As of: March 25, 2024, 3:30 p.m
By: Robert Langer
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No entry allowed: The district office has ordered signs to be put up due to the risk of collapse.
© Robert Langer
House in Kirchseeon village dated to 1676/77.
Damage and statics are currently being investigated.
A decision can then be made about future development.
Kirchseeon
– An old farmhouse in Kirchseeon Dorf, right next to the current site of the building yard, is now a listed building.
“That was new for us too,” said Daniel Dolinsky from the Kirchseeon local history association.
Yellow signs indicate a risk of collapse.
"Do Not Enter."
Building is currently empty
The house dates back to the 17th century.
The building is currently empty.
“A static examination of the house is currently being carried out and the damage is also being mapped,” is the information from the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation in response to EZ’s request.
These investigations are intended to provide the basis for the subsequent development of a repair and usage concept.
Registered in the list of monuments
The property is entered in the list of monuments with the following text: “Farmhouse, one-and-a-half-story flat gable roof building, 1676/77, redesigned and new plaster surfaces and structures, 2nd half of the 19th century.”
According to the Ebersberg District Office, the building is privately owned.
The house has recently been entered into the monument list as a monument.
The clearing out and removal of modern fixtures are approved under monument law.
The farm is on the monument list as a one-and-a-half-story flat gable roof building.
© Robert Langer
Do Not Enter
The district office emphasizes that the building is not allowed to be entered.
“Doors and gates must be locked so that unauthorized persons cannot get inside the building.” The office ordered that signs with the inscription “No entry” be placed on the building opposite the owner.
In the so-called fall area, where falling components, such as roof tiles, could pose a danger, a stable construction fence must be erected.
The authority also explains: “As long as passers-by do not enter the private property, there is no danger.”
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The community is interested in the property
The public order office will visit the property to check the implementation of the protective measures, says Mayor Jan Paeplow.
What happens next is still unclear.
In principle, the community is interested in the property.
Whether the municipality can demand a right of first refusal is not legally easy.
“We will discuss the issue in the local council,” said the mayor.
The building is marked with number 7 on an old map.
Below the church of St. Coloman.
© Kirchseeon Local History Association
Farm name “Nährer”
The Kirchseeon local history association, which runs its own local history museum, has extensive data on this farmhouse, as well as many other old buildings in the market town.
It was marked with the number 7 on an old map.
It was a one-quarter farm, a fiefdom, belonging to the Ebersberg Monastery, also called Lechner.
“Nährer” was first mentioned as the farm name in 1618.
The origin of the name is unknown.
The name Hans Pöttinger can be found as the owner of the farm, not the house, in 1538.
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