Villa Tautzschgenhof

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The Villa Tautzschgenhof is a large villa-like country house in Graue-Presse-Weg 62 (ancillary building on the street: No. 60) on the outskirts of the Wahnsdorf district of the Saxon town of Radebeul .

Villa Tautzschgenhof, from the south

description

Villa Tautzschgenhof, from the east

Villa with garden

The country house, which is a listed building along with the fountain house, putti and garden, is an "originally preserved Art Nouveau villa with neo-baroque elements". The single-storey building is located deep in the property from the street. It has a mansard roof with an octagonal roof turret with a curved hood. Pointed dormer windows are located under bat dormers on the second attic floor.

To the south, facing the park-like garden, there is a polygonal veranda with a terrace and a flight of stairs , there is a group of putti by the sculptor Burkhart Ebe . The access is from the north towards the entrance with a flight of stairs and a pillar-supported canopy. There is a small, polygonal well house with a curved roof on the access road.

The landscaped garden to the villa, which is located directly around the house, is protected as an annex to the preservation order . It is still located on the northern edge within the historical Radebeul vineyard landscape , while the long driveway from the road is no longer part of it.

Outbuildings

Outbuilding without a stable

The Tautzschgenhof has other listed outbuildings directly on the street under No. 60. The single-storey residential building ( coach house ) with an extended mansard gable roof is located at the gable directly on Graue-Presse-Weg. It was built in 1911. Directly behind it, connected by a low intermediate building with a gable roof, stands the former coach house , also from 1911 , at right angles . The store on the upper floor is boarded up. The stable on the ground floor of the farm building was expanded into an "automobile shed" in 1913 together with the construction of the large barn next to it . This stands on a natural stone base, has a plastered ground floor and boarded jambs. The tiled gable roof has a bat dormer .

history

The villa was built in 1911 as the home of the chemist Richard Seifert and the businessman Otto Walther above the Oberlößnitz vineyards by the Dresden architect Georg Heinsius von Mayenburg . Seifert, who until then lived in the Villa Marianne near his place of work, left the construction work to the construction company of the Serkowitz master builder Johannes Eisold .

Seifert was director of the chemical factory v. Heyden in Radebeul , where, in addition to his many other pharmaceutical developments, he also developed the recipe for the mouthwash marketed as Odol by his friend Karl August Lingner . The Tautzschgenhof, also Tautzschkenhof, is named after the Tautzschkenkopf or Tautzschenbach .

In 1939, the Radebeul entrepreneur Otto Baer lived there , owner of the paint factory named after his father of the same name.

After the Second World War, a small building was built on the property in 1948, in which the Radebeul-Wahnsdorf radiosonde ascent was located. This took part with its radiosondes in 1957/58 in the International Geophysical Year , together with the other GDR ascent points in Greifswald , Wernigerode and Lindenberg ( Meteorological Observatory Lindenberg ).

In addition, during the GDR era, the Wahnsdorf kindergarten was located there for a long time, and in 1991 it moved to the school building on Schulstrasse.

literature

Web links

Commons : Villa Tautzschgenhof  - Collection of images

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Large district town of Radebeul (ed.): Directory of the cultural monuments of the town of Radebeul . Radebeul May 24, 2012, p. 17 (Last list of monuments published by the city of Radebeul. The Lower Monument Protection Authority, which has been based in the Meißen district since 2012, has not yet published a list of monuments for Radebeul.).
  2. Curt Reuter; Manfred Richter (arrangement): Radebeul chronicle . Radebeul 2010, p. 25 (first edition: 1966, online version (pdf; 732 kB) ( Memento from February 1, 2014 in the Internet Archive )).
  3. Address book Radebeul 1939, p. 9.
  4. From the work of the Radebeul-Wahnsdorf radiosonde ascent center. Retrieved on January 18, 2015.

Coordinates: 51 ° 6 ′ 43.9 "  N , 13 ° 40 ′ 57.5"  E