Fritz-Foerster-Platz 2

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Residential and commercial building Fritz-Foerster-Platz 2
Two-way relationship

The office building Fritz-Foerster-Platz 2 (also Bergstrasse 60 ) is a residential and commercial building in Dresden . It stands in the southern suburb on the north-western edge of Fritz-Foerster-Platz in the corner between Nürnberger Straße and Bergstraße .

The striking facade of the building that defines the townscape is largely neoclassical and is enlivened by elements of Art Nouveau. In addition to the southern Beyer building, it is one of two preserved pre-war buildings on Fritz-Foerster-Platz, is a testimony to the former perimeter block development that extended to the neighboring squares and is a listed building .

history

The building was erected in 1910 on what was then Sedanplatz as an office and residential building. The 11th police station was temporarily housed in it.

From 1957 to 1991 the house was the administrative seat of the Dresden-Süd district . After that, it was the seat of the Südvorstadt local office until 1996, before the administration moved to the Plauen town hall and was renamed the Plauen local office (since 2018: Plauen district office ). Some departments of the city administration were also located in the building. The hygienic service moved out in March 2000, in April 2000 the departments for trade and insurance office matters of the public order office moved to the town hall in Theaterstrasse.

The building, which has meanwhile been transferred back to the previous owner, was acquired by the owners of Saxonia Holding and renovated in 2007/08 to meet the requirements of listed buildings. Since then it has been the headquarters of Saxonia Systems AG, which was sold to Carl Zeiss in 2019 . Next to the Fritz-Foerster-Platz entrance, the polymer concrete sculpture Two- Person Relationship created by Ulrich Eißner in 2005 was set up.

A Consulate General of Finland has also been housed in the building since January 2020 .

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Footnotes

  1. ^ Fritz-Foerster-Platz. Urban significance of Fritz-Foerster-Platz. Urban planning urban area, state capital Dresden, 2020, accessed on July 4, 2020 .
  2. ^ Cultural monuments in the Free State of Saxony - monument document. (PDF; 0.5 MB) Saxony State Office for Monument Preservation , accessed on March 29, 2020 .
  3. ^ Fritz-Foerster-Platz. Streets and squares of the southern suburb. In: Dresdner-Stadtteile.de. Retrieved March 29, 2020 .
  4. ^ Wolfgang Schaarschmidt: Dresden 1945: data - facts - victims . Ares Verlag, Graz 2018, ISBN 978-3-902475-76-3 , pp. 134 .
  5. ↑ The hygiene service is moving. State capital Dresden, February 29, 2000, accessed on July 4, 2020 .
  6. Departments are moving to the town hall - service operations are temporarily restricted. State capital Dresden, April 12, 2000, accessed on July 4, 2020 .
  7. Dagmar Möbius: Graduate portraits: The Alumniball co-initiator. In: Contact - The Graduate Magazine of the TU Dresden 3/2011. Retrieved March 29, 2020 .
  8. Carl Zeiss takes over software provider Saxonia Systems from Dresden. In: Dresdner Latest News . November 28, 2019, accessed March 29, 2020 .
  9. In the service of the lucky ones - Viola Klein becomes Finland's honorary consul in Saxony. In: Dresdner Latest News. January 16, 2020, accessed March 29, 2020 .

Web links

Commons : Fritz-Foerster-Platz 2, Dresden  - Collection of images, videos and audio files
Commons : Bergstraße 60, Dresden  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Coordinates: 51 ° 1 ′ 50.8 ″  N , 13 ° 43 ′ 48.5 ″  E