Luegermayer-Schlössl

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Luegermayer-Schlössl or Villa Voglsang
Luegermayer-Schlössl: side view

The Luegermayer-Schlössl , also called Villa Voglsang or Villa Lobkowitz, is located in the Parsch part of Salzburg (Fürbergstraße 65).

The name "Villa Voglsang" refers to the pastures in the area, where songbirds were caught in autumn to keep them in cages over the winter. It served as a pleasure palace for both Salzburg's archbishops and various nobles. These included those of Freysing, the Counts of Kuenburg, the Lords of Löwenheimb and, from 1714, the Daubrawa von Daubraweik. The Mozarts and WA Mozart were friends with this familyis said to have dedicated a symphony to the Daubrawas. In the following, a number of middle-class owners of the Schlössl should be mentioned (Poschinger, Kroiß, hat manufacturer Pflaum). In 1884 the Luegermayer-Schlössl was bought by Princess Juliane Lobkowitz, who had a large extension built. After that, the property was inherited by Baron Max von Rednitz, in 1901 by purchase to Helene Lenz and in 1922 to the Stockhammer family, who still own it today.

The cubic core of the Schlössl dates from the 16th and 17th centuries. The original house had three window axes and, on the four corners of the building, cantilevered polygonal turrets with a hipped roof and a final knob. On the east side there is a side wing two axes wide and two and a half axes deep, the first southern axis of which forms an arbor supported by iron pillars. The wing added in 1889 is on the west side and is a two-storey, cubic block with three axes and an adjoining wing to the north with two axes. In 1927 the balcony on the ground floor was closed and the iron structure was replaced by solid masonry. In 1934 a garage was added to the north. Basically, the building corresponds to the building fabric commissioned by Princess Lobkowitz in 1889 . The formerly spacious garden has been significantly reduced due to road widening and houses close to the Schlössl.

literature

  • Helene Karrer: 200 years of villa construction in Aigen. 1990, Salzburg: Association Aigen-Initiative Salzburg.

Web links

Coordinates: 47 ° 48 ′ 8.8 ″  N , 13 ° 4 ′ 11.2 ″  E