Residential and commercial building Meißner Strasse 279 (Radebeul)
The residential and commercial building at Meißner Straße 279 is located in the Kötzschenbroda district of the Saxon city of Radebeul . The corner house is one of the four listed buildings at the intersection of Meißner Strasse and Bahnhofstrasse to the south and Moritzburger Strasse to the north. During the GDR era, this intersection was a listed building as a street .
description
The under monument protection standing residential and commercial building is located on the sidewalk of the Bahnhofstrasse, the front begins to descend to the south lie the tracks under the railway bridge Leipzig-Dresden railway to pass under.
After the renovation, the three-storey building with the shop floor appears as a “emphatically cubic structure [with] rhythmically arranged six window axes” in the view of Meißner Strasse and “four uniformly lined up axes” in Bahnhofstrasse. The flat, slate-covered hip roof supports the cubic impression . The space between the building at Bahnhofstrasse 12 is filled by a floor-level shop extension in the same facade style as the corner building. On Meißner Straße there is a wall as high as one floor with a gate above which a slogan is placed; then a smaller outbuilding follows.
The ground floor facade is characterized by a “strongly horizontally accentuated ceramic cladding”. The ox head sculpture on the edge of the building at the intersection is made of ceramic that is colored like the facade. The two upper floors are simply plastered, the windows are framed by simple window frames.
The motto hangs above the entrance to the Meißner Straße:
"This house is mine, but it is not mine either, which was before me
thought it was his, but it wasn't his, because he moved out
and I moved in, and after my death it will be the same!"
history
The corner house was built around 1880. The facades were historic, the windows were protected by roofs.
Around 1928 the master butcher Arthur Peschel had his building redesigned; the plans for this came from the architect Max Schneider, who also designed the neighboring building at Bahnhofstrasse 12. During the renovation, which determines the appearance today, the facade in particular was greatly changed; The first floor cladding and the ox head attached to the corner are distinctive.
literature
- 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 .
Web links
Individual evidence
- ^ Large district town of Radebeul (ed.): Directory of the cultural monuments of the town of Radebeul . Radebeul May 24, 2012, p. 26 (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.).
- ↑ a b c 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. 213 .
Coordinates: 51 ° 6 ′ 28.8 ″ N , 13 ° 37 ′ 50 ″ E