazed staircase windows, in the same construction at Philipp-Reis-Straße 1, historically important |
09292036 |
|
|
Villa (Rathenaustraße 21) with fencing and garden as well as remise building (Philipp-Reis-Straße 12) | Rathenaustraße 21 (map) |
1892 (villa) | Plastered building with tower, echoes of the Swiss style, significant in terms of building history |
09292037 |
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Villa with villa garden (with pond), pavilion and enclosure with gate system | Rathenaustraße 22 (map) |
1895–1896 (villa), 1896 (enclosure) | representative clinker brick facade with half-timbered elements, lead-glazed staircase windows, terrace at the back, named after the general director Max Körting, co-owner of the arc lamp factory Körting & Mathiesen, of local and architectural importance |
09291980 |
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Villa (address: Rathenaustraße 23), enclosure with gate system, villa garden and ancillary building (address: Philipp-Reis-Straße 10) | Rathenaustraße 23 (map) |
1896 (villa) | Villa a multi-part structure, clinker brick facade with half-timbered elements, lead-glazed stairwell windows, rear terrace, outbuilding for servants' house and coach house, villa built for the manufacturer Max Gräbner, later the home of the Leipzig mayor and anti-fascist resistance fighter Carl Goerdeler (1884–1945), historically important |
09292038 |
More pictures |
Tram depot | Rathenaustraße 23a (map) |
1907–1908 (tram depot) | Former tram station of the great Leipzig tram, two reinforced concrete car halls with five tracks each, clinker brick facades, of local and architectural importance |
09292041 |
More pictures |
Official residence in open development, with front garden | Rathenaustraße 23a (map) |
1907–1908 (official residence) | Official residence of the great Leipzig tram, located directly at the tram station, clinker brick facade, of local and architectural importance |
09292039 |
Pavilion in the rear of the property, with garden | Rathenaustraße 23a (map) |
1884 (garden pavilion) | Elaborately designed wooden pavilion, built on behalf of the owner, the practicing doctor Dr. med. Oskar Hahn, important in terms of local history
On Neuer Communications-Weg, on behalf of the owner of a larger property in Leutz, the practicing doctor Dr. med. Oskar Hahn, a two-story garden house designed by architect Hans Engel (or Enger), who also referred to himself as the construction manager. Between April and July of 1884, a massive basement made of quarry stone masonry was built for the storage of garden tools, on which a wooden construction with exposed intermediate fields was implemented. A wide-spanned slate roof protects the extremely picturesque building from the weather, the entrance is framed by wooden pillars, and turned supports lead over to the protruding roof. A staircase leads to the side of the terrace in front. The pavilion building was located in the middle of a spacious park area between Villa Max Gräbner (later Karl Goerdeler's home) and the Leutzscher tram station of the great Leipzig tram. Between 1885 and 1886 a lookout tower and water basin were built in the castle style, which unfortunately has not been preserved. Reference should be made to the originally extensive Hahnsche property area, today including Rathenaustraße 17a (Villa Hahn) and Karl-Schurz-Straße 4. LfD / 2009 |
09302522 |
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Memorial stone for the victims of the imperialist wars | Rathenaustraße 23a (near) (map) |
1949 (memorial stone) | Granite boulder with inscription, historical value and memorial value |
09292040 |
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More pictures |
Rental villa, with front garden and enclosure | Rathenaustraße 28 (map) |
1892–1895 (villa) | historicizing plastered facade, named after the book printer's owner Hermann Schlag, of architectural significance |
09292044 |
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Rental villa, with front garden and enclosure | Rathenaustraße 30 (map) |
before 1890 (rental villa) | historicizing plastered facade with sandstone structure, verandas, historically important |
09291976 |
More pictures |
Rental villa, with front garden and enclosure | Rathenaustraße 32 (map) |
1893–1894 (rental villa) | Clinker brick facade, winter garden, of architectural significance |
09291977 |
|
Villa with villa garden and enclosure | Rathenaustraße 34 (map) |
1901–1902 (villa) | important Art Nouveau villa, plastered facade, lead-glazed staircase windows, architect: Paul Möbius, named after the owner, painter Max Loose, of local, art-historical and architectural significance |
09292048 |
Villa, with enclosure and garden | Rathenaustraße 36 (map) |
around 1895 (villa) | Clinker brick facade, outside staircase and veranda to the garden, named after the Hörügel family of manufacturers, owners of a harmonium factory, of local and architectural importance |
09292042 |
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More pictures |
Former villa, now a courthouse, with villa garden, outbuildings and fencing | Rathenaustraße 40 (map) |
inscribed 1897 (villa) | representative building with tower, in the style of historicism, plastered facade with rich porphyry structure, staircase window with slug glazing, porch door, hallway with wooden fittings, auxiliary building for servants, villa once owned by the Thorer family of tobacco shops (probably built for Curt Thorer), local history, art history and architectural history significant |
09292100 |
|
Rental villa, with front yard and garden | Rathenaustraße 42 (map) |
around 1900 (rental villa) | Plastered facade with half-timbered gables, staircase windows with remains of colored lead glazing, remains of a cave garden from the 1930s, of architectural significance |
09292101 |
More pictures |
Double villa, with plastic in the garden, front yard and enclosure | Rathenaustraße 44; 46 (card) |
1890-1892 (villa) | Clinker brick facade, plastered areas over the windows with painting, lead-glazed staircase windows, plastic in the garden, access number 44 on Otto-Schmiedt-Straße, of local and architectural significance |
09292102 |
More pictures |
Villa, with garden and enclosure | Rathenaustraße 50 (map) |
around 1900 (villa) | Historicizing clinker brick facade with tower, rear terrace, porch door around 1910, marble floor and wall cladding in the entrance area, etched and leaded glass windows, of local and architectural importance |
09292103 |
|
Villa (formerly an excursion restaurant) with outbuilding, garden and enclosure | Rathenaustraße 54 (map) |
around 1890 (villa) | Wilhelminian-style clinker brick facade with staircase tower, wooden coffered ceilings inside, of architectural and local significance |
09292104 |
Apartment building in closed development and in a corner | Rückmarsdorfer Strasse 1 (map) |
around 1910 (tenement) | with shops, plastered facade with bay windows, wall and ceiling stucco in the entrance area, striking location opposite the Leutzsch town hall, of importance in terms of urban planning and building history |
09292107 |
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Half-open apartment building and courtyard building | Rückmarsdorfer Strasse 7 (map) |
1908–1910 (tenement house) | Front building with gate passage, plastered facade with half-timbered gable, natural stone and brick structure, rear terrace, wall and ceiling stucco in the entrance area, of architectural significance |
09292110 |
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Apartment building in half-open development | Rückmarsdorfer Strasse 8 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09292111 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Rückmarsdorfer Strasse 10 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09292113 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Rückmarsdorfer Strasse 12 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09292114 |
|
More pictures |
Individual monuments of the whole Leutzsch cemetery (Obj. 09304455, same address): cemetery chapel (with a funeral hall), entrance building and enclosure with cemetery gate, memorial for those who fell in both world wars, fountains and tombs | Rückmarsdorfer Strasse 13 (map) |
around 1905 (cemetery chapel), around 1905 (mortuary) | of importance in terms of local history and building history |
09296913 |
More pictures |
Totality of Leutzsch cemetery, with the following individual monuments: cemetery chapel, entrance building and enclosure with cemetery gate, memorial stone for the construction of the water pipe, war memorial for those who fell in both World Wars, fountains and gravestones (Obj. 09296913, same address) as well as the horticultural cemetery design | Rückmarsdorfer Strasse 13 (map) |
from 1905 (cemetery) | of importance in terms of local history and building history |
09304455 |
Apartment building in closed development | Rückmarsdorfer Strasse 14 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09292115 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Rückmarsdorfer Strasse 16 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09292116 |
|
Factory building | Rückmarsdorfer Strasse 18 (map) |
around 1900 (factory building) | Clinker brick facade, the last remaining building of a formerly extensive factory site of an iron foundry, of architectural, technical and local significance |
09292117 |
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Apartment building in closed development and in a corner | Rückmarsdorfer Strasse 20 (map) |
around 1910 (tenement) | Plastered facade, formerly with old advertising, wooden panels and rich stucco in the entrance area, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history |
09292118 |
|
Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner location, with front garden, enclosure and gate entrance to the courtyard | Sattelhofstrasse 1 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | with corner shutter, clinker-plaster facade, important in terms of building history |
09292120 |
|
Apartment building in open development, with front garden | Sattelhofstrasse 3 (map) |
around 1910 (tenement) | historicizing plastered facade, lead-glazed staircase windows, wall and ceiling stucco in the entrance area, of architectural significance |
09292122 |
|
|
Double apartment building in open development, with front garden | Sattelhofstrasse 4; 6 (card) |
around 1905 (double tenement house) | Plastered facade, with half-timbered gables, number 6 lead-glazed staircase windows, of architectural significance |
09292124 |
Apartment house in open development, with enclosure and front garden | Sattelhofstrasse 5 (map) |
1910 (tenement) | Plastered facade, wooden panels in the entrance area, embossed wallpaper as well as wall and ceiling stucco, of importance in terms of building history |
09292123 |
|
Multi-family houses in a residential complex, with front gardens | Sattelhofstrasse 7; 9; 11; 13 (card) |
around 1925 (apartment building) | Plastered facade with brick structure, lead-glazed staircase windows, see also Benediktusstraße 8 and Wohlgemuthstraße 8, of importance in terms of building history |
09292126 |
|
Double tenement house (with Benediktusstrasse 5) in open development and in a corner, with front garden | Sattelhofstrasse 8 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | Plastered facade with corner accentuation, etched staircase windows, of importance in terms of building history |
09292125 |
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More pictures |
Row of houses in open development, with front garden | Sattelhofstrasse 15; 17; 19; 21 (card) |
1937 (block of flats) | Elaborately designed plastered façade typical of the time, see also Sattelhofstrasse 18–24, of architectural significance |
09298654 |
More pictures |
Row of houses in open development, with front garden | Sattelhofstrasse 18; 20; 22; 24 (card) |
marked 1938 (block of flats) | Elaborately designed plastered facade typical of the time, see also Sattelhofstrasse 15-21, of architectural significance |
09292128 |
Double apartment building in half-open development and in a corner, with a front garden | Sattelhofstrasse 23; 25 (card) |
around 1930 (double tenement house) | Plastered facade, front doors with ground panes, lead-glazed staircase windows, of importance in terms of building history |
09297844 |
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Double tenement house in closed development, with front garden | Sattelhofstrasse 27; 29 (card) |
around 1930 (double tenement house) | Plastered facade, stairwell windows with original glazing, front doors with polished panes, of importance in terms of building history |
09297843 |
|
Apartment building in closed development with a front garden | Sattelhofstrasse 31 (map) |
around 1930 (tenement) | colored plastered facade, front door with polished panes, of architectural significance |
09297842 |
|
Row of houses in semi-open development and in corner location, with front garden | Sattelhofstrasse 37; 39; 41; 43 (map) |
around 1935 (apartment block) | Typical plaster facade with balconies, historically important |
09297841 |
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Villa, with villa garden, garden house, pavilion and two sculptures | Schützstrasse 2 (map) |
1925 (villa) | Villa with reddish plaster facade, stucco and porch door in the entrance area, lead-glazed staircase windows, rich interior, in the traditionalist style of the 1920s, named after the factory owner Curt Wiese, of local and architectural significance |
09292093 |
|
Residential house in open development, with garden pavilion and front garden | Schützstrasse 4 (map) |
around 1935 (residential building) | Plastered facade with economical clinker brick structure, lead-glazed staircase windows, important from an architectural point of view |
09292091 |
|
Residential house in open development, with front garden and fence | Schützstrasse 5 (map) |
around 1935 (residential building) | Typical plastered facade, terrace, partly lead-glazed windows, of architectural significance |
09292094 |
|
Villa, with a front garden | Schützstrasse 9 (map) |
1909 (villa) | simple plastered facade, artist residence, former residence and work place of the Berlin sculptor Georg Muth, the villa is part of the high quality Leutzsch villa district, documentation value, personal history and architectural history of importance
In 1909, sculptor Georg Muth from Berlin commissioned the architect Hermann Knaus to design a villa with a sculptor's studio in what was then Schützstrasse 5, which was carried out in the same year. From June 1921 the property was taken over by the Ohanian brothers, tobacco goods and commission business (Brühl 69) from Walther Dalchow. Conversion into a two-family house in 1934 by the architect Jos. Hesse and the construction business Albert and Richard Berg from Böhlitz-Ehrenberg on behalf of Mrs. Sirwart. Ohanian born Denkme'd-Karnignian. 1941 Willy Münch is named as the owner. Preservation and repair work probably in 1988/1989. The small, picturesque residential building with a structured plastered facade and a moving roof landscape is part of the high quality Leutzsch villa district and a testament to the transition from Art Nouveau to the so-called reform style architecture. Numerous original details have been preserved, including the windows and inside the house stairs and wood paneling in the hallway. Unfortunately, the only half-timbered studio with a high two-winged gate has not been overlooked. LfD / 2007 |
09292092 |
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Villa with villa garden, fencing with gate entrance and gate, as well as a coach house with an archway connection to the villa | Schützstrasse 11 (map) |
1901–1902 (villa), 1901–1902 (coach house) | varied plastered facade with half-timbered elements, named after regional court director Dr. Otto Stohwasser, important in terms of building history
On July 9, 1901, District Court Director Dr. jur. Otto Stohwasser submitted the building application for a villa with an outbuilding, for which the renowned architects Schmidt & Johlige from Leipzig contributed designs. The same took over the execution of the country house on the corner property, for stone setting the construction business Klingler & Schröter is named. The building revision protocol for the final acceptance is dated March 26, 1902. From 1918, electrical light in the house was available from the Leipzig-Land electricity company, and in 1932 the property is mentioned as owned by the engineer and factory owner Oskar Liebner. The elegant Art Nouveau building has a plastered façade and flirts with a multi-part roof and façade design that is fabulous. Despite the loss of some decorative elements, the sophisticated architecture is recognizable and the spaciousness of the interior can be seen. A living room with a veranda, a ladies' room, a man's room with a library and the son's room were designed on the upper floor, five bedrooms and a bathroom with toilet under the roof, the kitchen and dining room, sideboard and people's room were on the ground floor. The buildings were embedded in a remarkable garden, surrounded by fencing typical of the time. For the representative property with two buildings built around the turn of the century, the connecting arched arcade as well as the fence and the garden, there is an architectural and personal historical value, as well as a relevance to the history of local development. LfD / 2014, 2016 |
09292084 |
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Apartment building in half-open development | Schwylststrasse 1 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | historicizing plastered facade, of architectural significance |
09297823 |
|
Apartment building in half-open development | Schwylststrasse 2 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | bright clinker facade, with stucco and artificial stone integration, of architectural significance |
09292212 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Schwylststrasse 6 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, historically important |
09293214 |
|
Apartment building in closed development and in a corner | Schwylststrasse 8 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | historicizing clinker brick facade, of architectural significance |
09292211 |
|
Double house in open development, with front garden and with gate entrance at No. 2 | Silcherstrasse 2; 4 (card) |
1937 (block of flats) | plastered facade typical of the time, see also Sattelhofstrasse 18–24 and 15–21, of architectural significance |
09292129 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Weinbergstrasse 1 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, wall and ceiling stucco in the entrance area, of architectural significance |
09292130 |
|
Apartment building in closed development and in a corner | Weinbergstrasse 2 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with corner shutter and doorway, clinker brick facade, staircase window with remnants of etched glazing, doorway with Art Deco painting, important from an architectural point of view |
09292131 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Weinbergstrasse 3 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | with gate passage, two-tone clinker brick facade, historically important |
09292132 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Weinbergstrasse 4 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, stucco valley in the entrance area, wall tiles from around 1910, of architectural significance |
09292133 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Weinbergstrasse 5 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | with house passage, historicizing clinker brick facade, historically important |
09292134 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Weinbergstrasse 6 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | with house passage and with shop, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09292135 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Weinbergstrasse 7 (map) |
around 1885 (tenement) | with gate passage, plastered clinker facade, of architectural significance |
09297850 |
|
Apartment building in closed development, with courtyard paving, outbuildings and workshop building in the courtyard | Weinbergstrasse 8 (map) |
1898–1900 (tenement), 1898–1900, bakery (workshop), 1925–1926 (outbuilding) | Front building with gate passage, clinker brick facade typical of the time, as a residential and commercial property of architectural significance
In October 1898, the Lindenau-based architect Carl Fischer submitted plans for appraisal for a tenement house to be built and an outbuilding with a bakery and horse stable in the courtyard. He himself is mentioned as an entrepreneur, as is Mr. Julius Turk. After various changes to the plan, the project was implemented by February 1900. Later, master carpenter Fritz Kronberg worked on the property and initiated an expansion of his workshop between 1925 and 1926 by the architects Hermann Knaus and Fritz Schwarzburger. Architect Wolf Meerbach drew for the conversion of the shop into living space 1960–1961. A weak side projection above the gate of the passage accentuates the late historical facade. Above the plastered ground floor there are three floors with red clinker facing, the roofing of which sets strong accents, and the eaves have a toothed frieze. All the doors in the house and the wooden staircase have been preserved from the furnishings. Refurbishment will probably begin in 2016. In the closed, preserved street, the building bears witness to the rapid expansion of the area around 1900 and has a historical value. LfD / 2015 |
09292136 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Weinbergstrasse 9 (map) |
around 1885 (tenement) | historicizing plastered facade, of architectural significance |
09297849 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Weinbergstrasse 10 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with house passage, clinker brick facade with flat bay window, of architectural significance |
09292137 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | Weinbergstrasse 12 (map) |
around 1895 (tenement) | with gate passage and formerly with shop, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09292138 |
|
Apartment block in open development, with front gardens and lateral fencing | Weinbergstrasse 13; 15; 17; 19 (card) |
1938 (block of flats) | Typical plaster facade of the 1930s, of architectural significance |
09292140 |
|
Multi-family houses in a residential complex, with front gardens | Weinbergstrasse 18; 20; 22 (card) |
1939–1940 (apartment building) | Typical plaster facade from the 1930s, etched staircase windows, see also Benediktusstraße 13, of architectural significance |
09292141 |
|
Memorial stone and historical gazebos as well as gates of an allotment garden | Weinbergstrasse 21 (near) (map) |
marked 1929–1930 (memorial stone) | Foundling memorial stone to commemorate the construction of the water pipeline 1929–1930, memorable value, document of the history of the district |
09292142 |
|
Double tenement house (Prießnitzstrasse 22 and William-Zipperer-Strasse 83) in closed development and in a corner | William-Zipperer-Strasse 83 (map) |
marked 1902 (double tenement house) | Historicizing plaster clinker facade, partly Art Nouveau decoration, corner accentuation, vestibule door, historically important |
09292202 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | William-Zipperer-Strasse 85 (map) |
1898–1902 (tenement house) | Clinker plaster facade, residential construction in a closed quarter, with architectural value
In June 1899, Karl Schiege received the building permit for a residential building that had been applied for in the previous year; the permission to use it was not granted until 1902. The design and execution can be attributed to the architect Emil Reiche. In March 1900 Franz Robert Stecher from Großwaltersdorf near Eppendorf took over the building contract and master bricklayer Wilhelm Friedrich the execution. Shortly before completion, Anna Auguste Caroline Böing bought the property under compulsory administration. In 1960, a new wash house was planned as part of the NAW (National Construction Work) (the laundry room was set up in the attic) and in 1969 the shop was converted into living space. Behind the formerly smoothed plaster and clinker facade with artificial stone incorporation, reduced in its stucco decoration, the technically solid furnishings have been preserved. The house in the closed preserved tenement quarter with architectural value. LfD / 2013, 2014 |
09304965 |
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More pictures |
Apartment building in closed development | William-Zipperer-Strasse 87 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with gate passage, probably formerly with shop, clinker brick facade, stucco structure in the gate passage, historically important |
09292201 |
More pictures |
Apartment building in closed development | William-Zipperer-Strasse 89 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, wall and ceiling stucco in the entrance area, of architectural significance |
09292200 |
More pictures |
Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner | William-Zipperer-Strasse 90 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | Formerly with corner shutter, plastered facade, wall and ceiling stucco in the entrance area, of importance in terms of building history |
09292154 |
Double apartment house in closed development and in a corner | William-Zipperer-Strasse 91a; 91b (card) |
around 1905 (double tenement house) | with gate passage, formerly with corner shutter, plastered facade typical of the time, of architectural significance |
09292199 |
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Apartment building in closed development | William-Zipperer-Strasse 92 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | Plastered facade in the geometrical Art Nouveau style, terrazzo in the entrance area, of architectural significance |
09292152 |
|
Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner | William-Zipperer-Strasse 93 (map) |
1880 & 1905 (tenement house) |
09292198 |
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Apartment building in closed development | William-Zipperer-Strasse 94 (map) |
1911 (tenement) | with gate passage, plastered facade, house overhead light, lead glazed with stained glass, reform style architecture, of architectural significance |
09292156 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | William-Zipperer-Strasse 96 (map) |
around 1905 (tenement) | Plastered facade in the geometrical Art Nouveau style, terrazzo and stucco structure in the entrance area, stairwell window with remains of colored lead glazing, house overhead light lead-glazed with stained glass, of architectural significance |
09292157 |
|
Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner | William-Zipperer-Strasse 98 (map) |
around 1910 (tenement) | Plastered facade with corner bay windows and two box cores, stucco and painting in the entrance area, house overhead light lead glazed with stained glass, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history |
09292155 |
|
Double tenement house (An der Lehde 9 and William-Zipperer-Straße 98a) in a semi-open development and in a corner location | William-Zipperer-Strasse 98a (map) |
marked 1939 (double tenement house) | Typical plaster facade of the time, colored glazed staircase windows, corner bay windows, of architectural significance |
09292159 |
|
Apartment building in a formerly closed development | William-Zipperer-Strasse 100 (map) |
1898 (tenement) | Typical plaster facade of the time, of architectural significance |
09292197 |
|
Three back buildings built together on a tenement property (tenement demolished in 2008) | William-Zipperer-Strasse 102a (map) |
1908 (workshop), 1908 (bakery), 1912 (coach house) | clinker buildings typical of the time, important in terms of building history and local development
1902–1903 was built in what was then Lindenauer Strasse 37 (later Theodor-Fritsch-Strasse 102), a tenement building with a gate passage and (bakery) shop as well as a wash house in the courtyard. Initially, the builder and contractor was probably master bricklayer Richard Leonhardt. In 1903, bricklayer and construction technician Max August Sauerteig was responsible for the back building with the bakery. Initially, Otto Petzold (bread and white bakery) worked here. At the foreclosure auction on August 30, 1904, master baker Hermann Robert Immisch from Leipzig-Gohlis acquired the property, which in 1912 had a car depot attached to the workshop building. Otto Petzold, however, continues to use the bakery, from 1913 building applications to enlarge the shop in the front building and modernize the bakery: installation of a journeyman's chamber with cloakroom and bathroom facilities as well as enlargement of the bakery. Already in September 1903 application was submitted to the Leutzsch municipal council for a connection of the property to the municipal water supply. The front apartment building with clinker brick facade above the grooved ground floor, emphasizing the first floor with more elaborate window frames. Two apartments per floor with a corridor, two rooms, a chamber, kitchen and AWC. A building application in 1996 for renovation and loft extension was not implemented. Severe structural damage as a result of neglect and demolition in 2008. Between 2004 and 2006, the bakery in the courtyard was converted into a remarkable residential and work house. The clinker brick building over an angular floor plan received a modern interior, including historical details (including iron stairs to the upper floor, white wall tiles, oven door). LfD / 2008 |
09292161 |
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Apartment building in a formerly closed development | William-Zipperer-Strasse 104 (map) |
1902–1904 (tenement house) | with gate passage, clinker brick facade, wooden panels in the gate passage, high-quality apartment doors, document of the district development, of architectural significance
The typical tenement house in a suburb of Leipzig was built with a passage and shop as well as a free-standing wash house and a courtyard building. Due to rapidly changing land owners, construction dragged on for three years. In June 1902, owner and executor Richard Leonhardt submitted the building application, the submitted plans were corrected in March 1903. In 1903 and 1904, the owner of the glazier Richard Huck and the glazier Lorenz Huck were named as entrepreneurs, before the merchant Adolph Alexander Pohle as owner of the timber business Max Pohle in Plagwitz acquired the property in a foreclosure auction. Installation of an attic apartment in 1927 by policeman Hermann Zschiesche and conversion of the shop for residential purposes 1933–1934 on the initiative of the same. The wooden verandas and very beautiful apartment entrance doors have been preserved. The yellow clinker brick facade structured by green facing bricks, plaster and molded stone parts. Courtyard building not a monument. LfD / 2010 |
09303255 |
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Apartment building in half-open development | William-Zipperer-Strasse 105 (map) |
around 1898 (tenement) | with gate passage, formerly with shop installation, historicizing clinker brick facade, stucco in the gate passage, stairwell window with remnants of etched glazing, of architectural significance |
09292162 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | William-Zipperer-Strasse 106 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, wall and ceiling stucco in the entrance area, of architectural significance |
09292165 |
|
Apartment building in semi-open development and in a corner | William-Zipperer-Strasse 107 (map) |
around 1885 (tenement) | formerly with shops, well-designed plastered façade typical of the time, significant in terms of building history |
09292195 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | William-Zipperer-Strasse 108 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, wooden cladding in the entrance area, staircase windows with remnants of etched glazing, of architectural significance |
09292164 |
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Apartment building in closed development and in a corner | William-Zipperer-Strasse 110 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with shops, clinker-plaster facade, wooden panels in the entrance area, of architectural significance |
09292163 |
|
Apartment building in closed development and in a corner | William-Zipperer-Strasse 112 (map) |
1902 (tenement) | probably formerly with a corner shutter, plastered facade with corner bay window, rich stairwell painting, of architectural significance |
09302164 |
|
Apartment building in a formerly closed development | William-Zipperer-Strasse 113 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with shops, clinker brick facade, vestibule door, of architectural significance |
09292189 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | William-Zipperer-Strasse 114 (map) |
marked 1902 (tenement house) | Formerly with shop fitting, historicizing clinker brick facade, terrazzo as well as wall and ceiling stucco in the entrance area, staircase window with remnants of colored lead glazing, of architectural significance |
09292166 |
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Apartment building in closed development | William-Zipperer-Strasse 115 (map) |
1908 (tenement) | with gate passage and historical advertising lettering above the gate, plastered facade typical of the time with a flat bay window, painting in the gate passage and in the stairwell, tiles in front of the courtyard door, of architectural significance |
09292190 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | William-Zipperer-Strasse 116 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with gate passage, Art Nouveau plastered facade, painting in the gate passage, staircase window around 1930, of architectural significance |
09292169 |
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Apartment building in closed development | William-Zipperer-Strasse 118 (map) |
1902 (tenement) | with gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09292168 |
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Apartment building in closed development and workshop building in the courtyard | William-Zipperer-Strasse 119 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | Front building with gate passage, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09292192 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | William-Zipperer-Strasse 120 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | in the curved axis of the street layout, historicizing plastered facade, of architectural significance |
09292171 |
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Apartment building in closed development and in a corner | William-Zipperer-Strasse 120a (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | with corner shutters, clinker brick facade, corner accentuation by balconies, of architectural significance |
09292170 |
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Apartment building in half-open development | William-Zipperer-Strasse 120b (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, historically important |
09292172 |
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Residential house in open development, with garden and cable car | William-Zipperer-Strasse 120c (map) |
around 1760/1780 (residential building) | Main building half-timbered plastered, cable railway 130 meters long, the longest cable railway in Leipzig, of local and architectural importance |
09292173 |
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Apartment building in half-open development | William-Zipperer-Strasse 120e (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | Clinker brick facade, stucco valley in the entrance area, vestibule door and staircase window with etched glazing, of architectural significance |
09292174 |
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Apartment building in a formerly closed development and in a corner location | William-Zipperer-Strasse 120f (map) |
marked 1901 (tenement house) | with gate passage, formerly corner store, clinker brick facade with corner accentuation, stencil painting in the stairwell, lead-glazed stairwell windows, of historical importance |
09292175 |
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Apartment building in half-open development | William-Zipperer-Strasse 123 (map) |
1912 (tenement) | with gate passage, facade with plaster and artificial stone integration, wall and ceiling stucco and stucco reliefs in the entrance area, stairwell window with remnants of colored lead glazing, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history |
09292193 |
|
Double tenement house (No. 124 / 124a) in a semi-open development, with a front garden and workshop building (No. 124b) in the courtyard | William-Zipperer-Strasse 124; 124a; 124b (card) |
1940 (double tenement house), around 1900 (workshop) | Front building typical of the time, plastered facade, bay window with leaded glass windows, etched staircase windows, of architectural significance |
09292176 |
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Apartment building in closed development | William-Zipperer-Strasse 125 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | with house passage and shop, historicizing plastered facade, historically important |
09292185 |
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Apartment building in closed development, with front garden and garden pavilion in the courtyard | William-Zipperer-Strasse 126 (map) |
around 1900 (tenement) | Front building with gate passage, representative clinker brick facade, old paving and painting in the gate passage, stairwell window with remnants of etched glazing, of architectural significance |
09292177 |
|
Apartment building in closed development | William-Zipperer-Strasse 127 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | historicizing plastered facade, of architectural significance |
09292186 |
|
|
Apartment building in closed development and in a corner | William-Zipperer-Strasse 129 (map) |
1902 (tenement) | Formerly with a corner store, clinker brick facade, stucco valley in the entrance area, etched staircase windows, of significance in terms of building history |
09292187 |
|
Apartment building in half-open development | William-Zipperer-Strasse 131 (map) |
1902 (tenement) | with a house passage, with a shop, clinker brick facade, historically important |
09292188 |
Apartment building in a formerly closed development | William-Zipperer-Strasse 134 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | with gate passage, formerly with shop, historicizing plastered facade, historically important |
09292180 |
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More pictures |
Apartment building in half-open development | William-Zipperer-Strasse 136 (map) |
around 1890 (tenement) | with passage through the house, historicizing plastered facade, rich painting, wall tiles around 1910, stucco ceiling, historically important |
09292179 |
|
Residential house, side building and gate (with gate) of a farm as well as inscription plaque | William-Zipperer-Strasse 138 (map) |
marked 1862, in the core probably older (farmhouse) | Half-timbered house on the upper floor, homestead in the old village center opposite the Leutzsch church, of importance in terms of local development |
09292225 |
Barn and attached side building of a farm | William-Zipperer-Strasse 144 (map) |
re. 1858 (barn) |
09292226 |
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Church (with furnishings), churchyard with enclosure, churchyard gate and paving, memorial stone on the Lutherlinde and gravestones | William-Zipperer-Strasse 147 (map) |
before 1397 (church), 1497 (church), 1688–1689 (church), early 16th century (figures in the shrine), 1933 (altarpiece) | The core of the Romanesque choir tower church, remodeled in Baroque style, neo-Gothic choir extension from 1890, of importance in terms of building history, the history of the town and its character |
09292228 |
Parish hall with side enclosure and Kaiser Wilhelm memorial stone in the rectory | William-Zipperer-Strasse 149 (map) |
around 1910 (parish hall), 1913 (memorial stone) | Plastered facade, terrazzo in the entrance area, building with community hall and parsonage, reform style architecture, of local and architectural significance |
09292230 |
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Former rectory, now kindergarten | William-Zipperer-Strasse 149 (map) |
around 1850 (rectory) | Plastered facade, porch door, wooden panels, of local importance |
09292229 |
|
Parish barn | William-Zipperer-Strasse 149 (map) |
around 1750 (barn) | Half-timbered building with plastered partitions and a crooked hip roof, of architectural significance |
09292227 |
|
House, barn and gate of a farm | William-Zipperer-Strasse 151 (map) |
marked 1859 (farmhouse) | Plastered facade, of importance in terms of local development |
09292231 |
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Residential house in semi-open development | William-Zipperer-Strasse 154 (map) |
around 1890 (residential building) | with gate passage and shop, historicizing clinker brick facade, vestibule door, original shop front, of architectural importance |
09292233 |
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Residential house in open development, with lateral fencing | William-Zipperer-Strasse 159 (map) |
around 1890 (residential building) | Clearly structured clinker brick facade, front door with lead-glazed skylight, important from an architectural point of view |
09292235 |
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Multi-family house in a residential complex, with a front garden | Wohlgemuthstrasse 8 (map) |
around 1925 (apartment building) | Plastered facade with brick structure, see also Sattelhofstrasse 7-13 and Benediktusstrasse 8, of importance in terms of building history |
09292265 |
|
Multi-family house in a residential complex, with a front garden | Wohlgemuthstrasse 14 (map) |
1931 (tenement) | Typical plaster facade of the time, see also Hans-Driesch-Straße 45–51 and Benediktusstraße 2, of architectural significance |
09292269 |
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More pictures |
Villa with villa garden and enclosure as well as garden pavilion from the property at Hans-Driesch-Straße 18 | To Harfenacker 2 (map) |
inscribed 1902 (villa) | Plastered facade with sandstone structure, corner bay window and balcony, gable with ornamental framework, terrace facing the garden, lead glass window, named after the factory owner Arthur Herrmann, of local and architectural importance |
09292060 |
Villa with front garden and enclosure | To Harfenacker 4 (map) |
1906 (villa) | Plastered facade, marble fittings in the entrance area, porch door, terrace and winter garden, hall with open staircase, stucco ceiling, reform style architecture, named after engineer and manufacturer Gustav Kleim (1864–1927), co-owner of the Kleim & Ungerer machine factory, formerly the studio of the painter Prof. Bernhard Heisig (1925–2011), of local and architectural importance |
09292069 |
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Studio house in open development, with front yard and enclosure | To Harfenacker 6 (map) |
1975–1980 (studio), 1975–1980 (front garden) | Clinker brick building with flat roof, in the style of modernism, studio building of the painter Prof. Bernhard Heisig (1925–2011), of personal and architectural importance, rarity
The new construction of the studio and residential building applied for in autumn 1975, designed by the Marr / Sieg collective and commissioned by the City Council of Leipzig, Culture Department, can be said to be unique for the GDR's construction industry. The test report dates from May 1976, the execution extended over the years 1977 to 1979. Dipl.-Ing. H. Jung, the practical implementation was carried out by KBR Leipzig [Kombinat Baureparaturen Leipzig]. Remaining and renovation work was carried out by September 1982 according to the specifications of Werner Judersleben and practical implementation by the HAG City of Leipzig. Prof. Bernhard Heisig moved in as the main tenant. The painter and graphic artist, born in Breslau in 1925, worked temporarily as a freelancer and as a teacher and professor at the University of Graphics and Book Art in Leipzig. In 1987 he received an honorary doctorate from the Karl Marx University. As an artist and teacher, Bernhard Heisig is one of the most important representatives and protagonists of the Leipzig School. The building, which is reminiscent of the style of an antique perystyle house, was arranged around a green inner courtyard, a 100-square-meter studio with a front completely dissolved into windows facing the street, a work hall about half the size, and a living and study room measuring almost 73 square meters in addition to a material store measuring seven meters square. All bricked outer walls consist of aerated concrete with clinker brickwork, the house has a partial basement, the garden plans date from 1982.Before the development, the property was used as garden land and was formerly owned by factory owner Gustav Kleim, who was responsible for the fencing in 1922 by architect Hermann Knaus. The Bernhard Heisig residential and studio house has a rarity, an architectural and artistic value, it is one of the most important private residential buildings in the GDR. LfD / 2017, 2019 |
09292063 |
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Residential house in open development, with front garden and fence | To Harfenacker 7 (map) |
1935 (residential building) | Typical plaster facade of the time, of architectural significance |
09292061 |
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More pictures |
Villa with villa garden and enclosure (also in front of No. 8a) | To Harfenacker 8 (map) |
1905 (villa) | representative plastered facade, terrace to the garden, inside embossed wallpaper and stencil painting, original post box on the house, garden with pond, bridge, waterfall and bath house (the former coach house - see Mathiesenstraße 8), named after the councilor Dr.-Ing. eh Wilhelm Mathiesen, co-owner of the Körting & Mathiesen arc lamp factory, of local and architectural significance |
09292068 |
More pictures |
Villa with front garden | To Harfenacker 9 (map) |
around 1905 (villa) | Plastered facade with half-timbered elements, terrace and veranda facing the garden, inside embossed wallpaper and marble stairs, lead-glazed windows, named after businessman Richard Bochröder, of local and architectural importance |
09292062 |
Residential house in open development, with enclosure and front garden | To Harfenacker 11 (map) |
1934–1935 (residential building) | plastered facade typical of the time, accentuated entrance, of architectural significance
Authorized representative Robert Schumann had the single-family house built as a tax-exempt home in 1934/1935. At his side, the architect Arthur Naumann acted as planner, structural engineer and site manager, and Hugo Reichardt with his construction business as the executor. Schumann had acquired the 900 square meter property from the hand of the businessman Wilhelm Oskar Jürgens. At the same time, on April 18, 1935, the final test for the neighboring “Naumann houses” at Zum Harfenacker 13 (client Kurt Engeln), 15 (Walter Rupnow), 17 (Käte Hünemörder) took place. In 1987, work on modernization and repair was planned. The house was provided with rough plaster from Munich, got a tiled roof, next to the front door made of oak wood window frame windows according to the Wagner system and only a few narrow strips of plaster as decorative decoration. The back front opens generously to the garden, the street side has comparatively small windows. To the left of the house entrance with a small vestibule, a driveway leads to the garage in the basement, above which a single-storey corner bay window accentuates. The enclosure of the front garden, which was still original in 1993, shows iron bars facing the street between U-iron frames with stone pillars and the same base. Building historical value. LfD / 2017, 2019 |
09305604 |
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Residential house in open development, with front garden and fence | To Harfenacker 13 (map) |
around 1935 (residential building) | Typical plastered facade, lead-glazed staircase windows, front door with etched glazing, of architectural significance |
09292066 |
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Residential house in open development, with enclosure and front garden | To Harfenacker 15 (map) |
1934–1935 (residential building) | Typical plaster facade of the time, interestingly designed entrance, of architectural significance |
09305607 |
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Residential house in open development, with front garden and fence | To Harfenacker 17 (map) |
1938 (residential building) | Typical plastered facade, outside staircase, home of the politician and doctor Prof. Felix Boenheim (1890–1960), of importance in terms of building history and personal history |
09292064 |
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Residential house in open development, with front garden and fence | To Harfenacker 23 (map) |
1932 (residential building) | traditionalistic plastered facade, shutters, of architectural significance |
09292058 |
|
|
Residential house in open development, with front garden and fence | To Harfenacker 29 (map) |
around 1935 (residential building) | Typical plastered façade, gable partly boarded up, outside staircase and loggias to the garden, in the local style, of historical importance |
09292057 |
Residential house in open development, with front garden and fence | To Harfenacker 31 (map) |
around 1935 (residential building) | Plastered facade typical of the time, terrace and winter garden facing the garden, lead-glazed staircase windows, stylistically between traditionalism and modernity, important in terms of building history |
09292056 |
Former cultural monuments
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tenement house | Am Tanzplan 2 (map) |
re. 1865 (tenement house) | Tenement house in originally open development and the inscription "Erbauet JCRichter 1865" (plastered facade) |
09291893 |
|
Barn of a farm | Am Wasserschloß 6 (map) |
1820 (barn) | Half-timbered barn of a farm with clay and brick infills (field stone base) |
09291897 |
|
Block of flats | Benediktusstrasse 4; 6 (card) |
1931–1932 (apartment block) | Apartment block in semi-open development in the corner of Sattelhofstrasse with front gardens and fencing (see also: Sattelhofstrasse 10–16 and Wohlgemuthstrasse 10/12) |
09292266 |
|
|
Factory | Franz-Flemming-Strasse 13 (map) |
1910 (factory) | Factory with administration building and clinker buildings (administration building plastered facade) |
09291921 |
Probable location of a hand lever pump | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse (map) |
Probable location of a manual pump with a well shaft and cover plate at the corner of Bischofstrasse, in front of the head building opposite "Liebesplatz" |
09299208 |
||
Residential building | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 103 (map) |
around 1880 (residential building) | Residential house in originally open development (plastered facade) |
09292325 |
|
Secret Annex | Georg-Schwarz-Strasse 129 (map) |
1900–1901 (rear building); 1900–1901 (tenement house) | Rear building in closed development (demolition of the front building April 2007) |
09292287 |
|
Road extension with roundabout and trees | Hans-Driesch-Strasse (map) |
Road extension with roundabout and trees in the cutting axes (see also: William-Zipperer-Straße) |
09291988 |
||
Residential building | Rückmarsdorfer Strasse 3 (map) |
1875 (tenement house) | Residential building in a formerly open development with enclosure, former children's shelter from 1905 (plastered facade; wooden veranda 1910) |
09292108 |
|
Tenement house | Rückmarsdorfer Strasse 28 (map) |
around 1880 (tenement) | Apartment building in open development near the KGV closing time (plastered clinker facade) |
09297866 |
|
Residential building | Schützstrasse 1 (map) |
1931 (residential building) | Residential house in open development in the corner of Zum Harfenacker with front garden (plastered facade; terrace; paving) |
09292095 |
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