Buildings: •
Saint Willibrord's Catholic Church (branch church;
Filialkirche St. Willibrord), Hauptstraße –
Romanesque west tower, nave from 1746, expanded in 1965. • Bahnhofstraße 14 –
Quereinhaus (a combination residential and commercial house divided for these two purposes down the middle, perpendicularly to the street) from 1878. • Bahnhofstraße 1 – small
Baroque Quereinhaus (?). • Gerolsteiner Straße 6 – building with half-hipped roof, about 1800. • Gerolsteiner Straße 7 – two-floor solid building with small windows. • Before Hauptstraße 2 – warriors’ memorial 1914-1918,
crucifix 1850, on base built in 1919. • Across the street from Hauptstraße 8 – wayside cross, red
sandstone shaft cross from the earlier half of the 18th century. • Hauptstraße 18 – stately house from an old estate along the street, early 19th century. • Hauptstraße 19 – small
Quereinhaus apparently from 1742, Baroque entrance, appearance largely 19th century. • Between Hauptstraße 19 and 23 – wayside cross, red sandstone beam cross from 1762. • Hauptstraße 46 –
Quereinhaus about 1800 (?),
Classicist doorframe, late 19th century. • Memorial, north of the village on the
railway right-of-way – to those who lost their lives in the accident on 18 May 1897, possibly from shortly thereafter. • Former Gerolstein railway works yard, southwest of the village on the way to
Gerolstein (Kasselburger Weg) – monumental zone,
roundhouse, depot/administration building/workshop, 1928-1930, rebuilt in 1949/1950 after wartime destruction. •
Heiligenhäuschen (a small, shrinelike structure consecrated to a saint or saints), south of the village on the road from Gees to Gerolstein – red sandstone from 1768. • Kasselburg – monumental zone,
castle founded in the 12th century, among
Eifel castles one of the stateliest and best preserved, parts from 13th, 14th and 15th centuries, eight-floor dwelling tower, three-floor hall building with built-on
chapel, mid 14th century,
keep, lower part of which is
Romanesque, remnants of dwelling and commercial buildings, square gatetower, 15th century; complex includes broad area. • So-called
Judenkirchhof (“Jewish Churchyard”), west of the village on the hill –
Gallo-Roman temple complex, AD 124. == References ==