List of streets and squares in Berlin-Wilhelmstadt
The list of streets and squares in Berlin-Wilhelmstadt describes the street system in the Berlin district of Wilhelmstadt with the corresponding historical references. At the same time, this compilation is part of the lists of all Berlin streets and places .
overview
The district of Wilhelmstadt has 40,536 inhabitants (as of December 30, 2019) and includes the postal code areas 13593, 13595. The district was named in 1897 for the 100th birthday of Kaiser Wilhelm I , after which the intensive development of the existing streets and the expansion of the street system began, north of Heerstrasse in historic Wilhelmstadt, this consists of tenement houses from the beginning of the 20th century. In the other locations there are more residential streets with single-family houses.
There are 121 dedicated streets and eight named squares in the district. The total length of these federal, urban and residential roads is 59.5 kilometers, 23 roads also belong in part to the neighboring districts of Staaken and Spandau . Heerstrasse with the B 5 and B 2 have the status of a federal road , the latter running south in the direction of Potsdam over Wilhelmstrasse , and then Potsdamer Chaussee . The section of Wilhelmstrasse north of Heerstrasse belongs to the main road system like the relieving (because it is more developed) Gatower Strasse . Pichelsdorfer Strasse between Heerstrasse and Wilhelmstrasse also serves as the main and commercial street of Wilhelmstadt. The latter is then connected to the Ruhlebener Straße and Charlottenburger Chaussee streets via Spandauer Klosterstraße, which leads west over Brunsbütteler Damm back to Heerstraße and then to Brandenburg and the 10 federal motorway . To the east, the six-lane train leads to Charlottenburg and to the Bundesautobahn 100, partly through the district. This also includes the Weißenburger Strasse, Götel- and Schulenburgstrasse between Pichelsdorfer and Ruhlebener Strasse. The Schmidt-Knobelsdorf- , Lutoner Strasse train leads west from Wilhelmstrasse to the neighboring district of Staaken . This street is connected via Seeburger Strasse at the northern end of Wilhelmstrasse with Spandauer Klosterstrasse and the Old Town Square in the central part of the Spandau district .
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 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Adamstrasse
( Location ) |
610 | Johann George Adam Betcke (1825–1912), master baker and Spandau local politician | 1874 | The street 1 , which was newly laid out around 1870 in the Wilhelmstadt area , was named Adamstraße in 1874, after the first name of the town councilor Adam Betcke. On November 20, 1914, the Spandau magistrate decided to separate the eastern section laid out in 1897 as Betckestrasse. Betcke was city counsel in Spandau from 1854 to 1882 and mayor from 1883 to 1885. | |
Alfred-Balen-Weg
( Location ) |
180 | Alfred Balen (1930–1986), Yugoslav water polo coach in Spandau | 19 Sep 2006 | The footpath between Weverstraße and Gatower Straße was named in honor of the trainer who has been working for Wasserfreunde Spandau since the late 1960s, as he promoted Berlin's role in German water polo. | |
Alt-Pichelsdorf
( Location ) |
410 | the village lying here became the Spandau locality Pichelsdorf | Aug 25, 1939 | In 1939, as elsewhere in Greater Berlin , the Dorfstrasse was renamed with the prefix “Alt-” to the surrounding community incorporated in 1920, including the part of Pichelsdorfer Strasse south of Heerstrasse. The road lies between Heerstraße / Mahnkopfweg and Heer- / Pichelsdorfer Straße. | |
At the Omnibushof
( Location ) |
230 | the bus depot was completed in 1967 | Aug 1, 1966 | Between Wilhelmstrasse and Gatower Strasse, the road was rebuilt together with the new BVG bus depot on the former allotment area north of Heerstrasse . | |
At the Pichelssee
( Location ) |
750 | Pichelssee, adjacent widening of the Havel | Jan. 26, 1925 | On the route of road 1 of the development plan, the road leading south from Alt-Pichelsdorf to the peninsula was named after the eastward section of the river. Not officially listed as Schloßstraße because of the access to the "Schloßpark" at the southern end of the peninsula. | |
At the south park
( Location ) |
150 | Südpark , 1919–1924 designed park in the area of Börnicker Lake . | 1921 | The street lies between Weverstraße and Jordanstraße in the inner area of Wilhelmstadt. On October 17, 1959, the southern section of the road that was separated by the garden colony "Kietzer Feld" was detached as a separate street Plathweg . | |
Amalienhofstrasse
( Location ) |
380 | to the local Amalienhof estate | 1878 | The street lies between Päwesiner Weg and Lutoner Strasse and was laid out in 1876 in the Klosterfelde area of Spandau. | |
At the Karolinenhöhe
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
190 Karolinenhöhe, a 52 meter high mountain south of the road | June 14, 1988 | This paved, traffic-calmed area is located between Weinmeisterhornweg and Gruberzeile. The road land with the eastern properties belongs to the district and forms the border to Staaken on the western edge . The road was laid out south of Heerstraße to further develop the building site. | |
Baumertweg
( Location ) |
180 | Georg Ferdinand Baumert (1854–1930), lawyer, local politician. | Oct 22, 1956 | The road between Grimnitzstrasse and Jordanstrasse was projected as road 101 in the development plan . | |
Baumgartensteg
( Location ) |
70 | Baumgarten, captain of a Prussian howitzer battery, 1813 | Oct 16, 1910 | The short residential street with good old buildings is located between Ruhlebener and Heidereuterstraße. Bombardier Schultze von Baumgarten's howitzers managed to hit the powder magazine of the citadel with a long-range shot over almost 1,300 meters, for example from where the street is today , and to persuade the French occupying it to surrender the Spandau fortress . | |
Betckestrasse
( Location ) |
550 | Johann George Adam Betcke (1825–1912), master baker and Spandau local politician | Nov 20, 1914 | The street continues the Adamstraße eastward between Pichelsdorfer Straße and Havel . Adamstraße initially ran the entire length across Wilhelmstadt, but was divided in 1914, with the section east of Pichelsdorfer Straße being named after the surname of the former mayor. The western part, Adamstrasse, refers to the first name of the former mayor. The two residential complexes Betckestrasse 5 and Betckestrasse 22–33 are listed architectural monuments. The Spandau-Süd fire station is located on the banks of the Havel. |
|
Beyerstrasse
( Location ) |
240 | August Beyer (1834–1899), Royal Building Inspector, involved in the construction of the new workers' housing estate in Spandau in 1874 and 1875. | 1878 | The road between Földerichstrasse and Pichelsdorfer Strasse was laid out here in 1873 as an access road for a new workers' settlement for the Spandau gun foundry. Beyer was involved in the construction of the new workers' settlement in 1874 and 1875. In 1967 these houses were demolished and replaced by new buildings. | |
Blakenheideweg
( Location ) |
240 | Blakenheide, old field name west of Spandauer Wilhelmstrasse | May 13, 1929 | The street between Gatower Straße and Warägerweg is only connected to the former via a footpath and has a turning area at lots 11 and 14 / 14a. The street is on the Weinbergshöhe, it was near the originally different city limits and was therefore called Grenzweg by residents . | |
Blasewitzer ring
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
640 Blasewitz , eastern suburb of the Saxon capital Dresden | Apr 1, 1972 | The Blasewitzer Ring between Sandstraße and Seeburger Weg forms the district boundary to Staaken on the eastern edge of the road . The local streets were named after Dresden suburbs and districts. In 2016 , Gewobag had a new type of eco- power plant installed on the roof of a twelve-storey residential building on this street : the developers call it “Windrail”. This is a combination of wind turbines and solar modules , which is supposed to deliver around 95,000 kilowatt hours of electricity, and CO2 emissions are also reduced. |
|
Bocksfeldplatz
( Location ) |
110 × 40 | Johann Abraham Bocksfeld († 1852), Spandau local politician | May 13, 1929 | The previously nameless square was named in 1929 on the incoming Bocksfeldstrasse after the naturalized name of the area. The square connects to Bocksfeldstrasse and is located on the Enger Steig between Bollmannweg and Fröhnerstrasse, plots 1-7 and 11-20 are on the square and plots 8-10 are set off somewhat westward in the settlement area. | |
Bocksfeldstrasse
( Location ) |
810 | Johann Abraham Bocksfeld († 1852), Spandau local politician | Jan. 26, 1925 | The road lies between Alt-Pichelsdorf and Enger Steig. It is east of Jaczostraße as a dead end and further interrupted as a footpath and cycle path. In the west it leads as a cul-de-sac on Bocksfeldplatz. Bocksfeld owned a piece of land with a brickworks and lime kiln here, so the area was named after him. The street north of the Scharfen Lanke was named Bocksfeldstrasse by decision of the Spandau district office in 1925 between Jaczostrasse and Alt-Pichelsdorf. In 1926/1927 an extension to the west of the "police settlement" was laid out and included on October 3, 1928. | |
Bollmannweg
( Location ) |
130 | Carl Bollmann (1833 – after 1873), Spandau local politician | Oct 3, 1928 | The short street between Enger Steig and Roedeliusweg, projected as street 41a , was named in 1928 after the mayor of Spandau, Bollmann (1869–1872). | |
Börnicker Strasse
( Location ) |
210 | Börnicke , marshy meadow around the Börnicker Lake north of Heerstrasse | 1878 | The road goes northeast from Heerstraße 270 as a dead end to the Südpark colony. The street was laid out in 1874 in the Potsdamer Vorstadt (since 1897: Wilhelmstadt) and named in 1878. | |
Brandensteinweg
( Location ) |
520 | Hans Ernst Friedrich von Brandenstein (1849–1938), politician, Prussian member of the state parliament | Feb 8, 1958 | The road going off from Heerstraße 184-186 on the Pichelswerder peninsula was rebuilt. The honor of Brandenstein with a street name is based on his campaign against speculative forest sales by the tax authorities in 1910, whereby the forest on the Pichelswerder has been preserved. | |
Brothers Street
( Location ) |
610 | Brothers and landowners Friedrich Wilhelm Reinicke († 1863) and Otto Reinicke (19th century). | 1894 | The Brüderstraße lies between Wilhelmstraße and Krowelstraße and runs over the real estate of the Reinicke brothers, which they owned in the 19th century in the Wilhelmstadt area in Spandau. Friedrich Wilhelm Reinicke called the Reinickesche Poor Foundation into being through his will. When the buildings between Pichelsdorfer and Wilhelmstrasse began to be developed in the Wilhelmstadt area at the end of the 19th century, the street was planned and named in 1894. The access road laid out in the area between Pichelsdorfer and Krowelstraße was included as an eastern extension in 1902. | |
Carlo-Schmid-Platz
( Location ) |
(irregular) |
200 × 70 Carlo Schmid (1896–1979), politician, constitutional lawyer and resistance fighter against the Nazi regime | Oct 1, 2002 | The square is on Lutoner Strasse and is bordered to the east by Ulrikenstrasse and Amalienhofstrasse. There is a lawn surrounded by trees. | |
Charlottenburger Chaussee
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
490 Charlottenburg , part of Berlin, at that time an independent city | 1882 | The street lies between Teltower Straße and the railway bridge in the district and continues to the east in Spandau and the properties on the north side of the street are also outside, in the neighboring district it merges into Spandauer Damm . In 1822 the Chaussee to the neighboring city of Charlottenburg was completed over the Spandauer Berg and initially named as Berliner Chaussee . | |
Daberkowstrasse
( Location ) |
280 | Christian Daberkow († after July 1821), Spandau local politician | Oct 11, 1955 | The street lies between Wilhelmstrasse and Stritteweg, over which it continues as a dead end . The street 470 was already built with residential buildings in the 1930s but was only given a name in 1955. | |
Village street
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
20 central street of the former village | until 1903 | The Dorfstraße is located in the district between Tiefwerderbrücke and the access road east of the Großer Jürgengraben. Most of the street runs south into the neighboring district of Spandau . It was the main street leading through the village of Tiefwerder, which was laid out with the village in the first half of the 19th century. The name Dorfstraße has only been shown since 1903, but it could be older. | |
Ebersdorfer Platz
( Location ) |
filled street |
100 × 10 Ebersdorf is located west of the Bleilochtalsperre near Saalburg and became a district of the city of Saalburg-Ebersdorf in the Saale-Orla district in Thuringia | Oct. 30, 1936 | The site is located with lots 1–7 (odd) and 4 and 6 (even) between Ulriken and Gehlberger Strasse and north of Ebersdorfer Strasse. The area has been inhabited since 1933, the previously unnamed place was named in 1936. | |
Ebersdorfer Strasse
( Location ) |
290 | Ebersdorf is a district of the city of Saalburg-Ebersdorf in the Saale-Orla district in Thuringia. | Oct. 30, 1936 | The road 29 was 1913 before the First World War in the development plan under the name Lübeckerstraße provided in the area Klosterfelde, but the settlement did not begin until 1933, the road between Päwesiner and Hettnerweg was renamed in 1936 to check more than one of Berlin's streets through the formation of large Reduce Berlin . | |
Egelpfuhlstrasse
( Location ) |
400 | Egelpfuhl , old field name in Klosterfelde | around 1900 | The Egelpfuhlstraße lies between the south bank of the Bullengraben and the Lutonerstraße in the district and continues to the north in Spandau , the east adjoining area of the Bullengrabengrünzug up to the Lazarusstraße is also in Spandau. The Egelpfuhlweg as an unpaved sand path was renamed Egelpfuhlstraße in the northern section around 1900. However, the expansion of the road began after 1970. The western side of the street is largely undeveloped. There is the Ernst Ludwig Heim allotment garden and other green spaces. On the eastern side there is some business at the northern end, followed by single-family houses. | |
Elsgrabenweg
( Location ) |
270 | Elsgraben , former canal between the Spree and Faulem See | Sep 9 1931 | The Elsgraben flowed alongside the old Teltower Landstrasse since the first half of the 19th century . From 1930 residential houses were built on and in 1931 the name of Teltower Landstrasse was extended by road 4 projected in the development plan . The street is between Ruhlebener and Teltower Straße. | |
Narrow climb
( Location ) |
250 | Footpath with narrow width due to the development | May 13, 1929 | This street is between Jaczostrasse and Heerstrasse but is only a driveway along Bocksfeldplatz , at both ends a two meter wide footpath that leads through the buildings as a gate passage. | |
Fahremundstrasse
( Location ) |
710 | Fahremund, old Spandau winegrowing family | May 13, 1929 | The street laid out after 1920 according to the development plan street 63 was named like the surrounding streets in 1929 with reference to the local viticulture until 1740. On August 5, 1971 a section of street 467 from the previous southern end to Steinmeisterweg was added. The street lies between Steinmeisterweg and Heerstraße. | |
Falstaffweg
( Location ) |
690 | Sir John Falstaff , wine-reveler from Shakespeare's comedy "The Merry Wives of Windsor" | July 10, 1933 | The street between Weinmeisterhornweg and across the Pfälzische Strasse as a dead end was previously called Strasse 43 . The name is related to the wine growing in the area until 1740. | |
Földerichplatz
( Location ) |
(school forecourt) |
180 × 40 Christoph Földerich († around 1630), merchant and patron, place named after the street | May 13, 1929 | The space J was named after running past Földerichstraße. It lies between Adamstrasse and Weverstrasse. The Christoph Földerich primary school is located here. | |
Földerichstrasse
( Location ) |
780 | Christoph Földerich († around 1630), merchant, councilor in Berlin, 1628 donor for free lessons from Spandau students | 1878 | The road initially consisted of the current southern section between Jordan and Adamstrasse. With the development of the northern Wilhelmstadt from 1900, the northern part up to Metzer Straße was newly laid out and incorporated into Földerichstraße. | |
Folkungerstrasse
( Location ) |
560 | Folkunger , medieval Swedish ruling family | July 10, 1933 | The street 116 between Weinmeisterhornweg and Pfälzische Straße, which has existed for a few years, was built around 1930 and named in 1933. | |
Franzstrasse
( Location ) |
370 | Franz Bäthge (19th century), master bricklayer, landowner | 1895 | The road between Pichelsdorfer and Götelstrasse was laid out as a new road after the Bäthge land had been parceled out. | |
Fröhnerstrasse
( Location ) |
310 | Johann Ferdinand Fröhner (1792–1859), 1821–1839 mayor of Spandau | Oct 3, 1928 | The development began here in 1925 on Straße 60a according to the development plan. The street is between Bocksfeldplatz and Sandheideweg. | |
Gatower Strasse
( Location ) |
2290 | Gatow , a neighboring district to the south in the Spandau district | until 1878 | The road between Wilhelmstraße and Alt-Gatow across Heerstraße is in the route of the old path from Spandau to Gatow municipality . The name was first documented as an official name in 1878. On May 8, 1935, the northern section of the previous Gatower Chaussee came to Gatower Straße. | |
Gehlberger Strasse
( Location ) |
460 | Gehlberg , municipality near Gräfenroda in Thuringia | 22 Aug 1936 | The street was laid out as street 515 in 1933 . In 1936 the street between Lazarus- and the dead-end street leading over Ebersdorfer Straße was named. | |
Genfenbergstrasse
( Location ) |
230 | Johannes Genfenberg , rector and teacher at the Spandau city school in the 14th century (certificate from 1330) | May 13, 1929 | It lies between Pichelsdorfer and Götelstrasse on the north bank of the Grimnitzsee. The road 102 , which was laid out according to the development plan, was first called Birkenwäldchen , also called Am Birkenwäldchen , before 1929 before it received its official name, which is still valid in 1929. | |
Götelstrasse
( Location ) |
760 | Götelwiesen and Götelfeld located here | until 1879 | The road between Genfenbergstrasse and Weißenburger Strasse / Schulenburgbrücke follows the route of the old one, which leads in a few turns from the western bank of the Grimnitzsee to the Spandauer Burgwall. The official name Goetelstraße (later: Götelstraße) was first used in 1879. On May 20, 1937, the street section north of Schulenburgstrasse was renamed Krowelstrasse. On April 1, 1972, the southern section through the forest parking lot at Grimnitzsee was canceled and the road was named Tharsanderweg. | |
Gotenweg
( Location ) |
300 | Goths , East Germanic tribe | 1935 | The road laid out in 1934 lies between Blakenheideweg and Zur Haveldüne in the Weinmeisterhöhe settlement, as is the case with several of the surrounding areas, named by Germanic and Slavic tribes. Before 1945 it belonged to the Seeburg municipality in the Brandenburg region. Through allied agreements in 1945 it came to the British sector and thus to the Spandau district with the "Seeburger Zipfel". | |
Graetschelsteig
( Location ) |
190 | Emil Graetschel († around 1924), businessman, Spandau local politician | Aug 1, 1965 | The Grätschelweg starts opposite Am Omnibushof from Gatower Straße to the east. | |
Grässeweg
( Location ) |
230 | Johann Georg Theodor Grasse (1814–1885), bibliographer, legend researcher and literary historian | Oct 11, 1955 | The road between Hettnerweg and Egelpfuhlstraße was laid out in the Klosterfelde area in 1951 as Straße 525 and named in 1955. | |
Grimnitzseeweg
( Location ) |
120 | leads to the Grimnitzsee | May 13, 1929 | Before it was named Straße 104 , the street lies between Pichelsdorfer Straße and Tharsanderweg. | |
Grimnitzstrasse
( Location ) |
170 | Grimnitzsee , connected to the Havel by a water arm | 1878 | The road between Pichelsdorfer Straße and Baumertweg was laid out on Pichelsdorfer Straße in 1873 and was named in 1878 because it runs in the direction of Grimnitzsee. | |
Gruberzeile
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
310 Otto von Gruber (1884–1942), photogrammeter, geodeter | Apr 8, 1964 | The Gruberzeile lies between An der Karolinenhöhe and the Wendehammer in the district. It continues in Staaken . The district boundary is initially on the south side of the Karolinenhöhe excluding the street width and changes halfway to the sand road on the northern edge of the street, so that this then also belongs to the district. The streets here are named after photo technology pioneers. | |
Havelchaussee
( Location ) |
1220 (in the district) |
Havel, right tributary of the Elbe | around 1925 | The Havelchaussee lies between Elsgrabenweg and the district boundary on Angerburger Allee in the district and continues south into the Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf district . The Havelchaussee was particularly popular at the time of the Berlin Wall as an approach to nature, the forest area of the Grundewald and Havel access . It is not yet included in the record for the Berlin streets from 1921 on the map from January 1925 and is mentioned for the first time in the official street directory from 1925. | |
Heerstrasse
( Location ) |
3220 (in the district) |
Heerstrasse to Döberitzer Heide | 1908 | Heerstraße is located between the Stößenseebrücke and Sandstraße in the district. In the east it continues to Westend and in the west to Staaken . The street served the Berlin garrison as a connection to the Döberitzer Heide practice area, which is why it was sometimes called Döberitzer Heerstraße . In the area of the city of Spandau, the road was laid out in 1903–1911, bypassing the town center, and around 1908 it was named Heerstraße. Allegedly, when planning the road, Kaiser Wilhelm II linked the starting point in Berlin and the destination in Döberitz on a map with a ruler. When the road was officially opened to traffic in 1911, Kaiser Wilhelm II took part in this state ceremony. | |
Heidereuterstrasse
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
370 Heidereuter, overseer of the magistrate's heath | Oct 14, 1910 | The residential street with good old buildings and some new buildings is located between Ruhlebener and Pichelswerder Strasse in the district and continues on the latter street to the east in Spandau . In addition, the properties to the west and north belong to the neighboring district. The Heidereiter who looked after the Grunewald (Spandauer Heide) lived between 1696 and 1813 not far from Ruhlebener Straße. The street emerged from a meadow path during the development of the Stresow district north of Ruhlebener Straße and, according to the development plan, was street 4a . The street ends on the eastern side for cars as a dead end at the furniture store IKEA , there is a pedestrian passage to Ruhlebener Straße. On the north side is the allotment garden "Am Schlangengraben" to which there is a passage.
The street ends on the eastern side for cars as a dead end at the Swedish furniture store. There is a pedestrian passage to Ruhlebener Straße. On this side of the street you will find a hotel and the entrance to the Linh Thuu pagoda. At the eastern end you come through a small park to Grunewaldstraße and over a pedestrian bridge to the old town of Spandau . |
|
Herulerweg
( Location ) |
220 | Heruler , an (East) Germanic tribe appearing for the first time on the Black Sea | 1935 | Between Warägerweg and Weingartenweg in the Weinmeisterhöhe settlement, which was established in 1934 and which was part of Seeburg at the time. In 1945 the Seeburger Zipfels area came to the Spandau district and what was then the British sector on the basis of allied agreements through the exchange of areas. | |
Hettnerweg
( Location ) |
380 | Hermann Hettner (1821–1882), literary and art historian | Oct 11, 1955 | The street between Ebersdorfer and Walzelstraße was laid out in 1951 in the Klosterfelde area as street 517 and named with the development in 1955. | |
Hevellerweg
( Location ) |
80 | Heveller , West Slavic tribe, inhabitant of the Havelland | 1935 | The short cul-de-sac goes south of Zur Haveldüne. The street is located in the Weinmeisterhöhe settlement that was laid out in 1934 and belonged to the Seeburg municipality in the Brandenburg region until 1945. On the basis of Allied agreements, the "Seeburger Zipfel" came to the British sector of Berlin and thus to the Spandau district in 1945 through the exchange of territory. | |
Höhenweg
( Location ) |
370 | runs on the Weinmeisterhöhe | 1935 | The street is a dead end on both sides from Zur Haveldüne in the Weinmeisterhöhe settlement. This Weinmeisterhöhe area belonged to the Brandenburg municipality of Seeburg until 1945, but on the basis of Allied agreements, the “Seeburger Zipfel” came to the British sector and the Spandau district in 1945. | |
Jaczo Street
( Location ) |
910 | Jaczo (12th century), Prince of the Sprewanen at Köpenick | April 16, 1909 | On April 16, 1909, the Spandau magistrate decided to give the street 42 the name Jaczostraße and on January 26, 1925 part of the street "Scharfe Lanke" was included. The street is thus between Heerstraße and Sandheideweg, it continues here as a dead end to Gatower Straße and ends in front of it in a turning hammer . | |
Jaegerstrasse
( Location ) |
440 | Hunter , a job title | around 1895 | The street is between Metzer Platz and Jordanstraße, but interrupted between the cul-de-sac south of Weißenburger and Adamstraße. The street name was officially justified by the fact that the hunt in the Feldmark Spandau had started earlier from here. | |
Johannastrasse
( Location ) |
560 | Johanna Lazarus, née Meyer (1840–1871), landowner's wife | 1888 | The quiet residential street, which is mostly built up with single-family houses, is located between Seeburger and Lazarusstraße. The road was laid out in the Klosterfelde area in 1880 on a piece of land by Julius Lazarus, the owner of the Amlienhof, and named in 1888 after the first name of his first wife. Lazarus founded the Johanna-Stift on Seeburger Strasse in 1883 in memory of his late wife Johanna. | |
Jordanstrasse
( Location ) |
350 | Jordan, innkeeper and landowner in Spandau | 1878 | The street was laid out in 1873 by Jordan west of Pichelsdorfer Straße on a site that was his property. It is located between Pichelsdorfer Straße and Wachenheimer Weg. | |
Kattfußstrasse
( Location ) |
605 | Johann Christian Kattfuß (* 1761), local politician, 1808–1815 mayor of Spandau | Oct 3, 1928 | The street lies between Weinmeisterhornweg and Pfälzische Straße was called Straße 43a in the development plan . The road was laid out before this name was given. | |
Keltererweg
( Location ) |
580 | Wine presser , worker in winemaking | May 13, 1929 | The road between Weinmeisterhornweg and Gatower Straße was road 108 according to the development plan , like the surrounding roads, the name is related to the vineyards that were previously operated here. | |
Kerstenweg
( Location ) |
90 | Ferdinand Kersten (1849–1911), baker, local politician | May 13, 1929 | The street between Wilhelmstrasse and Straßburger Strasse was laid out together with the residential buildings built in 1928/1929 as Strasse I , which was named in 1929. Kersten supplied all barracks between Spandau and Potsdam with bread from his bakery. After a fire in the bakery in 1900, Kaiser Wilhelm II asked personally on the same day whether the delivery of bread to his soldiers was guaranteed. | |
Konkordiastrasse
( Location ) |
360 | Construction company " Concordia " | 1890 | The construction company "Concordia" owned larger shares of the building land on this street between Weverstrasse and Sprengelstrasse. The company went bankrupt in 1892. | |
Krowelstrasse
( Location ) |
620 | Crowel, old arm of the Havel from Stresow to Faulen See | May 20, 1937 | The street between Weißenburger Strasse and Spandauer Burgwall initially belonged to Götelstrasse and was spun off and renamed in 1937 north of the Schulenburg Bridge outside the Burgwallgraben. | |
Crooked gardens
( Location ) |
230 | Crooked gardens, an old settlement outside the city of Spandau | Jan. 29, 1958 | The street lies between Seeburger and Seecktstraße, this is where the settlement first mentioned in 1470 was located. | |
Küfersteig
( Location ) |
260 | Cooper , here as cellar master | Oct 3, 1928 | The street between Keltererweg and Weingartenweg was named Straße 109 when it was laid out . The choice of name is related to the viticulture that was operated here until 1740, the cooper presses and tends the wine. | |
Kuhnertstrasse
( Location ) |
200 | Kuhnert, gardener in Spandau | 1878 | Master gardener Kuhnert laid this road in 1873 for the construction of workers' apartments on his property to enable. The official naming after him took place five years later. It is located between Grimnitzstrasse and Jordanstrasse. | |
Lankestrand
( Location ) |
80 | lies on the Scharfen Lanke | May 13, 1929 | The road between Rudererweg and Schwimmerweg was laid out as road D in Pichelsdorf parallel to the bank of the lake-like bulge of the Havel in the Pichelsdorf area. | |
Lazarusstrasse
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
680 Julius Lazarus (1834–1897), landowner, owner of the Amalienhof estate | Feb. 18, 1955 | The road area of Lazarusstraße between Päwesiner Weg to Egelpfuhlstraße and the Bullengraben green belt to the north belong to the neighboring district of Spandau . In the district is the south side of the street with lots 103-137 (odd). Lazarus had the housing estate on Gärtnerallee built in 1881 and the Johannastift in 1883. The street lies on former Lazarusian land, on which Johanna and Ulrikenstrasse , named after his first and second wife, run. The current street was previously street 514 . Lazarusstrasse , which had existed in Spandau since the 19th century , was renamed Päwesiner Weg on May 16, 1938, as Lazarus was a Jew. In 1955, as an act of reparation, a street in the Klosterfeld area was renamed. A quiet residential street on the south side, mainly built with single-family houses, on the north side of which the Bullengraben and the KGA Lazarusstrasse are located. Hiking trail no.20 (Bullengrabenweg) leads seven kilometers from Spandau train station via Lazarusstraße to Staaken. | |
Luton Street
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
810 Luton , an industrial city north of London , has been a partner town of the Spandau district since 1959 | Sep 1 1973 | Lutoner Straße lies in the arch between Bullengrabenbrücke and Carlo-Schmid-Platz in the district and was newly laid out as a connecting road between two residential areas in Klosterfelde. To Spandau 40 meters are west of the Bull ditch. | |
Mahnkopfweg
( Location ) |
340 | Mahnkopf, long-established fishing family in Pichelsdorf | Aug 25, 1939 | This cul-de-sac , going north from Heerstraße , is the part of Dorfstraße that was renamed in 1939 and was interrupted by Heerstraße. The southern part of the Dorfstrasse was given the name Alt-Pichelsdorf , as is customary in the formation of Greater Berlin , by prefixing "Alt-" to the village name. | |
Malschweg
( Location ) |
240 | Adolf Malsch († 1895), treasurer and city treasurer of the city of Spandau | Nov 8, 1955 | The street between Wilhelmstrasse and Stritteweg, further than a dead end , was called Strasse 469 before it was named . | |
Melanchthonplatz
( Location ) |
140 × 100 | Philipp Melanchthon (1497–1560), theologian who openly and persistently professed Luther | 1893 | The square between Wilhelmstrasse and Adamstrasse was named after the Melanchthon Church in Melanchthonplatz, which was built on Wilhelmstrasse in 1893. | |
Melanchthonstrasse
( Location ) |
260 | Philipp Melanchthon (1497–1560), theologian who gave the local Melanchthon Church its name | 1893 | The newly laid out street that begins at the Melanchthon Church, built in 1893, was named Melanchthonstraße in the same year, it is located between Adamstraße / Melanchthonplatz and Weverstraße. | |
Metz place
( Location ) |
(triangular) |
60 × 60 × 30 Metz , capital of the Moselle department in Lorraine (Lorraine), France | Dec 15, 2001 | The name arises from the south-bounding Metzer Straße, the place is further bounded by Pichelsdorfer and Jägerstraße. | |
Metz Street
( Location ) |
210 | The Lorraine city of Metz belonged to the German Empire when it was named the capital of Lorraine | 1900 | As the capital of Lorraine, Metz was part of the German Empire from 1871 to 1918. The Treaty of Versailles then returned it to France. The road between Jägerstrasse and Wilhelmstrasse was laid out in 1900 and named in the same year. | |
Meydenbauerweg
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
210 Albrecht Meydenbauer (1834–1921), civil engineer, founder of photogrammetry | Aug 27, 1963 | In the district the street is a dead end east of the sand street, the western section of the street is in Staaken . The new road, which included road 401 , was named after a pioneer of photo technology in 1963, like the surrounding roads (mainly belonging to Staaken). | |
Paddler path
( Location ) |
130 | Paddling , water sports | May 13, 1929 | The residential road between Am Pichelssee and Lankestrand was planned as road B. | |
Päwesiner way
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
510 Päwesin , municipality in today's Potsdam-Mittelmark district , Brandenburg | May 16, 1938 | The street is between Lazarusstraße and Seeburger Straße in the district, to the north it runs to Spandau to Brunsbüttler Damm. The previous namesake, Justizrat Lazarus der Strasse, was Jewish, so Lazarusstrasse in the Klosterfelde area was renamed by the Nazis in 1938. | |
Palatinate Street
( Location ) |
460 | Palatinate is a wine-growing region | May 13, 1929 | The road south of Heerstraße, planned as Straße 41 between Gatower and Wilhelmstraße, was named with reference to the Palatinate wine-growing region because of the viticulture that took place here until the middle of the 18th century. | |
Pichelsdorfer Strasse
( Location ) |
1670 | Pichelsdorf , which has been part of the Spandau district since 1920 | 1878 | The street is the main street between Heerstrasse and Wilhelmstrasse. The Pichelsdorfer Weg from Spandau was named in 1878. It is one of the oldest streets in Spandau; the path is already considered to have existed in the 13th century. A tram station was built here in 1894 and existed until 1962. The road branching off with the same name in 1940 was spun off as Wachenheimer Weg on August 1, 1966. | |
Pichelswerderstrasse
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
70 Pichelswerder , peninsula between the Havel and Stößensee | Oct 14, 1910 | The west side of the street between Heidereuter Strasse and Ruhlebener Strasse with property 26 (continuous) is in the district, this street section and the further course to the north to Freiheit through the mainline line is in Spandau . The street in what was then Spandau's Stresow district (since 1920: Stresow location) was called Straße 5 according to the development plan before it was named . On the eastern side of the street there are industrial and office buildings, the western side is bordered by the garden of the Linh Thuu pagoda and the allotment garden at Am Schlangengraben. | |
Plathweg
( Location ) |
130 | Ludwig Plath (1848–1921), master carpenter, Spandau city council | Oct 17, 1959 | The street that was previously here was Am Südpark , as it was interrupted by the Kietzer Feld garden colony, and the southern section was renamed Plathweg in 1959. The road goes westward from Pichelsdorfer Strasse as a dead end, pivoting to the northwest. | |
White Rose Square Coordinates: 52 ° 30 ′ 13.6 ″ N , 13 ° 23 ′ 15.8 ″ E | White Rose , resistance group against the dictatorship of National Socialism | Aug 15, 2020 | A triangular, almost 1000 square meter lawn ( roadside green) at Wilhelmstrasse 23 was rededicated to a place at the joint request of the SPD, Left, Greens and FDP by resolution of the Spandau District Council Meeting 2018 and was given the name Platz der Weißen Rose on August 15, 2020 . The square is in the immediate vicinity of the site of the former Spandau war crimes prison, which was demolished in 1987 after the death of the last prisoner, Rudolf Hess . With the designation, the district assembly wanted to set a "clear signal against National Socialist ideas". | ||
Potsdamer Chaussee
( Location ) |
1230 (in the district) |
Potsdam , southern neighbor of Spandau | 1849 | The country road leading from Spandau to Potsdam was paved around 1850 and has been designated as a highway since 1849. The northern section of the street in the area of the city of Spandau was named Wilhelmstrasse in 1897. The street is located in the district south of Heerstraße between the northern and southern meeting point of the Berlin city limits to Engelsfelde (district of Dallgow-Döberitz , Brandenburg). To the west is a strip of forest on which the wall stood between 1961 and 1989 . To the east are the former sewage fields Karolinenhöhe. The road leads as B 2 south to Gatow and on to Potsdam , it has the status of a federal highway . Probably after 1930 a small southern side street off Potsdamer Chaussee was detached and called a private street . The southern section belonged to the Osthavelland district until 1945. As the only access to Gatow airfield for the British occupying power in Berlin, it came to the British sector and thus to the Spandau district during the Allied exchange of territory together with the adjacent area. | |
Reclamweg
( Location ) |
80 | Anton Philipp Reclam (1807–1896), bookseller and publisher | Sep 1 1973 | The street was newly laid out and named, a dead end road east of Blasewitzer Ring. | |
Rodensteinstrasse
( Location ) |
740 | Legendary figure of the ruin Rodenstein in the Odenwald | May 13, 1929 | Rodensteinstrasse, laid out as Strasse 60 , lies between Gatower and Fahremundstrasse. The local street names refer to the former viticulture in this area. The knight of Rodenstein is said to have drunk his villages as a big drinker and to have drunk the wine cellars empty for the winemakers. On August 22, 1936, Strasse 65 , west of Wilhelmstrasse, was included. | |
Roedeliusweg
( Location ) |
260 | Wilhelm Adalbert Roedelius (1818–1877), local politician in Spandau and Lichtenberg | Apr 21, 1932 | The street 113 was named in 1932 after the mayor Roedelius, during whose tenure the Städtische Sparkasse was founded in 1852 and in 1857 it was decided to build a gas company. The street is between Jaczostraße and Bollmannweg. | |
Rowers path
( Location ) |
160 | Rowers , water sports enthusiasts | Jan. 13, 1929 | The street between Am Pichelssee and Lankestrand was previously called street A and lies parallel to the swimmers 'and paddlers' paths, south of the Spandau sailing school. | |
Ruhlebener Strasse
( Location ) |
1040 (in the district) |
Ruhleben , former manor district east of Spandau | April 16, 1909 | The street is located in the district between the district boundary along Heidereuterstraße and Tiefwerderweg and the embankment of the S-Bahn line between Stresow and Pichelsberg.
A section of the Charlottenburger Chaussee, between Teltower Straße and Heidereuter Straße as well as the then Charlottenburger Tor, was named after the neighboring manor district in Ruhlebener Straße after a municipal decision of April 16, 1909. Another part of Ruhlebener Strasse, between Teltower Strasse and the district border with Charlottenburg, the former Strasse 1 , was renamed Ruhlebener Strasse after World War II . Today's western part of Ruhlebener Strasse, located in the Spandau district, between Heidereuter Strasse and Klosterstrasse, was built after the construction of the Dischinger Bridge and renamed Ruhlebenr Strasse in 1956. In its course, the assigned status of the middle section changes as a six-lane two-lane main road at the intersection of Teltower Strasse on Charlottenburger Chaussee. The Ruhlebenr Straße only continues after the Teltower Straße (on the former Straße 1) as a two-lane residential street. |
|
Sandheideweg
( Location ) |
460 | Sand heather, local sandy parcel | May 13, 1929 | It is located between Gatower Straße and Weinmeisterhornweg and was called Straße 61 before it was named . The first houses were built in 1921. | |
Sand road
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
490 former sand pits in this area | around 1888 | The street is in the district between Gruberzeile and Blasewitzer Ring, but the western properties belong to Staaken . The name Sandstraße was officially mentioned for the first time around 1888 but may have been used a long time before. The road initially consisted of two sections with no direct connection. On August 1, 1972, the smaller, northern section was renamed Leubnitzer Weg . | |
Sharp lank
( Location ) |
1330 | Sharp Lanke , Havel Bay | April 16, 1909 | The street lies between Jaczostraße and Weinmeisterhornweg, further as a dead end to the south past the Weinmeisterhorn to the transition to the promenade in front of the suburb of Gatow . The road runs parallel to the banks of the Havel Bay of the same name. On January 26, 1925, the section leading eastwards around the bay in the north was spun off as Bocksfeldstrasse and the road section in between was incorporated into Jaczostrasse on the same day . | |
Schmidt-Knobelsdorf-Strasse
( Location ) |
870 | Heinrich Rudolf Gustav Schmidt von Knobelsdorf (1832–1909), military, 1888–1893 commander of Spandau | around 1900 | The Egelpfuhlweg, which lies here through the Egelpfuhlwiesen south of Brunsbütteler Damm and which already existed before 1700, was renamed Schmidt-Knobelsdorf-Straße with the development plans for this area around 1900 between Seeburger and Wilhelmstraße, the remaining part was paved and named Egelpfuhlstraße. | |
Schulenburgstrasse
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
260 Rudolf Wilhelm Graf von der Schulenburg auf Ramstedt (1860–1930), politician | 1911 | Schulenburgstraße is located between Ruhlebener Straße and Tiefwerder Weg in the district and leads through Spandau at the Schulenburg bridge again into the district. | |
Swimmer path
( Location ) |
90 | Swimming , water sports | May 13, 1929 | The street was designated in the development plan for Pichelsdorf as street C , it lies between Am Pichelssee and Lankestrand parallel to the paddler and rowers' path. | |
Seeburger Strasse
( Location ) |
1300 (in the district) |
Seeburg , western neighboring municipality | 1857 | Seeburger Strasse is located between Carlo-Schmid-Platz and Wilhelmstrasse in the district. In the north, Spandau borders between Elsässer and Klosterstrasse on the northern edge of the street with lots 1–7 (continuous). The street on the route of the historic route from Spandau to the neighboring village of Seeburg has been named this way since 1857. | |
Seeburger Weg
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
370 Seeburg , western neighboring village | 1857 | The street with single and multi-family houses in partly rural surroundings lies between Blasewitzer Ring and Carlo-Schmid-Platz in the district. In the south, 50 meters on the western edge of the street with properties 34 and 36 (straight) between Maulbeerallee and Grünzug border the neighboring district of Staaken . The street on the route of the historic route from Spandau to the neighboring village of Seeburg has been named this way since 1857. As a result of extensive structural changes, the course of the street was often changed, with entire parts being canceled. After the construction of the Rudolf-Wissell-Siedlung, only the section north of Maulbeerallee remained, which is still called the Seeburger Weg. The section south of Heerstrasse was renamed Semmelländer Weg on January 1, 1972. | |
Seecktstrasse
( Location ) |
300 | Hans von Seeckt (1866–1936), military and politician, 1920–1926 head of the German army command | Dec. 1, 1936 | The street lies between Seeburger Straße and Krumme Gärten. The new Seeckt barracks was built on the former parade ground in 1935 and the new road 479 , which was named in 1936, was laid out. | |
Semnonenweg
( Location ) |
250 | Semnones , Germanic tribe | after 1930 | The street between Zur Haveldüne and Herulerweg lies in the Weinmeisterhöhe settlement, where several streets are named after tribes. The road came to the British sector in 1945 through the Allied exchange of territory with West Staaken and thus to the Spandau district at that time. | |
Siemenswerderweg
( Location ) |
760 | Siemenswerder , property at the southern end of the road | Jan. 29, 1958 | The road goes south at Heerstraße 184/185 (Pichelswerder-Süd). Siemenswerder was expanded by the Siemens company as a place to relax for its employees. Before that, the “Königgrätzer Garten” restaurant was here. The road goes southwards at Heerstraße 184/185 (Pichelswerder-Süd) and ends at the southern end of the western bank of Pichelswerder. | |
Sotzmannstrasse
( Location ) |
360 | Daniel Friedrich Sotzmann (1754–1840), geodesist and cartographer | 16 Aug 2010 | The street is between Seeburger and Schmidt-Knobelsdorff-Straße, but only as a continuous walk to the former. The street's namesake was appointed geographer to the Royal Prussian Academy of Sciences in Berlin in 1786, where his first maps of Prussia were made and in 1791 he designed his first terrestrial globe. | |
Spandau castle wall
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
40 Location of the old castle from the 8th century | Sep 9 1931 | The street is 50 meters between Pichelsdorfer and Krowelstraße in the district (plot 1–3 odd) in the following section to the Burgwallgraben only plots 8 and 10 (even) on the southern edge of the district belong to the district, to the east the street in Spandau continues. | |
Sprengelstrasse
( Location ) |
220 | Christian Konrad Sprengel (1750–1816), educator, botanist. | March 1, 1912 | The quiet residential street with neighborhood projects and a few service providers is located between Földerichstrasse and Wilhelmstrasse, was called Strasse 36 before it was named . | |
Steinmeisterweg
( Location ) |
770 | Alexander Karl Peter von Steinmeister (1853–1929), local politician | Oct 11, 1955 | The street 62 was laid out and settled in 1932 and named in 1955. The namesake of the street between Weinmeisterhornweg and Heerstraße Steinmeister was committed to the traffic development of the areas between Spandau, Gatow and Kladow. However, his project for a railway line from Spandau via Gatow and Kladow to Potsdam was not realized. | |
Cul-de-sac
( Location ) |
90 | after the street situation as a dead end | June 1, 1974 | The street runs as a dead end in the housing estate built between 1974 and 1976 north of Ruhlebener Strasse . | |
Strasbourg street
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
460 Strasbourg , Alsatian city, with the French German War until 1918 for the German Empire came | around 1903 | The street was originally intended as an extension of the Breite Straße to the south. The road area and the east side of the road are in Spandau , the district includes the western properties between Spandauer Burgwall and Ziegelhof. The street was named in memory of the siege of Strasbourg in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870/1871. | |
Street 270
( Location ) |
1040 | Numbered according to the development plan | 1945 | The undeveloped road 270, unofficially known as Birkenallee, lies between Potsdamer Chaussee (as an extension of the suburban Engelsfelder Chaussee) and Gatower Straße on the northern edge of the former Rieselfeld Karolinenhöhe. In this area, formerly Rieselfelder of the city of Charlottenburg, in 1945 between the Soviet and British allies the Seeburger Zipfel (previously part of Engelsfelde) was added to the British sector of Berlin when the Gatow and Weststaaken airfield was exchanged . The British troops had free access from Spandau to their military airfield without any Soviet-controlled territory to cross. With this new Berlin city limit, the (now) Berlin section of Engelsdorfer Chaussee with the connection to Gatower Straße became Straße 270. | |
Road 467
( Location ) |
70 | Numbered according to the development plan | until 1929 | Road 467 extends the southern section of Fahremundstraße to the west to the area of the elementary school at Amalienhof. | |
Stritteweg
( Location ) |
100 | Martin Stritte (1877–1963), lawyer, local politician | Nov 11, 1968 | The street lies between Weinmeisterhornweg and Daberkowstraße. | |
Teltower Strasse
( Location ) |
300 | Teltow , south-eastern neighboring town of Spandau | until 1894 | The street between Ruhlebener Straße and Elsgrabenweg in what was then the Stresow district is part of the former old path that led through the Grunewald to Teltow and was generally referred to as the Teltower Weg in the 19th century. With the fortification it was first called Teltower Straße in 1894. | |
Tharsanderweg
( Location ) |
270 | Tharsander (1692–1765), theologian, writer with folk tales | Apr 1, 1972 | The street lies between Pichelsdorfer Straße and Grimnitzseeweg, it is the former southern section of Götelstraße, which was divided here by a garden and was named Tharsanderweg in 1972. | |
Tiefwerderweg
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
340 Tiefwerder , founded in 1816 as a fishing village, is now a locality | around 1816 | It is located between Ruhlebener Straße and Schwarzer Weg with the street area and the east side in the district, but the west side of the street with the associated land belongs to the Spandau district . The access road to the community of Tiefwerder through Stresow lies between Ruhlebener and Dorfstrasse and has been called Tiefwerderweg since that time. The former rural community in the Osthavelland district was established as a fishing village in 1816 when 29 fishermen settled there. The settlement on the Spandau castle wall was destroyed by a fire. | |
Ulmenstrasse
( Location ) |
270 | Elm , deciduous tree | 1890 | The street lies between Földerichstraße and Wilhelmstraße and was laid out in 1890 in the Wilhelmstadt area as an access road for a new building area, where elms were or were probably planted. | |
Ulrikenstrasse
( Location ) |
560 | Ulrike Lazarus, wife of the property owner Lazarus | 1890 | The road between Seeburger and Lazarusstraße is a designated path in the Klosterfelde area in 1860 and was named in 1890. Ulrike was the first name of the second wife of Justice Councilor Julius Lazarus, who owned the land there and who made the proposal for the name. | |
Wachenheimer way
( Location ) |
230 | Wachenheim an der Weinstrasse is a resort near Bad Dürkheim, Rhineland-Palatinate | Aug 1, 1966 | Opposite Jordanstraße, the street goes east from Pichelsdorfer Straße as a dead end . It was laid out in 1940 on the side of Pichelsdorfer Strasse under the same name and was given its own name in 1966. | |
Walzelstrasse
( Location ) |
300 | Oskar Franz Walzel (1864–1944), literary historian | Sep 20 1966 | Before Straße 518 , the road between Egelpfuhlstraße and Ulrikenstraße was named in 1966. | |
Varägerweg
( Location ) |
300 | Varangians , Vikings from Sweden | 1935 | The street lies between Blakenheideweg and Zur Haveldüne in the Weinmeisterhöhe settlement. The Warägerweg is located in the “Seeburger Zipfel”, which came to the British sector and the Spandau district in 1945 on the basis of allied agreements through the exchange of territory. | |
Weingartenweg
( Location ) |
330 | after to 1740 operated here wine | around 1935 | The street between Zur Haveldüne and Küfersteig in the Weinmeisterhöhe settlement is located in the Seeburger Zipfel, which came to the Spandau district in 1945 on the basis of Allied agreements. | |
Weinmeisterhornweg
( Location ) |
2090 (in the district) |
Land promontory in the Scharfe Lanke on the Havel | Sep 9 1931 | The Weinmeisterhornweg lies between the district boundary (Mareyzeile extended in height) and Scharfe Lanke in the district with properties 14–132 (even) and 1–163a (odd), to the west it continues Staaken to Heerstraße. | |
Weissenburger Strasse
( Location ) |
770 | Weißenburg in Lower Alsace on the Lauter, France. | 1895 | The street lies between Götelstraße and Wilhelmstraße and has a main street function between Picheldorfstraße and Götelstraße to Schulenburgstraße. Named Wagnerstrasse from 1878 to 1895, it was renamed on the occasion of the 25th anniversary of the Battle of Weissenburg on August 4, 1870 in the Franco-Prussian War , which marked the first important victory of the German troops under Crown Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Prussia over the French troops under McMahon and brought Douay. | |
Wendenweg
( Location ) |
280 | Wenden , tribe of the Western Slavs | 1935 | The road between Zur Haveldüne and Wilzenweg is located in the Weinmeisterhöhe settlement and as part of the Seeburger Zipfel in the name of the neighboring town. As a result of the allied territorial exchange in 1945, the road came to the Berlin district of Spandau (at that time the British sector of Berlin). | |
Weverstrasse
( Location ) |
900 | Franz Rudolf von Wever (1829–1896), military, director of the gun foundry | 1878 | The street is between Götel- and Melanchthonstraße. When Wever was director of the gun foundry, the military treasury built a residential colony near Pichelsdorfer Straße for the foundry workers, in which this street was laid out. | |
Wilhelmstrasse
( Location ) |
2950 | Wilhelm I (1797–1888), German Emperor, King of Prussia, | 1897 | Wilhelmstrasse is located between Seeburger Strasse and Daberkowstrasse, where it merges a little further south into Potsdamer Chaussee. In the southern section it belongs to federal highway 2 , and the northern section has the status of a main road. The northern section of the old Potsdamer Chaussee between Karolinenhöhe and Seeburger Strasse was renamed Wilhelmstrasse together with the Wilhelmstadt district in 1897 on the occasion of the 100th birthday of Kaiser Wilhelm I. The Spandau war crimes prison was located on the extensive barracks site until 1987 , and was demolished after Rudolf Hess's death . The barracks area was also used by the British Allies as Smuts Barracks . An area at the level of the former prison (house number 23, at the junction of Gatower Straße) was rededicated as a place in August 2020 and called the place of the White Rose . | |
Wilzenweg
( Location ) |
330 | Wilzen , historical West Slav tribal association | 1935 | The street was built in 1935 in the Weinmeisterhöhe settlement, which then belonged to Seeburg. This strip of land, Seeburger Zipfel, was incorporated in 1945 during the exchange of territory between the Soviet zone and the British sector from Berlin to the Spandau district, so that this road between Zur Haveldüne and Wendenweg came to the Wilhelmstadt district. | |
Winzerstrasse
( Location ) |
660 | Winemaker , job title in viticulture | July 10, 1933 | Before it was named, the street was called Straße 44 and, like the surrounding streets in the former wine-growing region, was named in 1933 to match the theme of wine. It is located between Weinmeisterhornweg and Pfälzische Straße over which it continues as a dead end. | |
Wörther Platz
( Location ) |
100 × 100 × 60 | Wœrth , town in Lower Alsace on the Sauer, France | around 1900 | The square south of the moat was named Wörther Platz around 1900, because Wörther Straße joins it when coming from the south. The space is limited by Krowel- and Brüderstraße. | |
Wörther Strasse
( Location ) |
330 | after the battle of Wörth | around 1898 | The street lies between Betckestrasse and Krowelstrasse. In the Franco-Prussian War of 1870/1871, the 3rd German Army of Prussia, Bavaria and Württemberg fought in the Battle of Wörth on August 6, 1870 to gain access to the Vosges. | |
Brick yard
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
70 after the former municipal brickworks | April 16, 1909 | The street lies with the plots 2-6 (straight) on the southern edge between Wilhelmstrasse and Straßburger Strasse. It is a paved road that continues eastward in Spandau to the Havel with the Havel cycle path. The municipal brickworks had been on a piece of land on today's street from at least 1676 until the 1730s and was demolished in 1755. Before it was named, it was Street 26 . | |
Zimmerstrasse
( Location ) |
290 | Carpenters , craftsmen | 1893 | The street between Pichelsdorfer and Wilhelmstraße was laid out on the area where the Reinicke brothers' Zimmererplatz (after whom the Brüderstraße got its name). | |
To the Haveldüne
( Location ) |
400 | Haveldüne , elevation of the terrain (ground moraine) on the Weinmeisterhorn | 1935 | The street between Gatower Straße and Höhenweg of the Weinmeisterhöhe settlement belonged to the Seeburger Zipfel, a strip of land reaching east into Berlin, which came to the British sector of Berlin and the Spandau district through the Allied exchange of territory against West Staaken. |
Some planned and former streets
Old names | from | to | renamed | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|
At the angle | 1919 | 1971 | canceled | The street 100 branched off at right angles from Friedensweg and was located in the timber house settlement built in 1919, with the construction of which the great housing shortage in the city of Spandau was to be temporarily contained. When it was demolished in the late 1960s, the street was no longer there. The indoor and summer pool has been located here on Gatower Strasse since 1974. |
Birch grove | before 1929 | May 13, 1929 | → Genfenbergstrasse | Here was a wood with this name, sometimes also called Am Birkenwäldchen . The road 102 north of the Grimnitzsee was named like this. |
Castle wall | April 16, 1909 | Sep 9 1931 | → Spandau castle wall | The old path to the former Havel island Burgwall (after a castle from the 8th century) was also called Burgwallweg . When the name was renamed in 1931, the district name was added to clear up confusion between the street names after the independent municipalities were combined to form Greater Berlin . |
Döberitzer Heerstrasse | before 1908 | around 1934 | → Heerstrasse | The straight road for the Berlin troops to the Döberitzer Heide training area was here. Heerstraße, built in 1906, was also run under this name in the Spandau area until 1934. |
Village street | handed down | Aug 25, 1939 | → Alt-Pichelsdorf → Mahnkopfweg |
The street where the houses of the local village were. |
Egelpfuhlweg | before 1700 | around 1900 | → Egelpfuhlstrasse → Schmidt-Knobelsdorf-Strasse |
Egelpfuhl is a centuries-old field name and the field path running here was named Schmidt-Knobelsdorf-Strasse in the eastern section between Seeburger and Wilhelmstrasse in 1900 and Egelpfuhlstrasse in the north-western section. |
Peace way | May 9, 1919 | around 1970 | canceled | The name in the wooden house settlement in the Wilhelmstadt area was dedicated to the peace after the First World War for road 99 . This emergency settlement was built in 1919 east of Gatower Strasse by the city of Spandau due to a severe housing shortage. The settlement including the street was demolished at the end of the sixties and the indoor and summer swimming pool at the Südpark was built on the site. |
Heimstättenhof | Apr 8, 1921 | Aug 12, 1932 | → Ruhlebener Strasse | The local settlement construction company "Heimstätten" for the workers' apartment of the Spandau gun factory gave its name. On April 8, 1921, the Spandau magistrate decided that the official street name within the Heimstättengesellschaft settlement on Teltower Straße should be Heimstättenhof. However, since the entire settlement bears this name, the street was included in the Ruhlebener Straße in 1932. |
In the vineyards | before 1931 | Sep 9 1931 | → Weinmeisterhornweg | In the past, viticulture was carried out in this ridge south of Spandau. The Weinmeisterhornweg was formed in 1931 from the Weinmeisterhornstraße, Straße 46 , In den Weinbergen and Stiftstraße in the Wilhelmstadt area. |
Lazarusstraße (previous) | 1878 | May 16, 1938 | → Päwesiner Weg | The street was named after the owner of the Amalienhof, who had the Johannastift and the workers' settlement built on Gärtnerstrasse. But since he was Jewish, the street was renamed in 1938. |
Luebecker Strasse | Feb. 19, 1913 | Oct. 30, 1936 | → Ebersdorfer Strasse | The road 29 in the area Klosterfelde was first after the Hanseatic city of Lübeck for multiple designations of Berlin streets renamed then 1936th |
Pieperweg | Aug 20, 1964 | 1980 | canceled | The cigarette manufacturer Wilhelm Pieper (1857–1918) was a city councilor in Spandau from 1897 to 1905 and from 1908 to 1918. A private road was given in 1964. Its name was repealed in 1980. |
Spichernstrasse | around 1911 | Aug 1, 1966 | canceled | Spichern is a municipality in Lorraine south of Saarbrücken. On August 6, 1870, the storming of the Spichern Heights in the Franco-German War led to heavy losses at the beginning of the German offensive due to tactical errors. The Spichernstrasse in Wilhelmstadt, which was named around 1911, was never expanded and therefore closed again in 1966. |
Proud pit | Oct 3, 1928 | July 22, 1960 | canceled | The Stolzengraben was a watercourse between Grimnitzsee and Scharfe Lanke that silted up. The road 49 planned here in the course of this former ditch was named after him; the road was closed in 1960 due to changes in the land. |
Teltower Landstrasse | before 1900 | Sep 9 1931 | → Elsgrabenweg | The name for the street from Stresow towards Teltow had been in use for decades before it was renamed together with Straße 4 in 1931 . |
Wagnerstrasse | 1878 | 1878 | → Weißenburger Strasse | Wagner was a landowner and owned land west of Pichelsdorfer Strasse, which he had been developing for the construction of residential houses since 1873. The access road got its name but was renamed in 1895 on the occasion of the 25th anniversary of the Battle of Weissenburg in the Franco-German War . |
Weinmeisterhornstrasse | May 9, 1919 | Sep 9 1931 | → Weinmeisterhornweg | The road 47 in the Spandau development plan for Wilhelmstadt was named after the headland on the Havel. In 1931 the entire street, including Weinmeisterhornstrasse, was given the new name Weinmeisterhorn "weg", which corresponds to the state of development. |
Further locations of Wilhelmstadt
In the district there are larger areas of the former Rieselfelder Karolinenhöhe in the south and along the bays of the Havel there are water and green areas that are used as recreational areas. Then there are the garden colonies, some of which in the district (as elsewhere in Spandau) have been reorganized into weekend settlements and others have been designed as allotment gardens according to the Federal Allotment Garden Act .
Allotment gardens and weekend settlements
- Weekend settlement "Birkeneck" ( location )
- Weekend settlement "Bocksfelde-Alt" ( Lage ), named that way since November 6, 1990.
- Weekend settlement "Bocksfelde-Neu" ( Lage ), named that way since November 6, 1990.
- Weekend settlement “Dr. Pfuhl-Theunerkauf "( location )
- KGA "Egelpfuhlwiesen" (Lutoner Straße 55, Lage ), permanent allotment garden with 133 plots on 39,360 m² of land owned by the state, including the grassland area.
- Weekend settlement "Grimnitzsee" ( location )
- KGA "Hasenheide" (Schmidt-Knobelsdorf-Strasse 12–17, Lage ), permanent allotment garden (I, II, III) with 164 parcels on 64,897 m² and with Annex IV 36 parcels and twelve permanent residents on 6,306 m² of state-owned leasehold.
- KGA "Heerstraße" (Heerstraße 352–360, Lage ), permanent allotment garden with 91 plots (four permanent residents) on 47,270 m² of private leased area.
- KGA "Karolinenhöhe" (Wilhelmstrasse 82–85, Lage ), permanent allotment garden with 112 plots (3 permanent residents) on 41,390 m² on private land.
- KGA “Kietzer Feld” (Jordanstrasse 29–37, Lage ), permanent allotment garden with 26 plots on 9,306 m² of private land.
- KGA "Kirchengelände" (Heerstraße 355–359, Lage ), permanent allotment garden with 31 plots (1 permanent resident) on 15,272 m² of private land.
- Weekend settlement "Margaret Island" ( location )
- Settlement Pichelswerder-Süd ( location ) is located on an area of 550 × 90 meters as officially designated plot 498 Z (continuous) as a flat plot on the eastern bank of the Pichelssee and the Havelschlenke.
- Weekend settlement "Sonnental" ( location )
- KGA Tiefwerderbrücke (Tiefwerder Weg 20/21, Lage ), permanent allotment garden with 76 plots on 27,636 m² of state-owned land.
- KGA “Tiefwerderwiesen” (Tiefwerder Weg 2–4, Lage ), permanent allotment garden with 23 plots on 7,634 m² of private leased land.
- Weekend settlement "Weinbergsweg" ( location )
- Weekend settlement "Weinmeistergarten" ( location )
- Weekend settlement "Weinmeisterhorn" ( location )
Parks and green spaces
- Südpark with Südparkich ( location ) on 12.6 hectares of green and water
- Egelpfuhlwiesen ( Lage ), south of Lutoner and Schmidt-Knobelsdorff-Straße (excluding KGA and cultivated area)
- Business park, formerly Smuts Baracks of the British Armed Forces ( location ), west of Wilhelmstrasse to KGA Hasenheide
- Business park and sports grounds, former Wavell baracks of the British armed forces ( location ), west of Wilhelmstrasse between Seektstrasse and Schmidt-Knobelsdorff Strasse
- Former Rieselfeld area in the district ( Lage ), between Gatower and Wilhelmstrasse, Straße 270 and the district boundary on 89.2 hectares
- Tiefwerderwiesen ( location )
- Freedom meadows ( location ), named after the freedom that is close at hand
- Pichelswerder ( location ), with GASAG natural gas storage facility and dog run area
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
- Street directory Wilhelmstadt. kaupert media GmbH, accessed on September 26, 2012 .
- Prussian military center Spandau at the confluence of the Spree and Havel rivers. (PDF; 3.2 MB) Exhibition on the museum ship “Kurier” in the historic port of Berlin, 2007, archived from the original on February 14, 2010 ; Retrieved January 30, 2011 (autumn 2007).
- Office for Statistics Berlin-Brandenburg: List of streets and squares in the Spandau district (as of February 2015); pdf
- cards
- Map of Berlin 1: 5000 with district boundaries. Senate Department for Urban Development Berlin, 2009, accessed on September 26, 2012 .
- Surveying map from 1938 - Spandau, Reinickendorf, Osthavelland district - 1: 10000. Berlin-Spandau surveying office, 1938, accessed on September 26, 2012 .
- Surveying map from 1938 - Spandau, Charlottenburg, Wilmersdorf, Osthavelland district - 1: 10000. Berlin-Spandau surveying office, 1938, accessed on September 26, 2012 .
- Surveying map from 1936 - Part IV - 1: 4000. (Spandau old town to Ruhleben and Haselhorst). Berlin-Spandau land surveying office, 1936, accessed on September 26, 2012 .
- Hermann Jansen: Competition Greater Berlin 1910. Spandau - Havel
Individual evidence
- ↑ To the Amalienhof
- ↑ Residential complex Betckestrasse 5
- ↑ Residential complex Betckestrasse 22–33
- ↑ a b c d e f g Clarification of the situation using the map of Berlin 1: 5000 (K5 color edition) produced by the district surveying offices
- ↑ Brief information in the Berliner Zeitung, November 16, 2016, p. 17
- ↑ On the person of Daberkow
- ↑ berliner-stadtplan.com: Egelpfuhlstrasse
- ↑ Heidereuterstrasse, Berlin-Spandau
- ↑ Berliner-Stadtplan.com: Lazarusstrasse
- ↑ Berliner Morgenpost : Democracy: Spandau gets "White Rose Square" , August 13, 2020 [1]
- ^ Arne Hengsbach: The capital and the Havel city
- ^ On the person of Schulenburg
- ↑ To the castle complex
- ↑ Complicated history of division . In: Berliner Zeitung , December 22, 2009.
- ^ About Stritte as a person
- ↑ Senate Department for Urban Development Dept. I Urban and Open Space Planning Allotment Garden Development Plan Berlin ( Memento of the original from March 19, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (PDF; 465 kB)
- ↑ a b c Allotment garden areas that are defined as permanent allotment gardens by the development plan
- ↑ a b Fictitious permanent allotment gardens intended for other uses according to FNP.
- ↑ Fictitious permanent allotment gardens according to §§ 16 and 20a BKleingG through the representation in the FNP as green area - allotment gardens additionally protected.
- ↑ a b c allotment garden areas which, according to the FNP, should be preserved.