Villa Trinkl

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Tower of the Villa Trinkl

The villa "Trinkl" is a representative villa with a tower in the Florentine style in the Dresden district of Trachau at Großenhainer Straße  241. It was built in 1886 by the Lößnitz master builders, the Ziller brothers, for one of the inventors of the canning jar at the wax & Flössner canning factory. The current house name goes back to the last name of the current owner family.

description

The listed villa was built on top of a vineyard hill in a preferred location. It is located in the Dresden villa district Wilder Mann . The two large, arched terraces made of syenite quarry stone masonry facing south stand above the former vineyard areas and offer a panoramic view of Dresden.

The picturesquely structured villa consists of several structures. The central building is a two-storey building with a knee-high floor and a slate-covered hip roof . In the main view to the south there is a three-storey risalit in the middle , which can be seen on the north side as a roof house, on top also a hipped roof, underneath on the north side is the entrance. A three-and-a-half-storey square tower is built on the east side, and a single-storey kitchen extension with an exit on top on the west side. A little separated from the annex, there are outbuildings to the north-north-west.

All facades of the main building are framed by color-contrasting corner pilasters , the windows are framed by walls . The main view to the south is particularly richly structured and decorated. There is a notched frieze under the eaves , the top floor of the risalit is grooved with plaster. Inside there is a three-part arched window as a Palladian motif with a central exit door that leads to a very narrow balcony with bars and consoles . On the upper floor below there is also a triple, but rectangular, coupling window with a central door. This leads to an arbor with bars between parapet pillars. Its Prussian cap ceiling rests on double pillars that support the arbor and form a veranda on the ground floor . This has a side flight of stairs to the upper terrace. The windows on both sides of the risalit are suspected to be horizontal on the upper floor; on the ground floor they have a gable roof.

The tower has a tent roof with a weather vane. The top floor is a belvedere . All four sides consist of a Palladio motif, consisting of a central, high round arched window, laterally accompanied by lower rectangular windows, which are crowned by a round window. Only the west side to the roof has blind windows instead of the two accompanying rectangular and round windows. The pilaster strips of the tower, like those of the central projectile, are designed as pilasters . The plastered areas under the Belvedere are grooved with plastering, with ornate round windows. The tower is currently (as of 2005) unused, but it is to be included in the family's living area in the future.

All around the building, a narrow cornice separates the upper floor from the knee floor. There are still numerous decorative elements distributed over the facades.

history

Plan drawing by the Ziller brothers for a villa on the estate of Winzerhaus Barth , not implemented in 1875. Used as a mirror image for the Villa Trinkl 1886.

In 1875 the Lößnitz master builders, the Ziller brothers , created the plans for the construction of a "magnificent villa with belvedere" on behalf of the owner of the Oberlößnitz estate, Winzerhaus Barth . Due to the death of the client at the time, these were no longer implemented. The planning was only carried out in reverse in 1886 as today's villa "Trinkl" in Trachau . The client there was Carl Hermann Wachs, one of the two company founders of the Dresden canning factory Wachs & Flössner on Kötzschenbroder Strasse.

From around 1909 to 1929 the property belonged to Dr. med. Albin Gustav Burkhardt. Rudolf Michael Trinkl (1897–1974) from Munich, grandfather of the current owners, acquired the property in 1935. The weather vane now bears the date of the most recent restoration, 1998, in addition to the original construction date.

literature

Web links

Commons : Villa Trinkl  - Collection of Images

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Sabine Bachert: Good views from the Trachenberge: Peter Trinkl is restoring the Italian construction of the family villa step by step. In: Sächsische Zeitung , January 27, 2005.
  2. Volker Helas (arrangement): City of Radebeul . Ed .: State Office for Monument Preservation Saxony, Large District Town Radebeul (=  Monument Topography Federal Republic of Germany . Monuments in Saxony ). SAX-Verlag, Beucha 2007, ISBN 978-3-86729-004-3 , p. 298 .

Coordinates: 51 ° 5 ′ 51.5 ″  N , 13 ° 43 ′ 1 ″  E