List of cultural monuments in Thalheim / Erzgeb.

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Thalheim coat of arms
City church of Thalheim

The list of cultural monuments in Thalheim / Erzgeb. contains the cultural monuments in Thalheim / Erzgeb.

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 .

Thalheim / Erzgeb.

image designation location Dating description ID
Factory building (Address: Chemnitzer Strasse 40–40c and Kurz Strasse 1a) Short street 1a
(map)
1924, according to the building file (factory building) Typical building built for the stocking manufacturer Gustav Drechsel with a representative designed, local image-defining façade facing the street, reform style architecture, of local and industrial significance.

At right angles to the street and the slope, three-storey plastered building on the street side and four-storey on the valley side, with an extended attic and street-side façade, base of granite ashlar masonry, façade design with simple cornices and plastered pilasters, which are provided with stucco capitals on the front side, the middle three of the five axes of the front are crowned by a slightly protruding ground floor (entrance area) with four vases and accentuated by a broad mid-house structure with segmented arched gable field (with serrated undersides on the circumferential profiles), south side straight through, north side by an attached staircase and wider front part of the building divided by projections , Front part of the building with high hipped roof with laterally (to the north and south) arranged, wide dormers, rear part of the building with a mansard-like roof with new slate or slate replacement covering, building renovated, doors, windows and plaster new, di e plastic windows based on the original gesprosst (1999).

09238278
 


Residential house in open development Am Plan 14
(map)
probably 1st half of the 19th century Upper floor half-timbered clad, building typical of the time and landscape in a location that characterizes the townscape, part of the pre-Wilhelminian town structure, of architectural significance.

Two-storey building with a squat, rectangular floor plan with a steep to moderately inclined gable roof without superstructures, the back is probably a historical extension, the massive ground floor clad with insulation, but with original window opening sizes (possibly stone window frames still available), the half-timbered upper floor and the gable triangles with Eternit - Cladding (slate substitute) and original window opening sizes, the roof with asbestos sheet covering, building in typical location and on typical property by the stream.

09238227
 


Factory building Äussere Bergstrasse 5
(map)
1906, according to the construction file (stocking factory) Built for Friedrich Viktor Müller and expanded for the stocking manufacturer Paul Müller and attractively redesigned with a beautiful 1920s plaster facade in an elevated position, with the formerly associated villa (see Innere Bergstrasse 4), forming an ensemble typical of the time, in terms of building history and local history, urban planning and architectural design significant.

In an elevated position over an elongated rectangular floor plan, three-storey solid plastered building arranged parallel to the slope, on the valley side with eight-axis show facade above relatively high protruding basement and plinth floor as well as with a gently sloping hipped roof above the second floor, which was probably put on and clad in 1924 and thus has a mansard roof-like skirting, chevroned stone plaster Show facade with a flat and wide, four-axis central projection, this with a flat, profile-framed triangular gable with semicircular window, plaster pilasters under and above the roof apron that runs through the main cornice and with profiled plaster mirrors in the parapet areas of the windows on the first floor, with the exception of the windows on the second floor, segmented arched lintels, All window openings on the front side with profiled plaster framing, in the right window axis the entrance with portal-like plaster framing with strongly profiled straight roofing and with original, double eleven The winged 1920s door, the staircase windows above it offset half-storey, partly (for example on the ground floor) original windows from the construction period preserved (three times four panes, the middle two designed as ventilation sashes), the gable and rear sides plain, the roof with Preolit ​​clapboard , the second floor is clad asbestos panels.

09238285
 


Building of an elevated water tank Outer Bergstrasse 30 (opposite)
(map)
around 1905 Significance in terms of building history and technology history.

Single-storey, solid plastered building over a square floor plan with a flat tent roof, at the corners and around the lintel areas of the openings, artificial or ashlar blocks, in between smooth plaster, Preolit ​​clapboard, preserved original metal door (or sheet metal?) With a relatively large handle ring and ornate riveted long straps, originals Open staircase with runs arranged on both sides and preserved wrought iron railing (Art Nouveau). Inside, artificial stone band with garland pattern.

09238288
 


Residential house in open development Bahnhofstrasse 1
(map)
inscribed 1879, later reshaped A civil servants' residence, probably belonging to the former stocking factory CW Schletter, in a picture-defining location and authentic appearance, a typical example of an appealingly remodeled Wilhelminian style building, of architectural and local significance.

Two-storey solid plastered building with an almost square floor plan with a moderately to steeply sloping pitched roof and the side of the street flanked by two standing dormers above the central axis emphasized by the former door and two pairs of windows, facade design originally through the preserved, in part suspected, door and window walls made of Hilbersdorfer Porphyrtuff and after a redesign probably in the 1920s through the preserved plaster structure with grooves on the building corners, simple eaves cornice with haunch, simple plaster mirrors between the ground floor and upper floor windows as well as profiled framing of the triangular gable of the dwelling, predominantly historical windows (original and from the renovation phase) , Roof asbestos panels.

09238250
 


Technical systems of a paper factory (Kugelkocher, Koller, Holländer) Bahnhofstrasse 3
(map)
probably around 1900 (technical systems) Historical technical equipment and plant components of the former paper and cardboard factory Clemens Claus, of technical and local significance.
  • Spherical cooker : Spherical riveted container with a diameter of about 2.5 meters, rotatably mounted on two stands around a horizontal axis, which serves to pre-soften the paper base material by cooking,
  • Koller: device with two artificial stone wheels, each about 40 centimeters wide and 1.5 meters in diameter, which - opposite one another - are attached to an axle and which serve to knead the paper base material in the surrounding circular tub by rotating movement,
  • Holländer: Roughly oval, around 5 meter long cast iron tub in which the liquid paper base flows around a central wall, passing through rollers covered with knives and thus being further crushed (or refined).

The previously existing two sewage towers were demolished.

09238293
 


Residential house in open development and garden (with retaining walls and outside stairs) Bahnhofstrasse 3b
(map)
marked 1920 Representative plastered building with sandstone integration, for the cardboard manufacturer WC Claus as a villa-like residential building for four civil servant families, built in the neo-baroque and reform style, valuable interior, valuable in terms of building history and local history, also of architectural significance.
  • Two-storey massive building on a squat rectangular floor plan with a relatively heavy, protruding and expanded mansard roof, the entrance arranged in the middle of the western long side framed with a portal-like arbor supported by columns, the semi-oval exit with wooden railing and two male putti in the combat area, above a small one Dormitory with segmented arched gable (labeled “WC”) and lateral volutes, to the north two French windows with exits on the upper floor, to the east a semicircular stairwell stepping out of the facade and to the south a two-storey bay window with an attic exit from the dwelling above, inscribed in its segmented arched gable “1920 “, The wall surfaces smoothly plastered, the architectural structure, the figures as well as the sandstone plinth, which extends to the fighter area of ​​the relatively low-lying ground floor, including a simple stone plaster plinth, the corners set through from the plinth to the eaves Pillars and adjoining sandstone blocks emphasized, the ground floor windows with semicircular lintels, the relatively wide, individually standing dormers with segmental arch roofing, the windows and doors as well as the (artificial?) Slate roofing new, building renovated,
  • Inside, almost completely preserved, representative building fixtures and fittings: stairs, ceiling stucco, in the vestibule glazed plastic ceramic friezes (around the doorway and as the end of the wall cladding) and ceramic tiles, doors, relatively spacious staircase.
  • Garden: In front of the entrance door, beautiful paved area with ornament, the paths with granite paving, the retaining walls and outside stairs made of schisty natural stone, the trees from the time the garden was laid out.

The villa is now used as a kindergarten for the Diakonisches Werk Stollberg.

09238258
 


Barn of a two-sided yard Bahnhofstrasse 4
(map)
3rd third of the 19th century Half-timbered building, one of the few rural outbuildings that have been preserved despite urbanization in a location that shapes the townscape, of importance in terms of building history and development.

Four-zone drive-through barn (bansen, threshing floor, bansen, carriage shed) with jamb and a moderately inclined saddle roof in half-timbered construction, visible brick infills between light gray beams, Preolit ​​clapboard covering.

09238256
 


Advertising pillar Bergstrasse 7 (next to)
(map)
1st third of the 20th century In a picture-defining location in the intersection area, an object of urban historical importance and high historical memory value.

(Presumably tamped) concrete cube on a circular floor plan with a diameter of around one meter, circumferential eaves in a compact carnies shape, flat, hood-shaped sheet metal cover with a central, about 10 centimeter raised, also circular upstand (originally additional superstructures on it), the column carries a probably original sign the number "4".

09238286
 


Rectory in open development, with retaining walls and gate system on Untere Hauptstrasse Chemnitzer Strasse 2
(map)
1910 according to the building file Representative, attractively designed and largely originally preserved plastered building in a central location, reform style architecture, of local and architectural significance.

Two-storey, stately plastered building built on a hillside and over a rectangular floor plan with an extended mansard roof, the base of natural stone ashlar masonry, the south and east sides with wide, two-axis roof bay windows and more elaborate facade structures (plaster, opening shapes and sizes) designed as show facades, the ground floor openings of the Round-arched south side, under the drawn-in SO corner the main entrance with an outside staircase, the ground floor rough (spray plaster) with smooth parapet mirrors, the upper floor smoothly plastered with rough pilaster strips (probably original stock), the roof bay with profiled, framed triangular gables with transverse oval central windows and plastic Carved out plaster ornaments (crosses) on each of the three pilaster strips, the west and north sides more plain, the staircase with a second entrance protruding to the north, the roof covered with wide towers and triangular dormers in the upper area with Preolit ​​shingles in the lower area and slate in the upper area, original e Doors, younger windows with division based on the original, the retaining wall analogous to the base in unrelated ashlar masonry.

09238298
 


Evangelical town church and cemetery Thalheim
Evangelical town church and cemetery Thalheim Chemnitzer Strasse 2a
(map)
1849–1850 (church) Classicist hall church with west tower, architect: Christian Friedrich Uhlig, important in terms of architecture, architectural history, local history and landscape design.

Individual monuments of the aggregate: Church (with furnishings), cemetery chapel and two war memorials for those who fell in the Franco-German War in 1870/71 and for those who fell in the First World War in the cemetery (see also list of aggregates - Obj. 09306075)

  • Cemetery chapel: Symmetrical, one-storey, solid plastered building built on a hillside with a base storey projecting high on the valley side (in this functional room) over a compact, almost square floor plan with recessed corner areas on the valley side and a small, five-sided closed choir on the slope-side rear as well as a raised windowed central area and Diverse roof with a corner tower to the left of the entrance and a roughly central turret, on the valley-side facing side designed in a neo-Romanesque manner, a representative entrance arranged in the middle under a raised, projected, gabled central projection, in front of it a straight open staircase through a passage designed in the Palladi motif, the wide and higher central opening with floral ornamented round arch covered with columns with cube capitals on the side, above the passage and on the side of it triple-coupled arched windows with columns in between with single en cube capitals, on the side, on the choir and in the raised central area, also arched windows, around the openings and above the basement, simple profiles, strong in the eaves and verge area, the central area with a flat half-hipped roof and a small eight-sided roof turret (probably the bells in it) with a pyramid roof , the entrance porch with a flat gable roof and the lower lateral areas with flat hilted roofs, the corner tower to the left of the central risalit eight-sided with columns with cube capitals at the corners, small segment-arched windows and pyramid roof, all roof surfaces with new old German slate covering, original smooth exterior plaster, original door and inventory of windows with numerous lead-glass windows from the period of construction with biblical motifs, buildings well repaired (new entrance steps, roofing, painting, etc.).
  • War memorial 1870/71: On a granite plinth, probably made of sandstone, with a short obelisk on a relatively high square pedestal, plastic jewelry on the obelisk and flat text fields on the pedestal.
  • War memorial to the First World War: A grove-like structure with a wide staircase accompanied by side retaining walls and a wide memorial erected in an axis, the base of the memorial and the staircase set in slate natural stone, the memorial is a broad granite cuboid composed of three parts with names chiselled in columns and In the middle there is a sculpture (kneeling female figure with a bouquet of flowers), at the side of the stairs associated rhododendrons and other plantings.
  • Cemetery expansion: cemetery complex on the slope around the chapel, structured by rows of trees parallel to the slope, between the now relatively tall trees, younger conifer plantations that are increasingly obscuring the structure.
09238273
 


Unity of the Evangelical City Church and Thalheim Cemetery
Unity of the Evangelical City Church and Thalheim Cemetery Chemnitzer Strasse 2a
(map)
1908 according to the building file (cemetery chapel) Classicist hall church with west tower, architect: Christian Friedrich Uhlig, important in terms of architecture, architectural history, local history and landscape design

Church : see Dehio Sachsen II, p. 931 f.

Subject aggregate, with the individual monuments: church, cemetery chapel and two war memorials for the fallen of the Franco-German War 1870/71 and for the fallen of the First World War in the cemetery (see list of individual monuments - Obj. 09238273), as well as with the surrounding church square and the neighboring cemetery (Garden monuments), furthermore with the totality parts: stairs and enclosure walls.

Description see above under individual monuments.

09306075
 


Residential house in open development Chemnitzer Strasse 8
(map)
Mid 19th century Upper floor half-timbered clad, building typical of the time and the landscape in a location that shapes the townscape, part of the pre-Wilhelminian development of the town, of importance in terms of local development.

Solid ground floor, profiled door and window walls made of porphyry tufa, straight door roofing with tooth cut, upper floor half-timbered, plastered street side, clad gable sides, crooked hip roof with pike dome, original window sizes.

09238267
 


Residential house in open development Chemnitzer Strasse 9
(map)
marked 1908 Typical of the time and attractively designed plastered building from the phase of the urban reshaping of the place, street-defining location, of importance in terms of the history of the local development.

Two-storey solid plastered building with a mansard roof and various loft extensions, elaborately designed door frame with pilaster structure, curved gable and wreath, artificial stone window walls, on the ground floor segment arch-shaped with a valley, on the upper floor profiled with a flower motif, on the north side emphasized central axis through ornamental frameworks upper floor, partly original windows ( Gallows window with lattice-like rooflight, winter window), owner: Emma Eichler.

09238263
 


Residential stable house, side building and paving of a four-sided courtyard Chemnitzer Strasse 10
(map)
around 1800 Stable house, upper floor half-timbered, essential parts of an older farm that has been preserved near the church, buildings typical of the time and the landscape, of significance in terms of building history and site development.
  • Residential stable house: two-storey, broad-layered building over a squat rectangular floor plan with a high and steep pitched roof, the ground floor solid with preserved window frames made of Hilbersdorf porphyry tufa and stable door frames made of sandstone, the entrance with segment-arched artificial stone and diagonally incised frames from the 1930s, the door leaf also from this period , original stable window sizes, the upper floor in half-timbered, plastered and slated on the south gable, except for the widened window above the door original window opening sizes, relatively strong, profiled baroque eaves cornice, roofing knotted, window stock probably 1920s or 1930s,
  • Barn: Three-zone drive-through barn in half-timbered construction with probably still original (?) Planking and steep, high pitched roof, this with preserved slate covering on the back (asbestos panels facing the courtyard), the lower eastern part made of solid, plastered quarry stone masonry with door opening (probably Basement access or former pigsty?),
  • Side building: Two-storey solid plastered building on the courtyard side (facing the street) with a high plinth facing the street, original window frames made of Hilbersdorf porphyry tufa and some original windows, beautiful original two-winged door (two times four square panels) with narrow skylights, some from the 1930s or 1950s Years window, garage installation on the courtyard side, in the southern ground floor area a former stable part with original window sizes and inventory, original gray plaster on the courtyard side, asbestos roof covering.
09238272
 


Residential house in open development Chemnitzer Strasse 17
(map)
1906 according to the building file Plastered facade with split gable, small-town residential building built as a residential building for six families, part of the Wilhelminian expansion along Chemnitzer Strasse, of importance in terms of local development and social history.

Two-storey solid plastered building on a natural stone base (polygonal masonry), gabled central projectile with free chevron, gable roof with overhang, slate covering, artificial stone window walls, covered with clinker tape in segmental arches, original smooth plaster, original window stock (gallows window with winter attachment).

09238262
 


Residential stable of a two-sided courtyard Chemnitzer Strasse 20
(map)
2nd half of the 18th century Upper floor half-timbered clad, stately, relatively old farmhouse typical of the time and landscape in a location that characterizes the townscape, part of the prehistoric local structure, of architectural significance.

Stately, elongated and wide-spread two-storey building with a high, steep pitched roof and an already historic annex at the rear, one of the few farmhouses preserved on Chemnitzer Strasse, the ground floor, which was probably massively undercut in 1879, with door and window walls made of stone (in the lintel between two simple rosettes : "No. 126. JG Eichler 1879") and, apart from a widened window in the gable, the original window opening sizes in the living room and stable part, the half-timbered upper floor with also original, relatively small and high-lying window opening sizes (single-bar framework?), Boarded up on the street side and with Window cladding provided with slightly decorated lintel boards (probably around 1920), the gable ends and the roof (without superstructures) with asbestos panels, the window stock from the end of the 19th century (1879?) And some of the beginning of the 20th century (some with winter windows), the doors more recent (GDR period), with the barn and the fence arranged at an angle forming a largely authentic ensemble.

09238271
 


Residential stable house and courtyard tree of a farm Chemnitzer Strasse 39
(map)
2nd half of the 18th century Upper floor high-quality timber framing, stately, relatively old and largely preserved farmhouse, a good example of the pre-Wilhelminian development structure of the place, of importance in terms of building history and development.
  • Relatively stately, two-storey and quite broad building, built parallel to the street, with a steep gable roof, massive ground floor (in the living room area probably undercut later) and, apart from the garage installation in the southern area of ​​the long stable part, original window opening sizes, entrance and stable door with classicistic and stable windows older, possibly original ashlar walls, younger made or artificial stone walls in the living room area (probably around 1900), simple two-winged entrance door (probably first half / mid-19th century), upper floor with striving half-timbered, on the courtyard side, other pages as well as the probably original already massive south gable, plastered, original window opening sizes (relatively small), relatively strong, wooden eaves profile, steep gable roof without superstructures, newly covered with dark brown interlocking tiles.
  • Courtyard: To the dung heap natural stone retaining walls (small heist) and medium-sized linden tree not far from the entrance of the stable house.
09238281
 


Factory building (Address: Chemnitzer Strasse 40–40c and Kurz Strasse 1a) Chemnitzer Strasse 40; 40a; 40b; 40c
(card)
1924, according to the building file (factory building) Typical building built for the stocking manufacturer Gustav Drechsel with a representative designed, local image-defining façade facing the street, reform style architecture, of local and industrial significance.

At right angles to the street and the slope, three-storey plastered building on the street side and four-storey on the valley side, with an extended attic and street-side façade, base of granite ashlar masonry, façade design with simple cornices and plastered pilasters, which are provided with stucco capitals on the front side, the middle three of the five axes of the front are crowned by a slightly protruding ground floor (entrance area) with four vases and accentuated by a broad mid-house structure with segmented arched gable field (with serrated undersides on the circumferential profiles), south side straight through, north side by an attached staircase and wider front part of the building divided by projections , Front part of the building with high hipped roof with laterally (to the north and south) arranged, wide dormers, rear part of the building with a mansard-like roof with new slate or slate replacement covering, building renovated, doors, windows and plaster new, di e plastic windows based on the original gesprosst (1999).

09238278
 


Residential stable house, barn and courtyard tree of a two-sided courtyard Chemnitzer Strasse 41
(map)
marked 1878 Stable house on the upper floor half-timbered cladding, ensemble typical of the time and landscape in a location that shapes the local image, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history.
  • Residential stable house: Relatively stately, two-storey building with a squat rectangular floor plan, the ground floor massive with original door and window walls as well as a recognizable stable part, the half-timbered upper floor plastered with original opening sizes, the roof steep to moderately inclined,
  • Barn: Against the slope, building arranged at right angles to the stable house, partly massive and mostly built in half-timbered construction, boarded up,
  • Trees: A beautiful and formative group of large trees, optically closing off the half-open courtyard.
09238303
 


Residential house in open development, with gate, paved path and garden Chemnitzer Strasse 41a
(map)
1931 according to the building file Appropriately designed, typical building of the time, of architectural significance.
  • Residential building: In typical 1930s simplicity, built over a squat rectangular floor plan and at an angle against the slope with one storey on the slope and two storeys on the valley side as well as a steep and high saddle roof, closes to the south, flush with the slope-side gable, about half the width of the building occupying and one window-wide, exposed part of the building, the roof of which is hipped, the entrance with a small wooden vestibule on the slope (i.e. at the back), the plinth and some window frames in clinker, above smooth plaster (fine scratch plaster?), the eaves with a coarse profile, the window openings squat rectangular to almost square, with completely preserved original windows (gallows windows divided into six, 1999), some with shutters from the construction period, the two gable triangles with wooden shingle cladding, the roof with the chimney and the dormers with the original slate covering, client, planner and Executor according to construction akte Alfred Merzner, civil engineering contractor.
  • Garden: The original path design with granite pavement, the gate pillars in clinker masonry, with old wood: the large trees and bushes from the time the garden was laid out have been preserved.
09238279
 


Residential house in open development Chemnitzer Strasse 42
(map)
1922, according to the building file For the stocking manufacturer Gustav Drechsel built, villa-like plastered building in an appealing design and in a location that defines the townscape, reform style architecture, of architectural significance.

Two-storey solid plastered building on an almost square floor plan, granite ashlar plinth, on the street side tower-like stand bay (with plaster initials GD) continuous sills, on the first floor plastered mirror, on the south side per storey in the central axis one pair of oval windows, largely original windows, original front door with oval window, for Part of the original colored wall tiles in the hallway and other solid interior fittings have been preserved (1999).

09238268
 


Mill with preserved technical equipment, miller's house, side building, mill ditch, garden pavilion and three courtyard trees of a three-sided mill Chemnitzer Strasse 48
(map)
marked 1838 (mill) Old oil mill with completely preserved technical equipment, with its surroundings and technology largely authentically preserved ensemble of half-timbered buildings in a meadow that characterizes the townscape, the last preserved of the eight mills in the village, of regional, technical and local history.

History: built in 1838 as a grist mill, listed as an oil mill for the first time in 1864, from 1919 to 1953 only oil mined, 1945–1960 production of fodder meal in the ramming plant (formerly Julius Richter, oil mill officially closed in 1953 due to lack of quality), under protection in 1954, conversion in 1992 of the barn, accompanying expansion of the courtyard-side framework, as well as the addition of a terrace in 1993, conversion of the mill building in 1993 (first floor, floor, roofing), 1995/96 renewal of the mill wheel 1998/99 renewal of the comb wheel, thumb shaft, restoration of tamping and wedge press, plaster repair, partial renewal of the iron girders.

  • Buildings: All three buildings in a design typical of the time and the landscape with a solidly plastered ground floor and mostly exposed half-timbered upper floor, some with slid-off gables and boarded-up sections on the sides facing away from the courtyard, the three half-hipped roofs with new slate and partly asbestos paneling, the residential building courtyard side with five staggered dormers, the mill building with a mansard roof and probably more recent courtyard-side roof structures, the residential building with door and window frames made of stone, the door frames in the lintel marked (1838),
  • Barn: The door and window stock younger with different partitions, residential building.
  • Technical equipment: Overshot waterwheel (renewed, diameter 2.80 meters, 1 meter wide, rim width 28 centimeters with 30 waterwheel blades, material pine and spruce wood painted brown with half oil, waterwheel shaft made of oak 6.30 meters long, octagonal cut with reworked waterwheel pins inserted , Area measurement 55 centimeters, water bed made of wood with a clear width of 80 centimeters, 35 centimeters high with 7 wooden support frames and overflow flap), Mühlgraben, the preserved technical equipment made of wood with thumb shaft, tamping mechanism with seven tamping pairs (partly renewed), preserved spur gears, standing wedge press ( or stamp press) (restored) as well as heating furnace.
09238302
 


Residential and commercial building (two parts of the house) in a corner and in open development (without rear courtyard building) Friedrichstrasse 1a
(map)
marked 1908 Architecturally high-quality building built by the former Bernhard Hanisch furniture factory behind it with sales rooms on the ground floor in a corner location that defines the townscape, reform style architecture, of architectural and local significance.

Residential and commercial building (1908): Two-storey, over an angular floor plan in a corner position (Friedrichstrasse and Untere Bahnhofstrasse), plastered solid building with representative facade design, with a raised corner bay with a bell-shaped hood, adjoining three-storey areas with segment-arched bay windows, slightly protruding side elevation With a balcony in the connection area to the extension building and expanded mansard roof, in the ground floor area up to about one meter above the base of yellow brickwork, above it colored, renewed gray plaster in dusky pink, shop entrance at the corner broken under the bay window, on the side original shop windows with partly preserved original ones Skylights with colored lead glass motifs (landscapes), on the upper floor and in the three-story corner area profiled stone window frames, in the parapet areas the segmental arched bay windows using plaster-cut technique (“Erb aut anno 1908 ”and“ no hard work, no price ”), top floor with a triple dormer on each side of the street, original slate covering, slate in the upper corner area, doors and windows renewed, in the house was Thalheim's first cinematograph. Towards Zwönitz (NW corner) oriel on the first floor with plastered parapet, three-storey area accentuated by plaster ornaments on the top floor (cornices, tooth-cut frieze, volutes, etc.) and separate mansard roof structure, slate roof covering as well as door and window stock original preserved, as far as can be seen representative design Staircase with preserved construction equipment and stucco ceiling.

09238213
 


Residential house in open development Friedrichstrasse 6
(map)
2nd half of the 19th century Upper floor half-timbered, construction typical of the time and landscape, of architectural significance.

Two-storey building with a squat rectangular floor plan with a gable roof, the ground floor massive with original window frames and door frames with straight roofing on the north gable side, the half-timbered upper floor and the roof slated or clad, original window opening sizes.

09238304
 


Factory owner's house in open development, with enclosure Friedrichstrasse 10a
(map)
1903, according to the building file Typical plastered building built for the stocking manufacturer CG Rehropp, a good example of the Wilhelminian expansion along Friedrichstrasse, of significance in terms of local development.

Two-storey solid plastered building with an almost square floor plan with a massive jamb and a relatively flat, protruding and expanded hipped roof pierced on all four sides by the dwarf roofs, the base in granite ashlar masonry with basement window cladding made of Hilbersdorfer Pophyrtuff, the courtyard side in the middle, both sides of the building facing the stairwell Extensions as well as the mid-houses to the north and south with crooked hips on the roofs, painted, probably stone door and window walls with simple profiling, on the ground floor with segmental lintels, the plaster with simple webbing on the ground floor or profile above the upper floor, probably original, above the original main entrance door oriented to the north, small roof (also with a crooked hip) on wooden consoles, original door and window stock, some with winter windows, in the stairwell with simple Art Nouveau colored glazing, origina le cellar window grating, the beautiful wrought iron fence on a granite base.

09238245
 


Factory owner's house (No. 11) in open development and factory building (No. 11a, eastern section) in the courtyard, with gate system and enclosure Friedrichstrasse 11; 11a
(card)
marked 1901 (residential building) For the stocking manufacturer W. Rudolph, attractively designed plastered buildings typical of the time, parts of a grown, compact ensemble in a central location, of architectural and local significance.
  • Residential building: Two-storey solid plastered building with six by three window axes, jamb, moderately inclined, extended and protruding gable roof as well as the street-side narrow two-axis gabled central projection, the original, simply profiled window frames - on the upper floor with straight roofs - made of sandstone, as well as the profiled cornice tops in the gable Round windows and simple ornamental chevrons on the top floor facing the street, a double-coupled arched window, the base in granite polygonal masonry, the smooth plaster probably from the middle of the 20th century, on the street side with faded inscription "Volkseigen", some original windows with winter windows have been preserved, door younger, on the side of the staircase attached to the courtyard Corner balconies that were probably subsequently covered, the roof with curved, sawn rafter and purlin ends.
  • Factory building (eastern section): four-storey solid plastered building with a developed, mansard-like attic and the courtyard and train station side central dwelling up to and including the staircase protruding from the courtyard facade, provided with rounded corners and designed as a step to the older western section of the building, the base in granite Quarry stone masonry with artificial stone cellar window walls with preserved wrought-iron window grilles, stone plaster cornice chiseled over the base, the preserved facade design with plaster structures in the form of a pilaster structure reaching up to the eaves, interrupted in the middle by a profiled cornice, which is only interrupted in the entrance axis The eaves continue up into the dwelling, this with a profile-framed triangular gable with stylized side coves, relatively small semicircular window, above in the letters "Stocking Factory", and underneath faded aufgem old lettering "VOLKSEIGEN", in the central axis accentuated by half-story offset windows, the main entrance door with massive, portal-like plastered stone walls, this with a profiled frame running around the semicircular overhang with a stylized keystone, in the overlay with plastic ornament in the form of a large rosette two stylized bundles of ears of corn hanging over it, beautiful original two-winged door and mostly original windows, on each side of the dwelling two large dormers with a plastered, profiled roof, original slate roofing, on the staircase construction also plastic decoration in the area of ​​the dormer, similar to the south facade, but simpler design, essential Simpler door frame, same door and no gable, the eastern gable side facing the train station is designed similarly to the courtyard side, also a dwarf house.
  • Enclosure: From the enclosure, the base and pillars made of massive granite masonry have been preserved.
  • Facade of the factory building (middle section) designed more simply.
09238246
 


Factory owner's house in open development, with enclosure, garden, pavement paving and garden pavilion Friedrichstrasse 12
(map)
1880 according to the building file For the stocking factor E. Lorenz built and the stocking manufacturer Louis Walther appealingly redesigned building with preserved, beautiful plaster structure, with the former associated factory (number 12a, no monument) forming a typical ensemble in a central location, of local and architectural significance.
  • Residential building: Two-storey, massive and relatively deep plastered building with six by five axes with jamb and extended, moderately inclined crooked hip roof with overhang as well as a very flat, gabled central projection on the street side, completely preserved plaster structure (probably from 1908) with profiled cornices and ribbons, straight roofing on the upper floor , Plaster grooves on the ground floor, etc., the plinth also plastered, the door and window frames made of Hilbersdorfer porphyry tuff, the protruding rafter and purlin ends sawn curved, on the roofing of the central risalit, which is also provided with a crooked hip, simple ornamental rafters, some original windows, winter windows and shutters ( Courtyard side), Preolit ​​shingle roofing, original or historical building fixtures preserved inside (wrought iron banisters, apartment entrance double doors partly with etched glass panes, colored floor panels).
  • Enclosure: beautiful delicate wrought iron fence on sandstone plinth, sandstone corner pillars on the northeast corner of the property, to the passage towards the shore road fence posts made of slate natural stone,
  • Pavilion: Simple half-timbered building with a flat gable roof, the parapet areas boarded up, the upper areas open and partly with delicate diamond-shaped nailed wooden lattice,
  • House tree: Linden.
09238247
 


Residential house in open development Friedrichstrasse 15
(map)
1902 according to the building file With shop, historicizing plastered facade, building built for the “Konsum-Verein zu Thalheim und Umgebung”, largely in its original appearance, an example of the Wilhelminian urbanization of the place, of local historical importance.

Two-storey solid plastered building on a base made of irregular layered masonry, base cornice, three large segment-shaped wall openings as shop windows and access, profiled cornice, in the central axis a roof bay with triangular gable, moderately inclined crooked hip roof, window frames probably sandstone, with a simple profile (partly bevel, partly beaded) Sills and keystone motif in the lintels, in the central axes of the eaves and gable sides with segmental arched roofing, remnants of the plaster structure in the eaves area and roof gable, partly original window stock (1999, gallows window with richly profiled posts and transverse wood), inside original stair railing and apartment doors.

09238251
 


Residential house in open development with fencing, gate entrance and garden Friedrichstrasse 26a
(map)
1906, according to the building file Typical plastered building with corner bay window, building designed for the “chocolate manufacturer” Josef Neumann with a more elaborate design, example of the Wilhelminian expansion that took place along Friedrichstraße, of importance in terms of local development and architectural history.

Two-storey solid plastered building with jamb and extended attic over an almost square floor plan with a moderately sloping, protruding hipped roof with extensions on all four sides, on the street side relatively flat central projection, on the courtyard side with original, gabled staircase extension, to the north and south central dormitories and on the southwest corner with curved A hooded bay window crowned with a knob and facing the intersection area, the base area veneered with white glazed clinker bricks, facade design with profiled door and window walls made of artificial stone as well as relief panels made of artificial stone with Art Nouveau-like ornamentation in the parapet or lintel areas of the upper risalit, dwarf and bay window groups , partly original window stock, entrance door, plaster and roof covering (Preolit) from the GDR period (no plaster structure provided in the plan drawing of the building file), inside the staircase with wrought iron T. stair railing, terrazzo floors and original apartment entrance doors,

  • Enclosure: beautiful wrought-iron fence fields from the construction period between brick pillars, these with plaster ornaments or reliefs obscured by recent overplastering, in between artificial stone base area, original pavement paving and garden with old trees: among other things, several small-crowned trees as well as large greenery probably from the period of construction.
09238248
 


Residential house in open development, with enclosure and villa garden (garden monument) Friedrichstrasse 34
(map)
in the core of 1885, according to the building file Plastered building with a mansard roof, a residential building built for W. Seume and redesigned for CG Nobis in a location that defines the townscape, idiosyncratic example of an older building that was remodeled in the heyday of the 1920s, of architectural and local historical value, the ceramic sculptures on the bay bay are also of artistic importance.

Two-storey solid plastered building on an almost square floor plan, base made of irregular layered masonry, three-storey semicircular extension (like a winter garden) with conical roof and knob, rear staircase with arched windows, arbor supported on columns on the south side, delicately profiled sandstone window frames, protruding mansard roof with extended mansard roof, Stucco relief on the underside of the eaves, on the extension half columns in front of the windowed wall surfaces on the ground floor, remains of vegetable plaster reliefs and between the upper floor windows relief panels (terracotta) with plant and animal motifs, dormers of the mansard roof and cornice of the extension with copper cover, copper gutter with curved Drain pipe, original front door from the construction period (two-winged), some original windows with winter attachment, cleats on the walls indicate the original equipment with shutters, wrought iron fence, old trees in the garden.

09238252
 


Semi-detached house in open development Gornsdorfer Strasse 3; 4
(card)
1906, according to the building file (double dwelling) Largely original, striking building due to its more elaborate facade design and elevated location, of architectural significance.

Elongated, two-storey solid plastered building with ten by two axes, slightly protruding four-axis central projecting straight off with a balustrade, as well as extended, steep gable roof with jamb, high plinth in clinker masonry, raised to the ground floor windows, on the street-side symmetrically designed façade, these with window arrangement and Flat cantilevered upper floor oriels emphasized entrance things with staircases behind them on both sides of the central projectile, probably artificial stone, U-shaped casings enclosing the upper half of the window openings and ornamental frameworks in the area of ​​the flat oriels mentioned above and the also slightly cantilevered jamb, smoother, probably more original Plaster, the gable triangles with asbestos paneling underneath probably also ornamental framework, the four attic windows of the central risalit with segmental arches and protruding pilaster-like protruding at the height of the parapet round-arched framing, above the above-mentioned balustrade, these framing and the oriel consoles emphasized by a rougher plaster texture, ground floor and top floor windows with differently structured parapet fields additionally emphasized, windows and roofing younger, entrance door of number 3 original two-winged door in Art Nouveau form, building inhabited and maintained (1999), built as a speculative building by the builders Ernst Hermann Sonntag (right half) and the Otto Schäfer & Co. family from Gunnersdorf near Frankenberg (left half), planning and execution by master builder Manfred Sievers, Thalheim.

09238219
 


Villa, garden pavilion, villa garden (garden monument) and enclosure Gornsdorfer Strasse 4a
(map)
1910, according to the building file (villa) Stately and representative building built for the Minkos family of stocking manufacturers (later Görner) in an elevated position on a slope with a surrounding park-like area, reform style architecture, of artistic, architectural and local significance.
  • Villa: Extremely stately, two-storey, solid plastered building with a roughly square floor plan with an almost semicircular, separately roofed central projectile with pilasters and an attic floor, two single-storey stand cores arranged to the side of it on the façade facing the valley and a mansard hipped roof with a relatively short lower and slightly sloping upper roof zone towards the north-east Entrance area with outside staircase in front of it, further bay windows to the southwest, base in rough, rough sandstone brickwork, the entire exterior of the building designed with a baroque plaster structure (four wide, colossal pilasters on all sides, profiled cornice with egg bar under the eaves, rounded, underneath then convex building corners, partly simple cornices in the parapet area and rear plaster mirror), the front side (to the northwest) and the entrance side (to the northeast) with more elaborate plaster ornamentation (profiled te and partly ornamented window frames, plastered mirrors, six fluted plaster pilasters with decorative capitals on the central risalit as well as between and to the side of the windows pinched plaster ornamentation: fruit hangings, medallions with figurative representations, heads and other), original entrance door, partly original window stock, in place of the original ones existing, new shutters, roof with wide-spread bat dormer window over the entrance and a small, radially sprouted semicircular dormer window on each side of the central projection, which ends with a relatively flat hood, originally covered with roof tiles, now asbestos panels, the hood of the central projection and the oriels with copper sheet the hood also has a tin crown, on the roof above the entrance area probably original slate roofing, inside mostly original fixed equipment (stairs, doors etc.) preserved, client according to the building file: Maria Selma Minkos.
  • Garden pavilion: on the valley side, relatively large area with vertical sliding windows exposed, closed building (probably half-timbered construction, boarded up) on an equilateral hexagonal floor plan with a relatively high, sweeping bell-shaped roof with six ridges and an upper section set off by profiled eaves boards, which is like a separately attached top The hood works and is crowned with a metal compass rose, covered with roofing felt.
  • Greenhouse: In the upper area of ​​the garden, rectangular building in iron and glass construction on a bricked and plastered, around one meter high base; the dwarf-like entrance area accentuated by ornamental rungs and metal curlicues on the verge, associated with a chimney of around five meters in exposed brickwork on a square floor plan, demolished in 2016.
  • Enclosure: The relatively high base and the pillars made of sandstone ashlar with bush-hammered surfaces, the fence panels and the gate are made of wrought iron, both in very simple shapes typical of the time.
  • Garden: The slope in front of and behind the villa is terraced, from the gate to the villa paved driveway with accompanying avenue planting, old trees.
09238220
 


Northern villa and southern residential house, garden pavilion, villa garden (garden monument) and enclosure Gornsdorfer Straße 4e
(map)
around 1925 (northern villa) For the hosiery family Hofmann (company M. Richard Hofmann) erected stately buildings in an appealing design, older villa reform style architecture, younger house in the traditionalist style of the time, building and local history, landscaping and in some cases important from an architectural point of view .
  • Northern villa: One-storey, valley-side, solid plastered building on the slope with a squat rectangular floor plan with three-storey, round, tower-like stand cores positioned at the two corners of the valley to a quarter, and with a high and extended mansard hipped roof, the ground floor, which protrudes only on the valley side, is an irregular base Granite ashlar masonry designed, the entrance located in the middle of the valley is framed by pillar templates that support a balcony, the main entrance with a generously glazed single-storey porch and above it a roof bay window of equal width with triangular gable, the upper floor with original gray plaster and relatively simple structure (strip-like plastered Window bezels, mighty chamfers in the eaves area with a semicircular profile at the lower approach, as simply stylized, fluted pilasters designed wall pillars between the glazing of the vestibule), the roof with a curved, sheet metal Covered foot, individually standing dormers with flat triangular gables in the lower and semicircular dormers and roof pikes covered with asbestos panels in the upper area, the standing bay windows covered with high bell-shaped roofs with knobs covered with slate, completely preserved original door and window inventory (especially gallows windows with six division), partly also narrow, tall formats), in front of the windows mostly original, openable roller shutters, between the all-round upper floor windows of the upright bay windows, wooden, ornamented pillars typical of the time, the interior largely completely preserved, partly damaged by vandalism, original solid furnishings (the entrance area with stucco marble wall cladding , especially the main floor with panel-clad walls, stucco ceilings with partially visible floral decorative painting, parquet flooring, original stairs, doors with fittings, cupboards and other fixtures, tiles with ornamental frieze, relatively complex ig designed bathroom with jagged vaulted tub niche typical of the time in the otherwise simpler attic.
  • Southern villa: from a two-storey main structure built on a rectangular floor plan and a single-storey and smaller part of the building assembled at a right angle to it, solid plastered building with a steep pitched roof, base made of slate quarry stone masonry, the simple facades with original patch plaster only due to the arrangement and the formats the mostly squat rectangular to square, partly rounded or transverse openings, narrow, smooth plastering flanges around the windows, in the verge and eaves area also narrow and smooth, flat Carnies profile, in the angle between the two buildings under the protruding roof of the single-storey one Part of the building is the entrance area with open quarry-stone-framed arched openings on both sides as well as round windows, in front of the entrance area stairs and retaining wall in slate quarry-stone masonry, terrace facing the valley with adjoining rooms below (probably younger or changed), originally preserved inventory of doors and windows (non-combatant windows with rising posts and division of six) with mostly still existing shutters with lamellas, the roof with individually standing dormers with beautiful, differently colored shading slate covering, on one of the chimneys also clad in slate a sun motif, possibly original lamps on wrought-iron brackets on the western building corners, original, solidly built furnishings in the interior in a simple, time-typical design (doors and windows with fittings, the original stairs, stucco ceilings, some with diamond-shaped filled surfaces or similar motifs, parquet floors, etc. .).
  • Pavilion: East of the northern villa, single-storey, solid plastered building on a square floor plan with a wide angle at the corners and thus almost equilateral octagonal-looking, with a round arched doorway towards the villa with a five-step flight of stairs and an original two-wing door with originally eight-part (two by four) glazing for each wing and with a skylight with curly decorative rungs, the roof box with facing parallel to the eaves, the roof bell-shaped with a knob and probably original slate covering.
  • Garden: Spacious complex with a lot of old trees, the spatial effect and the original view of the city and the associated factory disturbed by lack of care and overgrowning, the massive fencing with stamped concrete retaining wall and pillars without fence fields only along the Gornsdorfer Strasse on the valley side of the property receive.
09238230
 


School building (without a younger extension) with associated street-side trees Grundstrasse 9
(map)
1925-1926 Stately, largely originally preserved plastered building in an appealing, expressionistically influenced design, based on a design by the regionally known architect Paul Kranz from Chemnitz, of architectural and school historical importance.

A stately, elongated three-storey building composed of three slightly staggered and staggered structures with a hipped gable roof to the east, the western cube with a high, pointed gable oriented towards the street area and with a star-shaped window in the gable triangle, erected on the slope by a land that has been straightened out and underneath there are three high lancet-shaped windows, probably assigned to the auditorium, which are arranged in the middle above the four window axes below, in front of the eastern corner (of the western building) over an equilateral triangular floor plan, a double-sided, triangular floor plan with a standing bay-like three-storey entrance porch with a representative corner designed in expressionistic forms and the entrance area with wide cast stone walls around the two lancet-shaped door openings, above them the staggered staircase windows, at the corner of this porch a console-like projection and a small verda leave The two structures that adjoin the eaves face the street on the eaves side, the broad middle cube with high classroom windows arranged in two by four axes and lying, almost continuous towing hatch with ten windows (this formerly structured with pointed gable essays), the eastern building is lower due to the lower storey heights (probably only living and / or administrative rooms), individually pointed gable dormers on the roof, the door arranged here and the top window of the secondary staircase arranged in the western axis with lancet-shaped openings, under the originally slate-covered roof, simply sloping eaves, mostly original windows (cross-frame windows with figure eight and transverse panes), some with lightly colored glass (in the stairwell), original entrance doors, relatively simple original there is a staircase, in front of the building there are building-time tree planting in a curved row.

09238274
 


Town hall with outbuildings in the courtyard
Town hall with outbuildings in the courtyard Hauptstrasse 5
(map)
1906-1907, designated 1906 Stately, period-typical and originally preserved plastered building, in neo-renaissance form, in a central location that defines the image, of architectural and local historical importance, artistically and in terms of urban development.

A three-storey plastered building designed in neo-renaissance forms with lively and playful façades, irregularly interrupted and expanded hipped roof and set five-storey tower, the base in irregular granite brickwork, the basement window frames and the basement cornice in sandstone and window frames as well as the numerous architectural divisions (profiled cornices, balconies, relief panels, etc.) in Rochlitz porphyry tufa, in the attic of the SO wing, the corner area through the floor plan, facade and eaves, a balcony-like exit on the 2nd floor and through the The five-storey tower set at the transition to the SW wing is emphasized, the tower with an approximately square floor plan with an altar-like framed, broad main entrance on the ground floor, exit on the first floor, city coat of arms and name in relief Above the third floor, arched windows on the fifth floor, gable roof between the raised, curved gables and a square roof turret with four clocks and an octagonal lantern and curved hood, on the ground floor of the SW wing the Ratskeller with entrance from the front, flatter on the SW wing Side elevation with volute gable and balcony on the first floor, some remarkable lead glazing with pictorial representations (according to Dehio 1906/07 by Joseph Goller from Dresden), the doors are mostly original, inside a representative staircase, elaborately designed council chamber and the most structural equipment from the construction period ( ornamented floor tiles, partly false vaulted ceilings, doors, fittings, wall panels, lamps, wrought-iron banisters with candelabra-like staircases, probably based on the original color scheme, etc.), in front of the main entrance multi-colored paving with the lettering "1959 Thalheim" and the Stadtw appen (canceled before 2017), the simple back with a rounded staircase set at a corner. Granted city rights only in 1925.

09238300
 


Apartment building in open development (without southern extension) Hauptstrasse 10
(map)
around 1900 With a shop, plastered facade, a representative building in a central location not far from the town hall, a typical example of the Wilhelminian urbanization of the town center, of historical importance.

A three-storey solid plastered building built on a rectangular floor plan along the main street with relatively elaborately designed Wilhelminian style façades on the street and gable side (s), shops on the ground floor and a mansard-like roof, the street-side façade with slightly protruding side projections with oriels crowned by neo-Renaissance gables on the middle and second upper floor A lantern with a knob and a weather vane above it, the gable-side façades with central neo-renaissance gables in the façade level, the window walls, the cornice above the ground floor, the strong profile of the eaves, the variously shaped window canopies and benches as well as the plastic decoration (especially in the area of ​​the gable) existing) made of ashlar, windows and plaster of the facade surfaces younger, in the ground floor area changed entrance situation and probably slightly enlarged shop windows, roofing knotted slabs.

09238234
 


South half of the house in a semi-open development Hauptstrasse 18; 18a
(card)
1908, according to the building file With a shop, a plastered facade with a balcony, a representative building built for the former Richard Brunner business and fashion house, a typical example of the urbanization of the town center during the Wilhelminian era, of significance in terms of local development.

Three-storey solid plastered building with relatively elaborately designed, Art Nouveau-influenced façades with two flat gabled side projections on the street side, a balcony clamped in between and a slightly protruding bay window on the south side (both on the first floor), above it another display gable and gable roof with various extensions, right side projection with original ornamental panels , protruding gable triangle, protruding roof and below arranged, small bay window closed on three sides on the second floor, the balcony in wood construction with ornamental parapet fields, other areas with green colored plaster and partly reddish artificial stone walls, above the left risalit and above the side Half-timbered bay window, bricked-up gable with convex-concave top, some original windows and probably original slate roofing preserved, ground floor with only slightly changed shop area.

09238235
 


Inn in open development, with extension Hauptstrasse 22
(map)
around 1830 (inn) Typical village inn with half-timbered upper floor, with a younger half-timbered extension, in a central location on the Zwönitz, high memorable value, of local and architectural importance.
  • Main building: Typical cottage with a historic, possibly even original dining room, two-storey building parallel to the street and a somewhat recessed building on a rectangular floor plan with a crooked hip roof, massive ground floor with possibly an original, later enlarged dining room, window frames painted or plastered with stone, upper floor half-timbered with window openings In the original size and with a slated gable, larger, younger additions to the rear (without monument value), Preolit ​​shingles roofing.
  • Extension: at an angle to the smaller-looking main building, two-storey building with an expanded, steep gable roof and long continuous cambered gables on both sides, gable facing the street, north of the Zwönitz flowing past, ground floor massive with arched window openings, upper floor cantilevered with open framework, originally relatively large window openings Painted compartments (partly floral, partly figurative), between the windows of the dormers also faded half-timbering, originally slate, now Preolit ​​shingle covering.
09238236
 


Advertising pillar Hauptstrasse 23 (near)
(map)
1st third of the 20th century Preserved object of urban historical importance and high historical memory value in a location that defines the townscape.

(Presumably tamped) concrete cube on a circular floor plan with a diameter of around one meter, circumferential eaves in a compact carnies shape, flat, hood-shaped sheet metal cover with a central, about 10 centimeter raised, also circular upstand (originally additional superstructures), the column probably bears an original sign with the historical numbering.

09238287
 


Residential house in open development and in a corner location Hauptstrasse 24
(map)
1914, according to the building file Appealingly designed plastered building typical of the time, probably built for the former company Gustav Rudolph behind it in a corner location that characterizes the townscape, reform style architecture, of historical importance.

Two-storey, solid plastered building with an almost square floor plan in a corner position to Ludwig-Jahn-Strasse with a mansard-like, expanded roof with various structures, the base in irregular natural stone masonry, the two street facades relatively well structured (recessed corner, one corner and each on the upper floor Another bay window on both sides, these with separate sheet metal roofs, in the attic two larger dormitory-like loft extensions with relatively wide half-hip gables), in the area of ​​the eaves, around the windows and on the bay windows, plaster profiles and ornaments, on the back a stair tower with plain original lead glazing, almost Completely original window stock, original wrought iron brackets facing the main street (flag holder and flower box holder), roof covering with Preolit ​​shingles.

09238237
 


Southern half of the house in a corner and in half-open development, with lateral fencing Hauptstrasse 29
(map)
marked 1905 With a shop, a small residential and commercial building with a facing gable in a corner, of significance in terms of local development.

Two-storey solid plastered building in a corner position (NW corner of the intersection), with a flat roof and beautiful glare gable with attachments above the sloping corner, ground floor with split clinker cladding in the plinth area, profiled belt and eaves cornice as well as the door and window frames made of artificial stone (lightly decorated), Likewise, the relief panels arranged in the parapet area of ​​the upper floor windows, decorated with floral Art Nouveau ornaments, new windows, wrought-iron fencing to the west with relief-decorated artificial stone fence pillars in forms borrowed from Art Nouveau, in the gable designation: “Louis Schreiber. 1905 ".

09238239
 


House in a corner and in open development Hauptstrasse 30
(map)
1906, according to the building file With a shop, historicizing clinker brick facade, a stately building built for the green goods dealer Heinrich Gläser in a central corner location, a typical example of the urbanization of the town center during the Wilhelminian era, of architectural significance.

With three façades (to Hauptstrasse, Grundstrasse and Lindenstrasse) over an angled floor plan in a corner position to Grundstrasse, a two-storey massive building with a jamb-like raised, extended attic, this with a hipped roof facing Lindenstrasse, three-storey areas on the three street-side building corners and individual standing areas in between , gabled dormers, plinth in natural stone polygonal masonry with raised boss surfaces, basement window frames in artificial stone, the plastered and with horizontal plaster grooves on the ground floor with original shop entrances on both street corners and, on both sides of the same, original shop windows, the upper floor in clinker facing masonry , the cornices and belts made of artificial stone, as well as the relief panels adorned with floral ornaments reminiscent of Art Nouveau and arranged in the jamb zone above the windows, the three-storey corner areas originally safe m Crowned with ornamental gables, now simple, reduced upper finishes, a stairwell set over a corner in the corner on the courtyard side, the roof surface with original slate covering, original windows on the upper floors, house and shop entrance doors and ground floor windows younger, the executors (Uhlig brothers) among others known the construction of the church in the village.

09238238
 


Factory building Hauptstrasse 32b
(map)
1925, according to the building file (factory building) Plastered building typical of the time, attractively designed factory building built for the stocking manufacturer Louis Kunig, of architectural and local significance.
  • Residential house: Originally with exposed framework on the upper floor and relatively lavishly designed in the historicist sense (Swiss style echoes), for the "stocking factor" long building, today's appearance going back to 1920, redesign and plastering, two-story plastered building with four by six window axes on a squat rectangular floor plan with a moderately sloping, overhanging saddle roof and a street-side dwelling flanked by two individually standing dormers, cubature, roof shape, wall-opening ratio as well as the door and window walls of the ground floor made of ashlar preserved from the construction period, formerly probably street-side entrance, Now there is a wider window, the plastering with relatively simple geometric structures, simple plaster profiles around the windows, simple mirrors in their parapet areas, flat pilaster strips with plaster grooves on the corners of the building and coves in the eaves area, the gable triangles slated, half-timbered treble on the courtyard side ppenhaus expansion and entrance door probably from the construction period, the windows from the renovation phase, asbestos tile roofing, commemorative plaque on the street side: “In this house on August 30, 1882, the singer of our homeland Erich Langer was born. / Erzgebirgsverein Thalheim ".
  • Factory building: Behind the residential building, attached to the south of a probably older two-storey building, four-storey solid plastered building with an almost square floor plan with a stair tower raised by one storey, designed as a link to the older structure and as an eye-catcher, the main building with a flat gable roof, the stair tower With a flat hipped roof, almost completely preserved plaster structure: pilaster strips running over three floors with capital-like ends, above them a strongly profiled main cornice with a tooth cut under the overhang, third floor as an attic floor, which is emphasized by simple plaster grooves at the corners and between the windows on the north - and east side (to the city center) of the elevation each imprint of the formerly applied lettering "Louis Kunig", beautiful original double-winged entrance door with round arched rooflight on the east side, mostly original windows preserved (1999).
09238240
 


Residential house (with two house numbers) in open development Hauptstrasse 33; 33a
(card)
1906–1907, according to the building file With a shop, plastered facade with a brick base and half-timbered elements in the roof, as a “residential building with a bakery and coffee bar” for master baker Richard Gräbner, a stately building of local and architectural importance.

Stately two-storey and massive plastered building over an elongated and deep floor plan with an expanded hilted mansard-like roof with numerous extensions, lavishly designed façades with two gabled risalits and an intermediate entrance to the street as well as separately covered stand core on the sides on the ground floor and bay-like roof extensions, above the plastered plinth At the height of the center of the window, the round-arched closing and partially wider ground floor window openings, which are laid out as a shop window, are clinker-faced brickwork, above that smooth plastering and, from the middle of the upper floor windows, rough plastering, in between and in the eaves area belt straps, these and the U-shaped only around the Ornate garments placed in the upper areas of the openings, probably made of artificial stone (painted over), the slightly protruding gables of the risalites and bay-like extensions with ornamental framework and wooden profiles, roof with standing dormer windows between the gables mentioned and with new slats cover.

09238241
 


Stable house of a former three-sided courtyard Helenenstrasse 2
(map)
1844, according to information Upper floor high-quality timber framing, after a fire rebuilt in forms typical of the time and landscape, a farm that is now in an inner-city location, part of the old local structure, of architectural significance.
  • Residential stable house: two-storey, relatively elongated building with a half-hipped roof, massive ground floor with two door frames and window frames made of painted stone, new door and window frames, upper floor half-timbered, partially visible, slated on the gable side, original window opening sizes, new window frame, roof with renewed old German slate covering five small curly dormers in a staggered arrangement (three below, two above on a gap),
  • Barn: Transversely closed four-zone barn with drive-through threshing floor and carriage shed (with courtyard-side gate) in boarded-up half-timbered construction on a plinth of slate stone of different heights, crooked hip roof with probably original old German slate roofing and two courtyard-side dormer windows in a historical design like the one on the stable, on the corner of the roofing cardboard Extension with a flat roof in the same construction.
09238222
 


Residential house in open development, with enclosure, courtyard paving and garden Helenenstrasse 2b
(map)
1936 according to information Villa-like plastered building, building built for the veterinarian Paul Otto Zill in a central location, house and surroundings in an appealing design, of architectural and local significance.

Rather cautiously designed, traditional, homely style building, two-storey solid plastered building on an almost square floor plan with a high base in natural stone ashlar masonry, slightly protruding central projection on the street side with a steep gable, on the ground floor closed on three sides and with a hipped roof painted smooth, the exterior plaster now lighter contrasting window bezels, in the area of ​​the eaves and the verge of the risalit gable simple but strong plaster profiles, the drawn-in entrance with ogival natural stone block frame, wrought iron grille and staircase reaching down to the paved footpath, beautiful and high quality entrance door with wrought iron serpentine window grating ( original window stock, the roof with slate covering, the stand bay with copper sheet roofing, the fencing analogously with the building plinth brick pillars and plinths as well as with wooden pillars typical of the time Ren fence fields, two large solitary deciduous trees from the construction period, original granite paths.

09238225
 


Residential house in open development Helenenstrasse 3
(map)
Late 19th century Simple but appealingly designed and typical tenement building, a good example of the Wilhelminian reshaping of the site, of importance in terms of the history of the site.

Two-storey solid plastered building with six by two window axes, on the street side, central, two-axis and slightly protruding over-gabled central projection and a moderately inclined, extended saddle roof, relatively high quarry stone plinth with ashlar basement window walls, facade design with completely preserved ashlar walls with circumferential profiles, and in the upper storey straight round windows in the upper storey and also stone-framed arched windows on the street side in the attic of the central risalite, on the straight roofing of the pair of windows below on the upper floor, simple ashlar volute crowning, the cranked eaves and verge area as well as the gable triangle closing the central risalit with fine ashlar window stock, mostly with original stone profiles Winter windows (1999), roof with two small standing dormers with profiled triangular gables on the side of the center lrisalits and with asbestos sheet covering.

09238223
 


Official residence (with two house numbers) in open development Helenenstrasse 6a; 6b
(card)
1924, according to the building file Originally preserved, representative and high-quality official residence of the former Görner stocking factory opposite, with beautiful plaster decoration in Art Deco style and interior fittings in the same style, artistically as well as historically and socially important.

Over an elongated rectangular floor plan opposite the associated factory and aligned along the street, two-storey solid plastered building with expanded hipped roof, street-side façade with a wide, slightly protruding gabled central projection, various dormers and round, with flat, curved hoods (with point) on separately roofed stand core The two corners of the building on the street side, the facade rich, the others more plain with stone plaster, plaster and squeeze plaster ornaments, profiles, etc., jagged shapes typical of the time in Art Deco style, the high plinth and the two entrance portals on the side of the central projection in stone masonry Stone plaster (with scratches), the other areas in grayish through-colored fine plaster, the doors and almost all windows (these with historical shutters) original (at least in the stairwell the original interior fittings (stairs, railings, doors ...)) in the same, higher level Agony itat.

09238224
 


Residential house in open development, with enclosure Helenenstrasse 8
(map)
1922 according to the building file, essentially older For the stocking manufacturer Görner an appealingly redesigned, representative building, of architectural and local significance.

Two-storey solid plastered building built on an almost square floor plan in a restrained but solid villa-like design with a hipped roof, single-storey standing bay with segmental arches on the street side, the side entrance area with a single-storey porch and the opposite courtyard side with a three-sided closed upper floor bay, the base in polygonal natural stone masonry, the Plaster and with simple plaster profiles in the eaves and parapet area as well as between the storeys and around the upper floor windows, ground floor window walls in ashlar and except for the bay area with segment arch lintel, the extensions each with separate roofing, on the roof on the street side double-lined dormer window with curved Roof and still original slate, the remaining roof areas as well as the two lateral three-strand dormers with Preolit ​​shingle covering, original door and window inventory (with associated shutters, 1999), on the d In the windows of the entrance area as well as the railing there, original wrought iron work, the enclosure with plinth and pillars made of artificial stone and a wooden fence panel with twisted swirls, entrance gate and door younger.

09238228
 


Factory building Helenenstrasse 9
(map)
1905, according to the building file (factory building) Factory building built for the stocking manufacturer Görner, one of the most stately buildings in town, in a central location, appealing design and in good original condition, of industrial and local history as well as urban planning significance.

Very elongated, high four-storey building with a slightly wider and half a storey higher head building with a roughly square floor plan and a flat pitched roof on both parts of the building (that of the head building with the ridge in the transverse direction of the building), to Helenenstrasse in the middle of the building, the original staircase extension (probably with elevator) , in the front building with a separate entrance apparently the administration rooms and the stairwell, base made of granite polygonal masonry, above yellow clinker facades with relatively wide pilaster strips connecting the three upper floors between each window axis, above the ground floor, which is only included in this structure at the corners, and strong cornices in the eaves area , partly like the window parapets, emphasized with green-glazed clinker bricks, the pilaster strips on the head building are further but stronger and with internal structuring as well as strong corner emphasis, these are additionally emphasized by cube-like corner structures, on the head building to the building length Flat gables pointing to the side with straight central areas, almost completely preserved original door and window stock, large gallows windows and staircase windows typical of the time on the front building, typical factory windows with three by four pane structures on the longitudinal building, younger roofing.

09238226
 


Villa with garden Hormersdorfer Weg 6
(map)
1924–1925 according to information Plastered facade in the reform style of the time after 1910, representative building erected for the manufacturer Erich Römer on a large hillside property opposite the train station, of architectural significance.
  • Villa: a two-storey, solid plastered building built on an approximately square floor plan with the front side of the mighty semicircular single-storey stand bay window and a moderately inclined, relatively far protruding and curved hipped roof, the base made of granite polygonal masonry, the upper floor with a relatively wide and circumferential window sill height The stepped cornice looks much lower than the ground floor, set columns on the corners of the building from this cornice to the roof box, the adjoining corner areas are accentuated with plastering, the wide, protruding semicircular stand bay on the downward facing side with six half or quarter columns between the here higher and semicircular closing windows, overlying the parapet area of ​​the balcony, the rear of which is drawn in slightly behind the facade, the other ground floor windows with slightly recessed, plastered and also semicircular upwards d final framing, the slope-side entrance area in the middle, slightly pulled forward and flanked by two pillars supporting a smaller balcony, all surfaces (also on the pillars) with probably original scratch plaster, the roof with bat dormers of different sizes (the one on the front side relatively wide and the bay axis emphasizing), as well as with the probably original beaver tail double covering, front door, stock of box windows and the solid interior fittings (terrazzo floor, tiles, doors ...) largely original (1999).
  • Garden: Valuable old trees including linden (Tilia spec.), Red beech (Fagus sylvatica), horse chestnut (Aesculus hippocastanum) and English oak (Quercus robur) as well as rhododendron, the terrain sloping to the northwest is terraced and is intercepted by embankments , Paths at the house with granite paving, probably unapproved changes (for example pool installation northwest of the villa).
09238255
 


Factory owner's house Innere Bergstrasse 4
(map)
1929 according to the building file Built for the stocking manufacturer Paul Müller, with interior fittings, in an elevated position that characterizes the townscape, with the former associated factory building (Äußere Bergstrasse 5, see there) forming an ensemble typical of the time, of architectural and local significance.

Relatively high, single-storey solid plastered building, erected in an elevated position on heaped-up terrain in front of the associated factory secured by a retaining wall, squat rectangular floor plan oriented perpendicular to the slope and the street, expanded, half-hunched mansard roof and several facade projections or porches, on the eastern, On the gable side on the valley side, there are powerful five-sided, two-storey standing bay windows with fluted columns at the corners, a continuous stepped eaves profile, a continuous roof apron above, five wood-framed attic windows and a curved eight-sided mansard hood with a knob, on the north side an entrance porch with two representative pillars from a small arbor framed entrance, the overlying exit door opening round-arched with plastic decoration accompanying the lintel, the roof also designed as a half-hilted mansard roof, the eaves profile cranked, on the south side central, relatively mushy T stored dwelling with flat, profile-framed triangular gable and door on narrow, framed by an ashlar balustrade and arranged on a slightly protruding extension in the plan, original door and window stock (partly horizontally divided, sliding windows in the upper area), preserved inside Construction-proof equipment, including doors, panels, stucco ceilings with ceiling pictures or painting (information), Preolit ​​shingle roof covering.

09238284
 


Semi-detached house in open development, with front garden, fencing as well as courtyard and path paving Ludwig-Jahn-Strasse 1; 2
(card)
around 1900 Clinker brick facade, attractively designed ensemble typical of the time, a good example of the Wilhelminian expansion of the site, of architectural significance.
  • Residential building: Elongated, two-storey, solid plastered building, positioned against the slope and protruding far from the valley-side base, with jamb and moderately to steeply sloping, protruding and extended gable roof, two by five window axes on the street side, above the middle one a dwelling with double-coupled windows and on the Gable sides two widely spaced window axes and also doubly coupled in between arranged windows in the attic, the basement in natural stone brickwork, finished with sandstone window frames and with strong sandstone cornice, the ground floor smoothly plastered (probably original) with simple drilled window frames with raised edge and keystone indication, profiled above Belt cornice, the upper storey and the attic storey in red clinker brickwork with simple ornaments and structuring, parapet mirror, band with rhombuses between the windows, segment-arched window covers angung, in green and yellow facing bricks, the sandstone window frames simply profiled and with straight roofs, curved sawn purlin and rafter ends, the roof with more recent asbestos panel covering, original double-leaf entrance doors, in front of the entrances original open and typically decorated wooden vestibules, the one in front Number 1 with a balcony-like patio, some original windows still preserved (1999), the interior fixtures and fittings (doors, windows, colored ceramic flooring, wrought-iron banisters, etc.) as well as the original color in the stairwell (base removal, stenciling work) in poor condition (1999 ), in the courtyard areas with granite paving stones of various sizes, fencing with door and gate preserved, beautiful wrought iron work between pillars and above plinth made of clinker masonry, the gate pillars with sandstone spherical crowning.
09238277
 


Residential house in open development, with fencing and courtyard paving Ludwig-Jahn-Strasse 3
(map)
1902, according to information Clinker brick facade typical of the time, forming a beautiful ensemble with the neighboring double house (number 1/2), of architectural significance, the lead glazing of the stairwell also of artistic significance.

Two-storey solid plastered building (six by three axes), strong belt cornice made of sandstone, protruding saddle roof with free chevrons on the gable sides, over the central axes roof bay with triangular gable, red facing bricks on the first floor, ground floor plaster probably renewed, segment-arched plaster panels around the ground floor window, upper floor -Window in a round-arched glare field with yellow clinker framing, coupled round-arched windows in the gables, in the stairwell two original round-arched windows with figuratively decorative lead glazing, wrought-iron banisters, colored artificial stone tiles, terrazzo floors, original apartment doors, gate entrance with mighty sandstone pillars and a flat top.

09238269
 


Factory owner's house in open development, with enclosure and villa garden (garden monument) with grotto Robert-Koch-Strasse 5
(map)
1902, according to the building file (manufacturer's villa) With a historicizing plastered facade, a stately and representative building built for the stocking manufacturer Bruno Neukirchner with a railway-side display facade and rich, high-quality interior, park-like villa garden with grotto, pond and wooded area, artistically, historically and locally of importance.
  • Villa: With a show facade facing the railway, extremely stately and representative three-storey plastered building with an almost square floor plan, with eaves-high, relatively wide and flat central projections on all sides and a flat hipped roof, the relatively high plinth, the two railway-side, formerly open loggias at the building corners as well as the window frames and the rest of the architectural structure in sandstone, the other façade surfaces newly plastered in 1925 with ocher-yellow colored fine plaster, the ground floor areas of the central risalite with rustication, above the plinth, in the transom area of ​​the ground floor windows, above the ground floor, in the parapet area of ​​the windows of the On the first floor and in the eaves area also profiled cornices running around the center projections, the ground floor window openings with a round arched end and keystone motif, the windows of the first floor with the center projections with triangular gables, the rest of the first floor with straight roofs, those of the second floor on the central projections with a central crowning motif, the upper floor garments drilled and with brackets under the profiled window sills and roofing, on the ground floor and first floor stone parapet fields, on the park side (opposite the railway side) central entrance and Above that, large-scale glazing, as well as more elaborate facade design of the central risalite (among other things with continuous balustrade-like parapet areas and floor-to-ceiling pilasters placed between the window openings), originally also balustrades above the central risalites (on the front side with a central crown) and on the roof wrought iron ornamental grille, the effect of the central risalit on the railway side through the originally open and uncovered corner loggias (with parapet balustrades and pilasters) deeper, these probably provided in 1925 with the glazing that is now available and the ( Main) roof area pulled forward above, the entrance door and, apart from the loggia glazing and the one above the entrance, all windows are new (only after 1989 were the original box windows, which were probably still largely intact, replaced with the existing plastic windows with fittings from the construction period), in the middle of the roof Attached, elongated and steep hipped roof-shaped skylight glass roofing, the roof covering originally slate, the interior with a central, extremely generous staircase illuminated from above, designed in a Wilhelminian-Art Nouveau mix, the staircase with a wide U-shaped eye, above an Art Nouveau corresponding to this shape Lead glazing, depicting two floating angels entwined with flowers, wrought-iron banisters, stucco staircases and skylights, artificial stone steps, artificial marble plinths, terrazzo floors with mosaic inlays, on the second floor with a gilded stucco frame, a large wall painting, a Swiss one Depicting an alpine landscape with a town on the lake (presumably Lucerne), on the right in the foreground three women dressed in white, flower-binding women in Art Nouveau style (labeled A. Wolff), in the entrance area analogous design, the artificial marble structure, however, room-high, and art nouveau murals on both walls - Manner, each depicting a young woman, on the double-leaf swing door between the entrance and the stairwell glazing with etched ornaments, as far as can be seen also in the former living areas, today (1999) doctor's offices, social station and partly empty, completely preserved original, solidly built furnishings (ceiling stucco Doors, some with Art Nouveau glazing, fittings, etc.).
  • Enclosure: The south corner of the property with a brick corner with sandstone structure, cover and crowning, the other sections with well-preserved and stable wrought-iron fence typical of the time on a sandstone base, designed analogously to the associated factory property at Robert-Koch-Strasse 6, at the driveways partially preserved and crowned sandstone pillars, some gates and doors still lying on the property, this wrought-iron enclosure only surrounds the villa on both sides of the street (Flrst. 91/4), along the adjoining garden younger wooden fence.
  • Garden: To the north-west adjoining, park-like garden, along the parcel boundary between the corridor. 91/4 and 91/10 steep embankment sloping to the northwest, grotto north of the villa with a grottled inlet to the stone-enclosed pond with a small island below the embankment.
  • Valuable old trees: six blood beeches (Fagus sylvatica f. Purpurea) arranged like a circle at the edge of the pond, rows of winter linden trees (Tilia cordata) along the northeast and southwestern property line, also beeches (Fagus sylvatica), sycamore maple (Acer pseudoplatanus ), Norway maple (Acer platanoides), English oak (Quercus robur) and linden (Tilia spec.).

Barrack-like construction northwest of the villa and a single-family house in the north of the property act as disruptive factors.

09238221
 


Vestibule of the factory (northeast entrance) with room architecture and stucco ceiling, provided with three stucco-framed murals (oil painting on plaster base) Robert-Koch-Strasse 5 (near)
(map)
1902 Murals by G.Peter, of industrial and local significance.
  • 1.) View of the factory with the two villas, based on photos (from 1902),
  • 2.) Ideal vedute oriental landscape (places of trade relations), trade in products from Thalheim,
  • 3.) Fragmentary view, factory complex with villas.
09306478
 


Residential house in open development, with enclosure and row of trees Robert-Koch-Strasse 6
(map)
1890 Historic plastered building, parts of the stately complex of the former Bruno Neukirchner stocking factory, in a creative context with the associated manufacturer's villa (number 5), the ensemble arranged with the exposed side along the railway line, of architectural and local significance.
  • Residential building: Two-storey solid plastered building with a squat rectangular floor plan with six times four window axes, two-axis projecting central projecting over the street and a moderately inclined, overhanging saddle roof, broken stone plinth, original stone walls around all windows and doors, above the door and on the upper floor with straight profiled roofs - Parapet height of circumferential, slightly profiled cornice, entrance slightly retracted with five-step flight of steps and segmental lintel on the walls in the facade, free rafter with curved sawn purlins and rafter ends, on the central projection with ornamental framework (round arch motif), in the gables each a round window, some with original windows , Door, plaster and roofing more recent (GDR period), probably the first house of the factory owner Bruno Neukirchner, built at the same time as the neighboring, first factory building by the builders of the Thalheimer church (Uhlig brothers).
  • Enclosure: Probably in connection with the construction of the villa (Robert-Koch-Straße 5) along the entire railway side of the factory premises and accompanied by a row of small-crowned maple trees in the Wilhelminian style on a flat sandstone base, fence in mostly good condition (1999), row of trees with a few gaps,
  • Former factory garden: probably also in connection with the construction of the villa and the eastern factory building in 1902, the gabled northern side projection of which is bounded on the back, laid out, path system still comprehensible, parts of the planting and artificial stone basin surrounds have been preserved.
09238216
 


Residential house in open development, with fencing and courtyard paving Salzstrasse 3
(map)
marked 1877 For the businessman Ernst Köhler built and later typical and appealingly redesigned plastered building in a central location, historically important.

Two-storey solid plastered building on a squat rectangular floor plan with six times viet window axes, jamb, steep to moderately inclined, protruding and extended gable roof as well as street-side massive and centrally arranged two-axis roof bay, the facades and the roof bay with simple and balanced plaster structure with rounded building corners , subsequent grooved corner pilaster strips, belt straps at the ground floor parapet height and above the upper floor, simple mirrors arranged in the axes between the floors, window bezels, base offset and relatively wide cove in the cranked eaves area, the middle two axes through the profiled triangular gable and the one analogous to that Building structure designed corners of the roof bay as well as emphasized by the straight joint roofing of the coupled upper floor windows and the portico-like door frame, door and window stock probably from the redesign phase (1921), the Dac h with two standing dormers to the side of the roof bay and with new old German slate covering, building renovated in the sense of a monument and provided with an appealing color scheme (on what was probably the original fine plaster), beautiful wrought iron enclosure and granite courtyard paving.

09238294
 


Residential house in open development, with fencing and garden Salzstrasse 6
(map)
marked 1906 Varied plastered building with half-timbered elements, representative building built for the stocking manufacturer CF Förster on a corner plot close to the center, inside rich and high quality Art Nouveau furnishings, artistically, locally and historically important.
  • Villa: As "two single-family residential buildings with a shared entrance" (quote from the building drawing), two-storey solid plastered building with a well-structured hipped roof and bay windows, dwarf houses, built over a high base and composed of two building structures that overlap at the corners, each with an almost square floor plan, various gable extensions, etc. transfigured cubature or playful overall appearance, in the angle between the two structures representative entrance situation with outside staircase, podium and foyer, from it two elaborately designed stairwells, door and window frames in sandstone, in the entrance area with relief crowning (floral Art Nouveau decoration with female head and inscription "1906" in plaster stucco), in the plinth and in the compartments of the attic ornamental gable and bay window made with half-timbering, white glazed clinker brick, other facade surfaces originally more richly structured (cornices and window crowns in ornamented plasterwork analogous to the preserved design in the entrance area), now with renewed GDR plaster, roof originally with red roof tiles and a pointed spire to the left of the entrance, now with Preolit ​​clapboard, complete, with all fittings preserved door and window inventory, in the capital area of ​​the rising Window posts with floral ornaments in Art Nouveau form, in the corner area of ​​the entrance straight staircase and platform with original wrought iron railing and terrazzo floor with inlaid partially damaged mosaics (frieze framing, centrally arranged figure carrying two jugs and on the side of the same banners “Grüss in Gott / Tritt ei (n) Bring Glück. “), The two stairwells and the interior of the apartments with completely preserved original, solid furnishings (two elaborate wooden staircases, lambris, stuccoed ceilings, painted in the entrance area, high stucco marble plinths, terrazzo floors with mosaic inlays, large and high quality Art Nouveau leaded glazing (depicting a female figure in a wide river landscape) over the stairs, door glazing made of etched glass, original door and window fittings on the doors from the building period, etc.),
  • Enclosure: based on the somewhat more elaborate original with white clinker pillars and wrought iron grids over a concrete base about 30 centimeters high (originally small gable roof coverings made of red roof tiles on the pillars),
  • Garden: Original road paving in black and white artificial stone pavement as well as the basic layout preserved, originally in the corner of the property in front of the entrance to the water basin with central plastic and fountain.
09238217
 


Villa with garden Salzstrasse 10
(map)
1908, according to the building file Villa-like house of the builder C. Max Dunger, plastered building largely preserved in its appearance, with corner tower, of local historical importance.

Two-storey, massive plastered building with an almost square floor plan with a high, expanded attic, hipped towards the door side, with a gable facing the street-side facade, high plinth in clinker masonry, other areas probably provided with coarse plastering during the GDR era (originally smooth?) And only on the street side with profiled cornices between the ground floor / upper floor and upper floor / attic floor, smoothly plastered windows around the windows, building-high, separately roofed and knuckled standing bay windows on a square base on the south and west corners, a porch on the northeast side and a roofed staircase with a pair of columns at the entrance, east corner on the ground floor broken with a narrow window, a single-storey segmental arch flaring flat bay bay facing the street with three coupled round arched windows (the middle one narrower) with two pillars in between and parapets, windows, Roof covering, steps and other things renewed in 1981 (marked in the weather vane of the southern stand bay).

09238218
 


Residential house in open development Salzstrasse 12b
(map)
around 1900 Plastered facade with half-timbered dwelling, almost completely preserved in the original, typical apartment building, example of the Wilhelminian reshaping of the place, of architectural significance.

Two-storey, solid plastered building with a central dwarf house on the street side and a moderately inclined gable roof with overhang, base in exposed clinker brickwork, facade with artificial stone window walls with simple round profiles, probably original smooth plaster and ornamental framework in the dwarf house area, in the parapet areas of the two middle upper storey windows with field windows on the street side floral reliefs, free chevrons on the gable ends and the dwelling with ornamental framework (round arch motif), street-side central ground floor window, probably the former main entrance, rear, today's entrance door younger, original windows with winter windows at almost all openings, roof with a small gouge on both sides of the Zwerchhaus and with Preolit ​​clapboard covering.

09238215
 


Row of houses in open development Schillerstrasse 1; 2; 3; 4; 5
(card)
1921 according to the building file High-quality ensemble of three buildings (numbers 1, 2–4 and 5) with single-storey connecting buildings in between, a row of residential areas with small apartments built for the municipality of Thalheim according to plans by the regionally known architect Paul Beckert, a good example of 1920s residential construction, both in terms of architectural history and socially important.

Symmetrical ensemble of three buildings with single-storey connecting structures in between, which have passageways and accommodate side rooms, the elongated central main building (number 2, 3, 4) erected directly on the street with a six-axis central area raised to three floors and provided with a hipped roof and on both sides wing-like adjoining three-axis and two-storey building parts with steep pitched roofs, each of the three building parts with a separate entrance on the back (each with a small, open vestibule), on the street side only one, in the axis of the complex, creatively emphasized main entrance with a two-axis width Frame in natural stone (granite) ashlar masonry with two narrow corridor lighting windows on the side of the door, straight roofing and overlying, segment-arched, door-wide skylight, in front of this entrance frame granite step with granite cheeks on each of which a ball rested (only one received n), the central axes of the two wings with flat, polygonally closed stand cores over both storeys, which are provided with separate flat roofs starting under the protruding eaves, the base, which is also set in granite ashlar masonry, runs through at the same height and thus protrudes far Facades with fine original spray plaster and on the side of the window openings (also on the back) smoothly plastered and originally colored areas that are supposed to indicate shops, the entrance door younger, the window stock to about 40% original (gallows window with six division and relatively wide outer frame), the Both side buildings (number 1 and number 5) are two-story and set back from the street (thus front garden-like open spaces in the corner areas of the property) in an analogous design to the side wings of the main building (also with rear entrances).

09238290
 


Villa with villa garden (garden monument) and gate entrance Schulstrasse 6b
(map)
1922–1923, according to the building file Stately plastered building with bay window, with appealing interior design, villa built for the manufacturer Löffler (co-owner of the company Löffler & Rudolph, Eisenhammer Thalheim), reform style architecture, of architectural and local significance.
  • Villa: Symmetrical, two-storey plastered plastered building built on a hillside with a squat rectangular floor plan with a base storey protruding far towards the valley and a high, steep and expanded hipped roof with various structures, the base in granite polygonal masonry and with relatively large windows on the valley side, on the two drawn-in slope-side building corners, Open entrance areas with curved mansard roofs, on the two narrow sides semicircular single-storey standing bay windows with curved roofs, on the long side of the valley a wide diaphragm and two-story, five-sided closed bay window emphasized by plaster ornamentation (upper floor and attic) also with separate roofing on the long side Somewhat eccentrically arranged arbor with winter garden-like glazing on the ground floor and exit on the upper floor, above in the center of the facade wide, relatively flat gabled dormer windows with four roughly square window openings, on the ground floor door and window openings except for the arbor area with round arches, those on the upper floor and attic floor with straight ends, on the valley side arranged in groups of two and three, on the narrow sides a single round arched dormer window, the hall (staircase) behind The arbor can be seen through high arched windows, the reddish-colored high-grade plaster, the inventory of doors and windows (box windows, on the ground floor with a beautiful round arch) and the solid interior fittings (stucco ceilings, wooden panels, original stove, floors, doors and windows, lead glazing in the hallway , Radiator cladding, etc.) originally received, on the valley side an original pair of shutters, relatively far overhanging roof boxes, the separate roofs with copper sheet, the main roof covered with asbestos sheets.
  • Garden: paths partly with granite pavement, partly with a water-bound ceiling, from the gate to the house avenue-like planting,
  • Gate entrance: Original gate pillars made of granite masonry have been preserved, numerous large trees from the time of the gardens.
09238275
 


Residential house in open development, with garden (garden monument), enclosure and gate system Stollberger Strasse 47
(map)
1927–1928, according to information As a guest house for the stocking manufacturer Görner, a prefabricated wooden building by the well-known company Christoph & Unmack (Niesky), a typical, high-quality building that has been preserved with its surroundings, of architectural and historical importance.

Probably as a two-family house planned prefabricated building with originally two separate units (here formerly used for company guests and service personnel), solid wood construction made of planks combed at the corners on a clinker masonry base with one storey on the south-east and two storeys on the north-west side as well as a steep pitched roof with strongly angled roof feet, the corner combing of the planks are sawn to become wider towards the top, on the SE side a building-long terrace with three circumferential clinker steps and a protruding roof that is divided into two by two yokes (partition wall in between), the floor with geometric clinker brick structure, on the NE and the SW side on the upper floor mighty, structurally identical balconies with decorative planking in the parapets, heavily stepped, profiled cornices on the upper ends and above on the balcony front edge protruding gable triangles, between the parapet and cornice each six stepped sawn supporting (or hanging) timbers with Planks arranged like a jig, each converging at right angles in the center of the yoke, the north-west side pulled up to under an almost building-wide roof lane on two floors, on the ground floor two entrances with straight open staircases and small vestibules in front of the corners, between two and on the upper floor four windows, the window stock roughly according to the original Prototype renewed (as of 1999), probably still original sliding shutters with slats on all windows, the roof with two-stringed gaupe to the southeast with new slate covering, the gable triangles (around the balconies) with asbestos paneling.

Garden: the large surrounding property with largely existing trees and paths from the construction period, typical construction period fencing (artificial stone fence posts and wooden fence fields with cover over the slats) with gate pillars in clinker brickwork with original lamp attachments.

09238299
 


Methodist Church, with a front garden and piers
Methodist Church, with a front garden and piers Tannenstrasse 4
(map)
1929–1930 (church) Relatively simple sacred building in a design typical of the period, influenced by expressionism, of importance in terms of architectural and church history.

Relatively modest and simple, solid and plastered church building on a corner plot of land facing Kleiststrasse, with a squat rectangular floor plan with a quite stately, at an angle attached entrance porch to Tannenstrasse as well as a moderately to steeply inclined gable roof and a small square roof turret crowned with a gilded cross with a small pyramid east end of the roof, the base, the gate pillars, the framing of the entrance and a slightly protruding, separately gabled risalit-like wall area on the west side in relatively small granite ashlar masonry, exterior plaster probably original with simple smooth bevels around the windows, which are a bit recessed and therefore more vertical-looking, together with the parapet areas , the beautiful, relatively lavishly expressionistically designed, representative two-winged entrance door with triangular, radiant skylight set back about one meter into the porch, in front of it there is a six-step outside staircase s Granite stone with natural stone walls on the sides, porch with a very pointed gable and high upwards with a clear "kink" on top, simple, relatively angular and cranked eaves, the roof with the small triangular dormers on the nave and with the roof turret slated, the windows probably younger.

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Residential house in semi-open development (without adjoining factory building) Uferstrasse 9
(map)
1920, according to the building file Typical plastered building built for the manufacturer CF Drechsel in an appealing design, originally preserved staircase, of architectural significance.

An imposing two-storey, massive plastered building with a lofty mansard roof, a wide bay window on the street-side (western) display gable on the street-side (western) and on the southern façade, a flat, relatively wide and somewhat eccentrically arranged, gabled central projection, erected over a squat rectangular floor plan Profiled cornice structure in the parapet area of ​​the windows on the first floor and around the mighty, relatively steep gable triangles in which, apart from the slightly smaller one above the bay window, there are oval windows in the center, on the first floor relatively wide, originally preserved box windows (1999), asbestos sheet roofing , to the Uferstrasse an unscale shop window installation, inside completely preserved original staircase with doors including handle sets, floor panels, wooden built-in stairs and beautiful lambris with curved upper edge.

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Residential house in open development and in corner location, with fencing Uferstrasse 11
(map)
1912, according to the building file For the stocking manufacturer Heinrich Drechsel in a corner location that characterizes the townscape, a plastered building typical of the time, with echoes of the reform style, of architectural significance.

Two-storey solid plastered building with an almost square floor plan with a developed, partially hipped mansard roof and, on both sides of the street, risalit-like projecting gables, base made of irregular granite ashlar masonry, to the south two-storey wooden conservatory extension, to the west two-storey, solid wooden gables, in the corner area between the Originally probably an open balcony on the upper floor and a small canopy above the entrance, on all sides original scratched plaster with a few simple plaster mirrors in some parapet areas, the two gable triangles slated and the windows below with probably fixed ornamentally painted shutters and, on the north side, blind aprons made of ornate punched Sheet metal, the roof and the extensions with the original beaver tail double covering, all doors and windows as well as the obvious structural fittings inside (wrought iron banister, etc.) originally preserved (1999), the courtyard with Granite paving, the footpath paved with clinker slabs (cube motif) during the construction period, preserved from the original enclosure of the base in granite ashlar masonry and parts of the associated wooden fence.

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Residential house in open development and in a corner location Uferstrasse 17
(map)
marked 1889 One of the few Wilhelminian style residential buildings with a half-timbered upper floor in the village, beautiful original door, picture-defining location, of architectural significance.

Two-storey building in a corner position on a squat, rectangular floor plan with an extended jamb floor, dwarf house facing the main street and a moderately sloping, protruding gable roof, solid ground floor with younger plaster and split clinker plinth, windows with segmented lintels, street-side beautiful classicist door walls with simple roofing (inscribed: “18 EW Drechsel 89 “) and original double-leaf door, upper floor half-timbered, visible from the street with attached profiled strips around the compartments, slated on the gable ends, roof with curved sawed rafter and purlin ends and new slate covering.

09238243
 


Residential house in semi-open development, two outbuildings to the courtyard, enclosure wall, gate system and two courtyard trees Untere Bahnhofstrasse 21
(map)
1904 according to information A largely original ensemble of an inner-city homestead with a former coal trade, a good example of the Wilhelminian-style development of the place, of importance in terms of building history and the history of the site.
  • Residential house: Two-storey, solid construction built as a semi-detached house with number 21a with a steep to moderately inclined gable roof and street-side, two-axis dwelling, base made of polygonal natural stone masonry with cellar window walls made of Hilbersdorfer Porphyrtuff, street facade with younger, reduced plastering on the first floor and brickwork facing on the ground floor Dormitory gables, window frames and window roofing, eaves area and gable end made of profiled or simply ornamented stone, courtyard-side facade with predominantly preserved original plaster structure with grooves on the ground floor and profiled cornices between the floors, door and window frames analogous to those of the street facade, rear facade with simple smooth plastering and Without stone walls, original double-winged entrance door on the courtyard side, mostly original windows (1999 - gallows window with simple fighter ornamentation) preserved, roof with Preolit ​​shingle cover.
  • Stable barn: With the completely solid rear wall made of brick masonry on the quarry stone brook wall, two-storey building with a solid ground floor, boarded upper floor, probably half-timbered, and a half-hipped roof, original windows with simple six-six, roof with Preolit ​​clapboard, building possibly a little older than the residential building (?) .
  • Ancillary building: Like the house directly on the street, originally probably one and a half story massive building, which was probably later raised with a boarded half-timbered top and finished with a moderately sloping hipped roof, massive area plastered and with simple yellow brick structure (horizontal bands, corner accentuation and Window frames), original windows, roof with Preolit ​​clapboard.
  • Gate pillars: Bricked with an artificial stone spherical crown each.
09238210
 


Residential house in semi-open development and in a corner location, with a side wall Untere Bahnhofstrasse 21a
(map)
marked 1904 With a shop, historicizing clinker brick facade in a corner location that defines the townscape, an example of the Wilhelminian reshaping of the town, of significance in terms of building history.

In the corner, a two-storey building built as a semi-detached house with number 21 with a steep to moderately inclined gable roof and a broken corner raised to three storeys, each of which is connected to two-axis gable, base made of polygonal natural stone masonry with cellar window frames made of Hilbersdorf porphyry tuff, street-side views designed as show facades with plaster grooves on the ground floor, profiled cornices between the floors as well as in the upper floor parapet height and clinker facing facade on the upper floor as well as in the gable, upper floor window walls and roofing, eaves area and gable end with more elaborate crowning profiled or simply ornamented smoothly plastered from Hilbersdorf porphyry tuff and without ashlar walls, in the ground floor area of ​​the corner and towards Untere Bahnhofstrasse, more recent plastering without structuring and probably enlarged window openings, the entrance door on the courtyard side and the original windows ch with Preolit ​​shingle covering, the original enclosure to the Grundstraße in brick masonry with roof tile covering on the pillars and on the wall sections in between.

09238211
 


Residential house in open development, with fencing, gate entrance and garden Untere Bahnhofstrasse 32
(map)
in the core of 1877, according to the building file For the stocking manufacturer Gustav Rudolph, an appealingly redesigned, villa-like plastered building in a picture-defining location, a good example of a Wilhelminian-style building that was remodeled in the heyday of the 1920s and of architectural significance.

In the corner of Robert-Koch-Strasse, a two-storey, solid plastered building with an almost square floor plan with a high, extended mansard-like roof, a central upper-floor bay window facing Untere Bahnhofstrasse with plaster ornaments in Art Deco style and to the east (to the railroad-side garden) a two-storey, massive conservatory extension , both with separately under the far protruding eaves area with a flat Carnies profile, facade structure with plaster cornices and profiles, massive, inclined stone plaster door frame, representative two-winged entrance door with square, diagonally grooved glass panels from the renovation period, the existing windows with the original structure with some standing dormers in the lower area and small triangular dormers in the upper area, partly with Eternit, partly covered with Preolit, inside (staircase) plinth tiles from the renovation period, the garden with a granite pond, probably original tree and bush existed and from the Wilhelminian era, wrought iron enclosure on a granite base with a beautiful associated gate.

09238214
 


Post office building in open development, with garage Untere Bahnhofstrasse 32b
(map)
marked 1937 Originally preserved, typical building in the traditionalist style of the time, of architectural and local significance.

Post office building: parallel to the railway line in alignment with the station, which was newly built in 1920, two-storey solid plastered building with a high hipped roof, the base and the adjoining walls in slate brickwork, on the reveals of the segment-arched entrances scraped, slightly protruding limestone slabs around the outside rectangular window openings, narrow, smooth cleaning flasks, the surfaces with original scratch plaster, all ground floor openings with wrought-iron protective grilles from the construction period, original iron lettering "Postamt" above the entrance, original roof design with bat dormers and original old German slate roofing, one of the chimneys also included in the eaves area Large angular and smooth plaster cornice, granite entrance step, about half of the original windows (1999), original doors and almost completely original interior (floor, doors and other), in the area of ​​the garages already younger F window enlargements.

09238254
 


Former school (without expansion to the east), later a residential building in a semi-open area Untere Hauptstrasse 1
(map)
2nd half of the 18th century With built-in shop, upper floor timber-frame clad, stately building in a location that defines the townscape, one of the few older buildings in the center area, as a former school of high local historical value, also of importance in terms of building history.

Two-storey, relatively broad-based building with a steep and high half-hipped roof, six window axes on the eaves and five window axes on the gable side, the ground floor massive, openings in the living area that have been changed due to the use of shops (additional door and a shop window), but some original ashlar windows made of Hilbersdorf porphyry tuff Preserved on the gable and back, the half-timbered upper floor and the gable triangle clad asbestos panels, but with original window opening sizes (regular and striving half-timbering still visible on a historical photo), the eaves area with a baroque wooden profile, the roof with individual dormer windows and Preolit ​​clapboard, the ground floor - Window reveals (inside) with basket arch lintels.

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Residential house in open development Untere Hauptstrasse 22
(map)
marked 1880 Upper floor half-timbered clad, construction typical of the time and landscape, part of the pre-Wilhelminian development of the place, historically important.

Two-storey building with four times two window axes and a saddle roof, solid ground floor with door and window frames made of stone, the door frame with straight roofing, tooth-cut frieze and designation (name, no., Year of construction): "... 1880", the half-timbered upper floor on the street side with beautiful ornamental slate, all window openings in their original size, the gable sides on the upper floor and attic floor as well as the roof with its two simple standing, street-side dormer windows with asbestos panels, original two-winged entrance door with two by four panels on the northern gable side and mostly original windows (cross-frame windows with raised fighter), on the ground floor with winter windows, received (1999).

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Residential house in open development, with heiste and enclosure Untere Hauptstrasse 23
(map)
around 1800 Upper floor half-timbered, largely authentically preserved building typical of the time and landscape with relatively rare ground floor half-timbering, part of the pre-Wilhelminian development of the place, historically important.

Two-storey elongated building with a short extension on the street side at an angle and a half-hipped roof, ground floor in the southern section visible half-timbering (probably pillar construction), in the northern section with massive extension, probably younger, relatively wide, two-winged entrance door with stone walls, upper floor half-timbered, street side with historical, on Gable of the extension with ornamental slateing (probably around 1900), original window opening sizes, existing windows partly around 1900, partly younger (1999), roof covering of southern gable and northern gable triangle with asbestos paneling, Heisten retaining wall made of slate natural stone, on top of a simple wrought iron fence with mostly preserved granite and partly artificial stone fence pillars.

09238259
 


Residential house in open development Untere Hauptstrasse 26b
(map)
around 1900 Historicizing plastered facade, typical rental house construction from the phase of the Wilhelminian reshaping of the site, of architectural significance.

Two-storey solid plastered building on a flat base made of irregular layered masonry and artificial stone corner blocks, gabled central projectile, saddle roof with overhang, free chevron with profiled purlin ends, two narrow dormers, risalit gable with round window and also free chevron, slate covering, on the entire facade with the original plastering Corners and between the floors, various plaster reliefs and plaster strips as well as roofs, windows renewed above the windows.

09238260
 


Factory owner's house in open development, with fencing, gate entrance, garden and paved path Untere Hauptstrasse 35
(map)
1922–1923, according to the building file With a beautiful plastered façade typical of the time, a representative and high-quality building built for the stocking manufacturer Viktor Görner, between reform and Art Deco style, interior furnishings in the same style, artistically as well as historically and locally important.

Two-storey solid plastered building on an almost square floor plan with a high base made of irregular granite blocks and cornice, in the base round arched window and arched entrance with keystone, flanking pillars with semi-plastic vases, gabled central risalit, on the south side polygonal stand bay, extended staircase to the hipped mansard roof (rear staircase) original, red ocher colored noble plaster with high-quality and elaborate, partly ornamental structure on the risalit and bay window and in the window axes, almost completely original window stock, (arched window with beam-shaped skylight and rectangular window with cross-frame, 12-piece raised door), building-time, double-winged front door, completely preserved interior in the stairwell (granite steps, wooden railings, lead glass windows, apartment doors, artificial stone walls, etc. and in the apartments parquet, stucco ceilings in Art Deco shapes, doors, etc.), fencing with mighty gra nit pillars and wrought iron fence panels.

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Residential house in open development Wiesenstrasse 11
(map)
marked 1755 Upper floor half-timbered, largely original structure typical of the time and landscape, example of the prehistoric character of the place and the old local structure, of architectural significance.

Two-storey, relatively broad-based building with a steep gable roof, massive ground floor (probably undercut later?) With classicist door and window walls (?) In ashlar (painted over), upper floor half-timbered cladding, partly slated (in the gable with framing), original window opening sizes , New door and window stock, entrance from the stream side, at the back a small single-storey extension, probably formerly an oven, Preolit ​​shingles roofing, three small dormers staggered in two rows on the stream side.

09238233
 


Villa and villa garden (with stairs and retaining walls) and gate system Zwönitztalstrasse 8
(map)
1936-1938 For the stocking manufacturer Ernst Albert Schletter, a stately plastered building typical of the time in an elevated, location-defining location, of importance in terms of building history and local history.
  • Villa: Two-storey solid plastered building built on a hillside with a squat, angular floor plan, street (valley) side symmetrical design and broad appearance due to the two rather stately standing bay windows that are attached to the corners of the building with inclines, reaching up to the eaves and integrated into the roof landscape as well as through the high hipped roof, the base in polygonal quarry stone masonry that extends to the ground floor parapet, the ground floor only used for living on the valley side with arched openings, the upper floor windows just closed, partly wide and all with shutters, various window openings with wrought iron grilles, original smooth plaster with narrow bezels around all openings and a slightly offset, simply grooved eaves area preserved, beautiful original main entrance door with ornamental grille preserved in a chiseled, arched stone plaster frame, in front of it three-step semicircular staircase, all other doors and windows e Also original, the roof with wide towing hatches on all sides with Preolit ​​clapboard, the interior with original, non-building furnishings (including neo-baroque decorations on the radiator cladding, stairs, etc., colored glass windows, tiles, floor slabs, panels, etc.), partly with post-turn wallpapering and - Coverings covered, in the part of the building facing the slope side, original garage installation, above that probably the driver's and servant's apartment.
  • Garden: In the garden some stairs, retaining walls and paved surfaces in slate granite, as well as the brick gate pillars (the one with the original lamp attachment).
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Residential house and side building of a hammer property Zwönitztalstrasse 30
(map)
in the core designated 1819 Courtyard belonging to the former hammer mill / iron hammer with half-timbered buildings typical of the time, in a beautiful location at the exit of a valley, of local historical importance.
  • Residential building: Two-storey building over a squat rectangular floor plan with jamb, extended attic and protruding, moderately inclined gable roof, the ground floor solid, plastered and probably already built without a stable part with door and window walls made of stone, the lintel with straight roof and writing field: “No. 41 / B / 1819 "(the painted writing is younger - probably 1819 instead of 1879?), The half-timbered upper floor visible except for the sloped rear gable side (typical industrial framework with crossing storey-high struts) and with the original window sizes (partly added), the purlin and rafter ends as well as the verge board sawn curved, the roof with Preolit ​​clapboard, Wilhelminian style two-winged entrance door with a covered staircase in front of it, the windows younger and without mullion, only in the jamb area above the front door two rhombic windows with beautiful ornamental rungs in the shape of flowers.
  • Stable barn: first floor plastered slate stone masonry, the top floor with a jamb in a boarded half-timbered construction (probably hayloft), the roof design analogous to that of the house.
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Remarks

  1. The list may not correspond to the current status of the official list of monuments. This can be viewed by the responsible authorities. Therefore, the presence or absence of a structure or ensemble on this list does not guarantee that it is or is not a registered monument at the present time. The State Office for the Preservation of Monuments in Saxony provides binding information .

Web links

Commons : Cultural monuments in Thalheim / Erzgeb.  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files