List of cultural monuments in Oelsnitz / Erzgeb.

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Coat of arms of Oelsnitz
View over Oelsnitz

The list of cultural monuments in Oelsnitz / Erzgeb. contains the cultural monuments in Oelsnitz / Erzgeb.

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 .

Oelsnitz / Erzgeb.

image designation location Dating description ID
Railway bridge 19th century Mining context, technical monument.

A round arch (ashlar), other construction parts (including cheeks) quarry stone, the no longer existing track is only documented by buildings like this one.

09303895
 


Shaft system with gate pillars, gatehouse, machine hall, so-called wash house, two workshop buildings and administrative building as well as the associated dump Albert-Funk-Schacht-Strasse
(map)
around 1925 (machine hall) Formerly Vereinglückschacht, later Albert-Funk-Schächte I and II, parts of the system probably by the Leipzig architects Handel & Franke (according to information), of local, mining and building historical importance.
  • Workshop building: clinker brick hall on polygonal masonry plinth made of porphyry tufa, high arched windows (partly clogged) with metal bars divided into small pieces, German band and tooth cut as decorative friezes, flat sloping gable roof,
  • Machine hall: Elevated clinker building on a polygonal masonry base with a gable roof, structure through pilaster strips as well as eaves and cornices, high rectangular windows,
  • Porter's house: one-storey solid plastered building with a square floor plan on a clinker base with a hipped roof protruding far and with beaver tail covering, ceiling. 1229/4, demolished before 2016,
  • Gatehouse: one-storey solid plastered building over an angled floor plan on a clinker base with a hipped roof protruding far and with beaver-tail crown covering,
  • Workshop building: Single-storey clinker brick building with a very flat saddle roof, regularly windowed with segment arch openings, small metal lattice windows, ceilings. 1229/4, demolished before 2016,
  • So-called wash house: clinker hall with a rectangular floor plan with hipped roof, on a polygonal masonry base made of porphyry tuff, structured by pilaster strips and simple cornices, the lintels over the high rectangular windows made of reinforced concrete, on the east eaves side four window areas separated by thin wall strips, on the north side triangular gabled entrance Above the doors the inscription "entrance" and "exit", doors double-leaf with crossed glass fields, on this side also original lattice windows with solid transverse wood preserved,
  • Factory hall: Simple clinker brick building with a moderately inclined gable roof, high rectangular windows, simple structure with pilaster strips and brick cornices on the verge and in the eaves area, lintels steel girders,
  • Administration (probably converted former workshop): Two-storey clinker brick building with a monopitch roof, on the back with a small gable that breaks through the eaves side, structure by pilaster strips and eaves cornice, window openings probably originally as window strips, i.e. the storeys were divided later (probably 1970s).
09209460
 


Town hall with an extension that was built during the construction period and the neighboring administration building (Town Hall II, Albert-Funk-Schacht-Strasse 1) with the associated pavilion
Town hall with an extension that was built during the construction period and the neighboring administration building (Town Hall II, Albert-Funk-Schacht-Strasse 1) with the associated pavilion Albert-Funk-Schacht-Straße 1 and Rathausplatz 1
(map)
referred to as 1894–1895 Main building, representative clinker brick building in the neo-renaissance style, significance in terms of local history, urban planning and architectural history.
  • Town hall (marked 1894/1895 in a cartouche on the corner of the building): two-storey, compact clinker building with a rectangular floor plan with a single-storey, flatter extension, polygonal masonry base made of porphyry tuff, cornices, walls and corner blocks in sandstone, front side with stepped gable-crowned risalit in Renaissance ornamental forms, balcony on the west side Set tower (reminiscent of medieval city gate towers) with corner porch, high hood and lantern with weather vane, arched window, eaves cornice on consoles, hipped roof with slate covering, various loft extensions,
  • Town hall II: two-storey solid plastered building on a rectangular floor plan (two times five axes) with hipped roof, standing dormer windows and roof core as well as roof turrets with bell-shaped hood, narrow cornices between the ground floor and upper floor, profiled eaves area, slate roofing, relatively high window openings, multi-piece cross-frame windows, probably after original model replaced, building renovated.
  • Pavilion: Solid plastered building on a square floor plan with a bell-shaped roof.
09209483
 


Former polyclinic Albert-Funk-Schacht-Straße 1c
(map)
probably early 1930s Today the medical center, part of the center of the village, of local and architectural importance.

Elongated two-storey plastered building on a clinker base with hipped roof and continuous dormer, entrance zone at the open northwest corner with corner support in brick-facing masonry, in clinker also the stairs, an original banister preserved, profiled eaves cornice, roof covering probably in artificial slate, windows and doors and plaster renewed, Originally a branch of the Saxon Miners' Union Freiberg, architect Paul Beckert, over the entrance a larger than life-size miner figure made of stone by Georg Türke, created in 1930.

09209530
 


Parish and parish hall Albert-Funk-Schacht-Strasse 2
(map)
around 1915 Typical building in the city center, of importance in terms of building history and local history as well as urban planning.

Two-storey solid plastered building over an elongated floor plan with a hipped roof and various roof structures, base made of polygonal masonry, in the eastern part of the building high roof bay windows with curved gable, covered arched entrance, upper floor and roof with slate covering, in the northern part of the building the community hall, original leaded glass windows and window stock replaced in some cases Front door with arched skylight and oval glass field

09209461
 


Former department store Old State Road 2c
(map)
1929-1930 Extension building in the rear part of the property, built according to designs by the architect and former Gropius employee Bernhard Sturtzkopf, an architecturally and historically significant example of New Building (Bauhaus style), see also the Schocken department store in Chemnitz, evidence of everyday and consumer culture, also in terms of local development significant.

Four-storey cube in skeleton construction, on the north long side with a staircase in front, arbors and elevator in between, north-western corner of the building with shop window area on the ground floor in exposed clinker brickwork, originally narrow ribbon windows as on the third floor, which, however, were widened by a rung field as on the third floor due to use , Building plastered, interior fittings (stairs, railings, partially doors) preserved.

09209488
 


Railway bridge on the Neuoelsnitz – Wüstenbrand line Anton-Günther-Strasse
(map)
1930s Stone arch bridge, of importance in terms of traffic and railway history.

Single arched railway bridge with segment arched passage and embankment walls made of natural stone (sandstone cuboid).

09209417
 


Memorial to the fallen of the First World War with an honorary grove Outer Stollberger Strasse
(map)
after 1918 (war memorial) Significant in local history.

Area surrounded by beech hedge with a cenotaph made of sandstone: massive obelisk on a base with crowning cube and reliefs of the Iron Cross.

09209423
 


Two double houses in a settlement Outer Stollberger Strasse 54; 56
(map)
1920s In the sense of garden city architecture based on designs by the Chemnitz architects Zapp & Basarke , a group of buildings of architectural significance.

Two-storey solid plastered building on an angled floor plan, both structures connected by arched passages, base clinker facing masonry, between the ground floor and upper floor a kind of roof apron with a profiled eaves area, southern structure with a gabled central projection and covered entrance (roof on wooden studs), hipped roof with semi-circular windows, lost original Shutters, reddish-colored scratch plaster, fine plaster on window and door / gate pockets; inside: original doors, stairs with board balusters, terrazzo floor, surrounding lawn with hedgerow.

09209422
 


Two duplex houses in a miners' settlement, with a connecting structure Outer Stollberger Strasse 57; 59; 61; 63
(map)
Early 1920s (information) In the sense of garden city architecture based on designs by the Chemnitz architects Zapp & Basarke, a row of buildings of architectural historical importance.

Two squat-looking one-and-a-half-storey double residential buildings with a mansard hipped roof and wide street-side gable, combined with a round arched gate, the entrances to the apartments on the narrow sides, partly through round arched gates, the window openings almost square with facings in fine plaster, ground floor and gable with original gray plaster and mansard floor slated With a curved roof foot, a small garden at the back, hardly any windows from the period of construction, but the doors have been preserved, as well as a pair of shutters with slats and the holders for flower boxes.

09209420
 


Gas station Outer Stollberger Strasse 75
(map)
1930s Rarely preserved type of building in the region in an authentic state of preservation, significance in terms of building history, traffic history and technology history, evidence of the development of private transport.

Tank attendant house as a massive plastered building and a canopy resting on two supports with a flat hipped roof, in the eaves area on both sides the inscription "Tankdienst" and on the hip the gas station sign, a circled T as neon sign.

09209419
 


Cottage Bachgasse 5
(map)
around 1700 Authentically preserved building typical of the time and landscape in a hillside location that characterizes the townscape, part of the historic house development, probably one of the oldest buildings in the village, of historical and structural importance.

Ground floor solid, plastered, upper floor recessed to the first floor (first floor originally half-timbered?), Upper floor single-bar framework, on the street side with flattened headbands on the posts, protruding wooden nails, tapped floor-high struts and profiled threshold (only partially visible), gable roof with beaver tail Crown coverage.

09209475
 


School building with gym and auditorium extension as well as surrounding open space and pedestrian bridge Badstrasse 1
(map)
marked 1955 Well-preserved, architecturally high-quality, functional building from the 1950s typical of the time, of architectural, local and social historical importance, particularly representative, unique testimony to the early GDR building and education policy.

Very broad, elongated and flat two-storey building with a gym wing in the south-west, rear auditorium and inner courtyard, symmetrically structured facade of the main building with a central five-axis risalit as the entrance area, elevated with a triangular gable, the three-axis entrance and overlying arbor with set Doric columns in the central axis the slate-covered gable roof, turret with lantern and weather vane, inner courtyard with a water basin and two animal sculptures, the floor lined with slates, access to the auditorium on both sides of the inner courtyard along corridors with windows, entire building complex on a flat granite ashlar plinth, garments and structural elements in sandstone, original plasterwork, the sprouts For the most part already renewed from the point of view of the preservation of historical monuments, the original wooden windows on the central projectile (cross-faced windows), doors, floor coverings have been preserved, otherwise all interior fittings that are solidly built such as doors, arched flooring, artificial stone columns in the foyer, banisters, lamps, cloakrooms and some of the furniture have largely been preserved.

09209439
 


School building with connecting corridor, gymnasium and auditorium, seven former dormitories and surrounding open space Badstrasse 4
(map)
marked 1954 Spacious school complex in architectural forms typical of the time, training center for miners, testimony to the early GDR building and education policy, of local and architectural importance.
  • Main building: Elongated three-storey (23: 5 axes) main building with classrooms, attached gym with connecting corridor and workshop, entire building complex on quarry stone plan masonry base and with slate-covered hipped roofs, on the main building a gallery of standing dormers and asymmetrically arranged roof turrets / bell tower, the middle 10 window axes in Closer succession, on the courtyard side, three long window strips mark the stairwell, the entrance area arcade-like with segmented arched passages, their walls and the outside staircase in granite, pillars clad in quarry stone, entire facade provided with plastered plaster, eaves area profiled, over the entrance area typical relief of a group of three (teachers, students and younger miners), new window, originally probably a richer sprout,
  • Cafeteria: Two-storey head building (administration?) With a single-storey, elongated dining room extension over an L-shaped floor plan, on a broken stone base, with a slate hipped roof and standing dormer windows, side access via stairs into the dining room, original plastering, windows renewed with the loss of the probably richer original sprouting, originals double-leaf glass door, life-size sculpture of a miner in the access area to the cafeteria,
  • Dormitories: a total of seven free-standing two-storey plastered buildings with a slate hipped roof and standing dormer windows, five buildings have already been renovated, the rest of the original plastered plaster, entrance area with quarry stone framing and outside staircase.
09209438
 


Residential house in open development, with gate pillars and fencing Bahnhofstrasse 6
(map)
around 1905 Typical apartment building with Art Nouveau influences, in a central location, part of the Wilhelminian style development along Bahnhofstraße, with numbers 8 and 10 forming an ensemble, of architectural significance.

Two-storey, solid plastered building over a rectangular floor plan with a protruding hipped roof, central risalit with curved gable and asymmetrically arranged stand bay, upper bay window and attic in ornamental framework, the window openings segment arch-shaped with drilled walls, double or triple coupled in the risalit.

09209534
 


Residential house in open development Bahnhofstrasse 8
(map)
around 1905 Typical apartment building in a central location, part of the Wilhelminian style development along Bahnhofstrasse, with numbers 6 and 10 forming an ensemble, of architectural significance.

Two-and-a-half-storey solid construction in yellow clinker facing brickwork over a rectangular floor plan (two times four axes) with a two-axis central projectile, roof bay window and a moderately inclined gable roof, base made of natural stone polygonal masonry, dividing elements such as cornices, corner blocks as well as window frames, triangular gable roofing in the The facade also has dark clinker strips.

09209487
 


Residential house in open development, with gate pillar Bahnhofstrasse 10
(map)
around 1905 Typical apartment building in a central location, part of the Wilhelminian style development along Bahnhofstrasse, with numbers 6 and 8 forming an ensemble, historically important.

Two-storey solid plastered building (brick masonry) on a rectangular floor plan (three by five axes) with a three-axis central projectile, roof bay window and saddle roof, natural stone plinth, window openings on the ground floor in the form of segment arches, continuous cornice in the lintel area, plastered corner pilasters on the building and risali corners, upper floor window with triangular gable Roofing on consoles, triple-coupled in the risalit, roof bay with double-coupled arched windows, lateral volutes and curved gable with round window, cranked eaves, the roof covered with Preolit ​​shingles.

09209533
 


Residential house in open development, with garden Bahnhofstrasse 15
(map)
around 1900 Example of the loose Wilhelminian-style development on the commercial street in the direction of the train station, of importance in terms of building history and the history of local development.

One-storey clinker brick building on an approximately square floor plan with a multi-parted facade structure (risalite, bay window), ground floor window segmented arched, profiled window walls with apex stone, structured cornices probably in painted natural stone, on the street-side risalit, coupled arched windows with straight roofing and terracotta top) (volutes Gable roof with ridge palmette, standing dormer window with profiled stone frame and triangular gable roofing.

09209491
 


Residential house in open development in a corner Bahnhofstrasse 26
(map)
around 1887 Example of a Wilhelminian-style building along Bahnhofsstraße, of significance in terms of building history and site development.

Two-storey solid plastered building on an angled floor plan with broken corner, there segment-arched entrance with a canopy resting on volute consoles, flat natural stone base, several articulated cornices, plaster grooves, ground floor window in segmental arch form, on the upper floor rectangular window with straight or triangular gable roof, originally with pilaster roof, window on the corner Probably a balcony, dormer window at the broken corner with arched gable and palmette crowning, expanded mansard roof with slate covering and standing dormer windows, for example the original double-winged entrance door, some historical gallows windows with fluted posts.

09209489
 


Residential house in open development Bahnhofstrasse 51
(map)
around 1900 Typical apartment building with neo-Gothic style elements, part of the Wilhelminian-style development along Bahnhofstrasse, of importance in terms of building history and local development.

Two-and-a-half-story solid plastered building on a rectangular floor plan (six times three axes) with a central projectile, roof bay window and saddle roof with two standing dormers, artificial stone plinth with ashlar, plaster renewed without structure (GDR friction plaster), window frames and structure parts in natural stone, ground floor window segmented arched, the two The outer window axes of the street facade on the first and second floors are each coupled by twisted 3/4 columns with Gothic-style bud capitals, the gables are stepped - richer in the roof bay - and with obelisk attachments.

09209537
 


Station entrance building and two signal boxes including the remains of the track in their immediate vicinity as well as 18 lighting fixtures for the track system
More pictures
Station entrance building and two signal boxes including the remains of the track in their immediate vicinity as well as 18 lighting fixtures for the track system Bahnhofstrasse 94
(map)
around 1880 Local historical, architectural and traffic historical importance.
  • Station: Broad plastered building on an H-shaped floor plan with a symmetrically structured facade, single-storey middle hall and two-storey side elevations, sandstone walls and cornices, entrances and windows on the ground floor, each as arched openings with diamond-coated apex stones, originally preserved smooth plaster with grooves on the ground floor, on the rear wooden shelter, original gallows window with 8-parting, some original doors preserved,
  • Two signal boxes: In the south-eastern area of ​​the railway site, two-story buildings with a boarded-up upper floor and hipped roof with beaver tail covering, original windows,
  • The third on Bahnhofstrasse north of the reception building: three-storey plastered building with a flat hipped roof, all-round glazing on the upper storey, another signal box (parcel 1438/41) has been demolished.
09209493
 


villa Deutschlandschachtstrasse 2
(map)
1889 Red clinker building with plaster elements, of architectural and local importance.

Two-storey, red clinker brick building with plaster elements (bezels, mirrors) and a flat sloping roof, striking the "Bay Windows", which were very progressive for the construction period, original banisters.

09302624
 


Residential house in open development (with eastern extension) and gate pillars Deutschlandschachtstrasse 5c
(map)
1912 Villa-like building, built by the well-known Munich architect Emanuel von Seidl as a residential building for the »Germany« trade union, with the interior design and the surrounding environment largely preserved in its original form, of architectural, local and architectural significance.

Two-storey solid plastered building with a rectangular floor plan with hipped roof, street-side risalit with entrance and upstream two-armed straight staircase with a platform as well as a tower-like eastern extension, the ground floor with built-in plaster, roof apron between the ground floor and first floor, upper floor slate-clad, roofing slate, the arched door with original door leaf, Kloben indicate formerly existing shutters, some of the original wooden blinds, brackets for flower boxes and window grilles, as well as trellises, inside some of the doors, stoves and stucco ceilings that were still in construction.

09209415
 


Machine hall of the former Germany shaft I and heap of the former Germany shafts I and II Deutschlandschachtstrasse 5e
(map)
last third of the 19th century The last authentically preserved testimony to this mine, its importance in terms of local history and industrial / mining history.

Clinker brick hall with an approximately square floor plan (three by four axes), on a polygonal masonry base in sandstone, vertical division of the facade by pilaster strips, horizontal division under the eaves by tooth cut and German band, arched windows with small metal sprouts, moderately inclined gable roof with overhang, Germany shaft was built from 1872 to 1877 sunk, further in 1879 and 1920, then backfilled in 1969.

09209495
 


Clubhouse (No. 12) with extension (No. 12a), fence, gate entrance and surrounding garden Deutschlandschachtstrasse 12; 12a
(card)
1908 Erected for the miners' union “Germany” by the well-known Munich architect Emanuel von Seidl, of architectural and local history as well as architectural significance.

Two-storey solid plastered building with a rectangular floor plan with a hipped roof and bat dormers, risalit and archway on the SW side, followed by the extension, to the garden side (south), entrance with terrace and two-armed stairs made of granite ashlar, granite plinth, roof apron protruding far between the ground floor and upper floor with a canopy-like Underside (probably stucco), upper floor with asbestos paneling, gable slated, roofing Preolit ​​shingles, the windows not renewed in accordance with the monument, the flower boxes still original, a few shutters with dark green paint, the narrow doors with skylights (main entrance and side entrance), wrought-iron window grilles, banisters and As far as can be seen, the solid interior fittings, gate pillars made of stamped concrete with spherical crowning and original fence slats, one and a half-story extension with basket arch gate passage, solid plastered ground floor on a granite base, roof apron and mansard hipped roof asbestos panels disguised.

09209414
 


Residential house in open development in a corner Dr.-Otto-Nuschke-Strasse 2
(map)
marked 1897 Appealingly designed tenement house with clinker brick facade in a location that characterizes the townscape in the intersection area, part of the Wilhelminian style development of the town, of architectural significance.

Inscribed "1897" (on the northern risalit gable), two-storey clinker building with a steep slate hipped roof and standing dormers, supported on polygonal masonry plinths made of porphyry tuff, dividing elements such as drapery, corner blocks, cornices and gable elements (spherical tops, volutes) in sandstone on the north facade Risalite with stepped gable, on the street side segment-arched shop windows and entrances, partly coupled with sandstone columns, historical gallows windows, beautiful original double-winged front door with skylight.

09209485
 


Eastern stable house and northern side building of a four-sided courtyard Dr.-Otto-Nuschke-Strasse 12
(map)
Kern possibly around 1600 Both buildings on the upper floor are half-timbered, of importance in terms of building history and house history.
  • Residential stable house: Solid ground floor, walls 60–90 centimeters thick, typical three-part floor plan, fountain in the hall, cowshed and other utility rooms with groin vaults, very deep cellar vault (quarry stone barrel), upper floor all four sides half-timbered, collar beam roof, reclining chair, in documents to the 16th century tracing,
  • Side building: first floor stables with Prussian cap vaults, upper floor half-timbered.
09209471
 


Residential house in open development Dr.-Otto-Nuschke-Strasse 100
(map)
around 1905 High-quality plastered building with design elements of Art Nouveau, rare example for the region, testimony to the influence of major architectural trends on small-town construction, importance in terms of building history.

Two-storey, solid plastered building with a flat, sloping, slate-covered gable roof and four caterpillar caterpillars each, symmetrically structured facade, the two central window axes accentuated by a central projection with a curved gable, there teardrop-shaped windows, grooved corner pilasters with pillar attachments, profiled and cranked eaves cornice, on the gable ends which results in a semicircle, various dividing elements such as plaster strips, pilaster strips, structured plastered surfaces (parapet mirror of the windows), original Art Nouveau front door, windows renovated in accordance with listed buildings, building is refurbished based on the findings, color: dividing elements in dusky pink with black edging, original wrought iron banisters in the stairwell .

09209430
 


Residential house in open development Emil-Junghannß-Strasse 11
(map)
around 1800 Timber and landscape typical half-timbered building in good original condition, of architectural significance, due to the elevated location in the road junction area of ​​urban significance.

Solid ground floor with new plaster, entrance porch, upper floor double-bar framework with rich storey-high bracing, slated gable sides, crooked hip roof with pike dormer, Preolit ​​clapboard, without historical window stock.

09209531
 


Two multi-family houses (No. 5 and No. 6/8) in a settlement Franz-Schubert-Strasse 5; 6; 8
(card)
Late 1920s Monument-relevant parts of a closed settlement complex with multi-family houses, largely authentically preserved buildings typical of the time, part of a larger contiguous settlement area with houses from different times, evidence of the housing and social policy around 1930 due to the industrial development of the place, of architectural and social historical importance

Individual features of the aggregate settlement Robert-Schumann-Straße (see also aggregate 09305386, Robert-Schumann-Straße 12-24)

09209544
 


Halde of the former Friedens- and the former Hedwigschachtes Friedensschachtstrasse
(map)
19th century Significance in local history and mining history, dump shaping the landscape. 09301383
 


Cemetery chapel, group of sculptures, miners 'memorial and soldiers' graves for those killed in the First and Second World Wars, as well as a cemetery gate with two gate pillars Friedhofstrasse
(map)
1897 Structurally and locally of importance.

Individual features of the aggregate cemetery Oelsnitz (see also aggregate 09306090):

  • Chapel: Hall church with an approximately square floor plan on a polygonal masonry base, central hall with polygonal choir, entrance porch and annexes on both sides, gable roof with ridge turret, entrance porch with arched portal and set Doric columns, above in the gable triangle of the hall large round window, the side rooms with separate arched entrances, as at the main entrance over granite steps, the window walls of the arched windows and the portals in sandstone, the facade as a whole in clinker brickwork, the roof covered with slate, original wooden

Lattice windows, inside open roof structure, so-called Kaiserstuhl,

  • Sculpture group: Blessing Christ and kneeling Maria Magdalena (Noli me tangere) memorial stone in the Oelsnitz cemetery for the 57 victims of the mine disaster on the peace shaft of the German trade union in 1921,
  • Soldiers' graves and memorials to the First and Second World War: simple wooden crosses, natural stone wall with an iron cross.
09209469
 


Unity of the cemetery Oelsnitz Friedhofstrasse
(map)
around 1900 Structurally and locally of importance.

Material entity with the following individual monuments: cemetery chapel, group of sculptures, miners 'memorial and soldiers' graves for those who died in the First and Second World Wars, as well as cemetery gate with two gate pillars (see individual monuments 09209469) and cemetery with cemetery design (garden monument) and enclosure (material component part)

Description see above.

09306090
 


Dump of the former Frisch-Glück-Schacht Frischglückweg
(map)
1871-1882 Testimony to the coal mining industry in Oelsnitz, significance in terms of mining history and landscape. 09209541
 


Dump of the former Vaterlandgrube shaft Garnstrasse
(map)
1872-1885 Testimony to the coal mining industry in Oelsnitz, significance in terms of mining history and landscape. 09209542
 


Residential stable house, two side buildings (the south-western one with upper arbor) and barn of a four-sided courtyard as well as an archway and water trough Hartensteiner Strasse 6
(map)
marked 1864 Old location Oberwürschnitz, stately, authentically preserved courtyard typical of the time and landscape, impressive due to its cohesion, part of the original structure of the Waldhufendorf, significance for the townscape and architectural history, of interest for rural house research.
  • Residential stable house: Solid plastered ground floor with intact facade structure, natural stone walls, door with straight profiled roofing, the half-timbered upper floor with storey-high struts, half-timbered construction, plastered partitions, upper storey on the courtyard side massive, high hipped roof with pike dome, doors and windows new,
  • Side building: two-storey half-timbered building with half-hipped roof, cantilevered upper storey with upper arcade, (10 arches, two of which are boarded up as dovecotes), pegged curved headbands on the posts, open driveway with scissor headbands, inside was the porstube,
  • Stable: Solid, plastered ground floor with segment arched doors and gates, upper floor double-bar framework with storey-high struts, gable roof, historic wooden doors and gates, as well as 6-part windows,
  • Barn: boarded half-timbered construction with a moderately sloping, slate-covered gable roof.
  • Stable house marked "1864" (street-side door), side building marked "1822" (entrance), stable 2nd half of the 19th century, barn 2nd half of the 19th century.
09209514
 


Residential stable house and attached side building (with upper arbor) of a three-sided courtyard Hartensteiner Strasse 20
(map)
2nd half of the 18th century Old location Oberwürschnitz, authentically preserved buildings typical of the time and the landscape, part of the original structure of the Waldhufendorf village, significance for the local image and of interest for rural house research.
  • Residential stable house: Broadly positioned building (five by five axes) with a gable roof and pike dormer, the ground floor made of solid plastered quarry stone masonry, window and door walls made of Hilbersdorf porphyry tuff, classicistic door walls with a straight, profiled roof, the half-timbered upper floor slightly cantilevered on the gable side and clad with asbestos panels , double-bar on the courtyard side with rich, storey-high bracing, single-bar above the stable part (chest bolt deformed), window axes on the gable sides do not match (i.e. ground floor probably massively renewed), roofing asbestos-cement panels, without historical window stock,
  • Attached side building: solid ground floor, plastered, upper floor half-timbered with seven-bay upper arcade (basket arches), gable roof covered with asbestos panels.
09209518
 


Residential stable house, side building and gate pillar of a four-sided courtyard Hartensteiner Strasse 34
(map)
around 1800 Old location Oberwürschnitz, half-timbered buildings typical of the time and the landscape in good original condition, part of the original structure of the Waldhufendorf village, historically important.
  • Residential stable house: Stately structure (three by five axes) with gable roof, solid ground floor, plastered, window frames natural stone, intact facade structure, upper floor half-timbered, partly visible, partly plastered and clad, on the street side two horizontal windows, half-timbered and double-sided with floor-high braces, saddle roof with Interlocking tile roofing, historical windows lost,
  • Side building: solid ground floor, plastered, upper floor plastered half-timbering, partly boarded up, gable roof with interlocking tile covering, historical window stock (gallows window, sliding window on the dovecote), old wooden doors.
09209517
 


Residential house with a sawmill annex, side building and barn of a mill property as well as a former mill ditch Hartensteiner Strasse 97
(map)
around 1720 Old location Oberwürschnitz, authentically preserved courtyard, of local and architectural importance.

Residential house: stately two-storey building on a slight hillside, therefore a relatively high, massive ground floor (modified with horizontal windows), small rear water house extension, on the north gable side natural stone window casings with grating, the upper floor in visible half-timbering with flat profiled swelling, stiffening by pegged K-struts, Eaves and filler wood also profiled, wooden roof gutter, gable triangles slightly protruding, the former position of the lavatory bay recognizable on the eastern eaves side, south side on the upper floor slated, the gable roof covered with artificial slate (?) And roofing felt, some historical windows with 6-partitions still preserved.

09209511
 


Residential stable house (surrounding area) of a two-sided courtyard Hartensteiner Strasse 113
(map)
inside marked 1781 Old location Oberwürschnitz, building typical of the time and the landscape, the only building in this part of the village with a surrounding construction, significant significance for the history of the building and the townscape.

Two-storey building with a rectangular floor plan with a steep gable roof, the ground floor massive with preserved two-by-two-yoke framework in the living part (curved headbands and tension bars), the plank room removed and massively replaced in the 1950s, the ceiling allegedly preserved under the false ceiling, block window frames and wooden ones Window sills, partly original, partly reconstructed, the half-timbered upper floor visible on the courtyard side and slightly cantilevered with a profiled threshold, newly boarded up on the gable, the opening sizes original, the existing doors and windows new, the roof structure and the slate covering new, street side without superstructures, Rear windows, inside new walls based on the old floor plan.

09209509
 


Residential house in open development Hauptstrasse 12
(map)
around 1850 Old location Neuwiese, half-timbered building typical of the time and landscape, of architectural significance.

Ground floor solid and plastered, modified window openings, rear extension (water house?), Upper floor half-timbered clad with original window opening sizes, gable roof with interlocking tile covering.

09209501
 


Residential house in open development, with gazebo Hedwigschachtstrasse 2
(map)
3rd quarter of the 19th century Example of the loose Wilhelminian style development of the place, authentically preserved, of architectural significance.
  • Residential building: Single-storey solid building with a rectangular floor plan with a two-axis central projectile, roof bay window and a moderately inclined gable roof, corner and window structure using bricks, with profiled purlin ends, original gallows windows and shutters preserved,
  • Gazebo: Small half-timbered building with an L-shaped floor plan with a gable roof, original wooden door.
09209490
 


Residential house in open development and garden Höhlholzstrasse 41
(map)
Early 1930s Authentic, authentic single-family house of the time in simple, traditional designs, building history testimony to housing and settlement policy in the 1930s.

Easily single-storey, solid plastered building on a clinker base with a gable roof (rear extension later), central entrance with a small vestibule as a wooden lath, sparingly profiled eaves area, folded tile roof covering, original box windows with rising posts, shutters and door also from the construction period.

09209425
 


Former forester's house Innere Neuwieser Strasse 8
(map)
probably 18th century Half-timbered building typical of the landscape, preserved in good original condition, as a former manor forest house of architectural and local historical importance.

Broadly positioned building with a flat hipped roof and small pike dormer, ground floor massive, with GDR plaster, window frames probably removed or plastered, upper floor half-timbered, boarded up, window openings regularly and in one axis with the wall openings on the ground floor, roof covering in slate.

09209532
 


Residential house in open development, with fencing and gate entrance Karl-Liebknecht-Strasse 1
(map)
around 1900 Authentically preserved residential building from the Wilhelminian era, of architectural significance.
  • One-and-a-half-storey solid building with a cross-shaped floor plan on a sandstone base with a slate-covered gable roof, the entire facade clad with light red clinker bricks, window frames with straight roofing in sandstone, small glazed wooden veranda on the garden side, gallows windows largely preserved in their original form, as well as the two-winged front door.
  • Enclosure with wrought iron fence, brick gate pillars and hedge.
09209428
 


Transformer tower Gravel path
(map)
around 1930 Testimony to the local energy supply, its importance in terms of technology history and the townscape.

Plastered brick building with protruding broken pyramid roof, with historical insulators, original smooth plaster.

09209433
 


Cottage Kiesweg 1
(map)
around 1800 Authentically preserved building typical of the time and landscape, part of the older, rural local structure, of social and historical importance.

Solid ground floor, plastered, window frames and door jambs porphyry tuff, door with roof, rear side and toilet extension, slightly protruding upper floor half-timbered, slated, gable roof (tar paper covering), rear side plastered, original window sizes, historical window stock lost, cloisters of the window shutters in the window walls and some shutters receive.

09209434
 


Residential house, annexed side building, barn and further side building of a three-sided courtyard, with front garden Kiesweg 15
(map)
around 1905 Stately, younger, landscape-typical courtyard of a farmer who became wealthy through the sale of land (mining), evidence of architectural and social history.
  • Residential building: One and a half-story solid plastered building on an artificial stone plinth with roof bay and protruding slate-covered crooked hip roof, upper floor and gable in art nouveau-influenced decorative framework, stucco reliefs in the jamb zone on the front side: harvest sheaf and miner's symbol,
  • Lateral remise extension with boarded jamb, roof bay window and hipped roof with folded tile covering, no original window inventory,
  • Side building: ground floor solid and plastered, upper floor boarded up, hipped roof with folded tile covering, original wooden doors and gates,
  • Barn: Plastered massive ground floor, upper floor timber-framed boarded, half-hipped roof with rabbet tile covering, original wooden gates and historical (probably second-hand) windows, wooden shelter between the barn and side building.
09209432
 


church Kirchplatz
(map)
1725–1726, essentially older Baroque hall church with an older core, significance in terms of architectural and local history.

Plastered building with 5/8 choir, hipped roof with high ridge turret, with curved dome and onion, vestibule closed on three sides in the west.

09209470
 


Residential house (with surrounding area) Kirchplatz 4
(map)
probably 2nd half of the 18th gravel road Authentically preserved building typical of the time and landscape in the center of the village, a rare half-timbered house for the region, of architectural historical importance and significance for the townscape.

Stately two-storey half-timbered building with surrounding framework over a rectangular floor plan with half-hipped roof, on the ground floor level-high pegged struts, block frame window openings, the headbands and tensioning bars of the surrounding framework sawn curved, upper floor half-timbered with simple ornamental slate, half-hipped roof with three-sided windows and old German slate all new, on the ground floor in a listed appearance.

09209466
 


Residential house in open development Lindenstrasse 11
(map)
around 1905 One of the few, largely original, Wilhelminian style rental houses in the upper village, of significant architectural significance.

Two-storey solid plastered building on an artificial stone ashlar plinth with a two-axis central risalit and roof bay, saddle roof with roof overhang, purlin ends on ornamental studs, gable tip decorated with fretwork, window frames with drilled plaster framing and straight or on the first floor and in the risalit gable field with curved braces in the medallions, Smooth plaster in different colors, (ocher-colored horizontal plaster strips), partly preserved gallows windows from the construction period.

09209468
 


Residential stable house and side building (without extension) of a three-sided courtyard Lugauer Strasse 23
(map)
18th century Residential and farm buildings typical of the time and landscape, part of the older, rural local structure.
  • Residential stable house: Elongated structure of what used to be two by eight axes (some clogged windows on the ground floor and first floor) with a steep, crippled hip roof, solid plastered ground floor (GDR spray plaster), on the garden side porphyry tuff window walls and intact facade structure, reversible changes on the courtyard side, half-timbered upper floor , slated, clad (asbestos) or plastered, roofing asbestos panels, some historical gallows windows with 6-division still preserved,
  • Side building: Massive plastered ground floor with open shed (today built by a shelter), upper floor double-bar framework with storey-high struts, gable sides slated, crooked hip roof with asbestos paneling, historical inventory of gallows windows with 6-parting.
09209472
 


Residential house in open development Lutherstrasse 29
(map)
around 1925 Authentically preserved residential building with echoes of reform style architecture, building history testimony to the influence of major architectural trends on small-town building activity, of architectural significance.

Three-storey solid plastered building on a square floor plan on a clinker base, second floor laid out like a mansard with slate and roof apron, on the south side above the first and second floor. second floor bay windows, grooved plaster strips on the building corners, hipped roof with triangular dormers.

09209464
 


Cottage Mittelgasse 3
(map)
around 1785 Authentically preserved half-timbered building typical of the time and landscape, part of the closed, preserved row of houses on Mittelgasse, of importance in terms of building history and local development.

Relatively small and simple two-storey building with a squat rectangular floor plan in eaves position facing the Mittelgasse with a steep pitched roof and rear extension (probably around 1900), the ground floor solid, the upper floor half-timbered, both floors smoothly plastered, on the ground floor smooth plastering flasks and support brackets of the former shutters, in the Upper floor simple and younger board cladding around the window opening, strong wooden eaves profile, on the upper floor and in the gable triangle asbestos panel cladding, roof without superstructures with Preolit ​​clapboard, door opening on the back.

09209481
 


Cottage Mittelgasse 4
(map)
around 1800 Authentically preserved half-timbered building typical of the time and landscape, part of the closed, preserved row of houses on Mittelgasse, of importance in terms of building history and local development.

Ground floor solid and newly plastered (structural plaster from the 1990s), original window opening sizes, street-side entrance, upper floor double-bar framework with storey-high struts, additionally boarded, gable sides slated, strongly profiled eaves, saddle roof with old German slate covering.

09209480
 


Cottage Mittelgasse 5
(map)
around 1785 Authentically preserved half-timbered building typical of the time and landscape, part of the closed, preserved row of houses on Mittelgasse, of importance in terms of building history and local development.

Solid ground floor with new plaster, upper floor half-timbered (mounted), double-bar with storey-high struts, plastered compartments like ground floor, relatively small window openings, strongly profiled eaves area, gable roof with pike and new slate covering.

09209477
 


Residential building Mittelgasse 7
(map)
around 1785 Authentically preserved half-timbered building typical of the time and landscape, half-timbered house rare for the region, part of the closed, preserved row of houses on Mittelgasse, of importance in terms of building history and local development.

Two-storey half-timbered building with surrounding framework, massive undercuts in this area, block frame windows in the half-timbered part, surrounding columns with curved, sawn and flattened headbands and tensioning bolts, massive rear extension, upper floor double-bar framework with flat profiled threshold, floor-high pegged struts, strong eaves profile and Gable roof, gable and asbestos roofing, double-leaf shutters on the ground floor

09209476
 


Cottage Mittelgasse 8
(map)
re. 1786 Authentically preserved half-timbered building typical of the time and landscape, part of the closed, preserved row of houses on Mittelgasse, of importance in terms of building history and local development.

Inscribed "1786" (inscription on fill wood), solid ground floor, heavily smoothed through renovation, but original window opening sizes, upper floor double-bar framework with storey-high struts, gable sides clad (asbestos), flat profiled threshold and strong eaves profile, saddle roof with Preolit ​​clapboard, without historical window stock.

09209479
 


Cottage Mittelgasse 10
(map)
around 1785 Authentically preserved half-timbered building typical of the time and landscape, part of the closed, preserved row of houses on Mittelgasse, of importance in terms of building history and local development.

Building renovated, massive ground floor, original window sizes, upper floor recessed onto the first floor, half-timbered upper floor with floor-high struts, strong eaves profile, gable roof with sliding, cladding and covering asbestos or Preolit ​​shingles.

09209478
 


Transformer tower and overhead line mast Mittlerer Anger 2 (opposite)
(map)
around 1930 Technical-historical significance, evidence of the electrification of the place.
  • Transformer tower: About 7 to 8 meters high, solid plastered building with a square floor plan with flat to moderately inclined tent roof, clinker base and on the street side reaching to the eaves area, simply ornamented central axis in exposed brickwork with original metal door in the lower area and original windows in the middle height, against the remaining smooth plastered surfaces offset, simple angular plaster profile in the eaves area, slate roof covering and zinc gutter original, probably original stock, probably out of order.
  • Power distribution mast: iron grid construction on a square floor plan, some with original insulators.
09209506
 


Stable house of a farm Mittlerer Anger 22
(map)
2nd half of the 18th century Old location Oberwürschnitz, upper floor half-timbered, authentically preserved building typical of the time and landscape, part of the old local structure, historically important.

Relatively elongated two-storey building with a rectangular floor plan with a steep pitched roof, the massive ground floor with original ashlar window and door walls, the door walls with straight, profiled roofing, the windows in the stable part added, followed by a shed in this area, the half-timbered upper floor facing the courtyard, in the right area with plenty of struts, in the left area except for the corner without struts, original opening sizes, the south gable clad with asbestos panels, the north gable boarded up, the roof without superstructures with interlocking tile covering.

09209507
 


Cottage Mühlenstrasse 11
(map)
around 1850 Old location Neuwiese, upper floor half-timbered, part of the historic house development of the village, largely original preserved example in the place, historically important.

Ground floor solid and plastered (possibly natural stone walls), upper floor half-timbered, boarded up, facade structure (wall-opening ratio) intact, gable roof with Preolit ​​clapboard.

09209500
 


Water house Neuwieser Strasse 34
(map)
1904 (water house) Former weather shaft of the Hermann Blasche shaft, converted as a water house, evidence of local mining and water supply, significance in terms of mining history and technology history.

Two-storey solid plastered building (brick masonry) on a square floor plan, clinker base, pilaster strips, plastered mirrors with crossed hammers, hipped roof with wood-clad lantern with ribbon windows, folded tile covering, outer ridge tiles on the eaves corners with palmette, construction-time door and barbed gallows window.

09209441
 


Former railway viaduct
More pictures
Former railway viaduct Obere Hauptstrasse
(map)
1877, later reshaped Of importance in terms of traffic history, mining history and engineering.
  • Massive railway overpass with a jacket made of rammed concrete, length 110.0 meters, height 20.5 meters, crosses the tracks in an arch over Obere Hauptstraße, Rudolf-Breitscheid-Straße and Hegebach (three differently shaped openings), with a brick viaduct at its core from 1877 with five large arched openings, due to vaulting after subsidence (as a result of local hard coal mining), the openings over Obere Hauptstrasse were closed in 1924/1925 except for a low road passage, and in 1953/1954 also the arches over Rudolf-Breitscheid -Straße, with static protection of the structure by means of rammed concrete sheathing, two of the round arches can still be seen in the area of ​​Oberen Hauptstraße, renovated in 2002 as part of the route modernization.
  • Railway line Stollberg – St. Egidien (route abbreviation StE): Saxon branch line for transporting the coal from the Lugau-Oelsnitzer coal field (second largest Saxon coal field, production between 1844 and 1971),
  • Route: From Stollberg via Oelsnitz to St. Egidien, there connection to the Dresden – Werdau railway line, development of a number of hard coal pits along the route (direct connecting tracks to shafts in Hohndorf and Oelsnitz, connection of the shafts at Lugau by means of a connecting line to the Neuoelsnitz – Wüstenbrand railway line and connection the shafts in Gersdorf by means of the Oelsnitz – Kaisergrube branch line), built from 1877, provisional freight traffic from 1878, passenger traffic from 1879, due to the topographical conditions construction of viaducts near Niederwürschnitz (Viadukt Würschnitztal), Oelsnitz (present viaduct Hegebachtal), Lichtenstein (Viaduct Hegebachtal viaduct ) and St. Egidien (Lungwitzbachtal viaduct) as well as several smaller railway overpasses and underpasses necessary, subsidence of the terrain due to coal mining - between Neuoelsnitz and Oelsnitz, subsidence up to 17 meters deep between Neuoelsnitz and Oelsnitz - resulted in renovations on the line (1954 renovation g Viadukt Hegebachtal, after cessation of mining 1971 re-leveling of Neuoelsnitz station), 2002 renovation / modernization of the line, today only little traffic on the line.
09209454
 


Residential building Obere Hauptstrasse 3
(map)
around 1800 Upper floor half-timbered clad, half-timbered construction typical of the time and landscape, of architectural significance.

The massive ground floor newly plastered (1990s), window opening sizes still original, upper floor slightly recessed, half-timbered upper floor clad with asbestos panels, gable roof with pike.

09209462
 


Residential building Obere Hauptstrasse 15
(map)
1798 Half-timbered construction typical of the time and landscape, of architectural significance.

Rebuilt after the fire of the previous building in 1798, the ground floor was solid and newly plastered, the south part was massively added, the upper floor was timbered, the north side was boarded up, the west side slated, the courtyard side timber frame visible (double-bar), window openings just below the eaves, saddle roof (one side with a crooked hip) Old German slate covering, window 1930s.

09209459
 


Residential building Obere Hauptstrasse 27
(map)
around 1800 Half-timbered construction typical of the time and landscape, of importance in terms of architectural history and the appearance of the town.

Ground floor massive and plastered, with partly lying windows, on the back (south side) water house extension, upper floor half-timbered, gable sides with asbestos cladding, street-side half-timbered visible, struts at the building corners arranged in the same direction, gable roof with relatively wide eaves-sided roof overhang, window sizes original, structure through Deformed mining consequences.

09209458
 


Western barn of a four-sided yard Obere Hauptstrasse 43
(map)
Early 18th century Authentically preserved farm building typical of the time and landscape, part of the older rural local structure, of architectural significance.

Two-storey half-timbered building on quarry stone plinth, upper storey with roof overhang on the eaves side, on the street-side gable side on the ground floor crossed struts, also on the street side headbands on the posts - all struts and straps are leafed, on the courtyard side the upper floor with storey-high struts, saddle roof, partly with cardboard roofing , North gable boarded up, west side clad, historic wooden gate.

09209452
 


Residential house of a two-sided courtyard Obere Hauptstrasse 63
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century Half-timbered construction typical of the time and landscape, part of the older local structure, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor, partially preserved natural stone window frames, door frames removed, upper floor half-timbered, plastered, south side with stenciled slate cladding, gable roof with asbestos covering, double-leaf front door.

09209450
 


Side building of a two-sided courtyard Obere Hauptstrasse 67
(map)
1st third of the 18th century Probably one of the oldest surviving buildings in the old village, historically significant, scientifically documentary and defining the local image.

Small two-storey half-timbered building, partly boarded up, on the gable side K-strut-like leaf stiffening, on the eastern eaves side and on the ground floor as St. Andrew's crosses, gable roof with slate covering, on the street side the upper floor and gable triangle with asbestos lining, original central casement windows on the southern eaves side.

09209447
 


school Obere Hauptstrasse 68a
(map)
1907-1908 Old location Oberoelsnitz, built in reform style, building forms influenced by the architecture of the Deutscher Werkbund, significant in terms of building history, local history and the local image.

Elongated two-storey solid plastered building with two wide side projections with mansard gables, central projection with arched entrance and clock / bell tower, between the ground floor and upper floor roof apron, upper floor slated, different roof shapes of the individual building sections slated, in the east auditorium with kind of apse, in the plastered field above the entrance the lettering " Goetheschule ”and“ Without diligence, no price ”.

09209451
 


Former stable house of a farm Obere Hauptstrasse 96
(map)
Mid 19th century Construction typical of the time and landscape, part of the older, rural local structure, of architectural significance.

Plastered massive ground floor with partial changes (horizontal windows and porch), half-timbered upper floor with asbestos cladding on all sides, gable roof with asbestos covering, historical gallows windows partially preserved.

09209449
 


Residential stable house in a four-sided courtyard Obere Hauptstrasse 124
(map)
around 1800 Typical building of the time and landscape in good original condition, part of the older, rural local structure, of architectural significance.

Massive, newly plastered ground floor, the original facade structure, however, largely preserved, the upper floor timber-framed, half-hipped roof with asbestos panel covering, original window sizes, one gable side massively replaced, the heavy collar beam truss construction of the roof truss could be 200 years old, the former stable part with Prussian cap vault, however, only 100– 120 years. There is said to have been a fire in the building around 1860. The walls on the first floor are surprisingly only about 40 centimeters thick and do not seem to be made of field stone.

09209446
 


Residential stable house (No. 134) and side building (No. 134c) of a farm Obere Hauptstrasse 134; 134c
(card)
Early 19th century Courtyard complex typical of the time and landscape, part of the older, rural local structure, historically important.
  • Residential stable house: Solid ground floor, plastered, enlargement / clogging of the original window openings, door openings still original with natural stone walls, in the living part with straight profiled roofing, the upper floor double-bar framework with storey-high struts, windows on the street gable side (also in the gable triangle), gable roof with rebated tile covering, historical Lost windows and doors,
  • Side building: Elevated building with partially solid ground floor, here a small segmented arched door, otherwise half-timbered, boarded up, almost the entire ground floor is occupied by two large wooden gates, the gable roof covered with asbestos panels, a historical gallows window and a ventilation opening with slats in the jamb zone.
09209526
 


Southern barn and tree of a three-sided farm Obere Hauptstrasse 150
(map)
Early 19th century Authentically preserved farm building typical of the landscape, part of the old local structure, of architectural significance.

Broadly supported structure on partly plastered quarry stone and brick base, entire building half-timbered, plastered, partly lined, crooked hip roof with old German slate covering, two wooden gates on each eaves side.

09209442
 


Residential house of a two-sided courtyard Obere Hauptstrasse 154
(map)
Mid 19th century Construction typical of the time and landscape, part of the old local structure, of architectural significance.

Solid ground floor with GDR plaster, porphyry tuff window frames, upper floor half-timbered, corner struts running inwards, gable clad with Preolit ​​shingles, original window sizes.

09209443
 


Cottage with manual pump Oberer Anger 8
(map)
18th century Old location Oberwürschnitz, building typical of the time and the landscape, part of the historical house development of the place, of historical importance.

Two-storey and relatively wide-spread building with a squat rectangular floor plan with a historical extension (end of the 19th century) and a steep pitched roof, the ground floor in plastered brick masonry probably younger (with a door in the 2nd half of the 19th century), originally probably made of unfired clay bricks or half-timbered Stone door jambs and window jambs, no stable part, on the northeastern gable side a widened window of the recent times, the half-timbered upper floor plastered, original opening sizes (on the gable relatively high up, probably single-bar framework) with five axes on the entrance side, the plaster in the middle 20th century, the roof without superstructures and the gable triangles clad with asbestos panels, the existing doors and windows probably from the end of the 19th century, on the ground floor with winter windows, the two-winged door with skylight, the pump in front of the front door wooden with a small pommel crown.

09209508
 


Building complex of the Kaiserin-Augusta-Schachtes, later Karl-Liebknecht-Schacht, with gatekeeper's house, transformer station with transition, machine hall and winding tower, hoisting machine hall II, factory kitchen / administration, office building, material management, mine rescue service / factory security, workshop I, workshop II, power station with transformer station and boiler house Pflockenstrasse 28
(map)
around 1900 (material management) Authentically preserved industrial complex with buildings of the so-called Red Modernism, parts of which were designed by the Chemnitz architects Erich Basarke and the Lichtenstein architect Paul Beckert , testimony to the formerly supraregional important coal mining in the Lugau-Oelsnitzer district, industrial history, local history, architectural history as well as the townscape and landscape of Meaning.

A) Gate: small brick building with open corner and hipped roof
B) Transformer station with transition: today a museum
C) Machine hall and winding tower: Hall with a T-shaped floor plan, the two- or three-storey façades with windows, simple eaves profile and flat saddle roof, in the middle the multi-storey one Enclosure of the winding tower, as a steel skeleton with
brick infill, sheet metal cladding riveted to the building corners, upper floor protruding on consoles and interrupted by light strips, pyramid roof D) Conveyor machine hall II: simple brick cube (brickwork in Gothic style) with flat roof and six window strips with metal lattice industrial windows, on the ground floor -Area in the same axes square windows, side door opening and in its axis wrought-iron clock
E) Factory kitchen: (social building, formerly with as well as dining and culture room): three-storey brick building in a Gothic style, door jambs with scratched stone plaster, different windowing of the facade e, semicircular final wing of the building on the west side
F) Office building: one-storey brick building with an almost square floor plan with staircase construction, high hipped roof and loft extensions, brick masonry in block formation, economical pilaster strips and tooth cut in the eaves area, roof box with original stencil painting (blue and white flower frieze) and partly historical windows and doors preserved
G) Material management: single-storey brick building over an elongated floor plan with a transverse house-like head structure and a moderately inclined gable roof, economical structure through pilaster strips and cornices in the eaves area and east aisle, some original windows and doors
H) mine weir / plant security : simple two-storey brick building in the Gothic style Association with a moderately inclined gable roof, door jambs in scratched stone plaster
I) Workshop I: three-aisled brick building (steel girder infill) in Gothic association with windowed wall surfaces, mansard-like roof with glass surfaces
J) Workshop II: Three-storey cube in brick masonry in a Gothic connection with a very flat gable roof, continuous ribbon windows
K) Boiler coal bunker: elongated hall with very flat saddle roof, steel girder infill with tiles in the stretcher bond, continuous ribbon window under the eaves, side board crates, in some cases also massive attachments, boiler coal bunker 2015
L) Boiler house: cube in stone-faced brick masonry in a Gothic bond, (reinforced concrete skeleton construction), continuous ribbon windows under the eaves and glass wall surface (window panels) above the entrance, several additions in the same design
M) power station with transformer station (today a teaching swimming pool and sports hall ): very elongated hall made of brick masonry with a flat sloping gable roof, window and door openings framed by a simple, slightly protruding roll layer, some entrances also with clinker porches, aesthetic effect of the stone-transparent masonry due to the different brightness of brick and K left and through the wall association (Gothic association), the former associated compressor station demolished before 2010

Today used as a museum (AE):
Hall with winding tower and winding machine hall II (formerly contained a converter system, the team bathroom and the district rooms), social building, transformer station with transition and porter's house

09209521
 


House and outbuildings, with fencing and gate system Pflockenstrasse 35
(map)
around 1900 Clinker brick facade, authentically preserved residential building from the Wilhelminian era, a building that characterizes the street scene and is of architectural importance.
  • Residential house: Two-storey solid construction on a sandstone polygonal masonry base with central projectile, roof bay and slightly protruding flat gable roof, entire building with light red clinker cladding, darker shaped stones on the walls of the segment-arched windows and doors and as cornices, original house and entrance doors, windows renewed,
  • Ancillary buildings: Single-storey clinker brick building with a slate-covered gable roof, segment-arched windows, shed doors and garage door, historical inventory of windows and doors, clinker brick courtyard paving,
  • Enclosure: gate pillars, wrought iron fence and hedge enclosure.
09209429
 


Pipe bridge Pflockenstrasse 49 (near)
(map)
1950s (pipe bridge) Monument to the industrial development of the place, of importance in terms of local development.

The pipe bridge is a monument to the industrial development of the village of Oelsnitz, which is primarily shaped by the mining industry and through it draws a large part of its cultural identity. The construction of the Augusta shaft, not far from the property, provides impressive evidence of this. The pipe bridge was built in the 1950s. Although coal production in Oelsnitz was not ended until 1972, early attention was given to reusing the facilities. From then on, the shaft's power plant was used to produce district heating for the new development area in Lugau and for the "Textima". The pipeline ran along the former lumber yard on Pflockenstrasse, which was then crossed by the bridge. Even if the visual connection between this overpass and the shaft is no longer there, as new buildings have now been built on the old wood yard, the context in terms of content is clearly given.
Such re-use of existing technology can be regarded as a cultural-historical specificity of the GDR, which, in addition to the industrial-historical aspect, defines the importance of this relic.

09299791
 


Residential stable of a three-sided courtyard Promnitzer Fußweg 2
(map)
marked 1856 Stately building typical of the time and landscape in a location that shapes the townscape, part of the older, rural structure of the town, historically important.

Solid ground floor, plastered quarry stone masonry, the window frames and door frames with straight roofing made of porphyry tufa, inscribed "18 CFL 56", intact facade structure, upper floor double-bar Prussian half-timbered, plastered compartments, floor-high struts, crooked roof with long pike, slate cladding, gable cladding , relatively wide upper floor windows with gallows windows, historical double-leaf front door with skylight, door leaf probably 1920s or 1930s.

09209448
 


school-building Rathausplatz
(map)
1913, according to information Stately building located in the center of the village, influenced by the architecture of the Deutscher Werkbund, by urban planning, architectural and historical significance.

Broadly supported two-storey building with an almost square floor plan (five by six axes) with a hipped roof and various dormers on all roof surfaces and two chimneys, the windowed plinth probably made of artificial stone, arched entrance with granite walls, on the arch with diamond coating and crowning stone, including plastic on each side of a boy and girl, corner pilaster strips with relief in the upper part (children's motifs), under the roof apron another relief field with dancing and music-making putti, entire ground floor, also the plastic elements subsequently coated with thin spray plaster, between the ground floor and first floor roof apron, upper floor clad with asbestos panels , Hipped roof covered with Preolit ​​shingles, original window stock with small sprouts, two-winged door with speared glass fields and the skylight corresponding to the arched portal, inside entrance hall with wall fountain, staircase, floor coverings and lead glass windows original.

09209519
 


Fountain
Fountain Rathausplatz 1 (opposite)
(map)
marked 1914 Attractively designed facility as an artistic accent on the open space in front of the town hall, characterizing the townscape and artistic significance.

Fountain made of Rochlitz porphyry tuff on an octagonal floor plan with a round overflow, there a pedestal with the inscription “Glück Auf” and mining hammers, on it four boys dancing rounds (electroplating), inscription panel: “In memory of home donated by Herm. Rudolph z. Z. Teplitz on July 12, 1914 ”.

09209467
 


Memorial for Victims of All Tyranny (formerly: Memorial for the Victims of Fascism)
Memorial for Victims of All Tyranny (formerly: Memorial for the Victims of Fascism) Rathausplatz 3 (southern Stadthallenpark)
(map)
1951, 2018 renovated and relocated Historical meaning.

Wall made of irregular ashlar masonry over a U-shaped floor plan, in the middle a wall block with an artificial stone cover plate, flame bowl and memorial plaque "To commemorate the victims of any tyranny 30.1.1933 - 9.11.1989", formerly VVN memorial .

09209522
 


Culture house with bowling alley and city park Rathausplatz 3
(map)
1954-1956, literature Former culture house of the miners of the region, testimony to the GDR cultural and social policy, in the style of the national building tradition, local and architectural significance.

Elongated, windowed main building with ballroom functionally different additions, (for example bowling alley), determine the angular floor plan, between the side wings inner courtyard with pergola, three-axis main entrance with arbor, above the entrances relief panels with miners motifs, entire building on a flat base made of shell limestone blocks, Scratched window frames also made of shell limestone, original plaster, eaves profile with coarse scraping, hipped roof with triangular dormers and slate roofing, original building details such as lamps, balcony and window balustrade grilles have been preserved, inside largely original equipment (doors, lighting, railings, terrazzo floor), paths and terrace Lined with slate, granite cobblestones on the street side.

09209484
 


Seven multi-family houses (No. 12, 13/15, 14, 16, 17/19, 18 and 20/22/24) in a settlement Robert-Schumann-Strasse 12; 13; 14; 15; 16; 17; 18; 19; 20; 22; 24
(card)
Late 1920s Monument-relevant parts of a closed settlement complex with multi-family houses, largely authentically preserved buildings typical of the time, part of a larger contiguous settlement area with residential buildings from different times, evidence of the housing and social policy around 1930 due to the industrial development of the place, of architectural and socio-historical importance.

Individual features of the aggregate settlement Robert-Schumann-Straße (see also aggregate 09305386, same address):

Seven similarly designed three-storey solid plastered buildings, all with a longitudinal rectangular floor plan on a brick base and with a hipped roof, between the second and third floors, the roof apron and the third floor are clad with slate (or asbestos panels), resulting in a mansard roof-like effect, plaster grooves on the corner pilasters, different plaster colors, for example Areas and green corner pilaster strips or ocher areas with reddish pilaster strips, the roofs covered with slate with two-axis roof cores and sprued round windows, the windows largely renewed without gaps, only in house number 12 still some original nine-part windows, some of which have shutters, and house doors.

09209465
 


Aggregate settlement Robert-Schumann-Straße Robert-Schumann-Strasse 12; 13; 14; 15; 16; 17; 18; 19; 20; 22; 24
(card)
Late 1920s Buildings typical of the time, which are largely authentically preserved, part of a larger contiguous settlement area with blocks of flats of different origins, testimony to the housing and social policy around 1930 caused by the industrial development of the place, of architectural and socio-historical importance [residential building Robert-Schumann-Straße 21/23 demolished before 2014 ]

Subject entity with the following individual monuments: seven apartment buildings (Robert-Schumann-Strasse 12, 13/15, 14, 16, 17/19, 18 and 20/22/24) (see individual monuments 09209465) and two multi-family houses (Franz-Schubert-Strasse 5 and 6/8) (see individual monuments 09209544) of a settlement as well as front gardens and courtyard green (subject entirety parts).

09305386
 


School building (Rudolf-Breitscheid-Straße 1) and gym (Obere Hauptstraße 6) Obere Hauptstrasse 6
(map)
around 1900 Authentically preserved Wilhelminian-style functional buildings in the center of the town, significance in terms of building history, local history and the local image.
  • School: Elongated two-storey building in red clinker facing masonry with 13 axes on the eaves and with a flat hipped roof, plinth, cornices, diamond ashlar in the parapet fields of the segmented arched windows as well as the historical portal in sandstone, the two upper floors combined by pilasters, in the risalit with double-coupled segmented arched windows, above it Consoles, double-winged door with barred glass fields and original skylight, younger windows (GDR period),
  • Gym: One-storey building in red clinker facing brickwork with high arched windows, structured by pilaster strips, cornices and decorative bands, flat hipped roof with Preolit ​​shingle covering.
09209520
 


Former railway viaduct
More pictures
Former railway viaduct Rudolf-Breitscheid-Strasse 1; 3
(card)
1877, later reshaped Of importance in terms of traffic history, mining history and engineering.
  • Massive railway overpass with a jacket made of rammed concrete, length 110.0 m, height 20.5 m, crosses the tracks in an arch over Obere Hauptstraße, Rudolf-Breitscheid-Straße and Hegebach (three differently shaped openings), at the core a brick viaduct from 1877 with five large arched openings, due to vaulting after subsidence (as a result of local hard coal mining), the openings over Obere Hauptstrasse were closed in 1924/1925 except for a low road passage, and in 1953/1954 also the arches over Rudolf-Breitscheid -Straße, with static protection of the structure by means of rammed concrete sheathing, two of the round arches can still be seen in the area of ​​Oberen Hauptstraße, renovated in 2002 as part of the route modernization.
  • Railway line Stollberg – St. Egidien (route abbreviation StE): Saxon branch line for transporting the coal from the Lugau Oelsnitz coal field (second largest Saxon coal field, production between 1844 and 1971),

Route: from Stollberg via Oelsnitz to St. Egidien, there connection to the Dresden – Werdau railway line, development of a number of hard coal pits along the route (direct connecting tracks to shafts in Hohndorf and Oelsnitz, connection of the shafts at Lugau by means of a connecting line to the Neuoelsnitz – Wüstenbrand railway line and connection the shafts in Gersdorf by means of the Oelsnitz – Kaisergrube branch line), built from 1877, provisional freight traffic from 1878, passenger traffic from 1879, due to the topographical conditions construction of viaducts near Niederwürschnitz (Viadukt Würschnitztal), Oelsnitz (present viaduct Hegebachtal), Lichtenstein (Viaduct Hegebachtal viaduct ) and St. Egidien (Lungwitzbachtal viaduct) as well as several smaller railway overpasses and underpasses necessary, terrain subsidence due to the coal mining - between Neuoelsnitz u. Oelsnitz subsidence up to 17 m deep in parts - resulted in renovations on the line (1954 renovation of the Hegebachtal viaduct, after the mining operations ended in 1971, the Neuoelsnitz station was leveled), 2002 renovation / modernization of the line, today only low traffic volume on the line.

09209454
 


Residential house (surrounding area) in open development Rudolf-Breitscheid-Strasse 16
(map)
Early 18th century Authentically preserved building typical of the time and landscape, of importance for the local image, a rare half-timbered house for the region, of architectural significance.

Eaves-standing building with partially solid plastered ground floor, surrounding framework with headbands flattened on the posts, slightly protruding half-timbered upper floor with semicircular profiled filler timber, half-timbered double-bar with K-struts, western gable clad (asbestos), eastern gable boarded, gable roof with asbestos covering.

09209455
 


Residential house in open development Rudolf-Breitscheid-Strasse 22
(map)
probably 2nd half of 18th factual entirety Authentically preserved building typical of the time and landscape, of significance for the local image, of importance in terms of building history.

Two-storey, gable-independent half-timbered building, two-sided half-timbered with storey-high struts, ground floor partially undercutting, gable clad with asbestos panels, west side covered with stenciled slate, gable roof with beaver-tail crown covering.

09209456
 


Duplex house Rudolf-Breitscheid-Strasse 84; 84a
(card)
1924 Prefabricated wooden house by the company Christoph & Unmack, Niesky, exposed hillside location, special significance in terms of architectural history.

One-storey, elongated block construction with a wide central projectile and extended saddle roof, the entrances with large pointed arched windows on both sides of the projectile, these also in the outer window axes, windows otherwise squatly rectangular, mostly original shutters, as well as the board balusters of the banisters, the gables of the dormers boarded up , Preolit ​​shingles roofing.

09209528
 


Residential stable of a two-sided courtyard Shank grater 9
(card)
probably 2nd half of the 18th century Half-timbered building typical of the time and landscape, part of the old local structure, historically important.

Solid ground floor, part of the stable completely renewed, the original facade structure still preserved on the back, with lavatory bay, upper floor half-timbered, clad with asbestos panels, saddle roof with asbestos cover.

09209502
 


Individual monuments of the whole of the Luther Church and Neuwürschnitz Cemetery Schulstrasse
(map)
1925-1926 Central building built in the local style with a sturdy roof turret, old location Neuwiese, architectural and local significance.

Individual features of the aggregate: Church (with equipment) and memorial for the fallen of the First World War (see also aggregate 09306087)

  • Church: central building made of unplastered quarry stone masonry (green stone), slated bell roof with ridge turret, choir in the north, vestibule in the south,
  • War memorial: Muschelkalkquader with relief of an iron cross and stepped crown.
09209497
 


Unity of Luther Church and Neuwürschnitz Cemetery Schulstrasse
(map)
around 1925 Central building built in the local style with a sturdy roof turret, old location Neuwiese, architectural and local significance.

Subject aggregate with the following individual monuments: Church (with furnishings) and memorial for the fallen of the First World War (see individual monuments 09209497) as well as cemetery with avenue (garden monument) and enclosure (subject aggregate part)

  • Church: central building made of unplastered quarry stone masonry (green stone), slated bell roof with ridge turret, choir in the north, vestibule in the south,
  • War memorial: Muschelkalkquader with relief of an iron cross and stepped crown.
09306087
 


Church of the Old Lutherans Schulstrasse 29
(map)
1923 Old location Neuwiese, authentically preserved neo-Gothic building with a small roof turret, of social and local historical importance.

Small hall building with pointed arched windows, crooked hip roof and turret with pointed hood.

09209498
 


Railway bridge on the Stollberg – St. Egidien Tunnel path
(map)
1930s Stone arch bridge, significance in terms of local history and traffic history.

Single arch bridge made of quarry stone masonry, parts of sandstone on the arch, side embankment walls.

09209494
 


Villa with garden Turleyring 35
(map)
Early 1920s Representative plastered building in reform style, based on a design by the Chemnitz architect Erich Basarke, of architectural and artistic importance.

One-and-a-half-storey solid plastered building on a transverse rectangular floor plan with a wide triangular gable-lined central projection with a semicircular porch, terrace and curved outside staircase as well as mansard hipped roof, arched window and door openings, economical plastering and stucco structuring on the windows and in the grave area, profiled pilasters in the winter garden with more richly shaped pilasters Eaves area, mansard floor slated, roof covering Preolit ​​shingles, ground floor window and double-winged entrance door with grooved skylight from the construction period, partly construction period window grating and terrace railing.

09209543
 


Former mansion of a manor Untere Hauptstrasse 2
(map)
Mid 17th century Stately Renaissance building in the center of the town, the oldest secular building in the city, of architectural, local and urban significance.

Stately, quite high and elongated two-storey and massive plastered building on a rectangular floor plan, the steep pitched roof with a mighty central transept that gables over a central projection on the courtyard side, the courtyard entrance with ogival stone walls, the window openings framed with simple plastering flaps, only the opening above the entrance with ogival ashlar walls, in the eaves areas and under the roof apron that runs over the transept gable, strongly profiled ashlar cornices (double grooves), building renovated: door, window and (probably) plastering renewed, the slate roof covering and the dormer structure also new, inside with integrated original remnants of the heavily profiled wooden beam ceiling over the formerly large central room, profiled wooden beam ceilings in the ground floor and first floor, in the corner rooms of the upper floor with insert boards arranged in a herringbone pattern, roof truss as a standing and lying S. Chair with three collar beam levels.

09209482
 


Residential house in open development Untere Hauptstrasse 30
(map)
probably around 1800 Half-timbered building typical of the time and landscape in a location that shapes the townscape in the intersection area, historically important.

Two-storey building with an angular floor plan (extensions), massive plastered ground floor (plaster 1990s) with original window sizes, upper floor double-bar framework with storey-high struts, street-side gable clad, saddle roof covered with Preolit ​​shingles.

09209474
 


Workers' house in open development Untere Windberggasse 2
(map)
around 1880 Miner's house, testimony to the culture of living at the industrial site Lugau-Oelsnitzer Revier, of social and historical importance.

Small one-and-a-half-storey solid plastered building (brick masonry) with a central bay window, profiled eaves area and saddle roof with old German slate covering, all windows and doors segment arched with walls made of Hilbersdorf porphyry tufa, two-winged entrance door from the construction period and original windows (gallows window with 6-section, winter window).

09209435
 


Cottage Unterer Anger 10
(map)
probably in the middle of the 18th century Old location Oberwürschnitz, authentically preserved example of a typical rural house, part of the old local structure.

The massive ground floor plastered, partly with a tiled plinth, rear side and toilet extension, the upper floor half-timbered, on the north and east side single-barred with small window openings just below the eaves and storey-high, V-shaped struts (plastered over), the other sides in Double-bar framework with probably enlarged window openings reaching up to the frame (jumping head bolts), a threshold with bevel can be seen above the garage extension, the gable roof covered with asbestos, the gable triangles boarded up, historic lattice windows and double-winged front door with skylight (mid-19th century).

09209515
 


Four multi-family houses (No. 1, 2/3, 4/5 and 6) in a new mining settlement Willibald-Emmrich-Strasse 1; 2; 3; 4; 5; 6
(card)
1953 Authentically preserved residential buildings typical of the time in the Heimat style of the 1950s, influenced by the settlement construction of the late 1920s, building history testimony to the early GDR building policy.

Four almost identically designed apartment blocks, arranged in a U-shape, some open spaces in front of the buildings surrounded by hedges, individual trees and laundry areas behind the blocks, two-storey solid plastered buildings, seven by two or 14: 3 axes on a clinker base with a slate hipped roof, symmetrical facade structure by emphasizing the entrance areas (in number 1 and 6 central, with the others in the third axis from the outside), walls of the segment arch-shaped entrance and the window above as chiselled stone plaster, floors summarized across floors by double recessed segment arch framing in fine plaster with overlying round windows, Profiled eaves area, original scratch plaster, the upright rectangular windows with bezels, windows and doors mostly original, original lanterns over the house entrances, inside terrazzo floor, original banisters and apartment doors.

09209427
 


Catholic Church (former dance hall) Windbergstrasse 13
(map)
1946 Authentic and regionally quite rare evidence of the post-war period after 1945, especially of architectural significance.

Round arch style, bell tower with a steep dome, the structure originally belonged to an inn with a dance hall (late 19th century). During the Nazi party building, after the Second World War, the dance hall was converted into a Catholic church, with little substance remaining from the previous building.
Former cast iron pillars were replaced by massive pillars, as well as the wall facing the street and the one behind the pulpit, in 1961 struts were added on the back, all because of subsidence from mining grounds. The straight lintel windows that the dance hall had were replaced by arched ones, into which the colored glass windows (including evangelists) of the abandoned old St. Barbara's Church from 1894 were inserted. Large parts of the interior, especially the stalls, also come from this church. Most of the current roof structure dates from 1992. Church chronicle and building files available.

09299790
 

Remarks

  1. The list may not correspond to the current status of the official list of monuments. This can be viewed by the responsible authorities. Therefore, the presence or absence of a structure or ensemble on this list does not guarantee that it is or is not a registered monument at the present time. The State Office for the Preservation of Monuments in Saxony provides binding information .

Web links

Commons : Cultural monuments in Oelsnitz / Erzgeb.  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files