List of cultural monuments in Marienthal West

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The list of cultural monuments in Marienthal West contains the cultural monuments in the Zwickau district of Marienthal West that are listed in the official list of monuments of the State Office for the Preservation of Monuments in Saxony .

Legend

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

Marienthal West

image designation location Dating description ID
Residential building Ahornweg 4
(map)
1934 (residential building) Precast wooden house from the Dresden company Höntsch in good original condition of architectural value.

One-storey, rectangular floor plan, closed entrance porch, there three small colored glass windows, mansard roof with half crest

09301975
 


Four-sided courtyard with stable house, barn, side building, gatehouse with upper arbor and manure place as well as archway with wooden gate and two courtyard trees (lime trees) Augustusstrasse 7
(map)
1872 One of the few remaining farms in the urban area of ​​Zwickau in very good original condition, especially valuable due to the preserved upper arbor at the gatehouse.

Barn: one-storey with jamb floor, solid ground floor, large wooden gate with wooden gate, jamb floor half-timbered, a simple simple half-timbered gable, gable roof, bat dormer on the courtyard side. Side building: one-storey, rectangular floor plan with jamb floor, jamb floor half-timbered, small hay hatch with saddle roof, used as a stable building with coach house. Residential stable house: two-storey, rectangular floor plan, half-timbered upper floor, solid ground floor, half-timbered partially clad and plastered, north gable slated. Gatehouse: the most valuable part of the courtyard, particularly noteworthy due to the nine-arched upper arbor, narrow wooden connections, each compartment with struts, all wooden connections tapped, upper arbor with tapped lugs, parapet fields with wooden planking, gable roof, beaver tail double covering, massive ground floor, driven under, profiled threshold on the outer eaves side, Filling wood between the beams of the first floor ceiling as well as smooth vine wood, passage and oven system.

09230057
 


Individual features of the collective Paulusfriedhof: cemetery chapel, morgue, burial in the ground (see text), war memorial for those who fell in the First World War Bülaustraße
(map)
around 1900 Components of the cemetery of architectural or local historical importance (see also entity 09301906, same address).

1. Cemetery chapel with lead glass windows and cast-iron cross, brick shell with toothed frieze, pilaster strips, arched door and arched window openings, 2. (Hereditary burial Fam. A. Lemmrich, master builder, around 1928, sandstone tomb, no longer available, cleared in 2002), 3. Grave site Hereditary burial Fam. W. Meister, around 1900, black marble tomb, cleared in 2006, 4th resting place of the Pröbiuss and Schniedewind families, erected in 1916, brick wall with crowning, as well as embedded sandstone tablet and writing tablet in polished granite and inset writing, sandstone frame with porcelain flowers 5th memorial for the fallen with inscriptions: “In memory of those who remained for their German homeland in the World War 1914-18 / Their deeds live on admonishingly / Erected in 1927 / Faithful to death”, stele made of shell limestone, 6th mortuary.

09231405
 


All of the Paulus cemetery with cemetery chapel, morgue, two burials in the ground (see text), a war memorial for the fallen of the First World War (all individual monuments see object 09231405, same address) as well as pathways with avenues and chestnut trees (garden monument) Bülaustraße
(map)
around 1900 Historically significant complex.

1. Cemetery chapel with leaded glass windows and cast-iron cross, brick shell with toothed frieze, pilaster strips, arched door and arched window openings, 2. Hereditary burial Fam. A. Lemmrich, master builder, around 1928, tomb made of sandstone, (no longer available), 3. Grave site, hereditary burial Fam. W. Meister, around 1900, tomb made of black marble, 4th resting places of the Pröbiuss and Schniedewind families, brick wall with crowning as well as embedded sandstone plaque and writing tablet in cut granite and inset writing, sandstone frame set with porcelain flowers, 5th monument to the fallen with inscriptions: " In memory of those who remained for their German homeland during the World War 1914-18 / Their deeds live on admonishingly / Erected in 1927 / Faithful to death ", stele made of shell limestone,

09301906
 


Water tower Bülaustraße 43
(map)
1907 Railway history, technology history and local history significant part of the former Reichsbahn repair shop, former water tower of the Klönne type and also of great rarity (the railway wagons, cranes and some of the machines originally designated as a cultural monument have since been scrapped or in 2007 to an association outside the Free State of Saxony given).

The striking, 32-meter-high water tower with a spherical tank was built in 1907 and supplied the Zwickau workshop station (later the Zwickau Reichsbahn repair shop), which opened in at least some areas in 1908, with service water. As an engineering structure reduced to its function, the uncovered steel ball (400 m³ capacity) of the Klönne type rests on a filigree, conically tapering steel framework made of eight supports and diagonal struts, in which a cylindrical shaft with pipelines and stairs is installed in the center. 16 triangular steel sheets create the transition between the stand and the ball. A maintenance walkway runs at the equatorial height of the steel ball, with a ventilation lantern at the top. Due to its material-saving, technically and statically sophisticated design, the water tower is of importance in the history of railways and technology as a supply building for the Reichsbahn repair shop. In addition, it is extremely rare because only very few steel ball water tanks of the Klönne type have survived in Germany. As the last structural testimony to the now demolished Reichsbahn repair shop, it is also an important document for local history. (LfD / 2017.)

History: Acquisition of land for the construction of the later railway workshops from 1897, 1903 start of construction work with interruptions, start of work from April 1, 1908 in the part of the factory - at that time only foundations and foundation walls of the locomotive workshop exist. 1918–45 construction of new plants with a total of 7,846 m² floor space and equipment and equipment value of 1.2 million marks, 1945–57 plants with a total of 11,024 m² floor space (not listed) and plants with equipment value of 6.8 million marks. Changing names of the systems: 1. Zwickau railway workshops, 2. Reichsbahn repair shop, founded in 1908, 3. RAW “7. October “Zwickau.

Description / listing of the listed components of the RAW:

  • Locomotive workshop: multi-aisle solid construction, clinker brick with extension, steel framework or solid steel wall girders,
  • Water tower: spherical container, riveted iron lattice structure, memorial plaque with the inscription (in small caps ): “Memorial / the workers' movement / RAW Zwickau / the former battery room / the electrical workshop / was an illegal meeting place / German anti-fascists with / prisoners of war and civilian internees / persons from the USSR / to organize the resistance / against fascism. ”According to information from the UD Zwickau, the memorial plaque was stolen and is no longer available.

Equipment of the locomotive workshop see under "Collection / Equipment"

Listed vehicles / wagons / accessories in front of the locomotive workshop: see under "Collection / Equipment"

  • 5 lattice mast lights, around 1910, only a few examples.

Demolition permit for the workshop from 2015, demolition in 2016. The water tower was dismantled in 2018 - a replacement location is still being sought.

09231399
 


Vocational school and training workshop of the RAW Zwickau Bülaustraße 43
(map)
re. 1951-1952 Traditional buildings from the 1950s, entrance area highlighted in terms of design, significance in terms of architectural and local history.

Broadly mounted, two-storey plastered building, flat covered with regularly arranged rectangular windows, original windows preserved, the entrance to the house with a small flight of stairs and a double-winged door is located on the eaves side in the middle, lamps on both sides of the entrance, and above the entrance there is a half-relief depicting three apprentices the impeller of the Reichsbahn and the inscription 1951/52 as well as the coat of arms of the city of Zwickau, inside original room structures, stairwell, swing doors and doors as well as clocks from the time of construction, vocational school of VEB RAW “7. October Zwickau ”.

09299803
 


Former kindergarten, now a residential building, with a garden Bülaustraße 50
(map)
1954 Of architectural and social historical importance.

Single-storey longitudinal building with hipped roof, offset by the conversion to a residential building with presented wooden balconies and two single-storey extensions as entrance areas on the rear eaves side, the roof in the rear area changed by large dormer windows in an adapted construction with hipped roof, slate covering, base Porphyrtuff layered masonry, old entrance area of ​​the Kindergarten with sgraffito, depiction of a boy with deer as well as decorative ornamental floral depictions, entrance area, stairs and stair stringers in this area originally preserved, stairs stringers also Rochlitzer porphyry tuff, in this area two original dormers, large chimney, there depiction of the impeller worked into slate, small roof turret, upstream garden area, large meadow area with large greenery, otherwise the garden adapted for residential purposes.

09231400
 


Former apprentice dormitory of the RAW Zwickau, today apartment building Bülaustraße 51
(map)
1956 Typical dormitory from the 1950s, of architectural and social historical importance.

Two-storey longitudinal building with a laterally arranged risalit, there stairwell and house entrance, above the entrance large window with a French balcony, bars from the 1950s, regularly arranged rectangular windows on both floors, maggot plaster, hipped roof with slate covering, at the side sgraffito with a railroad worker, two apprentices and the impeller of the Deutsche Reichsbahn, the stair railing in the original preserved, the base of regular layered masonry made of Rochlitz porphyry tufa, new balconies in front of the garden area and, in some cases, door openings changed but slightly as well as two new dormers.

09299756
 


Cottage Erntestraße 1
(map)
around 1820 Originally preserved half-timbered building with a solid ground floor, of importance in terms of house history and urban development history.

Small two-storey half-timbered building on a rectangular floor plan, ground floor rammed earth reinforced with bricks, possibly driven under, window frames with a hollow, half-timbered upper floor, double-bared with corner struts, a gable clad, gable roof, as the remainder of the former village development of Marienthal of extremely great importance in terms of urban development and architectural history traditional cottage from the beginning of the 19th century.

09230290
 


Cottage Hoferstrasse 38
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Small half-timbered building, slight changes on the ground floor, of historical importance.

Two-storey, rectangular floor plan, ground floor changed, window and door frames not preserved, window openings changed, doors and windows renewed, half-timbered upper floor (in any case half-timbered on both long sides), simple half-timbered with corner struts, double-bar, extended on the gable side by a window axis, saddle roof.

09231725
 


Four-sided courtyard consisting of a stable house, barn and two side buildings Hoferstrasse 42
(map)
around 1820 (stable house) Closed preserved farm of importance in terms of urban development, architectural history and urban planning.

Residential stable house: Massive ground floor, presumably undercut, structurally slightly changed, door portal and window frames not preserved, windows changed, washhouse extension on the rear eaves side, half-timbered upper floor in very good original condition with narrow-style half-timbering and ambitious, all tapped wood connections, straight threshold between frame of the ground floor and Threshold of the upper floor filler wood between the ceiling beams, gable slated, gable roof, protruding far on the eaves side to the courtyard, barn: several times rebuilt, one storey with half-timbered drapery and gable roof, large wooden gate to the courtyard, structurally changed but important for the building ensemble, 1st side building: in Right angle to the stable house standing on the west side of the courtyard, two-storey solid construction, plastered, stable on the ground floor, hatch for retrieving the harvest upstairs, gable roof with beaver tail double covering, old windows preserved, 2nd side building: single-storey half-timbered building with narrow-style Half-timbered structure, all wood connections tapped, gable roof, gable brickwork plastered

09231143
 


Apartment building in closed development Jacobstrasse 23
(map)
1901 Richly decorated plastered building of architectural and artistic importance.

Four-storey, five axes, plastered building, ground floor, house entrance set back in the middle with original front door with cassettes, two-winged, partly with diamond ashlar, split skylight, window not original, facade richly decorated with pilasters, partly fluted, profiled cornice, elaborate window canopies with segmented arches or Triangular gables, shell ornaments in the gable and arch fields, head representations, fruit and fruit containers under the roof and fruit horns under the window parapets, cantilevered sills on curved console stones, console frieze on the cornice, there also a lion's head as a crowning over the central windows, saddle roof.

09230956
 


Composition of the Karl-Keil-Strasse residential complex of the Sächsisches Heim regional settlement company, consisting of 8 blocks of flats (all components) Karl-Keil-Strasse 15; 15a; 17; 17a; 19; 19a; 21; 21a; 23; 23a; 25; 25a; 27; 29; 31; 31a
(card)
1926 (No. 15, 15a, 17, 17a, 19, 19a, 21, 21a, 23, 23a) Ensemble of regularly arranged plastered buildings in very good original condition of architectural, socio-historical and urban development value.

Numbers 15, 15a: rectangular floor plan, three-storey, artificial structure with plaster grooves at the corners, two semicircular staircase projections, gable roof on the western eaves side, facing gables, dormers, newly presented balconies, windows renewed with internal bars, originally with surrounding cornice strip between 1st and 2nd 2nd floor, window sashes originally wider and only arranged to the side (applies to all eight buildings!).

Numbers 17, 17a: three-storey plastered building with new balconies and facing gables, dormers, gable roof, semicircular protruding staircase porches on the eastern eaves side.

Numbers 19, 19a: three-storey plastered building with upstream new balconies and facing gables, dormers, gable roof, semicircular protruding staircase porches on the western side of the eaves.

Number 21, 21a: three-storey plastered building with new balconies and front gables, dormers, gable roof, semicircular protruding staircase porches on the eastern eaves side.

Numbers 23, 23a: three-storey plastered building with new balconies and facing gables, dormers, gable roof, semicircular protruding staircase porches on the western side of the eaves.

Number 25, 25a: three-storey plastered building with new balconies in front of the building and facing gables, dormers, gable roof, semicircular protruding staircase porches on the western side of the eaves.

Numbers 27, 29: three-storey plastered building with upstream new balconies and facing gables, dormers, gable roof, semicircular protruding staircase porches on the western eaves side, with original dormers and shops on the gable side of the house, the dormers provided with acute-angled facing gables, typical for the construction period.

Numbers 31, 31a: three-storey plastered building with shops on the gable side, upstream new balconies and facing gables, dormers, saddle roof, semicircular protruding staircase porches on the eastern eaves side.

09231659
 


Comprehensive residential complex, consisting of: Apartment block with three entrances to a residential complex (no.16, 18 and 20), five row houses (apartment buildings no.22, 24, 26, 28 and 30) and a group of three houses (apartment buildings no.34, 36 and 38) , all with upstream green space (all parts of the whole) Karl-Keil-Strasse 16; 18; 20; 22; 24; 26; 28; 30; 34; 36; 38
(card)
1919-1922 An ensemble of multi-family houses, as examples of social housing in the 1920s, of importance in terms of local history, social history and building history.

Karl-Keil-Straße 34–38 (g): group of three - apartment buildings, two-storey plastered buildings, rectangular window openings in a regular arrangement, both head buildings with risalit-like projections, middle buildings with four window axes, house entrance with horizontal roof and skylight windows, in the stairwell area also window openings with segmental or basket arches at the top, the facade partially structured by plaster grooves, head buildings with hipped roofs, medium-sized buildings with pitched roofs, beaver tail covering, dormers, and also roof bay windows with balcony and oval window.

Karl-Keil-Straße 16 - 20 (g): same design as number 34–38,

Karl-Keil-Straße 22 - 30: three-story plastered buildings with risalit-like projections, medium-sized buildings with a central entrance on the eaves side, rectangular window openings as well as arched and segmented arched window openings, cornice between the 2nd and 3rd floors, hipped roof with distinctive roof bay, beaver tail covering, windows not renewed according to the prototype.

09231667
 


Individual monument and aggregate: Double dwelling, with enclosure and access stairs as well as surrounding green area, originally belonging to the municipal hospital Karl-Keil-Strasse 33; 33a
(card)
around 1930 Originally preserved plastered building, historically significant (see also material group 09231123, Karl-Keil-Straße 33, 33a, 35).

Two-storey, rectangular floor plan, stretched lengthways, symmetrically laid out, laterally risalit-like projections, there covered house entrance, gray plaster, rectangular windows partly combined to window groups (ribbon windows), hipped roof with beaver tail covering, original dormers with gable roof, ancillary systems: stairs to the house entrance concrete, fencing concrete and Originally preserved wooden picket fence, profiled cornice, windows around the windows, house counts as house 22 in the internal numbering and is a residential building and blood donation center at the same time.

09231441
 


Total hospital with the individual monuments: House 5, 6, 7, 9, 21, 23, 33, 33a, 44, 45, 47, 50, 53, 60, 63, 90 (see also individual monument Karl-Keil-Straße 35 - object 09299823 and Karl-Keil-Straße 33, 33a - object 09231441 [No. 33, 33a]), designed green spaces with avenues within the hospital grounds (garden monument) as well as the overall parts: House 1, 3, 41, 51, 52, 54, 66 , 67, 69, 72, 93 and walkways located on the hospital grounds (covered walkways between the functional buildings and clinics) Karl-Keil-Strasse 33; 33a; 35
(card)
1913 Start of construction, delayed by the First World War Completely preserved complex of great importance in terms of urban history, social history and architectural history [disruptive elements: not belonging to the whole - houses 2, 25, 30].

Unity of the municipal clinic with the following buildings: (Note: the following numbers are the internal house number designations used in 2005 according to the HBK property list of 23 November 2005.)

House 93 and House 41: totality parts, two gatehouses at the main entrance (House 11), House 93 right: today gate and telephone exchange, House 41: left, today Sparkasse and hairdresser, single-storey plastered buildings with hip roofs, the left of the two pavilion-like buildings was extended in 1962 , both with caution, both beaver tail double coverings with bat hatches.

House 90: individual monument, pathological institute, today microbiology, pathology, lecture hall, library and orthopedic technology, built in 1927, broad, two-storey, quite modern plastered building with generous rectangular windows (ribbon windows), original lanterns on the outer facade, centrally arranged entrance with spacious staircase (terrazzo ) with curved cheeks, this area is particularly emphasized by windows and doors with crossed lattices, mansard hipped roof with beaver tail covering and ridge turrets for ventilation, on the back an apse-like porch with pointed arch openings, here inside the original lecture hall with seating. Lead glass skylight in the form of an octahedron, wall paneling, doors, construction-time equipment elements, etc.

House 23: Individual monument, former nurses' dormitory I, built in 1928, today's use of the dormitory and central facilities such as the company doctor, hygiene, environmental protection and technical service, broad three-storey plastered building with three-axis central projection, here the house entrance, particularly emphasized by windows and doors with crossed bars and outside staircase , horizontal nine-pane rectangular windows, hipped mansard roof with ridge turrets for ventilation, three ridge turrets, remarkable staircase made of in-situ concrete and terrazzo attachment as well as two stairwells, inside possibly historical painting based on a design by Heinrich Koch (formerly a painter at the Bauhaus Dessau).

House 60: Individual monument, former administration building with hospital chapel (House 1), today patient admission, pharmacy, medical vocational school, medical informatics, finance and accounting, church, representative main building of the complex with central projection and two side projections, broad plastered building, pilaster structure in the area of the central risalite, originally two representative entrances with round arched door openings each next to the side risalit, these now only side entrances, new main entrance in the middle, on the ground floor round arched window openings, grooved skylights, otherwise regularly arranged eight-pane rectangular windows, mansard hipped roof with double plain tile, six-axis dormer window in the triangular gable window a standing dormer window with a hipped roof, a mighty slate-covered clock tower characterizing the house, four roof turrets for ventilation, original outside lanterns preserved, chapel incorporated in the area of ​​the left side risalite dnet, reaching from the 1st floor to the attic, here in the gable three large round arched windows with split bars made of artificial stone, the house is opposite the main entrance, the line of sight when entering the hospital grounds falls on this main building, monument value: architectural and socio-historical value. Refurbishment 2005.

House 45, 44 and 47: individual monuments, former culture and dining room for the staff, today central archive, one-storey building on a broad basis, with large arched windows on the eaves side, sprouted, multi-leaf (original preserved), partially clogged on the south-east side during the renovation, low sanitary buildings, here arranged under the eaves, small rectangular windows with radial bars, hipped roof with beaver tail double covering, large haulers (pike-like), houses 44 and 47 are single-storey corner pavilions with a square floor plan and the associated arcades that are later closed.

House 21: Individual monument, former nurses' dormitory II, now vacant, built in 1929, with inner courtyard and terrace as an individual place to stay for the sisters, three-story, broad plastered building with risalits, gray plaster, generous nine-pane rectangular windows, horizontal window formats, smooth plaster strip between the ground floor and 1st floor. Upper floor, smooth circumferential window bezels, front eaves side with triaxial central projection and regularly arranged rectangular windows, unadorned, functional facade, mansard hipped roof with beaver tail double covering, mighty roof turrets for ventilation, inside possibly historical paintings based on a design by Heinrich Koch (formerly a painter at the Bauhaus Dessau), Spatial version painted over today, monument value: socio-historical and architectural value.

House 1: Material part, former gynecological clinic, today gynecological clinic and children's center, elongated plastered building, central part four-storey, here four-axis central projection, two three-storey side wings, on the north-west side five building parts at right angles, hip roofs with beaver-tail double-roofing, generous window openings with muntin-shaped windows on the south side The entire width of the balconies on the 2nd and 3rd floors, today only French windows.

House 50: Individual monument, former director's residence (house 9), built in 1921, today administration, two-storey plastered building in very good original condition, smooth plaster base, rough plaster facade with smooth plastered surfaces, irregular floor plan with protrusions and recesses, on the ground floor a former winter garden, above a balcony Massive parapet, rectangular box window split bars, eight-pane, two-winged with skylight (original preserved and refurbished), slightly profiled cornice, plastering around the windows, two house entrances with simple stair access, hipped roof with beaver tail double covering, inside still good interior fittings including original cloakroom, double-barreled wooden staircase , partly twisted, original front door, renovation 2003.

House 51: Part of the whole, former senior civil servant house (house 14), today a double house with two units each, two-storey plastered building with symmetrical design, gray plaster, base, bevels and cornices smoothly plastered, rectangular windows with two wings with split skylight and muntin division, hipped roof with double plain plain roofing Also with a hipped roof, new staircase porches on the gable ends.

House 52: Comprehensive part, residential building, also belonging to the hospital grounds, natural stone plinth, two-storey plastered building, gray plaster, windows framed by plastering flaps, double-winged windows with split skylight and rung division, house entrance on the side, hipped roof with beaver tail double covering, individual dormer windows also with hipped roof.

House 53: single monument, double residential building, base, cornices and smooth plaster, facade gray plaster, stairwells accentuated by smoothly plastered risalit-like protrusions, house entrances single-leaf doors with glass inserts and horizontal bars, triangular gable roof over the front door, stairwell windows as round arched windows with radiant bars in the skylight Rectangular window with two sashes with split skylight and muntin division, four axes on the ground floor, six axes on the upper floor in the center of the house, also grooved box windows with split skylights, windowsill cornice on the upper floor, centrally arranged roof bay window over four axes with coupled windows, these with diagonal cross bars also cornice, hipped roof with beaver tail double covering, monument value: historical building value due to the very good original condition (plaster, roof covering, doors and windows).

House 54: entity part, residential house, around 1950, two-storey, rectangular floor plan, maggot plaster, base smoothly plastered, entrance probably framed with natural stone, doors and windows renewed, segmented arched windows in the stairwell above the house entrance, above the city coat of arms, hip roof, rebated tile covering renewed.

House 3: Comprehensive part, former ward block 17a, built in 1925, today a clinic for skin diseases and ENT, three-storey plastered building (smooth plaster), T-shaped floor plan, almost room-sized lattice-divided rectangular windows, multi-leaf with skylights, French balconies, but today the grilles renewed, 14 axes , extended on the gable side, windowsill cornice between the ground floor and first floor, hipped roof, individual dormers with hipped roof, beaver tail double covering, two roof ventilation tabs.

House 5: Individual monument, former bed house 4a, built in 1920, now vacant, former house 4a bed house, belongs to the old part of the hospital, original and unchanged, sophisticated architectural design, this results in the single monument value, three-storey, on a rectangular floor plan with head building, Belt cornice, over it a wide smooth plaster band, background in rough plaster, windows framed by bezels, representative facade design with large windows with basket arches and French balconies, original railing preserved, gable side facing south / west also with large window openings and French balcony railings, hip roof, beaver tail double covering, single Standing dormers with hipped roof, two ridge turrets for ventilation, from Heinrich Braun's “Autobiography”: “I designed the floor plans for the buildings used for the treatment of the sick by hand. The floor plan of the hospital pavilion differs from the usual form. According to Dosquet's principles, the general hospital wards are long, relatively narrow rooms with one-sided light. Your window wall consists of sliding windows that extend from the ceiling to the floor. In a few minutes, the hospital ward can be converted into an open veranda. The southern exposure is completely used for the hospital wards, the side rooms connect to the north. ... "

House 7: Single monument, former bed house 4b, built in 1920, today Clinic for Internal Medicine 1, same design as House 5, very good original condition.

House 6: Single monument, former bed house 4d, built in 1920, now vacant, same design as House 5.

House 63: Individual monument, former bed house 4c, built in 1920, today a pharmacy and central purchasing department, the windows are only based on the original, the original sliding windows are no longer preserved, same design as the other bed houses, renovation 2002.

House 67 and House 66: overall parts, market gardening with greenhouses, facility to maintain the green areas on the hospital grounds, residential building built around 1920, natural stone plinth, rough plaster, upper floor with half-timbering and planking, slightly protruding, original front door with triangular gable roof and small open staircase, pyramid roof with central Chimney, beaver tail double roofing, bat dormers, small auxiliary building as the oldest part of the facility (shed), gable roof, beaver tail double roofing, wooden crate, further auxiliary building front building of the greenhouses, connects these with each other.

House 69: Part of the whole, former boiler house and machine house (House 8), built in 1921, today workshops, angular building with a single-storey wing construction, rectangular windows, large arched windows in the attached side wing, windows and doors renewed, gable roof and hipped roof with double plain tile roofing, bat dormers, roof turrets as Ventilation.

House 72: entity part, former laundry building (house 6), built in 1925, still in the same function today, presumably a building complex that used to consist of two parts, one or two storeys with extensions, remodeled in 1992, hipped or hip roof, originally with plain tile roofing, original dormer received.

House 9: Individual monument, former isolation house (House 5), today Clinic for Oncology and Internal Medicine 2, two-storey plastered building on a U-shaped floor plan, in the middle part of the 1st floor two window bay windows that characterize the house, south side large window front with almost room-sized rectangular windows, multi-leaf with Rungs division, today renewed as well as French balconies, hipped roof with beaver tail double covering and individual dormer windows also with hipped roof, two ridge turrets for ventilation, side staircase porch, two arched entrances, rough plaster facade, smooth plaster base, plastering flanges to emphasize the window openings and individual window axes.

Double dwelling at Karl-Keil-Straße 33, 33a: with ancillary facilities (fence and access stairs as well as surrounding green area, originally belonging to the municipal hospital), originally preserved plastered building, two-storey, rectangular floor plan, elongated, symmetrically laid out, lateral risalit-like projections, there covered house entrance , Graupelputz, rectangular windows partially combined to form window groups (ribbon windows), hipped roof with beaver tail covering, original dormer windows with gable roof, ancillary systems: stairs to the concrete entrance, concrete enclosure and wooden picket fence originally preserved, profiled cornice, fascias around the windows, house counts as in the internal numbering House 22 and is a residential building and blood donation center at the same time.

Wall corridors: single-storey, closed and partially open corridors with pavilion-like corner and access buildings, with curved gable roofs or tent roofs, all with beaver tail double covering, wall surfaces structured by pilasters and arches, some blind arches, the individual buildings were connected to one another by these corridors, weather protection corridors for Staff and patients (internal traffic), buildings staggered according to the topography of the area, arcades partially demolished in 2009 according to UDSB 1.System: between House 1, House 24, furthermore House 24, House 3, House 63, House 60, House 5, House 6 , House 61, House 8 and House 7, 2nd system: between House 21, House 45 and House 23,

Gardens: garden area director's villa: gardens laid out according to the original plan while maintaining the large greenery, the dominant wood is a red beech with a crown diameter of approx. 20 m, water basin restored with the original fountain figure "Kniender Knabe" (presumably a representation of a son of Heinrich Braun, created by a Dresden artist). Garden area in front of houses 51 to 54: lawn and avenue of lime trees, behind house 6 and house 8: small park to the south-west of the house, there plastic from the 1970s (reclining female figure, somewhat larger than life, by Henning Aust). Former route guidance completely preserved as well as rhododendrons and large greenery. Green area Entrance area: designed green area between gatehouses and administration building as well as former nurses' dormitories and pathology, lawns, flower borders, large greenery, centrally placed head sculpture Heinrich Braun on obelisk from 1935 (sculptor Prof. Stengel), green area between gynecological clinic and archive building: terraced lawn, grass verge: along area Karl-Keil-Straße between the entrance and the women's clinic, noise protection strips with extensive greenery, garden area behind house 90: lawns and hedges (hornbeam originally cut).

[Disruptive elements: buildings that do not belong to the aggregate - House 2 (Clinic for Neurology and Psychiatry), House 25, (Clinic for Physiotherapy) House 30 (Clinic for Radiotherapy)].

History: The planning and conception of the hospital grounds as well as the individual design of the facility with the arcades goes back to hospital director Heinrich Braun in close cooperation with the architects. The architects worked in Building Construction Department III in the Saxon Ministry of Finance in Dresden. In particular, the floor plan of the “Zwickau Pavilion”, the conception of the operating theaters and other significant innovations made the hospital a “Mecca” for architects and carried the name of Heinrich Braun in connection with Zwickau far beyond the national borders. Under his leadership (until 1928), the Zwickauer Krankenstift developed into a medical cultural center that numerous domestic and foreign surgeons visited for study purposes. At that time and for many decades to come, it was considered one of the most modern hospitals in Germany. The hospital opened in 1921. To improve the city connection, the electric tram network was extended to the hospital. Commissioning took place on November 6, 1924.

09231123
 


Totality of Heinrich-Braun-Krankenhaus;  Königliches Krankenstift (former) individual monuments above: former administration building with hospital chapel (house 60 - emergency room, medical school etc.), former nurses 'dormitories (house 23 - originally a civil servants' house, today central facilities including a library and house 21 - hospital management and laboratory diagnostics), former pathology (House 90 - microbiology, pathology and orthopedic technology), former culture and dining room (houses 44, 45, 47 - central archive and carpentry), former director's residence (house 50, today hospital administration), former wards (houses 5 - clinic for surgery and trauma surgery, House 6 - Clinic for Surgery and Anesthesia, House 7 - Clinic for Internal Medicine, House 63 - Clinic for Internal Medicine B), former isolation house (House 9 - Clinic for Oncology and Internal Medicine B) and double house (House 53) ;
Totality of Heinrich-Braun-Krankenhaus; Königliches Krankenstift (former) individual monuments above: former administration building with hospital chapel (house 60 - emergency room, medical school etc.), former nurses 'dormitories (house 23 - originally a civil servants' house, today central facilities including a library and house 21 - hospital management and laboratory diagnostics), former pathology (House 90 - microbiology, pathology and orthopedic technology), former culture and dining room (houses 44, 45, 47 - central archive and carpentry), former director's residence (house 50, today hospital administration), former wards (houses 5 - clinic for surgery and trauma surgery, House 6 - Clinic for Surgery and Anesthesia, House 7 - Clinic for Internal Medicine, House 63 - Clinic for Internal Medicine B), former isolation house (House 9 - Clinic for Oncology and Internal Medicine B) and double house (House 53) ; Karl-Keil-Strasse 35
(map)
1920/1921 (former administration building with chapel - house 60) Locally, socially and historically significant parts of the Heinrich-Braun-Krankenhaus (see entity 09231123, same address).

For texts see subject entity 09231123

09299823
 


A clinic and a medical function building, formerly Krüppelheim and craftsmen's house of the Krüppelheim as well as a designed park, originally belonging to the Krüppelheim (garden monument) Karl-Keil-Strasse 39
(map)
1906 (Krüppelheim) Structurally slightly redesigned plastered buildings of social and local historical importance.

House 11: formerly Krüppelheim, today a clinic for pediatric and adolescent surgery, simple two-storey, partially single-storey plastered building with a mansard hipped roof with beaver tail double covering, plastering and windows simplified.

House 10: former craftsman's house, today a clinic for pediatric and adolescent medicine and ENT, in this building the patients housed in the Krüppelheim were originally trained, two-storey plastered building, structurally slightly redesigned, with a mansard hipped roof, historical tree population, pathways.

Park: valuable old wood stock with dendrological features, including hornbeam (carpinus betulus), English oak (Quercus robur), columnar oak (Quercus robur 'Fastigiata'), red beech (Fagus sylvatica), horse chestnut (Aesculus hippocastanum), Red-flowered horse chestnut (Aesculus x carnea), hemlock (Tsuga canadensis), Weymouth's pine (Pinus strobus), giant arborvitae (Thuja plicata) and rhododendrons, especially in the north-western area, path system with water-bound cover and granite edges, some of the former paths readable.

Monument value: importance in terms of local history and social history.

09231840
 


Former forest recreation site, later forester's house, consisting of today's forester's house (originally forest recreation site), the outbuilding and the former lounge hall (known as the air bath) Karl-Keil-Strasse 41
(map)
1910 Socially and historically significant building ensemble.

Forester's house: single-storey half-timbered building on a rectangular floor plan, half-timbered construction typical of the time it was built around 1900, with an open hall to the garden, mansard roof, window shutters and wooden fixtures for the flower boxes, slate roofing, brickwork base.

Side building: with saddle roofs, T-shaped floor plan, half-timbered partially boarded up, original doors and windows preserved, boarding of the gable triangle, forward purlin heads, original from around 1905, deck hall presumably shortened and structurally slightly simplified, belongs to the ensemble as an ancillary facility

From 1919 it was used as a forester's house, previously built as a TBC home, initially the outbuilding probably built, then the house, the lounge halls were quite simple, open structures, simple round timber with a pent roof, house: open veranda, partly glazed.

09230414
 


Inn and house in half-open development of a row of houses, part of a group of three houses (belonging to No. 44 and 46) as well as remains of the enclosure and front garden Karl-Keil-Strasse 42
(map)
1927 Urban and architectural striking building in good original condition.

The "Gasthof zur Tanne" is part of an apparently uniformly planned group of three houses, which was coordinated in terms of both the facade and the structure. It stands at the gable facing the street and thus becomes the striking head building of the house ensemble. The middle building takes up this motif again in a simplified form through the gable in the attic. House number 46, on the other hand, stands at the eaves in the street. The projections and recesses of the building or individual components create an exciting assembly that also has a uniform roof and facade design. The “Gasthof zur Tanne” is a three-story plastered building with a steep pitched roof. The arrangement of the window openings and their different design are just as important for the appearance of the house as the juxtaposition of the most diverse building materials (plaster, base clad with roughly hewn granite bosses, window frames, gable decorations and lettering made of artificial stone with porphyry flour, tiled roof, wooden doors and windows, and iron railings ). The facades are designed with great care in terms of craftsmanship and design; every detail, for example the two-storey triangular bay window on the gable side, is equally important. In terms of both the choice of building materials and the design language, the design of the house tends to be based on traditional building concepts, with ideals of the "new building" being incorporated. These architectural concepts, which are characteristic of the 1920s, are used creatively in the design of this house, which is the artistic significance of this building. The same applies to the interior design of the building. Here, too, modern construction tasks and views of life were implemented. The ground floor of the house was intended as a business floor with a restaurant, club room and shop, while the upper floors housed solid apartments with bathrooms and kitchens as well as accommodation rooms of the inn with shared bathrooms. The furnishing of the apartments generally with bathrooms, almost equally sized rooms and spacious kitchens corresponded to the modern ideas of living. There were no longer rooms with an unfavorable layout resulting from the constraints of the facade design or unfavorable corner locations. With the exception of the room doors, the interior of the building was preserved. Due to the excellent original condition, the building becomes a remarkable testimony to the building and lifestyle of the early 20th century, which is the social and historical value of the building. The urban significance, which also determines the building's status as a monument, results from the urban integration of the “Gasthof zur Tanne” in the street as described above. Enclosure: remnants of the enclosure (fence pillars, walls), the fence fields have all been renewed with lamps that have been added later.

09231124
 


Former forest recreation center for TB patients with a house for adults and a children's home, later the municipal skin clinic (two buildings) Karl-Keil-Strasse 43
(map)
1924-1925 Originally preserved ensemble from the mid-1920s, of social and architectural significance.

Children's recreation home: rectangular floor plan, single-storey, middle section two-storey with semicircular protruding staircase tower, curved saddle roof, a dormer on both sides with a saddle roof, balcony extensions, original front door, acute-angled ornamentation, slate roof covering, tuff stone base, plaster blocks, connected by building complexes in the middle of the forest possibly former lounge hall, structurally completely changed.

House for adults: two-storey plastered building on a U-shaped floor plan, on the representative entrance side on both sides semicircular, possibly staircase porches with barred windows on the ground floor, base of natural stone masonry, in an irregular formation, centrally arranged front door with horizontal roof, original lamps from the construction period, triangular skylight with Sprouts - depicting an abstracted plant, original front door, single-leaf with a fixed narrow side part, original windows, hipped roof, slate covering, three original flag holders, upper floor slightly protruding as well as protruding roofs with boarded roof undersides, on the courtyard side a subsequent elevator extension, window flush with the plaster with attached, round, profiled transom and sapwood, windows on the upper floor arranged directly at the eaves, house partly influenced by modern building of the 1920s.

09231472
 


Residential house in closed development, part of a row of houses (belonging to No. 42 and 46) Karl-Keil-Strasse 44
(map)
1928 An important building in terms of urban development and architectural history in good original condition.

Three-storey, six axes as well as triangular bay windows, each 1 × 1 axis, over the entire house two-axis roof bay window, two dormers, the facade structure is colored olive green today through plastered window frames, the window and door frames colored porphyry red, triangular skylight window in the house entrance, base natural stone , Gable roof.

09231125
 


Residential building in semi-open development, part of a group of houses (belonging to no. 42 and 44) Karl-Keil-Strasse 46
(map)
1928 Of great importance in terms of urban planning and building history.

Four-axis, two-storey plastered building with hipped roof and dormers, regularly arranged rectangular windows, green plaster coloring with porphyry red framing of the windows, group of houses with the same design as the “Zur Tanne” inn.

09231126
 


Restaurant with equipment Königswalder Strasse 12
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century Simple plastered building with very good restaurant equipment, of architectural and social historical importance.

Single-storey, broadly mounted plastered building, four axes, two entrance doors on the eaves side, house subsequently extended by a window axis, saddle roof, originally centrally arranged three-axis roof bay window with a sloping roof and saddle roof, house entrance door with massive roofing, wood paneling inside, wooden benches, on the garden side a massive veranda extension from 1932 and in front of it a wooden garden terrace with leaded glass windows, colored glass and leaded glass windows on the skylights of the terrace windows.

09230443
 


Apartment house in a corner location in open development Marienthaler Strasse 117
(map)
1901 With a shop, mixed clinker building, of great urban and architectural value.

Ground floor plaster changed, both upper floors orange-red clinker brick, polygonal corner formation, corner projections, ground floor shop front changed, elaborate window frames and decorations of the window parapets with floral motifs, two-storey bay windows over a rectangular floor plan on the corner, in the attic as a balcony with baluster parapet, fluted pillars on the bay window, window parapets with Dreischneuss, volute-like cantilever consoles under the bay window, rows of dormers, gable roof, four-story corner.

09230659
 


Apartment building in open development Marienthaler Strasse 129
(map)
re. 1910 With a shop area on the ground floor, a characteristic example of reform architecture after 1900 with a balanced cubature and structure as well as a few, but accentuating decorative elements, dominated by two gables, significant in terms of building history.

Dating 1910 over the side entrance.

09230664
 


Residential stable of a former three-sided farm, later a kindergarten Marienthaler Strasse 155
(map)
1792 Dendro, roof structure Traditional half-timbered house in very good original condition of great architectural and urban historical importance.

Two-storey building with a rectangular floor plan, ground floor solid and plastered, half-timbered upper floor with narrow-style half-timbering, struts in each compartment, regularly arranged rectangular windows, gable slated, gable roof, at the rear in place of the water house, somewhat enlarged single-storey solid building with gable roof, large roof overhang on the courtyard side, sloping weather on the eaves side , Gable triangle boarded up, emergency exit staircase in front of it as a kindergarten and changes to the window openings on the ground floor, but otherwise very good original condition of the attic and first floor. Today only remnants of the farm buildings of the former three-sided courtyard are preserved that are not listed.

09230666
 


Residential stable house, barn and two side buildings of a four-sided courtyard Marienthaler Strasse 160
(map)
1888 (rear side building) Originally preserved farm with well-preserved buildings of importance in terms of both town and house history.

Residential stable house: two-storey, half-timbered upper storey, partly slated, ground floor massively plastered, window frames not preserved, probably undercut around 1920, gable roof, side building on the street side: two-storey, half-timbered upper storey, both gables massive, the half-timbered slab, ground floor massively plastered, flat sloping saddle roof, around 1900, Rear side building: two-storey, massive ground floor, half-timbered upper storey, regular stud framework with gable roof, mid-19th century, barn: one-storey with jamb, half-timbered, jamb slated, saddle roof, around 1800.

09230667
 


Two side buildings and a barn as well as a manure place and enclosure of a four-sided courtyard Marienthaler Strasse 160a; 162
(card)
around 1680 (front side building) A farm that is still closed and is of great importance in terms of town history and building history.

Residential stable house: rebuilt, no monument, side building at the front on the street side: longitudinal rectangular floor plan, solid ground floor, half-timbered upper floor with pegged head braces and fire rigs, construction time around 1680, steep gable roof, barn: one-storey with jamb, mixed clinker construction, flat sloping gable roof, around 1910, side building on the opposite side From the stable house: two-storey solid construction, plastered brick construction, gable roof, fundamental renovation in the rear area, manure place behind the stable house, plastered brick masonry, monument value: the most important building of the courtyard is the street-side farm building with a well-preserved and rare half-timbered construction, otherwise the courtyard is only important for urban history as evidence of the former village development in the urban area, the other two side buildings (barn and side building) are inferior and relatively simple in their design.

09230665
 


Roof construction of the stable house and gatehouse as well as the pond of a four-sided courtyard Marienthaler Strasse 163
(map)
around 1800 (gatehouse) Remarkable evidence of rural architecture of its time, of local and architectural importance.

Residential stable house: around 1800, rebuilt several times, only the roof structure in its dimensions and quality including the profiled eaves are of monumental value, high crooked hip roof, gatehouse: around 1800, solid ground floor, partly clay corrugation walls, side gate passage, half-timbered upper floor, tenon struts, regular half-timbering, double-bar rows , Gable roof, beaver tail double covering, upper floor half-timbered partition walls with clay infill and various plaster scratch patterns.

In front of the yard there is a pond with old willows. The rear eaves side of the stable house presumably also has a half-timbered upper floor, there a two-storey massive disfiguring extension, the rear side building presumably massive without monument value, but remains on the list of monuments for the time being due to the ensemble effect.

09230668
 


Farm consisting of a stable house, gatehouse, barn and side building as well as courtyard paving Marienthaler Strasse 171
(map)
re. 1771 Building ensemble that has been preserved as a closed building is of great importance for both the history of the house and the city.

Guest and residential house: in the living room area, wooden ceiling with wooden beams profiled with a ship's neck, on the ship's neck a heart and inscribed 1771 as well as floral ornament, living stable house: today converted into an inn, on a rectangular floor plan, two-storey, ground floor quarry stone masonry with a hollow, today partially only plastered, window frames with hollow , Half-timbered upper floor, no longer completely uniformly preserved, K-struts, tenon wood connections, double-transom, gable roof, three-aisled in the stable area, Bohemian cap vault, natural stone pillars, in the corridor area Prussian cap vault over belt arches, in the living room area, however, the former wooden ceiling, insert boards no longer preserved, profiled with a boat valley and there marked 1771, in the half-timbered upper floor construction as well as in the roof structure preserved, in front of the stable house in Hof Heiste, partly still preserved with river pebble paving, in front of that there was the former dung heap - h Today still recognizable, gatehouse: one-storey, gate passage, wooden gate renewed, half-timbered, saddle roof, today beaver tail double covering, rear side building: formerly field side, ground floor solid, half-timbered upper floor clad, passage to field, saddle roof, barn: single-storey with jamb floor, boarded jamb, ground floor half-timbered, Flat sloping gable roof, today converted into a restaurant, the former threshing floor is now a guest room.

09230670
 


Park of Pauluskirchplatz and memorial (war memorial for the Franco-German War, also King Albert memorial) Pauluskirchplatz
(map)
1957, some of the complex is older Important complex in terms of urban development history and urban planning.

Warrior and King Albert monument: granite obelisk made of red granite with steps, originally with medallion (this has not been preserved) and inscription: “Hermann Dölling, Julius Runst, Anton Pöhler, Julius Beckert, Karl Pelzsche, Karl Baumann dedicated by the United Military Associations Between Marienthal ”, on the other side of the obelisk incised writing:“ 1870–71. ”And an iron cross, the monument was unveiled on September 4, 1904, is located west of the Pauluskirche, it is an obelisk 4.1 m high . Green area: with reference to the Pauluskirche and surrounding this church, in front of the memorial bed with edging, forming three interlocking circles, still the square edging with Theuma slate, remnants of the original large greenery, the original path system and square design preserved.

Description of the garden monument: (Nora Kindermann, January 12, 2012.)

The Pauluskirchplatz was laid out / redesigned in its current form towards the end of the 1950s. In the garden and cemetery office of the city of Zwickau, two planning variants have been preserved, one of which almost corresponds to the current design. This plan is dated October 19, 1957 and signed by Sperling. These plans also show that at that time there was still a residential building on the northeast parcel number 104. The break in design is still clearly visible today.

Structural assets:

Building: Pauluskirche (individual monument)

Path system: Simple passage with a square-like widening in the south-west of the square, on the main paths polygonal plates made of Theuma slate, in the children's play area a water-bound ceiling, all edging made of Theuma slate.

Memorial: Warrior and King Albert Memorial, obelisk made of red granite (see description above).

Vegetation: (no description).

Rows of trees: Rows of winter linden (Tilia cordata) on the north and south sides of the square.

Individual trees: Typical planting of sand birch trees (Betula pendula), ornamental apples (Malus floribunda), field maple (Acer campestre), the winter linden (Tilia cordata) presumably come from an earlier plant phase. Hedges and bushes: Cut hornbeam hedge (Carpinus betulus) around the southwest corner of the plant, freely growing ornamental shrub hedges in the plant, consisting of u. a. made of gold bells (Forsythia intermedia), dogwood (Cornus sanguinea), lilac (Syringa vulgaris), peasant jasmine (Philadelphus spec.), hazelnut (Corylus avellana), weigela (Weigela floribunda), snowball (Viburnum opulus), privet (Ligustrum vulgare), Oregon grape (Mahonia aquifolium), yew (Taxus baccata), a larger stock of juniper (Juniperus spec.) Around the war memorial,

Perennials: Perennial area preserved in its original extent, planting easy to care for but not typical of the time with forest marbles (Luzula sylvatica), goat's beard (Aruncus dioicus), golden strawberry (Waldsteinia ternata),

Monument value: garden historical (plaza in the design of the 1950s).

09231717
 


Church (with furnishings) and churchyard Pauluskirchplatz 1
(map)
1899-1901 Church building with north-west tower, typical town church of town-historical, architectural-historical and architectural importance.

Orange-red brick building with representative entrances on the west as well as on the north side, on the west side with the inscription: "KÄMPFE DEN GUTEN KAMPF DES FAUBENS", original front door, rectangular tower on the side with semicircular apse, in the southwest corner entrance with a short column, also very beautiful original front door with decorated long bands, on the south side under the windows coats of arms with representations of handicrafts, a representation for the carpenter with a plane and angle and chisel, under the second window the handicraft of the copper plumber with copper kettles and the corresponding hammers, under the next window compasses, Hammer (possibly slaters' tool), under the next window a stonemason tool with the appropriate measuring compass and a wooden hammer, buttress in front of the facade, south-east access to the sacristy, base entirely polygonal granite masonry, choir in the east polygonal design with buttresses, there under the window a coat of arms with Bez eichnung 1899/1901, in the northeast corner polygonal chapel, on the window of the choir locksmith's tools with keys, pliers and hammer and padlock, next window on the west side of the ship coat of arms with compass and triangle and house representation - symbolizing the craft of the architect, next coat of arms not clear clarifiable, probably a doctrine, a trowel and a mason's hammer, but in armor, next window with a coat of arms probably carpentry with a carpenter's hatchet and triangle, another coat of arms with a representation of the stonemason, chisel iron, corresponding chisels, angles and wooden hammer (mallet?), representative entrance the west side with a staircase in front, elaborate gate, on both sides niches with shell ornaments closing off, a kind of stepped portal, in the arched terracotta relief with flower depictions, above the entrance inscription: "NUN ABER BLEIBET BELIEVE HOPE LOVE" and a cross, also continue to depict flowers as well as alpha u nd Omega, high barrel vault, altar made of Cotta sandstone and French limestone by Alfred Klinck, crucifixion group made of marble and alabaster, richly colored glass painting of the large windows of the chancel, church tower 67 m high.

09230769
 


Rectory of the Pauluskirche Pauluskirchplatz 2
(map)
1715 Well-preserved half-timbered building, partly clad or plastered, of importance in terms of urban history, urban development and architectural history.

Two-storey, broadly encased building with massive ground floor, upper floor half-timbered plastered or clad, half-hipped roof with three-quarters head, ground floor presumably quarry stone masonry, rectory next to the church, important as an ensemble, belonged to the predecessor of today's church, which was probably built on the same site still to the former village of Marienthal, on the eaves side of the church there is a double-winged coffered door with a narrow grooved skylight, around 1850.

09230770
 


school Pauluskirchplatz 5
(map)
1890 Well preserved clinker brick building of architectural and local historical importance.

Three-storey, broad-layered building over an angular floor plan with a rear single-storey gym extension connected to the school on the eaves side, belt cornice with tooth cut frieze, pilaster strips, console frieze on the cornice, all red clinker brick, segmented arched window openings, wide formats, multi-leaf, windows not original, polygonal entrance front two axes, the original front door has not been preserved, and the inscriptions on the inset writing fields have not been preserved, from 1904 V. District School, demolition permit for the gym in 2015.

09230771
 


Consolidation consisting of 5 apartment blocks Steinpleiser Strasse 19; 21; 23; 25; 27; 29; 31; 33; 35; 37
(card)
1953 Example of social housing of the 1950s with architectural, social and urban value (all parts of the whole).

Steinpleiser Straße 19, 21 (type ZW3Y): three-storey, broadly mounted plastered building with clinker base, very beautiful door frame, red artificial stone with roofing and two twin windows with ashlar and ashlar roofing in the middle on the ground floor, regularly arranged rectangular windows, stairwells with larger windows and round windows, intermediate building Arranged at right angles with a passage, single-storey plastered building, gable roof, beaver tail covering and roof turrets with pyramid helmets.

Steinpleiser Straße 23, 25 (type ZW3): see numbers 19 and 21, same design, shop with large shop window front on the gable end, houses now all with full thermal insulation, gable roof.

Steinpleiser Straße 27, 29 (type ZW3): same design as numbers 19 and 21, as well as numbers 23 and 25, roof termination by hipped roof.

Steinpleiser Straße 31,33 and 35, 37 (type ZW2): same design as numbers 19 and 21, numbers 23 and 25 as well as numbers 27 and 29, roof termination by hipped roof.

09231644
 


Cottage Südblick 3
(map)
around 1800 Small half-timbered house of architectural and urban development value.

As a testimony to the former village, which acquired an urban character through the incorporation, two-storey building with a rectangular floor plan, 2 × 4 window axes, massive ground floor possibly quarry stone, upper floor half-timbered, small regularly arranged rectangular windows, slate, gable roof, half-timbered probably preserved undisturbed.

09230957
 


The whole consisting of: mansion (single monument, see Obj. 09302621), farm building and former horse stable (all parts) of a manor Südblick 6
(map)
1866 (farm building on the right) Architectural and historically remarkable ensemble in good original condition.

Manor house: two-storey representative plastered building on a longitudinal rectangular floor plan, plaster and wall opening ratio changed, profiled cornice, mansard hipped roof, single-axis roof bay window, crowning changed and on both sides of the roof bay window three small dormers with saddle roof, also on the gable side three dormers with saddle roof inside, possibly house On the outside, however, the outer walls and perhaps also the spatial structures and the cubature of the building have been retained, the value of the building consists in its great importance in terms of location and building history.

Horse stable: opposite the manor house on the west side of the courtyard, single-storey solid construction with a large wooden gate, saddle roof and shower placed on wooden pillars, formerly used as a horse stable, farm building: northeast of the courtyard, single-storey angular building in clinker-mixed construction with large plastered surfaces and clinker strips, tooth-cut frieze and cube frieze on the Cornice, triangular gable with round window, saddle roof, large subsequent wooden gates. Monument value of the entire complex: local historical significance as an important witness to the foundation of the village and the most important economic asset as well as urban development importance due to the neighboring location to the church. Note: northwest side building (adjoining the horse stable) no memorial. Furthermore, there is no monument between the manor house and the horse stable.

09231145
 


Individual monument and aggregate: manor of the manor Südblick 6
(map)
2nd half of the 18th century Significantly in terms of building history and local history, in good original condition (see also material group 09231145, same address).

Two-storey representative plastered building on a longitudinal rectangular floor plan, profiled cornice, mansard hipped roof, single-axis roof bay on the courtyard side, crowning changed and on each side of the roof bay there are three small dormers with gable roofs (originally barn roofs), also on the gable side three dormers with gable roofs (originally, in the plastered dormers) Internal room structures, several baroque stucco ceilings, vaults, baroque stair railings, original doors, stairwell etc. have been preserved, the roof structure has been preserved, the value of the building lies in its great importance in terms of location and building history.

09302621
 


Cottage property Südblick 8
(map)
18th century Originally preserved half-timbered house, with a plastered or slated half-timbered upper floor, of importance in terms of the history of the house and the local history.

Two-storey, 2 × 5 axes, ground floor massive quarry stone presumably driven under, house entrance and doors changed, half-timbered upper floor plastered on the eaves side, gable-side slated in old traditional slate, gable roof with beaver tail double covering, house empty, poor state of construction, one of the last originally preserved half-timbered houses to the original rural development of today's Marienthal district, possibly built before 1750

09230958
 


Total population of the Ulmenweg housing estate, with five single-family houses and associated house gardens (all elements of the total population) Ulmenweg 60; 62; 64; 66; 68
(card)
1933 Plastered buildings typical of the time, still characterized by the Heimat style, of architectural, socio-historical and urban development value.

1 1/2 storey plastered buildings with a rectangular floor plan, window openings almost square up to horizontal window shapes, some windows combined to form ribbon windows, the window shutters originally attached to the ground floor windows have been partially preserved, the original entrance situation has mostly been changed, above the closed verandas on the ground floor There are balconies on the upper floors, striking bay windows over semicircular floor areas on the upper floors, the living room, the master bedroom and the kitchen were originally located on the ground floor and two bedrooms and chambers on the upper floors (attic floors).

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Totality of houses with six terraced houses and front gardens (all totality parts) Virchowplatz 1; 1a; 3; 5; 7; 9
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1929 Uniformly designed row of houses of urban, architectural and socio-historical importance.

Robert-Koch-Straße 16g: three-storey, six axes, plastered construction, the structure presumably simplified, saddle roof, dormers with a semicircular finish made of sheet metal, the windows also subsequently renewed, but due to the urban development value, the building belongs to the ensemble.

Virchowplatz 1: three-storey front building of the row of houses with regularly arranged almost square windows with shutters, these shutters with slats, slight bay-like protrusions both on the gable and on the eaves side, both with pent roof, house with pitched roof, today skylight windows, simple closed design, subsequently decorated with plaster decorations, decorated facade, therefore of great importance for urban development.

Virchowplatz 1a: Head of the row of houses.

Virchowplatz 3: Part of a similarly designed row of houses, bay-like projections on both sides, house entrance in the middle of the eaves side, otherwise the same design as the head building, in the middle two-axis large roof bay window with a sloping roof, otherwise saddle roof.

Virchowplatz 5: see number 3, FS 639,

Virchowplatz 9: five-storey with jagged floor with round windows, flat-roofed almost square building, changed in plaster and window design, originally trowel plaster in fan shape, this no longer preserved today, as the head building of the row of houses of particular urban value.

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Apartment block (with two entrances) in open development Virchowplatz 11; 13
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around 1930 The building is designed in a similar way to the neighboring development, therefore of urban and architectural value.

Broad, three-storey plastered building with eight axes, regularly arranged rectangular windows with shutters, these with slats, hipped roof with beaver tail covering, three-part windows with skylights, window sill cornices under the windows at the corners.

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Memorial stone for the former chairman of the Erzgebirgszweigverein Zwickau, Prof. Dr. Ernst Fritsche in the Zwickau city forest Waldparkstrasse
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1910 09231156
 


Four-sided courtyard consisting of an old stable house (with surrounding framework), new stable house, barn and gatehouse (side building) and courtyard paving Waldstrasse 12
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1707 Dendro (old stable house) Architecturally and historically significant building complex, particularly valuable is the old stable house with ancient half-timbered construction (head struts, curved St. Andrew's crosses).

Old stable house, outside: two-storey half-timbered house with partially solid ground floor, the surrounding structure and block room have been preserved in the living room area, the house was extended by two window axes on the gable side, construction period between 1650 and 1680, extension between 1780 and 1800, room area: block walls in the lower area replaced by quarry stone masonry, Stands of the surrounding area presumably shortened, today on rubble stone plinths, cleats with keel arches, tapped into stands, original cross-frame windows with wooden frames and wooden sill from the time of construction, stable and entrance area: rubble stone masonry plastered, originally half-timbered construction with the exception of the gable-facing extension, a house entrance, a basement access and two stable doors, first floor: Rähm between the ground floor and first floor with a serrated frieze, above the living room area inscription: “WHO TRUST GOD, HAVE BEEN BUILT IN HEAVEN AND ON EARTH.” Upper floor slightly protruding, threshold profiled t with boat throats, half-timbered construction in the old part of the house with curved St. Andrew's crosses (one St. Andrew's cross per compartment), still flattened head struts, central pivot window, newer part of the house with tenon half-timbered struts, top floor: crooked hipped roof, originally saddle roof, reconstruction probably around 1800, slate roofing, three dormers arranged in two rows

Old stable house, inside: Entrance area: right door opening to the stable with wooden frame, above the door inscription: "David Richter, Bauherr", to the left of the entrance brick cellar neck, brick masonry, probably rebuilt, stables: under the old part of the house is the stable in the right half of the house from the renovation phase Around 1800, stable window reveals and door openings with basket arches, Bohemian cap vaults in the entrance area as well as in the area of ​​the stable pinned cross-bar vault, stable in extension: separate entrance on the courtyard side, built as a horse stable, window reveals with basket arches, Bohemian cap vault, the same design as the neighboring stable admitted that both were built at the same time, room: partially well-preserved block walls, profiled beams with a ship's valley, beams were shortened in connection with the installation of a pigsty, later supports of the beams were also profiled, located between the ceiling of the room and the floor of the upper floor ch a cavity of approx. 50 cm height, basement: house with partial basement, accessible from the courtyard via a separate entrance, two barrel-vaulted cellars, arranged at right angles to each other in the basement stair area niche for exposure of the cellar, the vault area of ​​the vault starts on the floor, upper floor: chamber above the Parlor: in the gable area window openings with rails for sliding shutters inside, walls with timber-framing and whitewashed, board wall to the hallway, connected there, all wood paneling laminated, floor partially with rind covering with clay coating (area of ​​the old bulk floor).

Barn: one and a half story, two large wooden gates, simple braced half-timbered construction, solid gable with clinker bricks, gable roof, 1891 completely new building,

Second, younger residential stable house: 1848 new building, structurally redesigned and simplified with segmented arched windows, garage instead of stable door, stable with two aisles with columns, belt arches and cap vaults, crooked hip roof, the house is only a completion of the courtyard, on both sides of this residential building there are two gates with gates or wooden gate.

Gatehouse: narrow-style half-timbered construction with head struts and struts, all wood connections tapped, large gate passage, originally a stable on the right part of the courtyard, block partially preserved within the gate passage, lower areas of the compartments blocked out, base brickwork or natural stone masonry, saddle roof with hand-painted beavers and Splies covering, around 1750, collar beam roof with girder, central purlin, all wood connections tapped, on the outer eaves side of the gatehouse remarkable half-timbered construction, parallel struts between threshold and frame as well as head braces, partly also arranged as V-braces like a tree of life, roof construction on the gatehouse: roof slightly protruding A purlin is combed onto the ceiling joists, and the rafters onto this.

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Stable house, presumably a former farm Waldstrasse 23
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around 1800, re. 1779d Distinctive, originally preserved half-timbered building of architectural and urban historical importance.

Longitudinal building, ground floor massively driven under, plastered, half-timbered upper floor, narrow-style, striving, all wood connections tapped, regularly arranged rectangular windows, gable slated, gable roof, around 1800, the house belongs to the original village development, is a final testimony to this development and is therefore of great urban historical importance, the rear eaves side and the second gable also slated.

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Semi-detached house in open development, with green space at the house Waldstrasse 30; 32
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1945 Originally preserved house in the style of the Heimat style of architectural significance.

Single-storey double residential building with a gable roof, two entrances on the eaves side and two small windows with original grating, next to these front doors house entrances with segmental arches and small stairs, next to them living room windows, horizontal window formats, rectangular windows, maggot plaster, original preserved, gable side originally preserved flower windows in wood with sheet metal cover and Sgraffito (two carpenters pictured on the roller), gable with three rectangular windows and a round window, flower windows on both house 30 and house 32, but only preserved sgraffito on house number 30, four-axle dormer window in the center on the eaves side, gable side of house 32 Newly plastered, after 1960, construction time around 1932.

Ancillary facilities: green area in front of the house.

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House, garage and entrance gate Werführung Strasse 139
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1939 Former home of the factory owner of the aircraft repair shop in Zwickau of G. Basser-Kom. Ges., Typical building from the 1930s, in very good original condition, of architectural historical importance.

One-storey plastered building with a rectangular floor plan, Theumaer slate base, the first floor plastered on one storey, the central house entrance slightly recessed with natural stone edging, three small windows on both sides to illuminate the hallway and the guest toilet with decorative grating, windows segmented arched window openings with multi-sashed windows and shutters, the large hipped roof Flat covered in the same style, fence pillars of the driveway made of Theuma slate, from the construction period.

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Villa with garden and remains of the enclosure Werführung Strasse 145
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1890 Historicism villa of architectural, architectural and urban value.

360 m above sea level, villa with an irregular floor plan, one and a half storey, clinker brick building, with lavishly decorated carved wooden veranda, partly open, ornamental framework, decorated floating gables, saddle roofs, tower above a rectangular floor plan, there presumably a staircase with a pointed helmet, covered with slate, various inscriptions including "Nadelburg", other plaque: "EERuwe", the client was a master tailor, for this reason the name of Villa Nadelburg is derived, other plaques on the side with the inscription "Erbaut" and the time of origin, in addition to remnants of the enclosure, elaborate iron mesh fence, partly also granite posts, Little original trees of the garden, only the basic structure with the access road preserved, both inscriptions reproductions by Berthold Dietz, on the tower handling reproduced according to the old model, historical stair railings and wrought iron grating in front of the cellar windows, wooden balcony, on the side original inscription panels with the inscription "Built 1891".

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Former Chausseehaus Werführung Straße 223
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1828 Simple plastered building typical of the time in good original condition of importance in terms of traffic history.

Single-storey jamb floor, pilaster structure, central projection, entrance originally on the side, window openings partially changed or added, small twin windows in the jamb area, central projection with twin windows and round windows, flat pitched pitched roof, slate covering.

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House and gazebo on a small farm Werdar Strasse 225
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1909 Buildings typical of the time in good original condition.

Swiss style residential building, mixed clinker construction, with a jamb floor - boarded up, two-axis roof bay window with saddle roof, decorated rafter heads, half-timbered porch with round roof and small stairs, open arbor, half-timbered construction partly boarded up and reconstructed.

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