Villa Alte Ziegelei

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Villa Alte Ziegelei zu Lobstädt on a postcard from 1906

The Villa Alte Ziegelei is located in the Lobstädt district of the Saxon community of Neukieritzsch at Glück-Auf-Straße 11. The structure-defining, listed villa building was built around 1900 as a residential and commercial building for the local steam brickworks .

description

The two-story building rests on a basement with a base made of artificial stone . Above is the ground floor, designed as a mezzanine floor, which is optically separated from the upper floor by a cornice made of ashlar, as well as a fully constructed mansard under a protruding platform roof with beaver tail covering and ironwork parapet.

A stair tower standing on a rectangular base, in the upper area with ornamental frameworks on the south side of the building, whose covered helmet with a compass rose and weather vane as the crowning of the tower rises above the ridge line of the property by a third, dominates the view of the villa, which also has a central projection on the street side green Art Nouveau ornamental framework and ornamental plastered surfaces under a crippled hip that opens wide and is worn by decorated headbands.

The brown wooden lattice windows are massive Sohlbänken , jambs and lintels enclosed with Tropfenornamentik and Lambrequins decorated. A large, three-part window on the upper floor to the right of the risalit and a smaller window with shutters in the attic in the middle of the risalit interrupt the six-axis window structure of the street view.

history

Villa Alte Ziegelei zu Lobstädt, southeast view in summer 2015

The cultural monument was built around 1900 by the Leipzig-based owners of the local steam brickworks on the factory site for residential and business purposes. The brickworks with the manufacturer's villa then came into the possession of the Dora and Helene coal works. After 1945 the brickworks continued to operate as VEB. At this time, the interior of the villa building underwent several renovations with regard to the living space division, with various decorative elements such as door frames, stucco ceilings, stoves and lead glasses being removed. The spire was dilapidated after World War II and was demolished in the early 1960s. Also in GDR times, the wooden balconies and the entrance loggia were partially dismantled and their entrances walled up.

In the 1980s, the roof skin and the windows on the rear of the building were partially renovated, removing the original wooden box windows and changing the clear dimensions. After a fire, the property has been empty since 1997.

The monument has been extensively renovated and expanded for residential use since 2018.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ State Office for the Preservation of Monuments in Saxony: Monument Document. In: List of monuments Monument Office Saxony. Retrieved February 10, 2019 .

Coordinates: 51 ° 8 ′ 17.6 "  N , 12 ° 26 ′ 53.8"  E