Villa Gustav Ziller

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Villa Gustav Ziller

The villa of the Lößnitz master builder Gustav Ziller is located in the Serkowitz district of the Saxon city of Radebeul , on Augustusweg 3, right on the border with Oberlößnitz . It is the house next to the Ziller brothers' business premises , which his brother Moritz Ziller lived in.

description

Villa Gustav Ziller, details

The three-storey, today under monument protection standing villa has a square floor plan without the annexes. The well overhanging, flattened hipped roof is covered with slate, on it was formerly a roof garden. The house stands on a plastered base. The mezzanine-like , subsequently added second floor is decorated with stucco ornamentation.

In the main view of the street is a flat central projection with a once wooden, but now massive porch porch and a vented gable under which there is a Venetian window with colored decorations. The decorated exposed beams are colored, in between there are colored plaster fields with flower hangings. The rest of the facade is structured by pilaster-like corner pilasters and cornices , and there are also window roofs on consoles on the first floor.

The two-storey utility wing on the back has lower storey heights and a gable roof .

On the south side there was a large house park, the trees of which meanwhile form an "old tree population" between vineyard walls.

The enclosure consists of wooden fence panels over rubble stone plinths that are located between sandstone pillars.

history

Villa Gustav Ziller, architectural drawing around 1869
The villas of the two brothers Ziller (left Moritz, right Gustav) after their death in 1912. The meadow in the foreground is Oberlößnitz

In 1869 the Ziller brothers erected this country house-like villa on the neighboring property of their own business premises as a two-storey building for Gustav Ziller as the client. In 1887 Gustav Ziller increased the building to three floors. The address at that time, Hauptstraße 2, belonged to Serkowitz, as the municipality border ran in the middle of the street, but it was shown as Oberlössnitz in the company advertisements of the Ziller brothers .

In 1913 there was a major interior renovation, probably to a rental villa. The new resident was the hygienist and bacteriologist Heinrich Conradi , a former employee of Robert Koch in Berlin, who, in addition to his work in the Saxon State Health Office, taught as a private lecturer at the Technical University of Dresden from 1913 . Around 1920, insensitive additions were made to the house on both side fronts and the rear. In the 1943 address book, Gustav's son Otto (1889–1958) is listed as the architect and owner at the address of his parents' house (2nd floor), including the architect Bernhard Weyrather , with whom Ziller worked from 1922 to 1926.

Towards the end of the 1950s, the young sculptor Helmut Heinze had his first studio there.

From 2003 to 2005 the building was completely renovated.

literature

Web links

Commons : Villa Gustav Ziller  - Collection of Images

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Large district town of Radebeul (ed.): Directory of the cultural monuments of the town of Radebeul . Radebeul May 24, 2012, p. 7 (Last list of monuments published by the city of Radebeul. The Lower Monument Protection Authority, which has been located in the Meißen district since 2012, has not yet published a list of monuments for Radebeul.).
  2. see street-level city map in: Frank Andert (editor): Stadtlexikon Radebeul. Historical manual for the Loessnitz . 2nd, slightly changed edition. City administration, Radebeul 2006
  3. see billboard in: Frank Andert (editor): Stadtlexikon Radebeul. Historical manual for the Loessnitz . 2nd, slightly changed edition. City administration, Radebeul 2006. p. 65
  4. Ingrid Lewek; Wolfgang Tarnowski: Jews in Radebeul 1933–1945 . Extended and revised edition. Major district town of Radebeul / City Archives, Radebeul 2008, p. 23. ISBN 978-3-938460-09-2
  5. Thilo Hansel; Markus Hänsel: On the trail of the Ziller brothers in Radebeul. Architectural considerations . Notschriften Verlag, Radebeul 2008. P. 71

Coordinates: 51 ° 6 ′ 23 "  N , 13 ° 39 ′ 48.3"  E