The planned expansion of a water storage and supply system for the Freiberg mining and metallurgy industry began on January 23, 1558 by the order of the elector. In the course of this, the lower Großhartmannsdorfer pond was also strengthened. The Müdisdorfer Kunstgraben and the Müdisdorfer Rösche were laid out from 1558, with the latter being built over a ten-year period. The Rösche was excavated with a large number of light holes in the opposite direction, later the course was corrected and wrinkled several times. It also includes the Röschenhaus and several daytime mining buildings. The construction management was incumbent on Martin Planer, who used this rose to create an underground waterway from the Untere Großhartmannsdorfer pond, with which fire pits could also be supplied with impact water. The Röschenhaus was looted and burned down during the Napoleonic Wars in 1813. Today the watercourse is of supraregional importance for the service and drinking water supply of the Dresden and Freiberg regions.