Sitzenberg Castle (German: Schloss Sitzenberg) is a historic castle located in Sitzenberg in the municipality of Sitzenberg-Reidling in the district of Tulln in Lower Austria. The castle is used as the Sitzenberg Federal College for Agriculture and Food Economics.
History
editThe castle is visible from afar on a wooded hilltop. The access road branches off from Schlossbergstrasse and, after a long curve, passes through the gatekeeper's house and ends after another curve in front of the western front.[1]
The original castle was likely a two-story structure with several round towers and a high entrance and a fortified rampart in the east and a defensive wall with round towers in the south and east. In the second half of the 16th century, it was converted into a Renaissance castle under Christoph Greiss zu Wald. At the end of the 17th century, a clock tower was built in the northwest corner of the courtyard and around 1700 the central portal in the west wing was built. The east wing was demolished and rebuilt in 1821 due to a landslide.[1]
From 1913 to 1921/1924, the building was converted into a closed four-wing complex in the Neo-Renaissance style according to the plans of Gustav von Flesch-Brunningen. The north and south wings were extended to the east, each with a round tower at the end. The new, spacious east wing was given a show facade and a generous interior design. The courtyard arcades rest on widely projecting corbels.[1]
Minor renovations were carried out in 1950/1951 to create classrooms and rooms for boarding school accommodation.[2]
Gallery
editExterior gallery
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East view
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Northwest view
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Entrance, 2022
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Courtyard, 2022
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Gatekeeper's house
Interior gallery
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Interior, 2022
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Interior, 2022
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Interior, 2022
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Interior, 2022
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c Hammerl, Martin. "Sitzenberg". www.burgen-austria.com. Retrieved 11 September 2024.
- ^ "Schloss Sitzenberg, Federal College of Agriculture and Food Economics, Schlossbergstrasse No. 4". The Art Monuments of Austria | Dehio Lower Austria south of the Danube: 2244–2247. 2003.
External links
edit- Media related to Schloss Sitzenberg at Wikimedia Commons