List of cultural monuments in Werda

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Werda coat of arms

The list of cultural monuments in Werda contains the cultural monuments of the municipality of Werda that were recorded by the State Office for Monument Preservation of Saxony until March 2020 (excluding archaeological cultural monuments). The notes are to be observed.

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

Cabbage green

image designation location Dating description ID
Memorial to the fallen of both world wars
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Memorial to the fallen of both world wars Brotenfelder Weg
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2nd half of the 20th century Significant site in terms of local history. Cube-shaped memorial stone for the fallen of the two world wars, made of Theuma slate (differently processed). On three sides the inscription “The dead admonish. Keep peace. 1914-1918 "" 1939-1945 ". The leading edge of the cornice, straight top cover, three linden trees and geometrical routing. 08985678
 
Residential stable house (surrounding area) with barn extension
Residential stable house (surrounding area) with barn extension Jägerswald 1
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Around 1800 District Pillmannsgrün, one-storey half-timbered house, building that characterizes the landscape and is located in the forest with a good original inventory in typical Vogtland construction, of historical importance. Residential stable house with log parlor and cladding, uprights with head struts (on the gable), two thirds of the house in log construction, gable roof, gable sheet roofing, boarded gable triangle, caterpillars, wooden barn door on the gable side, wooden window frames, old windows, originally shutters, parlor ceiling, insert ceiling old doors and box locks, newer extension on the rear eaves side (solid, plastered). 08985675
 
Residential stable house
Residential stable house Kornaer Strasse 33
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Early 19th century Simple, single-storey farmhouse, evidence of the typical Vogtland construction (block room preserved), historically significant. With plank room (plastered, brick wall in front of it), solid part of the stable, plastered, cladding, two segmental arch entrances (granite walls), stable windows, segmented arches, granite walls, slate sole benches, gable roof (artificial slate on the courtyard side, natural slate on the street side, English roofing, wooden shingles under the slate roof) Slide-in ceiling with girder, some original doors with iron fittings, Prussian caps in the stable, gable triangle boarded up, some with a cellar (barrel) with a well hole. 08985679
 
Factory owner's villa
Factory owner's villa Kottengruner Hauptstrasse 30
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Around 1905 Erected for the weaving manufacturer Lothar Foss, elaborately designed representative building in the style of historicism, of local historical importance. Two-storey clinker brick building, moving roof landscape (hipped roof), slate roofing, ashlar plinth, corner ashlar, on the ground floor a glazed winter garden with corner column and segmented arched window with keystone, above on the upper floor wooden veranda with ornamental parapet, arched window, rectangular window and segmented arched window, central projection with triple glazed window and straight roofing - Half-timbering, wide roof overhang, hipped roof, original windows, square three-storey corner tower, arched windows on the first floor, ornamental half-timbering with flower motifs and triplet windows on the third floor, hipped roof (concave bent), slate covering. 08985677
 

Former memorial (Kottengrün)

image designation location Dating description ID
Residential house in open development Kottengruner Hauptstrasse 35
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Around 1900 Formerly a weaving, residential and administrative building, later the parish hall and bakery, building in the style of historicism that characterizes the street scene and is of local historical importance; demolished between 2008 and 2016. Two-storey clinker building on a granite base (polygonal masonry), pent roof (slate), granite basement window frames, ground floor and first floor clinker brick with artificial stone structure, segment arched windows with keystone and parapet fields on the ground floor, rectangular windows with triangular gable roofing, parapet panels with artificial stone parapets, parapet panels with consoles Inscription "God bless ... (illegible, probably:" this house ") u. they go in and out ”, profiled plaster eaves with serrated cornice, monopitch roof (slate covering), coupled window on the upper floor with segmental arch roofing, entrance renewed (segmental arch walls), central projection with high hipped roof and gable roof dormer windows (boarded up). 08985676
 

Who's there

image designation location Dating description ID
St. Katharinenkirche (with furnishings) and enclosure of the churchyard
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St. Katharinenkirche (with furnishings) and enclosure of the churchyard Alte Landstrasse 5
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1776–1777, essentially older Baroque hall church with east tower, medieval core, of architectural and local historical importance. Plastered quarry stone building on a rectangular floor plan, closed on three sides on the west side, flat-roofed inside, two-storey surrounding galleries, pulpit from the end of the 18th century, organ (by Karl Eduard Schubert) with a classicist prospect from 1869 to 1871, narrow arched windows, drilled segmented arch portal, east tower on a square floor plan, octagonal bell storey with a Welsch hood, lantern, knob (slate covering). Enclosure: quarry stone wall (double-shell dry stone wall) with slate cover, square gate pillars. 08985671
 
Residential stable house Bergener Strasse 32
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1st half of the 19th century Single-storey building with log construction and strong cladding of high documentary value and of particular architectural historical significance for the folk architecture specific to the Vogtland 09306899
 
Memorial to two Soviet prisoners of war and four concentration camp inmates Main street
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2nd half of the 20th century (panel renewed) Monument to local history. Wooden plaque with the inscription “For honoring memory. 2 Soviet prisoners of war and 4 concentration camp inmates who were cowardly murdered in our forests in the last days of the war in 1945 rest here. ”, Green space design (groups of trees and bushes). 08985670
 
Former manor consisting of a manor house, two adjacent farm buildings and a gate
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Former manor consisting of a manor house, two adjacent farm buildings and a gate Hauptstrasse 6
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In the core 18th century (manor house); 19th century (towers at the manor house); around 1900 (farm building) Simple plastered building with hipped roof and two towers, mansion later used as a hiking home, then residential house, of architectural, local and regional historical importance.
  • Manor house: bought by the town of Plauen around 1900 for the construction of a dam, used by the " Wandering Birds " as a hiking home, in 1928 an embroidery machine and weaving mill owner bought the manor , in whose outbuildings men's, women's and children's clothing was made from 1952 to 1990, two-storey, Solid, plastered, box-like building with a hipped roof (slate covering), flanked on both gable sides by two square three-storey towers, a tower with a concave, bent tent roof and gable roof dormers, crowned by an iron ornamental grille, second tower with convex rounded arched dormer roofs and segmented arched roofs and point, core structure symmetrically structured, central axis emphasized by a drilled entrance portal made of granite, heavily profiled wooden eaves, on the street side at an angle wooden veranda, system overall horseshoe-shaped
  • Angular farm building: one storey. Solid, plastered, brick eaves (tooth cut), gable roof, flat gable roof (artificial slate), in the gable round arched window (triple window) and above round window, rear wing brick and quarry stone, unplastered, segment arch entrance with granite walls and brick lintel, dwelling house with loading hatch, granite sills , some old windows
  • Enclosure: square gate pillars with ball attachment (artificial stone)
08985674
 
Mill building with technical equipment, wood oven and sawmill as well as courtyard paving of a mill property (Jahnsmühle) Jahnsmühle 1
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first mentioned 1224 (mill); designated 1802 (door lintel); around 1800 (plaster); marked 1867 (oven); 1936 (roller mill) Mill buildings partly in half-timbered construction, original mill and sawmill technology, remarkable and rare wood-burning oven, of high technical and economic historical importance. 08985673
 
Residential building Parkstrasse 9
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Around 1800 One-storey plastered building with a saddle roof (Eternit) and probably with shredded (partially preserved), socio-historical evidence of rural architecture. Solid, plastered, eaves-side entrance house with hipped roof (slate roofing), old windows, rear winter window, originally shutters, sills. 08985672
 
Werda dam, Geigenbachtalsperre: gate valve house, dam wall with the base of the former still building, cascade overflow with stilling basin, dam master's house (now an office)
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Werda dam, Geigenbachtalsperre: gate valve house, dam wall with the base of the former still building, cascade overflow with stilling basin, dam master's house (now an office) Talsperrenstrasse 39
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1900 (dam master house); 1904-1910 (dam); 1904-1909 (dam); Commissioning 1910 (dam) Technical monument of a gravity dam with a curved axis ( Intze principle ), the second oldest dam in Saxony, quarry stone wall made of slate, also of architectural significance, today the Fernwasser Südsachsen association. 08985680
 
Turbine house with old technology, office and workshop with mixing chamber, filter hall with equipment (control panels), lime plant, hardening plant and level house of the waterworks Talsperrenstrasse 41, 43
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1904–1909 (lime plant and turbine house); 1915 (hardening plant); 1922 (turbines); 1928–1930 (filter hall) Waterworks that are significant in terms of technology, architecture and art history, with evidence of different times, filter hall, an outstanding architectural monument in the Bauhaus style with significant original interior fittings, today the Fernwasser Südsachsen association. 08985681
 

Remarks

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

Detailed memorial texts

  1. Jahnsmühle:
    • Two-storey mill building with an angled sawmill, mill: on the ground floor upright framework (with headbands) with brick infill and remains of the block room, only brick brickwork on the gable side, a total of slate base, on the upper floor half-timbered with brick infill, boarded gable, gable roof (cardboard ), at the angle to the sawmill four-storey boarded tower with a monopitch roof, rear extension from 1985 (no monument), hallway with a cellar (flat barrel vault), laid out with large rectangular slabs, arched entrance with wooden walls (renewed) and keystone marked 1802, sawmill (in the corner to the residential building) with a tower-like structure
    • Sawmill: two-storey, ground floor brick, upper storey boarded up, gable roof (partly corrugated iron), inside the old mill building, room with wooden beam ceiling (beam renewed) and oven (cast-iron, double-leaf door marked with "CF Lorenz 1867", was a wedding present for Christoph Friedrich Lorenz ) with water tank
    • Behind it an old brick oven: as a rear loader heatable from the kitchen, so-called "wood oven" (first mentioned in 1224), in the kitchen a square pit from which the oven could be filled, segment-arched oven opening, low oven space that protrudes far into the living room is visible there as a semicircular closing wall step
    • In front of the building a water trough made of slate (was necessary for the heating technology of the wood-burning oven to extinguish fire)
    • Inside old mill and sawmill technology:
      • Roller mill from 1936 on the ground floor
      • Shotstone
      • Cast iron saw frame from 1917 by the Kirchner company in Leipzig
      • Large saw frame from 1913/17 on the upper floor of the sawmill, cast iron
      • small saw frame from 1934 with the inscription: "Herkules" and "Carl Hoffmann Aue i. Sa. “and rails for extending the wood
      • Planing machine from 1934 labeled "Neue-Lein-H3" and "Patent" from the company Lein in Pirna
      • Double hemmer from 1936 by the Kirchner company from Leipzig
    • Courtyard paving: slabs of slate, two millstones included in the courtyard paving
  2. Werda dam:
    • Schieberhaus: single-storey quarry stone building made of Tirpersdorf slate, rectangular windows with bevelled walls and strong lintel (slate), windows renewed, interior renewed with modern technology, hip roof (slate), fan lantern and tent roof (slated), adjacent stilling basin from 1985 (no monument) on a rectangular The floor plan with a knee-high quarry stone wall serves to reduce energy consumption, and the two reconstructed Tos buildings (1985–1992) are not a monument
    • Dam wall: made of quarry stone masonry (fruit slate) with a curved axis (concave arched on the air side), upper cornice strongly profiled (protruding wide slate cuboids), mural loosened up by protruding boss stones, in the middle of the upper edge wall protrusion (vertical wall plinth with supporting arch) on which the The former touring building was in place, lime-cement mortar was used for the barrier wall, the water-side protective jacket made of concrete dovetailed, a 2.5 m thick facing wall made of hydrotechnical watertight concrete was placed in front of the original structure, the crest of the dam was redesigned m raised, dammed water: Geigenbach, purpose: drinking water supply and flood protection, energetic use planned, current dimensions of the dam (after reconstruction): height above foundation base 43.7 m, height above valley floor 37.5 m, crown length 292.8 m, crown width 7.3 m, building volume 140,000 m³, building volume / G total storage space 1:37, old dam wall: radius of curvature 296 m, inclination of the air side of the dam wall 1: 0.767, inclination of the dam wall 1: 0.1, further technical data: hydrology: catchment area 14.33 km², annual inflow total 7.25 hm³, mean annual inflow 0, 23 m³ / s, reservoir: highest storage target 594.52 m above sea level. NN, full water level 594.25 m above sea level NN, congestion destination 594.25 m above sea level NN, lowering target 565.3 m above sea level NN, lowest descent target 556.64 m above sea level. NN, max. Storage height (above foundation) 42.72 m, total storage space 5.142 hm³, storage space 5.002 hm³, usable space 5.142 hm³, extraordinary flood retention area 0.140 hm³, usual flood retention area 0 hm³, operating room 4.966 hm³, reserve space (without pre-lock) 0.036 hm³, dead space 0 hm³, dead space 0 hm³ Total accumulation 47.2 ha, degree of expansion 0.69, reconstruction of the main dam by the Weimar hydro project, Dresden production area and the Institute for Water Management
    • Cascade overflow / flood relief system: The flood relief of the main dam takes place via a fixed lateral overflow weir on the left slope. Its total spill width: 33 m. The overflow ridge is followed by the collecting channel, which guides the water under a bridge leading to the crest of the dam to the cascade of drainage on the steep slope on the air side. The cascade flows into the stilling basin in the valley. The design flood is 7.6 m³ / s. This contrasts with a capacity of the flood relief system of 9.6 m³ / s. Original cascade steps made of ashlar stones (water blocks made of fruit slate) with high, wide landings, side walls made of quarry stone with slate cover, in the valley a former stilling basin, in an arch from the cascade to a wide moat.
    • Dam master house next to the dam wall: the first construction of the dam system was built, originally the house of the Obenauf supervisor, later the dam master house, today an office and house, two-storey, solid, plastered, broken stone base (slate), upper storey or Drempel ornamental framework, eaves side elevation Zwerchhaus and saddle roof (back) and pointed gable (front), in the gable triangle half-timbered, boarded up, arched windows, windows renewed and partly enlarged, partly twin windows, sills and lintel in porphyry tufa, gable-sided arched entrance with a single staircase, ornamental framework on both eaves sides K-struts and diamond motif, overall saddle roof (slate covering) with bat dormers and roof pike, wooden eaves, inside original staircase with board docks
  3. Werda waterworks:
    • Turbine house: horseshoe-shaped single-storey structure, southern wing turbine house, northern wing workshop, in the intermediate building office, cuboid base (slate), plastered solid construction with boarded jamb, gable roof (slate) with bat dormers (slated), boarded gable triangle, two Francis roof house in the courtyard -Turbines from Siemens-Schuckert and Escher Wyss & Cie. from 1922 with slide operation (serial numbers 6717 and 6718), control panel and synchronization, in the gable rectangular window with continuous straight roofing and semicircular window
      • Intermediate structure: slightly lower than the side wing, partly solid, plastered, partly block construction with surrounding framework, continuous slate block base, inside currently original office furnishings, wall panels made of Theuma slate with a profiled cornice-like finish, suspension device for the agitators (coupled square pillars made of Theuma slate with lugs and strong rectangular cover plate), staircase, door frame made of slate panels
      • North wing / workshop building on a hook-shaped floor plan and mixing chamber: single-storey block construction with surrounding framework on a slate base, round arched tension bolts, overall hipped roof, wooden lattice windows (renewed) with shutters, underground mixing chamber with old technology, head building with six window axes or six-bay surrounding framework
    • WABAG filter hall from 1928 to 1930: basilically designed functional building on a rectangular floor plan with raised head buildings in Bauhaus style, high central nave, flat single-storey aisles, flat roof (bitumen)
      • Southern head building with entrance portal: high two-storey solid building with a recessed but elevated central axis, one-storey entrance porch with original copper roof (wide roof overhang), side structures each on a square floor plan with five tall rectangular narrow windows each on the ground floor, which visually join together to form a ribbon of windows, upper floor The front building has no windows, only rectangular windows in the central axis, entire building with fluted concrete base, slate sills, original windows, wide roof overhang, wide plastered eaves, different building heights, solid, light yellow plastered
      • Northern head building / front side as a counterpart to the southern head building with a raised tower-like central projection, which is flanked by single-storey side projections, central projection and side projections each with five window axes
      • Central building / filter hall: 15 window axes on the eaves side (ribbon of tall rectangular windows), slate plinth, sloping wall protrusion between the head building and hall, interior with high-quality original Bauhaus-style furnishings: square entrance hall with original ceiling lamp composed of geometric shapes (square, nickel sphere, disc-shaped glass lamp) , in the corners of the room two inlet channels, to the hall original double door (five glass panels each) with original door handle, original floor tiles, adjoining sacral-like filter hall, high central nave separated from side aisles by marble-clad control panels (1 m high), filter tables / control panels lengthways through Room running (marble cladding renewed), between the three naves four pillars each on a rectangular floor plan, partly tiled, in the two side naves perpendicular to the central nave, filter basins (longitudinally rectangular), on the front side (northern end building) of the center Five-axis ribbon of windows on the nave, central nave on the upper floor illuminated by transverse rectangular windows, interior flat overall covered with iron girders, original banisters, lamps partially renewed
    • Former lime plant (now chemical plant) from 1904–1909: one-storey building, concrete base, otherwise boarded timber frame construction, rectangular floor plan, high ground floor, original window sizes, small square windows with one and two-sided shutters, high hipped roof (cardboard), towed away on one side, high roof structure with hipped roof, no old technology in the interior
    • Old hardening plant (built in 1915): square floor plan, single-storey, cube-shaped building with a tent roof (slate), stone construction (slate cuboid), heavily profiled stone eaves, protruding bossed masonry, lateral pilaster strips, ribbon windows each made up of three rectangular windows
    • Gauge house from 1911 (without chlorine system): one-storey, solid base (plastered), boarded up ground floor, saddle roof (purlin roof) (roofing felt), short extension on the gable side, technology renewed

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Web links

Commons : Kulturdenkmale in Werda  - Collection of pictures