in 1742, used as an observatory by
Johann Gabriel Doppelmayr The
Oberneustadt was laid out in six large rectangular blocks on a terrace overlooking the Fulda. It extended to the southwest of the old town, from which it was separated by a newly created square. Du Ry connected the
Oberneustadt ramparts to the existing fortifications. There is an octagonal church in the center, the
Karlskirche, built between 1698 and 1706 and consecrated in 1710. The houses were two or three stories high, with plastered facades. Some had gables and balconies. They were plain but uniform and well-proportioned. Many of them were destroyed in
World War II (1939–1940). Paul du Ry also laid out the model village of Carlsdorf and its surrounding agricultural land for a group of Huguenot refugees. The village was named after the Landgrave. In Kassel in 1696 Du Ry remodelled the
Ottoneum theatre, designing the porch with double balcony and the sides. The
Ottoneum was the first permanent theatre in Germany, designed by
Wilhelm Vernukken and built in 1604-05 for the Landgrave
Maurice the Learned. Du Ry converted the building into an art gallery to hold the Landgrave Charles's paintings, biological and astronomical objects and curiosities. In 1885 it became a natural history museum. Between 1703 and 1711 Du Ry designed the
Schloss Wilhelmshöhe, now a museum, probably the most typical of the Huguenot structures in the city, and the
Palais Prinz Georg. He may have been involved in the design of the
Orangerie in the
Karlsaue, but this is debated. He built the
Bellevue Palace in 1714, now a museum devoted to the
Brothers Grimm. This was originally an observatory for the Landgrave Charles I. His buildings follow the Dutch rather than French tradition of Baroque Classicism. ==References==