Prinz-Georg-Strasse 11

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
House Prinz-Georg-Straße 11 (2012)

The building at Prinz-Georg-Straße 11 in Düsseldorf-Pempelfort was built from 1906 to 1907 based on a design by the architect Peter Hoenigs. In 1925 the ground floor was rebuilt and expanded. After the attic was damaged in World War II, it had to be replaced. On August 20, 1985 the building was listed as a historical monument.

The building is assigned to the Neo-Renaissance. Architectural details include the rustic facing, the loggia, the triangular bay window, a group of windows divided into three parts, the console heads and ornaments adorning the pillars, stone spiers, a half-timbered gable and a slate tower:

“[…] The facade of the house is strongly structured. The rustic veneer on the plinth extends up to the window sills on the ground floor and around the entrance loggia. The loggia opens on the left in the facade. In the base area there are two small, arched windows. A curved staircase leads to the door in the plastered loggia. To the right of it is a window. In the middle of the facade, the basement is accessed through a door. Smaller windows on the right illuminate the base. The facade jumps back above the entrance and shows a balcony with a round arched entrance. Here the wall surface is plastered, while otherwise the facade shows a natural stone facing. On the right is a bay window over a triangular floor plan in front of the upper floor. It starts over a group of three windows. Console heads and ornaments adorn the pillars here. In the middle of the first floor there is an arched window. The upper floor windows have stone fighters. The facade is sloping towards the balcony. A half-timbered gable, in the middle a slate tower and left a slate, curly dormer structure the attic. "

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b Jörg Heimeshoff : Listed houses in Düsseldorf . Nobel, Essen 2001, ISBN 3-922785-68-9 , p. 202
  2. Entry in the monument list of the state capital Düsseldorf at the Institute for Monument Protection and Preservation

Coordinates: 51 ° 14 ′ 19.9 ″  N , 6 ° 47 ′ 10.8 ″  E