List of cultural monuments in Marienberg
The list of cultural monuments in Marienberg contains the cultural monuments in Marienberg .
This list is a partial list of the list of cultural monuments in Saxony .
Legend
- Image: shows a picture of the cultural monument and, if applicable, a link to further photos of the cultural monument in the Wikimedia Commons media archive
- Designation: Name, designation or the type of cultural monument
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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 .
Cultural monuments according to districts
Marienberg
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Historic old town Marienberg monument protection area | (Map) | 1521 city foundation (old town) | Within the boundaries of the former city wall, according to plans by Ulrich Rülein von Calw, the Italian urban planning theory (“ideal city”) was probably implemented on German soil for the first time, a structure of supraregional importance in terms of urban development history.
Marienberg was built as planned from 1521 onwards, the background to the development being extensive silver finds. Under Duke Heinrich the Pious and according to the plans of Ulrich Rülein von Calw, the Italian urban planning theory of the “Città Ideale” was implemented on German soil for the first time. The partially preserved city wall encompassed approximately a square with a side length of 550 to 600 m (only in the south it did not run at right angles to the road network), the corners of which were occupied by round towers. Five city gates - two in the W - gave access to the local area, which can still be seen today in terms of structure and development. The Zschopauer Tor in the northwest and the Red Tower in the east of the city fortifications have been preserved, about a third of the wall itself, the course of the trench is made clear in the southwest and especially in the northeast by green spaces that were created from the 19th century. Some buildings with a core from the 16th century are still essential, some have been preserved in parts (portals, window frames, wooden ceilings, cellars). The town hall, the mining office, the ducal house, the workers' building Lindenhäuschen and of course the St. Mary's Church, one of the famous Upper Saxon hall churches of the late Gothic, which is not centrally located, but on the outskirts of the village to SE stand out. Today, the townscape is characterized by two to three-storey eaves-level buildings that were built in the 18th and 19th centuries, and often have dormer roofs or hipped roofs. These houses are predominantly plastered buildings, which are usually characterized by economical decorative elements in the form of cornices, grooves, stucco and natural stone walls. There are also brick-faced facades, especially from the late 19th century, but there are only a few preserved half-timbered structures. The high school, the parade hall, two military buildings as well as the extra muros E-Werk, which was built in 1910, determine the image of the city center. For historical, urban, artistic and scientific reasons, Marienberg is of particular public interest in maintaining it. A statute according to monument law (§ 21 SächsDSchG) has existed since 2004. |
08955916 |
Memorial to the victims of fascism, with an honorary grove | (Map) | 1953 (memorial) | In memory of 218 concentration camp prisoners murdered in April 1945, historically significant. |
08956122
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Post mileage | (Map) | marked 1724 | Remainder of a quarter of a mile stone, sandstone, the year "1724", significant in terms of traffic history.
A quarter milestone with the row number 51 and the year 1724 made of granite, stands as a remainder (without head piece and with the inscription "Wettin Eiche") on the Eisenstrasse in the forest. It was originally located on the Böhmische Strasse, in the Wüstenschlette, just before the Grenzland inn . In 1999 the slab of the quarter milestone was found on Marienberger Army Square. In 1722, the Electorate of Saxony began to erect the Saxon post-mile pillars. Elector Friedrich August I wanted to build a modern traffic and transport control system in the electorate in order to promote trade and economy. He entrusted Magister Adam Friedrich Zürner (1679 - 1742) with the implementation. The system of post mile pillars comprised distance pillars, quarter milestones, half and full mile pillars. The distance columns should be set up in the cities in front of the city gates, later only on the marketplaces. Quarter milestones, half and full mile pillars were set up along the Poststrasse. They received a consecutive numbering (row number), starting from the beginning of the measurement. The all-mile columns were set up outside the cities on the post roads at a distance of 1 mile (= 9.062 km). The distance pillars were marked with the monogram "AR" for "Augustus Rex", the Electoral Saxon and Polish-Lithuanian double coat of arms and the Polish royal crown. The full mile, half mile columns and quarter milestones were all similarly labeled, none of them had a coat of arms, but the monogram "AR". The distances were given in hours (1 hour = ½ post mile = 4.531 km). This mile system was the first European traffic management system. The pillar considered here is of great importance in the history of traffic as part of the nationally significant postal system. |
08956123
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monument | (Map) | marked 1773 | Local historical significance.
In the form of a porphyry block with a coat of arms, a crown and an inscription in memory of the electoral hunt from September 2nd to 11th, 1773 |
08956114
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Memorial stone | (Map) | 1913 | Local historical significance.
In the form of a porphyry stone (in memory of the Battle of the Nations near Leipzig) with two sandstone banks. |
08956115
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milestone | (Map) | around 1860 | Converted to a kilometer stone, with inscriptions, meaning of traffic history.
Royal Saxon whole milestone, reworked into a kilometer stone with inscriptions: Marienberg, Reitzenhain and “Jöhstadt 16.7 km”, sandstone, around 1.00 meters high. |
08956386
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Memorial stone | (Map) | 1669 | With German and Latin inscriptions, meaning of local history.
Inscribed: "Drauriges memory of Hern Rittmeister Johann Paul Meinchs ... who here on April 23rd Ao 1669 was torn with him by some escaped officers as Kauff-Leuthe - mugger was attacked, murdered with one shot through the head and plundered. - The perpetrators, however, were attracted to Eüßenach soon, for this they were drawn as punishment and put on the bike there on July 3rd. " |
08956121
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monument | (Map) | 1929 | Local historical significance, as the envelope once stood at this point.
In the shape of a small porphyry stone with an inscription |
08956120
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Zeuggraben as a water supply ditch for the artificial tools in Lauta, Marienberg section | (Map) | 1551 | Significance in mining history (see also Reitzenhain and Kühnhaide districts).
Individual monument of the entity Reitzenhainer Kunst- und Zeuggraben: (see also entity list, OT Marienberg, without address - Obj. 09305555) Open ditch, originally from Reitzenhain to Gelobtland, there junction towards Großrückerswalde / Wüstenschlette and on via Wolfsberg, Hirschstein to Lauta, today's route via Gelobtland and mountains to Schlettenbach in Dörfel, around 18 kilometers long. |
08956385
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Milestone | (Map) | 2nd half of the 19th century | Labeling, important in terms of traffic history.
With inscription and kilometer 15.0, made of sandstone. |
08956118
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Zeuggraben as a water supply ditch for the artifacts in Lauta, consisting of three sections in the districts of Marienberg, Kühnhaide and Reitzenhain, the Marienberg section as a single monument | (Map) | 1551 | Plant of mining historical importance.
Subject aggregate Reitzenhainer Kunst- und Zeuggraben: (see individual monument list, OT Marienberg, without address - Obj. 08956385), the sections Kühnhaide and Reitzenhain as aggregate components (see material aggregate list, OT Kühnhaide, without address - Obj. 09305557 and OT Reitzenhain, without address - Obj . 09305556). |
09305555
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War memorial for those who fell in the Wars of Liberation in 1813/1814 | At the Kaiserteich (map) |
1813-1814 | Sandstone obelisk with inscription, local historical significance. |
08956059
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Former storage facility | Am Kaiserteich 3 (map) |
1806-1809 | Dominant urban development, with a high hip roof and three rows of pike dormers, of local and mining historical importance.
Bergmagazin, a storage facility built by order of the Marienberg Mining Office 1806–1809 for the storage of grain for times of need, the building type characteristic of mining towns in the Ore Mountains (compare also Annaberg and former Johanngeorgenstadt) impressively shapes here too, although it is located outside the historic town center, due to its size and shape as a solitaire with the townscape. Four-storey plastered quarry stone building with large, flat-arched portals on the long sides, loading hatch on the narrow side, numerous horizontal windows with sandstone walls, multi-storey, steep hipped roof with three rows of pike dormers. Currently a cultural facility with a museum, library and café, the building has already served various functions, as a military chamber, as a Marienberg vehicle factory (1923, Gebrüder Sattler, made by Emil Schönherr) and as a fruit and vegetable store (1961). |
08956058
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Power station | Am Lindenhäuschen 1 (map) |
1910 | First power station in the city, built by the Baldauf family of manufacturers, of local history, industrial buildings influenced by Behrens' AEG building in Berlin, technical monument, special architectural history.
Former power station in the green space at the former Freiberg Gate, the city's first power station, built in 1910 by the Baldauf family, whose button factory was diagonally opposite (see Am Roten Turm 1). The cubic generator room as a central building on a rustic sandstone base, with three large window fronts in stylized thermal bath architecture, framed by plaster arches, lancet-shaped blind windows, polygonally broken gables. The striking building is not only a technical monument and of relevance to the local history, but also has supra-local architectural historical significance, as the design language of Peter Behrens, which was influenced by geometric Art Nouveau and whose AEG turbine hall in Berlin was built just a year earlier, is very clearly quoted. The administration building, which was added on in the same style, even bears the inscription “Gebrüder Baldauf” in Peter Behrens' script - it is nevertheless not a monument, as it is a new residential building that was built after a major fire in 2004. During the GDR era, the technical building served as a department store (1949 HO warehouse, 1973 large-scale sales point department store Adrett with 265 m² sales area, still in this function after 1990). In 1947 a false ceiling was added. |
08955987
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Office building and production building of a former button factory | At the Red Tower 1 (map) |
1910-1918 | Office building (marked "1894"); historicizing clinker brick facade with corner bay window, production building (1910–18) functional skeleton construction, significance in terms of building history and local history, image-defining ensemble.
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08955985
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Tower, so-called Red Tower | At the Red Tower 2 (map) |
Mid 16th century | The only one of the former four round towers at the corners of the city fortifications that is of local historical importance.
Individual monument of the population of the Marienberg fortification: (see also list of objects as a whole - Obj. 09305552, Obere Bahnhofstraße) Quarry stone construction with a diameter of eight meters, with a curved hood at the end, gun and rifle hatches at different heights. |
08955995
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Administration building in closed development, part of the town hall | Amtsstrasse 1 (map) |
marked 1847, core older (administration building) | With gate passage, plastered facade typical of the time, part of the development close to the market, of importance in terms of building history and urban planning.
Administration building in closed development, part of the town hall, built in 1847 at right angles to the rear town hall as a supplement to it, regular floor plan, but relatively strong walls, three-storey solid construction with simple plastered facade and wide passage, saddle roof from 1949 with roof houses from 1994, a second one was needed in 1949 The roof was raised on the upper floor, the roof structure was rebuilt, in 1994 some ground floor openings were changed. The building is part of the development close to the market and is of importance in terms of building history and urban development. |
08955937
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Residential building in closed development | Amtsstrasse 2 (map) |
1914, older core | With shop fitting, plastered construction with bay window, part of the development close to the market, of importance in terms of urban planning and building history.
Residential house in closed development, with built-in shops, three-storey plastered building with bay window, the basket arch door with ears, central polygonal bay window over two floors with a curved copper hood, a barrel vault in the basement and a ground floor vault make it clear that the core of the house near the market is older than 1914 The situation created by Oscar Krumbiegel with a new facade, second floor, the bay window and new internal stairs, there was a back building for the Engelmann printing plant as early as 1867 and there was also a printing plant in the building in 1924 (Neubert & Mehner), the shop window was only created in 1997 in its current one Shape. |
08955938
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Residential house in semi-open development | Amtsstrasse 3 (map) |
18th century, core older | With a protruding half-timbered upper floor, one of the few half-timbered houses in the city, important in terms of architectural history and urban development.
Residential house in today's half-open development, massive ground floor, upper floor with protruding double-bar exposed framework, gable plastered and slated, steep pitched roof with old German slate covering and without extensions, beautiful old door leaf in basket arches, a historical drawing shows a baroque ground floor plan, the wall thickness there is 70 Centimeter. A 50-year-old photo of the house also shows how little it has changed since then. Architectural historical significance as one of the few preserved half-timbered houses in the city, urban planning significance and image-defining as an optical component of the gable staggering on the street side to the northwest. |
08955956
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Residential house in closed development and in a corner | Amtsstrasse 4 (map) |
1902, remains older | Typical plaster facade, of architectural significance.
Residential house in closed development and in a corner location, the two-storey solid building with seven by seven axes, with beautiful doors to Töpferstrasse and a flat-roofed mansard roof, is a new building from 1902 (master glazier Gustav Seltmann, made by Emil glasses). There are still remains of the previous building in the basement. 1987 Removal of the dormer roofs and window crowns, nevertheless still significant in terms of architectural history and above all urban planning relevance. |
08955939
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Residential building in closed development | Amtsstrasse 5 (map) |
18th century, core early 17th century | Typical plaster facade of the time, of importance in terms of building history and urban planning.
Residential house in closed development, two-storey solid construction with sandstone walls, door with strongly profiled, straight lintel, gable roof with two large standing dormers (new), the facade was rebuilt in 1902 and the floor plan was changed on the upper floor (construction manager Emil glasses for landowner's son Heinrich Schaarschmidt), however the irregular ground floor plan indicates that the house was built in the 18th century. |
08955957
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Residential building in closed development | Amtsstrasse 6 (map) |
marked 1790 | With basket arch portal, of importance in terms of urban planning and building history.
Residential house in closed development, three-storey building with seven axes, basket arched portal in the middle, keystone marked “JCS 1790”, flat saddle roof facing the street. At the back, the original mansard roof can still be seen, which was removed from the front in 1908 (made by Oscar Krumbiegel for Zinna Bauer) for a second floor. |
08955965
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Residential building in closed development | Amtsstrasse 7 (map) |
18th century, core 17th century | Baroque, possibly even older, compact structure, of importance in terms of urban planning and architectural history.
Residential house in closed development, two-storey solid construction with a slate pitched roof and little roof house, the standing dormers from 1992, the compact structure probably from the Baroque period, but possibly even older, despite changes in the wall-opening ratio of the facade side, as part of the historic city center also relevance to urban planning. |
08955958
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Residential house in closed development with an enclosure wall in the courtyard | Amtsstrasse 9 (map) |
Early 18th century, later reshaped | Image-defining building with segment arch portal, of importance in terms of urban development and architectural history.
Residential house in closed development, with an enclosure wall in the courtyard, three-storey solid building with sandstone and porphyry walls, steep roof that towers above the other houses, mostly with winter windows, segment arch portal, basket arch door. The second floor was created in 1910 by shortening the mansard roof (builder tailor Max Albin Schaarschmidt, executed by Oscar Krumbiegel), the 18th century when the house was built is suggested, among other things, by vaults on the ground floor. Significance in terms of building history, relevance to urban development as well as shaping the image as part of the staggered gable landscape of the district road to NW |
08955959
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Residential building in closed development | Amtsstrasse 11 (map) |
18th century, later reshaped | Baroque building with a facade designed around 1910 (central roof house), of importance in terms of urban development and architectural history.
Residential house in closed development, two-storey, plastered solid construction with natural stone walls, segmented arched door with keystone, Baroque structure with facade designed in 1914, mansard roof around 1910 with central roof house expanded, enlarged side ground floor window, also with keystone, old door - for business owner Fritz Schwipper, execution Oscar Krumbiegel; In terms of building history and as a structural component of the historic old town, it is of importance in terms of urban planning. |
08955960
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House in a corner and in a semi-open development | Amtsstrasse 13 (map) |
1st half of the 18th century | With segment arch portal, stately baroque building, of architectural historical and special urban significance.
Residential house in corner location and in half-open development, two-storey solid baroque building with natural stone walls, segmental arch portal with keystone, extended mansard roof with hip, figuratively the head building of the city to the Zschopauer Tor, therefore of great architectural and urban significance. 1884 house owner Friedrich Theodor Demmler, painter. The new building of the attic in the sense of a second floor in 1898 as well as a large lying dormer window - both by Emil Gläser - was apparently reversed in 1991 and 1993 in line with the original, and windows were opened again on the striking gable side and the roof was provided with moderate dormer windows. |
08955961
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Residential house in a semi-open development and in a corner, with an extension | Amtsstrasse 14 (map) |
around 1750 | Stately baroque building with segment arch portal, of architectural significance and particular relevance to urban development.
Residential house in semi-open development and in a corner location, with half-timbered extension, two-storey solid construction, stately baroque building with segmented arch portal (with keystone), steep mansard roof with hip, two standing dormer windows, figuratively a head building of the city to the Zschopauer Tor, therefore of great architectural and urban planning Relevance. Inventory drawing from 1910 (builder Friedrich Moritz Siegert) shows an irregular floor plan and continuous corridors on both floors and cross vaults on the ground floor. The rear building at right angles was rebuilt in 1921. |
08955963
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Residential house in a corner and closed development | Annaberger Strasse 9 (map) |
1789 | Significance in terms of building history and urban development. Residential house in a corner location and closed development, of architectural historical importance and - as a structural component of the historical town plan of Marienberg - also of urban significance.
The building, which was not built until 1789, followed a predecessor, which had already burned down in the town fire in 1684. Until then, the site remained vacant. The owner of today's building was Carl Gottlob Lötzsch, whose son Carl August Lötzsch ran a butcher's shop here from 1812. The two-storey plastered building made of gneiss rubble was raised by one storey in 1925 while retaining the historic roof structure. The wall-to-opening ratio is slightly changed when the shop is installed later. Inside there are baroque details and groin vaults. |
09305931
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Garden pavilion | Anton-Günther-Weg 2c (map) |
1902 | The half-timbered pavilion originally belonging to the property of the former Marienberg city councilor Gerhard Baldauf, of architectural value.
The garden house was built in 1902 and is referred to in the Roitzsch Chronicle, Volume XVIII, Bl. 36, for OLN 488 b as "Garden House Gerhard Baldauf". The veranda of the garden shed can be reached via five steps on a base made of cyclops masonry. Four ornate wooden supports support the square roof, which, like an Asian temple, covers the room and the terrace. The building consists of a half-timbered structure exposed with bricks. There is a window on each of the front sides and a window on the garden side to the left and right of the door. The back facing the street has no windows. An Art Nouveau ornament is etched into the panes of the three-winged windows. The compartments are glazed above the windows and the door. For this purpose, colored panes were used over the windows and a carved wooden ornament was placed in front of it, the skylight of the door, divided by a vertical, is made of clear glass. Around 1900 comparable garden houses and garden pavilions were part of the usual equipment of villa gardens. They were therefore widespread in a wide variety of designs. In the course of time, the majority of these garden houses were lost due to vacancies and neglect, so that this particularly sophisticated garden house is one of the few originally preserved buildings of its kind. |
09303622
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Villa (with attached winter garden), coach house, pavilion and villa garden (garden monument) | Anton-Günther-Weg 4 (map) |
1907–1908, later expanded | Mighty, multi-parted and richly staggered villa with a monumental roof landscape, both neo-baroque and in the reform style of the time around 1910, architects: Zapp & Basarke, Chemnitz, named after the manufacturer Theobald Baldauf, co-owner of the button and metal goods factory Gebr. Baldauf (founded 1895 ), local historical and special architectural significance.
The villa with attached winter garden, garage, pavilion and villa garden (garden monument) is mighty, multi-parted and richly staggered, with a monumental roof landscape and evidence of the neo-baroque as well as the reform style of the period around 1910, it is named after the manufacturer Theobald Baldauf, co-owner of the Button and metal goods factory Gebr. Baldauf. The property has local historical and special architectural significance and can be considered an outstanding example of its kind in Saxony. The building of 1912/13 by the architect Gustav Hacault, who also designed the winter garden, which can now be seen today, was preceded in 1907/08 by a country house by Alfred Zapp (Zapp & Basarke, Chemnitz), a building that can almost be called factual Architecture magazine was covered. This was practically eliminated during the conversion to the current structure, the builder of which was City Councilor Gerhard Baldauf (1883–1945). Hacault also planned the fencing of the large garden on Freiberger Strasse, which is now lost. The garage was built in 1920, a design by Oscar Geyer, Zwickau. 1936 Sale of the property to Hermann Lesser (owner of the company Lesser, Clausnitzer & Co., straw and felt hat factory based in Dresden-Leuben), then the villa was used as a company holiday home in the following years. After the war, the property was initially the district headquarters of the Soviet military administration, and from 1952 the pioneer house "Philipp Müller". The building, which has been a listed building since 1982, has been a public-owned culture and leisure center since 1997.
The property fencing recently reconstructed based on the historical condition (base at least partially going back to the new building after 1945 ?, wooden fence and gates, gate pillars with sandstone covers, gate on Anton-Günther-Weg with wooden arch).
It is possible that when the garden was laid out, reference was made to views of the city with the striking St. Mary's Church ; there are also historical visual connections to and from the chapel of the cemetery and the representative electricity plant built at the instigation of Gerhard Baldauf around 1910 ( Freiberger Straße) is conceivable. Interpretation / evaluation: The Villa Baldauf with its garden is an impressive testimony to bourgeois living culture at the beginning of the 20th century (testimony to art and building history). A high local historical value is based on the owners or builders of the Baldauf family, who are important in Marienberg. The garden with the preserved furnishings (pavilion, grottoes / rock garden and old trees) shows individual design, the winter garden at the villa and the fountain basin, which was originally designed for electrical lighting, are to be assessed as particularly peculiar elements. To address this remarkable ensemble in more detail in terms of garden history, however, more detailed research on the sources and an expert analysis of the population are required. |
08956041
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Residential or administrative building of a former gas works | Outer Annaberger Strasse 9 (map) |
1874 | One of the last buildings reminiscent of the former gasworks, of architectural historical value.
Residential and administrative building of the former gas works from 1874, with some alterations that took place as early as 1880, the last building reminiscent of the gas works of architectural historical value, which also reminds of the geographical location of the former industrial complex through its position. Two-storey plastered building with a protruding half-hipped roof (slate covering), wall structures (cornices, drapery, corner accentuation) using red brick, thus following a typical technical and social building iconography typical of the time. Informational and extensive files on the technical equipment of the gasworks in the district archive. |
08956053
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House in a corner and in closed development, with an extension | Baderstrasse 1a (map) |
16th century, later modified | Plastered facade and mansard roof, with built-in shop, stately building with a two-story extension, essentially from the Renaissance period, part of the market ensemble, of particular importance in terms of building history and urban development.
Stately residential building in a corner location and in closed development, also with a two-storey, but lower corner extension, the broad, compact structure with plastered facade and partly beveled window frames, today in the red (garments) and white (wall) adopted for the time of construction, is covered by a mansard roof with a hip and is essentially from the Renaissance period, an old existing drawing shows a continuous hallway and many ground floor vaults (no longer available in 1981), but above all a staircase with characteristic sloping windows and contemporary paintings in the Baderstraße Preserved interior. The top floor was built in 1899, as it were, as a full floor, in 1923 the shop window for master baker Paul Graupner (in 1888 already an oven for master baker Karl Hermann Flader). The upper floor for the rear building was added in 1900. |
08955926
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House in a corner and in a semi-open development | Bergstrasse 2 (map) |
18th century | Stately baroque plastered building with a mansard roof, in a prominent place, of importance in terms of urban planning and architectural history.
Residential house in corner location and in half-open development, compact two-storey, massive plastered building with a steep, hunched mansard roof with standing dormer windows, characterizing the gable facing Kirchstrasse at the intersection with Bergstrasse. The building, which was probably built in the 18th century, has a slightly irregular floor plan and a continuous ground floor corridor with vaults (this can also be found in the adjacent former storage room). The forge was installed in 1869, the rear building was built as a slaughterhouse in 1889 for master butcher Hermann Wohlgemuth, the shop window (later enlarged) and a second front door are from 1942 (Oscar Krumbiegel for Walter Hirse). |
08955970
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Residential house in semi-open development | Bergstrasse 5 (map) |
1881 | Typical plastered facade of the time, narrow, very deep residential building, part of the development close to the market, of historical importance.
Residential building in half-open development, the narrow, very deep residential building with its only three-axis facade and flat saddle roof (two standing dormers) was rebuilt in 1881 after a large fire (April 8th, 1881). The previous building also extended to the site of today's Bergstrasse 3, the cellar still partly comes from it. The two-storey, plastered quarry stone building has just closed window and door frames made of porphyry, the windows have (again) typical T-shaped cuts, the simple decor is historic. The builder was the shoemaker Karl Hermann Fessel, the executor Eduard Schreiter. |
08955972
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Official building in open development and in a corner location | Bergstrasse 7 (map) |
1898-1901 | Stately red brick building with a stepped gable, in the style of historicism, in the corner of Kirchstrasse defining the street scene, of architectural and local significance.
The large official building in open development and in a corner location, completed as a branch of the main customs office Annaberg in 1901, dominates the intersection of Bergstrasse and Kirchstrasse. The stately red, late-historic brick building by the master builder Canzler (Royal Farming Authority Chemnitz) is two-story on a rustic base (Cyclops masonry) and structured by several flat risalits, two of which, each on one side of the street, impressively end in stepped gables, the profiled sandstone walls also have a structured effect the partly suspected, partly arched, fragmented window, facing Bergstrasse shows the elaborate sandstone portal with a large heraldic cartouche, iron tie rods and colored stones serve as decoration. High roof with towers. In 1927 and 1934 there were slight changes to the floor plan and the roof extension for service rooms. |
08955971
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Residential house in semi-open development | Bergstrasse 11 (map) |
Early 18th century | Eaves baroque building on a hillside, largely unchanged, of architectural and urban significance.
Residential house in semi-open development, of architectural and urban significance, baroque building on the eaves, largely unchanged. The two-storey plastered building with the original relationship between the opening and the wall and the listed window rungs is characterized by a wide, central arched portal. The slightly protruding gable roof has been provided with a pike dormer. An existing drawing from 1906 (construction work for the master baker Bernhardt Hahn) shows large barrel vaults in the cellar, a slightly irregular floor plan and a continuous corridor with cross vaults. A chimney was installed as early as 1854. |
08955973
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Residential house in open development | Bergstrasse 13 (map) |
marked 1521 | Small building with a seating niche portal from the Renaissance, one of the oldest preserved buildings in the city, of architectural and local significance.
Residential house in open development, a small solid building on the eaves with a profiled seat niche portal from the Renaissance, together with the diagonally opposite "Lindenhäuschen" one of the oldest preserved local buildings, therefore of architectural and local significance. The gables of the two-story building are boarded up, the openings largely in their original size. In 1902, however, a large part of the building fabric appears to have been renewed (owner at the time Ernst Theodor Ehrig, business owner). The steep gable roof without extensions, which still loosens a bit towards the eaves, seems to be original. |
08955974
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Residential house in open development | Bergstrasse 14 (map) |
1617 Dendro | One-storey building with a seating niche portal, one of the few preserved miners' houses in the city, of local and mining significance.
The eaves-standing, single-storey so-called linden house, originally a miners' house, is in open development on the eastern edge of the historic old town. It is particularly noticeable because of its striking round arched, profiled seating niche portal, is one of the oldest buildings on site (timber felled in 1617) and also largely preserved in its original appearance. This makes it one of the most important individual monuments of Marienberg for architectural, social and local historical reasons. The small, massive plastered building has a steep gable roof with a wide pike dormer. The irregular floor plan shows a continuous corridor with cross vaults and a large room next to the entrance, otherwise only tiny rooms. The name of the house comes from two framing linden trees that were planted in 1775 and only recently had to be replaced. The rear building has a garage function and was only built in 1998. |
08955975
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Transformer tower | Dörfelstrasse (map) |
1912 | Striking quarry stone building in the local style, opposite the red tower of the old city fortifications, of importance in terms of urban development, architectural history and technical history.
Transformer tower from 1912, client: Erzgebirgisch-Vogtländische Bahn- und Elektrizitätsgesellschaft GmbH, quarry stone building with a square floor plan, broken corners, rectangular window openings with shutters, today a pyramid helmet (originally bell roof), preserved in very good original condition. The building is a technical monument and, like few objects of its kind, shows how intensively the design of functional buildings was taken care of at the time of the emerging Heimat style. In this case, reference is made to the Red Tower opposite, which is part of the historic city fortifications. (At the opposite end of the old town there is another transformer tower from that time, which in turn refers optically to the Zschopauer Tor). |
09299713
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Residential house in open development | Dörfelstrasse 3 (map) |
1929 | Boarded-up residential building from the 1920s, one of the few wooden houses in the town, of architectural significance.
Single-family house in serial wooden construction, manufactured in 1929 by the company Höntsch & Co. (Dresden-Niedersedlitz, also Tetschen, Mödling and Riga) for Arthur Weidemüller, so-called "hollow wall construction", that is, square timber frames were horizontally paneled. Contemporary building design with a deeply drawn mansard gable roof and protruding ground floor bay window, authentic wooden houses of this manufacture are already rarities and are significant in terms of building history as a testimony to a traditional building material before the 1920s, in which a traditional building material was subjected to Ford series thinking (a contemporary Höntsch catalog is attached to the building files ). |
08956048
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villa | Dörfelstrasse 5 (map) |
1924 | Multi-part plastered building over an irregular floor plan, reform style architecture from the period after 1910, of architectural significance.
Villa for the chocolate manufacturer Alfred Hertel, construction management and execution by Emil Schönherr, 1924, multi-part plastered building over an irregular floor plan, reform style architecture, of architectural significance, two three-sided projecting bay windows on the upper floor, deeply drawn mansard roof with a hip in the gable area, fine plaster ornamentation similar to plait style, too the sides have equally high extensions with lavishly structured windows and balconies, gables with stylized leaf ornamentation. |
08956049
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Official residence, with enclosure | Dörfelstrasse 7 (map) |
1925 (official residence) | Company apartments of the metal goods company Wittig & Schwabe, distinctive plastered building, reform style architecture with influences of the country house style, despite the impairing extension in 1970 of architectural and local historical importance.
Official villa of the metal goods company Wittig & Schwabe, with enclosure, the house was designed for 16 people including the family of the service staff. Distinctive plastered building from 1925 according to a design by Emil Schönherr, reform style architecture with influences of the country house style, despite the impairing extension of architectural and local historical importance. Angular floor plan, one structure with a steep hipped roof, the other, ending as a side projection with pilaster strips, with a crooked hip roof, both roof shapes with overhang in the sense of the "English House". When the low-rise building was added in 1970, an oriel, a balcony and some convex masonry disappeared, and the extension made up around 40 percent of the total area. |
09305540
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barn | Dr.-Wilhelm-Külz-Allee 9 (map) |
probably 18th century | Large, free-standing barn with a very high mansard gable roof, part of the rural development on the outskirts, of economic importance. Mighty free-standing barn with a very high mansard gable roof, relic of rural development (Vorwerk?) In a changed environment, of economic, historical and architectural importance.
First floor plastered quarry stone, boarded gable, the standing dormer windows of more recent date. |
08956057
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Factory owner's villa, villa garden, grotto and viewing point | Fabianweg 1 (map) |
1911 | Multi-part building with a mighty roof, reform style architecture, named after the Donat family of manufacturers, of importance in terms of local history, garden history and architectural history.
Factory owner's villa for Paul Donat from 1911 (made by Emil Gläser), the factory building from 1907 (Trebrastrasse 10), with a grotto and a lookout point in the garden, multi-part building with a mighty roof, reform style architecture, of local and architectural importance. Above a high base made of polygonal masonry, a two-story plastered building with an elaborate design (gable, bay window, curved roofing), two half-columns at the side of the entrance, in the gable a relief with fruit basket and banks, two-story, wooden, glazed veranda. Part of the former garden of the factory owner's villa: Staffagebau with cascade, bridge and pond made of grotto stones, pond edging made of natural stone, bridge made of concrete with steel reinforcement, artificially created hill with trees (3 larches), remains of the staircase to the hill with grotto stones and steel skeleton of the former branch railing , Remnants of the branch railing and parts of the grotto stones recovered and stored. Donat-Villa (villa garden / country house garden)
Interpretation / evaluation: The Villa Donat with its garden illustrates the characteristics of bourgeois living culture from the early 20th century (significance in terms of building and local history). The most remarkable element of the garden is the grotto / cascade, which is close to the artificial grotto architectures that still exist several times in the regional environment, but also has an individual character in its form as a cascade and the connection to the pond and bridge (garden historical value). |
08956040
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Residential house in corner location and in closed development | Fleischerstrasse 1 (map) |
2nd half of the 19th century, core possibly older | Part of the market development, of importance in terms of urban development and architectural history.
House in corner location and in closed development, three-storey solid building with flat mansard roof and attic house, ground floor changed, profiled window frames. The facade of the building, which was probably built in the 2nd half of the 19th century, in a reduced historicism, in 1949 a HO restaurant was installed and some dormer crowns were reduced (by Oscar Krumbiegel), the monument value primarily results from the fact that the house is part the market development and as a structural component of the historic old town of Marienberg is important in terms of urban planning. |
08955923
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Former hotel building (two parts of the building) in a corner and in closed development | Fleischerstrasse 2 (map) |
1868 | Urban dominant plastered building in the style of historicism, part of the market ensemble, of urban and architectural value.
The comparatively lavishly decorated house was built in 1868 in a corner location and closed development as the Hotel zum Goldenen Kreuz (traditional name of the inn in Marienberg). Heinrich August Schulze was the owner and executor. Soon after, the building was used by the governing body. Three-storey plastered building with a hipped roof, the rustic decoration of the ground floor in the arched style continues on the upper floors with grooved plaster pilaster strips, the central part of the main facade facing the market is emphasized by additional pilasters, the facades are surrounded by strong cranked cornices. However, the second floor was not built until 1968, which meant that roof houses and balustrades disappeared. Nevertheless, the building, which is dominant in terms of urban development, is part of the market ensemble and also of architectural and local historical value. |
08955924
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Residential house in closed development and in a corner | Fleischerstrasse 3 (map) |
19th century | With corner shutters, broadly laid out structure, plastered facade, of importance in terms of urban planning and architectural history.
Residential house in closed development and in a corner, two-storey solid plastered building with beveled corner, there shop entrance, another house entrance. Broad structure of 7: 5 axes, hipped roof with eight standing small dormers. A large barrel vault in the cellar is probably evidence of the older building structure, but the building's current appearance is due to alterations from 1875 and above all from 1900 (execution: Emil Gläser), when the facade was decorated in a late-historic style (straight window canopies, on the ground floor with keystones, cornice ). The windows were enlarged in 1929 as part of a conversion into a doctor's practice (for Dr. med. Hans Schulze, construction manager Paul Weidemann). |
08955980
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Residential building in closed development | Fleischerstrasse 7 (map) |
inscribed 1804 | Stately building with late baroque cubature, with basket arch portal, of importance in terms of town planning and architectural history.
Residential house in semi-enclosed development, today three-storey solid building with natural stone walls and basket arch portal (keystone denoted ... 339 G 1804 ), steep pitched roof. An existing drawing from 1902 shows a slightly irregular floor plan, continuous corridor, several rooms with cross vaults and basement barrels, which is why an older date than the year marked on the keystone can be assumed. The second floor with a staggered wall template was only added in 1924, together with loft extensions. |
08955977
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Residential house in open development, with garden (garden monument) | Fliederweg 1 (map) |
1928 | Plastered building located on a small hill with a round corner bay, historically important.
Villa-like house with garden (garden monument), two-storey plastered building from 1928 (authorized representative Otto Schneider, site manager Emil Schönherr) on a small hill with a round corner bay window and slate-covered hipped roof, the dark red wall color suitable for monument use. Above all, a group of three windows facing the street shows the contemporary expressionist influence. |
08956052
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Memorial stone | Freiberger Strasse (map) |
1913 | Roughly hewn sandstone stele (rock form) in memory of the Battle of the Nations near Leipzig in 1813, inscription “1813–1913”, of local history.
Memorial stone with a pair of winter linden trees (Tilia cordata), roughly hewn sandstone stele (rock form) in memory of the Battle of the Nations near Leipzig in 1813, inscription “1813–1913”. |
08955988
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milestone | Freiberger Strasse (map) |
from 1858 (milestone) | Converted to a milestone, significant in terms of traffic history.
Made of sandstone with a weathered crown on the front. |
08956045
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Cemetery chapel, cemetery wall, 18 tombs and four soldiers' graves | Freiberger Strasse (map) |
1893 | Local historical significance.
Individual features of the population cemetery Marienberg: (see also population list - Obj. 09301359) History: In 1533 a new cemetery was laid out in front of the Freiberg Gate next to the hospital. At the same time the hospital church was built, which was rebuilt several times and destroyed by fire in 1892. 1893 new building according to plans by Th. Quentin. Cemetery wall: The old cemetery wall with the candle arches was repaired until 1832, then a new wall was erected in 1835, most of which is still preserved today. Parentation hall with chapel: elongated quarry stone building with sandstone structures, above the entrance portal a rosette with tracery-like structure, the cemetery chapel is located in the central building. Cemetery planting: On the way to the old hospital church there was originally an avenue, possibly linden trees. In section P and on the north wall in the northwest corner of the 16th century part of the cemetery there are two striking linden trees. Today's hawthorn and hawthorn avenues can be traced back to the 1920s and 30s of the 20th century.
Urn grave of Karl Heinrich Donat: 1893 or after (date of death), Zöblitzer serpentinite, 1.63 m × 0.32 m × 0.32 m, amphora-like urn on a Tuscan column. Inscriptions are worked into both the shaft of the column and the body of the vessel. The lid of the vessel is secured by a screw connection. Also grave slab for Hermann Gotthelf Donat (1792–1868) Location: Hereditary burial number 64 near Grabfeld O.
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08956043
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milestone | Freiberger Strasse (map) |
around 1860 (milestone) | Staggered and remodeled station stone, significant in terms of traffic and local history.
Milestone (station stone), after 1858, reworked into a kilometer stone in 1900, sandstone stele with a round end, relief crown, including location and kilometer information. Of importance in terms of traffic and local history. Implementation in 2002 from the original location diagonally opposite on the other street corner Trebra- / Freiberger Straße. Inscriptions: Front "arrow to the left / Zöblitz 6.2 km / jump 8.4 km / Olbernhau 14.9 km / Pockau 10.8 km / arrow to the right / Wolkenstein 7.6 km Annaberg 10.9 km", back " Marienberg / 1900 ”, a former royal coat of arms, crown probably renewed. |
08956042
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Totality of cemetery wall, cemetery chapel, 18 tombs and four soldiers' graves | Freiberger Strasse (map) |
1533-1537 | Material entirety Friedhof Marienberg, with the individual monuments: (see individual monument list - Obj. 08956043) as well as horticultural cemetery design (garden monument) in the western area.
Description see above. |
09301359
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Rectory in closed development and in a corner | Freiberger Strasse 2 (map) |
1899 | Representative plastered facade, stately neo-renaissance building facing Herzog-Heinrich-Strasse and the market, significant in terms of building history, local history and urban planning.
Rectory in closed development and in a corner location, probably 1899, representative plastered facade, stately neo-renaissance building facing Herzog-Heinrich-Strasse and the market, two-storey building with a beveled corner and strong ornamentation above a high base, arched openings and plastered rustics on the ground floor, late historical ornamentation (e.g. window canopies, Pilaster strips, cornices), flat hilted roof with nine standing dormer windows, exemplary renovation. |
08956011
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Former mining office, now a residential building in a closed area, with a memorial plaque for the chief miner of Trebra | Freiberger Strasse 4 (map) |
1771 | Stately broad-based building, plastered building with mansard roof and segmented arch portal, part of the development close to the market, of architectural, local and urban significance.
Former mining office in closed development, built in 1771 according to a design by Samuel Locke, building director in Dresden. Stately eaves-standing two-storey solid building with gable mansard roof (with extensions), central segmental arch portal with keystone containing the Saxon coat of arms, on the ground floor a memorial plaque for the royal chief miner Friedrich Wilhelm Heinrich von Trebra. Locke's drawing shows a ground floor with plastering, the upper floor - contrary to the current situation - with half-timbering. 1900 seven-axle pike dormer for the forestry office as intervention in the mansard roof. |
08956010
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Royal Post Office | Freiberger Strasse 6 (map) |
18th century | Stately baroque building, plastered façade, mansard roof, remarkable cellar, part of the development close to the market, of architectural and urban importance.
Residential house in closed development, core 18th century or older, two-storey solid construction with plastered facade, mansard roof with six standing dormers, upper floor with beveled natural stone walls, ground floor with segmented arch portal and continuous hallway with vaults, remarkable cellar. 1867 Installation of a forge. In 1900 there were changes to the facade (for Laura Burckhardt, executor Karl Gross, Rittersberg) by installing the shop with a round-arched window on the right and redesigning the two openings above. The mansard roof was shortened for a second floor, which was apparently undone in 1987. Nicely chamfered window frames on the upper floor. |
08956009
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Residential house in semi-open development and in a corner location | Freiberger Strasse 8 (map) |
18th century | Stately baroque building, with segment arch portal, of architectural and urban significance.
Residential house in semi-open development and in a corner location, with seven axes on the eaves facing Freiberger Strasse, stately two-storey, massive baroque building with retracted arched portal, half-hipped roof with little roof house and slate roofing, slightly irregular floor plan, continuous corridor, many cross vaults. 1889 installation of a slaughterhouse for O. Seifert, 1928 shop enlargement with installation of shop windows (for master butcher Kurt Gessner, made by Emil glasses), also in 1985 floor plan changes. |
08956008
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Residential house in corner location and in closed development | Freiberger Strasse 10 (map) |
1759 | Extensive, stately baroque building, plastered building with a mansard roof, characterizing the streetscape, of architectural significance.
Residential house in corner location and in closed development, extensive, stately baroque building, broad, two-storey solid plastered building with nine by six axes with a high mansard roof and numerous attic houses, built in 1759 by the Dresden building director Samuel Locke for the city councilor Christoph Gottlob Caspers instead of a previous building. The building, which was probably built as an arable bourgeoisie, received the first shop windows as early as 1891 (owner: Schreiber) and has since been further changed on the ground floor, stone walls in the shop area with fluting. The street-defining house is one of the most impressive buildings in Marienberg because of its dimensions and is of architectural and urban significance. |
08955982
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Residential building in closed development | Freiberger Strasse 16 (map) |
1912, parts of the ground floor older | Plastered facade with an accentuated center, with a store, reform style architecture, defining the image and significant in terms of building history.
Residential house in closed development, two-storey solid construction, plastered facade in reform style, with an accentuated center (there entrance with rusticated walls and beautiful door leaf) and with a store, the central part protruding with rounded corners and indicated colossal arrangement, the gable triangle cuts the mansard roof of the eaves-free building. It was mainly created in 1912 for the restaurateur Emil Kaden, executed by Emil glasses, and there was talk of reconstruction . The irregular floor plan of the ground floor, where a continuous corridor with cross vaults can also be seen, shows that the core of the building is older. |
08955983
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Residential building in closed development | Freiberger Strasse 18 (map) |
18th century | Typical plastered construction, formative and important in terms of building history.
Residential house in closed development, two-storey solid building with a plaster facade (new plaster), pitched roof with new, somewhat disproportionate roof houses, the relationship between openings and wall appears intact, the irregular floor plan with continuous corridor and vaults suggests that the house was built in the 18th century, Parts could be even older. In 1865 there were structural changes on the ground floor (client Carl Wilhelm Hillig), dormer windows for the first time in 1903 (Gottlob Schönherr, made by Emil Gläser), the front door dates from 1985. |
08955984
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Office building and production building of a former button factory | Freiberger Strasse 20 (map) |
1910-1918 | Office building (marked 1894): historicizing clinker brick facade with corner bay, production building (1910–18): functional skeleton construction, significance in terms of building history and local history, ensemble that shapes the image.
The office building and the production building of the former Baldauf button factory occupy one side of the quarter by the green area.
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08955985
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Catholic Apostolic Chapel | Goethering 3 (map) |
1894 | Historicist chapel in the arched style, importance in terms of church history, local history and architectural history.
Catholic-Apostolic Chapel, executed in 1894 by Oscar Krumbiegel, historicist hall church in round arch style, with pilaster strips and round arch frieze, colorful contemporary interior decoration (triumphal arch motif with the inscription "Glory to God in the height" to the apse), this in turn with "medieval" illusion architectural painting, Walls and ceilings painted with floral motifs, wooden organ loft; the building is structural evidence of the Catholic-Romantic movement of the 19th century and therefore has religious and social historical significance in addition to its architectural history. |
08956046
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Former orphanage | Goethering 5 (map) |
1881 | Monumental building with an irregular floor plan, of local historical importance.
Former orphanage, built in 1881 by August Findeisen, representative, irregular three-wing complex on an elevated position above the Schlettenbach valley and on the south-eastern city fortifications. The client was the Dresden businessman Wolf Wagner, a great-grandson of Johann Ehrenfried Wagner, the founder of the Marienberg orphanage in 1771 (it was located at 11 Freiberger Str. 11 and was to be replaced by this building). The neo-renaissance building from the imperial period, with a contemporary design language for educational institutions, appears too complex for the purpose of the "orphanage" and also overburdened the client financially. During the construction period, a supervisory board consisting of a superintendent and mayor had to be installed. The two-storey, massive old building is divided on the main front by a central and corner projections, the main entrance is emphasized by a sweeping rustic portal. Carefully worked window frames, mirrors, corner cuboids and other sandstone testify to the representative design will of the client. When the building was repaired in 1968, the original plaster with imitation cuboids was replaced by a scratch plaster, the roof turret was broken off, the roof structure was changed and pieces of sandstone were chipped off on the courtyard side. As a result, essential architectural design elements were lost. Today, after the original roof structure was destroyed after the fire in 1971, a modern mezzanine floor has been added to the two floors of the old building. Hipped roof with towers. Despite these changes, the documentation value of the complex is still high and the urban and social-historical significance as well as the architectural-historical significance are given. |
08956015
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Former inn in closed development and in a corner location | Herzog-Heinrich-Strasse 3 (map) |
Core 18th century, possibly older | With three preserved Renaissance windows on the ground floor, stately, palazzo-like plastered building, part of the development close to the market, of importance in terms of town planning, local history and architectural history.
Former inn in closed development and in a corner location, two-storey solid plastered building with mezzanine floor, with three preserved Renaissance windows on the ground floor, today's palazzo-like building goes back to a largely new building of the upper floor (eight by six axes) and roof and was designed by the restaurateur (innkeeper) Albert Oschütz commissioned in 1867. In the process, an existing drawing was created on which the much older floor plan of the ground floor can be seen. The arched portal is labeled "WB 1886" with a pilaster frame, and on the upper floor there is little vegetal decoration. |
08956012
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More pictures |
Marienkirche | Herzog-Heinrich-Strasse 5 (map) |
1558-1564 | Church (with equipment); mighty three-aisled hall church with south tower, one of the late large hall churches in Upper Saxony, interior redesigned in the Renaissance style after a city fire in the 17th century, of importance in terms of building history, art history, local history and the appearance of the town.
Construction began under the direction of Wolf Blechschmidt from Pirna and was completed by Christoph Kölbel from Plauen in 1560–64. In 1610 it was burned down except for the outer walls, the tower and today's sacristy, and has been rebuilt since 1616. It was not until 1669–75 that Andreas Klengel replaced the wooden pillars and wooden ceiling with Tuscan stone columns and cross vaults with stuccoed ribs. Restoration 1896–98 and 1947–58. Carefully executed ashlar installation with an irregular choir closed on five sides, on this the old sacristy with curtain arched window and door. Choir and hall with high two-storey and four-lane arched windows, these with tracery and rich profiling, under the eaves console cornice in Renaissance forms. The high pitched roof with numerous dormers grouped in a triangle. Mighty west tower, the onion dome from 1616, flanked by two stair towers. On the west side, elaborately designed portal with staggered keel arch and bars, 16th century, on the north and south side of the choir renaissance portals with ovules and diamond ashlar, on the north side of the hall round arched portal with bars, end of the 16th century - interior. The vestibule and the two side rooms with star vaults, probably characteristic of the first building phase. To the tower entrance pointed arch portal with bars. The light, seven-bay hall with pleasing proportions. Despite the Gothic arching, the vault is characterized by the stuccoing in Baroque forms: free-standing acanthus tendrils, dividing arches and belt arches of the side aisles with stucco acanthus ornaments above the warriors of the mighty Tuscan columns. Circumferential galleries, the parapets with stuccoed cloth hangings, fruit cords and angel heads by Alessandro Pernasione, the organ gallery from 1896. The sacristy on the east side still with ribbed vaults from 1558–60. Extensive equipment, some of high artistic value, including:
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08955917
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Monument to JE Wagner and green area on the SE side of the Marienkirche | Herzog-Heinrich-Strasse 5 (next to) (map) |
1871 | In the form of a neo-Gothic pillar with a helmet, made of sandstone, in memory of Pastor Johann Ehrenfried Wagner (1724-1807), founder of the Marienberg orphanage 100 years earlier, of local historical importance.
Monument to JE Wagner and green area on the SE side of the Marienkirche, the monument in the form of an octagonal neo-Gothic sandstone column with helmet (3.40 meters high), in memory of Pastor Johann Ehrenfried Wagner (1724–1807), the founder of the Marienberg orphanage 1771. The green area was called Lutherplatz and was laid out in 1876 around the Wagner monument that had been inaugurated five years earlier (on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the orphanage). |
08956013
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Apartment building in closed development and in a corner | Katharinenstrasse 1 (map) |
1899 | Stately historic clinker brick building with corner bay window, characterizing the street scene, of architectural significance.
Apartment building in closed development and in a corner location, built in 1899 for the businessman Eduard Schulze, executed by Emil Gläser, stately historic clinker building, three-story brick building above a high base with polygonal masonry (ground floor red and white striped / upper floors orange), strong cornices, structures and garments in sandstone , beveled corner with a flat bay window over two storeys, later the Marienberger Bank was in the house, through this 1935 expansion of the attic, with the removal of decorative structures. As the head building of a rising street, it shapes the image and is of architectural significance. |
08956018
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Apartment building in closed development | Katharinenstrasse 3 (map) |
1899 | Historic clinker brick building, formative and important in terms of building history.
Apartment building in closed development, historic clinker brick building, built in 1899 for master tailor Karl Emil Wagner, made by Emil glasses. The three-storey brick building is structured in a flat relief by sandstone elements, at its corners there are two roof houses with a shell motif and small pyramids. Developed together with the house at Katharinenstrasse 1, the ensemble at the lower edge of the old town created a new urban planning and cityscape situation. |
08956020
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House in a corner and in a semi-open development | Katharinenstrasse 16 (map) |
1790 | Late baroque plastered building with well-preserved architectural features (vaults, cellars, roof trusses), of architectural historical value and relevant to urban planning.
Residential house in the corner of Katherinenstrasse and Töpferstrasse in the northwest of the historic old town, today semi-open development in a striking urban situation, late baroque plastered building with well-preserved architectural features (vaults, roof trusses), therefore also of architectural historical value.
Two-storey, five by three axes, plastered quarry stone, mansard roof with one-sided hip, inside good original inventory: barrel-vaulted quarry stone cellar - from the time of construction (early 17th century), on the ground floor heavily busted groin vaults in the area of the former central hall and one half of the house (also recognizable on an inventory drawing from 1896), two-flight staircase, also cross-arch vault in the area of the landing, stucco ceiling on the upper floor in the hallway, window openings except in the area of the street gable with basket arch reveals, tiles in the Art Nouveau staircase (around 1905), steps made of Porphyrtuff from the construction period, collar beam roof - partly wood connections leafed.
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09301073
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Residential building in closed development | Katharinenstrasse 17 (map) |
marked 1795 | Late baroque building with segmental arch portal, defining the image and significant in terms of building history.
Residential house in closed development, late baroque two-storey plastered building with segmented arch portal, keystone marked 1795, basket arch door with a strong, straight lintel, sandstone and porphyry walls, mansard roof with later pike-like extension. 1854 oven for August Krautz, 1874 Esse, 1902/03 installation of skylights for master carpenter Albin Andretzky (made by Emil glasses). The contemporary existing drawing shows a continuous corridor, strong walls, three-span cross vaults and, in the front left room, a star vault. 1996 floor plan changes, stucco ceilings probably removed. |
08956031
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Garden shed | Katharinenstraße 18 (near) (map) |
around 1900 | Significant in terms of building history and local development.
The small half-timbered garden house with a flat pyramid roof, built around 1900 in a formative place to enclose a residential area that otherwise no longer exists here, is also relevant to architectural history. |
09305541
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Two barracks buildings, barracks (house B, Katharinenstrasse 21 / 21b) and civil servants' residence (house E, Katharinenstrasse 23) | Katharinenstrasse 21; 21b; 23 (card) |
1894 (barracks) | Part of a former infantry barracks, later non-commissioned officers 'and non-commissioned officers' pre-school, stately authentic plastered buildings, of local, military and architectural significance.
Barracks B and civil servants' residence (House E), memorial remains of the former infantry barracks (later NCO school), the buildings of which were once grouped around a central square, the stately plastered buildings that still exist today were completed in 1894. Before that, the 3rd Battalion of the 7th Infantry Regiment had been relocated from Chemnitz to Marienberg in 1858, and a number of buildings had already been demolished when these two structures were built. The three-storey barracks B measures 60 meters by 17 meters, the two-storey civil servants' residence 53 meters by 26 meters. Both buildings on rustic plinths have mighty side projections closed off by steep hipped roofs, which are connected by slightly recessed wings with a gable roof. In 1947 there were functional changes and some facade modifications. History barracks:
Description of the plant: Building complex around a rectangular square, consisting of barracks A, B, C, D, E, buildings today only partially preserved in their original form, only barracks B and barracks E are memorable. Description of barracks B and E 1894: The most spacious buildings, officers and crew wings 60 by 17 meters, six storeys in the middle building, side wings of the same height on both sides, both basement floors comprised a barracks locker room, detention rooms, cellar, craftsmen's rooms, kitchens, pantries and other things, on the ground floor and first floor seven school rooms and a teacher's room, a library, officers' canteen, apartments for officers and NCOs, crew schools, dormitories, washrooms, floors and others. 1947: Barracks B - crew wing:
1947: Barracks B - officers wing:
1894: Barracks E:
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09248149
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Residential house in corner location and in closed development | Kirchstrasse 2 (map) |
18th century | Stately baroque building, plastered facade with segmented arch portal, defining the image and significant in terms of building history.
Residential house in corner location and in closed development, among other things, architectural significance, concise and image-defining baroque building as the prelude to Kirchstrasse on the southeastern edge of the old town. Two-storey, thick-walled solid construction of four by four axes with plastered facade, therein segmented arch portal and natural stone walls, steep mansard roof with hip. Inside there are two large cellar bins. Construction work was carried out on the roof in 1872. |
08955997
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Residential building in closed development | Kirchstrasse 4 (map) |
after 1684, later reshaped; Basement before 1610 | Early plastered construction with a well-preserved wooden ceiling inside from the time it was built, from architectural and urban development historical buildings.
Residential house in closed development, four-axis plastered building built after the city fire around 1684, the basement possibly even older. Martin Kreysick should be considered as the client. Two-storey and eaves, with an entrance slightly offset from the center, rectangular windows that are not regularly arranged, window frames on the upper floor beveled - probably after 1880. Hallway narrow and without vaults. Quarry stone barrel vault in the cellar. Well-preserved bevelled wooden ceiling from the time of its creation with ship-grooved girder. The ground floor probably quarry stone masonry, here pressed basket arches of the openings, above it today brick masonry (remains of half-timbered), collar beam roof. Construction work around 1880 (for miner Gustav Eduard Fiedler), in 1901 said renewal of the outer walls and single-flight stone stairs by Emil glasses. Collar-beam roof with uprights. |
09303374
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Residential house in semi-open development | Kirchstrasse 6 (map) |
from 1620 | Plastered building with a steep roof, strongly defining the image and significant in terms of building history.
Semi-open residential building, two-storey plastered eaves building with irregular window openings and a steep pitched roof without extensions, a floor plan from 1919 shows very thick walls on the back and in the SE as well as an irregular floor plan without right angles, the continuous corridor is typical of Marienberg buildings from the Baroque period and before . Cubature and roof pitch can indicate a former half-timbered house. Construction time around 1620, builder Hans Weber. 1890 owner Karl Heinrich Ehnert (installation of Esse). |
09305542
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Residential house in open development | Kirchstrasse 7 (map) |
18th century, with an older core | Upper floor half-timbered, located right next to the church, one of the few half-timbered buildings in the town, of architectural significance.
Two-storey residential building in open development, located on the eaves facing Kirchstrasse directly below the choir section of St. Marien, of importance in terms of urban development and architectural history. The massive ground floor with a central segmental arched entrance, the size of which could indicate a function of the building as a craftsman's house. The upper floor with two-bar visible framework, created after fire in 1819, this wooden construction is rare in Marienberg, half-timbering intact, i.e. with intact wall-opening ratio, winter window, saddle roof, built towards the church, without extensions and with slate covering, gable boarded. Good structural condition. |
08956004
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Residential building in closed development | Kirchstrasse 9 (map) |
18th century | Plastered building with a steep roof, defining the image and significant in terms of building history.
Residential house in originally closed development, eaves, two-storey solid plastered building with saddle roof without extensions, upper floor with six axes, arched entrance to the left, the windows slightly changed and without the original natural stone walls, strong ground floor walls, the floor plan is irregular with a continuous corridor, therefore probably the 18th century. 1912 Installation of a massive staircase, together with the adjoining building number 11, slightly raised above Kirchstrasse, a defining structural component of the town center development, relevance for urban planning and building history. |
08956006
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Residential building in closed development | Kirchstrasse 11 (map) |
18th century | Plastered building with a steep roof, defining the image and significant in terms of building history.
Residential house in closed development, facing the eaves and slightly raised to Kirchstrasse, the two-storey solid plastered building with a pitched roof without extensions (apart from three hatches from 1904), together with the Kirchstrasse building. 9, defining the image and structural component of the town center development, also of architectural historical relevance, striking, slightly modified portal, new construction of the upper floor facade wall in 1897 (execution: Emil glasses), then there six axes, continuous hallway shows a baroque floor plan, the core of the house therefore probably 18th. Century. |
08956007
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Residential building in closed development | Kirchstrasse 24 (map) |
after 1759 | Plastered building, old vaults inside, part of the old local structure, of architectural significance.
Residential house in closed development, massive plastered building on the eaves, built after the city fire in 1759, but the vaults on the ground floor and in the basement could still be an older substance, the flat saddle roof with a pike-like extension is probably not original, nor is the facade, which was initially built in 1866 by a jamb was changed (builder: Sachse), in 1915 by means of a shop door (builder: Reichel) and finally in 1928 and 1938 by shop windows (execution: Emil glasses), despite the changes in the substance of the building history and, since the house is a structural component of the town center, also urban planning relevance. |
08956022
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Residential house in closed development and in a corner | Kirchstrasse 28 (map) |
1799 (first building files, cellar older) | Baroque plastered building with a mansard roof, of importance in terms of urban planning and architectural history.
Residential house in closed development and in a corner position, baroque plastered building with a deep body of four to six axes and a mansard roof, which is hipped towards Fleischerstrasse, segment-arched entrance located slightly outside the central axis. The cellar with its barrel vaults is likely to date from the 16th century, when there were already permanent buildings here. The first building files date from 1799. Early inventory drawings show the floor plan with a continuous hallway, cross vaults there and on the right, the upper floor partly with stucco ceilings, the roof with a reclining chair. After the fall of the Wall, the oversized dormers were optically better integrated, the lying Berlin windows from the GDR era were reduced to standing formats after 1995. The house is important in terms of building history and, as a structural component of the old town center development, is also important in terms of urban development. |
08956384
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Residential house in corner location and in closed development | Kirchstrasse 30 (map) |
18th century | Wide-spread baroque building with basket arch portal, more recent roof extension, of architectural and urban importance.
Residential house in corner location and in closed development, core 18th century, parts possibly older, broadly laid out two-story massive baroque building with basket arch portal, natural stone walls and mansard roof with hip, the ground floor windows were enlarged as early as 1890, the roof extension with two (too) large, standing ones Gaupen was done in 1920 by Emil glasses for the manufacturer Alfred Morgenstern. The floor plan was changed significantly in 1926. In addition to the historical significance of the house, there is also urban planning, as it is a structural component of the core development in Marienberg and is also in a key location. |
08955979
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Residential building in closed development | Kirchstrasse 32 (map) |
18th century | Wide-spread baroque building with a high mansard roof, defining the image and of architectural significance.
Residential house in a closed development, two-story, massive baroque building from the 18th century, with a high mansard roof and two rows of new, standing dormers. The segmental arched central entrance, the second segmental arched door with keystone in the outer right axis and the seven irregular openings on the upper floor indicate several building measures (one documented in 1891). There are barrel vaults in the basement and a (suspended) stucco ceiling on the ground floor (shop area). The historical significance of the house is evident, but so is the urban development relevance as a structural component of the town center development. |
08955978
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House in a corner and in a semi-open development | Kirchstrasse 34 (map) |
18th century | Typical plaster facade of the time, of importance in terms of urban planning and building history.
Residential house in corner location and in half-open development, massive two-storey baroque building with plastered facade, three to six axes, the segment-arched portal almost in the middle on the long side to Kirchstrasse, the rather flat hipped roof with three heavy new dormers. In 1864 the floor plan was changed on the upper floor and the outer wall of the upper floor was rebuilt, the irregular ground floor plan shows a continuous corridor with stairs, a garage installation from 1957 was reversed, and there were also conversions in the 1990s. In addition to the building-historical significance of the house, which still exists, there is also urban planning relevance, because it is a structural component of the special town center development and also in a formative place. |
09305543
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House in a corner and in a semi-open development | Kirchstrasse 36 (map) |
18th century | Stately baroque building, plastered facade with mansard roof, characterizing the street scene and significant in terms of building history.
Residential house in a corner location and in half-open development, the stately two-storey baroque building with an extended attic in the steep Krüppelmansarddach (also in the second attic there are still two rows of small dormers) has a plastered facade in front of quarry stone masonry of seven to three axes with natural stone walls, the irregularly placed openings and the bricked up Entrance (1995) on the eaves side of Kirchstrasse testify to numerous construction measures. As early as 1895 there were extensive changes to the floor plan on all floors (client: Secretary Adolph Barth), parts of the ceilings were also subject to modifications, but the strong outer walls were retained, even on the upper floor. The sloping corner to Bergstrasse (former shop entrance) and the neighboring shop windows date from 1926, the latter were reduced in size again in 1958. When the attic was expanded in 1995/96, the collar beam on the second attic was raised. Two large cellar vaults inside testify to the original building, stone stairs are also worth mentioning. The striking building of architectural historical relevance is also significant in terms of urban planning because of its location and its structural contribution to the old town core development. |
08955969
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Residential building in closed development | Kirchstrasse 42 (map) |
before 1800 | Plastered facade, low late baroque building with modified ground floor openings, formative and important in terms of building history.
Residential house in closed development, plastered facade, low late baroque building with modified ground floor openings and six axes on the upper floor, the flat slate-covered saddle roof with two rows of roof houses, central segment arched entrance, the facade changes go back to 1891 (client: Joh. Heinrich Langheinrich), 1921 there are floor plans in the right half of the house. The house illustrates the heterogeneous development that emerged over the course of time on the homogeneous urban layout and is of urban significance. |
08955968
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Boundary wall between the properties at Lorbeerstraße 2 and Katharinenstraße 6 | Lorbeerstraße 2 (map) |
possibly before 1700 | Quarry stone wall (layer masonry), documents the historical plot structures, of importance in terms of local development.
Boundary wall between the properties at Lorbeerstraße 2 and Katharinenstraße 6, the quarry stone wall, made up of predominantly slate layered masonry, documents the historical plot structures and therefore, although at least partially renewed, may have been of historical importance as early as the 16th century. |
08957105
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Methodist Church | Lorbeerstraße 5 (map) |
1961 (church) | As a conversion of a garage, this is a rare testimony to the GDR post-war architecture, above all of architectural significance.
Methodist church, as a conversion of a garage (!) 1960 a rare testimony to the GDR post-war architecture, the single-storey, functional rough plastered building with a rusticated segmental arch entrance on the side, also with its flat saddle roof, evokes the atmosphere of an early Christian church - an impression that is associated with Saxon post-war churches occurs more often and which also seems to have a cathartic background. Four large windows facing the street with straight lintels point to the hall, the flat apsidal extension underlines the church iconography. Next to it, as an application, a stylized metal figure of Christ with a raised arm, underneath the slogan: "I AM WITH YOU". |
09305544
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Residential house in closed development and in a corner | Lorbeerstraße 6 (map) |
1852 | Stately, broadly laid out plastered building (two parts of the house), later with a restaurant, characterizing the streetscape, of architectural significance.
Residential house in closed development and in a corner location, built after the fire in 1852, with probably an older core, two-storey plastered building (two parts of the house) with seven by six axes, later with a restaurant, characterizing the street scene and significant in terms of building history. The relatively large extensions of the comparatively flat hip roof date from 1906 (made by Emil glasses). The house was owned by the butcher family Drechsler for generations. 1976 major floor plan changes on both floors. |
08956016
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Residential house in corner location and in closed development | Marienstraße 2 (map) |
marked 1853, core older | Stately plastered building typical of the time, characterizing the streetscape, of architectural significance.
Residential house in a corner location and in closed development, probably rebuilt after the fire in 1853, with an older core, plastered construction typical of the time, of structural history and, as a structural component of the special town center development, of urban significance. The massive house with sandstone walls, just suspected front door and a hipped roof with modern roof houses is two-story. In 1996 the floor plan was changed. |
08956019
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Residential house in corner location and in closed development | Marienstraße 15 (map) |
18th century | Large baroque plastered building with mansard roof and segmental arch portal, defining the image and significant in terms of building history.
House in a corner and originally closed development, the deep, massive plastered building from the Baroque period is two-storey and has a hilted mansard roof with standing dormer windows. On the long side there is a segment arch portal, the window openings (6: 4 axes) in their original size have strongly profiled natural stone walls. An old as-built drawing shows a continuous corridor and all rooms on the ground floor with vaults. At the time of the installation of the Esse in 1885, the building owner was Heinrich Albin Uhlig, in 1890 there were floor plans changes on the ground floor (parlor), the extension of the attic was carried out by Emil Glasses in 1911. The building, which is a defining feature of its corner location and size, is part of the architectural history and structure Town center development, of urban significance. |
08956005
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Residential house in closed development and in a corner | Marienstraße 17 (map) |
18th century | Plastered facade with segmented arch portal, typical baroque building, characterizing the street scene and significant in terms of building history.
Baroque residential building in closed development and in a corner location, the two-storey plastered solid building has a crooked hip roof, in which there are two small pike. The wall-opening ratio was probably changed several times, although not in a dimensionally disruptive manner. To Marienstrasse basket arch portal with keystone. Groin vaults on the ground floor, baroque paintings in the building. 1854 extension, shop installation 1890 (Maria Theresia Donner), in 1910 the building belonged to Alma Schirneck, who was apparently planning a cinema in the extension (there is a drawing by Siemens-Schuckert, Chemnitz, which shows a connection to the Freiberger Straße cinema room, which actually still exists) . The building is of architectural significance, has a decisive influence on the image of the intersection near the church and, as a structural component of the special town center development, is of relevance to urban development. |
08955994
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Residential house in closed development and in a corner | Marienstraße 18 (map) |
Kern before 1614 | Buildings existed in the Renaissance period, plastered façade typical of the time after the fire in 1852, important in terms of building history and urban planning.
Residential house in closed development and in a corner location, the building already existed in the Renaissance period, the plastered façade typical of the time was created after the fire in 1852, two-storey solid plastered building with a flat hipped roof, in it modern dormer windows, the ground floor expanded into a shop area, a plaster cornice visually divides the floors. Oswald Schreyer is listed as the client, and Georg Bottich in 1614. In 1852 Albin Eduard Gerbing was the building owner, for the construction work this year (including the installation of the entrance gate) the existing drawing shows a cross-vaulted hallway and an irregular floor plan, in 1933 the master butcher Richard Drechsler was the house owner. The house has architectural significance, shapes the image of the intersection and, as a structural component of the special town center development, is of relevance to urban development. |
09305558
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Residential building in closed development | Marienstraße 34 (map) |
18th century (probably older) | Baroque plastered building with a mansard roof and segmented arch portal, shapes the street scene through its height, which is significant in terms of architectural history.
Residential building, eaves in a closed development, the baroque, plastered two-storey quarry stone building with five axes, with a mansard roof and segmented arch portal made of sandstone, is a relic of older buildings in the midst of historic houses that were built after a fire, it shapes the street scene through its height. Three large, house-like standing dormers are additions to the historicist era. Inside there are groin vaults, which are characteristic of the 18th century, as well as simple stucco ceilings. The chimney was installed in 1897 for Ernst Hermann by Emil glasses. Significance in terms of building history, urban development history and urban planning. |
08955990
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Monument to Duke Heinrich | Market (map) |
1900 | Bronze figure on a high granite base, in memory of Heinrich the Pious of Saxony (1473–1541), the city's founder, of local historical and artistic importance.
Monument to Duke Heinrich the Pious of Saxony (1473–1541), the founder of Marienberg, standing figure of the duke as a contemporary armored knight with a sword as high as a man, the feathered helmet of the armor at his feet, cast bronze based on a model by Friedrich Offermann, cast in Lauchhammer in 1900, on a high, polished granite base. |
08955935
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Market planting (row of trees) | Market (map) |
from 1775 | Significant in local history.
The market square was planted in 1775 with a surrounding row of trees made up of ten linden trees on each of the four edges of the square. In 1862 a second row was added. In 1970/1971 the outer row of linden trees was felled, so that the market is now surrounded by only one row of linden trees. The planting emphasizes the regular design of the square that forms the center of the ideal city. The marrow planting shapes the cityscape and is of local historical importance. |
09305723
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More pictures |
town hall | Market 1 (map) |
1537-1541 | Representative renaissance building with roof turret, built by master builder Johann Hofmann, impressive seat niche portal by Michel von Speyer and Andreas Günther, of importance in terms of building history, the history of the town and the townscape.
The town hall, which takes up a large part of the northwest side of the Marienberg market square, is next to the Marienkirche the most important building in the city in terms of history and urban development. Its structural core dates back to the time the city was founded, when, after a few years, it replaced a previous wooden building from 1524. The portals and outer walls from the 16th century have been preserved. The representative Renaissance building was built by master builder Johann Hofmann. The two-storey plastered building with square corner pilasters has a mighty hipped roof, which is crowned by a large roof turret in the form of a double lantern (marked 1685, renewed in 1790). Two renaissance portals - a third disappeared in 1834 - decisively define the building: the central main porphyry portal was created in 1539 by the master stonemason Michael von Speyer and was artistically designed by Andreas Günther from Halle. Ornamental pilasters frame the arched, jagged entrance with the seating niches typical of the time and region. The gable top, framed by volutes and vases, shows the coat of arms of Duke Heinrich, flanked by miners' figures. In the spandrels of the arched field you can see the reliefs of George and his successor Heinrich, the city founder. You can read the motto “verbum domini manet in aeternum”, the coat of arms is divided into the ten coats of arms of its little country. The door leaf with its carved reliefs is the work of Reinhold Langner (1905–52), from 1951 director of the Folklore Museum in Dresden. The round-arched Ratskeller portal with fittings also dates from the 16th century, the one on the left is more recent. On the ground floor with an irregular floor plan there is a continuous corridor with cross vaults, on the ground floor there was the brewery, meat banks, council scales, bread banks, the council drinking room, a cookshop, the stables and (until 1684) a carriage shed. The Fronfeste also existed here from 1534 until 1855, when it was moved to the newly built annex on the Amtsstraße. As early as 1834, a military guard with detention rooms was set up in the corner of Ratsstrasse, and the Renaissance portal there was opened. Inside, the spacious rooms were mostly divided up, especially today's wedding room on the upper floor with vaults, door walls and natural stone paving reminds of the early days of the building. The town hall burned down for the first time in 1610, with the portals and outer walls being preserved, followed by a new fire in 1684 and reconstruction by 1686. The current town hall tower dates from that time. 1873 Establishment of a savings bank in the building, 1939 city arms and sundial by Helas, painter from Dresden. |
08955918
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Administration building in semi-open development and in a corner location, part of the town hall (today town archive and town administration) | Market 1 (map) |
1856 (administration building) | Building from 19 to nine window axes extending over the entire length of the square, plastered facade typical of the time, of architectural and local importance.
Administration building in half-open development and in a corner location, built in 1856 as an extension of the town hall, two-storey building with 19 to nine window axes extending over the entire length of the square, plastered facade typical of the time, three entrances to Töpferstrasse, two added basket arch portals to the Amtsstrasse, hipped roof with many small standing dormers. Significance in terms of building history and local history, as a district-defining building of the old town grid, it is also of urban significance. |
08955936
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Residential house in corner location and in closed development | Market 3 (map) |
Kern before 1536 (western part) | With two gateways, a large, broad plastered building with a high hipped roof, an important part of the market development on the Amtsstraße, of local and architectural importance.
Together with the town hall, the “Princely House” forms the most important aspect of the Marienberg market square in terms of image and urban planning. Its western half with the corner to the Amtsstraße was built before 1536 to accommodate the nobility and was rebuilt after a city fire from 1610 to 1620. After it was destroyed again by the fire in 1684, the house remained in a precarious condition for almost 100 years until it was poorly restored as a storage facility in 1782. In 1834 the main customs office moved in, in 1883 the forest district administration, since 1900 it was the chief forester's office. The eastern part of the building used to be an independent free house built by Abbot Hilarius (Archediakonat Chemnitz) in 1541 and was rebuilt in 1694 by the client Hans Samuel Reichel. Large plastered quarry stone building with a total of ten or ten axes (including the extension of the Amtsstraße) in a corner position and in closed development, two-storey and on the market side with a rather high hipped roof, with two gate passages, one in the eastern section and one in the extension on the Amtsstraße. The ground floor with a continuous corridor, cross vaults, strong irregular masonry, and the upper floor also has an irregular floor plan. Roof extensions in the 1960s and 1970s either not implemented or reversed. |
08955919
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Residential house in corner location and in closed development | Market 4 (map) |
Kern around 1600 | Originally a half-timbered construction, with built-in shops, with a steep hipped roof, part of the market development, of importance in terms of building history and urban development.
The stately residential building in a corner and in closed development closes off the urban and visually most important side of the Marienberg market square towards Zschopauer Straße and points to this with its large gable side. The core of it was built around 1600 or before that and was originally built using timber construction typical of the region. An early existing drawing shows a continuous hallway, cross vaults and strong walls on the ground floor, especially on the side street. The slightly protruding upper floor points to the former half-timbered cage, the construction of which is still partially preserved. The steep hipped roof is slated and has recently (again?) Three rows of small, standing dormers. A massive five-axis extension with a gable roof and passage connects along Zschopauer Straße. Barrel and groin vaults can also be found in this building. 1906 changes on the ground floor for shop fitting (for Arno Thiele, executed by Oscar Krumbiegel), 1913 new upper floor facade (Krumbiegel), 1993 some floor plan changes on the ground floor. |
08955920
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Residential house (with older portal) in closed development and in a corner | Market 5 (map) |
16th Century | Three-storey solid construction with a splendid Renaissance seat niche portal, part of the market ensemble, of architectural significance.
Three-storey residential building in closed development and in a corner location, the plastered solid structure is part of the market ensemble and is also of importance in terms of building history. The current appearance of the house, the core of which can be dated to the 16th century, goes back to extensive construction work in 1900: the facade including the shop windows as a whole, the staircase and almost all of the substance from the first floor were rebuilt, and the house was modified another storey added. The builder was Ferdinand Hastedt, the owner of the cart mill in Rittersberg, the execution was carried out by Emil glasses. The closely spaced drilled windows on the upper floor, coupled on the second floor and provided with keystones, give the property a somewhat “Venetian” appearance. A triangular bay window with a pressed onion hood on the first floor breaks the symmetry of the facade boldly. In the center, however, an ornate sandstone renaissance portal (marked “1545”) announces the existing older building fabric on the ground floor. Its arch is floral and figurative, and reliefs of heads can be seen in the spandrels. The cartouche above the lintel shows a curiosity: In addition to the initials on the left side, their mirror image was also shown on the right after 1694 (Johann Rudolph Richter, Marienberg's mayor, died 1709 - graphic model: Augustus Rex). Inside, an elaborate Renaissance wooden beam ceiling is surprising, which was preserved in situ in 2000 for today's business premises. |
08955921
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Residential house (with older portal) in closed development | Market 6 (map) |
1659 | Stately building, with seat niche portal from the late Renaissance, part of the market ensemble, of architectural significance
Similar to the neighboring house at Markt 5, this house, originally built in 1659 and part of the market ensemble, underwent a comprehensive redesign in 1900: although the continuous corridor with cross vaults and the wide, late ornamented Renaissance seating niche portal SB1670 were retained, the entire plastered facade of the House, large parts of the first floor (except the back wall), also the entire second floor and the roof with new housing. The builder was master butcher August Winkler, with Emil glasses in charge. The ground floor is visually marked by a plastered cornice, the lintels on the second floor carry cartouches. The house has architectural significance and, as part of the market ensemble, also urban planning significance. |
08955922
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Residential building in closed development | Market 10 (map) |
18th century, core probably older | With shop fitting, baroque plastered building with mansard roof, of importance in terms of building history and urban planning.
Residential house in eaves and closed development, two-storey baroque plastered building with three-storey mansard roof, with a dominant classicist roof house. It is true that the characteristic ground floor floor plan (for example, a continuous corridor) was partially changed as early as 1902 and all floor plans were changed again more strongly in 1992, and the wall-opening ratio on the first floor is not original. Due to the mighty and compact structure, the house is relevant in terms of urban planning and determines the image of the historic market square of Marienberg. Barrel vaults in the cellar are still to be mentioned as the original substance. Owner was Ernst Zimmermann in 1895 and master butcher Oscar Schumann in 1902. |
09305545
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Residential house in corner location and in closed development | Markt 12 (map) |
in the core 18th century. | With shop, stately plastered building, part of the market ensemble, of architectural significance.
Residential building with a baroque core, with an extension to Baderstrasse, closed development of twelve by seven axes, two-storey plastered building with facade design from the 19th century, front door lintel to the market denoted GBB 1845 , structure by strong cornices, on the upper floor largely original wall-opening ratio, on the ground floor Later shop fittings, large driveway and door to Baderstraße, the roof hunched to the corner was given a roof house in late historical forms (by Oscar Krumbiegel) in 1901, an inventory drawing from 1853 shows the beautiful roof construction of the main building facing the market: reclining chair with double collar beam and jamb, and the one for the 18th century typical irregular floor plan with a continuous hallway. In 1856 the furrier Hezel lived in the house. 1949 f. Drafts for an HO store. The house is part of the market ensemble and therefore, in addition to its architectural history, it is also of urban significance. |
08955927
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House in a corner and in closed development and a wall in the courtyard | Market 14 (map) |
inscribed 1539, later reshaped | With a shop, stately plastered building with rich seating niche portal from the Renaissance period, part of the market ensemble, of local and architectural importance.
House in a corner and in closed development, built on one of the courtyards that the city's founder, Duke Heinrich, had reserved. The two-storey plastered solid building with a flat hipped roof is important in terms of architectural history, local history and, due to its corner location and as part of the market ensemble, also in terms of urban planning. The former mining office has an important porphyry niche portal with six finely crafted portrait medallions, which is marked SH 1539 in the keystone and is designed above the cornice with an acanthus-covered initial shield SH 1720 . The door leaves appear to be original. A groin vault on the ground floor and a wooden beam ceiling have also been preserved from the old structure, the walls on the ground floor are strong. The grooved corner pilaster strips of the facade, the wall-to-opening ratio on the upper floor and the partly arcade-like shop zone on the ground floor are ingredients of more recent times, as are the roof houses. A high old quarry stone wall has been preserved in the courtyard, which provides information about the historical plot structure. |
08955929
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Residential building in closed development | Market 15 (map) |
1852 | Part of the market development, relevance to urban planning and building history.
Residential house in closed development, part of the market development, of relevance to urban planning and building history. The two-storey solid building was built for master tailor Walther after the town fire in 1852. In the basement there are still barrel vaults from the previous building. The plastered facade, which appears classical, is structured by cornices, and the upper floor windows are very regular. The segment-arched shop fitting probably dates from the post-war period, the loft-like extensions of the flat saddle roof are more recent. |
08955930
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Residential house (with pharmacy) in a corner and in a closed development | Markt 16 (map) |
1852-1853 | Stately plastered building, part of the market ensemble, of local and architectural significance.
Residential house (with pharmacy) in a corner location and in closed development, the stately two-storey plastered building with a flat roof hunched down to the corner is part of the market ensemble, therefore of urban significance, but also of local and architectural relevance. The building, which looks like its neighbors, was built like the one after the city fire in 1852; the builder was the pharmacist and city councilor Fuhrmann. The facade, which has six by eight axes, is structured by cornices and enhanced by a mezzanine towards the market. The small dormers are original size. An air raid shelter from 1934 in the house is also of historical interest. In 1984–87 there were renovation measures, the plastic windows that were probably used in the 1990s are not suitable for listed buildings. |
08955931
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Residential house in corner location and in closed development | Markt 17 (map) |
around 1870 | Stately plastered building, part of the market ensemble, of importance in terms of building history and urban planning.
Residential house in a corner location and in closed development, plastered building from the Wilhelminian era with five by eleven axes, part of the market ensemble, of significance in terms of building history and urban development. The facade of the two-storey solid building is structured by cornices and has a basket arch portal to the market and Scheffelstrasse. The walls of the openings are made of porphyry, the elongated, possibly inconsistent building is also enhanced by a mezzanine jamb. The flat hipped roof has no extensions. Modification in 1908 for master furrier Paul Meißner, executed by Oscar Krumbiegel, 1921 shop window (also for Paul Meißner). |
08955932
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Former hotel in closed development | Markt 18 (map) |
around 1890 | Part of the market ensemble, of local and architectural importance.
Former hotel in closed development, part of the market ensemble, of importance in terms of local history, building history and urban development. The three-story solid construction is structured on the ground floor with plastered rustics and coupled flat arch windows and portal, the windows on the upper floors have sandstone walls and are simply profiled, the saddle roof with four new roof houses, the passage with groin vaults. The Wilhelminian style building, which was probably built towards the end of the 19th century, was the “To the 3 Swans” hotel. After construction plans in the 1960s (including the construction of a new department store) had not been realized, the “Lindencafé” was housed in the building until 1992. |
08955933
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Residential house in corner location and in closed development | Markt 19 (map) |
1864 | With shop fitting, plastered facade typical of the time, part of the market ensemble, of importance in terms of building history and urban planning.
Residential house in a corner location and in closed development, architectural historical and, as part of the market ensemble, urban development significance. The house was built in 1864 as a new building for the court ... Wersbach, the construction was carried out by master bricklayer Uhlig from Warmbad. The two-storey, late classicist solid building with five by nine axes is structured by cornices, the regular windows in some cases still have sills on consoles. The hipped roof, which merges into a saddle roof in the extension to Wolkensteiner Straße, has a total of nine standing dormers in the original size on the front sides. Two arched portals were added. In 1979 the ground floor plan was changed for the district art museum, the shop windows were there before that. 1984 plaster renewal as part of extensive renovations in the old town area. |
08955934
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city wall | Obere Bahnhofstrasse (map) |
16./17. century | Important historical evidence of the former fortification of the mountain town.
Individual monument of the population of the Marienberg fortification: (see also list of the population - Obj. 09305552, Obere Bahnhofstraße without number) Natural stone wall in the area of Oberen Bahnhofstrasse, today it functions as a retaining wall between Oberer and Unterer Bahnhofstrasse and between Oberen Bahnhofstrasse and the garden of the former orphanage (Goethering 5). It represents a section of the former Marienberg city fortifications. The construction of the complex began only around 20 years after the city was founded. It originally consisted of four corner towers, five gates and the average 6 meter high and 1.30 meter wide city wall. It was built from local natural stones. Arched structures increased their width to about 2 meters (battlements). Due to the importance of the city's history and urban development, it can be considered a monument. The fortification separated the city from the outside area. It granted the Marienberg citizens protection and security, even if it no longer met the requirements with regard to the level of development of war technology. It became dilapidated over the centuries. It began to be demolished in 1834 and intensified from 1856 onwards. Individual remains have been preserved to this day - the game at Zschopauer Tor is the most impressive. |
08955976
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City fortifications Marienberg | Obere Bahnhofstrasse (map) |
16./17. Century | important historical evidence of the former fortifications of the mountain town.
Historical open space designs in the course of the former city fortifications (city and settlement greenery, ring or "wall" system, promenade). The town of Marienberg (founded in 1521), which was planned with a grid-like structure, was fortified around the middle of the 16th century with a town wall and several gates and towers. From 1834/38 the now dilapidated walling was demolished, then systematically from 1856. Mainly sections in the north with the Zschopauer Tor and the Red Tower in the south-east, further sections in the south (including locally towering rock formations) were apparently renewed later. The garden design of some open spaces in the former course of the city fortifications was evidently based on a plan by the Dresden city gardener (and later garden director) Wilhelm Moritz Degenhardt (1845–1924). The Zschopauer Tor and the Red Tower have been a listed building since 1914. The green spaces were subsequently created, for example in 1880 in the northwest of Freiberger Strasse, the facilities in front of the city wall between Rotem Turm and Freiberger Tor were built as early as 1805/06 as emergency work for impoverished miners, financed by the Gesellschaft der Volksfreunde (LF).
Interpretation / evaluation: The remains of the city fortifications and the open spaces that were later created in the area of the former city wall testify to important specifics of the urban development of Marienberg. The course of the earlier fortifications, which can still be seen in the settlement structure today, and the preserved parts of the city wall, the Zschopauer Tor and the Red Tower, are elements of the city complex created according to plan in the 16th century (historical urban development value). Furthermore, the preservation of concise "spoils" of the city fortifications (Zschopauer Tor and northwestern city wall as well as the Red Tower), architectural references to it (integration of the transformer tower at Zschopauer Tor) as well as the creative staging of new buildings following the demolition of the defenses (electricity station) are historical Meaning. Similar to the typical developments that were generally introduced after the cities were de-fortified, the historical open space designs also reflect different forms of conversion of the land that became available at that time into public jewelry and recreational facilities (garden historical testimony value). Under the general conditions of the special circumstances (size of the city, topographical situation), the shapes that were fundamentally typical of the time were given individual characteristics. Assuming that these open space designs were created around the turn of the 19th to the 20th century, Marienberg is likely to be an example of a comparatively late development of this kind with regard to the garden-artistic redesign of areas of the former city fortifications compared to other Saxon cities of similar size (cf. . Among others Promenaden Bautzen, Ringpromenade Grossenhain, Stadtgraben Pegau and Ringanlagen Zittau). For a differentiated approach to the Marienberg green spaces in the area of the former city fortifications, detailed research on sources and an analysis of the existing situation are required. |
09305552
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Residential building in closed development | Obere Bahnhofstrasse 5 (map) |
1899, older core | Elongated, kinked plastered building with segmented arch portal, defining the image and significant in terms of building history.
Residential building in a closed development, located at the eaves with a slight bend at the southern exit (end of Marienstraße) of the historic old town. The elongated, plastered two-storey solid building with a gable roof is characterized by nine axes of window openings at irregular intervals and a central segmental arched entrance with a keystone. An existing floor plan from 1899 shows the elements that are generally typical of the 18th century, such as a continuous hallway with cross vaults and barrel vaults in the cellar. In 1899, floor plans were changed on both floors for the citizen school teacher Lebneck (by Emil Gläser), and a new stairwell was built on the back. Nevertheless, with its older, lower cubature, the building stands at a point of intersection with the later historicist urban development and thus illustrates the history of local development. The historical and urban significance is evident. |
08956021
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Residential house in open development | Obere Bahnhofstrasse 7 (map) |
re. 1899 | Large historic clinker brick building with bay window, elaborate facade characterizing the street scene, of architectural significance.
Residential house in open development, large historic clinker brick building. The elaborate, street-defining facade shows a ground floor with plastering and both upper floors with light red clinker brick. In this area, sandstone elements provide the decor, primarily the two-storey bay window, which serves as a quasi central projection, with fine drawing (including Hermen pilasters), which is ended with a gable triangle and Hermes head. Above this is the large four-axis roof house closure ending in volutes (labeled BM 1899 in it ), flanked by two further roof tubes in the flat gable roof. Numerous tiled stoves inside. The flour dealer Bruno Mehnert - still the owner in 1937 - had this building constructed as a combination of a residential building and an office building with flour by the Chemnitz architect Bruno Aurich. Formerly located near the train station and bearing the Mercury iconography of the trade, the iconic building embodies the economic expansion of Marienberg at the turn of the last century. The files report a plague of rats in the house in 1922. |
08956017
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Post office (without extension to SW) | Poststrasse 1 (map) |
1902 | Massive structure with historicizing details and a high tower, of local and architectural importance.
The post office of architectural and local historical importance was built in 1902 by the architect Schmedding (?) At a location typical for the time and function, namely on the edge of the old town, as it were on the "Glacis" and later green strip outside the former city wall. The massive, two-storey plastered building with a large hipped roof is pathetically accentuated by a stair tower with sloping windows in the style of the German Renaissance, and the volute gable at the side also cites this era. Medieval form borrowings are, for example, the partially still existing curtain arches or fish bladders. However, many openings were walled up or reduced because telecommunications systems were housed in the building in 1944. The air raid shelter also dates from this time. In 1963 the imposing tower dome was reduced. (The large flat extension is not relevant to a monument.) |
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Residential building (without north-western extension) | Poststrasse 2 (map) |
1904 | Plastered clinker facade, gable with free chevron, multi-part historicist villa with rich roof landscape, characterizing the street scene, important from an architectural point of view.
A mansion-like house of architectural significance, built in 1904 for the merchant Ernst Börner (executed by Emil Gläser) on the esplanade of the historic old town. Ground floor plastered on a rustic plinth with grooved corner pilasters, above a storey made of red brick, the structuring elements (window frames, corner rustics, cornices) set off with light natural stone, the central projecting with arched end of the two openings on the upper floor, in it a shell motif, the gable with a deep windowed chevron The half-hipped roof is closed off with an overhang, otherwise the overhanging roof landscape on the hipped roof base is separated from the structure by a suggested mezzanine (actually knee stick). On the upper floor veranda with vegetably designed windows. In 1922 the house became a business building for the ADCA (Allgemeine Deutsche Credit Anstalt) and for the changed purpose the veranda on the ground floor was glazed (by Emil Schönherr). Relocation of the entrance in 1938. The house originally had a picturesque side tower, which in 1956 was significantly reduced. The flat extension without monument value was built in 1968 for the GDR's industrial and commercial bank. |
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milestone | Poststrasse 6 (opposite) (map) |
around 1860 | Station stone, of importance in terms of traffic and local history.
The former station stone on the B 171 belongs to the system of royal Saxon milestones. These were the successors to the Saxon postal mile columns and were erected between 1858 and 1865 after the road construction engineer Wilke had re-measured the Saxon roads. The stone to be treated here belonged to the Annaberg – Marienberg and Marienberg – Ehrenfriedersdorf postal courses. The stone was originally located in front of the Wolkensteiner Tor, but in 1910 it was moved 2.2 km to today's B 171 in the course of the conversion to kilometers and provided with kilometers. In 2006 the now weathered stone was salvaged and restored. Today it has been moved back to its first location near Günther's Ruh with its original inscriptions "Wolkenstein 0.98 miles / Annaberg 2.67 M. / Ehrenfriedersdorf 2.52 M." and "Marienberg" on the back. The stone, made of sandstone and decorated with a crown, was restored again in 2014. As part of the comprehensive surveying system, this station stone is also of great importance in terms of traffic history. |
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Former Vorwerk | Poststrasse 11 (map) |
before 1592 | Old quarry stone walls on the ground floor with door and window openings as well as old roof truss, imposing, structurally reshaped quarry stone building with a singular vaulted cellar, of great importance in terms of urban and architectural history.
House history: Hans Canzler was a wealthy Leipzig cloth and wool merchant. His family is one of the most important mining companies in Marienberg. The farm buildings of the Vorwerk are shown on old cityscapes from 1592, 1629, 1650 and 1724. In 1686 the Vorwerk is divided. The citizen and trader Ernst Ullmann, in whose possession it is then, gives one half to his son, the citizen, Kramer and postman Ernst Benjamin Uhlmann. Johann Immanuel Berthold acquires the other half with all the buildings and ancillary facilities on the property. From this a description of the Vorwerk has been handed down: “... this Vorwerk was one of the best estates in the local city and included a district. But the times of war, plague, and dearth that had fallen into place brought the same thing down completely. The beautiful buildings and precious cellars were almost completely destroyed ... ”From these statements one can see that in 1686 the Vorwerk including the cellar stood. "The cellars were cleared and lifted, the buildings and the walls repaired and covered again, three floors filled and a malting and drying house with associated ovens and vats built." After several changes of ownership, the farm buildings of the Vorwerk and the malt house were added in 1776 remaining possessions in the property of the mayor Carl Christian Günther. After his death in 1811, the “brewing citizens” bought the malt house, the farm buildings remained in the family's possession. In 1846, at the request of the mayor at the time, Carl Christian Günther, the residential and farm buildings are bequeathed to the municipality in a will for the establishment of a poor foundation. Old and frail people who are unable to work are housed in a building in the Vorwerk called the monastery building. A sign with the inscription Günthers Ruh was put up above the front door . Building description: Two-storey plastered building with a rectangular floor plan, accessible on the gable side with a door portal, probably from the 18th or early 19th century. The building is closed off by a steep, slightly curved gable roof. The exterior of the building was severely affected by renovations around 1970. Even if the window openings have been largely retained, they have been enlarged slightly. The gable triangles, originally half-timbered, have now been massively bricked up. The steep gable roof is now disfigured by a large dormer window that affects almost the entire roof area. The building received a plaster typical for the renovation phase with narrow bezels. When it was converted into a tenement house around 1970, the spatial structure of the house was fundamentally changed, and the stairs were also replaced by new ones. However, there is no doubt that the cellar and the rising masonry have largely been preserved in their original form. The history of the house allows the assumption that both the cellar and the rising masonry date largely from the 16th century and were repaired in 1686. A new roof structure was also erected here. It is conceivable that today's roof structure dates from this time. A dendrochronological examination can provide more information about this. The door portal could stylistically be assigned to the conversion of the building into a poor monastery and would therefore possibly be from 1846. The cellar could have come from the 16th century and was repaired in 1686. Two-aisled cellar with six groin-vaulted vault fields, two free-standing brick pillars and six wall pillars, apex 1.90 meters, the crossbar of the vault is at floor level. Monument value: The following components of the building Poststr. 11 in Marienberg: outer masonry including the original window openings and the gable-side house entrance with door portal, inside the cellar, on the ground floor quarry stone walls including the door or window openings therein and the roof structure (without dormers). As one of the oldest buildings in the city of Marienberg and as a building complex in front of the gates of the historic city of Marienberg with an eventful history, the building has gained an extraordinarily high level of urban and architectural significance. As far as we know today, the cellar is unique in Marienberg. Comparable cellars are generally extremely seldom preserved, so that this cellar can be assessed as being of national architectural significance. |
09302032
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Two window frames of a residential building | Ratsstrasse 1 (map) |
probably 16th century (window frames) | Remarkable Renaissance spoils, of architectural significance.
Two window frames of a residential building, remarkable Renaissance spoils of architectural significance in the otherwise gutted building. The shop was built in 1915 by Emil Glasses, the two old window frames can be seen in the design drawings. |
08956029
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Residential building in closed development | Ratsstrasse 6 (map) |
18th century | Baroque plastered building with a mighty mansard roof, defining the image and significant in terms of building history.
Residential house in a closed development on this side of the street, baroque two-storey plastered building with a mighty mansard roof, inside two rows of small standing dormer windows from 1993. Six axes, the central entrance door with segmented arch, a curiosity is the convexly rounded eaves cornice. A forge was installed in 1876, inventory drawings from 1909, the year in which master locksmith Wilhelm Martin had the roof removed, show a slightly irregular floor plan, a continuous hallway and a number of different vaults. The house is of architectural significance and, since it is a structural component of the Marienberg town center development, it is also relevant to urban planning. |
08956034
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Residential house in semi-open development | Ratsstrasse 10 (map) |
18th century | Baroque plastered building with a mansard roof, defining the image and significant in terms of building history.
Residential house in half-open development, today the head building of a street side of the historic old town that is still closed from here, two-storey baroque plastered building with a mansard roof that defines the image, the compact solid structure with natural stone walls, six axes, large, arched entrance slightly moved from the center. 1910 Extension of the roof by Oscar Krumbiegel, builder painter Richard Schmiedel. The rear wooden veranda was added in 1912. An existing drawing from that year shows cross vaults in the corridor that was still continuous at the time. |
08956032
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Residential house in open development | Ratsstrasse 13 (map) |
18th century | Baroque plastered building with a mansard roof, defining the image and significant in terms of building history.
Residential house in today's open development, eaves-standing relic of a historical street, two-storey baroque plastered building with an image-defining mansard roof (later moderate expansion), six-axis natural stone walls, slight changes in the wall-opening ratio. Urban planning and architectural significance. |
08956033
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Fragments of the city wall, adjacent to the Red Tower | Schulstrasse (map) |
Core 16th century | Significant in local history.
Individual monument of the population of the Marienberg fortification: (see also list of objects as a whole - Obj. 09305552, Obere Bahnhofstraße) |
09305722
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Residential house in open development and in a corner location | Schulstrasse 2 (map) |
before 1900 | Built over an almost triangular floor plan, with a shop fitting, historicizing plastered facade, a wooden veranda extension on the back, characterizing the street scene, significant in terms of building history.
On the almost triangular property, which is formed by the converging streets of Goethering and Schulstrasse, an extensive renovation of the residential building with integrated shop (made by Emil Glasses) was carried out in 1906 for the "art and trade gardener" Emil Kramer. The site had already been used for gardening purposes (for example the greenhouse in 1894). The two-storey house with a French mansard roof is a historicizing plastered building on a rustic base and triangular floor plan with sparing vegetal ornamentation. It is worth mentioning two wooden extensions on the east side facing the garden, a two-storey bay window with colored glass windows that stands out. Although there were still some structural changes in 1946 and the color of the shop area has recently been changed in an unfavorable way, the building is still quite authentic and historically relevant. |
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Residential house in open development and in a corner location | Schulstrasse 6 (map) |
Mid 19th century | Half-timbered upper floor with elaborate decorative slate cladding, rare as a half-timbered building in the cityscape, characterizing the street scene, important in terms of building history.
Residential house (19th century, possibly with older parts) on the edge of the historic old town in open development and corner location, eaves facing Schulstrasse, above the solid ground floor half-timbered upper floor with decorative slate cladding. Half-timbered houses like this are rare in the cityscape. The three-colored ornamental slate cladding of the gable and the upper floor, which was applied for by the client, the roofer Albin Stengel, in 1921 (Emil glasses involved in the implementation), became the subject of a discussion on building aesthetics that lasted until 1923. There was even an assessment by the Saxon Homeland Security, which complained about the "unnatural" red artificial slate. |
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school | Schulstrasse 7 (map) |
1893 | Imposing building with a historicizing plaster facade, architectural and local significance.
The central school built in 1893, later called the Marienberg grammar school, is a splendid building on the “Glacis” of the historic old town, typical for the time it was built and the task at which it was built. It replaced smaller predecessor buildings in the urban fabric and was designed as a solitary building with open spaces in keeping with the times. The three-storey, late-historic plastered building with 27 closely spaced axes on the front has a dominant three-axis central projection, which protrudes over the rest of the building and the flat hipped roof, accommodates the arched portal, and on the upper floor three large arched windows framed by fluted half-columns and strong beams (Hall) and is crowned by a triangular gable with an oculus. The architectural and site historical importance is evident. |
08955996
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Residential and factory buildings | Stadtmühle 5 (map) |
1900 (residential and factory building) | Mainly historical importance.
The former "Holzwaaren-Manufactur" was built in the floodplain of Schlettenbach in 1900 by the manufacturer Karl Arnold, who was both the builder and the contractor. The complex, which consists of a residential building and three production buildings, is a technical monument and is of architectural and local significance. The factory owner's house is a two-storey plastered building with an almost square floor plan. The facade is divided by red brick and the building is completed by a representative mansard hipped roof. In the attached three-storey factory wing, the brick structures are continued in a reduced form. Typical of the time are the segment-arched openings in the production buildings, the construction of which lasted until 1911. In 1903 the cutting mill and galvanic establishment (metal goods) were provided with a lying locomobile from Lanz (Mannheim). Although the company was called button and metal goods factory Joseph Esser in 1908, the name Karl Arnold reappeared later. In 1996 the facility was partially converted for residential purposes. |
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Remnants of a villa garden (with grotto, viewing platform, two stairs and vase) of a former manufacturer's villa | Stadtmühle 22 (map) |
around 1920 (villa garden) | Garden consisting of a walk-in grotto with a viewing platform framed by branch railings (concrete) with red beech above it, two side staircases and a formerly existing, still recognizable pond with a small bridge, typical of the time, now rare equipment elements of a villa garden, significance for the local history and garden art.
Remains of a villa garden of a former factory owner's villa, consisting of a walk-in grotto with a viewing platform framed by branch railings (concrete) with red beech above, two side staircases and a formerly existing, still recognizable pond with a small bridge.
These are elements of a villa garden that are typical of the time and have become rare in the meantime, and are of importance in terms of local history and garden art. |
09247843
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Parade hall, later "exhibition hall" | Töpferstrasse 2 (map) |
1890 | Elongated parade hall with self-supporting roof structure, military-historical, architectural and local historical significance.
The parade hall on the southern border of the old town area, built in 1890 (site management engineer Hauptmann Krille), is closely related to the Marienberg military site, which was founded in the 17th and 18th centuries and gained greater importance due to the nearby NCOs school founded in 1873 . The hall is an elongated, single-storey plastered building about 15 meters high with a gable roof. The two long sides each show seven axes with arched windows in small parts, the middle axis to Poststrasse is projected like a risalit, closed by a transverse gable roof and forms the main entrance. The clear structure of the building through its symmetrical window openings with sandstone walls, oculi and the corners highlighted by partly plastered and partly clinker pilasters give the building a post-classical solidity. The completely free interior, measuring around 60 meters by 20 meters, has an impact thanks to its width and its open roof construction made of wood and iron. In order to be able to span the space, iron trusses, so-called polonceau girders, were chosen, which were connected at regular intervals with carpentry-like structural parts (rafters, purlins, truss rafters). In addition to the importance of the hall in terms of local history and military history, its great architectural and technical relevance should be emphasized, especially the eminently important roof structure. Some structural changes during the GDR era, especially at the front facing Töpferstrasse, could not undo the integrity of the building, which is still used today (as a garage). It was also an exhibition hall as early as the 1920s. |
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Administration building in semi-open development and in a corner location, part of the town hall (today town archive and town administration) | Töpferstrasse 12; 14 (card) |
1856 (administration building) | Building from 19 to nine window axes extending over the entire length of the square, plastered facade typical of the time, of architectural and local importance.
Administration building in half-open development and in a corner location, built in 1856 as an extension of the town hall, two-storey building with 19 to nine window axes extending over the entire length of the square, plastered facade typical of the time, three entrances to Töpferstrasse, two added basket arch portals to the Amtsstrasse, hipped roof with many small standing dormers. Significance in terms of building history and local history, as a district-defining building of the old town grid, it is also of urban significance. |
08955936
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Residential building in closed development | Töpferstrasse 13 (map) |
18th century or older | Typical plaster facade of the time, of importance in terms of building history and urban planning.
Residential house in closed development with core of the 18th century (barrel vault in the cellar, construction of the saddle roof), otherwise completely rebuilt in 1868 for a Mr. Krippendorf. The two-storey, six-axis solid building with a central arched entrance was given a new front wall in 1905 with the plastered facade on which the floors are optically divided by a cornice (made by Emil Glasses). In 1988 an HO store was dismantled. The building, which appears older due to its comparatively low height, is nevertheless of architectural historical relevance, but its greatest importance lies in the urban development contribution to the structure and appearance of the historical street grid of Marienberg. |
09305547
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Residential house in semi-open development and in a corner location | Töpferstrasse 15 (map) |
18th century or older | Stately baroque plastered building with segmented arch portal, part of the development close to the market, of architectural and urban significance.
Residential house in semi-open development and in the corner of the Amtsstraße, dominant and street-defining baroque plastered building with segmented arch portal (keystone). The two-storey building with six to three axes, with porphyry walls and a deep structure, is completed by a mansard roof with later expansion (otherwise preserved roof structure from the 18th century). An old as-built drawing shows the ground floor with the typical irregular floor plan and a continuous hallway. There are also groin vaults here. In 1888 the house belonged to the master baker H. Kleinert, for whom an oven and a bakery were set up that year. The house is part of the Marienberg development close to the market and is of importance both in terms of town planning and building history. |
08956106
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Residential house in closed development and in a corner location, with a historic stove plate on the facade | Toepferstrasse 17 (map) |
18th century | With a shop, plastered building with a crooked hip roof, part of the development close to the market, cast-iron stove plate around 1590, of importance in terms of building history, urban planning and local history.
Residential house in closed development and in a gable-independent corner position to the Amtsstraße, the two-storey solid plastered building with six to three axes is closed off by a crooked hip roof. An old existing drawing shows a very "crooked" baroque ground floor plan (that is, without right angles) and with a continuous corridor. In 1898 the roof was given Gaupen (builder Johann Carl Donath, executed by Emil glasses), but these were smaller than the four that had been built in the recent past. The shop installation was planned in 1911, also for Donath. 1933 businessman Oscar Großlaub, for whom an air raid shelter was installed in 1939 (see also the annex at Töpferstrasse 19). In this respect, the building-historical and urban-planning significance of the house also has a general historical relevance. There is also an artistic aspect in the form of a cast-iron stove plate that is now attached to the gable end of the house, made around 1590, probably based on a design by Andreas Walther. It shows two ancient warriors in armor fighting each other with swords and ornamented shields. |
08955940
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Residential building in closed development | Töpferstrasse 19 (map) |
1867 | Part of the development close to the market, stately building with high-quality facade decoration, historicizing facade still with a classicistic effect, of architectural significance.
Residential house in closed development, built after the fire of the previous building in 1867 for the merchant Hermann Donat (by master builder Friedrich Gläser), eaves-standing two-storey solid plastered building with a flat saddle roof, including five dormer windows from 1941. The historicizing eight-axis facade of still classicistic effect shows one through vegetal stucco applications highlighted flat central projection, in which the segmental arched entrance is also located. Belt cornices, just like the straight window canopies, reinforce the horizontal effect of the facade, which is enhanced by an attic zone with ornamental panes. The sides are closed by colossal pilasters. As with the neighboring building (number 17), an air raid shelter was also installed here, but as early as 1934 (!). In addition to the historical and urban significance of the house, there is also a general historical one. The additional entrance was created in 1985 for a HO restaurant. |
08955941
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Customs office building in a corner and in half-open development | Töpferstrasse 22 (map) |
1900, later redesigned (customs office building) | Elaborately designed clinker brick building, characterizing the streetscape, of architectural and local significance.
Customs office building in a corner and in half-open development, two-storey, lavishly designed dark yellow clinker brick building with eight to six axes on a mighty rustic base that balances the slope. Decorative elements such as window crowns, corner accentuations and horizontal bands made of glazed brown bricks, the monumental arched entrance made of profiled sandstone. The windows with new real muntin framed by shaped stones, the latter is also used for the eaves. The elegant building was designed in 1900 by the Royal Agricultural Office (Landbaumeister Canzler). The hipped roof was not expanded until 1950. It was a defining feature of the streetscape, is of importance in terms of building history and local history. |
08955966
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Catholic church with attached rectory | Trebrastrasse 9 (map) |
1906, later reshaped | Authentic building in the neo-Gothic style, formative renovation in the style of the 1950s / 1960s, above all of architectural significance.
Catholic church with attached rectory, authentic building in neo-Gothic style, built by master builder Oscar Krumbiegel in 1906 for the Catholic community. In front of the church, consisting of two structures with pointed arched windows, a school building with a pointed roof turret was placed vertically towards Trebrastrasse, which takes up the sacred forms: a two-story plastered building with a central gable field. The appearance of the former school building (rectory) in particular is shaped by conversions and design elements from 1960/61 that were carried out by the architect Artur Becker (Leipzig). Above all, the plaster design falls into this phase. The ensemble of church and school building (or residential building) not only embodies elements of the contemporary reform style through its heterogeneity and skilful proportioning, but is also a rare testimony to the architecture of the early GDR. |
09305546
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Former factory building (without extension) | Trebrastrasse 10 (map) |
1907 | Significance in terms of building history and local history.
Former Donat factory building (trimmings, buttons and umbrella hangings) from 1907 (extension from 1919). Three-storey plastered building with red brick structures (window arches and pilaster strips), 14: 3-axis segment-arched window, flat central projection with slightly inclined triangular gable, this and the identically designed gables of the narrow sides with ornamented chaff. The building, which extra muros on the edge of the old town, together with the neighboring Donat Villa, represents a residential and production context in terms of local history and development history, shows the late historical design language typical of the time it was built and is therefore also of architectural historical importance. It was later used as a hospital, and in 1993 there were plans for a retirement home. |
08956039
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Residential building in closed development | Wolkensteiner Strasse 7 (map) |
1864, in essence perhaps older | With later shop installation (ornamental tile furnishings), stately building with a gate passage, part of the street leading to the market (butcher shop since 1906), of importance in terms of building history and local development.
Residential house in closed development, two-storey solid plastered building with eight axes, with a central segment arched gate entrance, the windows with porphyry walls, slightly reduced facade, flat saddle roof with later added, somewhat immeasurable dormers. Erected in 1864 for the master blacksmith Weber in place of an arable house that was destroyed in the town fire in 1852. 1906 Establishment of a butcher shop for Max Frenzel from Zöblitz, the shop with ornamental tiles. |
08956112
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Residential building in closed development | Wolkensteiner Strasse 10 (map) |
1854, later reshaped | Plastered facade from around 1910, relevant to building history.
Residential house in closed development, three-storey solid construction with applied plaster structure (pilaster strips and mirrors), wide segment arch portal, roof pike. The house built by Oscar Krumbiegel for Richard Klinger was built in 1910. For a long time it was the seat of a regional newspaper. Before that, there was the lavish Hotel Stadt Wien from the mid-19th century, which had already been rebuilt in 1883 and seems to have burned down again before 1910. |
08956025
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Residential house in closed development and in a corner | Wolkensteiner Strasse 13 (map) |
marked 1780 | Baroque plastered building with basket arch portal, defining the image and significant in terms of building history.
Residential house in closed development and in a corner position, two-storey baroque plastered building with five to three axes, with a crooked hip roof and arched portal (marked 1780 ). The iconic building on the edge of the old town opens the Wolkensteiner Straße leading to the market. There are large vaulted cellars in it. The top floor was expanded in 1909 by Oscar Krumbiegel (builder businessman Reinhardt Bartzsch), the suggestion to make the pike dormer look like a separate storey was “a good idea” (April 5th, 1909). |
08956026
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Transformer tower | Zschopauer Strasse (map) |
1913-1914 | Natural stone construction, adapted to the old city wall, of importance in terms of urban development, architectural history and technical history.
Transformer tower from 1913/14, the material adapted to a segment of the city wall that was originally preserved here and attached to this natural stone structure, with an approximately square floor plan and ending with a flat pyramid helmet. The technical monument is not only a witness to the electrification of Marienberg, but also an architectural historical document of the fact with how much urban planning care and design requirements were given to functional buildings. In this “medieval” form, the building, whose counterpart can be found at the other end of the city (SO), is also a rarity. |
09299712
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More pictures |
Post mileage | Zschopauer Strasse (map) |
marked 1727 | Original distance column, offset 100 m, one of the few remaining columns that have been preserved in the original, of significance for the history of traffic.
At the Zschopauer Tor there is a sandstone copy of the Saxon distance column that originally stood in front of the Zschopauer Tor. There is a remnant of the coat of arms of a column from Annaberger Tor, which was demolished in 1868. The column is made of quartzitic sandstone from Niederschöna. Distance inscriptions, the year 1727 and the post horn mark are carved on the column. Restored in 1895, 1926, 1953 and 1980/81 and relocated to the northwest of the Zschopauer Tor (originally it was north of the gate). In 1722, the Electorate of Saxony began to erect the Saxon post-mile pillars. Elector Friedrich August I wanted to build a modern traffic and transport control system in the electorate in order to promote trade and economy. He entrusted Magister Adam Friedrich Zürner (1679 - 1742) with the implementation. The system of post mile pillars comprised distance pillars, quarter milestones, half and full mile pillars. The distance columns should be set up in the cities in front of the city gates, later only on the marketplaces. Quarter milestones, half and full mile pillars were set up along the Poststrasse. They received a consecutive numbering (row number), starting from the beginning of the measurement. The all-mile columns were set up outside the cities on the post roads at a distance of 1 mile (= 9.062 km). The distance pillars were marked with the monogram "AR" for "Augustus Rex", the Electoral Saxon and Polish-Lithuanian double coat of arms and the Polish royal crown. The full mile, half mile columns and quarter milestones were all similarly labeled, none of them had a coat of arms, but the monogram "AR". The distances were given in hours (1 hour = ½ post mile = 4.531 km). This mile system was the first European traffic management system. The pillar considered here is of great importance in the history of traffic as part of the nationally significant postal system. |
08955962
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Residential house in corner location and in closed development | Zschopauer Strasse 3 (map) |
16th Century | Representative residential and commercial building with building stocks from the 16th century of architectural, urban development and urban planning importance that was built in several construction stages.
Built in 1521 (ground floor and basement part of the house at Zschopauer Str. 3), before 1867 (house extension - right half of the house Zschopauer Strasse), 1867 (new construction or conversion of the upper storey and attic storey as well as Töpferstrasse extension). Two-storey plastered building, simplified in external appearance. House entrance changed and simplified several times, large gate in Töpferstraße. House closure through a uniform gable roof. The house should have been built in at least three construction phases. The core, possibly from the 16th century (1521), is the two-barrel cellar, which is located exactly under the old part of the house, as well as the left part of the ground floor in Zschopauer Straße with a groin-vaulted room and an equally vaulted old, presumably black, kitchen . The vaults impress with their narrow pillars and the acute-angled vault caps. The right side of the house in Zschopauer Straße is likely to be older than 1867 and possibly belonged to a smaller neighboring house, which has merged into today's residential and commercial building. In 1867 there was a fire in which the upper floor and the roof structure of the house on Zschopauer Strasse were destroyed or severely damaged. This was followed by the reconstruction and, at the same time, a new wing of the building in Töpferstrasse. It could be that remnants of the old roof structure have been preserved. Like the neighboring buildings, the building is part of the original development of the town of Marienberg, which was founded as a planned town and, in addition to its great architectural significance, is also of great importance in terms of urban development due to the remains from the 16th century. |
08955942
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Residential building in closed development | Zschopauer Strasse 4 (map) |
1881 | Typical plaster facade of the time, part of the development close to the market, of architectural significance.
Residential house in closed development, built in place of a previous building after the fire in 1881 for the restaurateur Karl Heinrich Süß by the Marienberg master builder Eduard Schreiter, two-storey solid building with a historic plastered facade, slate-covered saddle roof with vertical dormers, ground floor with plaster grooves and segmented arched openings (natural stone walls), as early as 1889 Draft for a shop fitting, cornice at the level of the sills of the upper floor windows with a straight lintel and simple crown. The building is part of the development close to the market and a structural component of the historic street grid of Marienberg, relevance in terms of building history, local development history and urban planning. |
08955954
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Residential house in corner location and in closed development | Zschopauer Strasse 5 (map) |
1867 | Representative plastered building, which has a significant impact on the street scene, presumably emerged from several previous buildings, of architectural and urban development value.
Residential house in a corner location and in closed development, representative plastered building that has a significant impact on the street scene, rebuilding after the fire in 1867, presumably including the previous building (builder butcher Carl Gottlieb Hübler, master mason Karl glasses, master carpenter Friedrich Weiß), two-storey, six-axis on Töpferstrasse and twelve-axis on Zschopauer Street, there a large gate passage, several shop fittings on the ground floor, the facade is essentially characterized by the plastering on the ground floor and the cornices between the ground floor and the upper floor as well as the horizontal window canopies over the windows on the upper floor, the house is closed by a flat sloping, completely new saddle roof with dormer windows ( after 1993). For a long time the house was an inn (1880 Friedrich Eduard Büttner, 1896–1963 (!) Eugen Buschmann), in 1971 it was a service combine, in 1980 an electrical shop. Office building since 1993. |
09304400
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Residential building in closed development | Zschopauer Strasse 7 (map) |
1867 | With shop fitting, plastered facade typical of the time, defining the image and significant in terms of building history.
Residential house in closed development, built after the city fire in 1867 for the client Müller, architect Karl Gottlieb Lübke, eaves two-storey plastered building with shop fittings, historic facade with triangular central projection, there central entrance, ground floor plastered grooves, upper floor six axes, saddle roof. The facade was rebuilt after the external plaster was removed in 1982, the house is a structural component of the historic inner city development of Marienberg and of architectural significance. |
08955949
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Residential house in corner location and in closed development | Zschopauer Strasse 8 (map) |
1881 | Part of the development close to the market, defining the image and significant in terms of building history.
Residential house in a corner location and in closed development, with a corresponding hipped roof with a little roof house. The corner house on Bergstrasse / Zschopauer Strasse burned down several times in the course of the city's history, the last time during a large fire on April 8, 1881. Immediately afterwards, the current house with forge was built by builder Eduard Schreiter for Friedrich August Wagler, but it was built in the same year Anna Marie Süß, b. Hesse, named as the owner, who ran a restaurant here from then on. Today's two-storey solid construction with four to seven axes, the ground floor of which has been provided with plastering again since 1982, appeared to have been single-storey until 1934. From 1919 shoe shop Georg Klossek. In the GDR era, the shop served as a sales point for groceries. Despite some changes in the floor plan and the facade - the corner structure through applied profiles is likely to have sprung from the latest imagination - the building is of architectural significance. The urban development relevance also results from its structural contribution to the development close to the market. |
08955953
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Residential house in corner location and in closed development | Zschopauer Strasse 10 (map) |
around 1850 | Classicist plastered facade, with built-in shops, part of the development close to the market, of architectural and urban importance.
Residential house from the 2nd half of the 19th century, in a corner location and in closed development, with a classicistic plastered facade. The two-storey solid building, facing the sloping Töpferstrasse with an additional basement, has nine to four axes and a ground floor with plastering, the three-axis flat central projection, like the other corners, is emphasized by pilasters and ends with an arched frieze gable triangle with a bezel. Two plaster cornices on the upper floor, the upper one interrupted by the central projection, give the facade an additional finish. The stately building is completed by a hipped roof with standing dormer windows. As early as 1893, the central entrance door was relocated in favor of the "counter" and "office" rooms of a post office (design: Emil Gläser), used as a post office until 1902. The shop was built in 1903 with an enlarged window, together with an extension of the attic storey Fritz Oertel. The shop windows of today's size were built in 1906, but on the narrow side they have since been blocked again. 1927 fashion department store Uhlemann & Karsch, 1936 Max Karsch. Despite the thermal insulation of 12.5 centimeters, the house is of architectural significance, and it is also of considerable urban relevance. |
08955952
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Residential building in closed development | Zschopauer Strasse 12 (map) |
Core 16th century | Narrow, high residential building with segment arch portal, ground floor inside with a remarkable wooden ceiling, part of the old local structure, of architectural significance.
Residential house in closed development, part of the original core development of Marienberg (16th century), significance in terms of building history and urban development. The narrow, eaves, two-storey plastered building with only three axes and a squat pitched roof (with two small standing dormers) has a segmented arch portal on the side with ears and keystone, inside a historic door leaf. The large distance between the upper and lower window openings (the latter slightly enlarged) suggests tall old interiors. There is a remarkable wooden ceiling on the ground floor. A roof conversion for Wilhelm Melzer is documented for 1898 (execution Emil glasses), for 1905 the extension of a workshop, for 1941 as owner the master glazier Karl Goldhahn. From the post-war period, the plastering text “Building glasswork”, which is worth preserving, comes from. |
08955951
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Residential building in closed development | Zschopauer Strasse 13 (map) |
probably 1867 (after Brand) | Typical plaster facade of the time, formative and important in terms of building history.
Residential house, eaves in a closed development, the simple historical facade, possibly the whole house rebuilt after the fire in 1867, builder carpenter Neufert (?), 1892 carpenter Friedrich Meerstein (the name also once in the band between the floors), two-storey seven-axis plastered building with central entrance, central axis emphasized by a roof house with triangular gable added in 1892, gable roof from 1980, converted into a restaurant in 2003, some of the facade was restored to the state it was in before 1980. Significance in terms of building history and urban development. |
08955948
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Residential building in closed development | Zschopauer Strasse 14 (map) |
1865, older in essence | Plastered facade, opposite and in a similar design to Zschopauer Straße 7, despite changes of architectural significance.
Residential house in closed development, plastered facade partly the result of a renovation and expansion from 1865 (builder, church director Donat): two-storey, ground floor with plastering, three axes on the upper floor raised like a risalit, wide roof bay window with flat triangular crowning (once stucco), 1992 heightening of the ridge by 80 centimeters, resulting in a flatter roof pitch and impaired proportions, recently built-in shop. Despite changes, it is of architectural importance as the core of the house is much older, some of which still have vaults on the ground floor. |
08955950
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Inn in closed development | Zschopauer Strasse 15 (map) |
around 1812 | Plastered building with segment arch portal, wide structure with a large, steep roof, defining the image as well as of architectural and site-historical importance.
Inn in closed development, late baroque plastered building on the eaves with segmental arch portal, steep saddle roof with pike-like later expansion, two storeys, seven axes, owner Erich Neuhäuser 1896, Bernhard Keinert, master baker 1921. The portal has been reopened since it was converted into a restaurant in 2003, after being closed since 1910 was. Before World War II, this was the location of the Viennese café , which had a remarkable Art Deco-style billboard. |
08955945
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Residential building in closed development | Zschopauer Strasse 16 (map) |
around 1600 and later | On the outside a simple house, with very elaborate Gothic vaults inside, a structural relic of the time before the city fire in 1610, of architectural significance.
Residential house in closed development, eaves, today's simple facade belies the historical significance of the building, which is characterized by very elaborate Gothic vaults inside (bulging star and ribbed vaults, in other rooms ribbed vaults and barrel vaults), the very irregular, downright The “sloping” floor plan of the ground floor is another sign that this is a structural relic from before the city fire in 1610. The exposed framework on the upper floor disappeared in 1860 when master baker Eduard Fritzsch had the house rebuilt. The extension of the roof in 1952 to a quasi mezzanine gave the facade its current appearance. |
08956108
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Residential building in closed development | Zschopauer Strasse 19 (map) |
1st half of the 18th century and later | With a steep pitched roof, part of the old town development, of architectural and urban significance.
Residential house in closed development, eaves Baroque structure with a steep pitched roof, facade of the plastered building with seven axes on the upper floor, later central roof house (1921, builder and executor Moritz Schreiter, master bricklayer). The back wall on the upper floor of the house was renewed in 1902/03 (client Bernhard Steinert). 1997 Enlargement of the ground floor windows, 2000/01 floor plan changes when converting to a restaurant. |
08955944
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Residential building in closed development | Zschopauer Strasse 20 (map) |
marked 1556, later reshaped (ground floor was preserved during the fire in 1610) | Plastered building with a splendid Renaissance seat niche portal with elaborate figural decorations, the building was later structurally remodeled, of architectural and artistic importance.
Residential house, eaves in closed development, two-storey plastered building with seven upper storey axes, with a remarkable portal, gable roof with a large extension. The portal, labeled “1556”, shows a female and a male figure holding a coat of arms in rich Renaissance clothing above the niche shells and, as a keystone, two armored putti with a coat of arms. Inside there is a mighty cellar and a hallway with elaborate groin vaults, a Renaissance window has been preserved towards the courtyard. Nikol Petz is named as the builder of the house, mayor of Marienberg until 1602 and previously city judge and mill owner. The ground floor was preserved during the city fire in 1610, everything else was built afterwards. There was also fire damage in 1867 and 1887, in 1886 floor plans were changed on the upper floor and a new narrow side wall (N, builder Gerbermeister Fischer). The large loft extension was built in 1911 (Richard Fischer, executed by Emil glasses). The house is one of the most important buildings in Marienberg in terms of architectural history and local history; the portal also makes the artistic significance evident. |
08955947
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House in a corner and in a semi-open development | Zschopauer Strasse 21 (map) |
1903 | Historicizing plaster and clinker facade, of importance in terms of building history and image.
Residential house in corner location and in semi-open development, defining the image and of architectural historical significance, authentic, historicizing plastered facade on the ground floor and clinker facade on the upper floor with four to five axes, French roof with integrated standing dormers. The high windows on the ground floor and first floor are crowned with a tendril motif, on the upper floor the ornamentation is set off in light stucco. The client was Ernst Schönherr, the execution was carried out by Emil glasses in 1903. The rather irregular floor plan suggests the existence of a previous building. |
09305548
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City gate and adjacent city wall | Zschopauer Strasse 21b (map) |
1541-1560 | City gate as a massive tower with a 30 meter long remainder of the city wall, the only one of the former five gates to be preserved, of local historical importance.
Individual monument of the population of the Marienberg fortification: (see also list of the population - Obj. 09305552, Obere Bahnhofstraße without number) The Zschopauer Tor, one of the landmarks of Marienberg, was built between 1541 and 1560 as part of the city fortifications after the city was founded. The massive tower, a quarry stone building with a square floor plan, is the only surviving of five city gates. The large round arched passage is clad with porphyry blocks, just like the pedestrian passage SW next to it, which was built in 1956. In 1963, in the middle of renovation work, there was damage from tanks. In 1964, exhibition rooms were designed for museum purposes in the gate building, which also found the placet of the Institute for Monument Preservation. The damaged gate walls were first repaired with bricks, later again with stone. In the SW there is a remainder of the city wall 30 meters long and 2 meters wide, which is reinforced on the city side with five blind arches and ends in a congenially built transformer house in 1914 (see there). |
08955943
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Residential building in closed development | Zschopauer Strasse 24 (map) |
1888 | Typical plaster facade, of architectural significance.
Residential house in closed development, built in 1888 by Emil Glasses for the widow Christiane Buschmann, eaves with a typical plastered facade, two-storey and seven-axis with a central suspected entrance. Flat gable roof with a new vertical dormer in the central axis. The house was probably built instead of a previous building that had burned down. |
09305549
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Courthouse (no.31) with attached outbuilding (no.33) | Zschopauer Strasse 31; 33 (card) |
1914–1916, designated 1914 (district court) | Monumental, multi-parted courthouse and smaller side building, reform style architecture, architectural, local and urban significance.
In July 1917, the district court was given its seat in this purpose-built complex outside the old town, the designs of which date from 1914 (main building, government building officer Nikolaus). It had previously been in the town hall since the court office was established in 1856. The district court consists of a monumental, multi-part main building in reform style and a smaller auxiliary building (labeled "1915") with a somewhat reduced design, the former prison. A two-story, plastered main building rises above a high plinth made of rustic masonry (basement) with dividing belts, lintels and portals made of Rochlitz porphyry tuff, which is closed off by a slate mansard roof. The front side facing Zschopauer Straße is characterized by a central projecting crowned with a triangular gable with elongated arched windows (hall), which is optically enhanced by an octagonal, tower-like roof turret behind it with a curved hood, weather vane and clock. This also creates an urban development effect that complements the architectural and local historical significance of the complex. Further risalites on the long sides, which break through the eaves, give rhythm to the large structure. To the side of the risalite on the street side is the main portal with fluted columns covered with foliage. Two putti hold a cartouche with garlands on the architrave. Outbuilding: In a similar, somewhat reduced design, inscribed 1915. |
08956035
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grotto | Zschopauer Strasse 40 (behind) (map) |
around 1913 | Small horticultural structure made of concrete, bricks and tuff of architectural significance.
In the Erzgebirge there are grottos made of bricks, tuff stones, reinforcement - covered with concrete and solidified. In other regions there are no comparable horticultural structures made from the same material. It can therefore be assumed that a company specializing in small garden buildings could have been located in the Marienberg area. So far, without any documentary evidence, the name of the sculptor Johannes Sucker from Fürth has been mentioned again and again in this context. |
09303063 |
Jump
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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A memorial stone carved into the rock for Kaiser Wilhelm II and a nearby war memorial for those who fell in the First World War | (Map) | marked 1913 (memorial stone) | Local historical significance.
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09207612
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Forge with original equipment | Rübenauer Strasse 1a (map) |
09207622
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school | Rübenauer Strasse 11 (map) |
1878 | Stately solid construction, elevated central projection with tower, in the style of the early neo-Gothic, importance for the local history and the local image.
Two-storey with strongly profiled walls and cornices, on the upper storey a bulging, straight lintel, slightly protruding central projection with triangular endings and tracery frieze, massive crowns on the sides, bell towers. |
09207605
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Residential building | Rübenauer Strasse 17 (map) |
2nd half of the 19th century | Largely originally preserved solid construction, of architectural significance.
Small two-story building with corner grooves, strong walls and cornices, door with a small triangular gable, original door leaf, roof bay window. |
09207606
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Residential stable of a former two-sided courtyard | Rübenauer Strasse 38 (map) |
Core probably 18th century | Construction typical of the time and landscape, of architectural significance.
Massive ground floor, partly changed by installing windows and a garage, upper floor half-timbered, with loading hatch, gable clad in the upper part. |
09207607
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Former residential stable of a two-sided courtyard | Rübenauer Strasse 48 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Upper floor timber-framed boarded, largely preserved in its original form, of architectural significance.
Solid ground floor, half-timbered upper floor, boarded up to the street. |
09207608
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Moving house of a farm | Serpentinsteinstrasse 52 (map) |
Core probably 18th century | Two-storey half-timbered building, half-timbered also on the ground floor, of architectural significance.
Two-story half-timbered building, solid rear, gable half-timbered. |
09207623 |
Mountains
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Former hat and hothouse of the unicorn treasure trove on a flat heap as well as remains of the unicorn treasure trove | Carlstrasse 35 (map) |
between 1774 and 1778 | As the last evidence of the significant Marienberg tin ore mining on Martersberg of mining history, local history and architectural history.
The core of the former colliery building, which was built between 1774 and 1778, stands on a shallow dump that slopes down towards the street and thus partly above the unicorn day shaft that has been kept. The associated Einhorn Zeuggraben was rebuilt between 1775 and 1777. It originally led to the building from the west and south and then continued northwards towards the Wagenbach. There its water acted on a water cap that was built at the same time and used for ore extraction. A special feature of the Einhorn Wassergöpel was that the sweeping wheel, based on the Harz model, was located in an above-ground wheel room north of the shaft and that the conveyor rods in the Einhorn driving shaft moved using an artificial rod. The Zeuggraben itself can still be seen clearly in some places in the area. After the Einhorn mountain building fell into the open in 1788, the associated hat and greenhouse was put up for auction and was subsequently converted into a purely residential building after previously - apart from a residential use by the hat man of the pit - the function as a material and counting warehouse as well as The shaft and greenhouse was in the foreground. Over a number of renovation phases, the two-story half-timbered house was transformed into today's mostly solid residential building. This consists of a solid, plastered ground floor made of quarry stone with a slightly protruding south-east corner and a partly solid, partly half-timbered upper floor. The outer walls of the upper storey on the south and west sides consist of plastered brickwork, while the north gable has a timber-framed construction boarded outwards and the east wall facing the courtyard has an exposed timber-framing, filled in with quarry stones and plastered. This is followed by an approximately 45 ° steep pitched roof with wooden formwork and sheet metal covering. The floors are separated from each other by wooden beam ceilings made of wooden beams chamfered on the underside, above which is a collar beam roof truss with a wind riser cross and a subsequently introduced central longitudinal structure. Furthermore, the following construction details are noteworthy: a basement access consisting of quarry stone masonry set in a herringbone-like manner in the cap with an attached round-arched cellar barrel, segmented arched windows in the strong outer walls of the southern ground floor as well as an inner wall constructed analogously to the outer wall of the upper floor framework made of half-timbering filled with quarry stones. At the north gable of the building is a two-storey shed extension made of a simple, boarded-up wooden construction on a solid base. Despite the structural changes that the former hat and driving house has undergone in its history, the property continues to bear witness to a building project that was often encountered in the Ore Mountains. The typical design of a hat and greenhouse of a larger mining company - two-story half-timbered building with a lower ground floor and a higher upper floor - can still be seen in today's residential building. In connection with the Einhorner Zeuggraben, which is partly clearly visible in the area, the system also communicates the conveyor technology that was formerly used on site. Finally, the changes to the hat and hothouse, which was dismantled in 1788, due to the subsequent residential use, have their own testimonial character and document a process typical for the region in which the colliery houses of inaccessible and negligent mine buildings were passed into private hands and become pure living - or residential stable buildings were converted. As the last evidence of the tin ore mining that was carried out here on Martersberg from the 16th to the 19th century and was extremely important for Marienberg, the colliery buildings, heap and pit are of significance in terms of mining, construction and local history. |
08956124
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War memorial for the fallen soldiers of the First World War | Main street (map) |
1920 | Made of quarry stone and marble, of local historical importance. |
08956060 |
Promised Land
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Syringe house | Promised Land (at 8) (map) |
1894 | One of the few surviving examples in the Ore Mountains area, of local significance.
Spritzenhaus, the inconspicuous plastered quarry stone building from 1894 is nonetheless of local and socio-historical importance and also one of the few surviving examples of this type in the Ore Mountains area. |
08955928
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House of a farm | Promised Land 9 (Map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Small half-timbered house typical of the landscape, boarded gable, of architectural significance.
Rural house, presumably from the first half of the 19th century, in the wood construction typical of the region, solid ground floor, upper floor with double-bar exposed framework, steep, slate-covered gable roof without extensions, boarded gable. Installation of a forge by August Kamm in 1882, owner at the time was Joh. Gottlieb Klemm. 1906 Enlargement of the building by a yoke and massive replacement of the right gable wall by construction manager Woldemar Fischer for Hermann Klemm. The house, which still has an intact wall-opening ratio and has been preserved or restored to a high degree, is of architectural significance. |
08956061
|
|
House and barn of a farm | Promised Land 10 (Map) |
around 1800 | Half-timbered house that characterizes the street scene, wooden barn, of architectural significance.
Residential building: solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, partly boarded, with extension, upper floor half-timbered. |
08956062
|
|
Residential building | Promised Land 15 (Map) |
18th century | One-storey, low, stretched house with a low roof, characterizing the street scene, of social and historical importance.
One storey, boarded gable, roof house and small loading hatch. |
08956063
|
|
Residential building | Promised Land 27 (map) |
18th century | One-storey plastered building, wide-spread structure with a deeply drawn roof, significance of local history.
Plastered quarry stone building, single storey, roof expanded to two storeys. |
08956064
|
|
Station building | Promised Land 30 (Map) |
1875 | Station building in the arched style of the 19th century, significance in terms of building and railway history, also historical evidence of the VVN.
On the first floor plaster structure, round arches partly changed, upper floor porphyry walls, roof houses. |
08956116 |
Grundau
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Residential stable house and side building of a farm | Grundauer Weg 9 (map) |
Mid 18th century | Residential house with half-timbered upper floor, building typical of the time and landscape, of architectural significance.
|
09207597 |
Back reason
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Stolln and mouth hole of the Deep Blühend Glück Stolln | Office side-back ground (card) |
denotes lower BGSt. 1856 | Mining and local historical significance. |
09207918
|
|
|
Former hut house, now residential building | Amtsseite-Hinterer Grund 7 (card) |
1886 | Mining and local historical importance, defining the townscape.
Two small individual buildings:
|
09207919
|
|
Former hut house, now residential building | Amtsseite-Hinterer Grund 15 (card) |
between 1628 and 1713 | Local and mining historical significance.
Parisloch mine operated as a silver ore mine between 1628 and 1713, Huthaus burned down in 1884 and was subsequently rebuilt with two floors at the same location, two-story solid construction, the upper floor boarded up. |
09207916
|
|
Former hut house, now residential building | Amtsseite-Hinterer Grund 16 (card) |
probably 18th century | Mining and local historical significance.
From 1688 to 1714 silver ore mining was carried out in the Gesell Gottes mine, not very successful, hut house built on the Elias Stolln dump, small single-storey solid construction. |
09207915
|
Residential stable house and barn of a two-sided courtyard and cellar house opposite | Amtsseite-Hinterer Grund 18 (card) |
1777-1780 | Residential stable house in a design typical of the time and landscape, of architectural and economic significance.
With its floor plans, the water house under the facing eaves, the toilet bay on the facing gable and the barn in front of the facing gable, the large residential stable house has a very high monument value as a whole, which is based on architectural and settlement history information on rural life in the Ore Mountains from that time founded between 1800 and 1850. In addition to these, there are particularly valuable findings of the furnishings: interior doors, windows, the stone flooring in the ground floor corridor, the basket arches of the living room windows and here especially the wall cupboard and the stove corner set with a ledge with a tiled stove on a cast iron substructure with curved legs and, last but not least, the one with The ceiling of the room decorated with a circular stucco mirror shows a high level of prosperity, as the size of the house suggests. The highlight of the equipment lies in the wall version of the room above the ground floor room, which can possibly be addressed as the upper room. Red rose tendrils on a light green background over a gray-violet base create a garden-like atmosphere. This color version, which can probably be assessed as singular, as well as the other findings mentioned, are, like the entire house, in an astonishingly good condition. The stable house is one of the outstanding rural cultural monuments of living and doing business under one roof in the Ore Mountains and far beyond. It is of extremely high value for the Saxon rural living culture of the first half of the 19th century.
|
09207902 |
Hüttengrund
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mouth hole | Hüttengrund 10 (near) (map) |
1532, first mentioned, probably older | Significant in terms of local history and mining history.
Adit mouth hole with elliptical quarry stone vault from the 19th century, located in the Hüttengrund near the lower smelter built in 1538 (Upper smelter built in 1523 further above near the Fabian Sebastian mine), mouth hole of an important water dissolving tunnel in the Marienberger Revier (originally the main tunnel), drained the pits on the Rosenberg, outflowing water served the lower smelter as a surcharge, mining facility closely connected to the Preussler family of glass masters. Marienberger Glashütte (since 1486 enfeoffment from Barthel Preußler - also called Glaser -, operated by the Preußler family until the beginning of the 17th century) probably located in the Hüttengrund, in 1522 Dominicus glasses mined (compare Wagenbreth / Wächtler: Bergbau im Erzgebirge, Leipzig 1990, p. 265 - possibly Barthel Preußler, called Glaser, is referring to this) a new silver ore vein near the Fabian Sebastian treasure trove and was then awarded the Güldener Rosenkranz treasure trove with the upper next dimension, in the following years a water dissolving tunnel was constructed by Valentin Preußler (son of Barthel Preußler, took over the glassworks in 1530 together with his brothers Jakob and Wolf) on their own property, this Wasserlösestolln, 30 meters below the previous drainage tunnel of the pits on the Rosenberg, the Ulrichstolln, was first recorded in 1532 as "the old glazier's Erbstolln" (Erbstollen = deepest water-dissolving tunnel of an area, tunnel owner poss ate the right to collect the so-called hereditary tunnel fee from the connected pits), the glass tunnel reached the pits at Rosenberg after 720 meters of excavation around 1550, from around 1570 tunnel excavation with fiscal participation to counteract the so-called civil engineering crisis of the Marienberg mining (after the peak of the Ore yields around 1540, the Marienberg silver ore mining lost much of its importance due to the exhaustion of deposits near the surface - only a few pits were the capital-intensive acquisition of the hoisting machines and artificial tools necessary for mining at greater depths possible), therefore at about the same time sinking a shaft / die from the glass gallery to the even lower level of the Fürstenstolln (later called Weißtaubner Stolln), which has been driven by the state since about 1525, in order to be able to drive it faster in the opposite direction, the tunnel breakthrough took place in 1594, in 1603 the Fürstenstolln reached the White Taube pit, let Although the construction of the Gläserstolln made it easier for the connected pits to drain water, the use of water lifting machines was still necessary, as the ore mining was already far below the bottom of the Erbstolln, and the introduction of the much deeper Fürstenstollen into the pits on the Rosenberg, which declined at the beginning of the 17th century, after the cessation of the entire Marienberg mining in 1904, the SAG Wismut last operated the water dissolving tunnel in the course of exploration work for uranium ore deposits in 1947/1948. |
08956107
|
|
Remnants of the garden design of a former residential and office building (concrete railing and remains of the former grotto) | Hüttengrund 27; 28 (card) |
between 1905 and 1915 | Rare evidence of garden design, especially design elements typical for villa gardens in the former district of Marienberg, of importance in terms of garden art and architectural history.
Branch railing made of reinforced concrete at various points in the garden, staircase with embankment wall - brick masonry and concrete as well as under the house built around 1970/80 (extension of the former garden house) almost completely preserved grotto made of brick and concrete. For a time, the rocaille concrete garden furnishings were popular garden design elements, especially in the towns around Marienberg / Lengefeld / Waldkirchen, mainly from factory owners' gardens. The producer of these special horticultural structures is currently unknown. The railings in this garden are in a comparatively good state of preservation. This may be due to the larger diameters of the railings as well as constant maintenance by the owners. Two bridges that spanned the former pond are no longer preserved. |
09303365 |
Kühnhaide
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Memorial stone | (Map) | marked 1814 | Small, roughly hewn stone (gneiss) with an inscription and a cross, in memory of those who died in the War of Independence in 1813, of historical importance. |
09206732
|
|
Zeuggraben as a water supply ditch for the artificial tools in Lauta, section OT Kühnhaide | (Map) | 1551 | Mining historical significance.
Individual monument of the entity Reitzenhainer Kunst- und Zeuggraben: (see also entity list, OT Kühnhaide, without address - Obj. 09305557) (see also Reitzenhain and Marienberg districts) |
08956368
|
|
Zeuggraben as a water supply ditch for the artifacts in Lauta | (Map) | 1551 | Mining historical significance.
Material population component of the material population Reitzenhainer Kunst- und Zeuggraben, section OT Kühnhaide with the individual monument: (see individual monument list - object 08956368, see also material universe list, OT Marienberg, without address - object 09305555) |
09305557
|
|
Mill dwelling house | At place 4 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Stately plastered building, of architectural and local significance.
Plastered quarry stone building. |
09305537
|
|
Residential building | At place 5 (map) |
around 1830 | Small single-storey plastered building, typical residential building for the mountain region, of architectural and socio-historical importance.
One-storey, rectangular floor plan, ground floor massively plastered, gable triangle half-timbered boarded up, small massive door porch subsequently, original small wood extension on the rear eaves side, gable roof with sheet metal. |
09248126
|
|
Stable house of a farm | Herrenhaide 5 (map) |
around 1800 | In a location that characterizes the townscape, upper floor half-timbered, in the shape typical of the town, of architectural significance.
Solid ground floor (quarry stone masonry) with largely preserved usage structures, upper floor half-timbered, different thicknesses of gable-sided and long-sided frames and struts, gable partially boarded up, unchanged gable roof. |
09205526
|
|
Residential house, two sheds and a former water / wash house | Herrenhaide 21 (map) |
Early 19th century | Presumably a former smallholder economy, rural building ensemble typical of the time, of architectural, socio-historical and landscape-defining value.
The ensemble shapes the landscape in its originality. Due to its authenticity, it becomes a testimony to rural building trade and the respective working and living conditions in this mountain region. |
09300434
|
|
|
Church (with furnishings) and some tombs on the church | Kirchgasse (map) |
inscribed 1691 | Baroque hall church with polygonal choir closure, western tower with a distinctive Welscher hood, of architectural and local significance.
Single-aisle building with polygonal choir closure, flat roof, LH saddle roof, verifiable in 1691, restored in 1869, tower end in 1787, to the west of the single tower above the roof converted into an octagon, shingled Welsche dome, portal in the tower, buttresses. |
09205524
|
War memorial for the fallen soldiers of the First World War | Kirchgasse (map) |
after 1918 (war memorial) | Designed simple system of three boulders, with an inscription for the fallen of both world wars, of local historical importance. |
09205523
|
|
Residential building | Kühnhaidner Hauptstrasse 15 (map) |
around 1800 | Typical rural house with clad half-timbered upper floor, of architectural significance.
Ground floor solid, plastered, half-timbered upper floor boarded up or clad, partially filled with tiles, gable roof with sheet metal covering, underneath shingle covering preserved, stable preserved and water house in the rear extension with pent roof. |
09247846
|
|
Former inn, now a residential building | Kühnhaidner Hauptstrasse 37 (map) |
around 1800 | Traditional clad half-timbered house, of architectural value.
Formerly the “Zur Recreation” inn - until 1945, two-storey, ground floor quarry stone, a solid gable, rear extension, solid ground floor, upper floor timber-frame clad. Ground floor: partially segmented arched window openings, basement: two barrel vaulted rooms - one of them with bricks, upper floor: central corridor, attic floor: renovation around 1900 - stairs, room doors, roof truss from the time of construction - collar beam roof, struts puffed out, drawn forge emerging from the ridge. |
09247844
|
|
Memorial to Friedrich Gottlob Keller | Mitteldorfstrasse 1 (opposite) (map) |
Early 20th century | Simple system with a commemorative plaque for Friedrich Gottlob Keller (1816–1895), the inventor of the wood pulp for paper production, of regional historical importance.
Friedrich Gottlob Keller invented wood pulp for paper production here in 1845–1853. Base, ashlar stones, simply plastered wall attachment with reference to paper technology (roll), inscription plaque made of polished stone. |
09205527
|
|
Customs house | Mitteldorfstrasse 17 (map) |
1938 | Upper floor presumably half-timbered, in the local style, of local significance.
Two storeys, base (quarry stone ashlar), plastered ground floor, upper floor boarded up (half-timbered?), Gable slated (Eternit), slate-covered gable roof, two gable dormers, after renovation: preserved window bars. |
09205521
|
|
Residential stable house | Mitteldorfstrasse 23 (map) |
around 1830 | Upper floor half-timbered, in a very good state of preservation in a characteristic location near the church, of architectural significance.
Solid ground floor with plastered facade, original windows and vestibule, upper floor slated, including half-timbering, original window position and size, unchanged saddle roof. |
09205525
|
|
Residential stable house | Mitteldorfstrasse 29 (map) |
around 1800 | Upper floor half-timbered shingled, typical regional half-timbered construction, of architectural historical importance. |
09305538 |
Lauta
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Shaft and 16 mining dumps | (Map) | 1532-1550 | Of local and mining historical importance.
Individual monument of the whole of the Bauer-Morgen-Gang (continuation of the stockpile train on Lauterbacher Flur): (see also list of the whole, OT Lauta - Obj. 09305633). |
08956024
|
|
Corridor and mining dumps | (Map) | 1532-1550 | Significant in terms of local and mining history. |
08956000
|
|
All of the peasant morning corridor with shaft and 16 mining dumps on Lautaer and Lauterbacher Flur | 1532-1550 | Of local and mining historical importance.
Subject entity, of which in the OT Lauta the individual features:
|
09305633
|
||
Residential stable house and barn of a two-sided courtyard | Dorfstrasse 3 (map) |
18th century | Half-timbered residential stable, upper floor cantilevered, wooden barn, one of the few well-preserved half-timbered houses in the village, of architectural significance.
Stable house: solid ground floor, upper floor single-bar timbered, boarded gable. |
08956068
|
|
Residential building | Dorfstrasse 32 (map) |
1st half of the 18th century | Small half-timbered building with a massive extension, one of the few well-preserved half-timbered houses in the town, of architectural significance.
Solid ground floor, upper floor single-bar framework with headband. |
08956067
|
|
|
school | Lautaer Gartenstrasse 7 (map) |
2nd half of the 19th century | Typical plastered construction with a striking roof turret, significance for the local history. |
09305539
|
Residential stable house | Lautaer Hauptstrasse 6c (map) |
inscribed 1801 | Rural half-timbered house, half-timbered gable that defines the street scene, of architectural significance.
Elongated building, the front part with half-timbering, solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered with a splendidly designed gable. |
08956069
|
|
Former residential stable of a two-sided courtyard | Lautaer Hauptstrasse 6e (map) |
marked 1800 | Boarded up gable, timber-framed upper floor facing the courtyard, characterizing the street scene, of architectural significance.
Solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered on one side, two gables boarded over. |
08956070 |
Lauterbach
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Corridor and mining dumps | (Map) | 1521-1538 | Local and mining historical significance.
Material component of the material population Bauer-Morgen-Gang in OT Lauterbach (continuation of the stockpile train on Lautaer Flur) with the individual monument: (see individual monument list, OT Lauterbach - obj. 08956054, see also material population list, OT Lauta - obj. 09305633) |
09305634
|
|
|
Triangulation column | (Map) | marked 1865 (triangulation stone) | Second order station, significant testimony to geodesy of the 19th century, of significance in terms of surveying history.
Surveying stone with a low base protruding about 3 centimeters and a squat shaft made of Ehrenfriedersdorfer granite, without a cover plate, rectangular block with the inscription: "Station / Lauterbacher / Bone / der / Kön.Sächs. / Triangulirung / 1865". |
08956130
|
Corridor and mining dumps | (Map) | 1521-1538 | Local and mining historical significance.
Individual monument of the whole Bauer-Morgen-Gang: (continuation of the stockpile train on Lautaer Flur) |
08956054
|
|
Memorial stone | (Map) | marked 1781 | Boulder with inscription, in memory of the shepherd boy Christoph Neubert, who was struck by lightning, of local history. |
08956088
|
|
Corridor and mining dumps | (Map) | 1521-1538 | Local and mining historical significance. |
08956145
|
|
Stable house of a farm | At branch 4 (map) |
marked 1777 | Elongated half-timbered house, probably a former three-sided courtyard, historically important.
First floor quarry stone, upper floor single-bar, partly Prussian half-timbering. |
08956076
|
|
Residential building | At branch 13 |
08956078
|
|||
Residential stable of a former two-sided courtyard | At branch 30 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered, rare example of filling the compartments with quarry stone, of architectural significance.
Ground floor quarry stone, plastered, upper floor half-timbered, fillings also in quarry stone, wood-clad stable, ground floor with porphyry walls. |
08956080
|
|
school | At the churches 1 (map) |
1884/1885 | Stately school building, profiled walls with strong roofs; historicizing plastered building, local historical significance.
The Lauterbach School was built in 1884/85 after the former boys' school was demolished. This and the girls' school were housed in half-timbered houses typical of the Ore Mountains in the 19th century. In the new building, a two-storey solid building with a flat central projectile, four school rooms, four teacher's apartments and a househusband's apartment were set up; the spatial structures have largely been preserved. The building is a testament to the development of the school system in the 19th century, but it also has a building-historical significance as a testimony to contemporary historicism, which is expressed here in Renaissance forms. The stately two-storey, symmetrical solid building with a jamb and gable roof is plastered, shows profiled window frames with strong roofs (5/11/5 axes) and the most striking design feature is a three-axis flat central projection, which ends with a triangular gable with twin windows, cartouche and rectangular attachment. Such an attachment can also be found at the end of the side gable, there still provided with acroteria. The double-leaf oak entrance door with carved children's figures (boy and girl) was created in 1950 by the local wood carving company Grämer. |
08956082
|
|
More pictures |
Church (with equipment) and 21 tombstones or tombstone fragments at the church and parentation hall of the cemetery | At the churches 8 (map) |
2nd half of the 15th century, later expanded | Typical Erzgebirge fortified church with a log floor on a stone substructure, retracted choir, stately roof turret, of architectural and local importance.
Former parish church. Fortified church with extremely rich furnishings. The massive construction in the second half of the 15th century, the choir around 1500. Modifications in 1663 and 1776–79. After the neo-Gothic parish church was built in 1906, the construction was moved to the newly laid out cemetery south of the village under the direction of Woldemar Kandler. Restoration 1974–76.
Gravestones in the fortified church:
|
08956077
|
Historic hand pressure syringe | Lengefelder Strasse (map) |
1862 | Of significance in terms of technology history.
Four-wheeled unsprung vehicle sprayer equipped for horse-drawn trains. Water tank made of riveted sheet iron with pumping mechanism in the middle, at the front and rear end of the water tank there is a double seat that can be opened. The suction hoses are located along the suction side. The delivery rate of this truck sprayer corresponds with a pump crew of ten people with 55 double strokes per minute about 250 liters. The vehicle syringe was obtained in 1862 (according to documents in the municipal archive) from the special syringe factory CG Baldauf Chemnitz. |
08955967
|
|
Residential house and attached side building | Niederdorf 5 (map) |
Mentioned in 1858 | Hook-shaped complex, half-timbered house that characterizes the street, of architectural significance.
Solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, slated gable, half-hipped roof, porphyry walls, former bakery. |
08956083
|
|
Residential building | Niederdorf 31 (map) |
Mentioned in 1868 | Half-timbered house, characterizing the streetscape, of architectural significance.
Solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, clad gable. |
08956084
|
|
House of a farm | Niederdorf 44 (map) |
1783-1784 | Very large half-timbered residential building, with a half-timbered gable that characterizes the street, and is of architectural importance.
Solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, partly changed, plaster blocks at the corners. |
08956090
|
|
More pictures |
Church (with furnishings) and former churchyard gate | Niederlautersteiner Strasse 1 (map) |
1906-1907 | Neo-Gothic hall church, west tower with baroque hood, architect: Woldemar Kandler, Dresden, older baroque churchyard gate, of importance in terms of building history, the history of the town and its character.
|
08956081
|
Side building and barn of a three-sided farm | Niederlautersteiner Strasse 7 (map) |
marked 1894, older in essence | The hook-shaped arrangement of the buildings, a large side building with a half-timbered upper storey that characterizes the street, a boarded-up barn, of architectural significance.
Solid ground floor, upper floor Prussian half-timbered houses. |
08956086
|
|
Stable house of a farm | Niederlautersteiner Strasse 37 (map) |
18th century | Half-timbered building, characterizing the streetscape, of architectural significance.
Solid ground floor, upper floor single-bar framework over a hook-shaped floor plan, back slated. |
08956085
|
|
Former inheritance court | Oberdorf 2 (map) |
essentially before 1800 | With a historical wooden ceiling and other historical details inside, architectural and local significance. |
08955677
|
|
House of a farm | Oberdorf 29 (map) |
marked 1871, older in essence | Half-timbered building with a splendid ornamental slate gable, the only example of this type in the town, of architectural significance.
Solid ground floor, wooden construction, partly with half-timbering, slate gable, scale-like and in rosette shape. |
08956079
|
|
Stable part of the residential stable house of a farm | Oberdorf 50 (map) |
marked 1771 | Three-aisled stable of the former inheritance, singularity in the place, of local history.
Three ships of the same width with a Bohemian cap vault. |
08956129 |
Niederlauterstein
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
War memorial for the fallen soldiers of the First World War | (Map) | 1935 | Simple brick stele with inscription plates made of bronze for the fallen of the First World War, of local historical importance. |
08956072
|
|
Side building of a farm | Brettelhäuserweg 9 (map) |
1864 | Large, three-aisled vaulted stable of the former hereditary court, singularity, of local significance.
Three-aisled stable with a narrow central nave and vault, rebuilt after a fire in 1864, the rear part (former horse stable) burned down in 1930. |
08956128
|
|
Residential building | Gänsegasse 11 (map) |
around 1800 | Rural half-timbered house, historically important.
Solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, gable partially boarded up. |
08956074
|
|
Residential stable house and barn of a farm | Marienberger Strasse 4 (map) |
Mentioned in 1787, but older | Residential stable house with a half-timbered upper floor, wooden barn, which is important in terms of architectural history.
Elongated half-timbered building, solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, tailcoat roof, barn: wooden construction. |
08956089
|
|
Castle ruins | Schloßberg (map) |
2nd half of the 12th century, expanded later | High-lying ruin of a castle, in quarry stone, with round and corner towers, local historical significance.
First mentioned in a document in 1304, in 1323 owned by the Reichsministeriale von Schellenberg, then the Margrave of Meißen, 1434 sold to the Freiberg patrician family von Berbisdorf, through this castle-like expansion of the complex, 1559 sold to Elector August (regional princely office), March 14, 1639 destruction Lauterstein Castle. |
08956073
|
|
Residential house of a mill estate | Schloßberg 2 (map) |
1893 | Historicizing plastered building, echoes of the Swiss style, stately home of the mill owner, local historical significance.
Elaborate plastered solid building in Swiss style made of quarry stone and brick, two-story above a very high base, plaster structure and sandstone walls, strong lintels, extended gables with wooden decorations. |
08956075
|
|
Former colliery house | Schloßberg 4 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Half-timbered building, significance in terms of mining history.
Half-timbered house located in the forest on a hillside, half-timbered partly plastered and boarded up. |
08956127 |
Pobershau
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Stockpile train | (Map) | 17./18. Century or older | Mining historical significance. |
09207937
|
|
Artificial trench for the Pobershauer mining area | (Map) | 1678-1680 | Mining historical significance. |
09207935
|
|
Stockpile train | (Map) | 17./18. Century or older | Mining historical significance. |
09207936
|
|
House of a farm | AS-Brettmühlenstraße 1 (map) |
Mid 19th century | Half-timbered building typical of the time and landscape, of architectural significance.
Solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, boarded gable. |
09207899
|
|
Whale tunnel system | AS-Dorfstraße 23 (near) (map) |
17./18. Century or older | Local and mining historical significance.
Deepest tunnel excavated over great distances in the local area of Pobershau, tunnel mouth hole from the 18th century. |
09207933
|
|
Mouth hole and tunnel pit | AS-Dorfstraße 35 (near) (map) |
19th century | Mining and local historical importance. |
09207932
|
|
Factory owner's villa and villa garden (garden monument) | AS-Dorfstrasse 41 (map) |
Late 19th century | Wilhelminian style plastered construction, architectural value and local historical significance.
Two-storey solid construction with an almost square floor plan, regular structure, all facades with central projections, facing the street with triangular gables, windows with strong walls and sills on small consoles, eaves cornice with toothed frieze, hip roof, open staircase, original front door. |
09207926
|
|
Factory owner's villa and pavilion in the garden | AS-Dorfstrasse 43 (map) |
Late 19th century | Stately, Wilhelminian style plastered building, architectural value and local historical significance.
|
09207909
|
|
Residential building | AS-Dorfstrasse 47 (map) |
2nd half of the 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered, design typical of the time and landscape, of architectural significance.
Solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, solid gable, boarded up, roof pike. |
09207925
|
|
Former hut house, now residential building, as well as mouth hole | AS-Dorfstrasse 53 (map) |
before 1800, later changed | Mining and local historical importance.
Small two-story solid building, the upper floor boarded up. |
09207923
|
|
War memorial for the fallen soldiers of the First World War | AS-Dorfstraße 57 (next to) (map) |
after 1918 (war memorial) | Local historical significance.
Small grove of honor with granite cube, this one with inscription plaques, as a conclusion almost life-size stone figure of a kneeling, praying soldier. |
09207922
|
|
Residential building | AS-Dorfstrasse 65 (map) |
Late 19th century | Wilhelminian style plastered construction, building typical of the time and landscape, of architectural significance.
Two-storey solid construction with corner grooves on the ground floor, simple cornice, windows on the upper floor with roofing, central projection, roof house, wooden decorations in the gables with echoes of the Swiss style, original door. |
09207896
|
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More pictures |
Hut house, mouth hole and tunnel system of the Molchner tunnel | AS-Dorfstrasse 69 (map) |
18th century | Significance of the townscape and the history of mining.
Currently used as the Tiefer Molchner Stollen show mine. |
09207889
|
Railway bridge on the Reitzenhain – Flöha line | AS knee brace (card) |
19th century | Three-arched sandstone bridge with small crowns of importance for the history of traffic and the townscape. |
09207938
|
|
Inn | AS-Kühnhaidner Strasse 20 (map) |
Late 19th century | Stately, landscape-defining building in Swiss style, local historical significance.
Above a high basement, a two-storey white plastered building with red brick structure, a half-hip roof, partly boarded up in the gable area. |
09207901
|
|
barn | AS-Zugstrasse 19 (map) |
1710 | Small wooden barn, part of a small rural property, of architectural value.
Small boarded half-timbered barn with a steep pitched roof was built in 1710 (according to dendrochronological research). The building impresses with its authenticity. It can be assumed that this barn is one of the oldest buildings in Pobershau. The monument value of this small rural farm building results primarily from its historical significance. |
09304401
|
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More pictures |
Church (with equipment) | AS-Zugstrasse 27 (map) |
1903-1904 | Hall church with south tower, in the neo-baroque style with Art Nouveau details, architect: Woldemar Kandler, architectural value, local significance and importance for local history.
West portal with curved top.
|
09207913
|
Residential building (without extension) | RS blue stone 13 (card) |
Mid 19th century | Half-timbered building, characterizing the townscape due to its elevated location, of architectural significance.
Solid ground floor, corner cuboid, upper floor half-timbered, gable slated, hipped roof. |
09207893
|
|
Tunnel system with mouth hole and rose | RS-Dorfstrasse (map) |
18th century | Mining historical significance.
Quarry stone wall around 20 meters wide with two flat entrances. |
09207903
|
|
Former hut house, now residential building | RS-Dorfstrasse 28 (map) |
Late 19th century | Mining and local historical importance.
Two-storey, plastered quarry stone and brick building, developed attic, gable roof. |
09207934
|
|
Former hammer building, today residential building | RS-Dorfstrasse 50 (map) |
around 1800, possibly older (hammer mill) | Mining and local historical significance.
Former tin foil hammer, later residential building. The house was used to process the tin obtained in the Pobershau area. One-storey plastered building with a rectangular floor plan, house closure through a very steep pitched roof. Very good original condition. Due to the beautiful gray plaster and the unusually steep gable roof, the building immediately catches the eye when driving through the town. The building is an important testimony to the mining industry in the Ore Mountains, even if the technical equipment was not preserved. |
09207924
|
|
Residential building with shop | RS-Dorfstrasse 74 (map) |
2nd half of the 19th century | Authentically preserved residential building with original shop fittings, building typical of the time, plastered facade, of local significance.
Two-storey solid construction with strong walls, straight lintel, original shops, upper floor with original windows, gable partly with winter windows, original lettering of the shop: “Lebensmittel-Fa. Albrecht-Drug-Colors ”, inside completely preserved shop fittings from the 19th century! |
09207895
|
|
Former hut house, now residential building | RS-Dorfstrasse 78 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Half-timbered construction typical of the time and landscape, significance for mining history.
Solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, hipped roof with two pikes, boarded gable in the upper part. |
09207890
|
|
Residential building | RS-Dorfstraße 90a (map) |
19th century | Single-storey plastered building, workers' house for the Poch wash "Zinnerne Bottle", significance for mining and local history.
Small single-storey solid building, since 1992 club house of the Pobershau Mountain Brotherhood. |
09207921
|
|
Main building (Ratsseite-Dorfstrasse 112) and ancillary building (Ratsseite-Hauptstrasse 1a, with clock) as well as the chimney of a former wood goods factory | RS-Dorfstrasse 112 (map) |
2nd half of the 19th century (main and auxiliary building) | Local historical and local significance.
|
09207900
|
|
School with a gym | RS-Rathausstrasse 1 (map) |
probably 1938, older in essence | Two-storey, massive plastered building with roof turrets, remodeled in the traditionalist style of the 1930s, older in essence, of high documentation value and significant in terms of building history.
Solid plastered building on the eaves with a gable roof and central turret, next to it the gymnasium with a smaller structure, both buildings expressive also because of their small windows. |
09305635
|
|
town hall | RS-Rathausstrasse 6 (map) |
1924-1925 | Plastered building with a mansard roof and clock tower, interior designed counter hall of the former Sparkasse, importance in terms of local history and building history.
Town hall: two-storey solid construction over quarry stone plinth, partly with wide arched windows, mansard hipped roof with copper clock tower, to the valley a mighty, broad central projection with triangular gable. |
09207910
|
|
Shaft system | RS-Rathausstrasse 11 (next to) (map) |
18th century | Mining and local historical importance.
Small, modern half-timbered building with access to the entire Wildsberger and Martersberger mine area. |
09207911
|
|
Bergschmiede, later an inn | RS-Stangenweg 2 (map) |
around 1900, core partly older | Half-timbered building, local history and mining history.
|
09207892
|
|
Residential building | RS-Wagenbachtal 4 (map) |
Mid 19th century | Massive building, part of the old local structure, historically significant.
Small single-storey plastered building, some with winter windows. |
09207905
|
|
House and barn | RS-Wagenbachtal 8 (map) |
Mid 19th century | One-storey plastered construction, design typical of the time and landscape, of importance in terms of building history.
Single-storey plastered building with a jamb floor, five by four axes, large shed on the back. |
09207904
|
|
Transformer tower | RS-Wagenbachtal 20 (opposite) |
09207907
|
|||
Residential building | RS-Wagenbachtal 22 (map) |
Late 18th century | Upper floor half-timbered, in the place rare half-timbered construction (headband), characterizing the townscape and historical significance.
Elevated building, due to hillside location above high, solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered with headband, tailcoat roof. |
09207908
|
|
Former hut house, now residential building | RS-Wiesenweg 1 (map) |
16th century, later heavily modified | Local and mining historical significance.
One-storey, elongated solid construction, modern windows and doors, built in the 16th century as a smelter. |
09207898 |
Reitzenhain
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Zeuggraben as a water supply ditch for the artificial tools in Lauta, Reitzenhain section | (Map) | 1551 | Significance in mining history (see also Kühnhaide and Marienberg districts).
Individual monument of the entity Reitzenhainer Kunst- und Zeuggraben: (see also entity list, OT Reitzenhain, without address - Obj. 09305556) |
08956363
|
|
Milestone | (Map) | 2nd half of the 19th century | Of importance in terms of traffic history; with inscription, including the designation "20.1". |
08956002
|
|
Zeuggraben as a water supply ditch for the artifacts in Lauta | (Map) | 1551 | Mining historical significance.
Material population component of the material population Reitzenhainer Kunst- und Zeuggraben, section OT Reitzenhain with the individual monument: (see individual monument list - obj. 08956363, see also material universe list, OT Marienberg, without address - obj. 09305555). |
09305556
|
|
Milestone | (Map) | from 1858 | Monument to the history of traffic. |
09206733
|
|
Station building | Ernst-Thälmann-Strasse 74 (map) |
around 1900 | Clinker brick construction typical of the time, simple but defining design, of importance in terms of local history and traffic history.
One-storey, symmetrical building with three gables, gable roof, clinker brick facades with simple decorative gables, artificial stone window frames, boarded gable. |
09205531
|
|
Railway house | Ernst-Thälmann-Strasse 75 (map) |
around 1900 | Characteristic clinker brick building, development that characterizes the townscape along the tracks of the Reitzenhain – Flöha railway line, with regional and transport historical significance.
Simple two-storey clinker brick building, central projectile, strong cornice, jamb storey, saddle roof, simple tile ornamentation above the windows that close in segmental arches, mainly blind windows on the gable side. |
09205530
|
|
Railway house | Ernst-Thälmann-Strasse 77 (map) |
around 1900 | Characteristic clinker brick building, simple, largely unchanged condition, typical development along the tracks of the Reitzenhain – Flöha railway line, significance in terms of regional and transport history.
Angular clinker brick building with a gable roof, two storeys with simple cornices, window frames made of artificial stone, original boarding on the upper floor, plastered entrance later, simple stepped eaves decoration on the gable. |
09205528
|
|
Inn, with barn annex | Hübner Strasse-Wildhauser 101 (map) |
19th century | Upper floor timber frame boarded up, in a location on the mountain that characterizes the townscape, unchanged, local architecture, of local historical importance.
boarded up |
09205544
|
|
Residential building, former customs house | Rudolf-Breitscheid-Strasse 3 (map) |
around 1905 | Elaborately designed plaster clinker facade with half-timbered elements, of regional historical and architectural importance.
Two storeys, base of quarry stone masonry, plaster facade with corner emphasis (change of material between plaster and clinker), above ornamental framework, moving roof landscape, window frames artificial stone with clinker arches. |
09205534
|
|
Secondary customs office building, later a customs office building | Rudolf-Breitscheid-Strasse 5 (map) |
2nd half of the 18th century | Basically baroque plastered building with a high hipped roof, of architectural and regional historical importance.
Two-storey, broadly laid plastered building with a high hipped roof, crowned by a turret on a polygonal base with a lantern and a Welscher hood, presumably a former bell tower, inside well-preserved baroque building stock, cellar accessible via two-flight stairs with a high barrel, vault at floor level, ground floor and first floor Made of quarry stone masonry, window openings with basket arch reveals, two-flight staircase - banisters from the renovation phase around 1904, remains of a brushed groin vault preserved on the ground floor, roof truss 18th century - collar beam roof with central longitudinal beam and lying chair. |
09303019
|
|
Former inn, later a customs officer residence | Rudolf-Breitscheid-Strasse 6 (map) |
probably between 1790 and 1830 | Representative plastered building from the beginning of the 19th century, presumably rebuilt around 1900, as an old inn, which was already in the same location in the 16th century, the building is of great regional and architectural significance.
Two-storey plastered building, longitudinal building with a gable roof, regularly arranged rectangular window openings with porphyry window frames, on the courtyard side today two blind niches with basket arches - here originally probably large gates, the interior floor plan changed by expanding into a customs official's residence, originally on the ground floor large stables with Bohemian cap vaults, supported by belt arches simple porphyry columns, which contain vaults and columns, the stables are no longer visible due to partition walls, frame panel doors with knobs and board doors with long hinges from the time of construction, however, have been preserved in a different location, staircase also from the construction period, floor plan changed on the upper floor with doors from the renovation phase from 1904, Collar beam roof with central longitudinal girder, some leaf seats from hanging truss visible, roof structure from the construction period. As a former envelope and later a customs officer residence, the building is of great regional and architectural importance. Furthermore, the dominant location and the size of the building have a significant impact on the townscape. |
09303002 |
Rittersberg
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mouth hole | Rittersberger Strasse 2 (near) (map) |
17./18. century | Mining and local historical importance. |
09207939
|
|
school | Rittersberger Strasse 11 (map) |
1897 | Historical plastered building typical of the time, elevated side elevation with roof turret, of local historical importance. |
09305550
|
|
Residential building | Rittersberger Strasse 13 (map) |
Early 19th century | One-storey plastered building, boarded up gable, small central projection, design typical of the time and landscape, scientific and documentary value and socio-historical significance.
Single-storey, broad-based solid building with a loft, boarded gable, small central projectile with triangular gable, gable roof with pike, original door. |
09207942
|
|
Residential building (without extension) | Rittersberger Strasse 20 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Partly in half-timbered houses, boarded up gables, part of the old local structure, historically important.
Solid ground floor, half-timbered upper floor, boarded gable, solid courtyard side. |
09207943
|
|
Sundial on the residential building and tunnel mouth hole behind the residential building | Rittersberger Strasse 30 (near) (map) |
marked 1883 | Local and mining historical significance.
Mouth hole: brick hole. |
09207941
|
|
Residential building | Rittersberger Strasse 34 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Single-storey solid construction, in a design typical of the time and landscape, of architectural significance.
Single-storey solid construction, stone walls, winter windows (without extension). |
09207945
|
|
Waystone | Disc path (map) |
19th century | Traffic-historical importance.
With two crossed, incised swords, inscribed "52", about 40 centimeters high, gneiss. |
09207947 |
Rübenau
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Former church school, later rectory | Am Maiberg 2 (map) |
around 1800, older in essence | Stately plastered building, formerly also the teacher's house, since 1904 parsonage, of local historical importance.
Two-storey solid plastered building with window sill cornice, front door with basket arch in the middle of the eaves side, gable triangles presumably half-timbered, half-hipped roof, documented construction around 1607 as a school building, the actual building stock indicates construction time from around 1780, conversion 1904 to a parsonage (Pfarrlehn was from 1853 to 1905 the residential building Am Maiberg 6), new school (Am Maiberg 4) built in 1903. |
09238055
|
|
House and barn of a farm | Am Maiberg 11Rittersberg (Marienberg) (map) |
19th century | Plastered building with crooked hip roof and roof pike, boarded up barn, buildings typical of the time and landscape, significance in terms of building history.
Solid construction, plastered, window arrangement retained, crooked hip roof with Eternit covering, pike gauze over the entire length of the roof, simple boarded barn. |
09205556
|
|
Milestone, reworked into a kilometer stone | Hermit Street |
09205843
|
|||
Residential building | Einsiedler Strasse 38 (map) |
19th century | Erzgebirgs-Kammhaus, plastered building with a simple shape, with a defining effect on the townscape, of significance in terms of building history.
Residential house, built around 1870. Compact (two-storey, five-axis), harmonious plastered building (gray plaster), closed off by a crooked hip roof. Gable covered with Eternit. At the time of the registration of the monument and a renewed inspection in 2002, in addition to the original natural stone walls and the original door portal, a house door and original winter windows, presumably from the construction period, were preserved. On the opposite side of the house there is a single-storey extension without monument value. Inside there is a central corridor and, to the right of this, a stable with Prussian cap vaults. The window openings inside are closed off by flat segmental arches, some frame panel doors from the construction period were still preserved in 2002. The building has a basement with a cellar barrel made of rubble stones. The roof structure was designed as a collar beam roof with tenon wood connections. Doors from the building era were also to be found in the attic - board doors with long hinges. The house is of architectural significance as a typical rural Erzgebirge house of the 19th century. |
09205571
|
|
Customs house (Oberer Natzschungweg 2), barn (Einsiedler Straße 94) and side building as well as the archway of a customs office | Einsiedler Strasse 94 (map) |
around 1800 | Stately, mansion-like customs building, in the classical style, closed courtyard, of architectural and regional significance.
|
09205575
|
|
Stable house of a farm | Hammerweg 13 (map) |
19th century | Upper floor half-timbered clad, typical building with architectural significance.
Two storeys, ground floor massive and modified, upper storey and gable slated, probably with half-timbering underneath, half-hip roof. |
09205866
|
|
Former hut house, now residential building | At Gasse 16 (map) |
19th century | Single-storey plastered building, boarded gable, largely unchanged building, of local and architectural importance.
Solid ground floor (partly quarry stone masonry), boarded gable, hipped roof with wooden shingles, built-in stable. |
09205557
|
|
Residential house with outbuildings | Kriegwaldweg 6 (map) |
1937 | Timber house, well-preserved example of element construction with wood as a building material, significant in terms of building history.
Cross-boarded house in wooden construction on rubble stone plinth, original window sizes with authentic six-panel division, gable paneling with vertical battens, steep gable roof with overhang, triangular dormer window typical of the time and triangular windows in the gable, outbuildings in the same appearance. Client: Oscar Weidmüller, Dresden, planning: Karl Adler, execution: Hermann Adler, Schwarzenberg construction business. The houses were completed in less than two months after building permit (July 16, 1937). |
09305551
|
|
Residential house (with forestry office), two side buildings and a forester's barn | Kriegwaldweg 8 (map) |
between 1774 and 1777, later expanded | Former forest ranger's office, closed ensemble, baroque house with coat of arms stone, of architectural and regional importance.
|
09205581
|
|
Residential stable house and barn of a two-sided courtyard | Kriegwaldweg 41 (map) |
Late 19th century | Stable house upper floor half-timbered, characteristic Kammhof with architectural significance.
|
09205573
|
|
House of a farm | Kriegwaldweg 45 (map) |
Mid 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered, in the shape typical of the townscape, example of rural construction and way of life, significance in terms of building history.
Two storeys, the first floor plastered, the former part of the stable converted, the wooden vestibule and two-storey cantilever chair preserved, the upper storey half-timbered structure (different thicknesses), boarded gable ends, unchanged saddle roof, called Hof Gütl. |
09205572
|
|
Former mansion of a manor | Kühnhaidner Strasse 4 (map) |
around 1750 | Plastered construction with a high hipped roof, in a location-defining street location, architectural and local significance.
Monumental, two-storey building with plastered facade, high hipped roof with dormer windows, vault in the entrance preserved (groin vault). |
09205583
|
|
Customs house (Oberer Natzschungweg 2), barn (Einsiedler Straße 94) and side building as well as the archway of a customs office | Oberer Natzschungweg 2 (map) |
around 1800 | Stately, mansion-like customs building, in the classical style, closed courtyard, of architectural and regional significance.
|
09205575
|
|
Former hammer mill and sawmill | Olbernhauer Strasse 10 (map) |
1689, 1769 reconstruction | Imposing, almost unchanged structure, significance in terms of technology history, local history and the local image.
Two-storey plastered building, wide structure with high hipped roof, pike dome, clad gable, partly massive barn. |
09205566
|
|
Mill building | Olbernhauer Strasse 67 (map) |
1925 or older | Well-structured plastered building of imposing size, location that defines the street scene, of local historical importance.
Two-storey plastered building on the eaves with a crooked roof, plastered window frames, upper floor clinker arches over the windows, technical equipment not preserved. |
09205568
|
|
Former stable house of a farm | Rübenauer Waldstrasse 10 (map) |
19th century | Upper floor half-timbered, typical regional example of rural construction and way of life, also of importance in terms of local development.
Ground floor massive and plastered, upper floor timber-framed boarded. |
09205558
|
|
Residential stable house | Rübenauer Waldstrasse 12 (map) |
Mid 19th century | One-storey plastered building with shingled gable, simple form characteristic of the townscape, of importance in terms of local development.
Single-storey building, massive (quarry stone masonry), stable structure preserved, gable boarded up (wooden shingles), hipped roof dormer at the rear. |
09205579
|
|
Residential stable house and barn of a farm | Rübenauer Waldstrasse 14 (map) |
Mid 19th century | Residential stable house, single-storey plastered building with half-timbered gable, boarded up barn, characteristic ensemble with a defining effect on the townscape, of architectural significance.
Former stable house: plastered facade, enlarged window openings, gable on the street side more elaborately shingled, hipped roof, boarded barn, saddle roof. |
09205580
|
|
Factory building (with equipment) | Unterer Natzschungweg 1 (map) |
Early 20th century (factory) | Former nail factory with the technical equipment (water turbine, transmission, lathes), of importance in terms of technology and local history.
Simple plastered building with rich technical equipment, former water turbine (removed), transmission with leather belts, associated wheels and shafts, lathes partly new. |
09205567
|
|
More pictures |
Church (with furnishings) and churchyard with enclosure and memorial stone on the churchyard wall | Zöblitzer Strasse (map) |
1613-1614 | Baroque central building with mansard roof and octagonal roof turret, of architectural and local significance.
Small central building with mansard roof (slate covering) from 1613/14, extended around 1714, plastered facade, western porch, octagonal roof turret with lantern and Welscher hood (slated), inner galleries, pulpit altar, enclosure: masonry (plastered), iron gate (redesigned in 1849) . |
09205562
|
War memorial for the fallen soldiers of the First World War | Zöblitzer Strasse 4 (next to) (map) |
after 1918 (war memorial) | Simple system on a stepped elevation, with natural stone and inscription plaque, of local historical importance.
|
09205564
|
|
War memorial for those who fell in the Franco-German War | Zöblitzer Straße 6 (near) (map) |
after 1871 | Small sandstone obelisk on a two-tiered pedestal, inscription, of local significance.
Enamel plaque with inscription (Albin Oskar Engelhardt, died December 2, 1904 in South West Africa, born in Rübenau, certainly a member of the German colonial troops who fell in Namibia during the Herero uprising in 1904). |
09205563
|
|
Factory owner's villa | Zöblitzer Strasse 20 (map) |
around 1910 | Above the village, an imposing structure with rich facade decorations and ornamental framework, of architectural and local significance.
Base of quarry stone masonry, plastered facade, decorative framework or boarded up in the attic, square corner bay window, crooked hip roof. |
09205561
|
|
Residential building | Zöblitzer Strasse 29 (map) |
19th century | Single-storey plastered building, gable shingled, largely unchanged rural house in simple, local-typical forms, a rare example of the use of wooden shingles, of importance in terms of building history.
One-storey plastered building, gable cladding, gable roof, large haul-out roof, simple boarded-up shed with side extension. |
09205560 |
statute
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Triangulation column | Am Hirtstein 3 (near) (map) |
marked 1868 (triangulation stone) | Second order station, restored, significant testimony to 19th century geodesy, significant in terms of surveying history.
Square surveying stone made of Ehrenfriedersdorfer granite on the adjacent rock, a notch made about 30 centimeters above the adjacent rock, inscription: "Station / Hirtstein / der Kön: Sächs: / Trinagulirung / 1868", extensively restored in 2012. |
09206735
|
Residential building | Turn 11 (map) |
18th century | Rural house with boarded or clad half-timbered upper floor, of architectural significance.
Two-storey, first floor quarry stone plastered, house entrance in the middle of the eaves side with wooden vestibule, half-timbered upper floor boarded up or clad, hay hatch with elevator at the gable triangle, door on the upper floor on the courtyard side, steep pitched roof, originally with shutters. |
09247845
|
|
Former stable house | Statutes Hauptstrasse 9 (map) |
Early 19th century | Upper floor timber-framed boarded, in a simple, local building design, historically important.
Solid ground floor, wooden vestibule and some shutters, upper floor and gable boarded up, with cantilever chair / wood, wood annex to the rear. |
09206722
|
|
Residential stable house | Statutes Hauptstrasse 41 (map) |
19th century | Upper floor half-timbered clad, location defining the townscape, architectural significance.
Solid ground floor, upper floor slated (including half-timbering preserved), gable completely slated, gable roof. |
09206720
|
|
Former stable house | Statutes Hauptstrasse 42 (map) |
19th century | Upper floor half-timbered clapboard, in a typical local design, example of rural construction and way of life, of architectural significance.
Massive ground floor, partially changed (window installation), boarded gable, upper floor slated. |
09206721
|
|
Former stable house and side building of a farm | Statutes Hauptstrasse 48 (map) |
19th century | Stable house upper floor half-timbered, location that characterizes the townscape, as an ensemble well-preserved example of rural way of life and work, of architectural significance.
Two-storey, plastered half-timbered building, gable roof, gable and upper storey slated, including possibly half-timbered (window system), ground floor massive and slightly changed (front window), outbuilding: quarry stone masonry plastered, saddle roof, basket arched gate. |
09206719
|
|
Former town hall | Statutes Hauptstrasse 62 (map) |
1939 | Simple plastered building in the local style, with originally preserved structural details such as portal walls, shutters and clock tower, local historical significance.
Two-storey plastered building with a gable roof, pointed clock tower and triangular dormer windows. |
09206716
|
|
Former stable house | Statutes Hauptstrasse 70 (map) |
19th century | Upper floor half-timbered clad, of a size that defines the street scene, striking example of rural construction and way of life, of architectural significance.
Half-hip roof, massive ground floor and partially modified windows, garage installation, upper floor slated, window system suggests half-timbered structure, gable slated as well. |
09206718
|
|
Residential stable house and barn of a farm | Statutes Hauptstrasse 74 (map) |
19th century | Partly in half-timbered, typical example of rural construction and way of life, socially and historically significant.
Solid ground floor, stable window, upper floor slated, gable roof, barn: one-storey (quarry stone masonry plastered), high gable roof. |
09206717
|
|
Residential stable house | Statutes Hauptstrasse 76 (map) |
19th century | Typical of the site, a gable with ornamental sheet metal, of architectural significance.
Solid ground floor, upper floor boarded up (half-timbered), gable slated and hay elevator, other gable with ornamental sheet metal, with side barn extension (boarded up). |
09205537
|
|
Inn | Statutes Hauptstrasse 84 (map) |
marked 1834 | Building that characterizes the townscape, located in the center of the town at the intersection, of local historical importance.
Two-storey plastered building with a crooked roof, formerly two buildings (right component connected to left barn). |
09205540
|
|
|
Church (with furnishings), churchyard with morgue, enclosure wall and war memorials for those who died in the Franco-German War and those who died in the First World War in the churchyard | Statutes Kirchstrasse 1 (map) |
Consecrated in 1573 | Hall church with a baroque west tower, of importance in terms of building history, local history and shaping the townscape.
|
09205541
|
Rectory and parsonage shed | Statutes Kirchstrasse 2 (map) |
19th century | Imposing and unchanged building structure in a position that defines the townscape opposite the church, of architectural and local importance.
Ground floor solid and plastered, upper floor and gable boarded up (including half-timbering preserved), large, unchanged gable roof with slate covering, portal with sandstone architecture and garments. |
09205542
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Residential stable house | Statutes Kirchstrasse 14 (map) |
Mid 19th century | With clad half-timbered upper floor, well-preserved evidence of rural living and working, of importance in terms of building history.
Ground floor solid and plastered, stable windows preserved, cantilever chair slated to the rear, upper floor timber-frame clad. |
09205543
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Former stable house | Statutes Ziegengasse 21 (map) |
Early 19th century | Upper floor timber-framed boarded up, with largely unchanged structural design, of architectural significance.
Solid ground floor (plastered), window openings later enlarged, also stone porch, strikingly boarded timber frame on the gable side, unusually high gable roof. |
09205548
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House and shed | Steinbacher Strasse 1 (map) |
Late 19th century | The ensemble that characterizes the townscape in unchanged condition, of architectural significance.
Two-storey plastered building (quarry stone masonry), windows on the ground floor with arches and wall stones, plastered up on the upper floor, simple saddle roof with slate covering, massive porch, boarded up shed. |
09205552
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Former stable house | Street of Youth 6 (map) |
19th century | Upper floor half-timbered clad, in a typical building design, of architectural significance.
Solid ground floor (plastered), former stable building as a garage / barn installation, upper floor half-timbered clad, unchanged slate roof with old German covering. |
09205551 |
Sorgau
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
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Residential building | Small page 6 (card) |
1818 | Small half-timbered house that characterizes the landscape, of social and historical importance.
Residential stable house from around 1800 (the later date “1818” on the keystone of the house entrance is not certain). It consists of a ground floor made of broken stones and a half-timbered upper floor (massively replaced on the slope side). A steeply inclined gable roof with boarded gables completes the building. It is covered with dark red / brown reform tiles. The framework, visible on two sides, consists of a post and beam construction with corner and center struts. The lintel bar is offset over the windows. The roof structure is designed as a collar beam roof with a reclining chair and a wind strut. The house entrance is slightly off-center on the valley side. It is covered by a basket arch with an indicated keystone. There is also an entrance on the slope side, which leads directly to the upper floor due to the steep terrain. The interior shows the structure typical of central German stables. A corridor roughly in the middle separates the living area from the utility area. It is covered with irregularly broken natural stone slabs. There is a water trough at the end of the hallway. The ground floor windows are also covered by round arches. Various doors date from the time it was built. The building documents the rural construction in the Ore Mountains in the period around 1800 in a largely unadulterated condition. Due to its exposed location on the slope above the Kretzschenbach, the building is also of importance for the landscape. |
09207624
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Residential building | Sorgauer Dorfstrasse 2 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Picturesque half-timbered house, typical of the time and landscape, of architectural significance.
Solid ground floor, quarry stone masonry, upper floor half-timbered, garden side massive, gable half-timbered, gable roof with slate covering. |
09207619
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Residential stable house and barn of a two-sided courtyard | Sorgauer Dorfstrasse 4 (map) |
18th century | Stable house upper floor half-timbered, boarded up barn, typical of the time and landscape, of architectural significance.
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09207618
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Stable house of a farm | Sorgauer Dorfstrasse 15 (map) |
Core 18th century | Massive building with half-timbered parts, boarded gable, largely preserved in its original form, of architectural significance.
Two-storey solid building made of quarry stone, tailcoat roof, plastered extension with half-timbering, boarded gable. |
09207617
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Inn with hall extension | Sorgauer Dorfstrasse 23 (map) |
2nd half of the 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered structure, significance for the local history and the townscape.
Solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, massive gable, half-timbered gable, half-hipped roof. |
09207616
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Residential stable house, barn and side building of a three-sided courtyard | Sorgauer Dorfstrasse 27 (map) |
marked 1817 | Residential stable house with half-timbered upper floor and segmental arch portal, boarded up farm buildings, part of the old local structure, of architectural significance.
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09207620
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House and archway of a farm | Sorgauer Dorfstrasse 31 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered, typical of the time and the landscape, arches rare in the region, of architectural significance.
Solid ground floor, half-timbered upper floor, solid gable, archway made of quarry stone. |
09207621
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school | Sorgauer Dorfstrasse 36 (map) |
marked 1876 | School building typical of the time with a striking roof turret, of local historical importance.
Two-storey solid plastered building, flat saddle roof with extension in Welscher hood (for bell?), Floors are optically separated by cornices, original window sizes, but with simplified windows, central entrance with overhang. |
09305553
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Stable house of a farm | Sorgauer Dorfstrasse 60a (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Upper floor half-timbered, picturesquely situated in the valley, small building of social and historical importance.
Ground floor and a massive gable, upper floor half-timbered. |
09207613
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Road bridge over the Kretzschenbach | Sorgauer Dorfstraße 64 (near) (map) |
19th century | Single-arched stone bridge, significance in terms of traffic history. |
09207626
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Stable house of a farm | Sorgauer Dorfstrasse 66 (map) |
1st half of the 19th century | Upper floor timber-frame boarded up, characterizing the townscape, important in terms of building history.
First floor quarry stone plastered, flat arch door, upper floor half-timbered, boarded all around with gable, partly gable through installation of windows. |
09207615
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Former forester's house, now residential building | Sorgauer Dorfstrasse 69 (map) |
around 1910 | Picturesque building, characterizing the local image, in the reform and Heimat style, of local history.
Single-storey solid construction with an attached, boarded-up attic and half-hip roof, dominant eaves-side central wing, gable roof. |
09207614 |
Zöblitz
image | designation | location | Dating | description | ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Oral hole, tunnel and heap of God's blessing treasure trove | (Map) | 1710-1884 | Mining historical significance. |
09247965
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War memorial for those who fell in the Franco-German War | At the market square (map) |
after 1871 | Local historical significance.
Natural stone obelisk on a two-tier natural stone base, serpentine panels. |
09207563
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Residential building in closed development | Am Marktplatz 21 (map) |
marked 1894 | Historicizing plastered facade, part of the marketplace development, of importance in terms of local development.
Two-storey solid construction, flat central projection with gable top, turret and shell motif, inscribed "1894" in the gable. |
09207558
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Residential building in closed development | Am Marktplatz 22 (map) |
Late 19th century | Historicizing plastered facade, part of the marketplace building, of importance in terms of local development.
Two-storey solid construction on a natural stone base, belt cornice, windows on the upper floor alternating with triangular gables and straight roofing, slate roof with three little roof houses, the middle one designed with triangular gable end, double windows and flat pilasters. |
09207557
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Pfefferküchlerei | Am Marktplatz 32 (map) |
18th century (residential building) | Residential house in semi-open development
Residential house in half-open development; formerly Pfefferküchlerei, oven preserved, part of the. Market place development, building history and local history of importance further information |
09306659
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Rectory in closed development | Am Marktplatz 82 (map) |
19th century | Plastered construction with gate passage, importance in terms of local history and urban development.
Two-storey solid construction with knee-high and gable roof, nine axes, natural stone walls, original door, vaulted rooms in the basement. |
09207554
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Former district court in a semi-open area and in a corner, now a museum | Bahnhofstrasse 1 (map) |
17th century, later remodeled | Plastered building with hipped roof, significance for the local history and the townscape.
Today the local history and serpentine stone museum, two-storey solid building, sixteen by seven axes, hipped roof with slate covering. |
09207562
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Former forester's house, now residential house in open development | Bahnhofstrasse 10 (map) |
2nd half of the 19th century | Plastered building with hipped roof, of architectural and local significance.
Two-storey plastered building, ground floor plastering, porphyry walls, hipped roof with slate covering. |
09207561
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Milestone, reworked into a kilometer stone | Bahnhofstrasse 18 (next to) (map) |
after 1858 (Stationsstein) | Former station stone, of importance in terms of traffic history.
The royal Saxon milestones were the successors of the Saxon postal milestones. On September 1, 1858, the road construction engineer Wilke began to re-measure the Saxon roads. This re-measurement formed the basis for the introduction of the new measurement system. This comprised station stones, milestones, half-milestones, branch stones and border crossing stones. The station stones were set up at the beginning and end of mail routes. The names and the distance of the towns along the route were marked on them. The milestones were right on the road. On one side of the stone was the name and distance of the starting point and on the other side the name and distance of the place at the end of the mail route. The half-milestones should mark the route. A crown was attached on either side. labeling was not common. Junction stones stood at junctions from the main route and usually only bore the name of the next post office without any indication of the distance. The name “Kingdom of Saxony” was marked on the border crossing stones. On the other hand, these contained place names and distances. The distance between station stones and whole milestones was one mile (this corresponds to 7.5 km). Accordingly, the distance between the station stone and half mile stone and between half mile stone and whole mile stone was half a mile = 3.75 kilometers. Since 1875, the meter has been the official measure of length throughout the German Empire (including the Kingdom of Saxony). For this reason, the stones have been changed many times to the new size. All stones were made from sandstone. (Source: Dietze, Gernot: Small monuments, often little-noticed gems of our homeland . In: Mitteilungen des Landesverein Sächsischer Heimatschutz e.V. 09/1999, p. 11ff.) The former station stone on the B 171 was later converted into a kilometer stone. Like all stones, it was made of sandstone and provided with a crown. It is labeled as follows: "Marienberg 5.6 km" and "Olbernhau 9.6 km". As part of the comprehensive surveying system, this station stone is also of great importance in terms of traffic history. |
09207564
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Residential house in open development, with garden (garden monument) | Bahnhofstrasse 19 (map) |
around 1870 | Wilhelminian style plastered building, as the former residence of a manufacturer of local historical importance.
Two-storey solid construction above the high basement, on the ground floor: segmented arched windows, diamond cuboids as keystones, window sills with brackets, corner grooves Upper floor: rectangular windows with straight roofing, flat plastered structure, flat central projection, roof with slate covering, strong cornice. |
09207596
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Residential building in closed development | Johannisstrasse 17 (map) |
18th century, later reshaped | Plastered construction, gate passage with segment arch, part of the old local structure, of architectural significance.
Two-storey solid construction, ground floor plastering, segment arch portal, between the ground floor and first floor, two cornices with plastered mirrors in the surface, porphyry walls. |
09207556
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Residential building in closed development | Johannisstrasse 87 (map) |
Mid 19th century | Classicist-looking plastered facade with a central projectile, part of the old local structure, of architectural significance. |
09305554
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Residential building in closed development | Johannisstrasse 111 (map) |
Mid 19th century | Plastered building with gate passage, part of the old local structure, of architectural significance.
Two-storey plastered building with twelve axes, two slightly protruding side projections, each with a segmental arch (one with an entrance door, one as a gateway), profiled cornice. |
09207552
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Residential building in closed development | Johannisstrasse 112 (map) |
Mid 19th century | Plastered building largely preserved in its original form, part of the old local structure, of architectural significance.
Two-storey, plastered building made of quarry stone masonry, profiled window frames on the upper floor, original front door, entrance with straight roofing, cornice with tooth cut. |
09207551
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More pictures |
Church (with equipment) | Schützenstrasse 6 (map) |
1729, older in essence | Baroque hall church with polygonal choir closure and east tower, architectural value, importance for the local history and the local image.
Using parts of a late Gothic house from the 15th century (triumphal arch, tower), hall church with east tower built in 1729 according to plans by Johann Christian Simon from Dresden. Fundamental redesign of the interior in 1904, restoration in 1994/95.
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09207553
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Factory owner's villa with enclosure and gate | Sorgauer Strasse 14 (map) |
around 1905 | Plastered building with brick structure and ornamental framework, factory owner's residence of the former tin toy factory, architectural value and local historical importance.
Factory across the street. |
09207547
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Historical lathe on a base (lathe Inv. No. 68 and 69), drill (Inv. No. 0104/53) for processing serpentine stone in a factory | Sorgauer Strasse 18 (near) (map) |
around 1880 | Technical history significance. |
09207625
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More pictures |
War memorial for the fallen soldiers of the First World War | Südsteig 6 (map) |
after 1918 (war memorial) | Located in the cemetery, of local historical importance.
Cross made of natural stone on a natural stone pedestal, behind it small flat granite slabs with the names of the fallen. |
09207549
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House and barn of a two-sided courtyard | Vorwerk 214 (map) |
around 1800, possibly older | Upper floor half-timbered residential building, boarded up barn, characterizing the landscape, of architectural significance.
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09207601 |
Remarks
- ↑ The list may not correspond to the current status of the official list of monuments. This can be viewed by the responsible authorities. Therefore, the presence or absence of a structure or ensemble on this list does not guarantee that it is or is not a registered monument at the present time. The State Office for the Preservation of Monuments in Saxony provides binding information .