List of cultural monuments in Mickten

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The list of cultural monuments in Mickten includes the cultural monuments of the Dresden district of Mickten . The notes are to be observed.

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

List of cultural monuments in Mickten

image designation location Dating description ID
Towpath
Towpath Altmickten
(map)
marked 1751, marked 1768 (retaining wall) Flood protection wall and retaining wall as well as paving of the path between Altmickten and Übigau ; the towpath leads to Castle Übigau , ends at the slewing crane of the former Dresden machine factory , significant in terms of landscape design, local history and urban planning (see also Castle Übigau). 09218117
 
Lindenschänke
More pictures
Lindenschänke Altmickten 1
(map)
1862 (inn) Small inn with extensions; exposed location on the village green , part of the historic center of Mickten, significant in terms of building history and local history. 09214501
 
Residential stable house, stable building and side building of a four-sided courtyard
Residential stable house, stable building and side building of a four-sided courtyard Altmickten 2
(map)
2nd quarter of the 19th century (stable house) Courtyard complex characteristic of the local architecture and way of life in the 2nd quarter of the 19th century, part of the historic center of Mickten, significant in terms of both building history and local history. 09214502
 
Residential house and back building of a two-sided courtyard
Residential house and back building of a two-sided courtyard Altmickten 3
(map)
2nd quarter of the 19th century, after 1823 (stable house) Courtyard area characteristic of the local architecture and way of life in the mid-19th century, part of the historic center of Mickten, significant in terms of both building history and local history. 09214503
 
Side building, barn and gate system of a three-sided courtyard
Side building, barn and gate system of a three-sided courtyard Altmickten 4
(map)
around 1869
(side building)
Side building, barn (converted into a residential building?) And gate system with gate to a three-sided courtyard ; The remaining courtyard is an important part of the historical, despite the fires in the 19th century, well-preserved village ensemble of Mickten, very important in terms of building history and local history. 09214504
 
Residential stable house and gate system of a three-sided courtyard
Residential stable house and gate system of a three-sided courtyard Altmickten 5
(map)
2nd quarter of the 19th century (farmhouse) Courtyard area characteristic of the local architecture and way of life in the mid-19th century, part of the historic center of Mickten, significant in terms of both building history and local history. The elongated former stable house (right) and the gate system belong to the protected property of the Dreiseitenhof Altmickten 5. The plastered, gable-free residential stable house with a gable roof, the twin windows typical of the area in the gable, has shown a large number of dormers, mainly on the courtyard side, since the last renovation. The gate system made of massive goal posts was probably renewed in the 1990s. The mentioned parts of the courtyard are as evidence of the local architecture and way of life in the middle of the 19th century, when Mickten was still predominantly village-like, and as part of the important historical center of Altmickten, of architectural and local significance. 09214505
 
Stable house of a former three-sided courtyard
Stable house of a former three-sided courtyard Altmickten 6
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (farmhouse) characteristic of the local architecture and way of life in the 1st half of the 19th century, part of the historic center of Mickten, significant in terms of building history and local history. The stable house of the former three-sided Altmickten 6 farm stands with its gable on the head side of the village green facing away from the Elbe. The plastered, two-story building is covered by a gable roof. Noticeable are the protruding natural stone slabs at the eaves point. The farmhouse is a characteristic testimony to the local architecture and way of life in the first half of the 19th century, when Mickten was still a village. In addition to its architectural significance, the Altmickten 6 residential building is part of the significant historical town center Altmickten, which also results in a local historical value. 09214506
 
Pull-out house with gate system (gate pillar) of a farm
Pull-out house with gate system (gate pillar) of a farm Altmickten 8
(card)
around 1800 (moving house) Typical local rural building with half-timbering on the upper floor, characteristic example of rural architecture from the beginning of the 19th century, significant in terms of local history and social history. The side building Altmickten 8, built around 1800, is located on the edge of the Altmickten village square. With the exception of the gable facing away from the square above its massive first floor, the two-storey rural building has half-timbered structures. The gable triangle of the gable roof is boarded up towards the Anger. On the courtyard side there is a small, two-storey extension with a towed roof. Two massive gate pillars with cover plates (natural stone) have been preserved from the gate system in courtyard number 8. Apart from its architectural historical value as a characteristic example of rural architecture at the beginning of the 19th century, the complex is a typical rural house in Altmickten which is also significant in terms of local history and social history. 09214507
 
Residential stable house (half-timbered) and barn of a two-sided courtyard
More pictures
Residential stable house (half-timbered) and barn of a two-sided courtyard Altmickten 9
(card)
inscribed 1823 (farmhouse), 2nd half of the 19th century (barn) Well-preserved courtyard, characteristic of the local architecture and way of life in the 19th century, part of the historic center of Mickten, significant in terms of building history and local history. 09214508
 
Stable house of a former farm
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Stable house of a former farm Altmickten 10
(card)
around 1800 (farmhouse) Farmhouse (partly half-timbered, upper arbor) characteristic of the local architecture and way of life around 1800, part of the historic center of Mickten, significant in terms of building history and local history. 09214509
 
Stable house of a former farm
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Stable house of a former farm Altmickten 11
(card)
around 1800 (farmhouse) Farmhouse (partly half-timbered) characteristic of the local architecture and way of life around 1800, part of the historic center of Mickten, significant in terms of building history and local history. 09214510
 
Residential stable of a three-sided courtyard
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Residential stable of a three-sided courtyard Altmickten 12
(map)
around 1830 (farmhouse), marked 1832 (gate entrance) Typical local farmhouse (partly half-timbered), characteristic of the local architecture and way of life, part of the historic center of Mickten, significant in terms of building history and local history. 09214511
 
Stable house of a former farm
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Stable house of a former farm Altmickten 13
(map)
around 1800
(stable house)
Farmhouse (partly half-timbered) characteristic of the local architecture and way of life around 1800, part of the historic center of Mickten, significant in terms of building history and local history. 09214512
 
Apartment building in closed development
Apartment building in closed development Böcklinstrasse 18
(map)
inscribed 1895, in weather vane (tenement) Urban development striking residential building, exemplary example of the Wilhelminian style residential development at the end of the 19th century, significant in terms of building history and local history. 09214515
 
Apartment building in closed development
Apartment building in closed development Böcklinstrasse 19
(map)
around 1890 (tenement) characteristic example of the Wilhelminian style residential development at the end of the 19th century, significant in terms of building history and local history. 09214514
 


Four residential buildings (Bunsenstrasse 15/17 and Rietzstrasse 52/54) in a residential complex
Four residential buildings (Bunsenstrasse 15/17 and Rietzstrasse 52/54) in a residential complex Bunsenstrasse 15; 17
(map)
around 1930 (apartment building) Above an L-shaped floor plan, on Bunsenstrasse and Rietzstrasse, made of multi-storey buildings with perforated facades and hipped roofs, staircase axes highlighted, enlivened by expressionist forms, significant in terms of building history and urban development. 09215654
 
Eight residential buildings (Bunsenstrasse 12/14/16/18/20 and Rietzstrasse 56/58/60) in a residential complex
Eight residential buildings (Bunsenstrasse 12/14/16/18/20 and Rietzstrasse 56/58/60) in a residential complex Bunsenstrasse 12; 14; 16; 18; 20
(card)
around 1928 (apartment building) on an L-shaped floor plan, after completion partly owned by the housing cooperative for Dresden und Vororte eGmbH, traditional multi-storey buildings with hipped roofs, stairwells highlighted in terms of design, enlivened by expressionist forms, especially Rietzstraße 56-60 effectively staged in terms of urban planning, structure and architecture artistically significant. 09215652
 
Dreyzigerplatz residential courtyard
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Dreyzigerplatz residential courtyard Dreyzigerplatz 1; 2; 3
(card)
1927-1928 (residential complex) Residential courtyard; Construction of a closed quarter between Dreyssigplatz, Leipziger Straße, Wüllnerstraße and Franz-Lehmann-Straße around an inner courtyard with drying areas, built by the repair cooperative of Dresdner Handwerk eGmbH, buildings with traditional roofing, facades with pilaster strips (except Franz-Lehmann-Straße) and expressionistic Forms animated, significant in terms of building history and urban development history. 09215604
 
Waffle factory Gebr. Hörmann (formerly)
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Waffle factory Gebr. Hörmann (formerly) Elbvillenweg 1; 3; 5; 5a; 5b; 5c; 5d; 5e; 7; 9; 11
(card)
inscribed 1906, inscribed 1909 (factory), inscribed 1911, inscribed 1916 (factory) Four-wing former factory around the inner courtyard; Older building on Kötzschenbrodaer Straße, significant in terms of building history, industrial history, local history and personal history as well as artistically significant. 09215595
 
Factory owner's villa or administration building
Factory owner's villa or administration building Franz-Lehmann-Strasse 5
(map)
around 1910 (manufacturer's villa) Administration building (without the associated, rear factory); Objectified, but structurally striking building of the reform architecture after 1900, significant in terms of building history 09215601
 
Row of houses
Row of houses Franz-Lehmann-Strasse 29b
(map)
around 1940 (residential complex) Part of a residential complex on Lommatzscher Platz and Lommatzscher Straße, consisting of three blocks connected by gates, after completion in the property of the builder Herbert O. Steinert (probably the master builder), complex cleverly integrated into the urban structure, with corner solution to Lommatzscher Platz and Rounding towards Franz-Lehmann-Straße, the middle block set back, traditionally designed buildings from the Nazi era with perforated facades and hipped roof , accents through the designed staircase axis and triangular roof structures, significant in terms of architectural and urban development history (see also Lommatzscher Platz 2-6 and Lommatzscher Straße 5- 15). 09215658
 
Dreyzigerplatz residential courtyard
More pictures
Dreyzigerplatz residential courtyard Franz-Lehmann-Strasse 36; 38; 40; 42; 44; 46
(card)
1927-1928 (residential complex) Residential courtyard; Construction of a closed quarter between Dreyssigplatz, Leipziger Straße, Wüllnerstraße and Franz-Lehmann-Straße around an inner courtyard with drying areas, built by the repair cooperative of Dresdner Handwerk eGmbH, buildings with traditional roofing, facades with pilaster strips (except Franz-Lehmann-Straße) and expressionistic Forms animated, significant in terms of building history and urban development history. 09215604
 
Residential complex with numerous shop fittings
Residential complex with numerous shop fittings Franz-Lehmann-Strasse 39; 41; 43
(map)
1912-1913 (apartment building) Exemplary example of the phase of transition from historicism to simplified building forms around 1910, significant in terms of building history and urban planning. 09215607
 
41st District School;  Franz Lehmann High School;  41. Elementary school
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41st District School; Franz Lehmann High School; 41. Elementary school Hauptmannstrasse 15
(map)
1899 (school) School building and rear gym; Elongated, conspicuous building, testimony to the style of the historicism that still prevailed in Dresden around 1900, example of the educational building task at the turn of the century, significant in terms of building history, local history and social history. 09215632
 
Tenement house with fencing in a corner and closed development
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Tenement house with fencing in a corner and closed development Herbststrasse 1
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) striking residential building, typical example of late historic housing construction around 1900 in Dresden, significant in terms of architectural history. 09215597
 
Tenement house with enclosure in open development
Tenement house with enclosure in open development Herbststrasse 9
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) representative residential building from the late 19th century with sophisticated facade design (historicizing decorative elements and structural elements), significant in terms of architectural history. 09215598
 
Apartment building in open development
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Apartment building in open development Herbststrasse 11
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) Representative residential building from the late 19th century with symmetrical facade design (historicizing decorative elements and structural elements), fencing partially preserved, significant in terms of building history. 09215599
 
Apartment house in a corner and closed development
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Apartment house in a corner and closed development Herbststrasse 21
(map)
after 1900 (tenement) Despite parts of the architectural jewelry that have been lost, it is an expressive residential building from the early 20th century with a striking, tower-like corner formation, significant in terms of urban planning and architectural history. 09215600
 
Apartment building in open development
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Apartment building in open development Herbststrasse 23
(map)
after 1910 (tenement) extremely simple, but with little ornament accentuated building of the reform style after 1900, significant building history. The relatively simple, two-storey residential building, built after 1910, is open-plan with an approximately square floor plan. The fancy plastered facade rising above a natural stone plinth is only structured by two different window formats and color-contrasting plaster frames (eaves frieze, corner accentuations). The extended attic is equipped with dormers with mansard roofs in two different widths, which are rarely found. The tenement house at Herbststrasse 23 is of architectural significance as an extremely simple, but with little ornament accentuated building of the reform style after 1900. 09215644
 
Apartment building in open development Homiliusstrasse 1
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Distinctive building, largely originally preserved and artistically highlighted, late-founding residential building, exemplary value for industrial design at the turn of the 20th century (color tiles in the hallway), significant in terms of building history and urban development history. 09218220
 
Emmaus parish Kaditz
Emmaus parish Kaditz Homiliusstrasse 15
(map)
1902 (parish hall) Parish hall; Originally built as a residential building, distinctive structure with historicist style elements and echoes of Art Nouveau , roof turret with bell, significant in terms of building history and local history. 09215590
 
Watzke's concert and ball establishment
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Watzke's concert and ball establishment Kötzschenbroder Strasse 1
(map)
1898-1899, marked 1898 (ballroom) Guest house with hall; high, two-story building with an irregular floor plan, with facing brick facade, stepped gable (marked 1898) and corner tower to Leipziger Straße, rear garden restaurant with Elbe terrace, inside large, e.g. T. splendid dance hall, building history, cultural history, local history and artistically significant. 09215593
 
Micktner windmill
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Micktner windmill Kötzschenbroder Straße 9
(map)
Mid 19th century (mill) Tower Dutchman ; From a technological history point of view, one of the last windmills in the urban area of ​​today's Dresden. 09215651
 
Wikidata-logo.svg
villa
villa Kötzschenbroder Straße 26
(map)
around 1895 (villa) Distinctive historic building with a tower extension, bay window and rich facade decoration, probably built as a manufacturer's villa for the wax & Flössner canning factory, of architectural and local historical importance as well as artistically. 09215594
 
Apartment house in a corner and open development
Apartment house in a corner and open development Kötzschenbroder Strasse 42
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) Residential building (with business fixtures) built around 1900 in clinker-stone architecture typical of the period, significant in terms of building history and urban planning. 09215649
 
Tenement house with enclosure in open development
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Tenement house with enclosure in open development Kötzschenbroder Strasse 44
(map)
around 1895 (tenement) historicist residential building from the late 19th century, significant in terms of building history. The tenement house at Kötzschenbroder Straße 44, which is built on an almost square floor plan and is openly developed, is a historicist residential building from the late 19th century. The two-storey plastered building above a high base has a loft. The symmetrically laid out façades visible from the street have simple decorative and structural elements typical of the construction period and are emphasized on the street side on the first floor by two balconies with wrought iron railings. Rear view of the building easier. The protected property also includes the fence, which consists of massive posts and wrought iron gates as well as fence panels. The property of the tenement as a monument results from its architectural significance for the city of Dresden. 09215596
 
Mickten tram station
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Mickten tram station Leipziger Strasse 133
(map)
1897 (tram depot), 1897 (administration building) Administration building and carriage hall (1897) with later extensions (1914); In the meantime, part of the extension has been used as a motor vehicle workshop, the administration building with its remarkable historic facade design, one of the oldest and most distinctive tram stations in Dresden, significant in terms of building history, local history and transport history. Addresses: Leipziger Strasse 133, Lommatzscher Strasse 1a and Sternstrasse 2a / 2b. 09215659
 
Wikidata-logo.svg
Dreyzigerplatz residential courtyard
More pictures
Dreyzigerplatz residential courtyard Leipziger Strasse 137; 139; 141; 143; 145; 147; 149
(card)
1927-1928 (residential complex) Residential courtyard; Construction of a closed quarter between Dreyssigplatz, Leipziger Straße, Wüllnerstraße and Franz-Lehmann-Straße around an inner courtyard with drying areas, built by the repair cooperative of Dresdner Handwerk eGmbH, buildings with traditional roofing, facades with pilaster strips (except Franz-Lehmann-Straße) and expressionistic Forms animated, significant in terms of building history and urban development history. 09215604
 
Semi-detached house in open development
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Semi-detached house in open development Leipziger Strasse 176; 178
(card)
around 1865 (residential building) simple residential building probably from the 2nd half of the 19th century, number 178 with shop front (approx. 1920), significant in terms of architectural and urban development history. The two-storey building with a mansard roof in open development on Leipziger Strasse (with a sloping gable end) probably dates from around 1865. The regular arrangement of the windows, framed only by a simple plastering bottle, is interrupted in house 176 by a broad, ground-floor shop building, house 178 in this area with a single-storey, flat shop front, probably from the 1920s. Roof structures made of single and double dormers with gable roofs. As a material testimony to the typical settlement on the outskirts of the second half of the 19th century, the twin house Leipziger Strasse 176/178 is of importance in terms of both building history and urban development. 09215603
 
Residential house in open development
Residential house in open development Leipziger Strasse 184
(map)
around 1865 (residential building) Simple residential building, typical urban outskirts from the 2nd half of the 19th century, significant in terms of building history and urban development history. The simple tenement house, built around 1865 on Leipziger Straße, has a rectangular floor plan in open development. The two-storey house with a gable roof has a plastered facade with 6 window axes at equal intervals, and the tall rectangular windows are only framed by a plaster bottle. The saddle roof dormer windows and the skylight windows did not appear until after 1992. As a tangible testimony to the typical settlement on the outskirts of the second half of the 19th century, the Leipziger Strasse 184 apartment building is of importance in terms of both architectural and urban development. 09215645
 
Row of houses on a U-shaped floor plan
Row of houses on a U-shaped floor plan Lommatzscher Platz 2; 4; 6
(card)
around 1940 (residential complex) Part of a residential complex on Lommatzscher Platz and Lommatzscher Straße, consisting of three blocks connected by gates, after completion in the property of the builder Herbert O. Steinert (probably the master builder), complex cleverly integrated into the urban structure, with corner solution to Lommatzscher Platz and Rounding towards Franz-Lehmann-Straße, the middle block set back, traditionally designed buildings from the Nazi era with perforated facades and hipped roof, accents through the designed staircase axis and triangular roof structures, significant in terms of architectural and urban development history (see also Lommatzscher Straße 1 - 9 and Franz-Lehmann Street 29b). 09215657
 
Row of houses
Row of houses Lommatzscher Strasse 1; 3
(card)
around 1940 (residential complex) Part of a residential complex on Lommatzscher Platz and Lommatzscher Straße, consisting of three blocks connected by gates, after completion in the property of the builder Herbert O. Steinert (probably the master builder), complex cleverly integrated into the urban structure, with corner solution to Lommatzscher Platz and Rounding towards Franz-Lehmann-Straße, the middle block set back, traditionally designed buildings from the Nazi era with perforated facades and hipped roof, accents through the designed staircase axis and triangular roof structures, significant in terms of building history and urban development history (see also Lommatzscher Platz 2-6 and Lommatzscher Straße 5- 15). 09215658
 
Mickten tram station
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Mickten tram station Lommatzscher Strasse 1a
(map)
1897 (tram depot), 1897 (administration building) Administration building and carriage hall (1897) with later extensions (1914); In the meantime, part of the extension has been used as a motor vehicle workshop, the administration building with its remarkable historic facade design, one of the oldest and most distinctive tram stations in Dresden, significant in terms of building history, local history and transport history. Addresses: Leipziger Strasse 133, Lommatzscher Strasse 1a and Sternstrasse 2a / 2b. 09215659
 
Wikidata-logo.svg
Dreyzigerplatz residential courtyard
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Dreyzigerplatz residential courtyard Lommatzscher Strasse 2; 4; 6
(card)
1927-1928 (residential complex) Residential courtyard; Creation of a closed quarter between Dreyssigplatz, Leipziger Straße, Wüllnerstraße and Franz-Lehmann-Straße around an inner courtyard with drying areas, from the repair cooperative of Dresdner Handwerk e. Gm bH erected, buildings with traditional roofing, facades with pilaster strips (except for Franz-Lehmann-Straße) and expressionistic forms, which are significant in terms of building history and urban development history. 09215604
 
Row of houses
Row of houses Lommatzscher Strasse 5; 7; 9
(card)
around 1940 (apartment building) Part of a residential complex on Lommatzscher Platz and Lommatzscher Straße, consisting of three blocks connected by gates, after completion in the property of the builder Herbert O. Steinert (probably the master builder), complex cleverly integrated into the urban structure, with corner solution to Lommatzscher Platz and Rounding towards Franz-Lehmann-Straße, the middle block set back, traditionally designed buildings from the Nazi era with perforated facades and hipped roof, accents through the designed staircase axis and triangular roof structures, significant in terms of building history and urban development history (see also Lommatzscher Platz 2 -6, Lommatzscher Straße 1, 3, 11, 13 and 15 as well as Franz-Lehmann-Straße 29b). 09305726
 
Row of houses on a U-shaped floor plan
Row of houses on a U-shaped floor plan Lommatzscher Strasse 11; 13; 15
(card)
around 1940 (residential complex) Part of a residential complex on Lommatzscher Platz and Lommatzscher Straße, consisting of three blocks connected by gates, after completion in the property of the builder Herbert O. Steinert (probably the master builder), complex cleverly integrated into the urban structure, with corner solution to Lommatzscher Platz and Rounding towards Franz-Lehmann-Straße, the middle block set back, traditionally designed buildings from the Nazi era with perforated facades and hipped roof, accents through the designed staircase axis and triangular roof structures, significant in terms of architectural and urban development history (see also Lommatzscher Straße 1 - 9 and Franz-Lehmann Street 29b). 09215657
 
Semi-detached house with fencing in open development
Semi-detached house with fencing in open development Lommatzscher Strasse 27; 29
(card)
around 1925 (residential building) simple plastered building with expressionistic decorative shapes, significant in terms of building history. 09215638
 
Residential complex
Residential complex Lommatzscher Strasse 31; 33; 33b; 35; 37; 39; 41; 43
(map)
around 1926 (approx. 1925-1927) built by the housing cooperative Dresden und Vororte e. G. mb H., on Lommatzscher Straße and Naundorfer Straße, consisting of three blocks, connected by two single-storey shop buildings, the rear shop building with a quarter-round floor plan, the row of houses on Naundorfer Straße with front gardens and fences, all buildings are striking examples of housing developments and Small apartment buildings from the 1920s, multi-storey buildings with hipped roofs, the stairwells highlighted by design, historicizing and expressionist jewelry, some entrances downright representative, e.g. Partly colored glass windows in the stairwells, the entire complex is significant in terms of building and urban development history as well as artistically. 09215636
 
TUR Übigau (formerly): assembly hall
TUR Übigau (formerly): assembly hall Marie-Curie-Strasse 10
(map)
1951-1953 (factory) Assembly hall at Marie-Curie-Strasse 10 (formerly Overbeckstrasse 48); Large factory hall with three transepts and a high-voltage field as a 30 m high head structure, reinforced concrete supports visible to the outside, wall fields set back in between, since 1991 Siemens Energietechnik und Medizintechnik GmbH (see also Overbeckstrasse 39 and Washingtonstrasse 18), former VEB Transformatoren- und Röntgenwerk Dresden . 09215641
 
Wikidata-logo.svg
Residential complex
Residential complex Naundorfer Strasse 8; 10; 12; 14; 16
(card)
around 1926 (approx. 1925-1927) built by the housing cooperative Dresden und Vororte eGmbH, on Lommatzscher Straße and Naundorfer Straße, consisting of three blocks, connected by two single-storey shop buildings, the rear shop building with a quarter-round floor plan, the row of houses on Naundorfer Straße with front gardens and fences, all buildings are striking examples of housing developments and small apartment buildings of the 1920s, multi-storey buildings with hipped roofs, the stairwells highlighted by design, historicizing and expressionist jewelry, some entrances downright representative, e.g. T. colored glass windows in the stairwells, the entire complex is significant in terms of building history, urban development history and artistically. 09215636
 
Apartment house in a corner and open development
Apartment house in a corner and open development Naundorfer Strasse 18
(map)
1901 (tenement) Residential building with a striking, historicizing sandstone-clinker facade, an exemplary example of the architectural development around 1900, significant in terms of building history and urban development history. 09218943
 
Apartment building in open development
Apartment building in open development Naundorfer Strasse 19
(map)
around 1913 (tenement) Residential building with a simple, objectified design language, especially in connection with neighboring buildings, a clear example of the construction method around 1910 in Dresden, significant in terms of building history. 09215635
 
Apartment building in open development
Apartment building in open development Naundorfer Strasse 22
(map)
around 1913 (tenement) Residential building with a simple, objectified design language, especially in connection with neighboring buildings, a clear example of the construction method around 1910 in Dresden, significant in terms of building history. 09215633
 
Apartment building in open development
Apartment building in open development Naundorfer Strasse 24
(map)
marked 1913 (tenement) Residential building with a simple, objectified design language, especially in connection with neighboring buildings, a clear example of the construction method around 1910 in Dresden, significant in terms of building history. 09215634
 
Factory for electrical apparatus and transformers Koch & Sterzel ; later TUR Übigau: factory building Overbeckstrasse
(map)
around 1913 (factory), 1924-1925 (factory) Factory building (1924/25) with a transverse, longitudinally rectangular middle section (transformer hall); This highlighted by triangular gables and a colossal order, the southern wing of the former military hydrogen facility (around 1913), after 1948 VEB Transformatorenwerk and Röntgenwerk Dresden, since 1991 Siemens Energietechnik und Medizintechnik GmbH, significant in terms of building history, technology history and industrial history, singular as the last structural element Certificate of airship travel in Dresden (see also Marie-Curie-Strasse 10 and Overbeckstrasse 39). 09215640
 
Residential house in open development
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Residential house in open development Overbeckstrasse 2
(map)
around 1880 (residential building) exemplary material evidence of the urban development of the historic center of Mickten in the 19th century., historically significant. 09215586
 
Residential house in open development
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Residential house in open development Overbeckstrasse 4
(map)
1920 (residential building) Simple, well-proportioned residential building, exemplary for the architectural development of the 1920s, significant in terms of building history. 09215587
 
Lack of laundry Overbeckstrasse 26
(map)
1920 (lack of laundry) Crate ironer with an electric motor from the ironing plant LA Thomas, Großröhrsdorf , of importance in terms of housekeeping and technology history. 09304287
 
TUR Übigau (formerly): Administration building
TUR Übigau (formerly): Administration building Overbeckstrasse 39; 39a
(card)
1960s (part of the factory) Administration building; With a U-shaped floor plan, facade with clinker brickwork, since 1991 Siemens Energietechnik und Medizintechnik GmbH, important in terms of industrial and architectural history (see also Marie-Curie-Strasse 10 and Washingtonstrasse 18) 09215642
 
Double apartment building with a (presumably) former wash house at the rear, in open development Rauchstrasse 4
(map)
marked 1914 (tenement) distinctive residential construction from the beginning of the 20th century, significant in terms of building history. 09215589
 
Double apartment building with a (presumably) former wash house at the rear, in open development Rethelstrasse 6; 8
(card)
marked 1914 (tenement) distinctive residential construction from the beginning of the 20th century, significant in terms of building history. 09215589
 
Four residential buildings (Bunsenstrasse 15/17 and Rietzstrasse 52/54) in a residential complex
Four residential buildings (Bunsenstrasse 15/17 and Rietzstrasse 52/54) in a residential complex Rietzstrasse 52; 54
(card)
around 1930 (apartment building) Above an L-shaped floor plan, on Bunsenstrasse and Rietzstrasse, made of multi-storey buildings with perforated facades and hipped roofs, staircase axes highlighted, enlivened by expressionist forms, significant in terms of building history and urban development. 09215654
 
Eight residential buildings (Bunsenstrasse 12/14/16/18/20 and Rietzstrasse 56/58/60) in a residential complex
Eight residential buildings (Bunsenstrasse 12/14/16/18/20 and Rietzstrasse 56/58/60) in a residential complex Rietzstrasse 56; 58; 60
(card)
around 1928 (apartment building) on an L-shaped floor plan, after completion partly owned by the housing cooperative for Dresden und Vororte eGmbH, traditional multi-storey buildings with hipped roofs, stairwells highlighted in terms of design, enlivened by expressionist forms, especially Rietzstraße 56-60 effectively staged in terms of urban planning, structure and architecture artistically significant. 09215652
 
Residential building in closed development Scharfenberger Strasse 1
(map)
Late 19th century (residential building) Wilhelminian style rental apartment building with a historic clinker stone facade, part of the historic center of Mickten, significant in terms of building history and urban development history. 09215647
 
Old Mickten School (formerly)
Old Mickten School (formerly) Scharfenberger Strasse 2
(map)
1874 (school) School-building; from 1898 to 1903 the town hall, now used as a residential building, roof turret, stands out from neighboring buildings despite the simplified historicizing facade, especially important in terms of local history. 09214516
 
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Residential stable house, several side buildings and rice sheds (some of the half-timbered buildings) of a four-sided courtyard Scharfenberger Strasse 12; 14
(card)
marked 1823 (farmhouse) Together with the remaining buildings of the neighboring farmstead, it shapes the townscape, as one of the largest courtyards in the historic village center of Mickten, structurally and historically significant. 09214517
 
Mickten tram station
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Mickten tram station Sternstrasse 2a; 2b
(card)
1897 (tram depot), 1897 (administration building) Administration building and carriage hall (1897) with later extensions (1914); In the meantime, part of the extension has been used as a motor vehicle workshop, the administration building with its remarkable historic facade design, one of the oldest and most distinctive tram stations in Dresden, significant in terms of building history, local history and transport history. Addresses: Leipziger Strasse 133, Lommatzscher Strasse 1a and Sternstrasse 2a / 2b. 09215659
 
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Apartment building in open development
Apartment building in open development Sternstrasse 15
(map)
around 1900 (tenement) Distinctive suburban residential building around 1900 with a historicizing version, dominated by the central balcony on the upper floor and two side projections, significant in terms of building history and urban development history. 09301498
 
Waffle factory Gebr. Hörmann (formerly)
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Waffle factory Gebr. Hörmann (formerly) Sternstrasse 35
(map)
inscribed 1906, inscribed 1909 (factory), inscribed 1911, inscribed 1916 (factory) Four-wing former factory around the inner courtyard; Older building on Kötzschenbrodaer Straße, significant in terms of building history, industrial history, local history and personal history as well as artistically significant. 09215595
 
Residential house in open development
Residential house in open development Trachauer Strasse 32
(map)
around 1925 (residential building) Simple plastered building with expressionistic decorative shapes, accentuating them, also folding shutters as a design element, characteristic building of small apartment and settlement architecture around 1925, significant in terms of building history. 09215639
 
Factory for electrical apparatus and transformers Koch & Sterzel; later TUR Übigau: factory building Washingtonstrasse 18
(map)
around 1913 (factory), 1924-1925 (factory) Factory building (1924/25) with a transverse, longitudinally rectangular middle section (transformer hall); This highlighted by triangular gables and a colossal order, the southern wing of the former military hydrogen facility (around 1913), after 1948 VEB Transformatorenwerk and Röntgenwerk Dresden, since 1991 Siemens Energietechnik und Medizintechnik GmbH, significant in terms of building history, technology history and industrial history, singular as the last structural element Certificate of airship travel in Dresden (see also Marie-Curie-Strasse 10 and Overbeckstrasse 39). 09215640
 
Dreyzigerplatz residential courtyard
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Dreyzigerplatz residential courtyard Wüllnerstrasse 39; 41
(card)
1927-1928 (residential complex) Residential courtyard; Creation of a closed quarter between Dreyssigplatz, Leipziger Straße, Wüllnerstraße and Franz-Lehmann-Straße around an inner courtyard with drying areas, from the repair cooperative of Dresdner Handwerk e. G. mb H. erected, buildings with traditional roofing, facades by means of pilaster strips (except for Franz-Lehmann-Straße) and expressionistic forms, which are significant in terms of building history and urban development history. 09215604
 
Apartment house in a corner and semi-open development
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Apartment house in a corner and semi-open development Wüllnerstrasse 44
(map)
around 1880 (tenement) Largely unchanged and therefore exemplary example of Wilhelminian architecture from the late 19th century, significant in terms of building history. 09215646
 
Apartment house with shop in a corner and closed development
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Apartment house with shop in a corner and closed development Wüllnerstrasse 47
(map)
around 1913 (tenement) Urban residential building from the beginning of the 20th century, simple plastered facade with strongly objectified architectural decoration forms, significant in terms of building history. 09215608
 
Apartment building in closed development
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Apartment building in closed development Wüllnerstrasse 49
(map)
around 1913 (tenement) Typical residential building from the beginning of the 20th century, historically significant. 09215609
 
Apartment building in closed development
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Apartment building in closed development Wüllnerstrasse 51
(map)
around 1913 (tenement) Typical residential building from the beginning of the 20th century, historically significant. 09215610
 
Residential house in a corner and semi-open development
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Residential house in a corner and semi-open development Wüllnerstrasse 56
(map)
Residential building from the 1920s with an expressionist design language, significant in terms of architectural history. 09215611
 

Former cultural monuments

image designation location Dating description ID
Overbeckstrasse 44
(map)

 
Scharfenberger Strasse 5
(map)

 
Scharfenberger Strasse 38
(map)

 

Remarks

  • This list is not suitable for deriving binding statements on the monument status of an object. As far as a legally binding determination of the listed property of an object is desired, the owner can apply to the responsible lower monument protection authority for a notice.
  • The official list of cultural monuments is never closed. It is permanently changed through clarifications, new additions or deletions. A transfer of such changes to this list is not guaranteed at the moment.
  • The monument quality of an object does not depend on its entry in this or the official list. Objects that are not listed can also be monuments.
  • Basically, the property of a monument extends to the substance and appearance as a whole, including the interior. Deviating applies if only parts are expressly protected (e.g. the facade).

Detailed memorial texts

  1. The Elbe bank fortification between Altmickten and Altübigau consists of an approximately 650 m long flood protection wall and retaining wall as well as the paving in front of it in a functional and visual unit. Both consist mainly of sandstone blocks. The different ways of working on the wall suggests a longer period of creation. Its older parts, such as the wall in front of Übigau Castle secured with supporting pillars, date from the second half of the 18th century, according to the dates found (1751 and 1768). The finely added masonry northeast of the palace area apparently goes back to a repair in the 19th century. The time when the paving was built is not known. Possibly it took place around 1880, as the towpath has only been marked as a route in the Dresden address book since 1880. On the other hand, an earlier development of certain areas cannot be ruled out. The Elbe bank fortification is enlivened by the spacious castle stairs, an archway and the rounded corners at the confluence with Altübigau. With its flood protection wall and retaining wall, paving and palace complex, the towpath forms a unique and unmistakable ensemble in terms of urban development history and is therefore of urban significance. It is of extraordinary importance for the Übigau site and has a decisive influence on the Elbe area in the west of Dresden, and is therefore important in terms of landscape design. The towpath illustrates the traffic development with flood protection wall and retaining wall as well as paving and is therefore extremely important for the local history.
  2. The "Lindenschänke", a small inn with annexes, opened in 1862 under Johann Gottlieb Selle, is located at the head of the historic Altmickten village square with a view of the Elbe. The two-storey, basement plastered building with a gable roof has one-storey or two-storey extensions that have changed over time and an Elbe-sided garden terrace. In 1998 the building was extensively renovated (including a new roof structure with a previously non-existent, low knee and dormers ), reopened at the end of 2002 after flood damage. Entrance area today from the side of the village square. The massive chimney structures are due to the use of the restaurant. Not least because of its usage history, the small guest house Altmickten 1 is significant in terms of both architecture and local history. It is also part of the historic center of Mickten in an exposed location on the village square.
  3. The protected property of the four-sided courtyard Altmickten 2, which dates from the 2nd quarter of the 19th century, includes the residential stable house on the eaves side of the anger, the adjoining side building (half-timbered on the upper floor) and a stable in the rear courtyard area. All buildings are now used for residential purposes. The wide, two-storey house is plastered, the windows are framed, and the twin windows typical of the area sit in the gable. The single-storey stable building with a mansard roof (expanded later). The four-sided, former farm is a characteristic testimony to the local architecture and way of life from the time when Mickten was still predominantly village-like. In addition to its importance in terms of building history, Altmickten 2 is part of the significant historical center of Mickten, which also has a local historical value.
  4. The two-sided courtyard Altmickten 3 consists of the elongated, two-storey house and a transverse, single-storey rear building (barn). The plastered house stands, together with the moving house of the neighboring farmstead number 4, at the gable facing the Altmicktener village green. Both buildings have gable roofs without roof structures (number 3, however, roof windows on the courtyard side) and have the twin windows typical of the area in the gable. Barn above gate openings and door openings on the ground floor with a gable roof, later hipped roof dormer. The house and the back building are characteristic evidence of the local architecture and way of life in the mid-19th century, when Mickten was still predominantly village-like. In addition to its architectural significance, Altmickten 3 is part of the significant historical center of Mickten, which also has a local historical value.
  5. The former farm Altmickten 4 (built in 1869) is composed of a residential stable / residential building (new building), side building and rear barn behind its still preserved gate system. The wide residential building and the narrower side building, both two-storey and plastered with a gable roof and twin windows typical of the area, face the green at the gable. The new building in place of the stable house has a steeper roof than the previous one and two curved dormers in the roof area on the courtyard side as well as a large dormer window to the neighbor. The barn, which lies transversely in the deep property, has two rows of bat dormers in the high pitched roof area facing the courtyard. The courtyard is accessed through a gate system (natural stone) made of massive goal posts with baffle stones and a gate covered by an arched, massive lintel from the green. As an important part of the historical, well-preserved village ensemble, despite the fires in 1823 and 1869, Altmickten 4 is of great importance in terms of building history and local history.
  6. On the property of the well-preserved two-sided courtyard Altmickten 9, which extends between Dorfanger and Scharfenberger Straße, are the narrow, elongated residential stable (marked 1823) and the right-angled barn (probably 2nd half of the 19th century) that is directly connected to the ground floor. The two-storey house consists of a solid and plastered ground floor, above a half-timbered construction, which is visible on the courtyard side and boarded along the street from the village square. The gable, which is set back from the green, is plastered, and the ground floor window formats are widened. On the courtyard side there is a formerly safe open arbor, similar to neighboring building number 10, above the entrance area, which is approximately in the middle of the longitudinal facade. The plastered barn is accessed via gate openings from both the courtyard and the rear Scharfenberger Straße. According to building records, the conversion of the barn and gate entrance is for 1957. The buildings of the former farm are an impressive testimony to the local architecture and way of life in the second half of the 19th century, when Mickten was still predominantly village-like. In addition to its architectural significance, they are part of the significant historical center of Mickten, which also results in a local historical value. The fact that the courtyard can still be experienced as a typical two-sided courtyard is also important.
  7. The stable house of the former Altmickten 10 farm stands, like almost all neighboring buildings, facing the village green. Above the solid, plastered ground floor with window frames and door frames, there is an upper floor built in a half-timbered construction, only the gable facing away from the village is plastered again. In the upper floor facade facing the courtyard sits an open, three-arched arbor, behind which the building widens slightly. The saddle roof, extended around 2000 with dormers, has a slightly overhanging roof on the courtyard side. The house is a characteristic testimony to the local architecture and way of life around 1800, when Mickten was still a village. In addition to its architectural significance, the Altmickten 10 residential building is part of the significant historical center of Mickten, which also has a local historical value.
  8. The two-storey former stable house stands at the gable on the village green. The elongated building consists of a solid, plastered ground floor (windows partially with folding shutters) and a visible half-timbered construction on the upper floor. However, the gable facing the village square is plastered, the window formats changed here. The rear part of the building (formerly the stable part) is paneled on the upper floor facing the courtyard. The gable roof without roof structures with a slightly more cantilevered roof overhang on the courtyard side. As a largely originally preserved structure, the farmhouse is a characteristic testimony to the local architecture and way of life around 1800, when Mickten was still a village. In addition to its architectural significance, the Altmickten 11 residential building is part of the significant historical center of Mickten, which also results in a local historical value.
  9. Protected property on the property of the former Altmickten 12 farm is the stable house. The massive ground floor and the massive gable with window frames and twin windows typical of the area are plastered on the two-storey building. The long sides of the elongated building are still solid behind the gable (on the courtyard side over 2 window axes), followed by a half-timbered construction on the upper floor. Balcony extension on the courtyard-side, still massive upper floor. The back gable of the house is plastered. On the courtyard side, four ox eyes sit in the gable roof area, the eastern roof area with roof windows. The gate system on the Anger with two massive, square pillars of the gate passage, on it the date 1832, then a natural stone wall. The house and shed Altmickten 12 are important in terms of building history. Furthermore, the former farm is part of the important historical center of Mickten, which also results in a local historical value.
  10. The stable house of the former Altmickten 13 farm stands at the gable at the entrance to the village green on the Elbe side. Above the solid, plastered ground floor with window frames and door frames, there is an upper floor built in a half-timbered construction. In the upper floor facade facing the courtyard, there are two wooden, balcony-like additions (the rear probably formerly historical upper arbor). The gable roof without roof superstructures is hipped to the rear, a slightly cantilevered roof overhang on the courtyard side. The farmhouse is a characteristic testimony to the local architecture and way of life around 1800, when Mickten was still a village. In addition to its architectural significance, the Altmickten 13 residential building is part of the significant historical center of Mickten, which also results in a local historical value.
  11. The striking corner building at Böcklinstrasse 18 was built in 1895 as a closed development (dating in weather vane). The three-story tenement house made of a plastered ground floor with a sandstone base and two upper floors in a typical historical clinker stone construction with window canopies on the first floor is covered by a mansard floor equipped with numerous dormers. The flattened corner of the building facing the Elbe and towards Dresden is raised by a tower-like roof structure and emphasized by the former ground floor shop entrance and balconies on both upper floors. The tenement house is an exemplary example of the Wilhelminian style residential development at the end of the 19th century, which was built in Mickten as part of the industrialization (especially in neighboring Übigau). The residential building at Böcklinstraße 18 is of importance in terms of urban development as well as building and local history.
  12. The three-storey, relatively narrow tenement house at Böcklinstrasse 19 is a typical building from the Wilhelminian era around 1890. Above the plastered ground floor, two upper floors with a clinker stone facade and historicizing decorative elements and dividing elements, above a saddle roof, later expansion to Residential purposes (dormers). The axis of the central house entrance, which is interestingly designed by basket arches , is accentuated by a risalit and ends today in an elevated roof structure. The tenement house is a characteristic example of the Wilhelminian style residential development at the end of the 19th century, which was needed / built in the course of the industrialization in Mickten (particularly in neighboring Übigau). The residential building at Böcklinstrasse 19 is significant in terms of both building history and local history.
  13. a b The residential complex built around 1930 with a perforated facade and hipped roofs over an L-shaped floor plan on Bunsenstrasse and Rietzstrasse consists of 4 multi-family houses built together. On the four-storey, largely unadorned residential buildings, the staircase axes are highlighted with intricately bricked clinker templates and are enlivened by expressionist shapes such as triangles, staggered angles and acute angles. Conspicuously grooved windows and front door glazing in all stairwells. The largely undisturbed roof area is only occupied by a few small triangular dormers typical of the construction period in the two buildings on Rietzstrasse. There are individual shop fittings in the ground floor zone. The striking complex refers to the structural development of Mickten around 1930 as a workers' residential area, which gives the residential building an informative value in terms of urban development history. In addition, as a testimony to the architecture of its time, it is of architectural and urban significance.
  14. a b The residential complex built around 1928 as a traditional multi-storey building with a perforated facade and hipped roofs over an L-shaped floor plan on Bunsenstrasse and Rietzstrasse consists of 8 apartment buildings. After its completion, partly owned by the housing cooperative for Dresden und Vororte eGmbH. On the four-storey residential buildings, the stairwells above the roofed-over house entrances on the street side are particularly prominent as high projections with expressionistic shapes such as acute angles, colored plaster mirrors and eye-catching window bars. The buildings at Rietzstrasse 56-60 facing the triangular square on Lommatzscher Strasse are particularly effectively staged in urban planning terms with two high projections and a wide roof structure connecting them. The courtyard-facing facades are enlivened by bay windows and balconies. The row of houses, which is striking in terms of urban planning, refers to the structural development of Mickten before 1930, which is why the residential complex also gains significance in terms of urban development history. In addition, the complex is of architectural significance due to its expressionist characteristics.
  15. a b c d e The distinctive "Wohnhof Dreyssigplatz", which is under monument protection, was built in 1927–1928 by the repair cooperative of the Dresdner Handwerk eGmbH. The residential complex forms a large, closed area between Dreyssigplatz, Leipziger Straße, Wüllnerstraße and Franz-Lehmann-Straße due to the block perimeter development over an irregular floor plan. The residential complex and business complex consists of four-story to five-story buildings with traditional roofing (hipped roofs), whose strict perforated facades are only made up of pilaster strips (except for Franz-Lehmann-Straße) and some expressionist forms, e.g. B. acute angles, are busy. Numerous shop fittings in the ground floor zone, highlighted by embossed stone cladding. The passages into the inner courtyard are closed with metal gates typical of the construction period, and drying areas in the inner courtyard. The façades here are rhythmized by balconies protruding like bay windows with massive parapets and masonry-facing columns. In the stairwells, metal banisters from the construction period. Dreyanzigplatz in particular is defined in terms of urban planning by the five-storey, slightly concave, axially symmetrical façade, which is accentuated by a wide central projecting with almost column-like pilaster strips, which is crowned by four triangular dormers. The property of the residential complex as a monument results from its great importance in terms of urban development, architectural history and social history. On the one hand, the complex is an exemplary testimony to the housing construction of the 1920s in an expressionist form; on the other hand, it vividly documents the urban development of Dresden on the outskirts of the city at the time.
  16. a b Four-wing former factory around the inner courtyard; Older building on Kötzschenbrodaer Straße, here a wrought iron gate and originally still recognizable inscription on the facade: "Waffelfabrik Gebrüder Hörmann Aktiengesellschaft" (1906 and 1909), elongated building on Trachauer Straße with two representative portals (Elbvillenweg 5a-5e) in connection with Administration wing on Sternstraße, once also the director's apartment with roof terrace and interiors, also staircase equipment and administration entrance (1921-1924), as well as various buildings on the eastern side (1916) (Elbvillenweg 1-11), historical, industrial, local and personal as well as artistic significant.
  17. The triangular green space between Wüllner, Franz-Lehmann-Straße and Leipziger Straße is dominated in urban planning terms by the four-storey residential building Franz-Lehmann-Straße 39-43. The residential complex, consisting of three houses, with built-in shops in the ground floor zone, has a facade structured by numerous protrusions, balconies and loggias. The triangular gables seated over wide risalits in the otherwise largely closed roof area characterize the individual houses. As decorative elements and structural elements can be found on the street-side facades u. a. Belt straps, window frames and color-contrasting plastered areas, some with oval medallions - traditional style elements from the construction period around 1913. House entrances spanned by basket arches lead into the inner courtyard of the block perimeter development. The rear facade is simpler with a central, wide porch with a hipped roof. The residential complex Franz-Lehmann-Straße 39-43 is significant in terms of building history and urban development. With its stylistic design and structural form, it impressively marks the phase of transition from historicism to simplified structures.
  18. The school building of the former 41st district school ("Franz-Lehmann-Oberschule"), now the 41st elementary school "Elbtalkinder", was opened in 1899 as the Mickten elementary school, which was located along Hauptmannstraße (then Jahnstraße). The old school building on Böcklinstrasse was no longer sufficient for the rapidly growing population. The builder Gustav Richard Martin (1863–1935) from Mickten designed the historicist new building . 1993 Completion of an external reconstruction and construction of new rooms for handicraft lessons above the gym. 2009-11 Remodeling and renovation measures as well as rear extension to the school building and extension of the gym. The broad street front of the three-storey plastered building, located in front of the extension, is built on a U-shaped floor plan with its 11 window axes and the rusticated pilaster strips between them, symmetrically and strictly axially. The three central window axes are accentuated by a gabled risalit. The window formats vary between upright rectangular windows and those with round and arched lintels. On the rear property there is a single-storey gymnasium with a flat gable roof, on the facade high arched windows and pilaster strips alternate. The property of the school complex at Hauptmannstraße 15 is a monumental property based on the testimony to the style of the historicism prevailing around 1900. Added to this is its local historical and socio-historical value as a former training center in the once independent village of Mickten.
  19. The residential building Herbststrasse 1, located in a noble location on the river and built around 1900 in open development, clearly marks the intersection of Herbststrasse and Kötzschenbroder Strasse on the Micktener Elbbogen. The basement and ground floor are plastered, the upper floor and the roof structure emphasizing both sides of the street with triangular gables above the flattened building corner are designed as a clinker facade with accentuating red clinker structures. As a further elevation, a roof turret sits between the curved gables on the mansard roof, which is equipped with single and double dormers. The first floor is emphasized by window frames and simple window canopies or window ledges and a balcony with a wrought iron railing. The residential building, which is typical of late historicism, refers to the structural development of Mickten around 1900, and therefore has value in terms of urban development history. In addition, as a typical example of late historical construction, it is of architectural significance.
  20. Herbststrasse 9 is a representative residential building from the late 19th century. The two-storey plastered building, which is located in open development over an almost square floor plan, has a developed mansard roof. The facades are adorned with elaborately designed, historicizing elements such as window frames and window canopies as well as a central balcony with a wrought iron, curved railing. Furthermore, the richly decorated outer dormers and the eaves cornice with a fine tooth cut stand out. The side facades are more closed but similar in detail. The monumental quality of the property, which was built around 1895, including the still existing fencing (fence panels renewed), results from its sophisticated exterior and the historical building value of historicism.
  21. The residential building at Herbststrasse 11, erected in open development at the end of the 19th century, appears as a characteristic apartment building in the style of historicism. The two-storey building has an almost square floor plan with a lofted mansard roof and has a symmetrical plastered facade, adorned and structured by historicizing elements such as window frames and window canopies as well as cornices. The outer double dormer windows with a pointed hipped roof are also striking. At least the massive fence posts / gate posts have been preserved from the original fence. The heritage property of the apartment building at Herbststrasse 11 results from the historical testimonial value for the architectural style described.
  22. The apartment building Herbststrasse 21, located in open development, marks the urban situation opposite the confluence of Winterstrasse with its unusual, tower-like corner formation. The two-storey plastered building with an approximately square floor plan has a mansard roof otherwise provided with dormers and gabled risalits with a crooked hip, the rear side of the building is plain. The windows framed with natural stone are partially visually connected by a vertical plaster structure. An upper floor window on the south-eastern corner of the house is decorated with a semicircular, floral natural stone relief. The challenging despite its simplicity in facade design and the aesthetic sensibilities of the viewer has a special way appealing housing, in addition to its urban impact, historical architectural value as a testimony of home style / Reform style around 1905 in Dresden.
  23. The striking corner building at Homiliusstrasse 1 is a largely originally preserved, design-highlighted late-founding residential building. The two-storey apartment building with an extended mansard roof is open-plan at the intersection of Homiliusstrasse and Trachauer Strasse. Simple, plastered ground floor zone with arched windows, the upper floor with window frames and window canopies and a strongly profiled eaves zone. The roof structures on the street corner, the colored clinker bricks and the original hallway furnishings set special accents. The colored tiles are remarkable as examples of the ceramic industry of that time that are particularly worth preserving. The property of a monument arises from the historical significance of the building and urban development as well as the exemplary value for industrial design at the turn of the 20th century.
  24. The two-story, distinctive house was not initially built for church purposes. The architect and builder Benno Hübel built it in 1902 for his own use as the last house on Homiliusstraße. With its strikingly shaped gables on the street side or the west side of the building, the moving mansard roof and shaped roof structures, it is a historical building with echoes of Art Nouveau. The original door frames, door panels and banisters have been preserved inside. In order to create its own parish, the Mickten parish (until then parish in Kaditz) acquired the building from the builder widow Gertrud Hübel and turned it into a community center. A year later it was inaugurated as the “Mickten parish hall”. Since 2006 the Emmaus parish of Kaditz has been part of the Evangelical Lutheran Laurentius parish of Dresden. Due to the roof turret, which is occupied by a simple wooden cross (with a small bell from 1480 from the Sophienkirche), the building, which is important in terms of architectural and local history, is recognizable as a place of worship from afar.
  25. The splendid, historicist building on the Micktener Elbbogen was built in 1898/99 on behalf of Gustav Paul Watzke as “Watzke's Concert and Balletablissement” by the architect Benno Hübel . The tall brick building with an irregular floor plan was erected at the intersection of Leipziger and Kötzschenbroder Strasse instead of a pub that had existed since around 1800. After 1945 various temporary uses (military, warehouse), since a comprehensive restoration in the years 1993–1996 used again as "Ball- & Brauhaus Watzke". The clinker brick facades, structured with sandstone, have, among other things, a three-axis central projection with a stepped gable (marked 1898) to Kötzschenbroder Strasse and a corner tower with a hood, small obelisks and a final pyramid roof to Leipziger Strasse. Used as a garden restaurant with terrace on the Elbe. Inside, there is a large, sometimes lavishly designed dance hall with a stage and western gallery, painting and furnishings in neo-baroque, neo-renaissance and art nouveau styles. The back wall of the stage building, which was once completely framed, contains a fragment with the main figure Venus, and above the stage there are three-dimensional putti with lyre and swan. The hall with red artificial marble columns on the long sides and a gallery with herms on the west side. The stucco ceiling with central picture by Emil Schulze (depicting the wedding of Cupid and Psyche), in the corners medallions by composers, in the coves stencil painting with water lily leaves, on the long sides two large Art Nouveau pictures with sleeping Venus. The nationally known inn with ballroom is significant in terms of building history, cultural history, local history and artistically due to the aforementioned explanations.
  26. The villa, located directly on the Elbe, is a striking, historicizing building with a tower, bay window, loggia under a column-supported balcony and rich facade decorations. The two-storey building was built around 1895 as a manufacturer's villa for the wax & Flössner canning factory, which was also located on Kötzschenbroder Straße at the time. The plastered building, built over an almost square floor plan and provided with a flat hipped roof, has numerous decorative elements typical of the time, as well as plaster grooves that structure the facade. The weather vane on the tower bears the date of the most recent renovation (1991). The particularly representative villa building at Kötzschenbroder Straße 24/26 is therefore a characteristic example of the architectural development at the end of the 19th century and is of artistic importance both in terms of building history and local history, as well as due to its sophisticated design.
  27. The three-story house at Kötzschenbroder Strasse 42, built around 1900, appears as a clinker brick building typical of the time. Lying in open development, the building is bevelled at the intersection of Trachauer and Kötzschenbroder Straße in accordance with its urban planning situation. At the corner there are two business entrances next to each other, above two balconies with wrought-iron bars and a curved gable in the roof. Above the plastered ground floor, the historicizing clinker brick facade is appealingly designed with accentuating red clinker brick structures and window frames and window roofing made of stone (1st floor). Window formats in the extended mansard roof. The property of the apartment building at Kötzschenbroder Straße 42 is a result of its architectural and urban significance.
  28. a b c The Mickten tram station was built on Leipziger Straße in 1897 with the construction of the narrow-gauge Lößnitzbahn to Radebeul and was a transfer point to the city lines until 1930. In the large wagon hall, expanded in 1914, the wagons of the city lines were stored, the vehicles of the Lößnitzbahn in a wooden wagon hall next to it. In addition to the administration building, apart from an extensive track network, several halls and workshop buildings belonged to the complex. After the site had been used as a motor vehicle workshop for the Dresden Transport Company, the large, elongated u. a. A shopping center (opening in 2009) is illuminated by the striking ribbon windows in the roof. Numerous halls and ancillary buildings were completely or partially demolished. The building at the intersection of Leipziger and Sternstrasse, formerly built for the administration of the train station (also in 1897), has a remarkable historicizing facade design. In particular, the corner design with a tower-like structure and high roof, emphasized by triangular gables, figurative decorations and sundial, as well as balconies on the upper floors, is to be mentioned here. The Mickten tram station is an important testimony to the development of traffic in the north-west of Dresden and, as one of the oldest and most distinctive tram stations in Dresden, is significant in terms of building history, local history and traffic history. As a building that is striking in terms of street space, the former administration building also has urban significance.
  29. a b The residential complex on Lommatzscher Platz and Lommatzscher Straße, consisting of three blocks connected by covered gateways, was owned by the builder Herbert O. Steinert (probably also the building master) after its completion around 1940. The residential complex is cleverly integrated into the urban structure along the wide Lommatzscher Straße, with a wide front facing Lommatzscher Platz (Lommatzscher Platz 4/6), the middle block (Lommatzscher Straße 5 - 9) set back and at the confluence with Franz-Lehmann-Straße noticeable rounding. Traditionally designed, four-story buildings from the time of National Socialism with perforated facades and hipped roofs, individual accents through designed staircase axes (emphasis on the house entrance, round windows and small triangular roof structures). Hipped roof dormers probably later. The residential complex refers to the structural development of Mickten (incorporated into the city of Dresden in 1903) before the Second World War, which is how it gains significance in terms of urban development and social history. Furthermore, the exemplary character for the architectural events around 1930 results in an architectural historical significance.
  30. The double residential building on Lommatzscher Strasse, which until the 1930s only ran as far as Rietzstrasse, was built around 1925 in open development. Despite the same design language, the house does not belong to the opposite residential complex of the housing cooperative for Dresden und Vororte eGmbH. The three-story house with a rectangular floor plan is covered by a hipped roof with individual small hipped dormer windows. The colorfully designed, historicizing plastered façade also shows expressionist decoration on the three sides of the facade, with the exception of a horizontal strap over the ground floor, which is strictly axially aligned. The two rear entrances are emphasized by risalits with small hipped roofs. Only massive gate posts with picket fences along Lommatzscher Strasse have survived from what was probably the originally designed enclosure. The double house Lommatzscher Straße 27/29 is significant in terms of building history.
  31. a b The residential complex of the housing cooperative Dresden und Vororte e. G. mb H. is located on Lommatzscher, Trachauer and Naundorfer Strasse on an approximately U-shaped floor plan and consists of three blocks that are connected by two single-storey shop buildings. The shop building on the corner of Naundorfer and Trachauer Straße (since 2007 address Naundorfer Straße 8) has a quarter-circle floor plan and a gable roof, the intermediate building on Lommatzscher Straße is a low-rise building. The expanding urban space on Lommatzscher Strasse is dominated by the facade, which is accentuated by three staircases with elevated risalits, which are integrated into a storey-like roof structure. However, on the hipped roofs, the saddle roof dormers that were added around 2010 next to the risalits disturb the overall composition. The row of houses on Naundorfer Straße is axially symmetrical, enlivened here by front gardens and fences. The plastered facades of the four-storey to five-storey buildings have expressionist decorations, and some house entrances are downright representative (some with colored glass windows). The entire residential complex is a striking example of settlement construction and small apartment construction in the 1920s and, in particular in its expressionist form, it is significant in terms of building history, urban development history and artistically.
  32. The tenement house, which was built in 1901 as one of the early buildings in the Mickten city expansion area stretching northwest towards Trachau, was built by Paul Jungfer in the role of master builder and client. The house is in open development and in a corner on today's Naundorfer and Hauptmannstrasse. An upper floor and several wide roof structures with a very distinctive clinker-sandstone facade rise above the plastered ground floor. The essential details of a historicizing Wilhelminian era building, such as window frames and roofing, gabled risalites, etc., have been preserved. Only the entrance on the flattened corner of the building was blocked later. A roof turret sits over the corner, the weather vane shows the year of the last renovation (2012). The two outer corners of the building on Naundorfer and Hauptmannstraße are raised like a tower with corner projections and emphasized by architectural decorations. The public interest in conservation results from the weight of the building and urban development historical significance of the residential building at Naundorfer Straße 18, especially as an exemplary example of the architectural development at the beginning of the 20th century, especially in connection with the neighboring buildings number 19, 22 and, which were built only about a decade later 24.
  33. The house at Naundorfer Straße 19 was probably built around 1913 in connection with the neighboring buildings (numbers 22 and 24) in a similar cubature. The street front of the two-storey plastered building, which has an approximately square floor plan, is determined by a central projection with a crooked hip with two window axes, which are emphasized by folding shutters. The plaster squares were probably formerly decorated with stucco elements. The roofed entrance to the house sits between two risalits with hipped roofs in the middle of the rear facade. The mansard floor has been expanded and has gable roof dormers. Probably with the last renovation, installation of two loggias in the upper mansard roof area. The side facades have also changed (new extension balconies). The tenement house, together with the neighboring houses, forms a vivid ensemble of the building method in Dresden around 1910, in which one turned against historicism in the construction of houses and introduced simpler, more objective forms. The house is therefore important in terms of building history.
  34. The tenement house at Naundorfer Straße 22 was probably built together with the almost identical neighboring building number 24 (marked 1913), but number 22 today without decorative elements on the facade. The street front of the two-storey plastered building, which has an almost square floor plan, is determined by a gabled central projectile with two window axes, which are emphasized by folding shutters and, as on the other facades, summarized vertically by color-contrasting plastered areas. The covered entrance to the house (front door from the construction period and colored glazing in the stairwell) sits between two risalits with hipped roofs in the middle of the rear facade. The mansard floor has been extended, dormers with a gable roof or a roof. Probably with the last renovation, installation of two loggias in the upper mansard roof area. The residential building, together with the neighboring tenement houses, forms a vivid ensemble of the building method in Dresden from around 1910, in which one turned against historicism in residential building and introduced simpler, more businesslike forms. The house is therefore important in terms of building history.
  35. The house on Naundorfer Straße 24, which was built in 1913 in the gable, is almost identical to the neighboring building number 22 (but this is somewhat simpler on the facade), in open development. The street front of the two-storey plastered building, which has an almost square floor plan, is determined by a gabled central projectile with two window axes, which are emphasized by folding shutters and, as on the other facades, are vertically combined by color-contrasting plastered areas. On the front they are decorated with stucco molds (fruit medallions). The covered entrance to the house (front door from the construction period and colored glazing in the stairwell) sits between two gabled risalits in the center of the rear facade. A single-storey wooden extension on the west side of the house. The mansard floor has been extended, dormers with a gable roof or a roof. Probably with the last renovation, installation of two loggias in the upper mansard roof area. The residential building, together with the neighboring tenement houses, forms a vivid ensemble of the building method in Dresden from around 1910, in which one turned against historicism in residential building and introduced simpler, more businesslike forms. The house is therefore important in terms of building history.
  36. The two-story residential building is open-plan on Overbeckstrasse. The relatively simple building with a rectangular floor plan is completed by a crooked hip roof on a profiled eaves cornice. The converted attic is illuminated via hipped roof dormers (single and double dormers). A horizontally running strap between the floors and the framed windows (partly combined as twin windows) are the only dividing elements on the simple building. The residential building Overbeckstraße 2 is connected to the urban development of the historic center of Mickten in the 19th century and is therefore of importance in terms of urban planning.
  37. The free-standing, compact-looking residential building, Overbeckstrasse 4, was built in 1929 by the practicing doctor Dr. med. Christian Funk established. The two-storey plastered building with an almost square floor plan has a simple, symmetrical facade on the street side, which is mainly determined by the formats and mullions of the windows. House entrance with a simple, narrow roof, wooden door from the period of construction and simple, horizontally designed window grilles. The eaves of the expanded mansard roof with dormers is interrupted in the axis of the entrance to the house, which can be reached via a few steps, there are small windows with horizontal sprouts. Single-storey additions to the west (side entrance) and to the back of the garden. As a testimony to the development of architecture in the 1920s, the simple and yet impressive house with its well-proportioned shape is of architectural significance.
  38. The shortage of the crate to be assessed here is in this form a testimony of housekeeping and commercial laundry of the 19th and 20th centuries and documents the technological transfer of the laundry roll with ironing board and wooden roll to a mechanical auxiliary device. As a later model, already equipped with an electric motor, it demonstrates the technological development of the initially hand-operated crate ironers to an easy-to-use auxiliary device for domestic laundry. At the same time, it also documents the much easier but laborious work process of washing the laundry and is thus also a testimony to the working conditions of housewives in the 19th and 20th centuries. The lack of boxes is therefore of importance in terms of domestic and technical history. To date, comparatively few laundry ironers have survived in Saxony, although originally many localities, partly also larger districts or settlements, had a publicly usable ironing room or ironing house. A single lack of laundry can now be recognized as a rarity. However, maintaining a certain variety of models is desirable, since only from this can a special informative value for technological development and the typical decentralized supply structure in the domestic economy of the time be derived. Finally, such a lack of laundry - especially one that is still operational - also has a great experience value and memory value, so that its preservation is of public interest.
  39. a b The mighty double tenement house Rethelstrasse 6/8 built in the first quarter of the 20th century is on the border with Übigau. The three-story house with a base clad in natural stone shows an attractive facade with decorative elements and structural elements such as B. ornamentally designed plaster mirror between the windows. The house entrance number 6, labeled "GF 1721" and "HV 1914", is emphasized by trapezoidal bay windows over both upper floors and a hip roof gable in the moving mansard roof. The house entrance number 8 is accentuated by balconies on the upper floor and a wide dormer in the mansard roof. Both buildings were renovated around 2000. Original staircase painting (restored) available. The one-storey building on the rear of the property, accessible from Rauchstrasse, with an approximately rectangular floor plan with an extended mansard roof, was presumably the wash house belonging to the tenement house in the past. The monument properties of the apartment building Rethelstraße 6/8 result from its testimony value for the architectural events at the beginning of the 20th century.
  40. The three-storey residential building at Scharfenberger Straße 1 is part of the protected historic village center of Mickten, despite its Wilhelminian style. It stands together with its few neighboring buildings from a similar construction period in closed development, on the rear side close to the farmsteads that surround the historic center of the village. Above the plastered ground floor, the two symmetrically designed upper floors are provided with a historicist clinker stone facade. Time-typical elements such as window frames, window canopies and window sills are used. With the industrialization in the 19th century numerous factories settled in Übigau - so u. a. the Übigau shipyard, which built the first passenger steamship with the "Queen Maria". As a result, the apartments urgently needed for the working-class families were also built in Mickten. The apartment building at Scharfenberger Straße 1, built at the end of the 19th century, represents this housing requirement and is therefore not only important in terms of building history, but also in terms of urban development history.
  41. The Alte Micktener Schule, opened as such by the communities of Mickten and Übigau on August 12, 1874 and used as the town hall from 1898 to 1903, is today a striking residential building on the edge of the historic village center of Altmickten. Despite the simplified, historicized plastered facade, the gable roof structure stands out from the neighboring buildings, which are otherwise largely village-like, thanks to its central projection on the Elbe side with staggered gable and lateral roof structures and crowning roof turrets. The two-story building now has an almost square floor plan thanks to the two-story additions that were probably built in the course of a school expansion in the 1890s. The house entrance is between these wings. From 1913 to 1928, the final stop of tram line 10 from Dresden was on Böcklinstraße directly in front of the house. In 1996/97 the building was completely renovated. The first school building in Mickten is significant in terms of building history and above all in terms of local history.
  42. Hof Scharfenberger Straße 12 has, in addition to the stable house and several side buildings, the special structural feature of a still preserved rice shed (derived from brushwood), a two-storey half-timbered shower. This is reminiscent of the Kaditzer Tännigt, which was completely cleared in 1927. The two-storey residential stable house (referred to as Aufbau after Brand 1823), together with its outbuildings and the remaining side buildings of the former neighboring farmstead (number 16, typical local round-arched twin windows in the gable of the side building on Scharfenberger Straße), some of them in half-timbered construction, form a closed, parallel to the street Four-sided courtyard. Today it is one of the largest farms in the historic center of Mickten. The complex in Altmickten is a structural testimony to the rural architecture in the mid-19th century and is of particular architectural and local value due to the preserved rice shed.
  43. The striking, suburban residential building was built in open development on Sternstrasse before 1900. On the two-storey plastered building with an almost square floor plan with a mansard roof, the corners of the building, each with a side projection, are emphasized on the symmetrical street facade. Decorative elements and structural elements, such as rustication of the ground floor, central balcony, window frames and shell motifs particularly enliven the street-side facade. The tenement house at Sternstrasse 15 is significant in terms of its architectural history due to its exemplary historicist shape for the late 19th century and as an authentic evidence of the structural development of Neumickten on both sides of Sternstrasse in terms of urban development history.
  44. The free-standing, three-storey house at Trachauer Straße 32 was built around 1925 on a T-shaped floor plan. Just like the neighboring building Lommatzscher Straße 27/29, the residential building is not part of the opposite residential complex of the housing cooperative for Dresden und Vororte eGmbH, despite the same design language. The building is covered by a hipped roof with individual small hipped dormers above a cantilevered, all-round eaves cornice. The colored plastered facade has an axially aligned design on the two visible sides with expressionist decoration (plaster mirror) above the ground floor, which is emphasized by folding shutters and separated by a strap. The residential building at Trachauer Straße 32 is a characteristic building of small apartment architecture and settlement architecture around 1925 with expressionistic and traditional elements, such as the folding shutters, of architectural significance.
  45. The apartment building Wüllnerstraße 44, located in a corner and half-open development, was probably built around 1880. The three-storey residential building, covered by a flat hipped roof, has two upper storeys with decorative elements and dividing elements above a ground floor along Leipziger Strasse with shop fittings. The first floor is particularly emphasized with more elaborate window canopies and the saddle pads from the construction period. There is also a balcony with a wrought iron grille on the sloping corner above the shop entrance. Most of the original windows have been preserved, some even with winter windows. Along the Wüllnerstraße there is a fence made of massive posts with a shaped head and picket fence fields. As a largely unchanged and therefore exemplary example of Wilhelminian architecture, the apartment building is significant in terms of architectural history.
  46. The respectable tenement house in closed development marks the corner of Franz-Lehmann-Strasse and Wüllnerstrasse. The three-storey building with an extended attic (mansard roof), which was built around 1910, has a simple plastered facade rising over a natural stone plinth on the street side with highly objectified decorative forms, which is designed with slight protrusions and recesses. These are continued in the roof area by different dormers and roof structures. The flattened corner of the building, used for a ground floor shop access, is accentuated on the upper floors by French balconies and raised by a round tower with a clapboard structure and a pointed roof. A striking roof with staggered facade recesses can be found at the entrance to the house on Wüllnerstraße. The street-wise distinctive tenement Wüllnerstraße 47 is of architectural importance.
  47. a b The unadorned house built around 1910 in closed development is a three-storey plastered building with a mansard roof and wide dormers. The street-side, almost symmetrical facade is structured by window axes on the upper floors to the right and left of the central entrance to the house. The stairwell is accentuated with three axes of narrow, high window openings. The buildings are significant in terms of architectural history, especially in connection with their neighboring buildings, which were probably designed in a similar fashion (Wüllnerstrasse 49 and 51).
  48. The four-storey apartment building at Wüllnerstrasse 56, built in the late 1920s, is located on a slight bend in the road in a semi-open development. The well-proportioned street facade of the plastered building, which is provided with horizontal dividing elements, accentuates indented loggias and the typical expressionistic design element of the pointed bay windows. In the gable roof, individual window axes are continued by dormers. Narrow and storey-high front door element set in natural stone, with skylight and in a design typical of the construction period. The attractively designed apartment building is an exemplary testimony to the building development of the 1920s in the architectural language of Expressionism and is therefore of importance in terms of building history.

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