List of cultural monuments in Schlierbach (Heidelberg)
In the list of cultural monuments in Schlierbach (Heidelberg) all immovable architectural and art monuments of the Heidelberg district Schlierbach are listed, those in the monument topography Stadtkreis Heidelberg. (= Part I and 2 of the Monument Topography of the Federal Republic of Germany, Cultural Monuments in Baden-Württemberg Volume II.5.1, edited by Melanie Mertens. Jan Thorbecke Verlag 2013).
It is as of 2012/13 and the following immovable architectural and art monuments are listed.
This list is not legally binding. Legally binding information is only available on request from the Lower Monument Protection Authority of the City of Heidelberg.
Legend
- Image: Shows a selected image from the Commons, "Additional Images" refers to the images in the respective monument category.
- Name: gives the name, the description or the type of the cultural monument.
- Address: States the street name and, if available, the house number of the cultural monument. The list is basically sorted according to this address. The link "Map" leads to various map displays and gives the coordinates of the cultural monument.
- Dating: indicates the date; the year of completion or the period of construction. Sorting by year is possible.
- Description: Provides structural and historical details of the cultural monument, preferably the characteristics of the monument.
- ID: Indicates the object ID of the cultural monument assigned by the State Office for Monument Preservation Baden-Württemberg . There is no ID of the monument office yet.
Schlierbach - old village, part of Heidelberg for a long time
Schlierbach is about two kilometers east of Heidelberg's old town on the left bank of the Neckar . The core of the development is at the exit of the Schlierbach valley, which descends south to the Neckar, from the Königstuhl and stretches up the steep slope of the mountain to the west and east. The place was first mentioned in 1245 and is named after the stream of the same name (v. Mhd. Slier - loam, mud). The original fishing and skipper village became the location of the orthopedic university clinic in 1918. Today the place is one of the upscale residential areas of Heidelberg. The Castle Wolfsbrunnenweg connects the Schlierbacher Wolfsbrunnen with the Heidelberg Castle .
Cultural monuments in Schlierbach
image | designation | location | Dating | description |
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Gatekeeper house | Am Grünen Hag 22/2 (map) |
Around 1890 | One-storey two-wing building with sandstone cladding under a gable roof. built for the Odenwaldbahn (opened in 1862). Simple building in the form of the Swiss house style. Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Semi-detached house with garden and fencing | Am Gutleuthofhang 1, Gutleuthofweg 4 (map) |
1904/05 | Erected by Friedrich Scholl and Johann Remler for Scholl and his sister. Complete separation of both building halves, also in terms of style. Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Cemetery chapel and mortuary | Am Gutleuthofhang 10 (map) |
1955 | Erected by the municipal building department based on designs by Heinrich Liedvogel. It is a funeral hall for the cemetery that has been moved here. The small belfry with the bell is from 1986. Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Villa with garden | Am Rosenbusch 12 (map) |
1933 | Built by Martin Schnabel for Oswald Fuchs. Clearly structured two-storey half-timbered gable. Reform architecture shaped by Heimatschutz and influenced by the Arts and Crafts movement. Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Villa with park | Am Schlierbachhang 39 (map) |
1913 | Franz Sales Kuhn built this summer residence for Reimann from Ludwigshafen. Modified in 1963 and repaired in 1988. Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Plaque | Elisabethenweg (map) |
Black polished granite tablet with inscription, set in a granite block. Reminiscent of three stays in Heidelberg by Empress Elisabeth of Austria, after whom the path is named. Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Rifle house | Elisabethenweg 1 (map) |
1860, 1904 hall extension | Building oriented towards alpine building tradition. A testimony to the club culture of the 19th century. Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Villa with garden and enclosure | Gutleuthofweg 12 (map) |
1906 | Built by Jean Feil for J. Ruland in "old German" style. An overall painterly effect is intended. Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Residential building | Gutleuthofweg 14 (map) |
Around 1905 | Built in reform architecture shaped by homeland security. Repaired in 1994. Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Duplex house | Hafnergässchen 2, 4 (map) |
18th century | Plastered building under a hipped roof, erected in the 18th century. Number 4 served 1808-1892 as a Protestant school house and teacher's apartment, temporarily used as a morgue and local arrest. Barrel-vaulted cellar with round arch portal. Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Substation | Hausackerweg, Schloss-Wolfsbrunnenweg (map) |
Early 20th century | Elaborately designed functional building made of unplastered quarry stone. Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Villa with park and enclosure | Hausackerweg 6 (map) |
1907 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Semi-detached house with front yard and enclosure | Hausackerweg 9, 11 (map) |
1898/99 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Villa with park and enclosure | Hausackerweg 10 (map) |
1902 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Semi-detached house with front yard and enclosure | Hausackerweg 13, 15 (map) |
1900 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Villa with park and enclosure | Hausackerweg 14 (map) |
1902 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Villa with garden and parts of the enclosure | Hausackerweg 16 (map) |
1906, |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Villa with coach house, garden, retaining wall and fencing | Hausackerweg 20 (map) |
1905, 1919 remodeling |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Villa with garden and enclosure | Hausackerweg 22 (map) |
1902 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Garden house with grotto and water basin | Hausackerweg 26a (map) |
1920s |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Villa with garden and enclosure | Hermann-Löns-Weg 8 (map) |
1907 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Villa with pergola, garden and enclosure | Hermann-Löns-Weg 10 (map) |
1907 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Villa with garden and enclosure | Hermann-Löns-Weg 20 (map) |
1910 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Villa with garden and enclosure | Hermann-Löns-Weg 22 (map) |
1913 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Villa with garden and enclosure | Im Höllengrund 1 (map) |
1910 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Villa with parts of the garden equipment | Im Höllengrund 4 (map) |
1910 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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More pictures |
Entrance building of Schlierbach-Ziegelhausen train station with packing building | In der Aue 2 (map) |
1889/90 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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villa | In der Aue 4 (map) |
1902 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Residential building | In der Aue 28a (map) |
1616, 1829 remodeling |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Residential house with garden, pergolas and fencing | In the Unteren Rombach 4 (map) |
1925/26 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Summer house with garden | Jettaweg 8 (map) |
1924 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Well room with fountain | Rombachweg |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Villa with garden, garage and fencing | Rombachweg 11 (map) |
1909 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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crossroads | Schlierbacher Landstrasse | 1788 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Elementary school with school yard and enclosure | Schlierbacher Landstrasse 23 (map) |
1890-1892 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Gasthaus Zum Güldenen Löwen, later a toddler school, with garden and fencing | Schlierbacher Landstrasse 130 (map) |
1724, 1860 remodeling |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Residential building | Schlierbacher Landstrasse 132 (map) |
1909 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Inn with hall construction, bowling alley, outdoor facilities and fencing | Schlierbacher Landstrasse 136, 136a (map) |
1736, 1903 extension |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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More pictures |
Gutleuthof chapel St. Laurentius | Schlierbacher Landstrasse 172 (map) |
1430 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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More pictures |
Clinic with chapel and outdoor facilities | Schlierbacher Landstrasse 200a (map) |
1922, 1928–1930 Wielandheim |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Railway keeper's house with outbuildings | Schlierbacher Landstrasse 208, Ingenieurweg (map) |
Around 1890 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Villa with garden and enclosure | Schloss-Wolfsbrunnenweg 5 (map) |
1875/76 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Villa with garden and enclosure | Schloss-Wolfsbrunnenweg 11 (map) |
1908 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Villa with garden | Schloss-Wolfsbrunnenweg 17 (map) |
1906, 1910 increase |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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House keep with garden and enclosure | Schloss-Wolfsbrunnenweg 23 (map) |
1910 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Villa with park and mausoleum | Schloss-Wolfsbrunnenweg 29 (map) |
1908/09 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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More pictures |
Villa Bosch with garden and outbuildings, residential buildings, garage construction, park and enclosure | Schloss-Wolfsbrunnenweg 31, 33, 33a, 46 (map) |
1922 | An important ensemble of upper-class living culture from the 1920s, consisting of the residential building of Nobel Prize winner Carl Bosch (No. 33, execution from 1922), the gardening center with an attached gardener's house (No. 31), an Art Nouveau house bought in 1925 (No. 33a, built in 1908) ) and a garage built in 1925 with parking spaces, gardener and chauffeur apartments (No. 46).
After the Second World War, the Villa Bosch initially served the American armed forces as accommodation for high-ranking military personnel. For a short time General Eisenhower resided here as military governor of the ABZ . Later it served a Heidelberg company as the headquarters for a few years. In 1967 the Süddeutsche Rundfunk (SDR) took over the villa to set up its studio in Heidelberg-Mannheim . In 1994 the SDR decided to sell the villa. The new owner was Klaus Tschira , who wanted to use the building as the headquarters for his planned foundation and had numerous restoration, renovation and modernization work carried out for this purpose. Ultimately, the Villa Bosch was rebuilt in the middle of 1997 in the old historical ambience, at the same time with an ultra-modern infrastructure. Since then it has been the seat of the Klaus Tschira Foundation gGmbH (KTS). The entire complex also includes extensive gardens and the garage house located a few pieces of land, in which the Carl Bosch Museum Heidelberg is now located. The former studio building of the Süddeutscher Rundfunk in the garden of the Villa Bosch was converted into a modern, barrier-free conference center. Events from KTS, the European Media Laboratory, the Heidelberg Institute for Theoretical Studies and external institutions are taking place in the “Studio of the Villa Bosch” .
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Hotel with retaining wall and pavilion | Schloss-Wolfsbrunnenweg 32 (map) |
1907, 1930 pavilion |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Villa Reiner with chauffeur's house and park with enclosure | Schloss-Wolfsbrunnenweg 35, 35a, (map) |
1916 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Villa with garden and enclosure | Schloss-Wolfsbrunnenweg 42 (map) |
1904 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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House with garden | Schloss-Wolfsbrunnenweg 47 (map) |
1923 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Villa with garden, garden pavilion and enclosure | Schloss-Wolfsbrunnenweg 48 (map) |
1910 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Villa with garden and enclosure | Schloss-Wolfsbrunnenweg 49 (map) |
1924 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Villa Speer with bunker, garage, garden and enclosure | Schloss-Wolfsbrunnenweg 50 (map) |
1910 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Villa with garden and enclosure | Schloss-Wolfsbrunnenweg 54 (map) |
1905 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Villa with garden and enclosure | Schmeilweg 3 (map) |
1908/09 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Villa with garden and footbridge | Valerieweg 2 (map) |
1898 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Gatekeeper house | Wolfsbrunnensteige 2 (map) |
Around 1890 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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More pictures |
Evangelical mountain church with forecourt | Wolfsbrunnensteige 7 (map) |
1908-1910 | Late historical church building with a gable roof and bell tower, built by Hermann Behaghel based on Romanesque designs. 1953 and 1965 modernizing interior conversions, 1975 partly return to the previous state. Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Residential building | Wolfsbrunnensteige 10 (map) |
Early 19th century and late 19th century |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Mill homestead | Wolfsbrunnensteige 13 (map) |
In the core 15./16. Century, 19th century cultivation |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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More pictures |
Catholic parish church of St. Laurentius and sister house | Wolfsbrunnensteige 14 (map) |
1900/01 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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More pictures |
Wolfsbrunnen, consisting of spring taps, supply systems, well rooms, forest terrace and meadow valley and the former pleasure house, later an inn, with ice cellar and shed; also Nepomuk statue, Tsar stone and wolf figure | Wolfsbrunnensteige 15, Am Schlierbachhang (map) |
1550 hunting and pleasure house, 1821/22 renovation | A notice board at the entrance to the facility provides information about the buildings at Wolfsbrunnen as follows:
1465 The house of the Wolfskreiser (wolf hunter) of the Count Palatine near the Rhine in Heidelberg is mentioned in documents in the Schlierbachtal as early as 1465. 1550 In this year the spring is put into a well house and a pleasure and hunting house is built on behalf of Elector Friedrich II. Because of its proximity to Heidelberg Castle, this house is often used by the subsequent electors and their guests: Located at the same height as the castle, this idyllic place was easily and quickly accessible via the Schloss-Wolfsbrunnenweg. However, it was located off the beaten track and allowed the princes undisturbed rest and discreet relaxation. In 1822 the house was converted into a three-story building and now used as an inn. Its current condition is largely due to this conversion in the style of a “Swiss house”. In the following decades, the outbuildings and the immediate vicinity in particular were rebuilt and changed many times. The inn has been owned by the city of Heidelberg since 1870. After the Gasthaus am Wolfsbrunnen was closed at the beginning of 2008, a new usage concept was fought for several years. Accompanied by the great civic commitment of the members of the Freundeskreis Wolfsbrunnen eV, this concept was established in mid-2010. In addition to a restaurant, the new usage concept also provides space for art and culture. Construction work started in 2011 on the basis of the new usage concept. By 2015 the main building was supplemented by two extensions on the north and south sides; In the northern extension there is space for an additional large guest and event room. On May 1, 2015, the guest house, expanded by this extension, was reopened after seven years of closure.
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Villa with garage, garden and fencing | Wolfsbrunnensteige 18 (map) |
1929/30 |
Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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Tunnel system, so-called Heidenloch | Wolfsbrunnensteige 20 (map) |
17th century ? | Arched corridor system of unknown date of origin. Protected according to § 2 DSchG
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literature
- City district of Heidelberg . (= Part I and 2 of the Monument Topography of the Federal Republic of Germany, Cultural Monuments in Baden-Württemberg Volume II.5.1) Edited by Melanie Mertens. Jan Thorbecke Verlag 2013. ISBN 978-3-7995-0426-3
Individual evidence
- ↑ Building supervision and lower monument protection authority accessed on December 4, 2017