List of streets and squares in Berlin-Gatow

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Overview map of Berlin-Gatow

The list of streets and squares in Berlin-Gatow describes the street system in the Berlin district of Gatow with the corresponding historical references. At the same time, this compilation is part of the lists of all Berlin streets and places .

overview

Street system in Gatow around 1920

The district Gatow has 3,733 inhabitants (as of December 30, 2019) and includes the postal code area 14089. There are 54 dedicated streets and paths and two named places in the district. The total length of the streets and paths in the district, insofar as they are included in the Regional Reference System (RBS), is 28.9 kilometers, including the section of Bundesstraße 2 . On the other hand, four streets also belong to the neighboring districts and have the same RBS street code there.

The path system between Gatow , Cladow , Groß Glienicke , Seeburg and Pichelsdorf around the years 1770–1790
_______________________
• Road to Cladow
  ( Kladower Damm )
• to Groß-Glienicke (West)
• Path to Seeburg ( Road 265 )
• Paths to Weinmeisterhorn
  (Pichelsdorf )
• Triftweg (west of the village)

history

The road system of Gatow is determined by the location of the place between the Havel and the national border. The Angerdorf Gatow came to the Spandau office early on. In 1890 Gatow had 440 inhabitants and the city of Charlottenburg put its sewage fields into operation on Gatower Feldflur. After the incorporation into Greater Berlin , only An der Cladower Chaussee with eight inhabited properties and the properties named under village are named in the address book in 1922 . In addition, Weinmeisterhorn zu Gatow is noted as belonging to the Spandau district with eight buildings, preferably used by rowing clubs, and the restaurant Weinmeisterhorn of the non-profit association for the promotion of the allotment gardener housing cooperative is listed. Without land, the route to Groß-Glienicke , Chaussee to Spandau and from Dorf Nach Seeburg , Nach Groß-Glienicke are listed. In 1930, nine streets are listed for Gatow: Chaussee to Spandau (eleven built-up properties), An der Cladower Chaussee (13 built-up properties between farmland and forest), Dorfstraße (31 built-up properties, including three restaurants), Groß-Glienicker Weg (three built-up properties ), An der Havel (three built-up lots), Lindwerder Island (with a restaurant, inhabited by ferryman C. Blankenburg and the physiologist Mercklin), Mühlenweg (undeveloped from Dorfstraße), Schulstraße (eight built-up lots including the 18th community school), street to Villa Lemm (with the Lemm'chen house and a six-party house in the city of Berlin) and Weinmeisterhorn with four houses, the Seglerheim, the Weinmeisterhorn restaurant and properties owned by sailing and rowing clubs. In 1931 in Hohengatow (previously: 'Havelmaten') streets were laid out and named according to the development plan in the high forest in the Kladow district, which in 1934 were still undeveloped or listed as construction sites in the address book. For the development of roads Gatows is airbase significant, which was built in 1935 and used from 1945 to 1994 as a British military airfield. The British use in 1945 required a transfer of Brandenburg areas (Seeburg) to the British sector (Spandau) through the exchange of areas. The Gatower borderline, giving up the formerly opposite Rieselfeldzipfels, became the Potsdamer Chaussee (today's B 2 ) and Rieselfeldgelände became part of the Spandau administrative district (also the Wilhelmstadt district ). The location of the Rieselfelder Karolinenhof in the west and the Havel in the east has an impact on the road system . For example, between Potsdamer Chaussee and Gatower Strasse, there are preferably forest areas whose cross-roads numbered streets are undeveloped and which correspond to the former Rieselfeld access roads, such as Road 265 , which runs along the southern Rieselfeldabfanggraben.

Road location and district boundary

The neighboring districts across the Havel are Grunewald and Nikolassee . With the border to Kladow , the boundary on the southern edge of the Hohengatow settlement comes to the shore and continues on the southern edge of Breitehornweg to Kladower Damm on its western edge, excluding the road land north of the plots on Christoph-Columbus-Straße. Furthermore, the area of ​​the former Gatow airfield remains outside the district, the road area of ​​the outer path belongs to the district, as does the air base and the Habichtswald settlement. The district boundary then leads on the outer path to Potsdamer Chaussee, on the west side of which is the city boundary to Groß-Glienicke . At the change to Engelsfelde, the border to Wilhelmstadt runs eastwards through the area of ​​the former Rieselfelder and again towards the Havel. In the west of the district are the former sewage fields, so the ratio of the number of streets to the total area of ​​the district is comparatively low.

The district boundaries of Gatow changed when in August 1945 the area was exchanged between the British and Soviet allies in favor of Gatow airfield against Weststaaken. In 2003 the district boundary was moved, so that Gatow lost the airport area including the Air Force Museum and the country town to the neighboring district of Kladow . The Gatow road system is characterized by two continuous Berlin main roads : the local system near the Havelna around the regional road connection (category III) Alt-Gatow in the Spandau – Potsdam route to the Potsdam district of Sacrow (today in Kladow to Ritterfelddamm) and the higher-level road connection (category II) the Potsdamer Chaussee , on the western outskirts of Berlin, which is also in the historical bond of Spandau to Potsdam today to the terminal by the Potsdam district Groß Glienicke .

Overview of streets and squares

The following table gives an overview of the streets and squares in the district as well as some related information.

  • Name / location : current name of the street or square. Via the link Location , the street or the square can be displayed on various map services. The geoposition indicates the approximate center of the street length.
  • Traffic routes not listed in the official street directory are marked with * .
  • Former or no longer valid street names are in italics . A separate list may be available for important former streets or historical street names.
  • Length / dimensions in meters:
    The length information contained in the overview are rounded overview values ​​that were determined in Google Earth using the local scale. They are used for comparison purposes and, if official values ​​are known, are exchanged and marked separately.
    For squares, the dimensions are given in the form a × b for rectangular systems and for (approximately) triangular systems as a × b × c with a as the longest side.
    If the street continues into neighboring districts, the addition ' in the district ' indicates how long the street section within the district of this article is.
  • Name origin : origin or reference of the name.
  • Notes : further information on adjacent monuments or institutions, the history of the street and historical names.
  • Image : Photo of the street or an adjacent object.
Name / location Length / dimensions
(in meters)
Origin of name Date of designation Remarks image
Old Gatow

( Location )

0730 + 280 Street of the Angerdorf Gatow 0May 3, 1935 The street is in the main street train (higher-level street system) Gatower Straße (northward) and Kladower Damm (southward). Until 1935 it was called Dorfstraße , before that it was just called Dorf. It is the first street in the former village of Gatow. Gatow was first mentioned in a document in 1258. Since 1920, when it was incorporated into Greater Berlin , the name Dorfstraße had been used several times due to the former suburbs , so most of them were renamed from "old" to the name of the district. The original Anger is in the southern part of the street and has an eastern branch there with a branch to Groß-Glienicker Weg and is run in the RBS as a supplementary street , the actual Anger in between is a green area. In 1922, some of the properties in Gatow were numbered. There was a tree nursery on 15b and ten parties lived in the associated house. Next to the parish hall (inhabited by the night watchman J. Heiland and the widow D. Kühn) are the church and the school of Gatow, in which the cantor E. Draeger, the civil servant M. Marusch and the retired secretary E. Orthband and the teacher F. Orthband live, another parish hall follows on property 10. Next to the Beutel'schen Haus (I to III) of the gardening owner E. Beutel (inhabited by a reindeer , the carpenter and four workers) is the Beutelsche Gut, next to the Mammschschen Haus on the way to Groß-Glienicke. At number 29 there is a Dresdner Bank convalescent home, next to which is the post office in Schulzesches Haus, and next to number 22 is another parish hall with four residents. The old mansion (Alt-Gatow 54) was first used as a police station 149 and then set up as a kindergarten . Alt-Gatow 65 is the architectural monument of the former Beutel'schen Hof with residential house from 1890, granary from 1763 and barn from 1904. It is the only one of the surviving farms in Gatow where the distinctive residential house faces the former village street with its gable end . On the Alt-Gatow street, 14 objects are included in the Berlin list of monuments , with farms and houses in particular being protected as monument ensembles. Alt-Gatow to the south to the Anger

Alt-Gatow on the eastern branch across the Anger

On the mountainside

( Location )

0560 at the foot of the northern slope of Gatower Mühlenberg 0Nov 1, 1965 The cul-de-sac leads from the Buchwaldzeile as an access road to the west over Am Kinderdorf to the settlement houses west of the turning hammer. It is located north of the NSG Windmühlenberg. According to the development plan, the road 268 is laid out and it was laid out under this name. As a path, the route continues over the Windmühlenberg settlement into the Hüllenpfuhlenden forest area. After the Gatower fire, a fund was decided in 1901 to build a new village school in 1901, which was completed in 1905 as a three-class elementary school on the corner of Buchwaldzeile and was destroyed by the Russians in 1945. Road on the mountain slope
On the banks of the Havel

( Location )

0200 Located near the banks of the Havel , symbolically advertising the new buildings Oct 31, 1995 The street lies east parallel to Gatower Straße and continues the Hainbuchenweg to the south to the edge of the village , it is the access to the new buildings of a terraced housing estate between Gatower Straße, Rothenbücherweg and properties to the edge of the village. In the Spandau street directory, the properties Havelufer 1–15 (odd) 2–30 (even) are named. View of Am Havelufer across the unnamed double-lane access road
On the pine slope

( Location )

0470 Pine slope, an area covered with pine trees near the Hohengatow hospital 0Sep 9 1931 The road in the south-east of the district starts at the south-east corner of Hellebergeplatz from the Hellebergeweg and continues over the Hochwaldsteig as a cul-de-sac . A forest path leads to the district boundary on Breitehornweg. It was laid out as road 7 of the development plan for the "Hohengatow settlement". In 1930 the plots of land in this location (mostly unnumbered) were grouped under An der Cladower Chaussee . The residential building at Am Kiefernhang 22, built in 1928 by the architect Berthold Petruschke for the Charlottenburg city administrator Wilhelm Lentz, is included in the list of monuments. As late as 1943, a summer house is specified for plot 22 . and for the street (like all in Hohengatow) the note “Post Bln. = Kladow” applies. With the beginning of the development in Hohengatow streets were named and laid out; previously there were already paths through the forest area that do not directly coincide with today's courses. On the pine slope 22
At the children's village

( Location )

0470 Albert Schweitzer Children's Village , created 1964–1968 0Nov 1, 1965 The street, according to the development plan street 258 , lies between Weit Blick and Melsunger Straße between the children's village (west of the street) and the “weekend settlement Windmühlenberg”, which is to the east. To the south, a footpath of the same name leads past Annenhof to street 264 . In August 1960, the “Albert-Schweitzer-Kinderdorf Berlin e. V. ”was founded in order to save orphans from being admitted to homes and to allow them to grow up in large families. In 1962 the property in Gatow was acquired and 1964–1968 this children's village with the street named in 1965 was built. In Gatow, some buildings that can be classified as typically National Socialist were built between 1934 and 1945. At Kinderdorf 23-27 (elementary school on Windmühlenberg), an unfinished hospital building of the Todt Organization was housed in the last months of the Second World War . A footpath from Am Kinderdorf to Windmühlenberg was the first path in Gatow to be named Lee-Parry-Weg after women's names. The basis is a decision by the Spandauer BVV to name new streets, preferably after women, named here by the actress Lee Parry . At the children's village
On the outskirts

( Location )

0330 on the northern outskirts of Gatow 0Sep 1 1973 The small street consists of row houses and ends on the banks of the Havel. On the right-hand side is the enclosure wall of Villa Lemm , which was inhabited by the British city commander after the war . Named Straße 271 until 1973 according to the development plan , it goes east from Gatower Straße and over Rothenbücherweg to the Havel . The eastern part coincides with the Havel-Radweg / Spandauer Weg , number 02 of the Green Main Paths of Berlin , which leads south through Alt-Gatow and north along the banks of the Havel. The street is on the outskirts of Gatow, which earned it this name. On the outskirts (towards Havel)
At the meadow house

( Location )

0130 Wiesenhaus, was on the road from the village to Gatow June 19, 1956 The meadow house stood on the way from Alt-Gatow to the depository Gatow on the Havel. The narrow cobblestone street goes as a dead end and then as a footpath to the water rescue station on property number 9. The street continues to include properties 2, 6 and 8. It is located between the eastern section of Alt-Gatow am Anger and the small bathing meadow on the Havel . At the meadow house
At the mountain gardens

( Location )

0380 Gardens on the Windmühlenberg 0Jan. 2, 1973 The street 255 was designated according to the alignment in the development plan and lies from the Buchwaldzeile to the west to the street 254. The 250er streets are also not listed in the 1943 address book. On the mountain slopes, the nature reserve Windmühlenberg borders in the south and the "weekend settlement Windmühlenberg" in the north. Only plots 5–7 (consecutive) are assigned to the street itself. The Windmühlenberg settlement is a new single-family house settlement near the center of the village. The paths of the weekend settlement in this settlement are not included in the official street directory of Spandau, from west to east there are street 254, Erlkönigsteig and Erlkönigsteig and parallel to each other somewhat offset to the Buchwaldzeile are Feensteig, to the north Rübezahl- and south Gnomensteig, Schneewitchensteig with Exit at the Buchwaldzeile. Post mill at the mountain gardens
Annenweg

( Location )

0140 the Annenhof is on the way after 1960 The Annenweg is from Groß-Glienicker Weg to the north to road 264, as a footpath it leads through the settlement Weiter Blick on to the road Am Kinderdorf and the Albert-Schweitzer-Kinderdorf there . Until 1998 the Annenhof was the agricultural enterprise of the agricultural engineer Hans-Joachim Ernst and belongs to the inventory of the Vierfelderhof Gatow at the address Street 264 No. 12. The Annenweg itself is the agricultural route through the fields in the corner between Groß-Glienicker Weg and Straße 264, without land and therefore not included in the official street directory. The Annenhof (street 264 No. 12) is located directly on the northwest corner of the crossroads and next to the Annenweg. Annenweg
Outside path

( Location )

0470 is on the western edge of the district 0Aug 9, 1956 The street lies between Potsdamer Chaussee and Groß-Glienicker Weg and from the latter also southwards to the former airfield and thus to the suburb of Kladow . Until 1956 it was an unnamed private road of the "Habichtswalde settlement", to the south are the "artist settlement" and the air base settlement. The road area belongs to Gatow, the former Gatow airfield bordering the west side of the road and the area of ​​the former shooting range of the British troops in Berlin (further north of it) are in Kladow . In Gatow, some buildings that can be classified as typical National Socialist were built between 1934 and 1945: In 1935, the "Air Base Estate" was built in the Habichtwald. Outside path
Bardeyweg

( Location )

0110 Ernst Georg Friedrich Jochim Bardey (1855–1914), mathematician, teacher and chronicler of the Osthavelland and the Gatow community May 30, 1956 The street is between Gatower Straße and Rothenbücher Weg, there is the Villa Lemm . The street was built with the construction of Villa Lemm and is therefore listed in the address book as the street to Villa Lemm, according to Spandau's development plan for Gatow as street 251 . Accordingly, the following properties on the street are listed in the address book in 1943. On the left, Eckhaus Gatower Straße 313 belongs to the city of Berlin, street to Villa Lemm No. 11 belongs to the clerk O. Schaffhausen, the owners for 12 and 13 to Rothbuchweg are not named, then construction sites follow. On the right side of the street on Pfirsichweg is Theilig's house owned by a commercial clerk. The two houses at Bardeyweg 5 (renovated in 1902) and the one built around 1860 on plot 7 are listed as architectural monuments. Villa Lemm was inhabited by the British city commander after the war . Bardeyweg (towards Villa Lemm)
Besingweg

( Location )

0320 Besing, old name for the blueberry Feb 13, 1932 The road 9 was named on September 9, 1931 Besingpfad and was renamed the following year at the request of local residents. It is located between Am Kiefernhang and Karlsbergallee in the Hohengatow settlement. In this location it is included in the address book for the first time in 1933, on the right side the plots 1–15 (odd) are listed, of which 3 and 9 are residential buildings. For the left side, the Taubitz house is listed on unnumbered property. In the 1935 address book, house no.5 and 7a on the left and the two summer houses 15 and 17 are added. The right side is numbered 2–18, the Taupitz'sche Haus was given the 10th, the residential building No. 2 and the summer houses 6, 8 and 18, the gardens on 12 and 14 have been added. For the year 1943, the indication “Post Bln.-Kladow ”for the street. On the right side there are plots 2–28 with eight residential houses, garden 12 belongs to 10 and 14 is built on, house 24 is uninhabited. 26 and 28 is the urban nursery of the city of Berlin. On the left-hand side of Karlsbergallee, 3, 15, 15a, 17/19 houses and 9, 11 and 13 summer houses are listed from properties 1–19. The Besingweg was first listed in the address book in 1933. With the beginning of the development in Hohengatow streets were named and laid out; previously there were already paths through the forest area that do not directly coincide with today's courses. Besingweg
Breitehornweg

( Location )

0770
(in the district)
Breitehorn, protruding bank stretch on the banks of the Havel (neighboring in Kladow) 0Nov 7, 1953 The road lies between Kladower Damm and continues over the Waldschluchtpfad as a dead end . On March 15, 1939, at the request of the Nazi organization , the street 184 was named Am Auslandsshaus (today: “Haus Lenné”) as the access road to the “Auslandsshaus der Hitlerjugend ” built in 1938 . The northern edge and the road area are in the district, the south side of the street in Kladow belongs to the "LSG Gatow - Kladow - Gross-Glienicke". Above the wooded slope of the Havel at the end of the Breitehornweg, the former foreign house of the National Socialist state youth organization Hitler Youth (HJ), built between 1937 and 1938, is embedded in the river landscape. It was designed by the Reichsarchitekt for this type of building, Fritz Gerhard Winter , as well as the foreign house in Hohengatow on the outskirts of the Reich capital. Since it was specially set up for the meeting of German youths with young people of the alliance partner of the axis Berlin - Rome , you can often find " House of Italy ". With the beginning of the development in Hohengatow streets were named and laid out; previously there were already paths through the forest area that do not directly coincide with today's courses. Before its current name, the street on the southern edge of the Hohengatow settlement was listed as Am Auslandsshaus , in the 1943 address book it is listed in the district of Gatow, it lies between Kladower Damm and Havel and is only built on with the Auslandsshaus. Breitehornweg 54
Buchwaldzeile

( Location )

0820 Buchwald, forest area west of Gatow 0Sep 9 1931 The paved road lies between Straße 265 and Groß-Glienicker Weg, it is parallel to the former Dorfstraße (today: Alt-Gatow). The path behind the western village property was called Feldweg before it was named or because of the adjacent community school Schulweg . To the north of Melsunger Strasse , a passable footpath continues along the paddock as a 10-zone zone . There are buildings for the farm workers at Buchwaldzeile 54–56 (front building, stable and rear building from around 1860) and in Street 264 No. 1, the "Schnitterkaserne", and in Plievierstraße 1 (residential building). The former gardener's house in Buchwaldzeile 49 is today a remarkable residential building due to its roof construction and is said to have previously stood on Pfaueninsel. Overall, the Schroedtersche Gut on Buchwaldzeile 43–61 and Alt-Gatow 52–58 is included as a monument area (entire complex) in the Berlin monument list and is thus protected. Between the Buchwaldzeile and Alt-Gatow, a footpath was created in 2009 via the old manor gardening under the name “Pfarrer-Jurytko-Steig”. The name chosen after the Catholic pastor in Gatow Georg Jurytko was honored because he, like the Protestant pastor Johannes Theile from Staaken (after whom a street in Staaken was already named), sentenced over 500 to death as a prison pastor in the Wilhelmstrasse military prison during the Nazi dictatorship Had accompanied members of the Wehrmacht . Buchwaldzeile
Emil-Basdeck-Strasse

( Location )

0390 Emil Basdeck (1878–1964), cadastral technician at the Spandau land surveying office June 15, 2000 The street in the Havelblick settlement is between Gatower and Kurt-Marzahn-Straße. Before the conversion of the allotment garden 'Havelblick' into a weekend settlement, it was not officially listed as the northern route. After withdrawing an objection, the name became final on April 20, 2003. The Havelblick settlement is located in the northeast, on the Rieselfeldern at the level of the harbor; the Rieselfelder tree nursery was owned by the City of Charlottenburg on the grounds of the settlement until the end of the 1920s . Emil-Basdeck-Strasse
Air base settlement

( Location )

0560 laid out as a settlement for the pilots working on the Gatow airfield after 1936 The street is located in what is known as the “Künstleriedlung” (nowadays) “Künstleriedlung” residential area, it leads as a ring road south from Groß-Glienicker Weg and is parallel to it. The settlement was built in 1935 for the Luftwaffe pilots, there are 30 white one-story houses with pointed roofs and arched doors on the 30 plots around the horseshoe-shaped street. In Gatow, some buildings that can be classified as typical National Socialist were built between 1934 and 1945: In 1935, the "Air Base Estate" was built in the Habichtwald. Until 1956, the street was an unnamed private road within the settlement. The air base settlement 1–30 is included in the list of monuments as a whole. In the 1943 address book the "Reichssiedlung Fliegerhorst" is recorded, the owner is named Fiskus and the 30 houses are inhabited by workers and craftsmen, such as firefighters, locksmiths and stokers, whose job is the airfield. Air base settlement 1–30
Gatower Strasse

( Location )

1260
(in the district)
from Spandau the road to Gatow before 1878 The street is in the superordinate street system Spandau (StEP class II) between the district boundary to Wilhelmstadt and street 265, where it merges into street Alt-Gatow. The street name Gatower Straße as an official name was first recorded in 1878. On May 8, 1935, Gatower Chaussee came to Gatower Strasse. Buildings on the properties Gatower Straße 231/233 (Landhaus Clara Lemm), 235h (Villa Rothenbücher), 241/243 (gland and tumor research institute), 296, 301 (farm building of the Villa Lemm ), 303 (rental house for the sewage field workers) and 313 ("Schnitterkaserne", parish hall) are included in the list as architectural monuments . Gatower Strasse 303

Gatower Straße northward of the crossing of the southern Rieselfeldabfanggraben, which crosses under the street

Groß-Glienicker Weg

( Location )

3020 Groß-Glienicke , neighboring municipality to the southwest (Potsdam-Mittelmark district) before 1900 The old connecting route from Gatow in a westerly direction to Groß Glienicke already had this name before 1900, sometimes called Glienicker Weg . In 1935, with the expansion of the Gatow airfield, the western section of the road became part of the airfield site. Today the road lies between Alt-Gatow (south end) and the outer path and ends (since 2003) on the border with Kladow . In Gatow, some buildings that can be classified as typical National Socialist were built between 1934 and 1945: In 1935, the "Air Base Estate" was built in the Habichtwald. Until 1956, the street was a private road within the settlement and also the access from Spandau. Groß-Glienicker Weg
Gustav-Haestskau-Strasse

( Location )

0220 Gustav Haestskau (18th century), cadastral technician , created the first cadastre of Spandau in 1728 and between 1720 and 1730 an eight-part cadastre of the city of Spandau and the surrounding lands June 15, 2000 The street lies between Emil-Basdeck- and Jürgen-Schramm-Straße in the "Siedlung Havelblick", which was formed through the transformation of the "KGA Havelblick", where this street was not officially named Mittelweg . The new name only became formally valid in 2003 after an objection was withdrawn. The Havelblick settlement is located in the northeast, on the Rieselfeldern at the level of the port. Until the end of the 1920s, the Rieselfelder tree nursery was owned by the City of Charlottenburg on the estate. Gustav-Haestskau-Straße (towards north)
Hafeldweg

( Location )

0420 Hafeld, field name for lands in the southern part of the Habichtswald 0Aug 9, 1956 The road goes northwards as a cul-de-sac from Groß-Glienicker Weg and opens up properties in the Habichtswaldsiedlung. The buildings, Künstlerweg 2/12, 13–25, 27 and Hafeldweg 26–49, dating from 1932–1934, are included in the Berlin list of monuments as the entire “Künstleriedlung Habichtswald” complex and are therefore protected as worthy of preservation. Until 1956, the street was an unnamed private road within the settlement. Haveldweg
Hornbeam Path

( Location )

0240 Hornbeams , deciduous trees after 1995 The street is parallel to Gatower Straße 257-263 to the east and opens up properties 1–35 (odd, west) and 2–16 (even, east) assigned to the road. The semi-detached houses are perpendicular to the 3.50 meter wide access road. The semi-detached houses to the east on this settlement area are assigned to Rothenbuchweg. The residential buildings south of the double-lane, unnamed transverse carriageway from Gatower Straße are located on the Havelufer, continuing Hainbuchenweg in the same design. Hornbeam Path
Havelmatensteig

( Location )

0310 Havelmaten, field name between Havel and Kladower Damm, Maten means meadows 0Feb. 2, 1931 The street is located in Hohengatow (southeastern tip of Gatow) between Hellebergeweg and Uetzer Steig and connects to the north as a dead end to the green area with the promenade. For the first time in 1933 in the address book in 1934 properties and a new building were listed on the Feldmark. Before it was named, the street was called Straße 2 according to the Hohengatow development plan. The building Havelmatensteig 22, Haus Neitzke, is listed in the Berlin list of monuments. The 1943 address book names plots 1–21 from Hellebergeweg to the left of Hellebergeweg, all built with residential buildings, on the right-hand side 2–22 (straight) there are four houses (8 is uninhabited) on the four plots (2–8) to Uetzer Steig, after that 10 is built with a summer house, 12 and 22 with residential houses, the street ends at the Feldmark. With the beginning of the development in Hohengatow streets were named and laid out; previously there were already paths through the forest area that do not directly coincide with today's courses. The Havelmaten farm was located north of the Hohengatow settlement. Havelmatensteig 22
Hellebergeplatz

( Location )

0060 × 40 Helleberge, ridge in the forest west of Kladower Damm Nov 23, 1931 The square is enclosed by Im Eulengrund, Hellebergeweg, Havelmatensteig and Am Kiefernhang, it is an extension of the Hellebergeweg and is located in Hohengatow. The “Haus Kisse” from the years 1932–1935 at Hellebergplatz 2 is one of Berlin's architectural monuments . In 1943 he was given “Post Bln.-Kladow”, the property at Hellebergplatz 1 belongs to Im Eulengrund 1 and 2/3 for the Kisse house. Hellebergplatz 2
Hellebergeweg

( Location )

0690 Hellebergen, ridge in the forest west of Kladower Damm Nov 23, 1931 The quiet residential street is located in forest and water-rich surroundings in Hohengatow and the "Gatower bathing meadow" is within walking distance. To the east between Kladower Damm and Krielower Weg, it leads north of the weekend house settlement on Hellebergeweg around Krielower Platz. It continues to the large bathing area on the Kleiner Breithorn of the Havel, where the water rescue station is located. In 1934 there were only “construction sites” on the way. Initially listed as Havelallee in the address book until 1931 , it was named Straße 1 in the development plan for the Hohengatow settlement . In Gatow, some buildings that can be classified as typically National Socialist were built between 1934 and 1945, including the officers' rental villas from 1937 for members of the Air Force at Gatow airfield along Kladower Damm, Hellebergeweg and Uetzer Steig. The entire complex of the rental villa complex with garages Hellebergeweg 21–27 and Uetzer Steig 10–20 from 1937 is included in the Berlin list of monuments. The 1932 address book contains the reference from the resident name Havelallee to the new name. With the beginning of the development in Hohengatow streets were named and laid out; previously there were already paths through the forest area that do not directly coincide with today's courses. The "Siedlung Hellebergeweg" is close to Haveln on the south side between the path that extends the Karlsbergallee and the "Great Bathing Meadow". Hellebergeweg eastwards from Kladower Damm
Hochwaldsteig

( Location )

0540 Hochwald , a forest that used to exist here 0Sep 9 1931 The street lies in Hohengatow between Im Eulengrund and Karlsbergallee . The street named in 1931 with the other paths in Hohengatow is listed as undeveloped in 1934 starting from Kladower Chaussee . Haus Wist, Hochwaldsteig 18, is listed in the Berlin list of monuments as a residential building with a garage from 1937 (architect Karl J. Pfeiffer). Already before 1900 a path called Hochwaldstraße led through the existing forest (before the development in Hohengatow) at the level of the Kleiner Breitehorn . Its course does not, however, coincide with the following Hochwaldsteig, but rather led from Cladower Chaussee (1 km south of the town center) to the bank of the Havel (south) through the Hohengatow forest. The connection from the Hochwaldsteig is car-friendly thanks to the extended arches, despite the 60-meter offset road axes via Marquardter Weg to Kladower Damm. Hochwaldsteig 18
In the owl ground

( Location )

0570 Owls used to breed in this forest landscape 0Sep 9 1931 The street, first street 6 according to the development plan, is located between Helleberge- and Breitehornweg in the Hohengatow settlement east of Kladower Damm. Haus Simon from 1936 by Hans Simon , Im Eulengrund 17, is included in the list of monuments as an architectural monument and the house garden as a garden monument. In the 1932 address book between Feldmark and Hochwaldstraße, the street Am Birkengrund to Havelallee (today: Hellebergeweg) is listed, apart from construction sites, number 14 mentions a house belonging to the businessman O. Frille. 1933 is the reference s. Available in Eulengrund, there with the same property on 14 between Hellebergeplatz, Hochwaldsteig and the Kladow district. In 1943, with the entry “Post Bln.-Kladow” in the address book, there are six residential buildings and two summer houses on the left (1–27) and six residential buildings and two summer houses on the right (2–34) in the direction of the Kladow district. Lot 6 belongs to the farmer E. Beutel (Alt-Gatow 65), 14, 16 and 20, 22 (on Marqardter Weg) belongs to the Wohnungsbau AG (Deutsches Heim) and is managed by Lieutenant Colonel Dr. Ing. F. Beckh, Major C. Wilhelm, Captain F. Meyhoeffer and the Major a. DL v. Wurmb inhabited. With the beginning of the development in Hohengatow streets were named and laid out; previously there were already paths through the forest area that do not directly coincide with today's courses. Im Eulengrund 17
In the Havel view

( Location )

0330 the settlement located here 0May 1, 2001 The street between Emil-Basdeck- and Jürgen-Schramm-Straße was named when the KGA was rededicated 'Havelblick' as a housing estate; before that, it was called Birkenweg within the colony . The Havelblick settlement is located in the northeast, on the Rieselfeldern at the level of the port. Until the end of the 1920s, the Rieselfelder tree nursery was owned by the City of Charlottenburg on the estate. In the Havelblick (towards the south)
Jürgen-Schramm-Strasse

( Location )

0300 Jürgen Schramm (1939–1986), surveying engineer, President of the Berlin Building Chamber June 15, 2000 The street in the Havelblick settlement was named like another street after a cartographer working in Spandau . It is between Gatower and Kurt-Marzahn-Straße. In the "Kolonie Havelblick", the existing streets were officially dedicated when it was redesigned into a residential area. The previous unofficial name was Südstrasse . An objection to the renaming was withdrawn in 2003 and the new name was formally effective on April 20th. The Havelblick settlement is located in the northeast, on the Rieselfeldern at the level of the harbor, and the Rieselfelder tree nursery was owned by the City of Charlottenburg until the end of the 1920s. At the Jürgen-Schramm-Straße / corner Gatower Straße there was a pumping station of the water company. Jürgen-Schramm-Straße (corner of Gustav-Haestskau-Straße, towards northwest)
Karlsbergallee

( Location )

0430 Karlsberg , across the Havel mountain in the Grunewald Nov 23, 1931 The road lies between Besingweg and Waldschluchtpfad and was previously unofficially referred to as Haveldamm because it ran along the western bank of the Havel. Three access roads to the east have the same name; to the east behind these properties towards the Havel is the bathing meadow. In the south it leads to the Haus Hohenstein care center. The “Dr. Taegen ”from the years 1935–1937 is included as an architectural monument in the Berlin List. With the beginning of the development in Hohengatow streets were named and laid out; previously there were already paths through the forest area that do not directly coincide with today's courses. In the 1931 address book, the Haveldamm is mentioned for the first time in this course . Left (south to north) of Waldschlucht (today: Waldschluchtpfad ) follow the construction sites on odd-numbered plots on 1, 3 to Hochwaldstraße (today: Hochwaldsteig ) and 5–9 to Waldesruh (today: Besingweg ). On the right, also from south to north, between Privatweg and Weg zur Havel there are construction sites at numbers 2 and 6–12 (straight) and a new building at 4. Today's plots are 16–20, 30–34 (west, straight) and 7–31 (odd), which are also subdivided (13, 13c – 13l, added 18–18b, 21, 21a, 23a / 23b, 23d, 25–25h, 27a – 27f, 29–29c, 33b – 33e, 35 / 35a) . There are three access roads with turning hammers, each seven meters wide, for these residential buildings on the slope between Karlsbergallee and Großer Badiese. Karlsbergallee 33b
Kladower Dam

( Location )

1680
(in the district)
Kladow , southern neighbor 0May 8, 1935 Since around 1900 the street was called Gatower Chaussee and was the connection between Spandau and Kladow. In 1934 there were only the first residential buildings along Dorfstrasse . In 1935, when Alt-Gatow was named, the Chaussee was divided and named Kladower Damm between Gatow and Kladow. Assigned to Gatower Strasse north of Dorfstrasse to Wilhelmstadt . Since then, the road has led from Groß-Glienicker Weg (continuing Alt-Gatow) to the edge of the district to Kladow. In Gatow, some buildings that can be classified as typically National Socialist were built between 1934 and 1945, including the officers' rental villas from 1937 for members of the Air Force at Gatow airfield along Kladower Damm, Hellebergeweg and Uetzer Steig. Until the establishment of the Hohengatow settlement and the naming of the streets laid out here, the area was summarized under An der Cladower Chaussee . Kladower Dam
Krielower Platz *

( Location )

0100 × 40 Krielow , western municipality on the Havel, today part of Groß Kreutz Feb 12, 1932 First, the square with other streets in Gatow was named as bathing meadow square on September 9, 1931 . After the development plan of the place was on the west bank of the Havel the name space Y . In 1934, between Helleberge-, Krielower Weg and Seepromenade, only the restaurantbad Bremert is listed here. After the development of the weekend house settlement on Hellebergeweg, the square no longer exists today and is also not available in the regional reference system (RBS), but is still used in common parlance at times. The way to the east is now signposted as a lake promenade. The northern plots belong to the lake promenade, the southern ones to the Hellebergeweg. Krielower Platz
Krielower way

( Location )

0300 Krielow , to the west of the municipality on the Havel, today a district of Groß Kreutz Feb 12, 1932 The street in the north of Hohengatow lies between Hellebergeweg and Uetzer Steig and connects to the north as a dead end to the green area with the promenade. The road, according to construction plan Straße 5 , in 1931, first with other roads in Hohengatow as bathing Wiesensteig named after lying here beach on the sandy beach of the Havel. In 1935 the road was still undeveloped, in 1940 there were “construction sites” and summer houses next to four inhabited properties. With the beginning of the development in Hohengatow streets were named and laid out; previously there were already paths through the forest area that do not directly coincide with today's courses. Krielower way
Artist path

( Location )

0400 Artist's settlement here since 1934 0Aug 9, 1956 The road is a ring route from and to Groß-Glienicker Weg. In the south of the suburban settlement (Habichtswald settlement) on plots 33-44, a settlement for unemployed sculptors and painters was created next to the (later) "Reichssiedlung Fliegerhorst" at the western end of Groß-Glienicker Weg. The course of the Groß-Glienicker Weg to the west was built over by the expansion of the Gatow airfield. The artist's settlement was first mentioned in the address book from 1935 with eleven lots, lots 1–32 were not built on. Until 1956, the street was an unnamed private road within the settlement. The buildings Künstlerweg 2–12, 13–25, 27 and Hafeldweg 26–49, dating from 1932–1934, are included in the Berlin list of monuments as a complete complex of the Habichtswald artists' settlement and are therefore protected as worthy of preservation. In the 1943 address book, lots 33–43 (odd, left-hand side) and 34–44 (right-hand side, even) are listed as “artists' settlements”, inhabited by painters and sculptors. Plots 1–32 are included under the suburban settlement with the addition “Habichtwald settlement” (odd left, even right), with the residents being named as workers and craftsmen and the owners being the “common. Wohnunsbau AG Berlin (W 62) "is noted. Artist path
Kurt-Marzahn-Strasse

( Location )

0260 Kurt Marzahn (1925–1984), geodesist from Spandau June 15, 2000 In the Havelblick housing estate, the street goes west and then southwest from Emil-Basdeck-Straße; it does not lead through to Straße 265. The official name was given when the allotment garden colony was transformed into a housing estate. The residents' objection to keeping the previous name Westring has been withdrawn, so the current name has been formally adopted since April 20, 2003. The Havelblick settlement is located in the northeast, on the Rieselfeldern at the level of the port. Until the end of the 1920s, the Rieselfelder tree nursery was owned by the City of Charlottenburg on the estate . Kurt-Marzahn-Straße (towards Emil-Basdeck-Straße)
Lee Parry Way 0210 Lee Parry (1901–1977), actress and singer 0Sep 1 2013 The street named in 2013 is a previously unnamed footpath that leads to the Windmühlenberg. The name was given in memory of the leading actress in the silent film "The Murder Mill on Evanshill", which was also shot in Gatow in 1921. The post mill on the 52 meter high hill was burned down according to the script. The starting point for choosing a name was a resolution by the Spandau District Council to increase the number of streets named with women. However, it is not included in the Spandau street directory as a footpath. Lee Parry Way
Marquardter way

( Location )

0080 Marquardt , Havelland municipality in the south of Gatow, today a district of Potsdam 0Sep 9 1931 The road between Kladower Damm and Im Eulengrund is the middle access road to the Hohengatow settlement. Plots 1, 3, 3a, as well as 2, 4 belong to the 6 meter wide asphalt road with edge strips on both sides. In the address book of 1933 and 1935 it is listed as undeveloped. In 1943 there are houses on No. 1 and No. 2, which are inhabited by military personnel from the airfield. At the west end of the street the street is extended to the left, so that the route leads over Im Eulengrund into the curve to the Hochwaldsteig, although both street axes are offset by 60 meters from one another. Marquardter Weg from Kladower Damm to the east
Maximilian-Kolbe-Strasse

( Location )

0390 Maksymilian Maria Kolbe (1894–1941), resistance fighter against the Nazi regime 05th June 1980 The street branches off as a dead end eastwards from Potsdamer Chaussee. It is the access road to the Gatow landscape cemetery . The road ends at the former Rieselfeld Rehbaumstücke. Maximilian-Kolbe-Straße 6 is the address of the Gatow landscape cemetery. The cemetery was planned since 1969 and was laid out from 1976. In this context, the western end of the Seeburger Weg was expanded and laid out as a wide street with a parking area for the cemetery guests; when the cemetery was opened in 1982, it was operational. Maximilian-Kolbe-Strasse
Melsunger Strasse

( Location )

0280 Melsungen , a small town in North Hesse and a climatic health resort on the Fulda 0Nov 1, 1969 The street is a dead end west of the Buchwaldzeile. It is continued from road 269, the former access road to Rieselfeld. A previous name was Mittelweg . The built-up part to the east was named in 1969. The plots on the odd page 3–23f are built on, and through multiple division 60 plots north of Am Berghang are built on with row houses (to the west) and residential buildings (to the east). With property 23, Melsunger Strasse becomes a residential street and merges with street 269, which is characterized by a field. There are agricultural areas on the north side. View in east direction along Melsunger Strasse
Peach path

( Location )

0150 Peach , stone fruit 0Sep 9 1931 The street is between Bardeyweg (formerly: street to Villa Lemm ) and leads as a one-way street northwards from Gatower Straße. In 1943, the location from the road to Villa Lemm is indicated on the left with the Schmidt'schen Haus (owner unnamed), Lamprecht'sches Haus and the boathouse of the Collegia rowing club, on the right the indication “Grundst. go z. Gatower Str. “, At the end of the street Alt-Gatow. Pfirsichweg 7 (northbound)
Plievierstrasse

( Location )

0090 Theodor Plievier (1892–1955), writer 0Nov 1, 1965 The street was laid out as street 227 according to the development plan. It is located with plots 1 and 3 south of the church as a connection between Alt-Gatow and the Buchwaldzeile , here it is the entrance to the Windmühlenberg settlement. The short and narrow street is designated as a 30 zone. It has an asphalt surface and sidewalks on both sides, on it parking and partially parking is prohibited. The eponymous Plievier lived in exile in the Soviet Union from 1934 to 1945 , distanced himself from communism after the Second World War and became known through factual novels, especially the novel trilogy Stalingrad , Moscow and Berlin . A street in Berlin-Gatow
Potsdamer Chaussee

( Location )

2350
(in the district)
Potsdam , destination of the Chaussee from Spandau after 1905 The road is part of the B 2 from Gartz on the Polish border to Mittenwalde on the Austrian border. It was laid out as a road between the city of Spandau and Potsdam (B 2), while the Berlin-Potsdamer Chaussee ( B 1 ) runs from Berlin through Steglitz and Zehlendorf to Potsdam. The road area in the district lies between Außenweg and the northeast corner of Engelsfelde at the transition to Wilhelmstadt . The state border with Brandenburg is on the western edge of the road. Between 1961 and 1990 the Berlin Wall lay on this Brandenburg site (then: GDR ) . Until 1945 the " Seeburger Zipfel" protruded eastward into Spandau and the Chaussee was between the street 269 and north of the street 265 in Gatow, whereby the Rieselfelder west (today in Brandenburg) was also Spandau territory. Potsdamer Chaussee
Rothenbuch way

( Location )

0830 Rothenbücher (deceased 1889), land and shipyard owner in Spandau and Gatow 0Sep 9 1931 The narrow street with partly paved and partly unpaved sidewalks lies between Bardeyweg and the outskirts and continues as a dead end in both directions. A section of the Spandauer Weg / Havel cycle path is located south of Bardayweg and it is the residential road (except for residents) to Villa Lemm . Several buildings are included in the Berlin list of architectural monuments on Rothenbücherweg. Villa Lemm with gatekeeper and farm building (Rothenbücher Weg 2/4, Am Ortsrand, Bardeyweg) from the years 1907–1908 by Max Werner and the garden of Villa Lemm (Rothenbücher Weg 2/4 by the Ludwig Späth company 1908 executed). In addition, there is Rothenbuch Weg 9, the Büdnerhaus from the years before 1845. On properties 9-19 including the village road and filing, the road profile and road surface from the 2nd half of the 19th century are protected as a northern village complex. The house number 19 (before 1845) and the apartment house number 21 from 1900 are like the house of Dr. Wagner from the years 1959–1960 was also included as a monument by Heinz Schudnagies . Rothenbücher Weg 9–19

Rothenbücher Weg 21

Lake promenade

( Location )

040 + (320) Promenade on the banks of the Havel Jan. 22, 1982 The lake promenade goes from the Hellebergeweg to the north, and not officially to the promenade along the large bathing meadow on the banks of the Havel. The path along which the weekend parcels are located has had this unofficial name for a long time. In 1982 the section with lots 1–1f parallel to Krielower Weg was dedicated to this name. Property 1 is assigned to the water rescue station. However, the name is also used for the entire riverside path between Kladow and Wilhelmstadt and is supplemented by the connecting path to Kladower Damm, known as the bank promenade. Corresponding to the other riverside paths, the lake promenade, as far as the Havel bank is accessible, bears the (unofficial) name of Dr.-Kleusberg-Promenade between Scharfe Lanke and Straße Am local edge. The Havel cycle path also runs along this route. The name Seepromenade is mentioned for the first time in the address book in 1933 as undeveloped from the bathing area . Lake promenade
Street 264

( Location )

0800 Numbered according to the development plan after 1930 The road goes 160 meters west of the Buchwaldzeile from the Groß-Glienicker Weg. A further path ends in front of the former Rieselfeldgelände at the green and arable land Hüllenpfuhlgelände at Gatower Separationsgraben, from here the road meets Gatower Bauernweg. Plots 1–7f (some with background pieces and driveways) built on with residential buildings on the north side up to the “Siedlung Weiter Blick” extend to the former Annenhof , which is located at no. There are two buildings on plot 14 and a garden area on 16. On the south side of the street in the corner of Groß-Glienicker Weg there is an agricultural area. Opposite plot 16 is the "Vierfelderhof Gatow", at the (physical) end of street 264. The children's and family farm Vierfelderhof (learning place farm) with farm shop and café and a farm kindergarten gives Groß-Glienicker Weg 30 as the address. Street 264
Street 265

( Location )

0120
(+ 2000)
Numbered according to the development plan after 1930 The road and the lengthening path through the former Rieselfelder lie between Alt-Gatow and Maximilian-Kolbe-Straße, the latter extends the route of the Seeburger Weg (formerly the Gatow – Seeburg link) past the Gatow landscape cemetery to Potsdamer Chaussee. The plots 43, 45, 55 and 61, which are used today, and which include a riding stables, are on the 265 road to the corner of Triftweg. The road from Alt-Gatow is initially a traffic-calmed area , paved and marked with road damage, west of the Buchwaldzeile it is marked as an unpaved residential street. The road leads south along the southern Rieselfeld interception ditch into the former Rieselfeld area . The street was called Seeburger Strasse until the 1950s . In 1943 the Seeburger Weg is mentioned in the address book with the location Alt-Gatow-Buchwaldzeile-Feldmark. At this time there are Rieselfelder fields on the right and the Baumgarten house of the farmer H. Baumgarten on the left. The way to Seeburg ran along the southern edge of the Rieselfelder, on a section there are also Rieselfelder to the south of it. Until August 1945 it cuts the tip of the Gatower tip on the other side of the Potsdamer Chaussee, which today belongs to Brandenburg. The Seeburg destination lost its importance for Gatow during the Berlin Wall , so that the planned street number was used by the Rieselfelder as an (official) address. In the address book of 1922, the street running through the town center in the Gatow district is only listed under Dorf (today: from Alt-Gatow). From this leading to the west between the Kup'schen house and arable land on the one hand and the land to the south with the house of the farmer Ernst Schulze and the parish hall "Nach Seeburg" is listed. Road 265: Beginning of Gatower Straße to the west
Street 269

( Location )

2060 Numbered according to the development plan after 1930 The street extends Melsunger Weg through the former sewage fields to Potsdamer Chaussee. Following the built-up Melsunger Weg, it has been developed as a driveway to over the Triftweg. A fled and hiking trail continues between the landscape protection areas Feldflur Gatow / Kladow (south, LSG 29) and LSG 35 (cemetery and laying pieces). The street is not mentioned in the Spandau street directory as no properties are assigned. But it is on the official map of Berlin 1: 5000 of the district surveying offices with names between Potsdamer Chaussee ( B 2 ). On the (north) side of the road is the branch ditch and the western beginning of the southern interception ditch . In addition, the last one east of the laying pieces crosses again to the north and further east the separation ditch crosses road 269. Street 265
Triftweg

( Location )

1300 Trift, stands for pasture and the way of the cattle drive before 1870 The (today's) footpath is already shown in Schmettau's maps between the way to Seeburg and the way to Groß Glienicke . It leads along the Gatower Separationsgraben, which was once used for sewage field drainage and is dedicated between Groß-Glienicker Weg via Straße 269 and Straße 265 . Plots in the outdoor area are not assigned. On the Triftweg the cattle were herded to the pasture by Gatow farmers, further to the west at the southern interception ditch and the western separation ditch was the Upstall , which was recorded in 1922 . Due to the Rieselfeldwirtschaft on the Rieselfeld Karolinenhöhe , the course has hardly changed and the name has been retained. Triftweg
Uetzer Steig

( Location )

0440 Uetz , Havelland municipality, united with couples and today a district of Potsdam 0Sep 9 1931 The street lies between Havelmatensteig and Krielower Weg in the Hohengatow housing estate (Gatow-Süd). Before it was named in the development plan, it was called Straße 3 . In Gatow, some buildings that can be classified as typically National Socialist were built between 1934 and 1945, including the officers' rental villas from 1937 for members of the Air Force at Gatow airfield along Kladower Damm, Hellebergeweg and Uetzer Steig. The entire complex of the rental villa complex with garages Hellebergeweg 21–27 and Uetzer Steig 10–20 from 1937 is included in the Berlin list of monuments. In addition, the "Haus Teich" from 1933 by Heinrich Sander, Uetzer Steig 4, is listed as a monument. With the beginning of the development in Hohengatow streets were named and laid out; previously there were already paths through the forest area that do not directly coincide with today's courses. Uetzer Steig 4
Forest canyon path

( Location )

0480 Landscape character of the Havelmaten, with forest and uplifts and depressions 0Sep 9 1931 The street between Breitehornweg and Karlsbergallee is in the Hohengatow housing estate (also known as Gatow-Süd) and leads to the west and north around Hohengatow Hospital (formerly: Geriatric Clinic), which was built in 1930, closed in 1996 and has been used as a nursing home since then. In Gatow, some buildings that can be classified as typically National Socialist were built between 1934 and 1945: In Hohengatow Waldschluchtpfad 27, next to the foreign house, there was the military hospital and rest home of the Todt Organization from 1944 (today: residential care center) , previously there were paths through the forest area that do not directly coincide with today's courses. The Waldschluchtpfad (Post Bln. = Kladow) is specified in the 1943 address book between Karlsbergallee and Forst. On the left side there is an uninhabited house at No. 1 and following forest. On the property on the right-hand side, at 12, there is the house of the architect A. Nölte, in which a chemist, an air force chief nautical officer and an air sergeant live. House 16 belongs to the factory director G. Romann, the owner of 18 is “unnamed”, and summer houses on plots 2–6, 10, 14, 20, 22 are noted. Forest canyon path
Wide view

( Location )

0630 good view from the Windmühlenberg over the surrounding landscape, symbolically advertising the settlement here 0July 1, 1973 The street, previously street 257 of the development plan, is a narrow paved driveway through the plots of the housing estate 'Weit Blick', which was redesigned because of the permanent settlers from an ( allotment garden ) colony in order not to be subject to the Federal Allotment Garden Act. The road lies between Buchwaldzeile and Am Kinderdorf, and continues over the latter as a cul-de-sac . Plots 1–29a (odd, north) and 2–28 (even, south) of the Weiter Blick development are part of the street. The Albert-Schweitzer Children's Village on plots 36–48 west of the intersection of the cross street Am Kinderdorf / Annenweg. The residential buildings of the “Weiter Blick” housing estate are located up to Am Kinderdorf, the Windmühlenberg weekend estate to the north and the settlement on the north side of Street 264 to the south . The street ends with a turning area at property 48, at Gatower Separtionsgraben in front of the arable and grassland area "Hüllenpfuhl". The route was laid out and built on in the early 1950s. Wide view

Street names no longer used or changed

In the address book from 1933 there are street names marked with “→ see”, which were obviously still in use in the previous designation. Since the streets named in Hohengatow in 1931 are listed with occupied or planned properties, the names with a “see note”, however, were not the names of the paths previously used by the first residents. Some of the first developed properties in Hohengatow were probably assigned to An der Cladower Chaussee . Plots in Gatow are often not numbered consecutively (especially under Dorf , today: Alt-Gatow). Until the 1930s Gatow was marked with the comment "Post Bln. = Spandau".

  • At the Birkengrund →  Im Eulengrund . 1933 indicated on both sides with several construction sites.
  • At Lindenweg : starting from Havelallee , undeveloped
  • On the Havel →  Rothenbücherweg . In 1933 it was located between Weinmeisterhorn and Straße zur Villa Lemm and the Havel, with six houses and several construction sites.
  • On the Kladower Chaussee : located between the districts of Kladow (forest), Hochwaldsteig, Marquardter Weg, Hellebergeweg, forest: Dorfstraße / Weg to Groß Glienicke. Indicated with 13 houses and several construction sites. This street name (probably) applies to the houses on the edge of Kladower Chaussee.
  • Friedrich-Beutel-Straße : crosses Am Lindenweg and is also undeveloped in 1933.
  • Havelallee →  Hellebergeweg . Located in 1933 from An der Kladower Chaussee via Am Lindenweg via Karlsberallee to the bathing meadow , taken with several construction sites. In 1933 the note “s. Hellebergeweg "
  • Haveldamm  →  Karlsbergallee . Built in 1932 under this name with a house at No. 4 and construction sites in the location on the left: Waldschlucht – Hochwaldstraße – Waldesruh – Havelallee-Friedrich-Beutel-Straße, on the right side: Privatweg – Weg zur Havel – Havelallee-Forststraße. In 1933 the note “s. Karlsbergallee ”, there are several construction sites on the left (north) and a house and several construction sites on the right (to Krielower Platz).
  • Lindwerder (Insel) : 1932 under “Post Berlin-Wannsee”, still part of Gatow. Until the reform of the district borders in 1938, the islands (Lindwerder and Kladower Sandwerder) in the Havel belonged to Spandau. Today the Havel border lies west of the islands and Lindwerder is part of the Steglitz-Zehlendorf district, Nikolassee district.
  • Mühlenweg : undeveloped, from the village street outgoing
  • Schulstrasse →  Buchwaldzeile . In 1933 it is recorded between Seeburger and Mühlenweg with two houses and the community school and on to Groß-Glienicker Weg with five apartment buildings, including the Brandis'sche workers house of the city of Berlin as the owner and the manager Brandis, tenant in Neu-Kladow.
  • Seeburger Weg : from Dorfstraße via Schulweg to Feldmark, it is indicated with a house, several assigned plots and on the right-hand side (viewed westward) as undeveloped (without assigned plots). The street is on the route of Melsunger Straße and Straße 269.
  • Road to Villa Lemm : going from the Chaussee to Spandau via Rothenbücherweg to Dorfstraße and was (probably) in the course of the Bardayweg . Listed with three houses and assigned properties between Rothenbücherweg and Dorfstraße .
  • Waldesruhstrasse →  Besingweg . Indicated in 1933 with three houses and several construction sites.
  • Weinmeisterhorn : under Post Berlin-Pichelsdorf, leading from the Spandau district to Gatow with 17 properties, some of which are owned by the sailing club as well as the Seglerheim and Weinmeisterhorn restaurant. Today it belongs to Wilhelmstadt as the Weinmeisterhöhe settlement.

Further locations of Gatow

Allotment colonies

  • KGA 'Havelmaten' (Kladower Damm 57, Lage ) is an allotment garden with 35 parcels on 9343 m² of state-owned leased land of level IV, allotment areas that are to be retained according to the zoning plan . The southern Rieselfeldabfanggraben flows into the northern edge of the KGA and a brickworks stood on its southern bank for around 100 years (mid-18th to mid-19th century)

Settlements

  • Weekend settlement 'Windmühlenberg' ( location )
  • Weekend settlement 'Rothenbücher Weg, Gatower Straße 235' ( location )
  • Weekend settlement 'Weit Blick' ( location )
  • Weekend settlement on the Hellebergeweg ( location )
  • Havelblick settlement ( location )
  • Air base settlement and artists' settlement Habichtswald ( location )

Parks and green spaces

  • Park am Windmühlenberg (RBS: 08163, Lage )
  • LSG 29 - Feldflur Gatow / Kladow ( location )
  • LSG 39 - Rieselfelder Karolinenhöhe ( location )
  • Gatower Heide, LSG 35 - Gatow / Kladow / Groß Glienicke ( location )
  • Great bathing area Gatow (RBS: 08215, location ) The district Gatow has three Havel bathing areas. The "Big Bathing Meadow" at Hohengatow is opposite the Grunewald Tower.
  • Small bathing meadow ( location ): Havel bathing meadow near the old Gatow village center.
  • Haveldüne (RBS: 08216, location )
  • Mantelpfuhlpark (RBS: 08159, location )
  • Sunbathing lawn "Plessches Terrain", north of Am Ortsrand (RBS: 08163, Lage )
  • Landscape cemetery Gatow (Maximilian-Kolbe-Straße 6, at Straße 256, Lage ) At the beginning of the 1960s there was a shortage of space due to the increased number of deaths in this cemetery at An den Kisseln, and an expansion by the GDR wall was impossible in the surrounding area . In 1969 planning began for the new cemetery on the Gatower Rieselfeldern in the south of the Spandau urban area, it was opened on 18 hectares in 1982 with a celebration hall, bell tower and waiting hall. The occupancy remained below the capacities, so since 1988 there has been the possibility for deceased of the Islamic faith and since 1994 a separate part of the cemetery for members of the Greek-Orthodox religion.
  • Evangelical cemetery in Alt-Gatow
  • Forestry Office Tegel Revierförsterei Gatow, RBS: 09370 (Kladower Damm 130–148, Lage )

See also

literature

  • Gesellschaft Wirtschaftshof Spandau e. V. (Hrsg.): Street chronicle with signposts through the Spandau economy . H. Born & Co Spandau, Berlin 1957.

Web links

Commons : Streets in Berlin-Gatow  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b The basic elements of the RBS
  2. Gatow working group: According to statistics from 1894, among the 440 inhabitants there were a landowner, two farm owners, two farmers, a tenant, a gardener, an administrator, an inspector, a miller and baker, two innkeepers, three milk traders, a blacksmith, and one Teacher, an architectural painter, a pensioner, a widow.
  3. a b c d e f g h Gatow working group
  4. a b Berlin address book 1922 → IV. Streets and houses of Berlin → Spandau administrative district → Gatow
  5. ^ Berlin address book 1930 → Part IV. Streets and houses of Berlin → Spandau administrative district → Gatow
  6. a b c d e f g h Berlin address book 1934 → Part IV. Residents and companies sorted by street → Spandau administrative district → Gatow, ...
  7. a b Walk through the Gatower Rieselfelder
  8. Sewage field use since 1874
  9. Monument Path - Project in Gatow ( Memento from March 23, 2013 in the Internet Archive )
  10. Entry in the Berlin state monument list with further information as wellArchitectural monuments Alt-Gatow
  11. On the pine slope 22
  12. a b c d e f g h Berlin address book 1943 → Heads of household, companies and businesses registered by the commercial court sorted by street → Spandau administrative district → Gatow
  13. a b c d e f g h i j k map of Berlin and the surrounding area (1922) in 12 sheets VI Berlin
  14. a b c d e f g h i wir-in-gatow.de: foreign house ( Memento from July 24, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  15. Printed matter - 1944 / XVIII - 1st women's name for Gatow
  16. a b c Stadtentwicklung.berlin: Interactive hiking map
  17. Watchtower station (river) WRS Alt-Gatow ( Memento from April 7, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  18. fbinter.stadt-berlin.de: rbs-strnr = (here) 05293
  19. a b c d e berlin.de: The Spandau village offers quiet, upscale living in the south-west of Berlin
  20. a b c d e f g Clarification of the situation on map 1: 5000, produced by the district surveying offices
  21. www.annenhofgatow.de ( Memento from April 13, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  22. a b c d Berlin address book 1940 part 3: Streets in the administrative district of Spandau for Gatow, ...
  23. Bardeyweg 5
  24. Half-house around 1860
  25. a b Berlin address book 1933 → Part IV. Residents and companies sorted by street → Spandau administrative district → Gatow
  26. ^ Berlin address book 1935 → Residents and companies of the city of Berlin sorted by streets and house numbers → Spandau administrative district → Gatow
  27. www.haus-lenne.de
  28. ^ We in Gatow: Gutshof ( Memento from May 23, 2013 in the Internet Archive )
  29. Schroedtersches Gut
  30. Naming of the pastor jurytko climb , cdu-fraktion-spandau.de
  31. on the person of Emil Basdeck
  32. Air base settlement
  33. a b Artist settlement
  34. Berlin city map: Hellebergeweg-Berlin-Gatow
  35. Helebergeweg / Uetzer Steig
  36. a b FIS broker map display map of Berlin 1: 5000 (K5 color edition) - Gatow
  37. City map & street archive (Hirs-Hohe)
  38. a b see the map of Berlin and the surrounding area from Brockhaus' Konversations-Lexikon, 14th edition. (1891-1895). Edge of the map in the southwest south of Gatow
  39. a b Berlin address book 1932 → Part IV. Residents and companies sorted by street → Spandau administrative district → Gatow
  40. on the person of Jürgen Schramm
  41. http://www.berlin.de/ba-spandau/bvv-online/vo020.asp?VOLFDNR=5735&options=4 Printed matter - 2086 / XVIII - Draft for the development plan 5–62 for the property at Gatower Straße 332 / Jürgen-Schramm -Straße 5/7 in the Spandau district, Gatow district
  42. Karlsbergallee 33b
  43. Gatow . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1931, Part IV., P. 1346.
  44. ^ Artists' settlement . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1935, p. 1751.
  45. on the person of Kurt Marzahn
  46. Berliner Zeitung , September 25, 2013, p. 19 (news in brief)
  47. to the person of Kolbe
  48. a b www.wir-in-gatow.de: Landschaftsfriedhof ( Memento from March 4, 2016 in the Internet Archive )
  49. a b Berlin address book 1922 part 3: overview plan of the administrative district Spandau with adjoining districts, p. 1148.
  50. Villa Lemm
  51. Street profile Dorfstrasse
  52. ^ Streets in Gatow . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1933, p. 1197.
  53. ^ Rural agriculture on the Vierfelderhof in Berlin-Gatow
  54. Internet presentation of the Vierfelderhof
  55. Uetzer Steig 10
  56. Uetzer Steig 4
  57. Vivantes Clinic - Haus Hohengatow / ( Memento from January 16, 2013 in the Internet Archive )
  58. Havelhoehe: Chronik.html ( Memento from August 20, 2012 in the Internet Archive )
  59. a b c Beach in Gatow ( Memento from April 7, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  60. Printed matter - 0644 / XIX

Remarks

  1. a b c d e In Berlin's address books, undeveloped properties that have been sold or leased are listed as 'construction sites'; if they have not yet been allocated, they are marked as 'parcels'. Developed properties are identified with the owners and heads of household on numbered or unnumbered properties, newly built buildings are marked as 'new buildings', uninhabited as 'uninhabited'.
  2. a b c In August 1945 the British and Soviet occupation authorities in Berlin agreed on an exchange of territory. To use for the British troops all over the base went military airfield Gatow together with the demarcation in large-Glienicker See separate eastern part of Groß Glienicke in British sovereignty over when access from Spandau to Gatow was the Seeburger tip to the British sector, administrative district of Spandau, to hand over. In return, the Spandau parts of the Staaken airfield and also the Gatow corner of the Rieselfelder west of Potsdamer Chaussee came under Soviet jurisdiction . As a result, Weststaaken came to the Soviet sector of Greater Berlin, which at the beginning of the 1950s led to the takeover by the GDR authorities. From 1990, contrary to the efforts of the State of Brandenburg, the exchange of territory in the Gatow-Kladower area was not reversed. Weststaaken returned to Spandau on October 3, 1990.