Villa Ferch-Erggelet

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Villa Ferch-Erggelet
Villa Ferch-Erggelet: side wing

The Villa Ferch-Erggelet (actually Zezi leather factory or Neustein leather factory ) is a castle-like factory building at the beginning of Arenbergstrasse in Salzburg . It is located on the southernmost edge of the right-hand old town in the outer stone area . The name "Villa Ferch-Erggelet" has only been in use since the beginning of the 21st century.

history

A predecessor of the current building was named Neustein and was first mentioned in documents in 1596. The small house belonged to Gut Bürglstein. From around 1700 about eight friars of the Bartholomeans lived there , who moved to the Bürgerspital Kaplanhaus in 1773 and was dissolved as a Salzburg institution in 1783.

In 1783 Christian Zezi, the owner of the Zezihaus and the Jos. Ant. Zezi, the building. He had the old house largely demolished in 1787 and, together with Vital Schwendtner, built a new leather factory with a stately facade there by the Salzburg court architect Georg Laschensky. The building looks completely different from what one generally imagines factories of the 19th century. The Salzburg historian Lorenz Hübner wrote that it "[...] from the other side of the bank of the Salzach River is a very pleasant sight [...]". In 1800 19 workers processed 1200 domestic cowhide and calfskin hides annually there.

In 1872 Kajetan Schneeberger bought the factory from the Guggenthaler Bräu Weickl, as well as the Gartenstöckl above and the barn with the stables. In 1886 Max Freiherr von Eggelet became the new owner. From 1931 to 1938, Ms. Marianne Eggelet ran her “tearoom”, which is unique in Salzburg.

Today the house with its two splendid, wood-paneled rooms and its vault, including the large garden, is rented for receptions, banquets or concerts.

literature

  • Peter Walder-Gottsbacher: Nonntal - Inner and Outer Stone in Ancient Views. 1996, Zaltbommel / Netherlands: European Library, ISBN 90 288 6349 4 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. quoted from Herbert Klein: 340 years of Jos. Ant. Zezi (1610-1950). 125 years of the Arrigler-Haagn family (1825–1950) . Jos. Ant.Zezi, Salzburg 1950, p. 42.

Coordinates: 47 ° 48 ′ 0.9 ″  N , 13 ° 3 ′ 14.8 ″  E