Villa Lütge

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Street view
Left street bay window
Risalit of the southern front

The Villa Lütge is a neo-baroque listed building in the Magdeburg district of Diesdorf .

location

The villa has the postal name Hannoversche Straße 7, 39110 Magdeburg. The Hannoversche Straße runs as part of the state road 49 north around the center of the district Diesdorf and establishes the connection between Magdeburg and the neighboring village Niederndodeleben . The villa property is opposite the confluence of the Kümmelsberg road and borders the Schrote river in the south .

history

The property on which the villa was later built came into the possession of the Lütge family in 1876. In the early 1890s, the migratory and breeding cattle supplier Friedrich Lütge commissioned the architect Alf Hurum , who later also planned the Villa Bennewitz , to create the design for a representative villa. According to the plans of Hurum, the villa and an adjoining cattle barn were built in 1895 after the previous buildings had previously been demolished. The original use of the villa consisted of two apartments for father and son Lütge, an office and staff apartments in the basement and attic. After 1990 the villa was unused for several years and threatened to deteriorate. In 2009 the villa was included in the Magdeburg monument register. In the course of the renovation of the villa building, the stable was torn down and row houses were built in the western part of the property.

Building description

The villa building, built in the neo-baroque style, has an asymmetrical L-shaped floor plan. The street front has a length of 27.61 m, the garden side measures only 20.31 m. The south side is 12.44 m wide and the north gable 9.81 m wide. The building was designed on three floors with a basement, upper floor and attic. The five-axis street front is provided with a two-story and a one-story risalit , each with blinded oriels. On the right risalit, at the level of the attic, a triple window was let in, the arches of which are supported by pilasters . The facade base, the building edges, bay windows and window frames have sandstone-colored plaster. A two-story risalit with a bay window is also in front of the south facade. The flat mansard roof was provided with high oval skylights, the appearance of which was changed during the renovation. The ceiling height of the living rooms on the upper floor varies between 3.8 and 4.1 m.

literature

  • Magdeburg - architecture and urban development , Janos Stekovics publishing house, Halle / Sa. 2001, ISBN 3929330334 , p. 202
  • Sabine Ullrich: Wilhelminian style villas in Magdeburg , Magdeburg City Planning Office, p. 58 ff

Web links

Coordinates: 52 ° 7 ′ 51.5 ″  N , 11 ° 34 ′ 23 ″  E