Before the current Lindesmühle, there was a picturesque group of buildings on this site with a mill building with a half-timbered upper floor and a half-hipped roof. The complex, which can be reached via the Lindesmühlpromenade, was a popular tourist destination. The Lindesmühle (former artificial mill) was built in 1886 in the historicist style. In its current form, it is a multi-part, castle-like group of buildings. It consists of a five-story high-rise building with a crenellated tower, a southern two-story gable roof extension and a northern two-story wing extension with a gable roof and stepped gable. All parts of the building are red sandstone ashlar structures with gray sandstone structure. Four grinding mills and ten roller mills produced an output of 1,800 hundredweight per week. On April 19, 1898, the Lindesmühle was destroyed by what was perhaps the largest fire in Bad Kissingen. The Austrian Empress Elisabeth of Austria-Hungary, who was staying at the Villa Monbijou on the Bad Kissingen Altenberg, probably observed the events surrounding the fire.
In 1899, the Lindesmühle was rebuilt by the Bad Kissingen architect Carl Kramp. The mill's output was now between 800 and 1,000 hundredweight per day. Since 1961, the facility has been used as a construction yard, which was later relocated to the Bad Kissingen-Süd industrial estate, where planning for a new construction yard facility began in 2002. The Lindesmühle was renovated in 2016/17. The Bavarian State Foundation Munich contributed 50,000 euros to the total cost of the project, which amounted to 400,000 euros. Wikipedia