Robert-Werner-Platz
The Robert-Werner-Platz is an inner-city square in the original mark of the Saxon city of Radebeul . The square is located about 250 meters east-northeast of the approach to Rundling Am Kreis , the center of the village of the original old community of Alt-Radebeul . In addition, the main street begins at him . The Robert-Werner-Platz − Am Kreis− Brunnenplatz axis forms the part of the redevelopment area of the center and village center of Radebeul-Ost , south of the railway tracks , with the help of which the center of Radebeul-Ost is to be upgraded.
Location and development
Robert-Werner-Platz is located northeast of the old Radeuler village center, about halfway to the entrance to the Radebeul Ost train station , which opened in 1860 . H. After crossing the square, it goes over today's road bridge at the beginning of Bahnhofstrasse over the tracks of the narrow-gauge Lößnitzgrundbahn and the Leipzig – Dresden railway line , historically the first German long-distance railway line operated by the Leipzig-Dresden Railway Company . The square is rectangular in a north-easterly direction, and the house numbers run like this, with the odd numbers on the south side.
On the southern narrow side, which is narrower than the other, there is a junction of the streets that meet there, Serkowitzer Straße from the west, Schildenstraße from the north and Kaditzer Straße from the south, into which the Dresdner Straße joins from the southeast. For a long time the northeast narrow side represented the beginning of Gartenstrasse; Since 2013, this has been extended to Schildenstrasse for through traffic and the square has been traffic-calmed. The southern long side extends into Mittelstrasse, while the northern long side formerly belonged to Bahnhofstrasse.
The square was also upgraded with the traffic calming: the half on the Gartenstrasse side is now a green area with a children's playground and water jets, where previously there was a wild parking area. The south-western half is built on, there is the address Robert-Werner-Platz 1 / 3a, the oldest still existing inn in Alt-Radebeul, the inn "Scharfe Ecke" . It was named after the previously difficult traffic route. The hospitality business was a row bar in the village in 1843 , and since 1860 it had the right to drink wine .
Several of the buildings grouped around the square are under monument protection and are therefore listed in the list of cultural monuments in Radebeul (district) :
- South-eastern long side: Kaditzer Str. 2, No. 3, No. 5, No. 11 (in the gallery from left to right as on the square: the buildings show the original rural development)
- north-western long side: No. 6 (the building from 1896/97 shows the suburban development in historicism)
- North-east narrow side: Housing complex Robert-Werner-Platz with the central building Robert-Werner-Platz 10, the left corner building Hauptstraße 1 and the right corner building Mittelstraße 2. The right corner of the square is occupied by the corner building Mittelstraße 1, while opposite the Hauptstraße 1 Gartenstrasse 10 complements the bridge ramp.
Awards
The building owner of Resthofs 2006 Robert Werner Platz 11 received the Radebeuler Bauherrenpreis in the category Memorial Nursing repair .
In the gala state competition “Gardens in the City” in 2014, Robert-Werner-Platz received a special prize for redesigning it as a city garden.
The building owner of the square, i.e. the city itself, was awarded the Radebeul Builder Prize in 2016 in the category of garden and open space design .
designation
Until 1932, the square existed simply as an expansion of the streets that meet there, in particular Bahnhofstrasse, Gartenstrasse and Mittelstrasse; the house numbers of the houses on the edge belonged to these streets.
Robert Werner (1862–1932), who died in 1932, was mayor of the city of Radebeul (1924–1927) and had previously been mayor since 1893. He was also made an honorary citizen of Radebeul at the end of his mayorship . On the occasion of his death, the square was dedicated to his name.
local residents
The architect Max Czopka previously lived at Bahnhofstrasse 1a.
literature
- Volker Helas (arrangement): City of Radebeul . Ed .: State Office for Monument Preservation Saxony, Large District Town Radebeul (= Monument Topography Federal Republic of Germany . Monuments in Saxony ). SAX-Verlag, Beucha 2007, ISBN 978-3-86729-004-3 .
- Design guideline for the redevelopment area "Zentrum und Dorfkern Radebeul-Ost" . In: Large district town of Radebeul (ed.): Planning and building in Radebeul . Radebeul 2008 ( online ).
- Urban development master plan; The reorganization concept for the redevelopment area "Zentrum und Dorfkern Radebeul-Ost". In: Radebeul makes steam; Newspaper for the redevelopment area "Center and village center Radebeul-Ost." No. 1, December 2005, p. 6 f.
Web links
- Redevelopment area "center and village center Radebeul-Ost".
- Photo representation of the redevelopment area center and village center Radebeul-Ost.
Individual evidence
- ↑ Radebeuler Bauherrenpreis 2006. In: Radebeuler Bauherrenpreis. Association for Monument Preservation and New Buildings, Radebeul, accessed on January 18, 2015 .
- ↑ Radebeul has one of the most beautiful city gardens in Saxony. In: Radebeul makes steam; Newspaper for the redevelopment area "Center and village center Radebeul-Ost." No. 17, December 2014, p. 5.
- ↑ Beate Erler: Nicely built; The winners of the Radebeul builders' award could hardly have been more different. In: saechsische.de from November 7, 2016.
Coordinates: 51 ° 5 ′ 53.8 " N , 13 ° 40 ′ 36" E