List of cultural monuments in Pfaffengrund

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Stauffenberg School in Pfaffengrund

In the list of cultural monuments in Pfaffengrund , all immovable architectural and art monuments of the Heidelberg district Pfaffengrund are listed, those in the monument topography Stadtkreis Heidelberg. (= Part I and 2 of the Monument Topography of the Federal Republic of Germany, Cultural Monuments in Baden-Württemberg Volume II.5.1, edited by Melanie Mertens. Jan Thorbecke Verlag 2013).

It is as of 2012/13 and the following immovable architectural and art monuments are listed.

This list is not legally binding. Legally binding information is only available on request from the Lower Monument Protection Authority of the City of Heidelberg.

Legend

  • Image: Shows a selected image from the Commons, "Additional Images" refers to the images in the respective monument category.
  • Name: gives the name, the description or the type of the cultural monument.
  • Address: States the street name and, if available, the house number of the cultural monument. The list is basically sorted according to this address. The link "Map" leads to various map displays and gives the coordinates of the cultural monument.
  • Dating: indicates the date; the year of completion or the period of construction. Sorting by year is possible.
  • Description: Provides structural and historical details of the cultural monument, preferably the characteristics of the monument.
  • ID: Indicates the object ID of the cultural monument assigned by the State Office for Monument Preservation Baden-Württemberg . There is no ID of the monument office yet.

Pfaffengrund - Gartenstadt-Siedlung becomes a new district

Starting with the garden city and homestead movement, the beginning of social housing construction in Germany - and against the background of the general housing shortage after the First World War - Heidelberg took a new path for the first time with the Pfaffengrund settlement. It is the first cooperative building project in Heidelberg, realized by the building cooperative "Gartenstadt", which renamed itself to the non-profit building cooperative for people's and warrior homes. The plan was based on Dresden-Hellerau and Karlsruhe-Rüppurr. The Pfaffengrund is the first planned, large-scale urban expansion and thus one of the youngest districts of Heidelberg.

Cultural monuments in Pfaffengrund

image designation location Dating description
Pfaffengrund settlement
Pfaffengrund settlement Am Markt 1–22;
At track 2, 4, 14, 16;
Throttle path 1-15, 17, 19, 21, 23;
Eppelheimer Landstrasse 71, 79, 81, 83, 85;
Finkenweg 2, 4, 6, 8, 9-16, 18, 20, 22, 24;
Kuckucksweg 1-24, 26;
Marktstrasse 1-42, 44, 46, 48;
Meisenweg 1-4;
Obere Rödt 1-4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 15, 16, 18, 20-29, 31;
Pfaffengrunder plate 1–12;
Pfaffengrundstrasse 1–36, 36a, 37, 38, 38a, 39–44, 44a, 45, 46, 46a, 47–60, 62–74 (even), 75, 76, 77, 79–111 (odd);
Reiherstrasse 1–22;
Richard-Drach-Straße 4-14 (even);
Inclined path 2–22 (straight);
Schützenstrasse 2, 4, 14–32 (straight);
School place 1–9, 11–19 (odd);
Spatzenweg 1–14;
Starenweg 1–12, 14–28 (straight);
Storchenweg 1–23 (odd);
Untere Rödt 1–11, 13;
Zeisigweg 1, 2;
1919-1928, 1932/33, 1934-1936 Started in 1919 as a semi-rural suburban settlement by the non-profit building cooperative for Volks- und Kriegerheimstätten according to the development plan by Ludwig Schmieder and carried out in six construction phases by 1928 in the expansion of Möwenweg, Eppelheimer Landstraße, An der Bahn and Schützenstraße. 1932/33 and 1934–1936 continued as a suburban settlement with a different concept.

The Pfaffengrund settlement is the first settlement in Heidelberg to document how the new social and architectural requirements in settlement and housing construction of the early 20th century have asserted themselves in this city as well.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Railroad keeper's house, today the club house of the Pfaffengrunder Carnival Society Diebsweg 20 after 1873 Designed by Friedrich Eisenkehr in 1844, the walls and plinth made of red sandstone stand out well against the plaster on the ground floor, the upper floor is clad in wood and has moldings.

A characteristic residential and operational building of a low-ranking railway official, an early testimony to the functional buildings belonging to this section of the route.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Evangelical Resurrection Church (also called Emmaus Church?)
More pictures
Evangelical Resurrection Church (also called Emmaus Church?) Upper Rödt 11 1949/50 Based on the design by Hermann Hampe from 1938. A plastered brick basilica in strict, functional shapes. Side choir tower with 5 bells.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Home of the Hitler Youth, today a daycare center
Home of the Hitler Youth, today a daycare center Upper Rödt 33 1935, renovation 2007 Two-storey plastered building by A. Scholl.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Evangelical parish hall Pfaffengrundstrasse 70 1924/25 Block-like plastered building by architect Döring; with a raised central projection and bell ridge in baroque classicist forms.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential buildings, school, today Stauffenberg School
Residential buildings, school, today Stauffenberg School School place 1–7, 9–19 (odd) 1924-1926 The eleven-axis core building of the school was extended by four axes to the south in 1938/39; and in 1957 the counterpart was added to the north. The houses No. 2 and 6 were teachers' houses. They have a strong cornice, the other houses on the square are also strongly architecturally accentuated. The square was renovated in 1994 and is one of the few that corresponds to Schmieder's plan.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Catholic parish church of St. Marien
More pictures
Catholic parish church of St. Marien Schützenstrasse 19 1938/39 The first massive church to be built in Pfaffengrund according to plans by Anton Ohnmacht, only consecrated in 1947. Simple, plastered hall construction with a rectangular floor plan and a tower attached to the side; The clarity and severity of the proportions are still convincing today.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Guard house
Guard house Schützenstrasse 21 1752 Baroque sentry house from 1752, probably designed by Wilhelm Rabaliatti. In 1856 it came to the Pfaffengrund as a shelter for field rifles. 1989 renovated and reorganized.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


Residential building Schwalbenweg 29 1937 Hermann Hampe designed it for main teacher Wöhrle. A fairly complete private house from the middle settlement phase of the Pfaffengrund before the Second World War.
Protected according to § 2 DSchG


literature

  • City district of Heidelberg . (= Part I and 2 of the Monument Topography of the Federal Republic of Germany, Cultural Monuments in Baden-Württemberg Volume II.5.1) Edited by Melanie Mertens. Jan Thorbecke Verlag 2013. ISBN 978-3-7995-0426-3

Individual evidence

  1. Building supervision and lower monument protection authority accessed on December 4, 2017

See also

Web links

Commons : Kulturdenkmale in Heidelberg  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files