List of cultural monuments in Lindenthal (Leipzig)

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

Legend

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

List of cultural monuments in Lindenthal

image designation location Dating description ID
Deutsche Bahn AG;  Railway depot Leipzig-Wahren (formerly): Railway depot with two locomotive sheds and turntables, with two water towers, formerly two water cranes (since August 2007 in Bielefeld), administration building (also referred to as the actual railway depot), the locomotive control building, the heavy current maintenance facility (formerly a power station building) and the so-called Basa building
More pictures
Deutsche Bahn AG; Railway depot Leipzig-Wahren (formerly): Railway depot with two locomotive sheds and turntables, with two water towers, formerly two water cranes (since August 2007 in Bielefeld), administration building (also known as the actual railway depot), the locomotive management building, the heavy current maintenance facility (formerly a power station building) and the so-called Basa building (Map) 1905–1906 (railway operations facility), 1904 (water tower), 1916 (water tower) two water towers of the Barkhausen type, a traffic and technical history monument of outstanding importance, especially due to the unique water towers of this type in the Leipzig area 09257045
 
Apelstein No. 46 (V)
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Apelstein No. 46 (V) At the farriers
(map)
Copy 1938 (memorial stone), another copy in 1988 (memorial stone) near the Lindenthaler windmill, there today a copy from 1988, original stone at Torhaus Dölitz (Helenenstraße 24) in the Dölitz-Dosen district, memorial stone in memory of the battles of the Battle of Leipzig in 1813, marks the command post of General von Blücher on October 16, historically significant 09259152
 
Tower Dutchman
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Tower Dutchman At the farriers 11
(map)
1892 (mill), 1945 increase (mill) Windmill that shapes the landscape, tapering brick building with hood, technical monument, of architectural and local significance

The Lindenthal miller's post mill stood free-standing at the end of the narrow but long property for decades. On the side of the parcel facing the Chaussee from Leipzig to Landsberg, a residential house and a side building were to be built for the windmill owner Eduard Werner in 1870. F. Heintze from Gohlis is on record for the design and execution, the “way to the windmill” is given on the map for explanation. The buildings were renovated, expanded and extended several times. In addition, further farm buildings were built. The added stable or a barn with a cellar was arranged by windmill owner Karl Reimann in 1879, and another stable building by his successor Albert Barth in 1888. In 1892 he also applied for a "massive [mill] in place of the recently demolished Bock mill". Master mason B. Hüller (or Müller) was hired, but ME Reichardt signed it on his behalf. On October 19, officials came for a final tour of the Dutch mill. Modifications to the house in 1921 and 1932 as well as a barn extension in 1927/1928 were arranged by August Eschenhorn. In 1945 he commissioned Ernst Rennert to increase the size of the mill. The entire residential and commercial complex at the local entrance was demolished in January 2000 on behalf of Gabriele Eschenhorn. What has remained as a landmark that can be seen from afar is the windmill, which was renovated by the Reinhold family around 2012/2013. Carpentry Martin Wernicke from Kyhna received recognition from the Leipzig Chamber of Crafts for its work at the 2014 Monument Fair. LfD / 2014, 2015

09259179
 
Monument to Gustav Adolf of Sweden, with enclosure, surrounding open space and four trees
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Monument to Gustav Adolf of Sweden, with enclosure, surrounding open space and four trees Monument avenue
(map)
1831 (memorial stone) old location Breitenfeld, Gustav Adolf battle near Breitenfeld on September 17, 1631 , significant military and church historical monument, memorable value and importance for popular education 09259124
 
town hall
town hall Erich-Thiele-Strasse 2
(map)
1921–1922 (town hall) Typical plastered building with a clock tower, in a prominent urban location, of local and architectural significance 09259140
 
Individual monument belonging to the Lindenthal railway settlement (Obj. 09300244): multi-family houses in a residential complex Erich-Thiele-Strasse 4; 6; 8th; 10; 12; 14; 16; 18
(card)
1921–1922 (apartment building) Typical plaster facade of the time, preserved in a closed row of streets, of architectural and socio-historical importance 09259139
 
Material entirety of the Lindenthal railway settlement, consisting of tenement houses, double tenement houses and rows of tenement houses, with residential green (front gardens and laundry drying areas as well as other green areas) as an aggregate parts, children's home (Karl-Mannsfeld-Strasse 7) and formerly also a wash house in the Erich-Thiele-Strasse / Karl-Marx- Platz (see Erich-Thiele-Straße 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18 - Obj. 09259139, Erich-Thiele-Straße 20 - Obj. 09306902, Erich-Thiele-Straße 37, 39, 39a, 41, 43 - Obj. 09259200, Karl-Mannsfeld-Strasse 1, 2, 3, 5, 6 - Obj. 09259190, Karl-Mannsfeld-Strasse 7 - Obj. 09301593, Karl-Mannsfeld-Strasse 8, 9, 10, 11 , 12, 13 - Obj. 09259194, Karl-Marx-Platz 2 - Obj. 09259201, Karl-Marx-Platz 3 - Obj. 09259202, Lewienstraße 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12 - Obj. 09259199, Nagelstraße 1 - Obj. 09306903, Nagelstraße 3, 5, 7, 9 - Obj. 09306904, Pietschkestraße 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 17, 19 - Obj. 09259189, Pietschkestraße 2 - Obj. 09259185, Pietschkestrasse 4, 6 - Obj. 09259186, Pietschkestrasse 8, 10 - Obj. 09259187, Pietschkestraße 12, 14 - Obj. 09259188, Rosestraße 5, 7 - Obj. 09259182, Rosestraße 9 - Obj. 09306727, Rosestraße 11 - Obj. 09300237, Rosestraße 13, 15 - Obj. 09259197, Rosestraße 14, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24, 26 - Obj. 09259183, Rosestraße 17 - Obj. 09259198, Rudolf-Breitscheid-Straße 1, 3, 3a, 5, 7 - Obj. 09259203, Rudolf-Breitscheidstraße 6, 8 , 10, 12 - Obj. 09259181, Rudolf-Breitscheid-Straße 14, 16, 18, 20, 22 - Obj. 09259184, Weststraße 2 - Obj. 09259195, Weststraße 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14 - Obj. 09259196, Wilhelm-Pfennig-Strasse 60 - Obj. 09259191, Wilhelm-Pfennig-Strasse 61, 63, 65, 67, 69, 71, 73 - Obj. 09259193, Wilhelm-Pfennig-Strasse 62, 64, 66, 68, 70 , 72, 74 - Obj. 09259192) Erich-Thiele-Strasse 4; 6; 8th; 10; 12; 14; 16; 18; 20; 37; 39; 39a; 41; 43
(map)
1907–1934 (settlement) Settlement for railway officials of the freight yard in Leipzig-Wahren, of social historical importance, interesting urban ensemble 09300244
 
Residential house in open development and front garden Erich-Thiele-Strasse 5
(map)
around 1900 (residential building) with shop fitting, clinker brick facade, building that characterizes the street scene, of architectural significance 09259138
 
Individual monument belonging to the Lindenthal railway settlement (Obj. 09300244): apartment building in a residential complex Erich-Thiele-Strasse 20
(map)
1927–1928 (apartment building) Typical plaster facade of the time, preserved in a closed row of streets, of architectural and socio-historical importance 09306902
 
Individual monument belonging to the Lindenthal railway settlement (Obj. 09300244): row of tenement houses in a residential complex Erich-Thiele-Strasse 37; 39; 39a; 41; 43
(map)
1907–1909 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of the settlement complex of the railroad settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 09259200
 
School building and gym Gartenwinkel 30
(map)
1907–1909 (school) Plastered facade, entrance designed as a portal, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history and local history 09259176
 
Apartment building in open development with front garden Gartenwinkel 39
(map)
around 1910 (tenement) Plastered facade, side elevation with triangular gable, buildings with a character that characterizes the streetscape, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history 09259177
 
Villa with garden
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Villa with garden Gustav-Adolf-Allee 55
(map)
marked 1900 (villa) Plastered facade with brick structure, half-timbered bay and gable, stately villa, built for the factory director Robert Andrich, owner of the pyrotechnical factory Julius Kratze Nachsteiger in Lindenthal near Leipzig, of local and architectural importance 09259123
 
Villa with garden Gustav-Adolf-Allee 57
(map)
around 1900 (villa) Plastered facade, half-timbered gable, window frames made of sandstone, representative villa, part of the pyrotechnical factory Julius Kratze Successor in Lindenthal near Leipzig, of local and architectural importance 09259122
 
Individual monument belonging to the Lindenthal railway settlement (Obj. 09300244): row of tenement houses in a residential complex Karl-Mannsfeld-Strasse 1; 2; 3; 4; 5; 6
(card)
around 1920 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of the railway settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 09259190
 
Individual monument belonging to the Lindenthal railway settlement (Obj. 09300244): Children's home of the Lindenthal railway settlement Karl-Mannsfeld-Strasse 7
(map)
1930–1931 (kindergarten) Plastered facade, furnishings partially preserved, document of the building and social history, of value for local history and popular education

On July 16, 1930, the building cooperative for the railway officials and workers in Wahren eGmbH requested the approval authority “to add a children's home to the six-family houses built in 1919”. Such a building was planned as early as 1914, but never executed, and the kindergarten at Pitschkestrasse 2 no longer met the spatial and hygienic requirements. The project was implemented by master builder Arthur Weißbach based on plans by the Mitteldeutschland GmbH Halle / Saale settlement company (completed in August 1931). The project, estimated at 80,000 RM, was financed half by shares in the cooperative and a first-digit loan from the Reichsbahn-Arbeiterpensionskasse I Berlin. First of all, a two-storey building with access from the street and into the garden / playground area, including a stairwell, as well as two rooms and a kitchen on the upper floor, is attached to the group of residential buildings in what was then Weststrasse. On the ground floor hall and a relaxation room. The actual children's rooms are a remarkable hall building on the street corner - this is very generously lit through large, rectangular windows. Inside, a harmonica partition allows the room to be subdivided, which has an apse to the east that also has a creative effect on the outside. In the basement there were functional rooms (including heating) and eight bathtubs for the residents of the settlement. A terrace with a pergola or canopy as well as wide stairs was created towards the rear open space. Still vacant in 2006, later reopened as the “Kleine Sternchen” day-care center of the People's Solidarity, the equipment was largely preserved at the time it was recorded. The house is plastered over a clinker base, the street-side entrance door is highlighted by a frame made of red cast concrete. The building on the corner of Wilhelm-Pfennig-Straße not only shows the successful implementation of the task at hand, but also highlights the client's social responsibility and the complexity of the cooperative concept, as well as its importance in terms of building history and social history. LfD / 2006, 2018

09301593
 
Individual monument belonging to the Lindenthal railway settlement (Obj. 09300244): row of tenement houses in a residential complex Karl-Mannsfeld-Strasse 8; 9; 10; 11; 12; 13
(card)
around 1920 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of the railway settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 09259194
 
Individual monument belonging to the Lindenthal railway settlement (Obj. 09300244): apartment building in a residential complex Karl-Marx-Platz 2
(map)
1907–1909 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of the railway settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 09259201
 
Individual monument belonging to the Lindenthal railway settlement (Obj. 09300244): apartment building in a residential complex Karl-Marx-Platz 3
(map)
1907–1909 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of the railway settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 09259202
 
Individual monument belonging to the Lindenthal railway settlement (Obj. 09300244): row of tenement houses in a residential complex Lewienstrasse 2; 4; 6; 8th; 10; 12
(card)
1907–1909 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of the railway settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 09259199
 
Apelstein No. 14 (V)
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Apelstein No. 14 (V) Lindenthaler Hauptstrasse
(map)
set in 1862, later renewed (memorial stone) Memorial stone in memory of the battles of the Battle of Leipzig in 1813, Battle of Möckern on October 16, 12,000 soldiers under the Russian Lieutenant General St. Priest, historically significant 09259178
 
House of a farm, with front garden and fencing Lindenthaler Hauptstrasse 3
(map)
1762 (farmhouse) Building that characterizes the townscape, plastered facade, with a crooked hip roof, Dendro 1762, building history and documentation value 09259158
 
Residential house and two side buildings of a farm as well as front garden, paving of the courtyard access and enclosure
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Residential house and two side buildings of a farm as well as front garden, paving of the courtyard access and enclosure Lindenthaler Hauptstrasse 7
(map)
around 1885 (farmhouse) Residential house with a historicized plastered facade, window frames with cantilever and roofing, iron fence, representative courtyard that characterizes the street scene, important from an architectural point of view 09259160
 
Residential house, two side buildings, barn, gate entrance and front garden of a three-sided courtyard
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Residential house, two side buildings, barn, gate entrance and front garden of a three-sided courtyard Lindenthaler Hauptstrasse 9
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (farmhouse), around 1890 (side building) Plastered buildings, side buildings with plastered half-timbered upper floor, completely preserved courtyard area, of architectural significance 09259161
 
Side building, barn and the rest of the entrance gate of a three-sided courtyard
Side building, barn and the rest of the entrance gate of a three-sided courtyard Lindenthaler Hauptstrasse 10
(map)
1885 (barn) Formerly also a residential house (with plastered half-timbered upper floor), barn plastered brick building, formerly completely preserved courtyard, of historical importance 09259153
 
Church (with furnishings) and churchyard, three tombstones on the north wall of the church and Brösigke tombstone as a column grave in the churchyard
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Church (with furnishings) and churchyard, three tombstones on the north wall of the church and Brösigke tombstone as a column grave in the churchyard Lindenthaler Hauptstrasse 11
(map)
1721 (church) also monument 1813 (see object 09259164) and memorial complex for the fallen of World War I (see object 092599163) in the churchyard, rectangular ship with hipped roof, west tower with baroque hood and lantern, of architectural and local significance 09259162
 
Memorial to those who fell in the Battle of Leipzig in 1813
Memorial to those who fell in the Battle of Leipzig in 1813 Lindenthaler Hauptstraße 11 (near)
(map)
1913 (monument) historically significant 09259164
 
Memorial to the fallen of the First World War Lindenthaler Hauptstraße 11 (near)
(map)
1926–1930 (Monument to the Fallen) monumental complex made of granite stone, historical, memory and testimony value

Behind the Lindenthal church there is a monumental memorial to commemorate the 88 men from the Lindenthal community who died as soldiers in World War I. Initially, the construction of a hall of honor at the local cemetery was planned in 1919, but it was not until 1926 that the local associations interested in a memorial pooled their strengths and founded a memorial committee. The military association played a leading role in the effort to erect at least one war memorial in the old cemetery by the church. The funds raised testify to the large volume of donations - on May 25, 1930 the memorial was inaugurated and handed over to the care of the parish. Architect and graduate engineer R. Jansen was won over to design the monument made of Beucha granite. A strong crossbeam with inscriptions on both sides rests on three mighty granite pillars in which the names of the fallen are carved on six fields. Above the beam, a cross-shaped end stone bears the dates 1914–1918 on both front sides. Measuring over six meters wide and a good five meters high, the monument, embedded in an open space design with lawn edges and benches, dominates the rear green area of ​​the churchyard facing Gartenwinkel street and the Neue Schule. A renovation probably already took place in 1937/1938, a cleaning of the monument on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the end of the war in 2018. Today the day care center "Am Kirchgarten" (Gartenwinkel 31) is located on part of the former churchyard area. There is a historical value for the memorial and memorial. LfD / 2018, 2019

09259163
 
Former cantor (No. 13), with extension (No. 15)
Former cantor (No. 13), with extension (No. 15) Lindenthaler Hauptstrasse 13; 15
(card)
around 1840 (cantor), around 1870 (house) Cantor's council with a plastered half-timbered construction, half-hipped roof, is located in the immediate vicinity of the church and the old school, extension around 1870 as a brick building with its own staircase, used as a residential building, school and current account, of architectural and local significance 09259165
 
Residential house, side building and barn of a three-sided courtyard as well as gate system, front garden and enclosure
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Residential house, side building and barn of a three-sided courtyard as well as gate system, front garden and enclosure Lindenthaler Hauptstrasse 14
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (farmhouse), marked 1889 (barn) Residential building upper floor half-timbered, side building and barn brick buildings, well-preserved farm from the 19th century, historically important 09259151
 
Residential house, side building, courtyard entrance and front garden of a former three-sided courtyard
Residential house, side building, courtyard entrance and front garden of a former three-sided courtyard Lindenthaler Hauptstrasse 16
(map)
19th century (farmhouse) Residential house with plastered facade and half-hipped roof, single-storey side building, part of the original town center development, historically important 09259150
 
Former school, with a front yard
Former school, with a front yard Lindenthaler Hauptstrasse 17
(map)
1876–1877 (school) Typical plaster facade of the time, part of the historic town center development, of local significance 09259141
 
Residential house, two side buildings, side building with pigeon house, barn and front garden of a farm as well as courtyard paving and paving of the driveway
More pictures
Residential house, two side buildings, side building with pigeon house, barn and front garden of a farm as well as courtyard paving and paving of the driveway Lindenthaler Hauptstrasse 19
(map)
around 1910 (farmhouse), around 1890 (side building) Residential house plastered construction in reform style, older side buildings in brick construction, courtyard that characterizes the townscape, of architectural significance 09259166
 
Residential house and side building of a farm, with front garden, fence, gate entrance and paving of the driveway and courtyard
More pictures
Residential house and side building of a farm, with front garden, fence, gate entrance and paving of the driveway and courtyard Lindenthaler Hauptstrasse 20
(map)
End of the 19th century (farmhouse) largely completely preserved courtyard complex, of architectural significance 09259148
 
Barn, front garden and courtyard paving of a farm Lindenthaler Hauptstrasse 21; 21a
(card)
marked 1888 (barn) Brick construction, scientific and documentary value 09259167
 
Residential house, side building (pull-out house with stable), paving, front garden and gate entrance of a three-sided courtyard
Residential house, side building (pull-out house with stable), paving, front garden and gate entrance of a three-sided courtyard Lindenthaler Hauptstrasse 22
(map)
around 1810 (farmhouse), 1879 (moving house), around 1840 (stable) Earth building side building, largely preserved courtyard in the old town center, of architectural significance

As a defining homestead in a weighty, shaping location, number 22 occupies a special position in the street village of Lindenthal. Exactly opposite is the “New School”, behind which the older village school and the cantorate are located, overlooked by the church's tower and nave . Probably around 1820 the right two-storey house of the Dreiseithof was built as a clay corrugated building, with a gable roof, plastered facade and a later extension on the eaves side from 1935, which was changed or enlarged again in 1939. Master bricklayer Gustav Telitz from Lindenthal was responsible for this in 1939. The smaller, gable-facing building on the left property boundary was finalized in mid-May of 1879 as a moving house on behalf of the landowner Friedrich Wilhelm Hanke. The solid clay building is single-storey, has a developed attic, a plastered facade and a tiled hipped roof. To the rear is a stable building built before 1881 - probably around 1840 - also made of plastered clay masonry. For the new barn at the rear, built in 1881, and the stable on the right, the master mason J. Laminated wood is well known as a draftsman and executor. For this purpose, the old barn was removed and the line of the courtyard building on the garden side moved back a little. Slate roofing was planned for the stable building; major renovations took place in the period 1928–1930. Initially, only an emergency apartment was approved for the son-in-law and sales representative Walter König, who had previously been the administrator of the Breitenfeld manor. The application to divide this apartment dates from 1935. The farm complex remained undamaged during the war and was in a very good state of preservation. The order for the partial demolition of the gable and main roof of the barn building was placed on June 8, 1993. A historical street-side fence has not survived, but the front gardens, which are generous for Lindenthal, the courtyard paving and the meadows and arable land behind the remains of the barn are. The buildings in clay wave technology are of outstanding architectural value, the structure of the courtyard as a whole is significant for the center of the street village of Lindenthal. LfD / 2019

09259147
 
House and front garden of a farm
House and front garden of a farm Lindenthaler Hauptstrasse 23
(map)
around 1890 (farmhouse) simply structured plastered facade, eaves facing the street, building of the old town center development, historically important 09259168
 
Residential house, side building, gate and front garden of a three-sided courtyard
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Residential house, side building, gate and front garden of a three-sided courtyard Lindenthaler Hauptstrasse 24
(map)
around 1830 (farmhouse), 1877 (side building) Residential house with plastered facade and half-hipped roof, part of the historic town center development and thus characterizing the townscape, historically the residential building as a clay corrugated building around 1830 of rarity

Probably in the first half of the 19th century the buildings of the three-sided courtyard, which is open to the village street and lying on a narrow rectangular floor plan, were built. The building file begins with the building application for a wagon shed in July 1868: carpenter laminated wood was taken under contract by landowner Johann Friedrich Lutze. The same builder had stables built by master mason CG Kühn in 1877 and 1880 on the same site as the old one. In 1904 the barn was redesigned. In 1923 a landowner and hereditary farmer Fritz Arthur Max Lutze was named, in 1994 the barn was converted into living space under Frank Lutze. The heritage-protected farmhouse with a massive ground floor using clay wave technology and half-timbered construction on the upper floor, partial demolition and renovation planned for 2011. Significance in the history of the district and testimony to the structural development of the site in post-Napoleonic times, characterizing the appearance of the town center development and, due to the construction, of particular scientific and documentary value, rarity. LfD / 2010/2016

09259146
 
House, side building, barn, gate and front garden of a farm
House, side building, barn, gate and front garden of a farm Lindenthaler Hauptstrasse 26
(map)
19th century (farmhouse) Residential house with plastered facade and half-hip roof, side building partly clinker facade, completely preserved courtyard, of architectural significance 09259145
 
Residential house and side building of a farm, with courtyard paving, paving of the driveway, remains of the fence and front garden
Residential house and side building of a farm, with courtyard paving, paving of the driveway, remains of the fence and front garden Lindenthaler Hauptstrasse 27
(map)
around 1890 (farmhouse) Building with brick façade, courtyard that characterizes the townscape, documentation value, of architectural significance 09259170
 
Side building and barn of a three-sided farm
Side building and barn of a three-sided farm Lindenthaler Hauptstrasse 28
(map)
End of the 19th century (side building) Plastered facade, parts of a courtyard that have been preserved, of architectural significance 09259144
 
Residential house (villa), side building, two front gardens, paving of the driveway and gate entrance of a farm
Residential house (villa), side building, two front gardens, paving of the driveway and gate entrance of a farm Lindenthaler Hauptstrasse 30
(map)
inscribed 1908 (villa) historicizing plastered facade, profiled window frames, entrance portal with coat of arms, stately building from the turn of the century around 1900, of significance in terms of architectural and site development 09259143
 
House of a farm
House of a farm Lindenthaler Hauptstrasse 40
(map)
around 1860 (farmhouse) Plastered facade, gable clad with wood, part of the original town development, of architectural significance 09259142
 
House, side building, barn and front garden of a farm Lindenthaler Hauptstrasse 43
(map)
around 1870 (farmhouse) Residential house with a gable roof, courtyard that characterizes the townscape, of architectural significance 09259171
 
House of a farm Lindenthaler Hauptstrasse 49
(map)
19th century (farmhouse) Single-storey building with a half-hipped roof, small farm, part of the historic town center development, in clay construction, of social and historical importance 09259173
 
House of a farm
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House of a farm Lindenthaler Hauptstrasse 51
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (residential building) Plastered facade, gable facing the street, small farm, building in the center of the village, part of the old village structure, historically important 09259174
 
Double apartment building in half-open development with post office and front garden Lindenthaler Hauptstrasse 73; 75
(card)
1914 (double tenement house) Typical plastered façade with pilasters, a building that characterizes the townscape, in the reform style, of significance in terms of building history and history 09259137
 
villa Lindenthaler Hauptstrasse 118
(map)
around 1900 (villa) Plastered facade with half-timbered elements, stair tower, design based on the Heimat style, of importance in terms of building history 09259128
 
Apartment building in open development in a corner, formerly with a restaurant and front garden Lindenthaler Hauptstrasse 138
(map)
around 1910 (tenement) Plastered facade, building that characterizes the townscape, local historical document of suburban development, reform style architecture 09259127
 
Villa, with a front garden Lindenthaler Hauptstrasse 140
(map)
Late 19th century (villa) Plastered facade with clinker brick structure, building that characterizes the street scene, of architectural significance 09259126
 
Bauer memorial stone: memorial stone Louise-Otto-Peters-Allee
(map)
after 1911 (memorial stone) Memorial to the death of the court master Hermann Bauer, of local history 09259149
 
Individual monument belonging to the Lindenthal railway settlement (Obj. 09300244): apartment building in a residential complex and front garden Nagelstrasse 1
(map)
1924–1929 (apartment building) Typical plaster facade of the time, preserved in a closed row of streets, of architectural and socio-historical importance 09306903
 
Individual monument belonging to the Lindenthal railway settlement (Obj. 09300244): multi-family houses in a residential complex and front gardens Nagelstrasse 3; 5; 7; 9
(card)
1927–1928 (number 5/7/9), 1936 (number 3) Typical plaster facade of the time, preserved in a closed row of streets, of architectural and socio-historical importance 09306904
 
Manor house, orangery and manor park of a former manor Parkring 3
(map)
1893 (manor house) old location Breitenfeld, plastered facade, representative complex, of local historical importance 09259120
 
Individual monument belonging to the Lindenthal railway settlement (Obj. 09300244): row of tenement houses in a residential complex Pitschkestrasse 1; 3; 5; 7; 9; 11; 13; 15; 17; 19
(card)
around 1920 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of the railway settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 09259189
 
Individual monument belonging to the Lindenthal railway settlement (Obj. 09300244): apartment building in a residential complex Pitschkestraße 2
(map)
1907–1909 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of the railway settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 09259185
 
Individual monument belonging to the Lindenthal railway settlement (Obj. 09300244): double apartment building in a residential complex Pitschkestrasse 4; 6
(card)
around 1915 (twin house) Plastered facade, part of the railway settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 09259186
 
Individual monument belonging to the Lindenthal railway settlement (Obj. 09300244): double apartment building in a residential complex Pitschkestrasse 8; 10
(card)
around 1915 (twin house) Plastered facade, part of the railway settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 09259187
 
Individual monument belonging to the Lindenthal railway settlement (Obj. 09300244): double apartment building in a residential complex Pitschkestrasse 12; 14
(card)
around 1915 (twin house) Plastered facade, part of the railway settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 09259188
 
Individual monument belonging to the Lindenthal railway settlement (Obj. 09300244): double apartment building in a residential complex Rosestrasse 5; 7
(card)
1907–1909 (twin house) Plastered facade, part of the railway settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 09259182
 
Individual monument belonging to the Lindenthal railway settlement (Obj. 09300244): apartment building in a residential complex Rosestrasse 9
(map)
1908–1909 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of the railway settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance

Again, the building inspector and government master builder Lubowski with his office for architecture and the building cooperative for the railway officials and workers in Wahren eGmbH were involved in the construction of the new residential building: in September 1908 the building application was submitted, the notification of completion almost twelve months later. At the same time, a central heating and laundry room building, which no longer exists today, was built, named in the documents as the “urban building”. Tectures bear the year 1909. Great importance was also attached (1908) to the design of an enclosure that was adequate to the architecture of the residential buildings. The residential building was built in a corner location with three apartments on the upper floors, with a shop or retail apartment and a normal apartment on the ground floor. All apartments had an inside bathroom with a toilet. In a semi-open development, the three-storey building shows itself in an effective corner position with a lawn facing Rosestrasse, a light plastered facade in an attractive contrast to the dark clinker brick base and the red tile roofs. The extended footpath area with mosaic paving on the corner underlines the location of the shop, whose window facing Rosestrasse is now walled up. What is striking, however, is the large, non-structured plastered area at this point on the facade. Almost unadorned, the two shop fronts on the streets with two mid-sized houses, risalits, and a roof top on the corner in a visible framework. The obvious downside of the renovation are the no longer original windows, but especially the disturbing shop door and the unsuitable shop window. For decades, an advertising pillar marked the corner area in front of the house. A building historical value is to be claimed for the house. LfD / 2018, 2019

09306727
 
Individual monument belonging to the Lindenthal railway settlement (Obj. 09300244): apartment building in a residential complex Rosestrasse 11
(map)
1908 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of the railway settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 09300237
 
Individual monument belonging to the Lindenthal railway settlement (Obj. 09300244): double apartment building in a residential complex Rosestrasse 13; 15
(card)
1908–1909 (double tenement house) Plastered facade, part of the railway settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance

The three-storey building rises free-standing at a considerable distance from the neighboring houses as one of three double residential buildings approved in November 1908 by the building cooperative for railway officials and workers in Wahren (Saxony) eGmbH. Bauinspector Lubowski from Leipzig-Gohlis signed for the design and construction management. In mid-June 1909 the basic and shell construction tests were carried out, six months later the building permit was issued. Each house was designed as a couple, with privets outside the apartments. The application for reconstruction and repair work dates from the summer of 1945, and the installation of new balconies on the already renovated building in 2009/2010. Two side projections emerge weakly, contrasting a dark tile base and a roof covered with red tiles with the light facade plaster. Three dwelling houses and exposed half-timbering on the 2nd floor are distinctive, the house has a lawn in front of it. On the courtyard side, the staircase projections step strongly in front of the plastered rear front. The interior of the cooperative apartment building is characterized by tenant gardens. As a testament to social housing construction, the house has an architectural historical value. LfD / 2018, 2019

09259197
 
Individual monument belonging to the Lindenthal railway settlement (Obj. 09300244): row of tenement houses in a residential complex Rosestrasse 14; 16; 18; 20; 22; 24; 26
(card)
around 1915 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of the railway settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 09259183
 
Individual monument belonging to the Lindenthal railway settlement (Obj. 09300244): apartment building in a residential complex Rosestrasse 17
(map)
1908 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of the railway settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 09259198
 
Individual monument belonging to the Lindenthal railway settlement (Obj. 09300244): row of tenement houses in a residential complex Rudolf-Breitscheid-Strasse 1; 3; 3a; 5; 7
(card)
1907–1909 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of the railway settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 09259203
 
Individual monument belonging to the Lindenthal railway settlement (Obj. 09300244): row of tenement houses in a residential complex Rudolf-Breitscheid-Strasse 6; 8th; 10; 12
(card)
1907–1909 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of the railway settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 09259181
 
Individual monument belonging to the Lindenthal railway settlement (Obj. 09300244): row of tenement houses in a residential complex Rudolf-Breitscheid-Strasse 14; 16; 18; 20; 22
(card)
1907–1909 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of the railway settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 09259184
 
Apelstein No. 16 (V)
More pictures
Apelstein No. 16 (V) Salt Road
(map)
marked 1863, erected in 1862 (memorial stone) Memorial stone in memory of the battles of the Battle of Nations near Leipzig in 1813, 18,500 men under the Russian general Count Langeron around Wiederitzsch, historically significant 09259136
 
Cemetery with cemetery chapel, grave monuments, enclosure and horticultural cemetery design Salzstrasse 2
(map)
1902–1905 (cemetery chapel) Chapel with brick facade, cemetery with Art Nouveau graves, Rotdornallee replanted in 2004, of architectural and local significance 09259121
 
Memorial to the victims of fascism, with an honorary grove
Memorial to the victims of fascism, with an honorary grove Street of 53
(map)
1960 (memorial and memorial for Soviet citizens) In memory of the 53 inmates of the Leipzig police prison murdered on April 12, 1945 (7 Czechs, 23 or 24 Russians, 7 Poles, one French, the German businessman Alfred Kästner, Paul Küstner, Margarethe Bothe, 4 unknowns), burial place of the foreign victims , historically significant 09259169
 
Apelstein No. 18 (V)
More pictures
Apelstein No. 18 (V) Weststrasse
(map)
marked 1863, erected in 1862 (memorial stone) Memorial stone commemorating the battles of the Battle of the Nations near Leipzig in 1813, 9,000 Russians under General von Sacken in battle with the French under General Compans, historically significant, moved around 1950 from Bahnhofstrasse 09259172
 
Individual monument belonging to the Lindenthal railway settlement (Obj. 09300244): apartment building in a residential complex Weststrasse 2
(map)
1907–1909 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of the railway settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 09259195
 
Individual monument belonging to the Lindenthal railway settlement (Obj. 09300244): row of tenement houses in a residential complex Weststrasse 4; 6; 8th; 10; 12; 14
(card)
around 1925 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of the railway settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 09259196
 
Apartment building in open development, with front garden Wiederitzscher Landstrasse 104
(map)
1901 (tenement house), 1901 (front garden) Street-defining building with historical clinker brick facade, historically significant as a historical document of the urbanization phase in Lindenthal

The property (s), Wiederitzscher Straße 8b (today for the courtyard building on parcel 145e under number 102) and 8 belonged to the Lindenthal mill owner Albert Barth. In 1900 a workshop (steam carpentry) and storage shed was built for the prospective tenant, the master carpenter Franz Reymann. In the following year, a residential building and a small laundry building were built - Reymann is also well-known as the client, although Barth probably continued to own the property. Two apartments of different sizes were set up on each floor; one attic apartment was not permitted by the building authorities. A new request in 1933, in addition to an attic apartment and the installation of a shop, was not implemented. In 1936, the approved conversion of the dry toilet facility into a water flushing facility failed because of the costs. Here, August Eschenhorn is named as the client and architect W. Tönnigs for the site management. In 1910 the entrepreneur Jope from Leipzig-Gohlis set up a celluloid laundry factory in the back of the "factory building of the mill owner Barth" on Communicationsweg, later Arthur Jope as permanent laundry works "Ariolin". The aim of the process was to firmly bond celluloid and linen fabric. The factory was closed in 1933 and the property was divided around this time. In 1935, Ms. Lydia Schulze applied for the property to be fenced in (no longer available). The factory building was used by Willy (or Willi) Faupel, a laundry and ironing shop, whose wife continued the business after Faupel's conscription to army service in 1940. The street front of the residential building behind a somewhat wider front garden appears stately, with a grooved ground floor zone and clinker-clad upper floors. Two double-axis side projections brace the four axes of the central zone and, in addition to the serrated kymation frieze, also feature consoles in the eaves area. The window frames on the upper floors are decorated with roofs, small stucco consoles and gable panels. Not too often in the tenement building of the time are stucco decorative panels placed under the windows on the ground floor. The courtyard building has no monument status and is heavily modified. With the few multi-storey houses on the opposite side of the street, the rental house impressively marks the urban expansion of the village of Lindenthal in the direction of Wiederitzsch (cf. the development from Wiederitzsch on what was then Bahnhofstrasse). The testimony to late historical architecture and evidence of the expansion of the site is of architectural historical value. LfD / 2018, 2019

09259155
 
Individual monument belonging to the Lindenthal railway settlement (Obj. 09300244): apartment building in a residential complex Wilhelm-Pfennig-Strasse 60
(map)
around 1915 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of the railway settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 09259191
 
Individual monument belonging to the Lindenthal railway settlement (Obj. 09300244): row of tenement houses in a residential complex Wilhelm-Pfennig-Strasse 61; 63; 65; 67; 69; 71; 73
(card)
around 1915 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of the railway settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 09259193
 
Individual monument belonging to the Lindenthal railway settlement (Obj. 09300244): row of tenement houses in a residential complex Wilhelm-Pfennig-Strasse 62; 64; 66; 68; 70; 72; 74
(card)
around 1915 (apartment building) Plastered facade, part of the railway settlement, of architectural and socio-historical importance 09259192
 
Former forge To the old smithy 4
(map)
around 1890 (forge) old location Breitenfeld, plastered facade, extension with half-timbered drapery, part of the historic town center development, of local significance 09259118
 

Former cultural monuments

image designation location Dating description ID
Residential building At the farriers 27
(map)
around 1850 (residential building) Residential house (plastered facade), roof with bat dormer; Part of the historic town center development 09259157
 
Residential building Parkring 5
(map)
Late 19th century (residential building) Residential building (plastered facade, gable); Part of the original town development 09259125
 

swell

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

Web links