At the Lehester dike

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At the Lehester dike
coat of arms
Street in Bremen
At the Lehester dike
Map of the village of Lehe from 1806: Above and right Am Lehester Deich, above left the Kuhsiel, right the Feldmark Der Rüten , in the middle the Bremer Weg with Lehester Bridge, today Lilienthaler Heerstraße
Basic data
city Bremen
district Horn Lehe
Cross streets Am Rüten, Am Mariannenhof, Wellhausenweg, Upper Borg, In der Poggenkuhle, Diekswürden, Lange Wenjen, Franklinstraße, Kopernikusstraße, Bekassinenstraße, Feldhauser Straße, Lilienthaler Heerstraße , Am Deichfleet, Kreuzdeich, Kuhgrabenweg
use
User groups Cars, bikes and pedestrians
Road design two lane road
Technical specifications
Street length 4000 meters
adjoining nature reserve W - Leher Fedestliches Hollerland

The street Am Lehester Deich is an access road in Bremen , district Horn-Lehe , district Lehesterdeich next to the district Borgfeld . It leads in a south-north and then in an east-west direction from Oberneulander Landstrasse and Am Rüten to Kuhgrabenweg, Oberblockland and Landhaus Kuhsiel an der Wümme .

It is divided into the sub-areas

The cross streets and connecting streets were named u. a. as Oberneulander Landstraße after the district, Am Rüten after a common land of Oberneuland as a field name , Am Mariannenhof after the summer residence of the cigar manufacturer Hermann-Otto Wendt (1848–1920), unnamed way, Wellhausenweg (?), unnamed way, Upper Borg after a castle-like one Court around 1500 Archbishop Johann III. Rode († 1511) allegedly owned, In the Poggenkuhle after a field name (ndt. Poggen = toads or frogs), unnamed path, Diekswürden possibly after the dike (= Diek ) of Wührden in Lilienthal , Lange Wenjen after the watershed (ndt. Wenje = vagina) of two sluices , Franklin street after the scientist and statesman Benjamin Franklin (, 1706 to 1790) Kopernikusstraße after the Prussian astronomer (1473-1543), Bekassinenstraße after snipe, Feldhauser road to the former village near Lilienthal, Lilienthal highway after neighboring city Lilienthal, Am Deich Fleet under the dike at an earlier Fleet , three unnamed roads, cross dike Kuhgrabenweg after the 1277 mentioned Kograve as Grenzgraben (ndt. Ko = limit), Oberblockland after top block land ; otherwise see the link to the streets.

history

Surname

The street Am Lehester Deich was named after the district and after the dike on the Leher side of the Wümme and the Holler Fleet in the river system of the Weser .

development

To the west and south of the Holler Fleet, the road runs as the border between Lehesterdeich and Borgfeld. The small rural community of Lehesterdeich was incorporated into the city of Bremen in 1921 and became part of Horn-Lehe in 1951. The district had around 11,600 inhabitants in 2007.

In 1908 Hermann-Otto Wendt bought a farm on Lehester Deich, used it as a summer residence and named it Mariannenhof after his wife's first name . The Hans Wendt Foundation from 1919 has its headquarters here.

The more intensive settlement of the district took place from the 1960s / 70s.

traffic

The Bremen tram crosses with line 4 (Lilienthal - Arsten) the street on Lilienthaler Heerstraße.

In local transport in Bremen, bus lines 31 (Borgfeld Ost ↔ Horn ↔ Nedderland) cross the street. Another stop on bus route 33 (Horn ↔ Sebaldsbrück) is only 500 meters away in Apfelallee, near Oberneulander Landstrasse. .

Buildings and facilities

There are almost only single-storey houses on the street.

Bremen monuments

  • Am Rütten No. 2-4: 1-sch. classicist manor house Landruhe from around 1795 with 2-storey. Medium risalit and hipped roof for the merchant Clemens Albert Caesar, as well as the 33,630 m² Menke Park, the orangery from between 1830 and 1840, the gate from 1801/1850, the bridge and the sculpture Thalia (Greek muse of poetry) from around 1800.

Notable buildings and facilities

  • Next to the street the Holler Fleet
  • No. 4: 1-sch. House with a crooked roof with the Meos restaurant
  • No. 17 at the corner of Am Mariannenhof: building complex of the Hans Wendt Foundation
  • No. 19: 1-sch. Children's house and children's and youth farm on Lehester Deich of the Hans Wendt Foundation
  • Between Wellhausenweg and Upper Borg: Single-family housing estate with mostly uniformly covered hipped roof houses
  • No. 63: 2-sch. possibly earlier farmhouse with thatched roof
  • Corner of Lilienthaler Heerstraße 384: 1-gesch. House with a restaurant
  • No. 83: previously 1-histor. Hilken farmhouse, today single-family houses
  • No. 85: 1-sch. House with half-timbered gable and crooked hip, former Wohlers farmhouse
  • No. 92a: 1-gesch. House of the so-called wood school on Lehester Deich from 1936 as a supplement to the old school shortly before the cross dike. After 1945 radio station of the occupation troops, in 1946 the house of the Hanseatic Club Bremen as a youth club which, after being converted into a small amateur theater in 1984, developed into a theater on the dike , with two productions per year and 20 to 25 performances each.
  • No. 93: Here stood a farmhouse from 1800. In 1973 the house of the Bremermann family burned down and three children died; today several single-family houses.
  • No. 99: 1-gesch. Former farmhouse of the Bahrenburg, Wolters and Früchtnicht families
  • No. 107: 1-sch. Farmhouse Marks with half hip
  • No. 109: until 1976 1-ed. Jan Reiners excursion restaurant that burned down after an arson in 1976; today new family house.
  • No. 111: Former Lehester Deich station of the small railway Bremen – Tarmstedt from 1900 to 1956, popularly called "Jan Reiners". After the station was demolished, there is now a single-family home here.
  • No. 115: Formerly the Behrens and Peters family farm; After demolition, built with single-family houses since 2005.
  • From no. 118: only houses and villas on the north side, between the street and the canal
  • No. 123: 1-gesch. converted farmhouse from 1863
  • No. 127: 1-gesch. Kötnerhaus with thatched hip, rebuilt in 1963
Lehesterdeich volunteer fire department
  • No. 135: 1-sch. Old fire station from 1937 converted into a residential building in 1986
  • No. 139/141: 1 to 2-cut. Building of the volunteer fire brigade Bremen-Lehesterdeich; Compulsory fire brigade until 1936 , then voluntary fire brigade with a new fire station (no.135), 1973 takeover of three vehicle halls (no.139b), 1974 new tool shed (no.139b), 2014 new tool shed, 2016 new fire station, 2018 vehicle fleet with seven Vehicles, a trailer and a boat with a trailer; see also fire brigade Bremen
  • No. 145: 1-sch. old school Lehesterdeich from the middle of the 18th century on the site of the so-called Kreuzdeichschule built later ; the reform pedagogue Paul Goosmann found his first job here in 1927/28 and the painter and teacher Fritz Geerken was at the school in 1936, in 1936 the wood school (No. 92a) was built to relieve the burden, and in 1961 classes were discontinued; today the seat of an architecture office
  • Bridge over the canal
  • No. 149: 1-sch. Building with two side wings from the Bremischer Deichverband on the right bank of the Weser from 1937, other buildings u. a. with solar cell roofing behind
  • No. 159: 1-storey farmhouse from the 19th century with half-timbered gable and crooked hip from Hof Stein , in 1957 the barn burned down.
  • Landhaus Kuhsiel on the Wümme
  • Western Hollerland nature reserve (Leher Feld) from 1985 and 1991 with a 293 hectare area of ​​the cultivated landscape reclaimed by the Dutch as wet grassland with an approximately 90 km network of ditches.

See also

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Monument database of the LfD Bremen

Coordinates: 53 ° 7 '14.9 "  N , 8 ° 53' 5.5"  E