Zillerstrasse (Radebeul)

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The Zillerstraße is a city road in the district Niederlößnitz the Saxon town of Radebeul . The approximately 800-meter-long street was developed by the local builders, the Ziller brothers, and named after their older brother Moritz Ziller in 1875 . In order to upgrade the emerging residential street, the Zillers created the square design with the large fountain , the western edge of today's Zillerplatz .

Location and development

View from Zillerplatz to the south into Zillerstraße. Left the Gothic house, right today's medical center Zillerstraße 13 (around 1900)
View from the north of Luisenstift and northern Zillerstraße. Center: House in the garden , bottom right. on the railway line the winegrower's house in Malerwinkel (postcard around 1906)

Zillerstraße begins on the north side of Meißner Straße and runs in a northerly direction, deviating slightly to the east. It crosses Borstrasse , then Heinrich-Zille-Strasse, which is adjacent to Zillerplatz , crosses Zillerplatz and the Winzerstrasse behind it, and then extends over Stosch-Sarrassani-Strasse to Paradiesstrasse.

The house numbering runs from south to north, the odd numbers are on the left. The first section between Meißner Straße and Borstraße is only occupied with addresses of the intersecting streets, apart from a later building No. 1b in between: on the left at Meißner Straße the No. 172 , on the corner of Borstraße the Villa Heimburg (Borstraße 15). On the right-hand side of the street, the property with the Catholic Parish Office in Radebeul (Borstrasse 11) extends over the entire length of the block , to which the Christ the King Church has recently been added. At the eastern corner of Heinrich-Zille-Straße, i.e. south of Zillerplatz, stood the Gothic House , which has since been demolished . This as well as the original villa of the Catholic rectory came from the father of the Ziller brothers, the master builder Christian Gottlieb Ziller .

The actual Zillerstraße numbering begins north of Borstraße on the west side with Zillerstraße 1 / 1a and then runs to No. 34 on the east side on Paradiesstraße. The block on the left between Stosch-Sarrassani-Straße and Paradiesstraße / Straße der Jugend is built on with the Luisenstift high school . Its new construction or renovation, the so-called Weinberghaus, was awarded the builder prize of the city of Radebeul in 2011 .

Many of the villas there, mostly built by the Ziller brothers, are under monument protection , they can be found in the list of cultural monuments in Radebeul-Niederlößnitz :

The Zillerstraße is mentioned in the Dehio manual : It is an example of the road development and plot-wide development by the master builder Ziller, who worked in the Lößnitz localities.

Residents

The archivist and historian Woldemar Lippert lived in the Villa Käthe .

The painter Alexander Kircher lived for a short time in Villa Zillerstraße 5 .

The musicologist and librarian Ewald Jammers lived in No. 11 , which became the home of his son, the lawyer and librarian Antonius Jammers .

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Radebeuler Bauherrenpreis 2011. In: Radebeuler Bauherrenpreis. Association for Monument Preservation and New Buildings, Radebeul, accessed on January 10, 2015 .
  2. Barbara Bechter, Wiebke Fastenrath u. a. (Ed.): Handbook of German Art Monuments , Saxony I, Dresden District . Deutscher Kunstverlag, Munich 1996, ISBN 3-422-03043-3 , p. 731 .

Coordinates: 51 ° 6 ′ 29 ″  N , 13 ° 39 ′ 10.9 ″  E