List of cultural monuments in Plaußig-Portitz

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The list of cultural monuments in Plaußig-Portitz contains the cultural monuments of the Leipzig district Plaußig-Portitz , consisting of the districts of Plaußig and Portitz , which were recorded in the list of monuments by the State Office for the Preservation of Monuments in Saxony as of 2017.

Legend

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

List of cultural monuments in Plaußig-Portitz

image designation location Dating description ID
Residential house in open development, with front garden Ackerweg 11
(map)
1934–1935 (residential building) Plastered facade, architecturally high quality residential building with significance for the local development history

The architect Richard Kinne and the construction company Otto Höppner were involved in the construction of the representative single-family house in the Portitz garden estate for the tailor Eduard Wilhelm Günter Biedermann. The building application was submitted in December 1934, and the project was implemented in just under eight months of construction in 1935. In 1938, those involved built a garage in the basement, which was originally planned. Leipzig scratch plaster was intended for the facades, over a plinth made of Narsdorf bricks and covered by a double-tile roof covered with beaver tails. On the ground floor there is a closed veranda, on the roof of which there is an open exit. The wooden folding shutters on the windows, the triple window in the gable and the clinker visible surfaces on the porch, which were very typical of the construction period, also set visual accents. The undeveloped part of the 2000 square meter property was intended to be used as a fruit and vegetable garden. The building on today's outskirts of Leipzig is of monumental value due to its architectural quality and, as a private residential building from the 1930s, quite unusual generosity, it has an architectural historical value. LfD / 2015, 2017

09260426
 
Apartment building in open development with front garden Alte Theklaer Strasse 13
(map)
around 1910 (tenement) old location Plaußig, plastered facade, historically important 09255972
 
Landhaus Kruegel: Villa (No. 1) with coach house (No. 1a) and an annex building on it
Landhaus Kruegel: Villa (No. 1) with coach house (No. 1a) and an annex building on it Old Village 1; 1a 1880 (villa), 1880 (coach house) old location of Portitz, plastered facade typical of the time, named after the builder, businessman Johann Friedrich W. Krügel, of architectural and local significance 09260451
 
House and side building of a farm
House and side building of a farm Old Village 2
(map)
around 1800 (farmhouse) old location of Portitz, building with clay walls, historically important 09260452
 
Residential house and two side buildings of a former four-sided courtyard and courtyard paving
Residential house and two side buildings of a former four-sided courtyard and courtyard paving Old Village 3
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century (farmhouse), 1852/1853 Dendro (side building), 1854 (side building) old location Portitz, former Ackermannsches Gut, significant for the old location, near the churchyard, historically significant, testimony to the development of the area 09260450
 
Portitz village church: church (with furnishings), churchyard, morgue and Luther linden tree with memorial stone
More pictures
Portitz village church: church (with furnishings), churchyard, morgue and Luther linden tree with memorial stone Old Village 5
(map)
1865–1867 (church), 1867 (organ), 1867 (small bell), early 19th century (crucifix), 1883 (memorial tree) old location Portitz, neo-Gothic church with polygonal choir and west tower, of importance in terms of building history, local history and the appearance of the town 09260449
 
Wikidata-logo.svg
Vorwerk Portitz: house, barn and two side buildings of a former Vorwerk Old Village 7
(map)
18th and 19th century (residential building) old location of Portitz, half-timbered house, of architectural and local significance 09260453
 
Residential house in open development with fencing Altes Dorf 9
(map)
around 1865 (residential building) old location Portitz, plastered facade 09260457
 
House, side building and barn of a three-sided courtyard, as well as gate entrance, courtyard paving and relief in the courtyard Altes Dorf 11
(map)
marked 1869 (farmhouse), 1869–1870, cowshed and bakery (side building), 1869 (barn) old location of Portitz, with baroque sandstone relief in the courtyard and remnants of a wooden gutter, closed courtyard complex, historically important

In the spring of 1869, a dilapidated house and a stable were to be demolished on plot 24 of the list of places in Portitz, after which a new house with a stable was to be built and an oven with forge was to be added to an existing building. Landowner Gottfried Remmler hired master carpenter H. Sperling. A good six weeks after the first building application, the application to build a new barn and another stable followed. The house and barn were already finished in the summer of 1869, a stable and the extension to the old, already existing gable-side house followed in December 1869 and 1870 respectively Drought?) On behalf of Max Remmler. The left-hand stable house from 1869 received a massive porch at the entrance in 1939/1940 instead of the rotten wooden "covered house entrance". The farmer Walter Max Remmler hired the architect and builder H. Altwein, and the iron clinker base is a particular testimony to the time of construction. The original house entrance door from the 19th century, the staircase and interior doors from 1869 are preserved behind the porch. The application for a roof repair dates from 1942, and in 1948 the farmer Harald Remmler owned the property. In March 1963, Harald Remmler, now the owner of a haulage business, reported the partial demolition of a farm building, but it was not carried out. In 1985 there was talk of the "Höhl residential and commercial complex". The official rejection of a change to the facade of the residential building by the city district architect is dated October 1988, because "the building is in an area of ​​monumental interest (old village location)". The local association in Portitz had a plaque attached to the Altes Dorf 11 property after 1990, whereupon the year 1853 is associated with the farmer Remmler and the term "Hufengut", but the structural structure of a three-sided farm is already on G. Rahrisch's map from 1837 readable. Even today, the courtyard complex, which has been preserved in its cubature, has a decisive influence on the old location of the village of Portitz, and the two gable-facing houses have a striking effect on the street. The courtyard, which is paved with field stones, is accessed through a large gate system with passage and gate. To the right is a small building, built before 1869 and called the kitchen at the time. The house on the right and the stable house on the left are bordered by two single-storey stable buildings with a hayloft, whereby the stable on the left, which was heavily rebuilt during a subsequent renovation of the entire courtyard, received a large terrace instead of the original roof structure and is only of monumental value as part of environmental protection. The right stable building was also changed after 1990 by the break-in of four identical garage doors, but can still show the original roof structure (saddle roof) with wooden nail connections and other details. Towering above everything, the large barn with an imposing tile-covered saddle roof closes the courtyard from the formerly agricultural hinterland - it shows the former prosperity of the estate. Two large gates, a vaulted potato cellar with niches inserted into the masonry and the extremely impressive roof structure have been preserved. The most remarkable part of the courtyard, because it is the oldest, is the old house, built before 1869, with remains of the clay corrugation construction on the ground floor, half-timbered construction on the floor above and a crooked hip, and a late Baroque sandstone memorial stone is embedded in the masonry. In their historical and village appearance, the two houses have lost some of their charisma due to the last renovation and the conversion to a guesthouse due to the façade colors and plastic windows influenced by contemporary tastes. LfD / 2018

09260456
 
House, barn and courtyard paving of a farm Altes Dorf 14
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century (farmhouse) old location Portitz, former Eulenstein horse farm, significant for the old location, historical building value 09260454
 
Residential house and two side buildings of a farm attached to it Old Village 16
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (farmhouse) old location Portitz, former Hintersässergut Abtner, significant for the old location, opposite the Vorwerk in a corner location, historical building value 09260455
 
Residential building Altes Dorf 24
(map)
around 1800 (residential building) old location Portitz, single-storey plastered building, partly clay walls, former shepherd's house and customs shed for salt storage of the community, significant document of the community self-administration, building historical and socio-historical value 09260459
 
Portitz municipal office: residential building, formerly the municipal office, with a rear annex and ancillary building in the courtyard, as well as paving of the driveway and enclosure of the side front garden At the long pond 17
(map)
1925–1926 (municipal office), 1925–1927, extension (municipal office) old location Portitz, plastered facade, great value for the local development history and popular education, characterizing the locality

In 1909 a detention facility and a syringe room were added to the old municipal office in Portitz by the builder Franz Hempel. The entire building stock was demolished in 1925 for a new six-family residential building with a municipal office on the ground floor, an extension with a meeting room for the municipal council and a shop for the Leipzig-Plagwitz consumer association should follow. Mayor Nietzschmann and Leipzig architect Curt Schmiemichen played a leading role here. A house garden and a community children's playground were added to the outdoor area, and a fire brigade training area was intended to be set up at a later date. The undeveloped surrounding area was important because of the coveted exception to the local law for three-story development. For this purpose, the elevated location of the opposite Gasthof Cradefelder Straße 2 was brought into play. Changes to the plan showed the idea of ​​a gymnasium and a gym that might be built. Six months after the initial application, the Schiemichen office - co-owner was the graduate engineer Walther Fritzsche - submitted new documents, according to which the Bauhütte Leipzig and surroundings, Soziale Baugesellschaft mbH, under the direction of master builder Näther, took over the execution. The building and a shed were probably completed in 1926, and an extension with a conference room, syringe house and holding cells was subjected to the final test in November 1929. At the end of May 1954, the building authorities confirmed the conversion into a day-care center, and a project for the general repair of the residential building dates from 1972. In terms of its proportions, the residential and administrative building, initiated confidently by the municipal administration, bursts with the still village-like structure in Portitz, but impresses with its modern architectural design and: Schiemichen, one of the most renowned Leipzig architects of the time, had been won over for the project. LfD / 2015, 2016

09260425
 
Residential house in semi-open development Cradefelder Straße 3
(map)
1888 (residential house) old location Portitz, plastered facade, as an early example of local expansion of local historical importance

The builder and contractor for the rather late Biedermeier residential building in 1888 was the bricklayer Friedrich Gustav Barth, the plans were provided by master bricklayer Franz Schirmer. The only largely original house of a type of building that was otherwise more common in other Leipzig suburbs and mostly found in the 1860s, which was built primarily by tradespeople. The house is a document of the tentative and late expansion of the village in Portitz. LfD / 2007

09260444
 
Signs "1938 settlement service" on all settlement houses Don Carlos Street
(map)
inscribed 1938 (inscription panel) see also Dürnsteiner Weg and Gmundener Straße, old location Portitz, of local importance 09260429
 
Signs "1938 settlement service" on all settlement houses Dürnsteiner Weg
(map)
inscribed 1938 (inscription panel) see also Gmundener Weg and Don-Carlos-Straße, old location in Portitz, of local importance 09260427
 
Signs "1938 settlement service" on all settlement houses Gmundener Weg
(map)
inscribed 1938 (inscription panel) see also Dürnsteiner Weg and Don-Carlos-Straße, old location in Portitz, of local importance 09260428
 
Portitzer School: School with attached gym Göbschelwitzer Weg 1
(map)
1938–1940 (school) old location Portitz, school building in traditionalist style, of architectural and local significance 09260445
 
Transformer tower Grundstrasse
(map)
around 1908 (transformer station) At the entrance to the village, directly in front of the old Plaussiger school, testimony to the development of the place, socially and historically significant 09260870
 
Residential house in open development, built as a village school Grundstrasse 15
(map)
2nd quarter of the 19th century (residential building) old location Plaußig, single-storey plastered building, with a relief medallion above the door, historically important 09255958
 
Gasthof Grüne Aue (formerly) Grundstrasse 16
(map)
around 1800 and 2nd half of the 19th century (residential building) House and hall of a former inn since 1872, formerly a smithy; old location Plaußig, solid clay construction, plastered, side building clinker facade, of local importance, memorable 09255959
 
Church (with fittings), cemetery with enclosure and memorial for those who fell in World War I and beams of the former bells
More pictures
Church (with fittings), cemetery with enclosure and memorial for those who fell in World War I and beams of the former bells Grundstrasse 17
(map)
1726–1728, essentially older (church), after 1918 (monument to fallen soldiers) old location Plaußig, baroque hall church with polygonal choir and west tower, of importance in terms of building history, local history and the appearance of the town 09255957
 
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Rectory (with sandstone relief on the stairs) and side building in the rectory
Rectory (with sandstone relief on the stairs) and side building in the rectory Grundstrasse 18
(map)
1726 (rectory), 1742 (rectory) old location Plaußig, parsonage plastered facade and porphyry walls, of architectural and local significance 09255961
 
Residential house in open development Herbert-Thiele-Strasse 4
(map)
1900–1901 (residential building) old locality Portitz, clinker-plaster facade, with wooden vestibule, house built in country house style with architectural significance

In the years 1900/1901 the two-storey single-family house was built by the construction company S. Säuberlich for the cantor Arno Neefe on the “Straße nach dem heiteren Blick”, the free-standing garage on the property line was not built until 1930. The plastered building has window frames made of molded clinker bricks Roof overhangs on the dwelling houses, a stand bay on the street side and a wooden vestibule. Overall, the house, built in the country house style, looks like a villa and offers a very picturesque impression, some of the furnishings have been preserved. By the way, the building authorities stipulated a minimum depth of 4.50 meters for the front garden. The building has an architectural and district development historical value as a rare document of purely private housing construction at the turn of the century. LfD / 2015, 2016

09260443
 
Residential house (No. 1a) and side building (No. 1c) of a farm Plaussiger Dorfstrasse 1a; 1c
(card)
marked 1898 (farmhouse) old location Plaußig, clinker brick facades, historically important 09255970
 
House of a farm Plaußiger Dorfstrasse 4
(map)
1901 (farmhouse) old location Plaußig, plastered facade, historically important

The building act begins in 1897 with the request of the landowner and bricklayer Johann Karl Körnich to erect a new barn gable. In 1900 master bricklayer Otto Bergelt presented plans for a new stable building and a small shed with a washhouse. Today there is a residential building built in 1901 in the street, for which the old and dilapidated previous building was demolished. While the ground floor had only one apartment, two lodgings were planned on the upper floor. Under the roof (saddle roof) a living room and three chambers, later an independent apartment, were to be set up in addition to floor spaces. The way to the toilets led for all tenants across the courtyard. Clinker strips set accents on the plastered facade as a cornice and eaves molding next to the exposed clinker base of the uncomplicatedly renovated building. All windows have frames, those of the first floor have sills on brackets. The building marks the transition from the rural local structure to a more urban style of construction, thus also referring to changed social structures in the village. LfD, 2015, 2017

09255977
 
House of a farm and front garden enclosure Plaußiger Dorfstrasse 5
(map)
marked 1800 (farmhouse) old location Plaußig, former post office, clay building, plastered facade, with basket arch portal, inscription plaque, fencing from the Wilhelminian era, of importance in terms of building history and local history 09255982
 
Side building of a farm Plaußiger Dorfstrasse 7
(map)
around 1900 (side building) old location Plaußig, clinker brick facade, with sandstone slab, historically important 09255983
 
Subject aggregate Castle and Manor Plaußig, with the following individual monuments: Castle, keep, as well as farm yard with gate entrance, barns and farm buildings, distillery building with chimney, manor house and post of the enclosure of a former manor (Obj. 09255978, same address), as well as manor park (with Tower hill) Plaußiger Dorfstrasse 12
(map)
in the core of the 18th century, later reshaped (palace complex) old location Plaußig, striking castle building, plastered building with profiled porphyry cladding, medieval ancestral seat of the von Plaussig family, farm buildings partly in the 19th century country house style, of architectural and local significance 09306118
 
Individual monument of the entity of the Castle and Manor Plaußig (Obj. 09306118, same address): Castle, keep, as well as farm yard with gate entrance, barns and farm buildings, distillery building with chimney, estate manager's house and posts of the enclosure of a former manor
More pictures
Individual monument of the entity of the Castle and Manor Plaußig (Obj. 09306118, same address): Castle, keep, as well as farm yard with gate entrance, barns and farm buildings, distillery building with chimney, estate manager's house and posts of the enclosure of a former manor Plaußiger Dorfstrasse 12
(map)
19th century and early 20th century (part of the manor), in the core 18th century and older, later redesigned (castle (manor)), around 1890 (distillery), 19th century (farm building), 1480 (keep) old location Plaußig, striking castle building, plastered building with profiled porphyry cladding, medieval ancestral seat of the von Plaussig family, farm buildings partly in the 19th century country house style, of architectural and local significance 09255978
 
House of a farm Plaußiger Dorfstrasse 13
(map)
19th century (farmhouse) old location Plaußig, local plastered facade, saddle roof, of architectural significance 09255985
 
Side building of a farm Plaußiger Dorfstrasse 15
(map)
19th century (day laborer's house) old location Plaußig, former reapers barracks and farm workers' house, of social and historical importance 09255984
 
Residential house, attached side building, barn and further side building of a farm Plaußiger Dorfstrasse 17
(map)
around 1800 (farmhouse), end of the 19th century (side building) old location Plaußig, residential building single-storey plastered building, side building in clinker construction, of architectural significance 09255986
 
Gable of a former inn
Gable of a former inn Plaußiger Dorfstrasse 19
(map)
around 1800 (facade) old location Plaußig, inn today integrated in a new building for residential purposes and use by volunteer fire brigade, clinker brick facade, of local history 09255987
 
Inn, with hall in the courtyard, side building, gate system, courtyard paving and fencing
Inn, with hall in the courtyard, side building, gate system, courtyard paving and fencing Plaußiger Dorfstrasse 21
(map)
1884 (inn), 1884 (hall), 1884 (adjoining building) old location Plaußig, plastered facade, building located in a central location with relevance to the history of architecture and the history of development as well as memory value

In the second half of April 1884, the innkeeper Friedrich Wilhelm Jahn submitted plans for a residential and guest house, the subsequently issued permit contained the additional (important) note: "The hospitality is transferred to the new property". A two-storey residential building was built on the property adjacent to the village school, in which, in addition to the dining room, kitchen, buffet, pantry, two more rooms and a shop were installed. Five rooms were planned for the upper floor and tile roofing for the roof. Storage and utility cellars were added to the facility and at the rear, mediated via a short covered corridor, a slate-roofed hall building was connected, which was extended to cloakrooms in 1894–1895. In the stable building, also built in 1884, there were ancillary rooms necessary for the restaurant. By extending the building on the street side around an axis, the access to the inn was moved from the center of the facade, the extension in 1897 by architect Emil Reiche for the inn owner Wilhelm Jahn is not immediately recognizable from the outside. In the rear area, the new construction of the bowling alley is on record for the years 1934 and 1935. With its light-colored plastered façade above the quarry-stone-brick base that has been left visible, the eaves-side inn sets a weighty accent in the townscape of the old village center. Along with the appealing renovation, the tile-covered saddle roof was removed, the plastering was restored on the ground floor and the front door from the construction period received replica door leaves. In addition to its architectural historical value, the house has a significant impact on the townscape and its historical significance. LfD / 2017, 2018

09255956
 
House and side building of a farm
House and side building of a farm Plaußiger Dorfstrasse 22
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (farmhouse), 1890 (side building) old location Plaußig, residential building single-storey plastered building, small farmstead, of social and historical importance 09255962
 
Former municipal office, previously school
Former municipal office, previously school Plaußiger Dorfstrasse 23
(map)
in the core 1726 (municipal office), 1859 (municipal office) old location Plaußig, plastered facade with gable roof, old village school until 1937, of local importance 09255988
 
House and enclosure of a farm
House and enclosure of a farm Plaußiger Dorfstrasse 25
(map)
marked 1611 (farmhouse) old location Plaußig, plastered facade typical of the landscape, ground floor clay walls over quarry stone plinth, upper floor half-timbered plastered, location opposite rectory and church, of importance in terms of the history of the building and the townscape

In the bolt of the house entrance door, the number 1611 shows the year the house was built, making it one of the oldest houses in Plaussig. In terms of architectural history, the massive clay walls on the ground floor and the small windows on the rear walls of the house refer to this. The upper floor has a later half-timbered construction, the larger window openings of the street-side gable and the eaves side facing the courtyard are probably due to a renovation from the middle of the 19th century. Under the tile roof there is a purlin roof with a double chair. With the application of the landowner Gottfried Hermann Heinitz for a barn extension, the building file begins in 1884 (barn broken up today). The construction of a stable building can be proven for 1898 (plans by Zimmermann Otto Beyer, execution by the Schönefeld building contractor August Heinitz), a wash house in 1900 and another stable in 1925. Only the house and the stable built in 1898 have been preserved on the property. The property opposite the church, churchyard and parsonage has a character that characterizes the townscape, and the house has a high architectural historical value. LfD / 2016, 2017

09255989
 
House, side building, barn and gate system of a farm Plaußiger Dorfstrasse 26
(map)
1905 (farmhouse), 1902 (side building), around 1800 (barn) old location Plaußig, plastered buildings typical of the time, of architectural significance 09255964
 
House and barn of a farm as well as courtyard paving Plaußiger Dorfstrasse 28
(map)
1889–1890 (farmhouse), 1896 (barn), around 1895 (stable) old location Plaußig, former bakery, plastered facade, of local significance

A single-storey house with a bakery was built in 1889/1890 on behalf of the baker Otto Dürre, who commissioned Ms. Braunsdorf with the execution. In 1896, carpenter Otto Beyer carried out the construction of the new barn with wash house. Three years later a building application was submitted for the extension of the house, initiated by master baker Otto Dürre and implemented by carpenter Otto Beyer. The veranda facing the garden on the residential building for the master baker and property owner Heinrich Tauer dates from 1937/1938. Architect Wilhelm Hans Bolte provided the plans, the construction business Richard Steinert carried out the implementation. The bakery was in operation until 1987. In the old town of Plaußig, the small residential and commercial property, which is located in the immediate vicinity of the local blacksmith's shop (number 30, demolished) and in a certain peripheral location, characterizes the street. The five-axis residential building is plastered on a broken stone base with a clinker roll layer, has profiled window walls and is closed off by a gable roof covered with tiles. The courtyard building is also largely original, with a tiled roof and plastered facade, the courtyard paving has been preserved. The bakery property in the old Plaussiger locality has an architectural and local historical value. LfD / 2017, 2018

09255965
 
Cottage with extension Plaußiger Dorfstrasse 30
(map)
around 1800 (residential building) old location Plaußig, typical one-story earth building, socially and historically important 09255966
 
Two houses on a farm
Two houses on a farm Plaussiger Dorfstrasse 29; 31
(card)
Left building: end of the 18th century (farmhouse), right building: 1st half of the 19th century (farmhouse) old location Plaußig, single-storey clay buildings typical of the landscape, of architectural significance 09255990
 
House and barn of a farm
House and barn of a farm Plaußiger Dorfstrasse 37
(map)
End of the 17th century (cottage) old location Plaußig, plastered facade, partly half-timbered, location at the entrance to the village, important in terms of urban development, historical value 09255969
 
Signs "1938 settlement service" on all settlement houses Posastraße
(map)
inscribed 1938 (inscription panel) see also Dürnsteiner Weg and Gmundener Straße, old location Portitz, of local importance 09306546
 
Residential house in open development Seegeritzer Weg 4
(map)
around 1900 (residential building) old location Plaußig, plastered facade with colored plaster structure, historically important 09255967
 
gym Seegeritzer Weg 8
(map)
1919 (gym) old location Plaußig near the pond, plastered facade, of local and socio-historical importance, evidence of the local association, worth remembering 09255968
 
Residential building Stralsunder Strasse 168
(map)
before 1800 (residential building) old location Plaußig, single-storey plastered building, possibly former poor house, 09255976
 
Apartment building in half-open development Tauchaer Strasse 274
(map)
1901–1902 (tenement house) old location Portitz, clinker brick facade, of importance in terms of local development

Shortly before the turn of the year 1901/1902, the carpenter Friedrich Emil Richter submitted a building application for a residential building and an outbuilding with a wash house and stables. Judges themselves intended to take over the execution. Immediately after completion in the summer of 1902, an application was made for a roller building. The residential building on the arterial road towards Thekla marks the historically shaped, hesitant urbanization of Portitz. Red facing bricks were used in the upper part of the front side, while the ground floor featured plaster. Compared to the facade drawing attached to the building file, the execution differs in detail, among other things with regard to the decorative gables of the dwelling houses. For example, simplified, more modern window roofs were used on the first floor. Each of the two apartments on each floor had two rooms facing the street as well as a corridor, chamber and kitchen as well as external toilets in the stairwell. The typesetter Karl Kretzschmann and his wife Klara bought the property in the year the building was completed. Unrenovated and vacant in spring 2017. LfD / 2017

09260441
 
Apartment building in open development with gate entrance Tauchaer Strasse 275a
(map)
1901 (tenement) old location Portitz, clinker brick facade, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history

From the application to the final acceptance, a tenement house on the Chaussee to Thekla was built in 1901/1902 in just eight months by the master bricklayer and construction business owner Franz Säuberlich from Schönefeld. The client was master baker Otto Louis Filzsack. Behind the clinker brick facade, which was still in keeping with the historical tradition, there were two apartments on each of the two upper floors, while the bakery was fitted out on the ground floor. In addition to the bakery, there was also an advertising corner shop and the living quarters of the master baker's family. The journeyman's chamber and an attic apartment, which was only approved later in 1902, were located under the roof. At the same time, a stable building was built on the courtyard side (conversion 1939–1940). The old German oven in the bakery was to be replaced by a two-cooker steam oven in 1942/1943, and in 1993 a pizzeria took the place of the bakery business. For the striking residential and commercial building construction on the thoroughfare (corner location on the long pond), a historical value can be established. LfD / 2015, 2016

09260442
 
Apartment building in half-open development Tauchaer Strasse 276
(map)
1901 (tenement) old location Portitz, clinker brick facade, of importance in terms of local development 09260440
 
Residential house in semi-open development Tauchaer Strasse 278
(map)
1899–1900 (tenement) old location of Portitz, clinker-plaster facade, of importance in terms of local development

Granting of the building permit was unusually lengthy because no waste water disposal had been clarified for the property on the road to Thekla (also Theklaer Weg); the construction site on Remmler's field was the first construction project on the northern side . Zimmermann Friedrich Emil Richter persevered as the builder and contractor and finally received approval for his building application submitted on February 20, 1899: on March 10, 1900. At the beginning of September, the final inspection was carried out for the three-storey residential building and a small, free-standing wash house. In 1901 wooden stables and a bakery were built at the rear. A new owner, the raw materials dealer Berhard Moritz Kretzschmar, was only allowed to set up a second attic apartment after he had set up storage space and drying floors in the stable and the relocated wash house. With regard to the disposal issue, a contract had been made with a local farmer. Even in 1979, when drafts for the installation of water flushing toilets were being made, a connection to the public sewage network was still not possible and a separate small sewage treatment plant had to be provided here (VEB Gebäudewirtschaft Leipzig as investor). In 2008 a building application was issued for the extension of a courtyard-facing balcony. The plastered facade is framed and structured by red clinker bricks, a two-axis dwarf building asserts itself between the far protruding eaves cornice. Annoying today is the shop fitting and renovation with the narrow plastic windows extending to the basement cornice over the entire front of the ground floor. LfD / 2015, 2016

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Apartment building in half-open development Tauchaer Strasse 280
(map)
1900–1901 (tenement house) old location Portitz, with restaurant, clinker brick facade, of importance in terms of local development

The carpenter and building contractor Friedrich Richard Dürre is next to his sister, the property owner Auguste Minna Kosmahl nee. Drought, on record as an actor. A corner house was built in 1900/1901 with a restaurant and an attached lounge and wash house. At the end of the actual construction work, a permit for the construction of a colonnade and the establishment of a househusband apartment under the roof was issued. The restaurant was converted in 1905, and innkeeper Karl Stöhr initiated an extension as a shop entrance in 1939. On the street side, the facade has two clinker-clad upper floors above a plastered ground floor, the middle floor is richly decorated with window frames made of artificial stone. In the tenement house, there were two apartments on each of the upper floors, with two rooms, a chamber, a kitchen and a hall, along with outside toilets in the stairwell. As the “Zur Börse” inn, the building is of particular importance in terms of local history and also documents the expansion of Portitz, which was shaped by late historicism. LfD / 2015, 2016

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Residential house in open development, formerly a school
Residential house in open development, formerly a school To the birch grove 1
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1896–1897 (school) old location Portitz, clinker brick facade, of local significance 09260448
 
Residential building To the birch grove 2
(map)
around 1850 (residential building) old location Portitz, single-storey plastered building, socially and historically significant 09260447
 
Residential building
Residential building To the birch grove 4
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (residential building) old location Portitz, single-storey plastered building, clay walls, socially and historically significant 09260446
 

swell

  • State Office for the Preservation of Monuments Saxony Dynamic web application: Overview of the monuments listed in Saxony. In the dialog box, the location “Leipzig, City; Plaußig-Portitz ”must be selected, after which an address-specific selection takes place. Alternatively, the ID can also be used. As soon as a selection has been made, further information about the selected object can be displayed and other monuments can be selected via the interactive map.
  • Thomas Noack, Thomas Trajkovits, Norbert Baron, Peter Leonhardt: Cultural monuments of the city of Leipzig. (Contributions to urban development 35), City of Leipzig, Department of Urban Development and Construction, Leipzig 2002

Web links