Paradise (Radebeul)

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The former Berggasthaus Paradies , later Paradies der Lößnitz , is located in the former Gräflich Flemmingschen winery in the Niederlößnitz district of the Saxon town of Radebeul , in Höhenweg 1 / 1a. The name Paradies is used today as the name for the steep slope vineyard, as well as the second name Auf den Bergen . The Paradies vineyard is located in the Radebeuler Steinrück single vineyard . The highest point is the former inn itself, it is over 215  m above sea level. Above sea level. The leading past the house way is part of the Saxon wine trail .

paradise

description

View from the Lößnitz paradise towards Radebeul / Dresden (lithograph, mid-19th century)
View from Paradise (1901)

The two-storey plastered building , including the gate system and ancillary building (courtyard tavern), is a listed building and has a size of five to three window axes. It stands on a sandstone plinth and has a gently sloping hipped roof with a protruding eaves with a beam head frieze . In the main view to the south to the mountainside, there is now a single-storey porch, which arose from the originally wooden, glazed veranda . There is a three-axis entrance porch on the north side. In the narrow side views there are balconies.

The windows of the building are arched on the ground floor and rectangular on the upper floor. The dark-painted facade is framed by light, offset corner blocks at the building edges.

In the north there is a single-storey outbuilding over a U-shaped floor plan open to the courtyard with a crooked hip or gable roof .

The property enclosure in the west is formed by a portal system made of quarry stone pillars with cover plates.

Vineyard

Running to the top right: The elongated triangular paradise (1906)

In July 2014, the city of Radebeul announced that the Saxon State Office for Environment, Agriculture and Geology intended to delimit the name of the location in accordance with Section 20 (7) of the Wine Law Implementation Ordinance. According to the map shown, the main boundaries result from Jägerstrasse in the north-west, Jägerhofstrasse in the north and east and the road on the mountains in the south. In the southwest, some parcels are the border properties.

The vineyard previously belonged to the Radebeuler Steinücken site within the Radebeuler Lößnitz site .

history

In 1827, the existing main building of the later restaurant on Höhenweg was renovated in the Tuscan style by Countess Flemming, née Hohenthal , in her vineyard property on the Welzig Mountains . In 1844/1845 the tenant Johann Georg Schimank created a wine bar with "self-made wines", at the same time ownership was passed to the Counts of Hohenthal-Dölkau . Due to its location and the panoramic view over the Elbe Valley, the mountain inn was quickly given the name Paradies , which also brought it several visits from the then Saxon King Friedrich August II. And helped it to gain further reputation.

In the years that followed, changing tenants made paradise a prosperous home-style excursion destination. In 1900, the builder Adolf Neumann therefore added a wooden, glazed veranda on the east side of the valley, which has since been closed.

In 1945 the Counts of Hohenthal-Dölkau were expropriated, but the restaurant continued to operate until 1960. Thereafter, the building served as a warehouse for the Dresden pharmaceuticals factory , which had to be closed by the building authorities in 1975. After the sale in private hands, the house, which is now a listed building, was converted into a residential building and renovated.

The name Paradies is still used today for one of the steep slopes of the Lößnitz (also on the mountains ).

literature

Web links

Commons : Paradise  - collection of images

Individual evidence

  1. Monument entry 08950315. Retrieved on November 4, 2019.
  2. Official announcement for the delimitation of the single location "Paradise". In: Radebeuler Official Journal 07/2014, p. 14 ( online ).
  3. ^ Announcement of the geographical names for German wine; Additions: Certain growing area in Saxony: single location: paradise, large location: Lößnitz, area: Meißen. As of July 23, 2019.
  4. ^ Frank Andert (editor): Stadtlexikon Radebeul. Historical manual for the Loessnitz . Ed .: Large district town of Radebeul. 2nd, slightly changed edition. City archive, Radebeul 2006, p. 147-148 .

Coordinates: 51 ° 7 ′ 2.3 "  N , 13 ° 38 ′ 47"  E