List of cultural monuments in Rodewisch

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Rodewisch coat of arms

The list of cultural monuments in Rodewisch includes the cultural monuments of the city of Rodewisch that were recorded by the State Office for Monument Preservation of Saxony until February 2020 (excluding archaeological cultural monuments). The notes are to be observed.

This list is a subset of the list of cultural monuments in the Vogtland district .

Rodewisch

image designation location Dating description ID
Elevated tank (Parcel 893a)
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Around 1900 Water house built in the neo-Gothic style, testimony to the sophisticated design of a functional building, monument to the technical history of water management. Cube-shaped building on a square floor plan, on a hillside, single-storey, solid, plastered, ogival entrance with profiled walls, buttresses stepped on the building corners, round windows (plastered), slightly protruding attic (brick) with five ogival wall niches with straight roofing, slightly raised corner pillars on the sides . 08985741
 
Reception building and platform roofing of a train station
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Reception building and platform roofing of a train station At station 3
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1909 Station building on the Zwickau – Falkenstein railway line (6650; see also ZF), of significance in terms of local history and traffic history.
  • Entrance building: two-storey with a single-storey central building (with boarded-up jamb), on the upper floor rectangular windows, otherwise solid, plastered, elongated building with two diaphragms, segmented arched windows and entrances, partly original doors, flat gable roof (purlin roof with profiled rafter heads, cardboard), dormers ( slated), one-storey wooden extension to the embankment (glazed veranda, former waiting hall), on the gable the inscription "Rodewisch"
  • Platform roofing: two-legged wooden construction, wooden pillars on a square iron base, flat gable roof, profiled rafter heads
08985735
 
Evangelical Methodist Peace Church Am Berge 1
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1908 Simple plastered building with roof turrets, historical significance. Hall church with granite plinth (boss cuboid), on the eaves side towed house-like modest building, solid, plastered, crooked hip roof (slate), one-storey low entrance house on the gable side with mansard roof (slate), aisle-like extension on the long side with high mansard roof, arched over there Roof with barn gouge, octagonal ridge turret with lantern, hood and cross, a total of three-part rectangular windows, some with rounded corners, inside flat barrel vault, organ loft and organ, lead glass windows, windows combined into window axes by plastering fields, thus vertical structure. 08985742
 
Residential house in semi-open development Am Graben 9
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1901 Clinker brick facade with emphasis on corners, elaborately structured residential building from the turn of the century around 1900, of architectural significance. Half of a duplex house (with number 7). Two-storey, granite base (polygonal wall), granite basement cornice, segment arched window with keystone (floral design) on the ground floor, lintel arches clinker brick (two-tone), round arched entrance with large rusticated keystone, original wooden entrance door with skylight and iron grille, all in red clinker brick building with plaster structure, girdle, on the upper floor rectangular windows with profiled walls and straight roofing, three-storey corner projections, upstairs consoles on the sills, mansard roof (slate) and three-storey corner projections with curved tent roof, gable roof dormer windows. 08985777
 
Apartment building in closed development Auerbacher Strasse 7
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1899 With shops, historicizing clinker brick facade, in the ensemble with Auerbacher Straße 9, a street-defining testimony to urbanization, of importance in terms of local development. Three-storey, on the ground floor large gate passage (original wooden gate with skylight), shop fittings (profiled lintel with keystone), plastering flanges and keystone, profiled cornice, on the first floor rectangular windows with clinker overhanging arches, figural keystones (angel heads), sills artificial stone with consoles, on the second Upper floor drilled rectangular windows, gable roof, brick eaves. 08985763
 
Apartment building in half-open development Auerbacher Strasse 9
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1900 With a store, a representative clinker brick building that defines the street scene, it forms an ensemble with Auerbacher Straße 7, which is of importance in terms of local development. Three-storey, yellow clinker brick with red clinker brick structure, polygonal masonry base, large gate passage with clinker lintel arch and keystone on the ground floor, original wooden door with skylight and decorative grille, segment arch entrance with staircase, further segment arch openings (shop fittings), two lintel arches of coupled keystone on the upper floor Rectangular windows with overhanging arches (clinker brick) and keystone, artificial stone window frames, sills (profiled), red clinker brick on the second floor on consoles, parapets and cornices, polygonal masonry base, stepped brick eaves, gable roof, windows renewed. 08985762
 
Residential house in open development Auerbacher Strasse 11
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1899 Clinker brick facade, striking testimony to the urbanization of the community, of importance in terms of local development. Two-storey with plaster structure, granite plinth (polygonal masonry), rectangular windows with clinker cladding arches and keystone, street-side three-storey central projectile on a trapezoidal floor plan with box-shaped dwarf house and half-hipped roof, altogether half-hipped roof (purlin roof, original slate-roofed entrance) Windows partly plastered relief. 08985760
 
Apartment building in closed development Auerbacher Strasse 12
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1905 With a shop, clinker brick facade, evidence of the development of the book trade in Rodewisch, of local historical importance. Three-storey with four-storey side elevation (two window axes wide), solid, plastered ground floor, upper floor clinker brick with plastered structure, pent roof (cardboard), on the ground floor wooden shop installation with central shop entrance, above inscription: "Buchdruckerei, Papier-Hofmann, Buchbinderei", side gate passage, in first floor rectangular window with profiled walls and sun relief (plaster) in the gable, second floor rectangular window, eaves cornice (plastered ashlar), corner ashlar (plaster), in the side elevation twin windows, first floor round arched window, on the second floor above the window sun relief with inscription "WAR" from mask-like face of the sun upwards to the third floor, braided band or sword, two head reliefs on the side (men with pipes and inscription "NOW"). 08985764
 
Residential and commercial building (former savings bank) in semi-open development and corner location Auerbacher Strasse 18
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1919, later reshaped Representative building in a prominent location, corner accentuation by dome, reform style architecture, of local and architectural importance. Three-storey plastered building, high granite plinth (boss cuboid), grooved ground floor, pilaster strips (partially grooved corner pilasters), arched windows on the ground floor, rectangular windows on the upper floor, twin and triple windows in the side bay, chamfered corner with trapezoidal three-storey corner bay, framed by two dome-shaped gables Lantern and hood with weather vane, flat box bay on the street side with a dwelling (mansard roof), two entrances with granite walls and triangular roofing, corner pilasters, vertically perforated skylights (granite walls), overall mansard roof (slate). 08985761
 
Residential and commercial building in open development and in a corner Auerbacher Strasse 44
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Around 1915, older in essence Clearly structured and well-designed representative building with a striking effect on the street scene, facade emphasized by box bay windows, based on reform style architecture, significant in terms of building history. Four-storey, solid, plastered, opulent building on an angular floor plan with a strong three-storey corner bay window, hipped roof, plain tile roofing, granite ashlar basement plinth (bossed masonry), on the ground floor segmented arched windows with volute-like curled lintels, window frames framed as corner pilasters with plastered plastered plastered pillars, rounded entrances (Putti and masks), above the gable field eagle relief and circular skylight, doors inappropriately renewed, first to third floor rectangular windows, strong horizontal structure through base, sill and belt cornice, on the first floor ribbon windows, some massive posts and transom with Stucco top (geometric shapes), arched niches on the corner bay window, on the second floor rectangular windows with window sockets alternating with half-columns, wide roof overhang, two two-story box bay windows on strong consoles. 08985759
 
villa Auerbacher Strasse 61
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1909 Versatile villa construction, plastered building with balconies that characterize the street scene, reform style architecture, of importance in terms of building history. In the corner to Lamnitzer Straße, two-storey, solid, plastered, granite base (boss cuboid), cellar window with ornamental grille, high mansard roof facing the street, moving roof landscape, beaver tail covering, caterpillars, high staircase with granite railing (perforated), original door and window, lead glass window, gable side trapezoidal stand bay, corner loggia with corner column and glazing, plastered structure, side staircase tower with high perforated round window. 08985754
 
Residential house in open development Bachstrasse 47
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Marked 1838, later reshaped With a beautiful basket arch portal and slated half-timbered upper floor, as a former inn and later bakery of local and architectural importance. Originally two-thirds used as living space, one third as commercial space, partly with a cellar, further cellar corridor on the north slope, two-storey, solid ground floor, plastered, upper floor half-timbered, slated, in the middle of the dwelling, originally curved gable, now triangular gable, eaves with six window axes, crooked hip roof (Artificial slate), gable slated, corner chamfered towards the courtyard, segmented granite portal drilled in the center with a keystone marked 1838, in the arch the inscription “Soli deo gloria, IGS”, a segmented arched window walls, otherwise rectangular windows, two dormer windows, upper floor rich ornamental slab , on the upper floor template slate covering, roof old German slate covering. 08985743
 
Residential house in open development Bachstrasse 81
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1794, later changes Gable-independent half-timbered construction, upper floor slated half-timbering, significance in terms of building history. Two-storey, ground floor solid, plastered, facing the street, beautiful ornamental slate gable (diamond motifs, slate window frame) between the two windows on the upper floor a round-arched inscription board (slate, faintly legible), inscribed with "Schuhwarenlager von C. Peuermann" (company sign) above Twin windows, entrance on the eaves side (brick framing, renewed), gable roof, slate covering. One-storey annex to the rear (no monument) on the gable side. 08985768
 
Landesanstalt Untergöltzsch (entity), today the Saxon Hospital for Psychiatry and Neurology Rodewisch
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Landesanstalt Untergöltzsch (entity), today the Saxon Hospital for Psychiatry and Neurology Rodewisch Bahnhofstrasse 1, 2, 4, 6, 16, 18, 20
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1889–1894, later expanded Entity of the state institution Untergöltzsch, consisting of the individual monuments: residential and station buildings (B 2, B 3, B 5, B 6, B 8, B 9, B 10, B 11, B 14, A 7, A 8, A 9, A 10, A 15), former residential and station buildings (A 17 Bahnhofstrasse 6, A 18 Bahnhofstrasse 4, A 20 / A 23 Bahnhofstrasse 2, now the “Im Göltzschtal” home), laboratory and library building (B 12, was formerly a station building ), Locksmith's shop (A 27, now a shop and hairdresser), psychotherapy department (A 14), administration building (A 5), former director's residence (A 3 Bahnhofstraße 18, now kindergarten), cemetery chapel (behind A 29), fountain and war memorial for the deceased of the First World War (on the cemetery to the west, behind A 29), the original pathology (A 29, now occupational therapy), institutional church (A 6), ballroom (A 24) and gatehouse (A 4 Bahnhofstrasse 16) - see individual monuments 08985784) - as well as green spaces on the premises of the institution (including an avenue), furthermore with the totality parts: wide right station houses (including B 4, B 7, A 11, A 16, A 28 as well as transformer station B 15 and technical station with boiler house B 17 / B 18) and ancillary buildings (including bowling alley A 22 and market gardening A 2) as well as some new buildings ( including B 21 Bahnhofstrasse 1, main building with cafeteria and A 3a Bahnhofstrasse 20, kindergarten); Hospital complex built in the pavilion system of uniformly designed, architecturally sophisticated yellow clinker-type buildings with red clinker structure and with floating gables, buildings with an H- and U-shaped or right-angled floor plan, built as the "Royal Saxon State Healing and Care Institution for the Mentally Ill in Untergöltzsch", very important testimony to health and social welfare at the turn of the century around 1900, of supraregional importance. 09301217
 
Individual features for ID no.  09301217: Residential and ward houses (B 2, B 3, B 5, B 6, B 8, B 9, B 10, B 11, B 14, A 7, A 8, A 9, A 10, A 15), Former residential and station buildings (A 17 Bahnhofstrasse 6, A 18 Bahnhofstrasse 4, A 20 / A 23 Bahnhofstrasse 2, now Heim "Im Göltzschtal"), laboratory and library building (B 12, formerly a station building), metalworking shop (A 27, now shop and hairdresser), psychotherapy department (A 14), administration building (A 5), former director's residence (A 3 Bahnhofstraße 18, now kindergarten), cemetery chapel (behind A 29), fountain and war memorial for those who died in the First World War (on the west cemetery, behind A 29), the original pathology (A 29, now occupational therapy), institutional church (A 6), ballroom (A 24) and gatehouse (A 4 Bahnhofstrasse 16)
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Individual features for ID no. 09301217: Residential and ward houses (B 2, B 3, B 5, B 6, B 8, B 9, B 10, B 11, B 14, A 7, A 8, A 9, A 10, A 15), Former residential and station buildings (A 17 Bahnhofstrasse 6, A 18 Bahnhofstrasse 4, A 20 / A 23 Bahnhofstrasse 2, now Heim "Im Göltzschtal"), laboratory and library building (B 12, formerly a station building), metalworking shop (A 27, now shop and hairdresser), psychotherapy department (A 14), administration building (A 5), former director's residence (A 3 Bahnhofstraße 18, now kindergarten), cemetery chapel (behind A 29), fountain and war memorial for those who died in the First World War (on the west cemetery, behind A 29), the original pathology (A 29, now occupational therapy), institutional church (A 6), ballroom (A 24) and gatehouse (A 4 Bahnhofstrasse 16) Bahnhofstrasse 2, 4, 6, 16, 18
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1889–1894, later expanded (sanatorium and institutional church); around 1900 (director's house); around 1920 (war memorial); around 1930 (cemetery chapel) Individual features of the aggregate state institution Untergöltzsch; Architecturally sophisticated type buildings, of importance in terms of building history, local history and regional history. The entire complex emerged from the former Untergölzsch manor (bought by the Saxon state in 1888) and the state sanatorium and nursing home for the mentally ill was built; the nursing home also served as a military hospital during both world wars (hence a memorial for the deceased soldiers in the asylum cemetery). On an irregular, longitudinally rectangular floor plan, divided in the middle of the long side by Bahnhofstrasse into two large building units (former "women" and former "men", today identified by letters A and B). 08985784
 
Memorial with roll call area and enclosure, planned as a war memorial for those who fell in the First World War
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Memorial with roll call area and enclosure, planned as a war memorial for those who fell in the First World War Karl-Liebknecht-Strasse 12 (behind)
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1938-1939 Cultural and historical testimony. Place of worship or roll call ground on a trapezoidal floor plan, erected on a hill. 08985748
 
Rental villa Kohlstrasse 2
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1905 Historicized plastered building with half-timbered gables, inside partly in Art Nouveau style, building that characterizes the street scene, of architectural significance. In the corner to Auerbacher Strasse, two-storey, solid, plastered, granite base, polygonal masonry, eaves side central projecting with gable, on the gable and jamb floor ornamental framework with St. Andrew's crosses, curved struts, gable triangle boarded up, central projecting with a trapezoidal and rectangular upper-storey segment, on the ground floor partly original windows with skylight bars, embossed corner blocks, windows with keystones, crooked hipped roof (purlin roof, slate covering) with profiled lugs, rear stair tower with leaded glass windows, original entrance, wooden door with skylight and iron grille, original staircase, Art Nouveau apartment doors, forms an ensemble with villas of the adjacent Auerbacher Straße. 08985757
 
Chimney stump of a former brass factory Lengenfelder Strasse 31 (opposite)
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Around 1860 Rare testimony to the industrial development in Rodewisch, memorable, important in terms of technology history. Square chimney plinth made of brick, supporting arches walled in the lower part, toothed cornice made of brick as the upper end of the chimney stump, memorial plaque attached to the front side: "The Essen stump is the last remnant of the brass furnace, the brass works Niederauerbach stood here from 1603-1924", plaque signed by K Schott 1962. 08985734
 
Residential house in semi-open development Lengenfelder Strasse 32
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1900 Clinker brick building that defines the street scene, forms a representative ensemble with houses at Lengenfelder Strasse 34, 36, 38, of architectural significance. Two-storey clinker brick building, granite plinth (Cyclops masonry), on the ground floor rectangular windows with lintel arches, in the arched coat of arms relief, keystone, on the upper floor rectangular windows with grooved corner pilasters and straight window canopies, in the middle triple windows (partially walled up) with straight roofing houses and triangular gables above Round gable, gable roof (slate), dormers, house corner chamfered towards the courtyard entrance (stepped brick wall), profiled cornice, round window in the gable. 08985739
 
Residential building in closed development Lengenfelder Strasse 34
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1901 Clinker brick building that defines the street scene, forms a representative ensemble with houses at Lengenfelder Straße 32, 36, 38, of architectural significance. Two-storey clinker building on a granite base (Cyclops masonry), on the ground floor rectangular windows with lintel arches and keystone, in the arched plaster stucco (coat of arms relief), high rectangular entrance door with lintel arch and keystone, on the upper floor rectangular window with straight, profiled roofing, central gable, gable gable with grooved, rounded corner windows (Cardboard), roof windows and windows renewed. 08985738
 
Residential building in closed development Lengenfelder Strasse 36
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1906 Clinker brick building that defines the street scene, forms a representative ensemble with houses at Lengenfelder Strasse 32, 34, 38, of architectural significance. Two-storey clinker building on a granite base (Cyclops wall), ground floor segmented arched windows, upper floor rectangular windows, window sashes, cornices, wide eaves, central gable with grooved corner pilasters and spherical top, volute gable with carnation arch crowning, saddle roof (cardboard renewed), gable roof. 08985737
 
Residential house in semi-open development Lengenfelder Strasse 38
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1906 Clinker brick building that characterizes the street scene, corner emphasis, forms a representative ensemble with houses at Lengenfelder Strasse 32, 34, 36, of architectural significance. Two-storey red clinker building with plaster structure (cornice strips, window sashes, corner pilasters on the tower), granite plinth (Cyclops masonry), on the ground floor straight window canopies with lintel arches and keystone, on the upper floor segmented arched windows, three-storey corner tower with a curved hollow roof and decorative grille on the second upper floor, round arch overall hipped roof (slate covering), gable roof dormer windows. 08985736
 
Milk ice cream bar in the former Hotel Rudolph Postplatz 1 (formerly)
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Around 1955 Wood-paneled room with inlays of artistic and art-historical importance. After the demolition of the building in 2012, parts of the bar were stored, formerly a room on the ground floor of the hotel, wall inlay picture with motifs from the Orient and a representation of a steamer, flowers, mountains, clouds and palm trees with regard to coffee imports and coffee drinking, plus paneling on the ceiling, divided into different fields as well as the column also covered with different inlays and the semicircular superstructure of the former counter, another column in the area of ​​the former cloakroom and two doors. 08967697
 
Residential house in a corner and semi-open development Postplatz 2
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1891 Historic clinker brick facade, corner emphasis by tower kernels, evidence of the urban development in the town center of Rodewisch, historically important. In the corner of Wernesgrüner Strasse, two-storey yellow clinker brick building, granite plinth (Cyclops masonry), chamfered corner with shop entrance, side shop window (renewed), on the ground floor rectangular windows with straight roofs and lintel arches with keystones, on the upper floor rectangular windows with lintel arches and keystones, angled corner stone on the upper floor Tower (box bay window on consoles) with lantern and onion hood, hipped roof (slate covering), street-side gable, round-arched with semicircular gable and spherical top, volute-shaped gable cornice. 08985781
 
Bus shelter in open development (KVG waiting hall) Postplatz 6
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1939 In the local style, a monument to traffic history. One-storey, solid, plastered, four-bay arcades on the eaves side on square brick support pillars (stone-visible), high hipped roof (slate). 08985782
 
Fountain Rebesbrunn 11
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Around 1920 Of local historical importance 09305627
 
Residential house in open development Rützengrüner Strasse 1
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Around 1850 Upper floor half-timbered, half-timbered building located in the immediate vicinity of Rodewisch church, of local historical importance. Two-storey, ground floor massive, plastered, hipped roof, roof structures, roofing felt, original window sizes and cubature. 08985783
 
St. Petri Church (with furnishings), cemetery enclosure and tombs of the Frister, Keilig and Seifert families in the cemetery Rützengrüner Strasse 3
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1729–1736, essentially older (church); 1756 (church tower); 1887 major reconstruction of the church; 1913 (tomb) Baroque hall church with east tower, remodeled in the historicist style, of great importance for art and local history.
  • Church: massive, plastered quarry stone building with straight east end, buttresses, set east tower on a square floor plan, octagonal bell storey with arched window, clock, Welscher hood, lantern, copper hood, ball, weather vane, remains of ridge vaults on the tower floor, hip roof (slate covering), standing dormers, Round arched windows (coupled window strips with round skylights), in front of the west facade a low entrance porch with a saddle roof, round arched entrance portal framed by Ionic corner pilasters, straight roofing and semicircular arched field, cross attachment, strongly profiled wooden eaves, south-facing entrance with rectangular granite walls and keystone, restorations 1826/27, 1885 / 86 according to plans by Christian Friedrich Arnold from Dresden as well as 1912 and 1961, inside hall with flat ceiling and single-storey galleries with baluster parapet, large baroque pulpit altar with life-size carved figures of Moses and John the Evangelist (1736, changed in 1886), rest e of a winged altar by Peter Breuer (1516/17) with a crescent moon Madonna. Depiction of Peter and George with dragons, larger-than-life tree-trunk crucifix (presumably by Benjamin Böhme, inscribed 1669), former patron saints' boxes on the north and south sides of the choir, former pulpit (mid-17th century) converted into a lectern, baroque angel of Annunciation (1714) , three further late Gothic carved figures by Peter Breuer, Jehmlich organ from 1976, in the vestibule a baroque grave monument made of sandstone for Friedrich Sebastian von der Planitz (1654) with the Planitz coat of arms
  • Enclosure: partly quarry stone wall, partly assembled from wall graves, slate cover plates
  • Tomb in the cemetery: Hereditary burial of the Seifert, Keilig and Frister families, raised portico in the center (made up of six fluted columns and two half-columns) with an attic, raised in the center and broken up by round windows, vase sculpture, inscribed with inscription "Karl Louis Frister gest. 1913 ", on the side two figural reliefs (artificial stone), attic with the head of Christ, flanked by two side family graves (left black granite border and front wall), Fam Keilig, relief: laurel wreaths and two mourners, right Fam. Seifert (artificial stone front wall, fluted half columns, Relief)
08985770
 
School building of the Schillerschule Schillerstraße 2
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1905 Representative, well-structured clinker brick building from the turn of the century around 1900, of local historical importance.
  • School: angular two- to three-storey red clinker brick building with a wide four-storey central projectile (6 window axes), a total of extremely elongated building (21 window axes on the eaves), granite base (polygonal masonry), eastern narrow side segmented arched windows, two window windows with round arch roofing and fluted pilaster framing, on the upper floor , on the eaves side on the ground floor rectangular windows, first and second floors segmented arched windows, on the third floor of the central risalit arched windows, high two-flight staircase with entrance portal on the central risalit, sandstone walls, round arched portal with keystone and side half-columns, supraport and triangular gable with angel relief, original entrance door with skylight, original staircase Fluted pilasters on the side walls, floral plaster stucco above the entrance, a total of pilaster strips and brick cornice, corner blocks, two-axis side projections on the eaves with gable, round Arched windows and plaster pilaster strips, a total of clinker brick structure in different shades of red, artificial stone sills, windows renewed, gable roof, partly hipped, profiled eaves, staircase tower on the back
  • At the rear of the gym extension: one-storey clinker brick building with a hipped roof (cardboard), three window axes on the gable side, six window axes on the eaves side, granite plinth, segmented arched window with keystone, old windows, pilaster strips, profiled eaves
08985752
 
Rittergut Obergöltzsch (material entirety)
Rittergut Obergöltzsch (material entirety) Schloßstraße 2
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Beginning of the 13th century (foundation walls of the moated castle); Early 16th century (Schlösschen); 19th century, in the core probably older (manor house) Material entity of the manor Obergöltzsch, with the individual monuments: foundation walls of the fortress house Göltzsch (former moated castle), furthermore the small castle and manor house (on an angular floor plan) of a manor and two pitch pans (see individual monuments 08985767), in addition with the following material part: castle island with surrounding moat (remains of the early medieval ramparts with pond) and outbuildings on the island; Renaissance castle with stepped gables and corner tower, mansion partly in half-timbered construction, one of the most interesting old moated castles in Saxony, of architectural, local and regional significance 09304993
 
Foundation walls of the Festes Haus Göltzsch (former moated castle), still a small castle and mansion (with an angular floor plan) of a manor and two pitch pans (individual monuments to ID No. 09304993)
Foundation walls of the Festes Haus Göltzsch (former moated castle), still a small castle and mansion (with an angular floor plan) of a manor and two pitch pans (individual monuments to ID No. 09304993) Schloßstraße 2
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Beginning of the 13th century (foundation walls of the moated castle); 1495 Dendro (castle); 1631 Dendro (gatehouse) Individual features of the aggregate manor Obergöltzsch; Renaissance castle with stepped gables and corner tower, mansion partly in half-timbered construction, one of the most interesting old moated castles in Saxony, of architectural, local and regional significance. At the confluence of the Pöltzsch and Göltzsch rivers on the castle peninsula. All in all porphyry tufa garments, gable roof (slate covering) with double-row conical roof towers (with pommel). The renaissance castle once served as the residence of the nobles von Planitz, exterior reconstruction 1937–1939, interior construction for cultural institution from 1950. Inside museum with collection (excavation finds from the former moat, for example fragments of medieval ceramics). Moat around the entire castle island. 08985767
 
Entrance building of a former swimming pool (Stadtbad) Schloßstraße 3
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1922 Plastered building with a distinctive roof shape, building designed in the local style of local historical importance. Single-storey head building of the former outdoor swimming pool, plastered, facing the street at the gable, cantilevered attic, supported by four square pillars (portico-like), in the roof polygonal three-axis window bay windows with wooden window sockets, on the ground floor sliding windows (formerly cash desk), gable roof (slate), with dormers, above Roof bay projecting triangular gable with inscription: "Stadtbad Rodewisch", rectangular windows, original plaster, wooden balcony on the back, wide roof overhang, wooden eaves, hipped roof on the back. 08985766
 
School (Pestalozzi School, Johann-Heinrich-Pestalozzi-Gymnasium) and forecourt with lighting, retaining wall and enclosure
School (Pestalozzi School, Johann-Heinrich-Pestalozzi-Gymnasium) and forecourt with lighting, retaining wall and enclosure Road of Peace 5
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1928-1930 Multi-wing, partly curved plastered building with tower (former school observatory), architectural-historical evidence of the New Objectivity and the traditionalist building of the 1920s. Architect: Paul Beckert (Lichtenstein / Sa.). Excellent monument of building history and local history. The Pestalozzigymnasium project was the result of a Saxon architecture competition. 08985751
 
villa Road of Peace 11
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1914 Prestigious building that shapes the street scene, reform style architecture, of architectural significance. In the corner to Obere Schillerstraße, one-storey solid, plastered, granite plinth, partially heaped mansard roof (slate), vertically structured gable side facing the street (plastered structure), corner pilasters, openwork arched windows and leaded glass windows on the ground floor, arched windows in the attic, at a corner entrance with staircase and Round-arched side wall, monopitch roof, original entrance door, on the long side gable with crooked hip roof (slate), semicircular stand bay window with domed roof (slate) and profiled Ionic half-columns, leaded glass windows. 08985753
 
House in a corner and in a semi-open development Werkstrasse 1
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1903-1904, marked 1904 With shop, historicizing clinker brick facade with corner bay window, representative corner building, testimony to the urban expansion of the place, of architectural significance. Two-storey clinker brick building, granite base (ashlar masonry), chamfered corner with staircase, shop windows with segmented arches (artificial stone) on both sides, three-storey corner situation with double window axes each with stucco parapet fields, floral Art Nouveau design (trees, poppy relief), opening up into the gable ( concave curved gable with round window), otherwise arched curtain window, on Werkstrasse side elevation with shoulder arch entrance, arched skylight, above inscription: "Salve, 1904" and triangular gable, in the gable field mask and owl relief, on the side spherical top, partly original windows, hipped roof (cardboard ), Gable roof dormer windows, box-like corner bay windows with a concave monopitch roof and curtain arched window, sill cornice and bay window carried by a console-like projection on the chamfered corner on the first floor. 08985773
 
Residential house in semi-open development and in a corner location Werkstrasse 2
(map)
Marked 1904 With a shop, historicizing clinker brick facade, corner building typical of the time with an urban character and significant building history. Two-storey, plastered structure, granite ashlar plinth, cellar window with decorative grille, on the ground floor segmented arched window with keystone, chamfered corner with shop entrance, segmented arched roof, above the shop window plastered relief with inscription: "Anno 1904" (and arabesques, cogwheel relief), upper floor with donkey back window garments, corner risalite Zwerchgiebel (two triangular gables with coupled arched windows, covered by arches, round windows), gable roof dormer windows, overall gable roof, slate roofing, windows and doors renewed, profiled plastering eaves with Art Nouveau relief. 08985779
 
Residential house in semi-open development Werkstrasse 3
(map)
Marked with 1903 Well-designed clinker brick building that characterizes the street scene and is of architectural significance. Two-storey with plastered structure, plastered basement plinth, basement window with grating, on the ground floor and first floor arched curtain windows, profiled, on the ground floor original windows, profiled cantilevered sills, segmented arched entrance with original entrance door (wooden door with skylight and ornamental grille), bar garments, segmented arched windows with triangular gable, middle gable (curtain arched gable, concave curved), inscription: "MM 1903", gable roof dormer windows, overall gable roof. 08985778
 
Former Hotel Rudolph in a formerly closed development Wernesgruner Strasse 2
(map)
1913 Plastered facade with balconies, reform style architecture, well-designed representative hotel building, of architectural and local significance. High four-storey building, arched entrance on the left, original front door, the rest of the ground floor boarded with wood (currently not visible), cornice, two side box oriels (two-storey) with segmented arched gables, corner pilasters, cranked cornice, plaster stucco (putti, ornamented pilaster strips), in between Balcony (two-storey), upper balcony with iron railing, central large gable with a square. Plastered fields, hipped mansard roof, altogether high mansard roof (artificial slate) with bat dormers, some original windows with skylight bars and leaded glass windows have been preserved, rich plaster structure. 08985771
 
Residential house in semi-open development Wernesgrüner Strasse 4
(map)
1900 With a shop, clinker brick facade, richly structured historicism building from the turn of the century around 1900, of architectural significance. Two-storey, granite base (polygonal masonry)
  • Ground floor: side shop entrance with lintel arch, shop installation, otherwise rectangular windows with lintel arches and keystones
  • Upper floor: Rectangular window with straight roofing and floral stucco, triangular gable blown in the middle, overhead gable (biaxial), with lateral fluted corner pillars, blown gable made of convex and concave arches, round window and coupled rectangular window with straight, profiled cardboard, saddle roof
08985772
 
Residential building in closed development Wernesgruner Strasse 11
(map)
1904 With a shop, a lavishly designed historic clinker brick building that characterizes the street scene, evidence of the urban expansion of Rodewisch, of architectural significance. Two-storey, granite ashlar basement plinth, shop door, entrance door and shop covered by a wide segment lintel arch, staircase granite steps, original entrance door (wooden door with skylight and iron grille), otherwise segment arch windows with keystone and egg bar segment arch on the ground floor, donkey back window garments on the upper floor, round bar walls with pointed dwarfs Triangular gable, coupled arched window on the first floor with a round arch and plaster stucco in the arch field (coat of arms cartridge), gable roof (slate), gable roof dormer windows. 08985780
 
Ratskeller (rear half of the house at the town hall) Wernesgruner Strasse 32
(map)
Around 1930 On a hillside, remarkable plastered building from the 1930s, of architectural significance. One-storey, solid, high granite block plinth, two-flight staircase at the corner of the house, separated by square corner pillars (brick granite blocks), original entrance door, on the ground floor large segmented arched windows (on the courtyard side) and small rectangular windows (on the gable side and square windows on the upper floor), mansard roof (slate, natural slate) , above the entrance with illuminated letters: “Ratskeller” (mid-20th century), low-lying entrance with original ceiling lamp, cuboid-like consoles on the eaves, original windows, building emerged from the Hotel Bergkeller, since 1923 town hall. 08985749
 
Residential house in open development Wernesgruner Strasse 45
(map)
1925 Structured plastered building typical of the time (noble plaster), as a representative of Art Deco evidence of the building history after the First World War, probably built in connection with the neighboring factories, of architectural significance. Two-storey, granite plinth, plaster structure, jagged torches (Art Deco), concave bent roof (cardboard), high polygonal staircase tower on the gable side with two entrances, rear entrance as arbor with arched openings and staircase, front entrance door with leaded glazing, eaves on the ground floor with pilaster strips summarized, rectangular windows with profiled bezels, side rectangular windows with square parapet fields, upper floor rectangular windows with round-arched bezels, some shutters, loft extensions, inside original staircase and apartment doors, heavily profiled plaster eaves, wide roof overhang. 08985745
 
Former management building of a villa and enclosure Wernesgruner Strasse 70
(map)
1894 Belonged to the villa (number 72) of the Wolff family of felt cloth manufacturers, in the ensemble with the associated manufacturer's villa of local historical importance. Single-storey clinker brick building with jagged floor, saddle roof, eaves side dwelling and central projectile, floating gable, granite base (Cyclops wall), seven window axes on the eaves side, central entrance with staircase, sandstone walls, original entrance door with ornamental grille, overhanging arches and original doorway with sandstone arches, gable side second entrance Brick wall, square posts with flat sandstone cover plates. 08985746
 
Villa and garden with enclosure Wernesgruner Strasse 72
(map)
1894 Representative clinker brick building in neo-renaissance style with valuable original substance, villa belonging to the Wolff family of felt cloth manufacturers, significance in terms of building history and local history. One and two storeys with a moving roof landscape, high base made of Cyclops masonry (granite), embossed corner blocks, on one corner of the house glazed loggia with inserted round columns (original window with skylight bars and lead glass windows, oval window division, flat arcade arches with keystone), on three sides of the Building's strong two-storey central projection with a blown cloverleaf gable facing the dwelling, side entrance and stairwell porch with sandstone walls and original staircase (with high arched windows), apartment entrances wood-paneled with triangular gables in the neo-renaissance style, all in all rectangular windows, partly linteled Keystones, partly triangular gable roofing, gable fields filled with plaster stucco (cartouches), continuous foot, sill and wreath cornice, jamb with finely profiled floral stucco fields, terrace roof and dwarf houses with gable roof (cardboard), tent roof dormer en (wooden construction), profiled eaves, wide roof overhang, profiled lugs, rear central projection two window axes wide (twin windows on the first floor), cloverleaf gable with multi-profiled gable cornice, volute-shaped ending, window parapet fields designed with arabesques, iron grilles in front of cellar windows, some original windows , mostly renewed, original trees in the garden, remains of the enclosure (granite bollards). 08985747
 
Villa Wolff with garden Wernesgruner Strasse 74
(map)
1905 Representative plastered building, reform style architecture, villa of the factory owner family of the company founder Franz Louis Wolff, formerly formed in connection with the neighboring felt cloth factory FL Wolff & Sons (this was broken off in 2009), a local and architectural monument. Two-storey, solid, high base (boss wall), one-storey entrance house with staircase, original wooden door, side elevation with diaphragm (round arched window, above it triple window and in the gable bay-like wooden triple window with profiled half-columns), segmented arched and rectangular window, on the upper floor large segmented arched window with a final stone , Sills sandstone, window sills, ornamental framework, hipped roof (cardboard) and saddle roof, at the corner of the house a polygonal stand bay window with bossed wall plinth and side entrance, on the upper floor windows with inserted half-columns, coffered cornice and polygonal tent roof (slate), on the street side side elevation with ornamental framework Partly original windows, remains of the former factory park including the original planting above the villa. 08985729
 
Stable house (surrounding area) Zeidelweide 6
(map)
Middle of the 19th century Single-storey rural building on the outskirts, testimony to the typical Vogtland style of living and farming of bygone times, of architectural significance. Solid, plastered, three-sided framework (stand with head braces), horse stable in one half of the house, gable roof (cardboard with wooden strips), three standing segment arch dormers with original windows and skylight bars (radial), gable triangle slate, wooden sills, wooden door frames, rear Extension, inside insert ceiling with profiled beam, two cellar holes, smokehouse, vault. 08985732
 

Roethenbach

image designation location Dating description ID
Johanniskirche (with furnishings) and churchyard with enclosure
Johanniskirche (with furnishings) and churchyard with enclosure Forstweg 2
(map)
Before 1500 Medieval hall church with high ridge turret, art-historical and local historical significance.
  • Church: single-nave hall church, solid (quarry stone), plastered, semicircular apse, octagonal roof turret (slated) with Welscher hood, roof originally steeper, lantern, sphere, weather vane and clock, high arched windows, retracted entrance porch with side arched portal, beveled walls, original wooden door , Round window, profiled eaves, flat-covered interior, single-storey galleries from the 19th century (three-sided), three-part winged altar by Peter Breuer (signed and dated 1516): the birth of Christ, crescent Madonna, baroque pulpit with depiction of the evangelists, baptismal font from 1670, organ by Urban Kreutzbach & Sons (1868), restorations of the church in 1858, 1960 and 1994 (outside)
  • Enclosure: quarry stone wall (granite) covered with slates
08985724
 
Side building of a four-sided courtyard Gartenstrasse 24
(map)
Marked 1859 Upper floor half-timbered, evidence of the rural economy of bygone times, of architectural importance. With gate passage, two-storey, ground floor solid, plastered, original window sizes, saddle roof (cardboard), in the stable Prussian caps, wooden shutters, window sills granite, gable framework, eaves side (back) sliding windows. 08985723
 
Residential stable house, two side buildings and barn of a four-sided courtyard Plohner Strasse 17
(map)
1880, older in the core (stable house); around 1900 (side building) Stable house upper floor timber-framed, side buildings partly boarded up, rural evidence of the living and economic methods of bygone times, closed courtyard area, of local and architectural significance.
  • Residential stable house: two-storey, solid ground floor, quarry stone (granite), rectangular windows, granite window frames, profiled, rectangular entrance door, inscription (presumably) "1846" in the lintel (granite), upper floor half-timbered, slated, profiled wooden eaves, hipped roof (slate), standing dormers
  • First side building (north side): one-storey building standing at an angle to the residential building, presumably with jamb, quarry stone masonry, lightly plastered, today exposed to rubble, windows with clinker edging, partly closable by wooden shutters, flat sloping gable roof, building completely preserved in its original form without changes (courtyard side unknown)
  • Second side building (east side): wooden shed with jamb and gable roof, boarded up, base granite layered masonry
  • Third side building (south side): rectangular floor plan, quarry stone masonry or half-timbering, the quarry stone masonry plastered with gray plaster / smooth plaster, window openings closable with board shutters, flat sloping gable roof, brick masonry in the gable area, large sliding wooden gates on the eaves side
08985725
 
Two war memorials, a war memorial for those who fell in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870/1871 and those who fell in the First World War Plohner Strasse 17 (opposite)
(map)
Marked 1910; around 1920 Local historical significance.
  • War memorial First World War: Artificial stone stele on a staircase base, side flanks with spherical top and inscription: “The heroes praise! The people in need! ", Middle stele with relief (iron cross and laurel wreath), inscription:" For their fatherland gave life: "below a former panel (torn out), below it oak relief and sword, original trees (oak and linden)
  • War memorial to commemorate the Franco-German war: roughly hewn granite stele with nailed iron plate, inscriptions: “Heil dir Germania! 1870–1910 ”and“ Your sons, who fought for the fatherland in 1870/71, dedicated to the 40th anniversary of the German Empire out of gratitude by your community. Röthenbach September 2, 1910 "
08985726
 
Northern house, western side building and water trough of a four-sided courtyard Rodewischer Strasse 21
(map)
Mid-19th century (farmhouse); marked 1849 (water trough) Both buildings with half-timbered upper floors, largely closed courtyards, testimony to the way of living and farming of bygone times, of architectural significance.
  • Residential house: two-storey, solid ground floor, plastered, profiled window frames, upper floor half-timbered and original window sizes, crooked hip roof (slate), entrance door granite walls with new roofing, gable slated, street-side (back of house) annoying two-storey extension
  • Stable: two-storey, solid ground floor, plastered, upper storey half-timbered, wooden shutters, saddle roof (Eternit), gable-side gate passage with boarded dovecote, two-aisled stall with granite columns, Bohemian caps (four yokes), segmented arched windows, entrance granite walls, concrete windows, upper storey half-timbered
  • Granite water trough: rectangular, inscription carved into the granite slab on the front side, inscribed "1849", partly boarded up by a suspected attachment (pent roof)
08985720
 
Villa with garden, access bridge over the Plohnbach , enclosure and gate entrance Rodewischer Strasse 24
(map)
1903 Villa on a hillside, historicizing plastered building with a picturesque roof landscape, representative building that characterizes the town and is of architectural significance.
  • Villa of a baker: single storey with high substructure wall facing the slope (Cyclops masonry), plastered ground floor, eaves side entrance with original entrance door and door lock, mezzanine floor, profiled eaves, corner rustication (plastered), gable side side elevation with dwarf gable, window tile covering and plain brick gable profiled, hipped roof with moving roof landscape (caterpillars, iron ornamental grille, square turrets, lantern and onion roof with spherical top), rectangular windows on consoles, eaves side dwarf house (slope side)
  • Old trees in the garden, bridge over the Rödelbach, iron railing on the side (historical) with flat relief attachments (angel heads)
  • Enclosure to the street: iron gate, grating with crabs, arabesques and putti motifs, wall of the moat made of quarry stone (granite)
08985721
 
Residential stable house (surrounding area) of a former four-sided courtyard Rodewischer Strasse 28
(map)
Marked 1858, the core is older Upper floor half-timbered, remarkable surrounding construction, preserved in good original condition, typical Vogtland monument of the living and economic methods of bygone times, of architectural significance. Two-storey residential stable house, solid ground floor, right half of the house with surrounding framework (stand with head braces) and cladding, left half of the house massive, plastered, two entrances with granite walls, a lintel with the inscription "1858", original entrance door (slightly changed) with flat skylight, profiled walls, Partly with a cellar (barrel, quarry stone), original window sizes, boarded gable, gable roof (artificial slate), quarry stone plinth. 08985719
 

Rützengrün

image designation location Dating description ID
Manor house, two side buildings and gate entrance of the former manor Am Teich 6
(map)
Around 1860 (southern farm building); 1890 (northern farm building); 1900-1902 (mansion) Structurally intact complex of great historical value and characterizing the townscape, the residential building also of architectural significance. The manor Rützengrün, the nucleus of the place, first mentioned in a document in the 15th century and long owned by the von der Planitz family, today consists of the house that the paper manufacturers Brettschneider 1900-1902 replaced a (larger, see Poenicke) previous building (mansion ) and two farm buildings from the 2nd half of the 19th century, it is characteristic of the townscape and with an intact structure over a (belonging) pond and is of great historical importance, the house also of architectural relevance 08985728
 
War memorial for the fallen soldiers of the First World War
War memorial for the fallen soldiers of the First World War Brunnenweg 1 (next to)
(map)
1928 For years in a dismantled state, re-erection in 2002, memorial stone with name, originally crowned by a bronze eagle, of local historical importance 08985802
 
Martin Luther Church
Martin Luther Church Hauptstrasse 3
(map)
1924–1925, designated 1924 Hall building with apse and massive west tower, in the local style, architect Johannes Höra from Bad Elster, architectural and local significance. Single-aisle, plastered, granite plinth (boss cuboid), four arched windows on the eaves, lead glass windows, hipped roof (slate covering), west tower (square, with octagonal top and octagonal tent roof, knob, cross, clock, slate covering), tower window with Palladio motif, corner pilasters and western facade pillars Overhanging the tower, staircase on the side of the tower with arched entrance, next to it sandstone inscription plaque, inside ceiling with depiction of the starry sky, on the tower arched niche with depiction of the blessing Christ, in the east three-sided small apse with arched window, lead glass window (figurative). 08985727
 

Remarks

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

Detailed memorial texts

  1. Landesanstalt Untergöltzsch :
    The former "Royal Saxon State Healing and Nursing Institution for the Mentally Ill in Untergöltzsch" is an early hospital facility that was not closed due to new scientific findings, but built in a pavilion system. The uniformly and sophisticatedly designed yellow clinker brick type buildings with decor by means of red clinker strips and segment arch openings stand on high slate plinths, often in polygonal masonry. The strict two-story buildings with an H- and U-shaped or right-angled floor plan, the floating gables influenced by the so-called Swiss style, also risalits and dormer windows have a rhythmic effect.

    The state institute, one of the most important surviving evidence of health and social welfare from the turn of the century around 1900 and in this respect comparable to the monuments in Berlin-Moabit and Hamburg-Eppendorf, is located on the former grounds of the Untergöltzsch manor, which the Saxon state for the planned maintenance purpose bought. Between 1889 and 1893 the ensemble mentioned was created in loose symmetry along two north-south axes, which are connected at their ends by means of half-rings. The complex is divided into roughly two halves of the same size by the Bahnhofstrasse, which runs in an east-west direction, which also meant the separation of women and men (today identified by the building letters A and B).

    The area is characterized by a park-like design, which is expressed in old trees, partly preserved chestnut avenues, a system of paths connecting the axes and a striking pond south of Bahnhofstrasse. All of this can already be seen in early illustrations. In addition, there is a cemetery with pathology, a funeral hall, chapel and fountain, on which there is also a memorial for the soldiers who died in both wars when the complex was also a hospital (chapel and memorial in the design language of the 1920s / 1930s).

    Some buildings do not fit completely into the otherwise homogeneous complex and stand out due to their design details. First and foremost, the former director's villa should be mentioned, which has a turret with a Welscher hood, an irregular floor plan, a gable with an ornamental framework and a coupled window. The eclecticism of late historicism in this house, which was not built until around 1900 and was not part of the original planning, differs significantly from the classic, strict design of the rest of the complex. The gatekeeper's house opposite is also noticeable with a central projection with a neo-renaissance tail gable, also a sign that it was built a little later. A curiosity is the asylum church, completed in 1894, which was converted into a gymnasium in the 1960s. The building mixes medieval (Romanesque) influences with those of classicism (Greek gable) and also stands for the ostentatious variety of styles from the years before 1900. Nevertheless, its brick masonry makes it closer to its surroundings.
  2. Individual features of the entity of the Untergöltzsch State Institution:
    • A3, residential building, medical directorate (originally not planned, created around 1900): two-storey yellow clinker brick building on a slate base (polygonal masonry), strong corner projecting with jamb and gable roof, ornamental framework in the gable, all in all on the ground floor segmented arched windows, on the upper floor coupled round arched windows, covered by clinker arches, with keystone, splendid clinker brick structure (green glazed clinker brick): cornice strips, richly decorated parapet areas (St. Andrew's crosses, diamonds), a square staircase tower on the side with chamfered corners, Welscher hood and lantern, pointed tent roof and knob (slated), on the back at the corner of the house a rectangular, single-storey stand bay window with Welscher Hood (slated), artificial stone walls, overall gable roof (purlin roof), slate covering
    • A4, gatehouse (originally not included in the development plan, built around 1900): one-storey yellow clinker building with jamb, slate plinth, red clinker brick structure, eaves side central projection with segmented arched entrance (sandstone walls) and coupled segmented arched windows on the upper floor, gable gable with saddle roof, convex, conical, sandstone roof , upper end as a small triangular gable, console, all in all segmented arched windows with red clinker lintel arches, also rectangular windows in the jamb, original windows preserved, saddle roof (purlin roof, slate covering), saddle roof dormer, original entrance door with skylight, toothed cornice, profiled rafter heads
    • A5, administration, was not included in the original development plan (created around 1900): two-storey yellow clinker building on a U-shaped floor plan, slate base (polygonal masonry), red clinker brick structure, basement windows, granite walls, otherwise sandstone walls, segmented arched windows with clinker lintel arches on the ground floor on the eaves side in the middle entrance door with segmented arched walls and keystone, on the upper floor rectangular windows, partly coupled windows on the ground floor and upper floor, covered by segmented arch clinker arches, a total of hipped roof (slate), corner projections with dwarf houses (round arched windows) and gable roof, floating gable, boarded up on the narrow side with double gable )
    • A6, institutional church: built in 1893/94, structurally changed and profaned in the 1960s, dismantling of the changes started in 2001, yellow brick shell on a high quarry stone base (slate), box-like two-storey hall church (approx. 10 m high), main entrance originally accessible via a massive open staircase on the east facade: double arched portal, original wooden entrance doors with skylight, stepped portal, coupled segmental arched windows on the ground floor, arched windows on the upper floor, combined into triplet windows via the entrance, total gable roof (currently corrugated iron - originally natural slate covering), eaves corner projections and central projections, stepped cornice (brick) , on the west facade a rectangular apse (church not faced) with a high arched window and triangular gable, sandstone eaves cornice, apse flanked by sacristy extensions with hipped roof, inside organ loft as a wooden structure, church partially with a cellar
    • A7, station, former administration building: two-storey yellow clinker building on a slate base, on the eaves side 5-window axis-wide central projection, rear terrace removed, red brick structure (cornice strips, garments), staircase, segmented arched entrance, segmented arched window, staircase risalit with twin eaves, stepped, Gable roof, floating gable, slate roofing, gable roof dormers, twin windows in the gable triangle
    • A8, residential building, formerly "first class": two-storey yellow clinker brick building on a slate base, gable and eaves side central projection with floating gable, red clinker structure (cornice strips, garments), gable side staircase and segmented arch entrance at the central projection (staircase tower), partial door windows, original entrance Window with block, on the back arbor and balcony on brick pillars and in the upper part on fluted iron columns, iron railings, original balcony door, stepped eaves cornice (stepped), saddle roof
    • A9, residential building, formerly "Directorenhaus": two-storey yellow brick building on a slate base, drilled segmented arched windows, toothed cornice, stepped eaves, original winter windows, original windows with blocks, single-flight staircase on the gable side (granite steps) and iron railing, original entrance door, gable roof (slate) wooden gable dormers with original windows
    • A10, station, "second class" (former name): two-storey yellow clinker building on a slate base, H-shaped floor plan with corner projections and central projecting, segmented arched windows, belt cornice in tooth cut (clinker brick), stepped eaves cornice on the gable sides, overall hipped roof (cardboard), risalite with dwarf house and gable roof, terrace on the eaves
    • A14, ward, formerly for the "restless", today psychotherapy department: yellow clinker building on a T-shaped floor plan, slate base, two-story main wing, single-story side wing, segmented arched window, main wing on the eaves side with side projections, gable roof (slate covering, purlin roof), floating gable Segmented arch entrance, stepped eaves cornice, on the side wings on the gable side staircase (granite steps, original iron railing)
    • A15, ward, forensic department, formerly for "half-calm and unclean": two-storey yellow clinker building, red clinker brick structure, slate base, segmented arched window (barred), belt cornice (tooth cut), side projections, gable roof (purlin roof), slate covering, suspended gable, gable roof
    • A17, residential building, former civil servants' residence, now training apartment: two-storey yellow clinker building on a slate base (layered masonry), single-flight staircase on the gable side (granite steps) and segmented arched entrance with original entrance door, segmented arched window, stepped eaves, gable roof with floating gable, gable roof
    • A18, residential building, originally a nursing home: one-storey yellow clinker brick building on a slate base (layered masonry scratched), two-storey side projections on both sides of the eaves (protruding to different degrees), in the middle segmented arched entrance with original front door and staircase (granite steps), iron railing, segmented arched window with original orange brickwork window walls , in the gable round window, gable roof (purlin roof), slate roofing, gable dormers, original doors inside, some winter windows
    • A20, station, former station for so-called "40 quiet people", today department for addicts, admission station: H-shaped floor plan, two-storey yellow clinker building on a slate base, segmented arched entrance in the middle wing, segmented arched window, clinker sills, gable roof (purlin roof), slate roofing, belt cornice (in tooth section ), Floating gable, rear central projection with staircase tower, high segmental arch entrance, both eaves sides with side projections (two window axes)
    • A23, station, originally a station for 40 “quiet people”: H-shaped floor plan, two-storey yellow clinker building on a slate base, segmented arched entrance in the middle wing, segmented arched window, clinker sill, gable roof (purlin roof), slate roofing, belt cornice (toothed section), floating gable, wooden gable roof carved with gable Gable, rear central projection with staircase tower, high segment arch entrance, both eaves sides with side projections (two window axes)
    • A24, ballroom, today a cultural center and music therapy: slate plinth, two-storey yellow clinker building on an H-shaped floor plan, red clinker structure, hipped roof (slate), gable dormer windows, side elevations with gable roof, floating gable, on the eaves side two window axes-wide side verandas (caneled iron pillars in between) , on the upper floor twin windows, on the other side of the eaves between the side projections terrace with two-flight staircase, iron railing, on the ground floor arched window with keystone, gable side seven window axes on the narrow sides, inside ballroom with stage, original staircase with iron railing
    • A27, former locksmith's shop, now shop and hairdresser: not yet included in the original plan, yellow clinker brick building on a slate base, red clinker brick structure, segmental arch entrance on the gable side, twin windows and round windows in the gable triangle, wooden gate (original) on the eaves side with segmented arched walls and loading ramp (granite slabs), gable roof (rebated tiles ), Purlin roof, stepped eaves cornice, profiled rafter heads, segmented arched windows, floating gables
    • A29, pathology, originally “section and burial hall”, now central work therapy: single-storey red clinker building with yellow clinker brick structure, slate base, central projectile with segmented arched entrance, staircase (granite steps), arched entrance, yellow cornice strips, gable-sided segmental arched entrance, segmented arched window and , in the gable round window, stepped eaves cornice, saddle roof (purlin roof, cardboard), corner pilasters
    • B2, residential building, formerly a nursing home: one and a half-story yellow brick building on a slate base (chiseled), hook-shaped floor plan, on three sides of the building on the right side elevation, jamb floor, segmented arched window, sills (clinker brick), ledge (red clinker), stepped eaves cornice, gable roof (slate roof) with wooden decorated floating gable, saddle roof dormer windows, segmental arch entrance with staircase (granite steps), round window in the gable triangle, profiled rafter heads
    • B3, formerly station for "half-calm", now station (B3) / ambulance: yellow clinker building on an H-shaped floor plan, segment arch cellar window with slate lintel arches, overall slate base (layered masonry), red clinker brick structure (cornice strips), segment arch window, stepped eaves cornice ( Clinker brick), on the eaves side rectangular entrance with side windows and fluted iron pilasters, single-flight staircase (granite steps), on the back side and central projections (stair tower), on the front on the upper floor triple windows (rectangular windows) in the middle with a common lintel
    • B5, originally a station for so-called "half-calm and unclean", now station / department for addicts and weaning station (B5): two-storey yellow clinker building on a slate base, segmented arched window in the basement with slate arches, eaves-sided segmental arch entrance, side risalite (stepping forward to different degrees), raw brick staircase Belt cornice, segment arched windows, hipped roof (purlin roof with floating gable, roofing felt), gable dormers, stepped eaves cornice
    • B6, originally station for so-called "restless", now station / work therapy (B 6): yellow clinker building on a T-shaped floor plan, three-storey, central building three-storey, ground floor slate (layered masonry), first and second floors yellow clinker brick with red brick structure, segmented arched windows, Stepped clinker cornices, segmented arched entrance on the gable side, the gable side slightly recessed at the house line, at right angles on both sides adjoining side wings: single-storey yellow clinker buildings on a high slate base, staircase on the eaves side, all in all saddle roof (purlin roof), stepped eaves cornice
    • B8, ward / neurological department (B 8): rectangular yellow clinker building on a slate base (polygonal masonry), two-story central building, flanked by one and a half-story side wings, central building on the eaves side five window axes, central projecting with gable, two-flight staircase (clinker stone arches), high rounded entrance , side wing adjoining the gable with side risalit and dwelling, a total of arched windows with sandstone walls and clinker lintel arches with keystone (sandstone), cellar window segment arches (granite walls and brick lintel arches), on the right side wing wooden veranda on square pillars (slate cuboid), original wooden construction with large arched windows , outer staircase in front of the veranda, entire construction with a crooked hipped roof (purlin roof with profiled rafters), round arched eaves cornice (brick) with stepped consoles
    • B9, originally for "40 quiet people", now ward / day clinic (B 9): identical to ward B 10, same cubature and building material, terrace on the eaves side renewed, one-storey extension on the front side, plastered
    • B10, originally planned for "40 calm people", station (B 10) in open development: yellow clinker building on an H-shaped floor plan, slate base, segmented arched cellar window, red brick structure (cornice strips), segmented arched window with red clinker cladding, gable roof (slate, purlin roof) with floating gable, low terrace on the eaves side with granite slab floor, iron railing, stepped eaves cornice, central staircase projection with segmented arch entrance and staircase
    • B11, former residential building "first class", now station (B 11) in open development: two-storey yellow clinker building, slate base, central projection with gable and terrace, segmented arched window, gable roof with gable roof dormer, stepped eaves, gable-side stairwell projected with segmented arched entrance
    • B12, originally a station and so-called "second class", today laboratory (B 12), central laboratory and scientific library: yellow clinker brick building on a slate base (layered masonry), cross-shaped floor plan, two-storey, segmented arched cellar window, wide central projection (five window axes), segmented arched window with profiled Sills, cornice strips, twin windows in the gable, on the gable side a central projectile (staircase tower) with segmented arch entrance and staircase (granite steps), gable roof (purlin roof), roofing felt, gable roof dormers, wooden floating gable
    • B14, residential building (B 14) in open development: two-storey yellow clinker building, high slate base (ashlar masonry), red clinker brick structure, segmented arched window, toothed cornice (clinker brick), profiled eaves (brick), on the gable side segmented arched entrance with a single staircase, slate base and iron railing Skylight, gable triangle with stepped eaves cornice (brick), gable roof (cardboard), wooden floating gable, gable roof dormer windows, segmental arched cellar windows with lintel arches made of slate, building originally erected as a residential building for senior civil servants
    • Kastanienallee with old pathways laid out parallel to station buildings B 9 to B 11 and residential building B 14
    • Cemetery, located to the west of the institution's premises (belonging to the entity) with burial hall (A29), chapel, fountain and war memorial:
      • Chapel (built around 1930): one-storey, modest plastered building on a slate base (layered masonry), three window axes on the eaves side, arched windows, arched entrance and wooden door on the gable side, staircase on a trapezoidal floor plan, gable roof (slate), profiled plastering eaves, door and window sashes, otherwise unjointed rear gable side single-storey extension (sacristy?)
      • Fountain system, behind the chapel: semicircular beech hedge, in front of it artificial stone wall with side benches concave in a semicircle, front wall in the middle with a square artificial stone relief on two steles, in the middle raised octagonal fountain column, in front of it semicircular wall surrounding the fountain (artificial stone), system built around 1915
      • War memorial, in the rear part of the cemetery of the soldiers who died in the hospital and those who died in the First and Second World Wars: stele made of quarry stone masonry and ashlar masonry on a cross-shaped floor plan, high rectangular base with corbels, above it high cross-shaped stele with a strong beveled cornice as the top , in the lower part soldier head relief (artificial stone) with helmet
  3. Memorial behind Karl-Liebknecht-Straße 12:
    Enclosure: quarry stone wall (slate), high front wall towards the valley (protruding far beyond the enclosure) similar to a gatehouse, with a beveled upper edge (quarry stone, slate). In the front wall, archway: large round arched portal opening with oversized slate keystone. Main entrance to the square flanked by two smaller arched openings, on the outside on the upper floor arched openings with a bay-like exit (slate slabs supported on three massive consoles), access inside the gatehouse through a staircase, steps made of slate slabs. Former roll call or parade ground (presumably a Nazi thing), now a grassy, ​​hilly area with a slightly deepened central field, two linden trees (originally four linden trees on both sides of the path), border wall with loopholes (round arched), buttresses in the corners, remains in the rear a central staircase that leads to a raised area similar to a stage, there on the inside of the enclosure wall remains of reliefs, the second staircase leading to the higher-lying observatory.

    Original building intention: a war memorial intended since 1924 for the fallen of the First World War, reinterpreted by the National Socialists as a "witness to nationalist building convictions", "symbol of the city" and "memorial for those who fell in the World War (1914/18)" as well as the "national survey ".

    Originally planned consecration on the 25th anniversary of the outbreak of the First World War, postponed as a result of the renewed outbreak of war in 1939 or at the same time reinterpretation of the memorial as a "memorial for the victims of the new war imposed on the German people" (according to the building report from 1939). April 15, 1939 "Cornerstone laying" completed, walling of a copper box with documents and a parchment certificate. Originally there was a large stone block in the middle of the square as an "altar"; on the front there was a 10-meter-high obelisk with an imperial eagle (with outstretched wings) and memorial plaques. Originally planned was a lane from the roll call square of the Pestalozzi School to the memorial as a parade road and line of sight. After Rodewisch was occupied by American combat groups, the 10-meter-high obelisk bearing the bronze national eagle was blown up (the eagle sculpture was transported away by Soviet troops).
  4. Individual features of the totality of the manor Obergöltzsch:
    • Festes Hus (moated castle, only the foundation walls preserved): Foundation walls of the "Festes Haus Göltzsch" with inner (surrounding the Festes Haus) and outer moat or pond (around the entire former moated castle), permanent house on a square floor plan with two lateral projections (Supports), eight rooms (formerly) excavated inside, knee-high quarry stone walls with slate coverings, a square room to the weir, small arched bridge over the moat, the "Feste Hus" (formerly part of a circular rampart) has not been inhabited since the end of the 16th century , dilapidated and filled in, foundations dug 1937–1939 and the outer ditch widened to the pond
    • Renaissance castle: solid, plastered, two-storey, rectangular floor plan, two corner towers (north-west side), towers on a three-quarter round floor plan and rectangular turrets placed over a corner (standing bay on stepped consoles), northern corner tower with slated hood and spherical top, southern corner tower in the style of a church tower (with square and octagonal attachment, lantern, hood and weather vane, slated, clock on the side)
      • Inside: Upper floor ballroom with renaissance ceiling, so-called "Flaserdecke", a wooden coffered ceiling with hand-printed multi-colored wallpaper, from the broken castle Niederrödern near Radeburg (17th century)
      • Two Saiger bells from 1550 and 1558 in the tower, groin vaults on the ground floor, rectangular windows with profiled walls, round rod made of porphyry tufa,
      • On the long side staircase to the upper floor with baroque stair gate (from Tiefenau Castle, attached to the outside staircase in 1955)
      • On the gable side there is a round-arched entrance with a profiled porphyry tufa
      • Stepped gable on the narrow sides
      • In the gable twin windows (rectangular window) and small round window
    • Manor of the manor with gatehouse (since 1951 "Museum Göltzsch"): horseshoe-shaped building (composed of several additions from the 18th and 19th centuries), formerly owned by the Planitz family, two-storey, solid, plastered, crooked hip roof (slate) and hipped roof (Gatehouse), rectangular window, northern wing with later extension (no monument), profiled eaves
    • southern wing (gatehouse) from the 17th century: profiled wooden eaves and slightly bent floor plan, solid ground floor, upper floor half-timbered, partly plastered, rectangular gate passage (courtyard side) or arched gate passage (outside), high rectangular windows on the upper floor, hip roof (slate) , on the back of the ditch three-storey extension with gable roof, rectangular window
    • two pitch pans (placed in front of the foundation walls of the fixed house and in front of the manor house or museum): square granite blocks with a central drainage hole, dimensions: 102 × 102 × 42 cm and 80 × 80 × 40 cm
  5. Pestalozzi School:
    School building in the corner of Jahnstraße, on a U-shaped floor plan with a concave, rounded street side of the central wing (class wing) and angled gymnasium and auditorium annex, structure of the building as a perforated facade, four-storey curved class wing, solid construction (brick), ground floor made of ashlar (green stone) the Elstertal), first to third floor plastered, ten window axes (center wing) lattice windows on the street side, at the corner west entrance with granite staircase and square corner pillar, recessed original entrance door, corner pillar with strong corner console and larger-than-life half-sculpture (artificial stone figure, depiction of Pestalozzi with student, at the same time the figure portrays the then Rodewisch mayor Pfeiffer), courtyard side of the central wing convexly rounded wall, original plaster, rectangular windows grouped in groups of four to form ribbon windows, thereby emphasizing the horizontal.

    Entrance building: square corner tower (23 meters high) with clock and dome from 1950 (erected as a school planetarium), towering over the school building, on the first and second floors of the tower corner windows with slate slabs and a straight roof.

    Entire building hipped roof (slate covering), triangular dormers, main entrance with parabolic double portal with slate walls and keystone, outside staircase, balcony exit above the entrance.

    Inside the central wing, there is a long, rounded corridor (according to the shape of the building), a staircase with original gate and door systems.

    Hall building with auditorium and gymnasium: two-storey building built at the same eaves height as the main building, on the ground floor a high gymnasium, high slate base, large rectangular windows, above that on the upper floor a high auditorium with remarkable interior fittings, on the long sides five tall rectangular windows or triplet windows, on the front side with a stage rectangular opening, coffered ceiling (three rectangular fields, light boxes on the edge or, in the middle coffer, round luminaires in Bauhaus style), figurative sculpture attached to the corner of the building (mother with child).

    At the corner of Jahnstraße a roundabout-like forecourt (roll call area) with an angular enclosure and round corner (circular wall: slate cuboid and slate cover plates), lighting (square stele made of slate masonry, top made of frosted glass) on the square forecourt and large open staircase.
  6. Manor Rützengrün:
    • Residential building: two-storey solid plastered building with a deep structure on a cyclops granite base, ground floor with plaster grooves and rectangular windows, courtyard side with trapezoidal stand bay, the storey optically closed off by a cornice, above it a high upper floor with smooth plaster, here the openings (with sandstone walls) partly with curved roofs, neo-bar roofs also their sprouts, also the tower-like risalit (with Welscher hood) on the west side and the side risalit with tail gable on the courtyard side, house corners and risalits framed by grooved pilaster strips, eaves with corrugated plaster grooves influenced by Art Nouveau, heterogeneous roof landscape on a mansard base, with old German slate covering and flat finished with French railing, granite staircase, with iron railing, doors original, also inside
    • Southern side building (farm building, around 1860): two-storey plastered field stone building, partly mixed masonry, basement with Bohemian cap vault, on the courtyard side (again) with three segment-arched entrances as well as with granite entrances, the upper floor windows standing and suspected, the ceiling on the upper floor slightly lowered, and the flat gable roof probably not with the original construction, but with large double T-beams around 1930, elaborate gable design on the west side, with pilaster-like wall templates here trisection of the wall
    • Northern side building (farm building, around 1890): elongated two-storey red brick building, ornamentally decorated with yellow clinker bricks, which mark the yokes like pilaster strips and cornice-like storeys, servants' building with the same design along the longitudinal axis, east side of the farm building with double-standing roof trusses from the time of construction, the west side with More modern purlin construction from the first half of the 20th century, the former coach house building to the west originally with the same decoration, but single-storey and flat-roofed, today with a heavily modified facade, the base, however, probably part of the previous mansion
    • Remains of the enclosure: iron gate with floral motifs in Art Nouveau forms

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Commons : Kulturdenkmale in Rodewisch  - Collection of pictures