In the village centre stands the small
Catholic chapel from 1827 which is consecrated to
Saint Brigid, patron saint not only of
Ireland but also of, among other things,
cattle. This once led to a yearly custom in which farmers would fetch water consecrated to Saint Brigid –
Brigittenwasser – in little bottles from the church and take it home to put in sick livestock's fodder as needed. This was supposed to help the animals. This custom, however, is no longer practised.
Buildings •
Catholic branch church, Kapellenstraße, triaxial
aisleless church from 1826 (or 1827 according to the above source). • Hauptstraße 10 –
timber-frame house of a corner estate, mid 19th century. • Hauptstraße/corner of Im Backesgarten – wayside cross, beam cross from 1687. •
Saint Hubert’s Catholic Parish Church (
Pfarrkirche St. Hubertus), Hauptstraße, so-called Hilgerath Church (
Kirche Hilgerath),
mediaeval west tower, aisleless church 1803, expanded in 1950; grave crosses in the outer wall, 17th and 18th centuries. • Wayside chapel, south of Saint Hubert's Catholic Parish Church,
Gothic Revival brick building from 1907, Gothic Revival altar.
Natural monuments The
Drees, a mineral
spring, gushes forth from the ground at the village's outskirts. The water is sour and contains
iron and
carbonic acid. The spring is a product of the now mostly extinct
volcanic activity that gives the
Vulkaneifel its name. The springwater is definitely an acquired taste, but its fanciers swear by their daily glass of
Drees even today. == Economy and infrastructure ==