Settlement Magdalenenplatz of the Kötzschenbroda building cooperative – Wikipedia

The Settlement Magdalenenplatz of the Kötzschenbroda building cooperative consists of numerous apartment buildings from the time from the mid -1920s to the early 1930s in the style of the home protection architecture. It is located in the Niederlößnitz district of the then city of Kötzschenbroda, now part of the Saxon city of Radebeul. The settlement east of Dr.-Külz-Straße between Winzerstrasse in the north and Heinrich-Zille-Straße in south is considered to be Consideration of the monument preservation . [first] Most of the houses in the settlement are part of the Non -profit housing association Radebeul e. G.

Settlement corner of Winzerstrasse (left No. 29), Dr.-Külz-Straße (right to south nos. 26/24, 22), in the interior Heinrich-Zille-Str. 32
Settlement area at Winzerstraße 29, behind it Heinrich-Zille-Straße 30
The two-storey Heinrich-Zille-Straße 34 and 32 in front of the three-story No. 30 in the interior of the area (such as No. 22 and 28). On the left of the one with garages Magdalenenplatz

The majority of the Dresden architect Willy Schubert apartment houses of the Building cooperative Kötzschenbroda Lying with house numbers 20 and 34 directly on Heinrich-Zille-Straße and with the numbers 22 to 32 on two, also named as Heinrich-Zille-Straße, which are also named by this withdrawal roads, [2] which form a small, rectangular place to Heinrich-Zille-Strasse, formerly Magdalenenplatz named because it lies against the magdalenenasyl “Talitha Kumi”. Furthermore, the houses on Dr.-Külz-Straße under house numbers 16, 18/20, 22 and 24/26 can be found. [2] In Winzerstrasse, the buildings carry house numbers 25, 25a and 29. [2] They include the small country -like villa of the Dresden City Councilor J. Paul Lieben from 1876 between the numbers 25a and 29, which is the only other building in which it is quartered.

Almost all houses are aligned with their long side, only the two double houses in Dr.-Külz-Straße 18/20 and 24/26 stand across and thus along the street running from the south to north.

The mostly two-storey five- and four-family houses have brick-covered hipped roofs with brewed pike dormers or small triangular pointed tapes. The plastered buildings are on various types, but mostly made of clinker, plinths and have clinker structure in the facades. Some inputs are decorated by tooth cut frieze.

Most houses were modernized in the 2000s. [3]

As a stub elements, the monument description lists the “garages on the central settlement square, the former Magdalenenplatz on Heinrich-Zille-Strasse”. [2]

Dr.-Külz-Strasse 24/26 [ Edit | Edit the source text ]

The earliest house of 1924, in the design of which the state association Saxon Heimatchutz presented a sketch with change requests that were also taken into account. The cleaning facade is without structure.

Dr.-Külz-Straße 16, Winzerstraße 29 [ Edit | Edit the source text ]

Vertical clinker structure decorate the facades.

Dr.-Külz-Strasse 18/20 and 22 [ Edit | Edit the source text ]

Horizontal clinker structure decorate the facades. Execution in 1928/1929 by the construction company of Felix Sommer ( Adolf Neumann Nachf. ).

Heinrich-Zille-Straße 24 and 26, Winzerstraße 25 and 25a [ Edit | Edit the source text ]

Horizontal clinker structure decorate the facades. Version Winzerstraße 25 and 25a in 1928 by the construction company of Felix Sommer.

Heinrich-Zille-Strasse 20, 32 and 34 [ Edit | Edit the source text ]

The settlement houses are on a stone base, have windowsill cornices on the upper floor and straight fortune over the windows on the ground floor. In some of them, the roofs are in the middle of “pointed motifs with an expressionist appeal” [first] broken up. Design and construction management Heinrich-Zille-Straße 20, 32 and 34 through the brothers Kießling. Execution Heinrich-Zille-Straße 20 in 1928/1929 by the construction company of Felix Sommer, Heinrich-Zille-Straße 32 by Alfred Große.

Heinrich-Zille-Strasse 22, 28 and 30 [ Edit | Edit the source text ]

The three -storey six -family houses from 1931 are located on a base made of quarry stone, the windowsill cornice and the window frames are made of concrete.

  1. a b Volker Helas (editor): City of Radebeul . Ed.: State Office for the Preservation of Monument Saxony, large district town of Radebeul (= Monument topography of the Federal Republic of Germany. Monuments in Saxony ). SAX-Publishe, Beucha 2007, ISBN 978-3-86729-004-3, S. 141/142 as well as the enclosed card .
  2. a b c d Entry in the monument database of the state of Saxony on the monument ID 08950474 with further information (PDF, including map section) – Settlement Magdalenenplatz of the Kötzschenbroda building cooperative (total). Accessed on February 27, 2021.
  3. Apartments in Niederlößnitz.