Laudert - Culture and Sightseeing - Buildings

Buildings

The following are listed buildings or sites in Rhineland-Palatinate’s Directory of Cultural Monuments:

  • Saint Remigius’s Catholic Church (Kirche St. Remigius), Mittelstraße 20 – Baroque Revival aisleless church, 1923–1926, architects Ludwig Becker and Anton Falkowski, Mainz
  • Near Bergstraße 29 – water cistern, Art Nouveau, marked 1912
  • Graveyard – Romanesque column in graveyard chapel’s gable as spolia (Saint Remigius’s Chapel)
  • Mittelstraße 3 – former school with teacher’s dwelling; plastered building, Gothic Revival motifs, marked 1906
  • Mittelstraße 9 – timber-frame house, partly solid, 18th century; whole complex of buildings with commercial wing
  • Mittelstraße 37 – timber-frame house, plastered, 19th century; whole complex of buildings with commercial building
  • Wall complex, north of the village – so-called Alte Burg (“Old Castle”); mottelike complex, 11th or 12th century, two manmade earthen walls, moat, tower hill, rectangular graves

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Famous quotes containing the word buildings:

    Now, since our condition accommodates things to itself, and transforms them according to itself, we no longer know things in their reality; for nothing comes to us that is not altered and falsified by our Senses. When the compass, the square, and the rule are untrue, all the calculations drawn from them, all the buildings erected by their measure, are of necessity also defective and out of plumb. The uncertainty of our senses renders uncertain everything that they produce.
    Michel de Montaigne (1533–1592)

    If the factory people outside the colleges live under the discipline of narrow means, the people inside live under almost every other kind of discipline except that of narrow means—from the fruity austerities of learning, through the iron rations of English gentlemanhood, down to the modest disadvantages of occupying cold stone buildings without central heating and having to cross two or three quadrangles to take a bath.
    Margaret Halsey (b. 1910)

    The American who has been confined, in his own country, to the sight of buildings designed after foreign models, is surprised on entering York Minster or St. Peter’s at Rome, by the feeling that these structures are imitations also,—faint copies of an invisible archetype.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)