List of cultural monuments in Sayda

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Coat of arms of the city of Sayda

The list of cultural monuments in Sayda includes the cultural monuments in Sayda . The notes are to be observed.
This list is a partial list of the list of cultural monuments in the district of Central Saxony .
This list is a partial list of the list of cultural monuments in Saxony .

Legend

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

Sayda

image designation location Dating description ID
Entirety of component of the entirety of the area watercourse Institute (ID no. 08991218) in the district of Sayda with single monuments (Map) 16.-18. Century Material component of the Revierwasserlaufanstalt in the district of Sayda with the individual monuments: Dittersbacher Rösche with mouth hole, Mortelgrunder Kunstgraben and Mortelbacher Rösche with mouth hole (individual monuments ID no. 08991094); Landscape-defining components of an extensive system of mining water management for supplying Freiberg mining with impact water - of particular importance in terms of mining history and local history. 09304805
 


Dittersbacher Rösche, Mortelgrunder Kunstgraben and Mortelbacher Rösche (individual monuments for ID No. 09304805) (Map) 1827 (Mortelgrunder Kunstgraben) Individual features of the totality Revierwasserlaufanstalt: Dittersbacher Rösche with mouth hole, Mortelgrunder Kunstgraben and Mortelbacher Rösche with mouth hole - artificially created surface and underground aqueduct between the I. Purschensteiner Rösche on Dittersbacher Flur in the municipality of Neuhausen / Erzgeb. and the Dittmannsdorfer Teich on Ullersdorfer Flur in the urban area of ​​Sayda and on Dittmannsdorfer Flur in the municipality of Pfaffrodas, local features of an extensive system of mining water management to supply the Freiberg mining with impact water, of mining history and local history of importance. 08991094
 


Bingen, Halden and a tunnel including a tunnel mouth hole (Map) 15-19 Century
(mining activities)
Evidence of the early copper and silver ore mining in Mortelgrund below Sayda, of significance in terms of mining history. 08991095
 


Triangulation column
Triangulation column (Map) re. 1869
(triangulation column)
Second order station, significant testimony to geodesy of the 19th century, of significance in terms of surveying history. 08991023
 


Ten city barns
Ten city barns Old Heidersdorfer Strasse
(map)
around 1843 Despite the partial reshaping, important evidence of the agricultural town, of importance in terms of local and urban development history. 08991026
 


Farm building for the restoration known as the “machine”, today a holiday home Alte Heidersdorfer Strasse 17
(map)
between 1880 u. 1920 Presumably the former farm building of the restoration opposite, known as the “machine”, today a holiday home - a typical half-timbered house built between 1880 and 1912 with a massive ground floor of regional historical value. Solid ground floor, upper floor timber-framed boarded, entrance porch, glazed windows, gable roof, slate roofing 08990958
 


Sayda train station;  Mulda – Sayda narrow-gauge railway
More pictures
Sayda train station; Mulda – Sayda narrow-gauge railway At the train station
(map)
1897 Reception building and locomotive shed of the Sayda station of the Kleinbahn (narrow-gauge railway) Mulda-Sayda - belonging to the last remaining structural witnesses of the narrow-gauge line that was in operation for almost 70 years, the reception building and the locomotive shed with workshop built at the same time acquire importance in terms of transport history and of great regional history. 08991039
 


War memorial for those who fell in World War I
War memorial for those who fell in World War I At the train station
(map)
1922 Originally placed at the front side gate of the parish church (former wedding portal through which the future husbands entered the church), which found a new location in the park opposite the train station due to the renovation of the church, of local historical importance. 08991029
 


Sayda town church
Sayda town church Am Kirchplatz
(map)
1391 (choir) City Church (with furnishings) - an important late-Gothic hall church with furnishings mainly from the end of the 19th century and of great importance for the local history and the townscape. 08991028
 


Residential building in closed development
Residential building in closed development Am Kirchplatz 2
(map)
around 1730 one of the few remaining buildings that survived the city fire of 1842, impressive due to its authentic structure, defining the appearance of the town due to its location, of local history, character of the townscape and architectural history. Solid ground floor, timber-framed upstairs, very steep pitched roof, still with shingle roofing until 1937, construction time has not been handed down, judging by the structure, the building could also have been built before 1700. 08991044
 


Fountain
Fountain At the market
(map)
1932 Part of the design of the square in front of the town hall, of importance in terms of local history and character.

Base area with two side and one front, semicircular water catchment basin with metal taps, on top of which a high square base with a sitting lion, presumably made of limestone.
1929 limited competition to beautify the market square with a fountain, design by Georg Türke and Gustav Reissmann , the latter carried out 1931–32, the cost of the fountain was borne by the Saxon state, only the transport was made with the help of donations by the city of Sayda from Dresden realized.

08991040
 


Town hall, former residential building
Town hall, former residential building Am Markt 1
(map)
1842/1843 After the town fire in 1842, the plastered building was built to shape the townscape and is of local historical importance.

Basement floor, three-storey, sandstone walls, five to four axes, entrance area as a segmented arch with original door leaf and coat of arms of the city of Sayda, plastering on the ground floor, profiled window walls, profiled cornice, crooked hip roof, slate roofing, later extension along the market, three-storey, gable roof with slate covering
history : The town hall was destroyed in the town fire in 1842. After that, the city administration was temporarily housed in the house of the mayor Emil Eduard Wehner. In 1893 the community acquired today's town hall from Johannes Jonathan Jähnig, who had the building built in 1843. The building was fundamentally rebuilt as an administration building. In 1894 the administration moved into the new building.

08991041
 


Residential house in semi-open development Am Markt 3
(map)
1843/1844 Newly built plastered building after the city fire with typical design features of this time, of importance in terms of urban planning and urban development history. Two-storey plastered building, on the upper floor profiled window frames and sills, webbing, profiled sandstone door frames, profiled cornice, crooked hip roof, slate roofing, large pike dome 08991052
 


Residential house in a corner location in a semi-open development Am Markt 11
(map)
after 1842 Town house from the reconstruction phase after the devastating city fire of 1842 in good original condition, important for the appearance of the market square, of importance in terms of building history, urban development history and urban planning. Two-storey plastered building, renovated after 1990, old structure largely preserved, profiled cornice, door portal modernized, shape retained, half-hip roof, wall-opening ratio preserved 09306067
 


Inn in a corner location in a closed development
Inn in a corner location in a closed development Am Markt 14
(map)
1843/1844 Urban planning, plastered building typical of the reconstruction period after the great city fire in good original condition, of great importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and local history. Two-storey plastered building, historical windows, some new plastic windows, sandstone door frames with a beveled keystone, two newer gate entrances to the market, shutters on the upper floor, mighty hipped roof with slate covering, two towers, several horizontal skylights. 08991051
 


Water tower
Water tower At the water tower
(map)
1893/1894 Testimony of the urban high-pressure water pipeline, shaping the cityscape and of significance in terms of local history and technology. 08991027
 


Residential building Am Wasserturm 24
(map)
after 1936 (information) Half-timbered building built in the local style with proportions of the time of origin, preserved to a high degree in its original appearance, of architectural significance. One-storey, two- and three-bar framework, diagonal struts, windows with muntin, shutters, small commercial extension with pent roof, original front door, saddle roof, one or two dormers, gable with longitudinal boards, Dresden architect (Hellerau). 08991089
 


Milestone, reworked into a kilometer stone Dresdner Strasse
(map)
after 1858 originally a half-milestone, of importance for the history of traffic. 08991036
 


Path pillar Dresdner Strasse
(map)
possibly 1836/1837 Natural stone column of high design quality, significance in terms of local history and traffic history. 08991038
 


Waystone Dresdner Strasse
(map)
19th century of historical importance. About 1.80 m high stele on a triangular floor plan, protruding several times upwards, pyramidal end, golden inscription: "Niederseiffenbach 6.4 km, Neuhausen footpath 5.2 km, Heidersdorf 5.6 km" and "Neuhausen 5.5 km" 08991031
 


Seven city barns Dresdner Strasse
(map)
after 1842 Despite certain structural changes, a well-preserved row of town barns, which are now a rare testimony to arable towns, of importance in terms of town history and landscape. Single-storey quarry stone or brick buildings, plastered, saddle roofs or half-hip roofs, gates mostly changed. 09306069
 


Residential house in a corner and closed development Dresdner Strasse 23
(map)
after 1842 Newly built house after the city fire, despite structural simplification still an impressive example of the reconstruction after the city fire, significant in terms of urban development and urban planning. Two-storey plastered building, five axes, natural stone walls plastered over, quarry stone masonry, wall-opening ratio, rising masonry, roof shape and probably roof structure preserved. When new in 2001 not included in the list of monuments due to structural simplifications. The comparison with now renovated residential buildings of the same construction period shows that the building that has not been recorded looks hardly any different from the buildings that have already been recorded. Due to its largely authentically preserved building stock and as a corner house, it is subsequently recorded as a cultural monument in connection with the review of the 2014 list of monuments. 09306059
 


Residential house in a corner and closed development Dresdner Strasse 25
(map)
after 1842 Newly built house after the city fire, despite structural simplification still an impressive example of the reconstruction after the city fire, significant in terms of urban development and urban planning.

Two-storey plastered construction, quarry stone masonry, four axes, wall-opening ratio, rising masonry, roof shape and presumably roof structure preserved, hipped roof
Not included in the list of monuments when new in 2001 due to structural simplifications. The comparison with now renovated residential buildings of the same construction period shows that the building that has not been recorded looks hardly any different from the buildings that have already been recorded. As a largely authentically preserved corner house, the building is subsequently recorded as a cultural monument in connection with the review of the list of monuments in 2014.

09306060
 


Residential house in closed development in corner location (without extension in Große Kirchgasse) Dresdner Strasse 29
(map)
after 1842 Plastered building typical of the time and place from the reconstruction phase after the devastating city fire of 1842, largely preserved in its original form, of significance in terms of urban development and urban planning. Two-storey plastered quarry-stone building with the original wall-opening ratio, regularly arranged rectangular windows, 4 × 2 axes, simplified facade, shop fitting, profiled cornice, distinctive hipped roof, dominant corner house that characterizes the street scene, inside window reveals with segmental arches. 09306066
 


Residential house in closed development in a corner location (without extension to Lutherplatz) and keystone above the old gate entrance Dresdner Strasse 30
(map)
after 1842 Plastered building typical of the time and place from the reconstruction phase after the devastating city fire of 1842, largely preserved in its original form, of significance in terms of urban development and urban planning.

Two-storey plastered quarry stone building with the original wall-opening ratio, regularly arranged rectangular windows, simplified facade, profiled cornice, distinctive half-hip roof, dominant corner house that characterizes the street scene, inside window reveals with high round arches.

09306065
 


Defeat building Dresdner Strasse 34
(map)
1901
(defeat building
and warehouse)
Side building of the drugstore on Dresdner Straße in the style of the train station architecture in open development, intact wall-opening ratio, of importance in terms of building history and urban development. Single-storey plastered building with jamb floor, two segment arch wooden gates, belt cornice in the form of a tooth cut, jagged clinker border of the windows, corner accentuation by clinker masonry, oculus in the gable triangle, freight elevator, profiled cornice, roof overhang, segment arch window in the jamb, built as a deposit building by pharmacist Paul Güzel Güzel in 1901 In use by the city administration since 1985, today a new loading ramp. 08991053
 


Residential building in closed development Dresdner Strasse 34
(map)
1843 Newly built residential and commercial building after the city fire, since then operated as a drugstore, of importance in terms of local development, building history and urban planning. Two-storey plastered construction, seven axes, partly sandstone walls, profiled eaves, loft conversion with original windows 1920, shutters and doors also from this period, saddle roof, slate roofing, in 1928 the druggist Fritz Zehmisch acquired the building, before 1928 there were rooms for the administration on the ground floor Social insurance fund until they moved out, still operated today in the family business as a drugstore, originally the Niederlags building on Gerberstraße also belonged to the property and has been used by the city administration since 1985 08991079
 


Residential house in closed development and outbuildings
Residential house in closed development and outbuildings Dresdner Strasse 36
(map)
1843 Plastered building with economical structuring elements, as part of the closed development along Dresdner Straße and a typical building built after the city fire of urban development historical and urban value.

two-storey, profiled window frames on the ground floor, historical door leaf, profiled roofs, profiled belt cornice, profiled eaves cornice, high gable roof, slate roofing
Outbuildings: single-storey plastered building, gable roof.

08991058
 


Residential building in closed development Dresdner Strasse 47
(map)
after 1842 Building largely preserved from the construction period, an impressive example of the buildings in Sayda after the fire in 1842, of importance in terms of urban development and architectural history. Two-storey plastered building, five axes, segmental arch door frames made of sandstone, original door preserved, winter window with muntin preserved, saddle roof, profiled eaves, roof house, rebuilt after the city fire, the building belonged to the farmer Alwin Meier according to information from the local chronicle (ABM 2003) who lived in the property and used it for agricultural purposes, uninhabited since 1999, issued an emergency security requirement in 2003 to the community of heirs. 08991065
 


Residential building in closed development Dresdner Strasse 51
(map)
1843 Part of the development along Dresdner Straße that emerged after the city fire of 1842, of significance in terms of urban development. Two-storey plastered building, five axes, first floor shop installation with historical profiled window and door frames, pilasters with consoles, profiled cornice, upper floor profiled window frames and continuous sill, profiled eaves cornice, saddle roof. 08991068
 


Secret Annex Dresdner Strasse 52 (behind)
(map)
after 1842 Rebuilt as an office building, leather warehouse and sales room for the Ruscher tannery after the town fire of 1842, later a residential building with a turner's workshop, of importance in terms of urban development. Two-storey quarry stone building, window frames, half-hip roof, on the gable side a toilet with a hipped roof. 08991088
 


Residential building in closed development Dresdner Strasse 53
(map)
after 1842 Part of the reconstruction after the city fire in 1842, of importance in terms of urban development. Two-storey plastered building, four axes, ground floor arched window and door, recessed entrance area, sandstone walls, wide webbing, upper floor rectangular windows, sandstone window walls, profiled eaves cornice, saddle roof with wide barn roof, overhead pike, renovated after 2003, with the walls and color scheme as well as the window and front door not necessarily listed, but the wall-opening ratio and the cubature were retained. 08991069
 


Residential building in closed development Dresdner Strasse 61
(map)
after 1842 Part of the development after the town fire in 1842, of value in terms of urban development. Two-storey plastered building, six axes, ground floor sills, profiled roofing above the entrance area, profiled cornice as a continuous sill on the upper floor, winter windows preserved, saddle roof with three roof houses, these subsequently added or expanded, after the monument registration in 2003, new plastic windows were installed the window frames on the ground floor as well as the sills removed, the building is only of low monument value due to its urban context, it would be possible to delete it from the list of monuments. 08991070
 


Syringe house Dresdner Strasse 64 (next to)
(map)
1853 Typical fire brigade equipment house from the 19th century, until 1937 it was used to house the fire extinguisher, since 1998 fire brigade museum, of local history. One-storey plastered building, horizontal rectangular windows, sandstone walls, large gate driveway on the gable side, gable roof. 08991064
 


Residential building in closed development Dresdner Strasse 69
(map)
after 1842 Building that has largely been preserved in its original form, relic of the development after the fire in 1842, of significance in terms of urban development. Two-story plastered building, five axes, sandstone window frames on both floors, sandstone door frames, saddle roof with old roof pike, originally with shutters. 08991066
 


Total hospital cemetery with individual monuments Dresdner Strasse 76
(map)
17th to 20th Century The entire hospital cemetery with the following individual monuments: Ev. Burial chapel (former hospital church), cemetery attendant's house (grave digger house), ten tombs and enclosure wall (see also individual monuments at the same address, Obj. 08991035) as well as cemetery design with horticultural facilities (garden monument); Plastered chapel with three-sided choir closure, flat roofed inside, of architectural and local significance. 09303717
 


Ev.  Burial chapel (former hospital church), cemetery keeper's house and enclosure wall (individual monuments for ID No. 09303717)
Ev. Burial chapel (former hospital church), cemetery keeper's house and enclosure wall (individual monuments for ID No. 09303717) Dresdner Strasse 76
(map)
1690 (chapel) Individual features of the collective hospital cemetery: Ev. Burial chapel (former hospital church), cemetery keeper's house, ten tombs and enclosure wall - cemetery complex of great regional historical importance. Burial church (see Dehio Sachsen Vol. II, p. 879). 08991035
 


Steamroller Dresdner Strasse 77
(map)
1925 as a functioning, authentically preserved street steam roller of rarity, of significance in terms of technology history. 08991097
 


Former hospital, now a local museum
Former hospital, now a local museum Dresdner Strasse 78
(map)
1508 The building, popularly known as the »Spittel«, housed the poor and the sick for a long time, as one of the oldest buildings in the city and due to its history of use, it is of great importance in terms of local history and social history, as well as architectural history and the local image. 08991034
 


milestone
milestone Dresdner Strasse 78 (near)
(map)
after 1858 Station stone, of importance for the history of traffic. 08991033
 


Post office Dresdner Strasse 82
(map)
1929 Post office building typical of the time in a striking street location of architectural, local and urban significance. Two-storey plastered building, wall-opening ratio intact, profiled walls on the ground floor, profiled pointed arch portal, 5 to 2 axes, profiled cornice, shutters missing, new plastic windows with sprouting, high hipped roof, old lettering "Post Office", still inscribed "HGS / Dresden “(Heimstättengesellschaft Sachsen in Dresden), renovated. 08991032
 


Former school and enclosure wall Friedebacher Gasse 1 1886-1887 Typical school house in good original condition of local historical importance. Two-storey plastered construction, profiled window frames made of sandstone, profiled cornice, corner grooves, segment arch door frames with original door leaf, twin windows with rounded arches in the gable triangle with straight roofing, profiled cornice, one gable window added, other gable window with triangular or straight roofing, saddle roof with new Roof extensions, slate covering, renovated. Dry stone wall: Quarry stone, inaugurated on October 10, 1887 as the second newly built schoolhouse. 08991042
 


Residential stable house (without front extension) and western barn of a three-sided courtyard Friedebacher Weg 2
(map)
1st half of the 19th century (residential building) largely authentically preserved traditional half-timbered buildings of architectural and urban development value.

Residential
stable house : solid ground floor, windows slightly enlarged, upper floor half-timbered intact, original window size, gable side timber-frame boarded, gable roof western stable barn : partly solid, partly wooden construction, roller door, two gate entrances, saddle roof.
Barn : wooden construction, gable roof, gable with window, slate roofing, collapsing in 2014, receipt unreasonable - cancellation in 2015.

08991021
 


Residential house in semi-open development Lange Gasse 1
(map)
after 1842 Kat-like residential building, largely preserved in its original form, of importance in terms of urban development and social history.

Erected after the town fire in 1842, presumably in place of a previous building, plastered quarry stone masonry, saddle roof, simplified facade, presumably originally extremely simple, the only largely authentically traditional house of this type, significant in terms of both building history and social history.

09306068
 


House in a corner Lutherplatz 1
(map)
after 1842 Structurally slightly redesigned residential building from the time after the great city fire of 1842, part of the largely closed urban development around 1843, of importance in terms of urban development and urban planning. Two-storey plastered building, gable facing Dresdner Straße, profiled eaves, sandstone walls only in the gable triangle and door walls, otherwise removed, mighty half-hip roof, renovated between 2003 and 2004, including installation of a shop, extension of the front door, wall-opening ratio, rising masonry and The original roof was preserved. 08991078
 


Residential house in open development Lutherplatz 11
(map)
after 1842 Typical plastered construction of the reconstruction phase after the devastating city fire of 1842, of importance in terms of urban development history and urban planning.

Plastered quarry stone building, simple sandstone walls - partly painted on the upper floor, profiled cornice, wall-opening ratio, surrounding walls, roof and roof structure preserved, door portal removed, hipped roof, window reveals inside with round arches.

09306063
 


Old fish farm; Engelhardt's fish farming and net production Mortelgrund 2
(map)
around 1905 (fish farm house) Residential house of the former fish farm with fish ponds and the associated drainage ditch - the location was originally the center of the old mining in Mortelgrund, commercial fish farming followed the mining activities and made use of these by fishing the mining ponds, largely original building with echoes of the Swiss style and upstream hydraulic engineering Facilities, historically important. 08991025
 


Mortar mill Mortelgrund 5
(map)
1849 according to insurance files Former watermill, today residential building with a former mill pond, Mortelgraben (Mühlgraben), Langenwiesengraben (Mühlgraben in Mortelgrund) and drainage ditch - largely original mill complex (without mill technology) of local historical and architectural significance as well as landscape-defining importance. 08991024
 


Residential house and side building, today an inn with holiday apartments Mühlholzweg 12
(map)
Rebuilt in 1773 / burned down in 1865 Building ensemble from the middle of the 19th century of great importance in terms of regional history as well as building history and landscape. 08991059
 


Former courthouse (today retirement home)
Former courthouse (today retirement home) Pfarrgasse 1
(map)
1851 Stately building, historical substance from the middle of the 19th century largely preserved, due to its history of use of great local historical importance, in the context of the church also of urban development value. 08991073
 


Former  District judge's house (today residential building) in half-open development
Former District judge's house (today residential building) in half-open development Pfarrgasse 2
(map)
after 1842 Typical house of the time in good original condition of architectural value, as part of a street that was built almost at the same time, also of urban development and urban value. Two-storey plastered building, sandstone walls, profiled sandstone door walls with multi-profiled roofing, profiled wooden eaves, half-hip roof, gable roof, slate roofing, roof pike, boarded gable, house has been renovated. 08991071
 


Former  Cantor's house (today residential house) in closed development
Former Cantor's house (today residential house) in closed development Pfarrgasse 4
(map)
after 1842 Newly built plastered building after the great city fire of 1842 with an intact wall-opening ratio, of importance in terms of local development and urban planning. Two-storey plastered building, 5 axes, sandstone walls painted over, sandstone door walls with multi-profiled roofing, gable roof, slate roofing, three towers. 08991072
 


Diaconate in closed development and rear building
Diaconate in closed development and rear building Pfarrgasse 5
(map)
1844 Typical of the time, after the great city fire of 1842, a plastered building of importance in terms of urban development history and the townscape.

Diaconate : two-story plastered building, scratched sandstone window frames, profiled side sandstone door frames and straight roofing, seven axes, profiled cornice, gable roof, slate roofing, a structure with number 6.
Ancillary building (rear): single-story quarry stone building, plastered, gable roof

08991050
 


Rectory in closed development and rear building Pfarrgasse 6
(map)
1844 Newly built house after the great city fire of 1842, forming a twin house with the diaconate, of importance in terms of urban development history and the appearance of the town. Rectory : two-storey plastered building, scratched sandstone walls, entrance with straight roofing, profiled sandstone door walls, eight axes, profiled cornice, gable roof, slate roofing, a structure with number 5. Ancillary building (rear): single-storey quarry stone building, plastered, gable roof, renovated. 08991048
 


Residential building in closed development Pfarrgasse 8
(map)
after 1842 Part of a closed row of houses, which was rebuilt after the city fire of 1842, structurally slightly redesigned, of value in terms of urban development. Two-storey plastered building, four axes, intact wall-opening ratio, profiled wooden eaves, partly scratched sandstone walls, gable roof. 08991086
 


Residential building in closed development Pfarrgasse 10
(map)
after 1842 Part of a newly built row of houses after the city fire of 1842, of significance in terms of urban development history and urban planning. Two-storey plastered building with gray plaster, four axes, wall-opening ratio intact, on the ground floor scratched sandstone walls with a cove, on the ground floor originally shutters, profiled wooden eaves, saddle roof, simplified renovation. 08991085
 


Residential building in closed development Pfarrgasse 11
(map)
after 1842 Part of a uniformly designed row of houses created after the town fire of 1842, of importance in terms of urban planning and the history of local development. Two-storey plastered building, gray plaster, three axes, wall-opening ratio intact, profiled eaves, pitched roof, no disfiguring loft extensions, sandstone walls on the ground floor and first floor, profiled with 1 cove, sandstone portal, profiled cornice on the ground floor. 08991084
 


Residential building in closed development Pfarrgasse 12
(map)
after 1842 Part of a preserved row of houses as development after the town fire in 1842. Simple two-storey plastered building, rebuilt after the town fire in 1842, four axes, wall-opening ratio intact, profiled cornice, saddle roof, no disfiguring loft extensions, sandstone walls with a cove on the ground floor. 08991083
 


Residential building in closed development Pfarrgasse 13
(map)
1843 Part of a row of houses rebuilt after the town fire of 1842, which has largely been preserved in its original form, of importance in terms of urban development. Two-storey plastered building, 5 axes, wall-opening ratio intact, profiled eaves, saddle roof, no disfiguring roof extensions, roof structure preserved, sandstone walls scraped on the ground floor, rebuilt in 1843 after the city fire, 1857 extension of the cowshed with vaults, owned by the shoemaker Ernst Wilhelm in 1882 Neubert, no significant structural changes, after 1992 renewal of the roof structure, new windows, largely original. 08991082
 


Residential house in semi-open development Plan 3
(map)
1914 rebuilding after fire one of the few buildings that survived the city fire of 1842, then destroyed in a fire in 1914 and then rebuilt according to urban planning, simple plastered construction of urban development history and value. Two-storey plastered building, grooved window frames on the upper floor, entrance area with a curved flat arch, gable roof on one side with a crooked hip

Monument value checked and confirmed in 2006: largely preserved in its original form, great urban significance.

08991076
 


Residential house in semi-open development Plan 8
(map)
around 1740 one of the few buildings in Sayda, which dates from the time before the great city fire of 1842 and was largely preserved in its original form, of importance in terms of building history, urban development history and urban planning. Ground floor solid, shutters missing, upper floor timber-framed boarded, gable timber-framed boarded, gable roof, two horizontal skylights. 08991074
 


War memorial for four sons of the city of Sayda who died in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870/71
War memorial for four sons of the city of Sayda who died in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870/71 Place of the Victims of Fascism
(map)
1872 (September 1st inauguration) Monument of great local historical importance erected in 1872 with great participation and donations from the population. 08991030
 


Residential house in semi-open development Place of the Victims of Fascism 2
(map)
after 1842 Probably at the same time as the neighboring building, immediately after the great city fire of 1842, a simple plastered building of importance in terms of urban planning and urban development history. Two-storey plastered building, ground floor shutters, some windows clogged, profiled cornice, hipped roof with a standing roof house, slate roofing, renovated. 08991056
 


storage hall Place of the Victims of Fascism 4
(map)
around 1905 Boarded up wooden shed, early 20th century, original preserved, of value in terms of town and building history. Storage shed in the rear of an industrial plant, half-timbered and wooden cladding, ornate wooden window frames, windows and doors dating back to the construction period, iron gates later ingredients, the storage shed impresses with its authenticity. 09306064
 


Residential building in closed development Square of the Victims of Fascism 5
(map)
1730 One of the few houses in Sayda that survived the devastating city fire of 1842, largely original plastered building from the 18th century of importance in terms of urban planning, urban development and architectural history. Two-storey plastered building, on the ground floor window conversion from the 1920s, sandstone door walls (keel arch) with chipped keystone, high pitched roof. 08991077
 


Residential building and adjoining former hall Roßplatz 1
(map)
18th century Together with the neighboring residential building, it forms an ensemble that is significant in terms of urban development, which initially survived the fire of 1842, but was then partially rebuilt or rebuilt, due to its building history and its dominant location, the monument value results from the importance of the townscape and history of the town. Two-storey plastered building, partly sandstone walls, high hipped roof, three large arched windows (dance hall), above three oculi, partly renovated. 08991081
 


Residential house in semi-open development Roßplatz 2
(map)
19th century reshaped, in essence probably older Together with the neighboring house with the former hall, forming a building ensemble of great importance for the townscape, in the core possibly still existing buildings from the time before the devastating city fire of 1842, thus the building gains importance in terms of urban development history. Two-storey plastered building, profiled eaves, hipped roof. 08991080
 


Former Hospital and poor house, today a residential building Schloßweg 4
(map)
1877/1878 Former Hospital and poor house as well as the coat of arms of the former castle above the house entrance and the surrounding wall of the former Vorwerk - representative plastered building with façade decoration typical of the time, built as a hospital and poorhouse after the fire in the Vorwerk, due to its historical location and its history of use, today's residential building is included the fencing walls that partially enclose the property have a significance in terms of local history and building history. Two-storey plastered building, base and window with sandstone walls, profiled and grooved window walls, door walls in the shape of a keel arch, in the spandrels quatrefoil motifs, central facade accentuated by triforic motifs, above the door coat of arms with dated 1774, strongly profiled cornice, on the upper floor continuous cornice under the eaves, webbing Slit windows, profiled cornice, gable roof, slate roofing, some historical windows, eleven to five axes. Wall: Quarry stone masonry, cover plates made of slate, partially renovated, brief information on the history of its origins in: Old and New from Sayda. To the Heimatfest 1908 , p. 21 08991054
 


Fire station with hose tower Schloßweg 5
(map)
presumably 1937 Testimony for fire fighting and fire fighting in the village, of importance in terms of local history and building history. Plastered construction, a segmented arched gate entrance, a straight final gate entrance, three windows arranged above it, semi-solid gable roof, tube tower, upper half with cross planking, gable roof, very good original condition. 08991055
 


school
school Schulgasse 1
(map)
1844 After the city fire, authentically handed down plastered building of local and architectural significance. Two-storey, sandstone walls, profiled door walls with roofing, original door leaf in Biedermeier style, nine to five axes, hipped roof with roof house and roof overhang, slate covering, inside two-flight stairs with belt arches over the flights of stairs. Destroyed in the town fire in 1842, rebuilt in 1844. Use as a school until 1977, then other use. 1993 to 1995 extensive renovation based on the historical model and since July 29, 1995 use as a primary school. 08991045
 


Residential building on the corner of Dresdner Strasse Schulgasse 3
(map)
1843/1844 stately building, rebuilt after the city fire of 1842, of importance in terms of urban development history and urban planning. Two-storey plastered building, five to five axes, some windows clogged, new plastic windows, mighty hipped roof, two towers facing Dresdner Strasse, renovated. 08991049
 


Residential building, formerly an administration building Schulgasse 7
(map)
1842 Former administrative and residential building of the municipal branch, Delegation Sayda, representative plastered building, newly built after the fire of 1842, due to its history of use and its original building stock of urban and architectural importance as well as urban development. Two-storey plastered construction, emphasis on the three central axes over both storeys through straight roofing over the door and windows, seven axes, saddle roof with long loft extension, missing shutters, slate covering, sandstone door walls 08991046
 


Residential house with extension in a corner
Residential house with extension in a corner Schulgasse 10
(map)
after 1842 Building with an extension, largely preserved in its original state, which was rebuilt after the fire in 1842, is of importance in terms of urban development history and urban planning. Two-storey plastered building, sandstone walls, 3 to 3 axes, shutters on the ground floor, mighty hipped roof with slate roofing, two-story extension to Pfarrgasse, four-axis, sandstone walls, shutters on the ground floor, gable roof, slate roofing, round-arched twin windows in the gable. 08991047
 

Friedebach

image designation location Dating description ID
Residential stable house Dresdner Strasse 101
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Rural residential and farm buildings typical of the time and landscape with an integrated barn in good original condition, of architectural significance. Solid ground floor, historical plaster, built-in garage, upper floor visible double-bar framework, boarded gable triangle, side barn annex in wood construction, gable roof with slate covering. 08991020
 


Residential stable house Dresdner Strasse 117
(map)
18th century Large building typical of the time and landscape with an intact half-timbered construction on the upper floor, of importance in terms of the history of the building and of the townscape. Three to ten axes, massive ground floor, e.g. Some of the sandstone walls preserved, new plaster, first floor original window size, new windows, shingling, partially fallen off, boarded gable, mountain door, gable triangle clad, different gable triangle clad, gable roof. 08991019
 


Side building and barn Dresdner Strasse 118
(map)
1948 (cellar and barn) Rural farm buildings directly on the road, boarded half-timbered buildings in typical landscape characteristics, of importance in terms of building history and the appearance of the town. Side building : built as a cellar and barn, solid base, boarded up wooden construction, chamfered corner on the ground floor, window with muntin, saddle roof. Barn : partly massive, wooden construction boarded up, roller door, saddle roof, slate roofing, the farm buildings originally belonged to the property with today's house number 126, former place list number 101 b. 08991062
 


Stable house with an annex on the courtyard side and a barn of a farm Dresdner Strasse 122
(map)
around 1800 Well-preserved courtyard complex with a stable house, presumably from the 18th century, as evidence of the rural way of life and rural building trade of architectural and social historical importance. Residential stable house : solid ground floor, weather house, upper floor timber-frame boarded, original window size, historical windows at the rear, gable partially covered, gable roof.

Angular extension (1939): wooden structure, roller shutter , gable roof, original window
Barn : solid base, wooden structure, gable roof, gable with mountain door.

08991018
 


Cottage property and mountain cellar Dresdner Strasse 126
(map)
1868 Contemporary and landscape-typical residential house with clad half-timbered upper floor and associated mountain cellar, both in good original condition, of importance in terms of building history and social history as well as shaping the townscape.

Residential stable house : Solid ground floor, sandstone walls, historical windows, upper floor timber-framed, boarded up at the back, original window size, crooked hip roof, rear roof pike, originally only a residential house, which was converted into a residential stable house, presumably a householder or gardener property, empty in 2014 and endangered.
Bergkeller : Located to the northeast of the residential building, one-story with a cellar in the basement, gable roof, slightly modernized.

08991017
 


Residential stable of a three-sided courtyard Dresdner Strasse 128
(map)
2nd half of the 18th century traditional farmhouse with half-timbered upper floor, largely preserved in its original form, of architectural significance. Solid ground floor, two built-in garages in the former stable area, massive entrance porch, upper floor timber-framed boarded, gable timber-framed clad, gable roof, windows directly under the eaves. 08991067
 


Residential building Dresdner Strasse 133
(map)
re. 1938 Newly built farmhouse with half-timbered upper floor after a fire, as an example of rural building influenced by the Heimat style, of architectural historical importance. Solid ground floor, gate entrance, upper floor double-bar timbered, St. Andrew's crosses below the windows, gable windows, slated, gable roof with slate covering, horizontal skylights, refurbished, between the doors strips of plaster tape with the following inscription: "PM 1938" for the builder Paul Meyer, who managed it The old house burned down by lightning and the barn, which was burned down, was rebuilt in 1938. 08991016
 


Stable house of a former farm Dresdner Strasse 137
(map)
1870 Stately farmhouse typical of the time and landscape with a half-timbered upper floor in good original condition, characterizing the townscape due to its location and cubature and of architectural historical importance. Ground floor massive, changed, upper floor windows in original size, mountain door, all clad, half-hip roof, two horizontal skylights. 08991014
 


Former stable house, shed and barn Dresdner Strasse 139
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Small farm in traditional construction, largely preserved in its original form, of importance to the regional history and character of the town.

Residential house : solid ground floor, door portal preserved, garage installation in the former stable area, half-timbered upper floor, double-tiered, tenoned struts, crooked hip roof with roof pike
Barn : one-storey with jamb, timber-framed boarded, gable roof
Shed : one-storeyed, timbered boarded-up, saddle roof.

09305965
 


Residential stable house Dresdner Strasse 140
(map)
around 1800 Authentically preserved, typical landscape building with a half-timbered upper floor of architectural historical importance as well as of the townscape. Solid ground floor, upper floor timber frame boarded up, original window size, stable door on the gable side,

Mountain door, a timber-framed gable boarded up, a massive gable, gable roof, renovated in accordance with listed buildings before 2014, defining the townscape, presumably former garden food.

08991015
 


Cottage Dresdner Strasse 142
(map)
re. 1800 Rural residential and farm buildings typical of the time and landscape, with boarded half-timbered upper floor in very good original condition, of importance in terms of the history of the building and of the townscape. Solid ground floor, partly sandstone walls, upper floor timber-frame boarded, original window size, gable timber-frame boarded, gable roof with slate covering, refurbished, inscriptions notched into beams: "J.?.R. a. 1800 GBMG a. F. “- References to builders Johann Rauer and later owners Gottlieb Berndt and Gottlob Müller from Friedebach. 08991013
 


Former Cottage property with stable house and shed Dresdner Strasse 153
(map)
around 1800 Half-timbered buildings typical of the landscape, largely preserved in their original state, of architectural, social and local significance. Solid ground floor, original winter windows, upper floor double-bar timbered, timber-frame construction intact, original window size, original windows, boarded gable, gable roof, rear extension in the same construction, in the back of the garden traditional single-storey wooden shed with boarding and gable roof, probably 19th century. , This property is likely to be a cottage industry or garden food. 08991011
 


House with workshop Dresdner Strasse 185
(map)
around 1900 Former wheelwright and wood bending shop R. Wenzel, small traditional craft business from the beginning of the 20th century in good original condition, of architectural and local historical value.

Residential building : two-storey plastered building with largely original facade structure (wall-opening proportions), only two windows on the upper floor have been extended (reversible), closure with a crooked hip roof, connected to a small workshop building by an intermediate building with a double-leaf wooden gate, this one-storey plastered structure, closure with a saddle roof, Facade structure of both buildings through plastered corner pilasters and cornices (also plastered), example of traditional craft businesses in the Eastern Ore Mountains, as they were widespread around 1900 and were important employers in the region.

09305975
 


Two mountain cellars Dresdner Strasse 189
(map)
around 1900 impressive evidence of rural storage, of regional historical importance. Natural stone, partially plastered, rounded at the top, wooden doors, one of the mountain cellars probably originally belonged to house number 91, which has since been demolished. 08991002
 


barn Dresdner Strasse 195
(map)
1903 (new building after fire) Rebuilt in 1903 after the property on the property burned, temporarily used as a tool shed for the local fire brigade, later a storage building for the community, largely original half-timbered building, as a testament to rural construction after 1900 of architectural historical value. Solid ground floor, small segmented arched windows, upper floor gable side visible half-timbered, otherwise boarded up, gable triangle half-timbered boarded, side gate through hillside location, saddle roof, historical windows, the farm was around 1903 in the property of the oil mill owner Karl Robert Glöß, whose estate burned down completely in 1903, So that it became uninhabitable, Glöß only had the barn and a shed rebuilt in 1903, in 1912 after the death of the previous owner the community bought the property at auction, as early as 1884 there was a fire brigade's tower on the previous building, in 1923 a new tower was built, which then After 1932 with the construction of a new syringe house it was no longer needed and was demolished. Next to the building, the community had a house built next to the barn, on the ground floor of which the community administration was housed. 08991001
 


Residential building Dresdner Strasse 198
(map)
around 1910 Small residential building with many historical details, largely preserved in its original form, harmonious combination of traditional rural architecture and modern design language, unique in the town, significant in terms of building history. One and a half story, solid ground floor, original plaster, original winter windows, upper floor Bohemian paneling, side elevation with segmented twin windows in the gable field, protruding beam heads, oculus, triangular gable end, wooden weather house, original windows, winter windows, crooked hipped roof, segmented arched stone, slate roofing, base Verbal information from the last owner, Mrs. Elisabeth Köhler from 2002, the house was built around 1910 by the mason foreman Gustav Göhler (her grandfather), building files are not in the district archive, the house is marked in the equidistant map from 1913, so the information from the last owner was confirmed. 08991022
 


Road bridge Freiberger Strasse
(map)
possibly 18th century High arched stone bridge over the Chemnitzbach that characterizes the landscape, formerly the only traffic route between Dorfchemnitz and Friedebach, significant in terms of building history and local history. Single arch bridge made of natural stone masonry, covered with the rest of the old paving, is located between Freiberger Straße and the embankment of the former Mulda – Sayda railway line , lies in the course of the historic Saydaer Straße (led through the Höllengrund, was the only connection to Sayda) , with the construction of today's Freiberger Straße through the valley of the Chemnitzbach in 1878 only minor importance, name vmtl. going back to the proximity of the bridge to a sheep farm on Voigtsdorfer Flur (regular shaft drive over the bridge). 08991092
 


Residential stable house and two mountain cellars (opposite) Freiberger Strasse 6
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Typical farmhouse and side building as well as the associated mountain cellar, both defining the townscape and of regional historical importance.

Residential stable house : Solid ground floor, partly sandstone walls, original windows, one storey on the street side, other side two storeys (hillside location), upper floor timber-frame boarded, gable timber-frame boarded, original windows, wooden eaves, gable roof, roof pike, in the stable area upper floor massive, partly slate roofing, Barn extension in wood construction with lavatory
Side building : massive, plastered building, boarded-up jamb floor, flat saddle roof, built into the slope, above mountain cellars - only the mountain cellar is still preserved today
Mountain cellar : quarry stone masonry, partly plaster residue, wooden door.

08990996
 


Middle grinder; Cold oven mill Freiberger Strasse 8
(map)
1842 Mill technology, former bones pounder (side building), mountain cellar and mill ditch of a mill - important technical systems of the former oil and grain mill as well as building of bones pounders, of great importance in terms of local history and technology.

Mill technology : thumb shaft, tamper pairs, wedge and punch press, oat crusher on the upper floor, technology from 1862, high operation of the mill 1928–1945, diesel engine from 1920 (when the waterwheel was frozen in winter), bone
pounder driven by shaft and transmission from the main building Bergkeller : Quarry stone masonry.

08990995
 


Side building and barn of a three-sided farm Freiberger Strasse 11
(map)
Mid 19th century Typical regional farm buildings, due to the very good original condition, the typical landscape characteristics and the dominant location, of importance in terms of building history and the appearance of the town.

Side building : solid ground floor, segment arch doors , upper floor double-bar timbered with original windows, gable roof with slate covering, fire siren
barn : ground floor solid, upper floor single-bar timbered, e.g. T. boarded up, rear area wooden structure, gable roof, z. T. original windows.

08990989
 


Residential stable house with integrated barn part Freiberger Strasse 12
(map)
Early 19th century Upper floor half-timbered, in its authenticity impressive rural residential and farm building typical of the time and landscape, of importance in terms of structural history, social history and the appearance of the town.

Solid ground floor, original windows, barn part with wooden door, boarded up gable on the ground floor, upper floor double-bar timbered, original windows and winter windows, boarded over barn and stable part with a mountain door, both gables boarded timber-framed, saddle roof with tailcoat roof.

08990990
 


Residential stable house and barn of a three-sided courtyard Freiberger Strasse 22
(map)
after 1860, before 1882 Rural residential and farm buildings typical of the landscape in good original condition, of importance in terms of building history and the appearance of the town.

Residential
stable house : Solid ground floor, one horizontal window, upper floor clad half-timbered construction, original windows, clad gable, half- hipped roof with three-quarter- length barn : wooden construction, roller door, high entrance, gable roof, the entire courtyard was completely rebuilt after 1860 on the property of the property that burned down in 1860 , probably rebuilt between 1860 and 1882.

08991000
 


Barn and side building of a farm Freiberger Strasse 25
(map)
around 1800 Significant in terms of building history, shaping the streetscape.

Side building : ground floor z. T. massive, z. T. boarded, upper floor timbered boarded, gable roof, gable timbered boarded, z. T. slate covering, presumably formerly moving house or also cottage?
Barn : wooden construction, saddle roof, large gate entrance to
residential stable house (originally listed as a monument, demolished after September 5, 2001): around 1800, solid ground floor, timber-framed upper floor, original window size, saddle roof, massive street side and wooden construction, dwarf house.

08990982
 


Residential house (without extension) and pipe drilling with technical equipment Freiberger Strasse 26
(map)
1864 The only surviving mechanical wooden tube boring mill in Europe, thus singular and of particular technical and historical value, ensemble also of importance in terms of building history and local history. 08990988
 


Farmhouse Freiberger Strasse 27
(map)
around 1800 Rural house with timber-framed upper floor, which is typical of the region, in good original condition, of importance in terms of building history and character of the townscape.

Ground floor: solid, upstairs wooden walls, gable half-timbered z. Partly boarded up and shingled, other gable clad, gable roof, boarded up small houses on the street side.

08990980
 


Residential stable house (without extension) and barn of a two-sided courtyard Freiberger Strasse 29
(map)
1928 Examples of the rural building trade influenced by the homeland security movement in the 1920s, of architectural significance.

In 1928 the stable house, the barn and the cellar of the small farm burned down. In the same year, the residential stable and barn were rebuilt using traditional mixed construction with massive ground floors and half-timbered upper floors. It can be assumed that the builders as well as the designing master builder were influenced by the building conceptions of the Heimat style, possibly also direct references to the execution of the buildings by the Heimatschutz were given.
Due to this construction method, which is adapted to the historical building traditions, the buildings fit harmoniously into the village landscape. In addition to the resulting architectural and urban significance, the residential and farm buildings also document that agriculture at that time still had the same need for residential and economic space as, for example, the previous century, so that the monument value is also derived from regional history Derives meaning.
Residential stable house : solid ground floor, upper floor double-bar framework with diagonal struts, under the windows widening stands (decorative shape), original window size, new windows, gable half-timbering visible, gable triangle boarded, gable roof, renovated with cushions, barn: wooden construction, mountain door, original windows in the gable , Load train, gable roof.

08990979
 


Residential stable house, side building and barn of a three-sided courtyard Freiberger Strasse 36
(map)
in the gable 1866 stately courtyard, largely authentically preserved, as an example of rural living and life as well as rural building trade of architectural and social historical importance.

Residential stable house : Solid ground floor, profiled segment arched door walls with mask representation as keystone, 10 to 4 axes, upper floor: half-timbered shingled, renovated, gable half-timbered clad, half-hip roof, e.g. Historic windows preserved, rebuilt after the previous building was destroyed by lightning in 1866, side building: rebuilt in 1864, retained in the event of a fire, also referred to as barn in the architectural drawing, ground floor quarry stone masonry, plaster missing, sandstone walls, upper floor boarded up, gable cladding, gable roof.
Barn : solid, segmented arched gate, clapboard gable, gable roof, on one gable with a small forelock, rebuilt after the previous building was destroyed by lightning in 1866, residential stable house renovated in accordance with listed buildings (2014).

08990986
 


Mountain cellar Freiberger Straße 38 (near)
(map)
19th century as evidence of rural storage of regional historical value natural stone masonry, interior wooden door. 08990985
 


barn Freiberger Straße 38 (opposite)
(map)
1950 Small boarded barn characteristic of the upper Ore Mountains region, authentically preserved, of importance for the regional history and the local image.

Partly massive, two-storey with jamb, wooden construction, upper straight gate entrance, gable roof, one gable clad.

08990983
 


Mountain cellar Freiberger Straße 38 (next to)
(map)
19th century as a typical evidence of rural food storage of regional historical value.

Natural stone masonry, wooden door with segment arch.

08990984
 


barn Freiberger Straße 44 (opposite)
(map)
re. 1851 small boarded wooden barn typical of the locality and landscape of regional historical and local significance.

Barn : single-storey boarded half-timbered building, saddle roof, dated 1945 ?, built in 1851 - inscription on ceiling beams "1851", "GTJ" for Gottlieb Traugott Jehaber as builder and "GTN" for master builder Gottlob Traugott Neubert Stable
house : demolished before 2014, ground floor Solid, windows slightly enlarged, stable area, upper floor timber-frame boarded, original window size, wooden walls, historical windows, gable timber-frame boarded, gable roof, toilet extension to the rear.

08990978
 


Farmhouse Kreuztannenstrasse 3
(map)
18th century Rural residential and farm buildings typical of the time and landscape in mixed construction (half-timbered / quarry stone), of architectural and socio-historical importance.

Solid ground floor, one window frame with wood, the other natural stone, some winter windows with split bars, upper floor timber-frame clad, very small window openings near the eaves, probably in original size, gable slightly protruding, clad, gable roof, house standing empty for many years, poor state of preservation (2014 ).

08991006
 


Transformer house Kreuztannenstrasse 5 (opposite)
(map)
1938 as a testimony to the electrification of the place of regional historical importance.

Square floor plan, on top of it a tower-like structure, lower area massive, description according to building application: concrete foundation and concrete floor, base masonry 45 cm thick, otherwise 26 cm thick, outer cladding base high-grade plaster, otherwise board cladding with brown protective coating, wooden tent roof, door pressed steel door, window wired glass.

08991007
 


Former Oil mill building, barn (without extension) and shed Mühlenweg 1
(map)
presumably before 1618 Well-preserved mill complex in the center of the village, probably one of the oldest buildings in the village, of great local historical importance. 08991010
 


Memorial to the fallen of World War 1 Upper branch
(map)
Consecrated in 1922 Monument complex consisting of three porphyry steles, stones on both sides with the names of the inhabitants of Friedebach who fell in World War I, of local historical importance. Three roughly hewn porphyry stones (Rochlitzer Porphyrtuff), the two sides about 1.80 m high, the middle about 2.50 m high (the side with the names of the fallen) as well as a lying cross and palm fronds, the central stone with the inscription: " The brave hero in honor of commemorating 1914/18 ”, next to it a mourning angel carved in relief from porphyry with a rose in his hand. 08991009
 


Cottage property Unterer Seitenweg 5
(map)
presumably 18th century (possibly also partly older) Residential stable house with barn part and various additions, impressive due to its authentic inventory, typical of the time and landscape, of importance in terms of the history of the building and the townscape.

Massive ground floor - possibly driven under, upper floor living area - double-bar timbered, boarded gable with very small windows directly under the eaves area - here possibly older half-timbered construction from the 17th century, massive framework replaced above the stable, barn part half-timbered construction with boarding and two mountain doors , Gate entrance, historical window design, curved saddle roof, partly tailcoat roof, protruding gable triangle - timber frame boarded up, shutters, all additions are part of the monument, chicken staircase continues, very good original condition.

08990998
 


Residential stable house Unterer Seitenweg 11
(map)
probably end of the 18th century Stately half-timbered building typical of the time and landscape, of importance in terms of building history and the appearance of the town. Solid ground floor, upper floor double-bar framework, historical windows, gable framework partly boarded up, four to nine axes, gable roof, vacant and poor state of construction (2014) 08990999
 

Ullersdorf

image designation location Dating description ID
Material entity component of the material entity Revierwasserlaufanstalt (ID no. 08991218) in the Ullersdorf district with individual monuments (Map) 16.-18. Century Total component of the Revierwasserlaufanstalt in the district of Ullersdorf with the individual monuments: Mortelbacher Rösche and Dittmannsdorfer Teich - landscape-defining components of an extensive system of mining water management for supplying Freiberg mining with impact water, of particular importance in terms of mining history and local history. (Subject entity ID no. 08991218, Großhartmannsdorf). Individual monuments Mortelbacher Rösche and Dittmannsdorfer Teich (individual monuments ID no. 08991093) 09304806
 


Mortelbacher Rösche and artificial pond (individual monuments for ID No. 09304806) (Map) 1824–1825 (Dittmannsdorfer pond) Individual features of the aggregate Revierwasserlaufanstalt: Mortelbacher Rösche and artificial pond - artificially created surface and underground aqueduct between the Mortelgrunder Kunstgraben on Saydaer Flur in the urban area of ​​Sayda and the Dittmannsdorfer Teich on Ullersdorfer Flur in the urban area of ​​Sayda and parts of the Dittmannsdorfer Florts area in the municipality of Dittmannsdorfer Flort an extensive system of mining water management to supply the Freiberg mining industry with impact water, of importance in terms of mining history and local history. 08991093
 


Residential stable house and two barns in a three-sided courtyard Chemnitzer Strasse 1
(map)
1880 rebuilding after fire Three-sided courtyard that has been preserved in its structure in a landscape-defining location, historically significant. 08990951
 


Former inn or stable house of a four-sided farm Chemnitzer Strasse 2
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century The last remaining building of a farm that originally shaped the landscape for centuries, half-timbered building typical of the time and landscape from the 19th century in good original condition, of regional historical importance. 08990950
 


Farmhouse, barn and enclosure Chemnitzer Strasse 7
(map)
around 1830 Two-sided courtyard with half-timbered buildings, residential house with elaborate gable cladding, exposed location, of importance in terms of regional history and landscape. Residential building : Solid ground floor, horizontal windows, upper floor half-timbered, double-bar, corner struts, gable street side with multi-colored ornamental cladding, some windows with muntin, massive extension at the rear, crooked hip roof. Barn : partly half-timbered, partly massive, boarding-up jam zone, louvred windows, gable roof, picket fence typical of the landscape (secondary system). 08991090
 


Farmhouse, probably a former miller's house Dorfstrasse 1
(map)
Mid 19th century Half-timbered house typical of the region from the middle of the 19th century in good original condition at an old mill location of regional historical value.

Ground floor massive, slightly changed, upper floor original window size, e.g. Partly additional compartments converted into windows, boarding, gable roof, a lying window, marked as mill location in equidistant map from 1880, possibly "Mittelmühle", 1913 no longer marked as mill location in the measuring table sheet, so the house could have been the mill house, renovated - slightly changed.

08990959
 


Transformer tower Dorfstrasse 1 (near)
(map)
1920s simple boarded-up lattice tower, largely authentically preserved, technical-historical significance. Clinker base, two-storey boarded tower-like structure, gable roof, large type building from the 1920s. 08990960
 


Farmhouse Dorfstrasse 3
(map)
around 1800 Typical regional stable house with half-timbered upper floor in good original condition, of architectural significance. Solid ground floor, upper floor with double-bar framework, diagonal struts, one gable side plastered, gable boarded over, second gable side boarded up, gable roof. 08990961
 


Residential stable of a former four-sided courtyard Dorfstrasse 6
(map)
around 1800 Stately farmhouse with an intact half-timbered construction on the upper floor, significantly defining the townscape, of architectural significance. Solid ground floor, smoothed, upper floor double-bar framework with struts, solid gable side, clad gable, gable roof, renovated in accordance with listed buildings before 2014. 08990962
 


Former field barn Dorfstrasse 6a
(map)
19th century Field barn converted into a holiday home, possibly originally belonging to the neighboring oil mill, significant regional history. High quarry stone plinth, single-storey with jamb, timber-framed, gable roof, located southwest of the former oil mill and possibly belonging to it, today holiday home, holiday apartment with winter garden built in, appearance has been preserved, window with split bars from the construction period, in the gable new windows like the historical model, Field barn, characteristic of the landscape and the 19th century, in good original condition, characteristic of the townscape, evidence of rural building trade and economy. 09306005
 


Former school, now a residential building Dorfstrasse 12
(map)
1873-1874 Typical plastered building with central projections and characteristic design elements of architectural and local historical importance. Two-storey, solid, ground floor window with segment arch (sandstone), window with muntin renewed, two old doors, recessed main entrance with segment arch, belt cornices, corner pilasters, upper floor windows with straight roofs, twin arched windows in the risalit, twin windows in the gable and lateral oculi , Pitched roof, in the school there was a classroom for all students as well as the teacher's apartment. 08990963
 


War memorial for those who fell in World War I
War memorial for those who fell in World War I Dorfstrasse 12 (next to)
(map)
Consecrated in 1922 simple stele with a cantilevered top with a pyramidal end with a cross and inscription, of local historical importance. On a base, a simple stele with a cantilevered top with a pyramidal end with a cross, inscription: "Our heroes from 1914 - 1918", including a list of names, all around a flower bed, enclosure with picket fence 08990964
 


Residential house in open development Dorfstrasse 17
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century simple rural house typical of the Upper Ore Mountains, plastered building with economical structure and central roof bay of regional historical value.

One-storey, massive, sandstone walls, entrance with segment arch, central roof bay window with two closely spaced windows and oculus, profiled eaves, gable roof, at the rear various additions without monument value, clearly existed in 1904, comparable cottage-like houses in the village were built in 1877, from this one can be approximated same construction period of the house in Dorfstr. 17 derive.

08990977
 


Cottage property with house and barn Dorfstrasse 27
(map)
2nd half of the 18th century, before 1786 Cottage property, largely preserved in its original appearance, of socio-historical and architectural value.

Residential stable house : Solid ground floor, sturdy sills, newly plastered, upper floor double-bar timbered, mountain door, boarded gable, gable roof, slate roofing, through additions on the opposite eaves side, dressing roof
barn : half-timbered construction, boarded up, old windows, gable roof, slate roofing, roof bay with mountain door, buildings possibly . Renewed after 1786, but no building files, in the mile sheet of 1786 both buildings are shown in their current location, so that one can assume that both buildings were built before or around 1786.

08990957
 


Residential building Dorfstrasse 28
(map)
1911 rebuilding after fire Plastered construction with echoes of the Swiss style, shaped by building concepts of the beginning of the 20th century, of importance in terms of building history and shaping the landscape. 08990956
 


Residential stable house and side building of a three-sided courtyard Dorfstrasse 29
(map)
around 1870 Stately residential stable house with plaster structure and side building with three-arched Kumthalle of a former four-sided courtyard, of regional historical importance. Residential stable house : two-storey with jamb, sandstone walls, box window, plaster structure, decorative rosettes in the jamb, gable roof, slate covering, segmented arched windows in the gable, twin windows and oculus in the top. Side building : two-story, massive ground floor, e.g. Partly changed, central Kumthalle, boarded up upper floor (later reassembled), gable roof. 08990955
 


Cottage property with house and barn Dorfstrasse 30
(map)
2nd half of the 18th century Rural residential and farm buildings in a design typical of the time and the landscape, in good original condition, of importance in terms of building history and the appearance of the town.

Residential stable house : solid ground floor, upper floor with single-bar framework, diagonal struts, boarded gable sides, old windows in the gable, gable roof, slate roofing. Barn : half-timbered construction, boarded up, old windows, mountain door on the gable, gable roof.

08990954
 


Stable house of a former four-sided courtyard Dorfstrasse 32
(map)
End of 18th century stately half-timbered building that has a significant impact on the landscape, in good original condition, of regional historical and local significance.

Solid ground floor, upper floor double-bar framework, diagonal struts, old windows, solid gable side, clad gable, gable roof.

08990953
 


Residential building Dorfstrasse 34
(map)
1909 Rural house from the 19th century, typical of the landscape and the times, in its original appearance, of architectural significance. 08990952
 


Former town estate, later a forester's house, now a holiday facility Forstweg 1
(map)
1852/53 representative symmetrically laid out multi-part building of importance for the local history and landscape.

Middle section : three-storey, segmented arched window, tent roof, single-storey side wing, partly boarded up, gable roof, e.g. Partly with slate
covering , various dormers as roof houses or towers, a bat dormers Originally probably Vorwerk from Sayda Castle. 1678 the electoral chief forester Israel Richter lived here on Schönheide and Falkenberg. From 1690 no longer residence of a chief forester. 1767 designated as a good. Then use as a municipal property of the city of Sayda. Burned to the ground in October 1851. Rebuilt in 1852/53 by the city of Sayda. In the city archives there is a purchase contract dated October 12, 1904, which certifies the sale of the building complex from the city of Sayda to the Royal Saxon State Treasury. The state forest district administration was housed in the building complex. Forest use until 1984. Still used as a resettler camp and holiday facility.

08990949
 


Residential stable house Olbernhauer Strasse 1
(map)
around 1800 Typical regional farmhouse with half-timbered upper floor in largely authentic tradition, of architectural significance. Ground floor solid, smoothed, upper floor double-bar timbered framework with diagonal struts, boarded up back, window enlarged upwards, in the gable window with original muntin, saddle roof, lying desolate in 1690, the new owner was obliged to build the house and barn in the deed of purchase, as "4th "horse goods" sold. Described in 1750 as Hufen Gut with oil mill. The oil mill was also part of the property in 1821. Whether the existing stable house was the oil mill traded in the sales contracts or a different building cannot be determined without thorough research. Judging by the construction of the house, it was built around 1800. 08990972
 


Residential stable house and barn of a two-sided courtyard Olbernhauer Strasse 2
(map)
1st half of the 19th century Two-sided courtyard that has been preserved in its structure with half-timbered buildings typical of the region, of importance in terms of building history and character of the townscape.

Stable house : ground floor solid, smoothed, e.g. Partly changed, upper floor with double-bar framework, corner struts, all clad except for one side of the eaves, gable roof. Barn : solid base, boarded up wooden construction, gable roof.

08990968
 


Side building (with Kumthalle) and barn of a former four-sided courtyard Olbernhauer Strasse 3
(map)
after 1900 The side building, largely preserved in its original appearance, the stable with the three-arched Kumthalle, of importance in terms of the history of the building and of the townscape. Stable : two-story, central Kumthalle, upper floor with segmented arched window with slats, gable roof, back of upper floor boarded up. Barn : 1½-storey, massive, low-lying gate with segmented arch, main gates with sliding rollers, upper floor with segmented arched windows with lamellas, gable clad, gable roof, gate pillar, stepped closure made of bricks with attached ball. 08990971
 


Cottage property with barn extensions Olbernhauer Strasse 5
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century Half-timbered buildings that characterize the townscape in good original condition and of regional historical value.

Ground floor massive, smoothed, upper floor half-timbered, clad, gable roof (probably roof structure renewed), rear extension, attached economic part consisting of two slightly offset structures, predominantly wooden construction, boarded up, e.g. Some old windows, saddle roof with continuous ridge height.

08990970
 


Residential stable house and barn of a former three-sided courtyard Olbernhauer Strasse 7 around 1800 Rural residential and farm buildings typical of the time and landscape in half-timbered construction, largely preserved in their original form, of importance in terms of regional history and the appearance of the town.

Residential stable house: Solid ground floor, profiled stone walls with sturdy sills, upper floor with double-bar framework, corner struts, one solid gable side, one clad, gable roof, slate covering Barn : wooden construction, boarded up, sliding gate on castors, gable roof, renovation before 2014: plastic skylight window, timber frame planked open .

08990969
 


Former cottage property Olbernhauer Strasse 8
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century Residential stable house with intact wall-opening ratio, characterizing the townscape and of value in terms of building history. Two-storey, massive, clad gable, saddle roof, back of upper floor timber-framed boarded up, extension with upper floor timber-framed boarded up. 08990966
 


Residential stable house and barn of a three-sided courtyard Olbernhauer Strasse 10
(map)
around 1850 Rural residential and farm buildings typical of the time and the landscape, characterizing the townscape due to the dominant hillside location, renovated in accordance with monument regulations, of importance in terms of regional history and character of the townscape.

Residential stable house : Solid ground floor, window with muntin renewed, upper floor double-bar timbered frame with corner struts, gable side clad, gable slated, gable roof, over the living part with slate covering, mountain door.
Barn : two-story, lower part z. Partly massive, boarded up, windows with muntins, gable roof.

08990967
 


Residential stable of a three-sided courtyard Olbernhauer Strasse 16
(map)
Mid 19th century Farmhouse with half-timbered construction typical of the region on the upper floor, important in terms of building history and character of the town.

Solid ground floor, upper floor with original window size, clad half-timbering, gable roof.

08990965
 

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. Components of the upper water supply of the Revierwasserlaufanstalt (RWA), located south of the Mortelmühle:
    • Dittersbacher Rösche (opened in 1857), 1,563 m long, section with a brick mouth hole (outlet) on Saydaer Flur - another section of the Rösche on Dittersbacher Flur in the municipality of Neuhausen / Erzgeb.
    • Mortelgrunder Kunstgraben (built 1827) between Dittersbacher and Mortelbacher Rösche, 289 m long, covered with concrete slabs
    • Mortelbacher Rösche (excavated 1827–1859), with 2,950 m length the longest Rösche of the RWA, feeding into the Dittmannsdorfer Pond on Dittmannsdorfer Flur in the municipality area Pfaffroda, section with a bricked mouth hole (inlet) on Saydaer Flur - further sections of Rösche on Ullersdorfer Flur in the urban area of ​​Sayda (ID no. 08991093) and on Dittmannsdorfer Flur in the municipality of Pfaffrodas.
  2. Probably since the settlement of the Mortelgrund around 1200, but at the latest since 1400, mining was primarily carried out here on copper, but later also on silver ores. An economic upswing took place from 1512 (here mention of the Eschig mine, award of the “St. Anna zum neue Glück” mine in 1518 to the Welser merchants from Augsburg). A smelter in the valley has come down to us around 1520. This burnt down probably around 1550 and was replaced by a new one, the so-called "Roselers Huett". The black copper produced from the ores from the nearby pits was delivered by the local smelter to Chemnitz for further processing, and from 1537 to Grünthaler Saigerhütte. Today the old fish farm (see object 08991025) is located at the former hut location. Around 1630 the Saydaer Bergbau was possibly. Due to war events, it was opened again at the end of the 17th century and continued to operate until around 1830. This old mining area is particularly remarkable because of the participation of the Welser patrician family.
    The preserved Bingen and Haldenzuges document in their entirety the underground course of the two ore veins Schönberger Spat (western slope of the Mortelgrund) and Eschig Spat (eastern slope), on which copper and silver were built. Each heap as well as some of the bingen mark the former location of a day shaft on the ore vein, further bingen represent fractures of the underground, but still near-surface quarries.
    • A. Bingenzug over the Schönberger Spat:
    1. Binge: Location: N 50 ° 41.519 ', E013 ° 26.497' - Parcel 1181 / 2. Binge: Location: N 50 ° 41.523 ', E013 ° 26.442' - Parcel 1179 / 3. "Black holes": approx up to 30 Bingen and a larger heap, probably partly from the 1st mining period, but certainly from the 2nd mining period - Location: N 50 ° 41.498 ', E013 ° 26.389' and N 50 ° 41.497 ', E013 ° 26.390' - parcel 1176 / 4th Binge: Location: N 50 ° 41.490 ', E013 ° 26.322' - Parcel 1172 / 5th Binge: Location: N 50 ° 41.464 ', E013 ° 26.048' - Parcel 1171 / 6th Binge: Location: N 50 ° 41.449 ', E013 ° 26.010' - parcel 1171
    • B. Halden and Bingenzug over the Eschig Spat - parcel 1328:
    7. Dump: Location: N 50 ° 41.439 ', E013 ° 26.896' / 8. Binge: Collapse site of the 1920s, Location: N 50 ° 41.427 ', E013 ° 26.869' / 9. Binge: Location: N 50 ° 41.418 ' , E013 ° 26.859 '/ 10. Binge: Location: N 50 ° 41.410', E013 ° 26.848 '/ 11. Dump and Binge: Location: N 50 ° 41.406', E013 ° 26.826 '/ 12. Binge: Location: N 50 ° 41.397 ', E013 ° 26.795' / 13. Remainder of the stockpile: Location: N 50 ° 41.385 ', E013 ° 26.719' / 14.Large stockpile: Location: N 50 ° 41.381 ', E013 ° 26.675'
    • C. Michaelis Stolln including mouth hole - Parcel 1176: Schmaler Stolln, location of the associated mouth hole: N 50 ° 41.419 ', E013 ° 26.441'
    The Michaelis Stolln was used to excavate an Eschig Spat ore vein containing silver and copper, probably in the 17th and 18th centuries. Century in operation, brick mouth hole (marked 1725) with laterally protruding lining walls restored in 1997, reconstruction of the first 15 m of the tunnel with barrel-shaped vault.
  3. The stone set in July 1869 on the elevation known as Saydaerhöhe north of the town of Sayda shows the upwardly tapered shape of a truncated pyramid that characterizes many pillars from the Friedrich Böhme workshop in Niederbobritzsch (e.g. 80-Drachenkopf), level 1, 60 m, edge length at the top 43 cm, stepped base. The stone material of the monolith is granite from this location. The stone is slightly set off in the base and the lower part is roughened. The cover is no longer in place. It is in good condition.
    The lettering on the south side of the pillar has been revised and is very legible. "Station / SAiDAHÖHE / der /Kön.Sächs. / Triangulation / 1869. ”A short inscription on this side of the column -“ EZV Sayda ”(Erzgebirgszweigverein Sayda) - names the association that has taken care of the station. The views to surrounding points are no longer available, the point is surrounded by dense forest.
    In the period from 1862 to 1890, a land survey was carried out in the Kingdom of Saxony , in which two triangular networks were formed. On the one hand, there is the network for grade measurement in the Kingdom of Saxony (network I. class / order) with 36 points and the royal Saxon triangulation (network II. Class / order) with 122 points. This national survey was led by Prof. Christian August Nagel , according to which the triangulation columns are also referred to as "Nagelsche columns". This surveying system was one of the most modern layer networks in Germany. The surveying columns set for this purpose remained almost entirely in their original locations. They are an impressive testimony to the history of land surveying in Germany and in Saxony. The system of surveying pillars of both orders is in its entirety a cultural monument of supraregional importance (LfD / 2013)
  4. On both sides of the Alte Heidersdorfer Straße outside the city area, three of them have been fundamentally changed and no longer worthy of a monument. Six barns on the right and four barns on the left side of the street (out of town), however, have been preserved in their original condition and are worthy of monuments for reasons of urban development and regional history. It is a one-storey building made of quarry stone masonry, partly unplastered, with large segment arch gate entrances, some barns with modified gate entrances, saddle roofs. Rebuilt outside the city after the last big fire in 1842.
    The building regulations of the city of Sayda, which were issued after the city fire, stipulated that no agricultural products may be stored within the city. As a result, the barns were probably rebuilt in 1843 at their current location and at other locations outside the city. The ordinance also stipulated that such structures were to be built using stone construction. The aim was to counter the risk of fire by defining locations and building regulations. But already in 1892 a fire destroyed six barns on Heidersdorfer Weg, but it certainly did not spread to the urban area.
  5. Entrance building : built in 1897, basement floor made of sandstone, two-storey clinker brick building, multi-profiled cornice, segmental arched window, over the first floor a toothed frieze, a boarded gable, a clinker brick gable with an ornamental frieze in the gable triangle, historical door, jamb floor, roof overhang, saddle roof, 1974 when the kindergarten moved The converted and expanded building of the former train station locomotive shed : built in 1897, mostly boarded up, three-axis workshop, fourth axis two-storey, ground floor brick masonry, windows with segment arch, boarded up upper floor, gable roof, one gable side changed in the 1950s Goods handling hall : built in 1897, before 2014 demolished, rectangular building, wooden construction, two gate entrances on each long side, a gable side loading ramp and canopy, roof overhang, flat saddle roof. History of the narrow-gauge railway : On February 15, 1894, the Saxon state parliament approved the construction of the Mulda – Sayda railway line on a narrow 750 mm gauge. This gauge was common for narrow-gauge railways in Saxony. Construction began in May 1896. The reason for the construction of the railway line was the increasing industrialization in the Ore Mountains. The route comprised 16 railway and road bridges, including the 193 m long Muldenbrücke in Mulda. The route was 15.554 km long and had to overcome a difference in altitude of 252 m. The Mulda station as the starting point of the route has been expanded to include a narrow-gauge track. The stations, stops and stops in Dorfchemnitz, Voigtsdorf, Friedebach, Unterfriedebach, Wolfsgrün and Sayda were newly built. On July 1, 1897, rail operations were ceremoniously opened. The travel time between Mulda and Sayda and between Sayda and Mulda was 1:19 and 1:01 hours. The route was used for both freight and passenger transport. In addition to the transport of workers, the railway also gained importance for the transport of those seeking relaxation, such as B. the winter sports enthusiast. The transport of goods consisted primarily of coal, agricultural products, livestock, wood and textile products. In the early 1960s, all bridges were renewed. There was also a rail mail service. At the beginning of the 1960s, a “Socialist Working Group on Narrow Gauge Traffic” at the Dresden Reichsbahndirektion carried out an efficiency calculation for the narrow-gauge lines in the area of ​​responsibility. As a result of this, the closure of the narrow-gauge line from Mulda to Sayda was recommended. Rail mail had increasingly been shifted to trucks, and increasing bus traffic replaced rail traffic. The supply of private cars to the population also gradually improved. The intention was to avoid necessary investments by closing the line. In addition, there was a desire to lay off workers who were urgently needed in other areas of industry and economy. In 1966, the line was closed and the track system was dismantled in 1967. For almost 70 years, the small railway line was the main means of transport for goods and passengers in the Ore Mountains towns of Mulda, Dorfchemnitz, Friedebach, Voigtsdorf and Sayda, from which its great regional historical importance derives (from: Documentation ABS Brand-Erbisdorf, ABM 140/03 and LRA Freiberg) .







  6. Originally inserted within an existing Gothic pointed arch portal of the city church, this is the so-called wedding portal through which the groom had to enter the church at the wedding.
    Monument: on a pedestal, representation of a naked man, leaning on a sword, to the right and left of him an inscription with the names of the fallen, above "The town of Sayda their fallen heroes", after the renovation of the church and the associated opening of the old one A new location for the monument had to be found in the “bridal portal”, the new location is opposite the old reception building in a small park, the pointed arch was re-cast (modeled on the pointed arch portal).
  7. ^ Sayda town church:
    • Built in 1391, the three-sided closed choir with ribbed vaulting received the church was named "Church to our dear women"
    • 1502 construction of the nave as a three-aisled hall,
    • 1702 tower added
    • Completely destroyed in the city fire in 1842
    • In 1892 fundamental redesign of the interior; after the Freiberg Cathedral, the largest late-Gothic hall church in the former Freiberg district
    • 1892 neo-Gothic altar, crucifix above the altar from the 16th century.
    • Baptismal font from the 17th century by Caspar von Schönberg and his wife Agnes
    • Newly made pulpit in 1892, depictions of Matthew, Markus, Lukas and Johannes, in the middle Apostle Paul, on the south wall four epitaphs of the von Schönberg family (mainly from the time before the Thirty Years War).
  8. At the highest point of the city, a water tower was built in 1893/94, which, together with the waterworks built south of the city and the associated high-pressure water pipe, was supposed to ensure the water supply to Sayda and the surrounding area. J. Neubert from Friedebach is listed as the builder of the 25 meter high natural stone tower.
    The slightly conical shaft of the water tower is accentuated by a profiled belt cornice above the high base zone as well as scratched sandstone walls on the arched portal and the regularly arranged arched windows. The plastered tank floor, which surrounds the 200 m³ steel water tank of the Intze I type, protrudes slightly and is closed off by a round arch frieze below the conical roof.
    The water tower is still in operation today and as an early testimony to the central urban water supply at the end of the 19th century, it is of local and technical historical importance. Its central, high location makes it one of Sayda's landmarks with an impact on the townscape.
    Entrance area slightly protruding from the base on the northeast side, here a round arched doorway with chiseled sandstone walls, above and next to it historical metal signs with height information and information on construction, in the water tower iron tanks with a storage capacity of 200,000 l, engineering structure between 1893 and 1893. Built in 1894, inaugurated on October 8, 1894 (together with a waterworks south of the city and the associated high-pressure water pipes), while the waterworks was built by the Königin-Marien-Hütte in Cainsdorf near Zwickau, led by the builder J. Neubert from Friedebach near Sayda the water tower, 1995/1996 general overhaul, the water tower stored water from the Fleckenwiesenbach, which was pumped from the Fleckenwiesen southwest of the city to the waterworks located there and then into the water tank in the water tower and from there distributed in the city, taking advantage of the elevated position and the Own height of the water tower to maintain the water pressure in the pipeline network.
  9. Sandstone cube , approx. 80 cm high, scratched base, rounded end, a cast-iron crown on both sides, heavily weathered inscription: "Sayda", royal Saxon milestones were set up from 1858 as a result of a state re-measurement to mark postal and trade routes and thus solved the post mile pillars, the milestones differ in station, full mile, half mile, branch and border crossing stones, while station stones marked the start and end points of postal rates (with information on post stations and distances, plus cast-iron crown), full milestones stood Distance of one mile along the route (had writing mirrors with inscriptions and a central cast-iron crown), half-milestones like this one were set up between the whole milestones (without inscriptions, but with a small crown), junction stones were located at those road junctions where no other milestone came to the list (with indication of d he next post station and middle crown, without distance information, possibly with several writing mirrors and carved direction signs), border crossing stones marked the borders of the Kingdom of Saxony (on the Saxon side with the inscription “Kgr. Saxony ”and the middle crown), after the introduction of the metric system around 1900, milestones - as shown here - were partly converted into kilometer stones and, if necessary, provided with information on location and distance.
  10. Signpost column, approx. 2 m high round column, elaborately designed, upper end as crown, inscription partially renewed ("To Neuhausen 5.3 km and Brüx [Most (Czech Republic)] 28.9 km" and "To Bienenmühle 9.7 km und Frauenstein 20.2 km ”), below it, a signpost above it, a crown (each chiseled in), with other pillars of the same design, belongs to the directional signs along an old salt road over the Erzgebirgskamm, this long-distance trade route stretched from Halle via Leipzig, Oederan, Sayda and Brüx (Most) to Prague and crossed the Deutscheinsiedler Sattel, called Alte Salzstraße or Böhmischer Steig, played a major role in the founding of the city, in Sayda crossed the Silberstraße, a trade route from Zwickau to Dresden, a pillar of the way probably in the course of the expansion of the Sayda-Brüxer- Road built in 1836/1837 as evidence of two important trade connections.
  11. Burial Church : Former hospital church, first mentioned in 1508. The current hall church was completed in 1690. The tower was demolished in 1776. Restorations took place in 1906, 1986–89. Plastered building with a three-sided choir closure. Inside, it has a flat ceiling with a wooden coffered ceiling, which was decorated with floral ornaments and cherubimes. One-storey galleries on three sides. Altar structure around 1600, wooden pulpit 18th century. Stained glass window from 1906. Sandstone grave marks inside, mostly figurative from the 16th and 17th centuries, some Hieronymus Eckart the Elder. Ä. attributed. Also memorial for the mayor Brossius (deceased 1576). Cemetery attendant's house (gravedigger house): two-storey with an almost square floor plan, solid ground floor - plastered quarry stone masonry, sandstone walls, upper floor timber-frame boarded, partly original windows - two-winged with rung division - with flat triangular gable roofing, hipped stone roof, encircling grave stone wall : encircled quarry wall Wall partly semicircular, partly through stone slabs, in some areas newer wall, plastered. Tomb in the cemetery : 1. Jendretzky tomb, red granite base, mourners kneeling on it (presumably electroplating), possibly electroplating, inscribed 1936, inscription: "Our little mother 1870 - 1936 / ...", baroque tombs on the outer wall of the chapel: 2nd Tomb Fr. Elisabeth, born Kieß, sandstone, inscribed 1670 3. Tomb Anna? (Possibly tomb for the deceased children of the Heermann family), sandstone, inscribed 1674 4th tomb, weathered inscription, sandstone, upper end Eye of God with flanking putti heads, 2nd half of the 17th century. 5. Tomb of Frau Maria?, 1652 –1729, sandstone 6. Tomb Christian B… ?, General ACCIS-Einnehmer, inscription heavily weathered, 17th century 7. Tomb Johann Fritzsche, city judge, sandstone , inscribed 1682 8. Tomb Church council and innkeeper Johann Schuster and Mrs. Dorothea Schuster, Sandstone, inscribed 1703 and 1706, upper end of the crucifixion scene 9. Tomb woman? Born Schoberin, sandstone with heart-shaped inscription plaque, inscribed 1636 10. Tomb, weathered inscription, sandstone with quatrefoil inscription plaque, 17th century. Garden monument: cemetery cross (intersecting avenues - including sycamore), two younger horticultural facilities with trees of life (urn burial sites) and individual trees - u. a. Beech and ash.













  12. Roller for road construction and civil engineering, driven by steam power (single-cylinder machine with Stephenson reversing and gear ratio), so in principle a self-propelled locomobile with rollers instead of tires (front one continuous roller with chain steering, rear two laterally arranged rollers with a larger diameter) , was used to compact the respective subsoil using its own weight and as a construction site tractor.
    Built in 1925, manufactured by the JA Maffei Lokomotiv- und Maschinenfabrik, Munich (company founded in 1837, initially one of the leading German locomotive factories, 1880–1927 also manufacturing steam rollers), the present steam roller originally belonged to the one in Freiberg from 1908 to 1938 as the "steam roller owner" active Wolfgang Scharf [registered with Albert Gieseler as Wolfgang Schart]
    probably in use from 1925 to 1968 as Freiberg's last steamroller, restored in 1997/98 by Andreas Adam GmbH (road, civil and civil engineering), Sayda, all parts remained original received, functional.
    Currently exhibited on the A. Adam GmbH company premises together with other evidence of road construction history in a glass house, one of the few remaining and still functional road steam rollers in Germany, built in 1925 and one of the later examples, as the first steam rollers were already in use in the 1860s came, at the turn of the century, until the middle of the 20th century, mostly replaced by more modern rollers with diesel engine drives (developed around 1910). Technical data:
    Manufacturer Lokomotiv- und Maschinenfabrik JA Maffei, manufacturing location Munich, year of construction 1925, factory number 9005, weight 12–15 t (depending on the roller wheel width), power 12–15 HP, steam pressure 12 bar, boiler heating surface approx. 8 m², boiler diameter approx. 600 mm, cylinder diameter approx. 180 mm, piston stroke 250 mm, flywheel diam. 1000 mm, speed 120-200 / min.
  13. ↑ Solid ground floor, sandstone walls, basket arch door jambs, upper floor double-bar timbered framework, boarded up at the rear, in the middle above the entrance area a cartouche with coat of arms: inscription “Hospital zu Johannis donated by Caspar and Bernhard v. Schoenberg 1508 + built by Adam Rudolf Schoenberg 1784 “, gable shingled, crooked hip roof, bat dormers, roof shingled
    Hospital: not only built for sick people, but mainly for poor, needy, old people, today Erzgebirge. Local history museum with 17 rooms, fundamental renovation in 1991/92 (reconstruction in Dehio).
  14. Station stone, sandstone cube with a rounded end, lettering area recessed on both sides, each with a cast-iron crown, underneath inscriptions (reconstructed): on the street side “Sayda. Brüx 4.40 M. / Frauenstein 2.78 M. / Altenberg via Seyde 4.15 M. / via Zaunhaus 4.55 M. ", on the opposite side" Großhartmannsdorf 1.88 M. / Olbernhau 1.45 M. / Zöblitz 2.65 M. / Marienberg 3.49 M. ”, originally set up around 1860 on the Sayda market square opposite the“ Alte Post ”, since 2001 at the current location, royal Saxon milestones were used for marking from 1858 as a result of a state re-survey by post and trade routes and thus replaced the post mile pillars, station stones marked the start or end point of postal rates and were labeled on one or more sides with the post station locations and the respective distance, there were also full mile, half mile , Junction and border crossing stones, distance information initially in miles (from 1840 a Saxon post mile corresponded to 7.5 km), milestones were partly converted into kilometer or boundary stones after the introduction of the metric system around 1900.
  15. Residential building : solid ground floor, partly sandstone walls, shutters, upper floor timber-framed, boarded gable, a gable with original windows, roof overhang, central gable, gable roof, slate roofing Side buildings : solid, boarded jamb floor, boarded gable, gable roof, roof overhang, roof overhang approx. 2008, new building in 2009 fish ponds including drainage ditches : five simple, partly next to, partly below each other, dam ponds , these hold the water of the stream flowing in from the north, which is led past the ponds in a trench to the east and below it The also lined tapping channels from the lowest ponds are united, passed there under the access road and flows further south in its natural bed, the ponds are connected to one another by means of smaller ditches or pipes for the purpose of water exchange, the inflow and flow control takes place by means of small contactors. Excerpt from the information board at the site: 1451 first mention of the "ponds, fisheries and mills (mills)" as manorial possessions in a feudal letter, fishing in Mortelgrund already from the settlement of the valley around 1200, but still from the brooks with sufficient fish, around 1520 At the location of the current fish farm there was a smelter (probably belonged to the merchant Bartel Welser from Augsburg), it burned down around 1550 and was replaced by a new hut ("Roselers Huett") around 1560 - slag heaps from this time still exist today, 1587 Mention of the Mortelteiches in a stately inventory of assets, at this time the ponds created for mining were also fished, while the fish population in the streams decreased due to mining, possibly Start of fish farming, around 1800 there were still mining facilities at the site of today's fish farming, until 1830 mining was carried out in Mortelgrund, from 1900 increased operation of fish farming in Mortelgrund, subsequent disputes and court hearings with the Mortelmühle about water usage rights, around 1920 management of almost all ponds, Brooks and (mill) ditches by the fish farmer Engelhardt, around 1950 supplying many pond owners in the region with brood trout from the Mortelgrund fish keeper (belonging to the Dresden Fischwirtschaftsverband, Freiberg cooperative), during GDR times strong subsidies for local fish farming, 1989 abandonment of [ commercial?] trout farming.



  16. ↑ Description of the mill : two-storey quarry stone construction, original plaster, 5 to 6 axes, high base storey, windows with sandstone walls, historical windows, ground floor groin vault on chiselled sandstone pillars with grooved corners and cantilevered cover plates, gable triangle half-timbered roof, crooked hip roof, cellar vault preserved (cross ridge, clay vault) Canals and shafts of the watercourse partially restored, no more technology available, Mühlenstein history : 1875 bar license for Mortelmühle, 1784 Adam Rudolph von Schönberg on Purschenstein sells two-course Mortelmühle to Joh.Christian Eilenberger, so the Mortelmühle was probably in the possession of 432 years Schönberg, water supply via two mill ditches - the Langenwiesengraben and the Mortelgraben - to the mill pond (currently without water in 2009) and the remains of the drainage ditch. Mortelgraben course: N 50 ° 41.376 ', E013 ° 26.220' / N 50 ° 41.375 ', E013 ° 26.218' / N 50 ° 41.385 ', E013 ° 26.266' / N 50 ° 41.383 ', E013 ° 26.286' History : 1477 first documented mention of the "Mortelmühle". So Anna Caspar von Schönberg was given extensive lands on Purschenstein, which also included the “Mortelmohl bey Saida”. The second documented mention of the mill comes from the year 1579. In 1584, the Mortelmühle was the only stately mill in Sayda. At that time it had 6 courses, in 1679 4 courses and in 1711 2 courses. Sold by Adam Rudolph von Schönberg on Purschenstein in 1784 to Johann Christian Eilenberger. From 1800 to 1900 multiple changes of ownership through purchase or inheritance. Lt. According to a registration book of Deutsche Versicherung, the mortar mill in its present form was built in 1849 on the walls of the old cellar vault. In 1875 a license for the Mortelmühle was granted. In 1910 the Radstube collapsed and the waterwheel was badly damaged. The water wheel was no longer repaired and fell into disrepair. In 1911/12 the fish farmer Karl Hermann Hähle acquired the mortar mill, then the wood turner Karl August Walther (owned from 1912 to 1935). This ran a turnery and restaurant. In 1991 the last still water-bearing mill ditch was filled in. 1999 resale. Today u. a. Seat of the “Förderverein Mortelmühle e. V. “, since then tentative renovation measures to preserve the building.




  17. History : Vorwerk built in 1773 by the mining captain Adam Rudolf von Schönberg from Freiberg. The estate, also known as the Neues or Saydaisches Vorwerk, was under the jurisdiction of Purschenstein Castle. It was on the old Bohemian Salt Road, which led from Leipzig via Oederan, Sayda and Brüx to Prague. This road was very busy. Horses could be changed at the Vorwerk and the coachmen received board and lodging. The so-called Small or New Vorwerk of the Purschenstein lordship consisted of a residential and farm building with built-in breeding cattle shed, a barn with a wagon shed and storage vault, and a shed building in 1850, according to a catastration protocol from July 26th of the same year. At that time, all buildings were 77 years old, i.e. they were rebuilt in 1773. The entire Vorwerk was cremated on June 30, 1865 (according to the manuscript of the ABM 140/03 of the GSQ Freiberg from 2003) by lightning. The house and the barn were then rebuilt as a forester's house. (This information is based on a thorough evaluation of archival materials from the Purschenstein reign and various chronicles). Up until the end of the 19th century, the area surrounding the Vorwerk was used for agriculture and forestry. From around 1900 until the end of the Second World War, a restaurant and a garden café were operated in addition to agriculture and forestry. From 1945 to 1972 agricultural use predominated. Afterwards it was used as a children's holiday camp until 1989. The property has been privately owned since 1994 and 1998 respectively. In 1998 a thorough renovation and the opening of the restaurant and hostel took place. The current building stock, the buildings now used as an inn and guest house make these statements seem likely. Description : The house or the guest house is a single-storey plastered building with shutters, the windows with natural stone surrounds and a slate-covered gable roof with new dormers. The opposite side building, which was built at the same time, is also a single-storey plastered building with a gable roof and a roof extension. The adjoining barn, also opposite the house, is a simple half-timbered building with typical paneling and a gable roof. As the location of the former Vorwerk and a later excursion restaurant, the building ensemble is of great regional historical importance. Due to the largely authentic building fabric from the 19th century, the property also gains importance in terms of architectural history.






  18. two-storey, profiled sandstone door jambs with straight roofing on consoles, profiled eaves, building structure completely clad, crooked hip roof with wide barn roof (this later added), three-axis later extension on the north-western gable side, inside vaults, the predecessor of today's retirement home, the former The district court burned down in the town fire in 1842, the extent to which remains of the previous building were included in the new building is not known, on October 25, 1851 the inauguration of the Royal Saxon District Court in Sayda took place, the property was already in the possession of the from April 5, 1850 Royal Saxon high state treasury in Dresden, previously the property was owned by master cooper Gottlob Friedrich Melzner, already on January 1, 1850, the then mayor Trautzsch commissioned the agricultural master builder Krasting from Zwickau with the construction of the court, on December 4, 1850 the royal vote voted Ministry of Justice the acquisition of the house property belonging to the cooperage master Melzner to accommodate a single court, closure of the district court in 1951, after 1952 expansion to a home after work, various construction measures follow, obviously also the extension of the house.
  19. Monument on a high base (formerly probably a grotto), green, natural stone stele made of Grillenburg sandstone with four names of the fallen, the upper end is a cast-iron Roman helmet, laurel wreath (copy of the helmet, the original in the Sayda Local History Museum), consisting of green bronzed Cast iron, the contract was ultimately awarded to the Gräflich Einsiedelsche Eisenwerk Einsiedel as a result of tenders, other suppliers turned out to be too expensive, the sculptor Carl Schimmel took over the sculpting work, who was able to prevail against other applicants, and the monument design (precise specifications) came by the Sayda city administration, which specified both the design of the helmet and the design of the stone with font and color, next to the names of the fallen there is the inscription “To remember the in German-French. War 1870/71 fallen warriors ”on one side of the stone, the monument has been restored several times, most recently after 1998.
  20. Residential building, Freiberger Straße 26
    Swiss-style residential building : two-storey, solid ground floor, profiled sandstone walls, upper floor double-bar timbered framework (presumably insulated), St. Andrew's cross, clapboard gable, roof overhang on cleats, gable roof, central projection with entrance area, original door, called "master builder's house" , because the master builder Neubert built this house for himself.
    Tube boring mill : single storey, wooden construction, original windows with triangular ends, flat gable roof, roof overhang on knags, original technical equipment.
    History : Manufacture of the first pipe runs (water pipes made of stuck together wooden pipes) in the early Middle Ages, initially by hand, later by means of mechanical boring mills using water power (verifiable from the 17th century), mostly 3.4 m (Dresden measure) long pine wood pipes (Pine wood available in large quantities, easy to work, very resinous bark ensures a long shelf life): For this purpose, use of iron wood drills of various sizes and shapes specially forged for this purpose, which centers a straight pine trunk clamped in a tube boring machine and along its length Drilled through the axis, initially drilling with a small-diameter drill, then widening the cross-section using a stronger drill (supported by a pulling rope guided through the first hole), these wooden pipelines were originally used for water supply and drainage in mining, and later also for urban areas good water supply.
    The present mechanical tube boring mill was created by the builder and owner of a construction business Gotthold Julius Neubert in Friedebach in 1864, business and tube boring was taken over by Martin Julius Wenzel in 1928, continued operation from 1986 by his grandson Hans-Jürgen Wenzel, originally driven by the Chemnitzbach by means of a 4 m high Undershot water wheel, water wheel and wheel room destroyed by floods around 1960, since then driven by an electric motor, daily production of approx. 30 tubes until 1945, production figures still increased around 1960, in today's show workshop still traditional production of approx. 15 tubes per year for museums and Private customers u. a. in the Black Forest and in Austria.
    The building and the workshop facilities have been preserved to this day, making the Friedebach pipe boring mill the only still existing mechanical pipe boring mill for the manufacture of wooden water pipes in Europe and of great technical history and rarity.
  21. Mill building : possibly built before the Thirty Years War, two-storey solid plastered building, angular construction, ground floor window changed, partly 1.20 m thick walls (reference to presumed construction time before the Thirty Years War), a gable timber-framed boarded - slightly protruding, one gable clad, Steep, curved saddle roof, originally lifting crane on the side extension, today no more technical equipment barn : wooden construction, saddle roof, original windows, built in 1939 by the then owner Paul Albin Schlesier, by LPG heightening of the barn Shed : one-storey, half-timbered building with wooden cladding, saddle roof, today Garage mill history : first documented mention of the mill in 1707 (purchase contract: Mr. George Bräuer from Deutschneudorf bought the grinder with one gear and the existing grinder from Wolf Rudolph von Schönberg auf Purschenstein and Sayda), flour was also ground in Mühle until 1954, then feed production from 1960 operated by LPG "Heimat erde ”, 1968 dismantling of the waterwheel, then operation by an electric motor, the elevator on the mill building was moved to the massive extension by the LPG, mill operation completely stopped in 1996.



  22. Components of the upper water supply of the Revierwasserlaufanstalt (RWA):
    • Mortelbacher Rösche (excavated 1827–1859), with a length of 2,950 m, the longest Rösche of the RWA, feed into the Dittmannsdorfer pond on Dittmannsdorfer Flur in the municipality of Pfaffrodas, section on Ullersdorfer Flur - further sections of the Rösche on Saydaer Flur in the urban area of ​​Sayda (cf. Object 08991094) as well as on Dittmannsdorfer Flur in the municipality of Pfaffroda.
    • Dittmannsdorfer Teich (built 1824/25), artificial pond / reservoir, only part of the Ullersdorfer Flur - west side of the artificial pond in the Pfaffroda municipality.
  23. ^ Residential stable house, Chemnitzer Straße 1
    • Residential stable house : rebuilt in 1880 after a fire in the previous building, solid ground floor, sandstone walls, upper floor double-bar timbered, diagonal struts, gable roof, e.g. T. slate cover, z. Some old windows, clad gable side
    • barn extension at right angles : rebuilt in 1880 after a fire in the courtyard, timber-frame construction boarded up, high entrance, gable roof
    • southern barn : built in 1907 as a barn with a crushing room for breaking hemp on the ground floor, 1½-storey, e.g. T. half-timbered, mountain door in the gable, clad gable field above, gable roof, slate covering.
    The first known documentary mention of the farm is a sales deed dated July 31, 1700, the owners are known until 1835 and from 1908, the owner of the residential and farm buildings that exist today has yet to be determined.
  24. Residential stable house : Solid ground floor, sandstone walls, a cross-storey window, winter window, upper floor with double-bar framework, corner struts, half-hipped roof, boarded back, gable clad, the inn originally also had a hall on the upper floor, obviously the stable was only built into the residential stable later, like Postcards from around 1860 show that the “Alte Schenke” was attached to this house, a single-storey plastered building, the design of which is reminiscent of street houses or money-collecting points, this building no longer exists. Demolished side buildings : 1st barn: timber-frame exposed with bricks, and remains of old windows, gable roof. 2. Barn: wooden construction, boarded up, parts on the ground floor are solid, louvred windows, gable roof, slate roofing. 3rd side building: two-storey, e.g. T. massive, z. T. half-timbered, old windows, boarded gable, gable roof, z. T. collapsed, ruinous.



  25. ^ Probably rebuilt in 1877 on behalf of Carl Herklotz. The house already existed in 1880, as can be seen from the equidistant map from 1880. In the doorstep of the house are the year 1907 and the initials "OH" for Herklotz. Presumably, a conversion or change of ownership was documented by the year. It is documented that the house was used on July 6, 1910 by Mrs. Johanna Gottliebe. Herklotz born Schmieder was acquired. On September 9, 1911, a fire destroyed the house. Johanna Herklotz submitted a building application for reconstruction on September 23 of the same year. The building was probably completely destroyed in the fire and then rebuilt, as the existing building drawing shows. Up until 1920 there was a cattle shop in the house.
    The two-storey plastered building is a typical example of rural construction around 1911. Obviously, no major changes were made after 1911. The main design elements of the house are the barley plaster, strong sills, windows with gaps, plaster strips and the boarding on one gable end. The jam zone and the gable field received decorative planking.
    The house is completed by a flat gable roof with a roof overhang. Due to its isolated location, the house shapes the townscape and the landscape. Due to its authenticity, the building impressively documents the rural building trade of the early 20th century, from which the building-historical significance of the house is derived.
  26. Two-storey, massive, weather house, sturdy sills, winter windows, clad gable, crooked hip roof, central roof house, vacant in 2014 but largely preserved in its original form, the construction time of the house has not been passed down, from the Sächsisches Meilenblatt from 1786 you can see that on the same Location must have already stood a house. There is no documentary evidence of whether the house was fundamentally renovated or rebuilt in the 19th century. There is documentary evidence of a building application for the renovation of the house in 1909. However, the two drafts in the building files are not identical to the building that still exists today. It can be assumed that the previous building was completely or largely demolished (possibly with preservation of the ground floor walls) and that the house that exists today was built in 1909. Elements of the design of the Saxon Homeland Security, such as the crooked hip roof and the window arrangement, were adopted. The current building is a typical example of rural master builder architecture from around 1900 and is therefore of architectural value.

swell

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