List of listed objects in Sooss

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The list of listed objects in Sooss contains the 4 listed , immovable objects of the municipality of Sooss in the Lower Austrian district of Baden .

Monuments

photo   monument Location description
Elementary school Upload file Elementary school ObjectID
56459
Hauptstrasse 29 KG
location
: Sooss
The long, single-storey schoolhouse was built in 1874. The triangular-gabled central projection of the hip-roofed building has a round arch portal and round arched windows; the rectangular windows in the reserves have just been completed.

In 1996 the school was completely renovated: the facades and all the interiors were redesigned. With the inclusion of the headmaster's apartment, four classes and a gymnasium were built.

Catholic parish church hl.  Anna, cemetery and walls
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Catholic parish church hl. Anna, cemetery and walls ObjectID
55712
Thomas Wendt-Straße 305/3 KG
location
: Sooss
The building is located in the north of the village in an open field in the middle of the walled cemetery, surrounded by a ditch in the north, east and west. The late Gothic choir tower church (a former fortified church ) is first documented in 1319; According to the document, the building was erected from 1319. Originally part of the Baden parish, Sooss became its own parish in 1783.
The simple nave was probably built in the second half of the 15th century, after which it was changed in baroque style. The squat buttresses with steep desks, the simple baroque arched windows , the wrought-iron gable cross decorated with a small figure of the risen Christ are from the second half of the 18th century . The mighty choir tower from the late 15th century with a retracted bell chamber and pointed helmet is characterized by square upper floors, coffin cornice and wall slots in beveled stone frames. In the north there is a two-storey sacristy or oratory extension , in the west a small vestibule .

Between the church and the defensive wall is the (local) cemetery and, next to it, the so-called cholera cemetery , in which the Soossers who died of cholera in 1831 are buried. The secondary wrought iron grave cross located there comes from the hand of the Viennese bell caster and Sooss benefactor Andreas Klein († 1786 in Sooss) and is likely to have been made in the second quarter of the 18th century. The cast iron cemetery cross was erected in 1848.

Martinek barracks
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Martinek barracks ObjectID
101400

KG location
: Sooss
The barracks planned by the Austrian architect Leo Splett was built between May 1938 and June 1941 for a flag department of the Air Force of the Wehrmacht .

The extensive complex of numerous building complexes was a base of the Soviet occupation in 1945-55 , in 1956 an artillery force school was set up in the Baden artillery barracks (the official name 1956-63) , and in 1957 an army driving school.

The one to two-storey buildings, at right angles to each other, usually have (partly expanded) gable roofs . In the northeast of the built-up barracks area, closest to the command building, is the segmented main entrance.

The barracks extend over the municipal areas of Sooss and Baden . The Soosser portion of originally eight hectares is now only 0.21 hectares. On this, near the southernmost transverse tract of the facility, there is a generally unoccupied entrance / exit, which is embedded in the fence on Badner Strasse and which is used for operations and deliveries becomes.

Part of the 1st Vienna High Spring Pipeline
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Part of the 1st Vienna Mountain Spring Pipeline ObjectID
129172

KG location
: Sooss
The first Viennese spring water pipeline is part of the Viennese water supply and was the first supply of Vienna with safe drinking water. After four years of construction, the 95-kilometer line was opened on October 24, 1873.

Legend

The source for the selection of the objects are the monuments lists of the respective federal state published annually by the BDA. The table contains the following information:

Photo: Photograph of the monument. Click the photo generates an enlarged view. Next to it are one or two symbols:
More pictures available The symbol means that more photos of the property are available. They are displayed by clicking the symbol.
Upload your own photo By clicking the symbol, further photos of the object can be uploaded to the Wikimedia Commons media archive .
Monument: Name of the monument. The designation is given as it is used by the Federal Monuments Office (BDA) . The internal object identification number (ObjectID) is also given.
Location: The address is given. In the case of free-standing objects without an address ( e.g. shrines ), an address is usually given that is close to the object. By calling up the link Location , the location of the monument is displayed in various map projects. The cadastral community (KG) is indicated below this.
Description: Brief information about the monument.

The table is sorted alphabetically according to the location of the monument. The sorting criterion is the cadastral municipality and within this the address.

By clicking on "Map with all coordinates" (top right in the article) the location of all monuments in the selected map object is displayed.

Abbreviations of the BDA : BR… construction law , EZ… deposit number, GB… land register , GstNr. … Property number, KG… cadastral community, 0G … property number address

literature

  • Viktor Wallner: Houses, people and stories - a Baden anecdotal walk. Society of Friends of Baden, Baden 2002.
  • Peter Aichinger-Rosenberger (among others): Lower Austria south of the Danube. Band 1: A to L . Dehio-Handbuch , Die Kunstdenkmäler Österreichs, topographic monuments inventory. Berger, Horn / Vienna 2003, ISBN 3-85028-364-X .
  • Peter Aichinger-Rosenberger (among others): Lower Austria south of the Danube. Volume 2: M to Z . Dehio-Handbuch , Die Kunstdenkmäler Österreichs, topographic monuments inventory. Berger, Horn / Vienna 2003, ISBN 3-85028-365-8 .
  • Walter Pfeifer: The parish church and the pastors at Sooss . From: Karl Maurovitsch (compilation): Chronicle of the market town of Sooss. Around 1200 to 2006 . Sn, s. l. 2008 (?), P. 116. - Text online (PDF; 340 kB) , accessed on May 15, 2012.

Web links

Commons : Listed objects in Sooss  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b Lower Austria - immovable and archaeological monuments under monument protection. (PDF), ( CSV ). Federal Monuments Office , as of February 14, 2020.
  2. a b Aichinger-Rosenberger: Lower Austria south of the Danube , Volume 2, p. 2265.
  3. Karl Maurovitsch (configuration): Chronicle of the market town Sooß. Around 1200 to 2006 . Sn , s. l. 2008 (?), P. 101. - Text online (PDF; 1.52 MB) ( Memento of the original from August 20, 2011 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , accessed May 15, 2012. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.sooss.gv.at
  4. a b Pfeifer: The parish church and the pastors in Sooss , p. 116.
  5. ^ Aichinger-Rosenberger: Lower Austria south of the Danube , Volume 2, p. 2266.
  6. a b Wallner: Häuser , p. 179 f.
  7. ^ Aichinger-Rosenberger: Lower Austria south of the Danube , Volume 1, p. 220.
  8. Rescue from the economic crisis: huge land purchases for the barracks. In:  Badener Zeitung , No. 34/1938 (LIX. Volume), April 27, 1938, p. 3. (Online at ANNO ).Template: ANNO / Maintenance / bzt
  9. § 2a Monument Protection Act in the legal information system of the Republic of Austria .

Remarks

  1. The Africa explorer (and honorary citizen of Sooss) Oskar Lenz (1848–1925) also found his final resting place here. - Pfeifer: The parish church and the pastors in Sooss , p. 116.