Bridge, Church of St. Lawrence and St. Francis of Seraphina, 1912
Originally a Baroque monastery church, this single-nave, oriented structure featured a narrow nave and an elongated, pentagonal presbytery. Both were vaulted with barrel vaults and lunettes, decorated with frescoes by J. V. Tschöpper (2nd half of the 18th century) and F. J. Duchoslav (late 19th century). Most of the Baroque furnishings, dating from the 18th century, were created by J. A. Dietz, F. M. Vogt, Ignatz Raab, and the master stonemason Martin Hennevogel. A masonry gallery in the west.. Read more »ern part of the nave housed an organ from the late 17th century. Repairs were documented after a fire in 1639. By the last quarter of the 17th century, the dilapidated and uninhabitable complex had a roofless nave and damaged masonry. Restoration began in 1716 and finished in 1722, only for another fire to strike in 1723. While the vaults and most of the interior survived, the monastery burned again in 1820 and was restored by 1842, with minor work continuing into the late 19th century. The church and monastery were demolished in 1977 during the destruction of the historic city center.