Water tower of the historic count's water art (year of construction: 1878, architect: probably Richard Dielmann)
“Water storage for fountains, fountains etc. to be loaded in the garden of the Philippsruhe Palace, built in the style of northern Italian campaniles. Decorative tower, veneered with ocher bricks, 42 meters high. Simple and coupled blind arcades, each designed with diamond-shaped brick decor, structure the point de vue structure, the substructure of which is reminiscent of the plastered joint cut or rustic sandstone masonry due to recessed brick layers. The tower was originally only part of the Landgrave's Water Art, which once also included a pump house for the "operation of his Royal Highness's electrical lighting system". (Source: Hessian Office for the Preservation of Monuments)