Villa Fischbach

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Villa Fischbach, Puschkinallee 5

The Villa Fischbach is a listed building in Potsdam. The villa is in the Nauener Vorstadt , Puschkinallee 5.

history

The villa in what was then Capellenbergstrasse 7 (later 5) was built in 1872/73 on behalf of the court plumber Eduard Fischbach (1811–1877). The design was made by the architect Reinhold Persius , the execution was carried out by master bricklayer Albert Lüdicke († probably 1901, at the latest 1903). According to the Potsdam address book for 1879, the widow Marie Fischbach, née Gäde, is the subsequent owner. She lived in the villa with the building inspector widow Helene Schneider, née Fischbach, who is noted in the address book for 1903 as the owner.

The community of heirs "Fischbachsche Erben", registered in 1904 and 1905, sold the property to the Döberitz landowner widow Wilhelmine Elisabeth Rogge, née von Bredow (1835–1917), who lived there until she died. The property then went to the “Rogge-Döberitz heirs”. The Elisabeth Rogge-Doeberitz Foundation was established on January 27, 1920 with the aim of "improving the living conditions of single women in need in the state of Brandenburg." The address books now show the "Rogge-Döberitzsche Family Foundation" as the owner. In 1920, the Housing Office forced the separation of apartments that accommodated several people.

From around 1979, Soviet military personnel used the building as a kindergarten. Repair work was carried out after 1997. The villa is used commercially (as of 2017).

architecture

The five-axis plastered building, built in the late classical style, is two-story with a flat hipped roof . The street-side façade is preceded by a two-storey loggia with a flat triangular gable like a risalit . The gable was originally crowned by Akrotere . The entablature is supported on the ground floor by pillars and columns, on the upper floor by pillars and caryatids . A flight of stairs leads to the front garden. The ground floor of the window past wall surfaces with pilasters and ornamented Verdachungen edged, indicating the acroteria. Arched segment roofs are attached over the windows of the upper floor. The entrance area protruding slightly from the cubic structure is on the south side.

literature

  • Ulrike Bröcker: The Potsdam suburbs 1861-1900. From the tower villa to the apartment building. 2nd Edition. Wernersche, Worms 2005, ISBN 3-88462-208-0 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Erika Stix, Martin Conrath: To the history of the Döberitzer Heide . Part 9, Berlin 2011, p. 26.
  2. ↑ List of foundations of incorporated foundations under civil law based in the state of Brandenburg. Directory no. 42, file number 742–00 / 7042, as of June 6, 2017.
  3. a b Bröcker, p. 281.

Coordinates: 52 ° 24 '39 "  N , 13 ° 3' 33.1"  E