Marktstrasse 18 (Warburg)

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View from Sternstrasse (2018)

Marktstrasse 18 denotes a residential and commercial building in Warburger Neustadt on the corner of Marktstrasse and Sternstrasse. It was built in 1862, added to the topography of the Federal Republic of Germany as a monument in 2015 , and entered the list of architectural monuments in Warburg in October 2019 .

Location and architecture

Location of the previous building in Warburg, original cadastre 1831–34
View into Sternstrasse (2018)
View into the street between the cities, on the left the Café Blome (2018)
Gravestone of the builder Marie Christiane Püttmann in the castle cemetery
Photo around 1900 (Photogr. Verlag A. Hoffman, Dresden, Liliengasse 24)
View from Josef-Wirmer-Straße (2018)
Double door from 1862 on the 2nd floor (2018)

The house is at one of the highest points in the city center. At it, Sternstrasse, where most of the aristocratic residences were located in the Middle Ages, crosses with Marktstrasse, which connects Neustädter Markt via the town hall between the cities with the Old Town Market .

The current building is a three-storey half-timbered house with a spacious half-hipped roof . The upright position is irregular, with the symmetrically designed gable side facing Marktstrasse having a width of 13 compartments with 5 window axes and the eaves side facing Sternstrasse a width of 16 compartments with 7 window axes. In the gable area there are three windows in the corresponding central axes of the first and second floors, and two additional round windows in the slopes .

The identically designed wooden lattice windows each have fighters , including two Superagriseal wing and above the skylights Superagriseal unit wing and profiled frames. The windows on the first floor are crowned with window canopies designed as classicistic triangular gables, which underlines the special importance of this floor as a Bel floor .

The ground floor, which was thoroughly modernized as a shop in 1963 and partially lowered to street level, is characterized on Marktstrasse and the eastern part of Sternstrasse facade by a shop window front designed as a curtain wall up to the corner , in which a spacious entrance zone with space for the presentation of goods is integrated. A projecting flight roof with integrated awnings is arranged over the front of the shop window as protection against rain and to avoid glare , which carries advertising lettering with fluorescent tubes.

history

The house had a previous building, the floor plan of approx. 24 × 13 m in the original plan of the city of Warburg made in 1831–34. In 1849 it was house number 105. The owner was the tailor and cap maker Christian Püttmann, who had settled in Warburg around 1835. There was also a shoemaker's workshop in the house, which was run by the shoemaker Temme, as well as living rooms for a further 13 people. Warburg experienced a slight economic upswing during the tenure (1843–1879) of Mayor Heinrich Fischer and as a result of the railway connection begun in 1847. Püttmann died in 1850, leaving behind his wife Marie Christiane, née Eichhorn (1807–1876), and two sons, Wolrad and Louis. On November 12, 1857, this house, along with 15 other houses and six barns in the Sternstrasse / Marktstrasse area, fell victim to a city fire.

In 1862, Marie Christiane Püttmann and her sons rebuilt the house as a residential and commercial building in the form it still had. The financing came from funds from the Provinzial Feuersozietät . With a footprint of 17 × 13 m, the new building was slightly shorter than the previous building, but had three floors over three meters high on a 1 m high basement plinth. Windows and doors were given a noble classicist building decoration. The main entrance was in the middle of the gable side facing Marktstrasse, to the left and right of it were the workshop and business premises. The main facade facing Marktstrasse was plastered and the ground floor was provided with a scratched ashlar that still existed in the 20th century. Marie Christiane Püttmann died in 1876 and was buried in the Warburg castle keep. Your tombstone, recognized as a monument, is still standing today. Wolrad Püttmann, who had inherited the house and business from his mother, died in 1893. The business was then carried on by his wife Carolina and daughter. Wolrad's brother Louis Püttmann meanwhile had a textile and fur goods store in the nearby Hauptstrasse 63, which existed as " Louis Püttmann GmbH & Co. KG " until it was closed on March 26, 2018 .

In 1903 the house at Marktstrasse 18 was sold to the shoemaker and shoe dealer Albert Pennig from Germete (1861–1940), who had been running a shop in the house at Marktstrasse 19 opposite since 1885. He moved his business and residence there and was named as the owner in the Warburg address book in 1909. The house remained in the possession of the Pennig family for over 100 years and developed as the “ Pennig shoe store ” into the leading specialist shop in Warburg and the surrounding area. In 1948 the family had new shop windows installed on the ground floor, the facade plaster removed and the facades renovated with half-timbered views. In 1963 Albert's grandson Anton Pennig had the ground floor completely redesigned and modernized for use as a modern shoe shop. In 1976 and 1980 there were further conversions and an extension conversion on Sternstraße, which included an extension, the storage rooms and a staircase to the floor above, also used as a warehouse. In 1988 an apartment was installed in the attic, which is exposed to Markstrasse and through newly created dormer windows on the eaves side. In 1995 the Pennig family withdrew from the company and leased the business to the shoe retailer Jörg Sprenger for 10 years. On February 13, 2008 the company " Albert Pennig Inh. Anton Pennig " was deleted from the commercial register of the Paderborn Local Court .

In 2015, the real estate company ICP-GmbH , based in Salzkotten , bought the building, initially to renovate it according to the planning of the architect Lothar Beltz. She offered the apartments publicly for sale as condominiums. In the same year, the house was included in the monument topography of the Federal Republic of Germany and with it the determination of monument worthiness. The contract with the shoe store was not renewed, it moved to another location in 2016. Since the sale of the apartments and the shop failed, the renovation was not started, but the house has been completely empty since then. In autumn 2018 it became known that the investor was planning to completely demolish the building and replace it with a new building with 10 condominiums. As a result, a local political debate broke out about whether the house should be included in the list of monuments, which would prevent it from being demolished. This was followed by further citizen applications for entry in the list of monuments and numerous letters to the editor from citizens interested in monument protection against the demolition. Only a visit on August 21, 2019 and a subsequent statement from the petitions committee of the North Rhine-Westphalian state parliament , called by 174 citizens, brought a rethink among the city and investor and on October 16, 2019 the entry in the official Warburg monument list .

On April 2, 2020, the German Foundation for Monument Protection acquired the building as trustee of the Warburg Monument Foundation in order to renovate it with approx. € 2 million and return it to use as a residential office building. She intends to use the proceeds later for further monument measures in Warburg for charitable purposes.

literature

  • Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany , monuments in Westphalia, district Höxter, volume 1.1 .: The city of Warburg ,, edit. by Gotthard Kießling, Michael Christian Müller and Burkhard Wollenweber, with contributions by Peter Barthold, Hans Joachim Betzer, Daniel Bérenger, Franz-Josef Dubbi, Horst Gerbaulet, Detlef Grzegorczyk, Fred Kaspar, Hans-Werner Peine, ed. by the Landschaftsverband Westfalen-Lippe and the Hanseatic City of Warburg, LWL monument preservation, landscape and building culture in Westphalia, Imhof-Verlag , Petersberg 2015, ISBN 978-3-7319-0239-3
  • Svenja Brüggemann: What takes a long time ... , in: Monuments , Volume 30, No. 4, Bonn, August 2020, ISSN 0941-7125

Web links

Commons : Marktstraße 18, Warburg  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Dieter Scholz, October 18, 2018
  2. Census files 1849, StA. Warburg
  3. Monument topography 2015, p. 47.
  4. Historical photos from the Pennig family
  5. Monument topography, pp. 182f
  6. Dieter Scholz, October 18, 2018
  7. Paderborn District Court , HRA 3159 as of March 26, 2018
  8. www.myheritage.de to Albert Pennig online
  9. ^ Advertisement from 1935 for the 50th anniversary of Albert Pennig, family property
  10. ^ Warburg address book, Warburg 1909
  11. StA. Warburg, building application dated December 13, 1948
  12. StA. Warburg, building permit dated March 17, 1963
  13. StA. Warburg, building permits dated March 28, 1976 and February 5, 1980
  14. StA. Warburg, building permit dated August 4, 1988
  15. Paderborn District Court, HRA 3145 as of February 13, 2008
  16. Katharina Engelhardt, July 27, 2016
  17. Ralf Brenner, September 26, 2018,
  18. Hermann Ludwig, September 29, 2018
  19. Ralf Benner: Investor is considering legal action. In: Westfalen-Blatt of March 21, 2019 (accessed on May 28, 2019).
  20. Hermann Ludwig, Elmar Nolte a. a .: The necessity of the demolition questioned , Neue Westfälische , September 27, 2018
  21. Elke Chmella-Emrich timbered backdrop will be a piece of poorer , Westfalenblatt Warburg, October 6, 2018
  22. Winfried Brösch: City administration has the duty to represent the interests of the citizenry , Neue Westfälische Warburg, October 10, 2018
  23. Gisela Schulz: Restoring instead of tearing down , Westfalenblatt, October 11, 2018
  24. Johannes Wasmuth : Abstract: "The city has not done its homework" , Neue Westfälische Warburg, October 12, 2018
  25. Jump up ↑ Heinrich Becker, Elfriede Dittmann, Thomas Erdmann, Karl Gassmann, Sabine Hauptmann, Christoph Hofstätter, Nedzat Kurtischl, Christian Laudage, Rainer Mues, Gabi Schäfers, Gisela Schulz, Margit Schulte-Kellinghaus, Wolfgang Strathausen, Iris Mayland: Kulturgut wird vernetzt , in : New Westphalian Warburg, October 16, 2018
  26. Dieter Scholz: Warburgers oppose the demolition of Pennig's house. A citizen application requests entry in the list of monuments , in: Neue Westfälische Warburg, October 22, 2018
  27. ^ Günther Kasten: No cheap architecture with false frameworks , Westfalenblatt, Warburg, October 22, 2018
  28. Jürgen Thon: Luxuswohnungen Warburg , Neue Westfälische, November 5, 2018
  29. Christoph Humburg: Totally Missing Urban Planning , Neue Westfälische, November 16, 2018
  30. ^ Reinhard Humburg: Protect the house temporarily, reader doubts the financial strength of the investor, Westfalenblatt, November 27, 2018
  31. Elke Chmella-Emrich: Planned new building is a foreign body, Westfalenblatt, Warburg, December 7, 2018
  32. Winfried Brösch: Pennig House: "Even the cause of the hype set" , Neue Westfälische, December 19, 2018
  33. Winfried Brösch: Pennig House: "Violation of procedural law" , Neue Westfälische, May 15, 2019
  34. Johannes Wasmuth: Warburgs monuments in danger, Pennig House: Editor of the letter to the editor criticizes Mayor Michael Stickeln , Westfalenblatt, May 21, 2019
  35. Johannes Wasmuth: Empty threat , Westfalenblatt, July 6, 2019
  36. ^ Neue Westfälische, July 9, 2019: Letters to the editor from Johannes Wasmuth, Reinhard Humburg and Uli Nolte
  37. Bernd Ulrich: By no means final , Neue Westfälische, July 10, 2019
  38. Dieter Scholz: Pennig House : The North Rhine-Westphalia Committee stands in front of a locked door in Warburg , Neue Westfälische Warburg, August 21, 2019
  39. Ralf Benner: Access to Pennig House denied , Westfalenblatt Warburg, August 21, 2019
  40. Ralf Benner: Pennighaus is a monument , Westfalenblatt Warburg, August 23, 2019
  41. Dieter Scholz: Owner withdraws demolition application , Neue Westfälische Warburg, August 25, 2019
  42. Jürgen Vahle: Pennig House: City Waiting for Letter from Salzkotten , Westfalenblatt Warburg, September 4, 2019
  43. Dieter Scholz: Pennig House: Written application not yet received , Neue Westfälische Warburg, September 5, 2019
  44. Ralf Benner: Pennighaus: Letter from the investor is here , Westfalenblatt Warburg, September 17, 2019
  45. ^ Jürgen Vahle: Monument Foundation buys Pennig House , Westfalenblatt Warburg, April 2, 2020
  46. ^ Hermann Ludwig: Foundation buys Pennig House in Warburg , Neue Westfälische Warburg, April 3, 2020
  47. ^ Website of the German Foundation for Monument Protection, accessed on April 4, 2020

Coordinates: 51 ° 29 ′ 16.9 ″  N , 9 ° 8 ′ 49.8 ″  E