At the sea dike

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Houses No. 26 to 36

The street Am Seedeich in Cuxhaven is a touristic, about 0.9 km long street on the North Sea. It leads in an east-west direction from Deichstrasse / Am Alten Hafen to Döser Deich and Grimmershörnbucht.

Back streets

The side and connecting streets were named Deichstraße after the original course on the western Hafenobdeich, formerly "By dem Dieke", Am Alten Hafen 1928 after the old fishing port (previously Elbestraße), Kasernenstraße 1895 after the former so-called "Bretterkaserne" (from after 1892 ) of the naval base Cuxhaven and Döser Deich after the place.

history

Surname

The street was named after its location on the lake and the dike.

development

Public lavatory
No. 36: Nautical School

The Ritzebüttler bailiff (1809-1811) and then Hamburg Senator and Mayor Amandus Augustus Abendroth (1767-1842) founded the North Sea resort of Cuxhaven in 1816. After Ritzebüttel and Alt-Cuxhaven were united in 1872, the local area was expanded more towards the west. In 1905 Döse came to Cuxhaven. In 1890 Cuxhaven had 4,905 inhabitants, in 1910 there were already 14,888. Döse and the street Am Seedeich became the tourist focal point of the city. Many villas and apartment buildings were built on the street around 1900.

In terms of traffic, the road is opened up by the KVG bus routes 1005 (train station - ferry port) and 1006 (train station - ferry port - Duhnen) .

Buildings, plants (selection)

There are mostly two to five-story buildings on the street. The houses marked with D are under monument protection.

  • No. 1: House also with holiday apartments
  • No. 2: Seven-story hotel as a new building
  • No. 5: Two-storey Villa Kamps from around 1900 ( D ) based on plans by Rudolph Glocke
  • No. 6: Five-storey house Elena as a new building
  • No. 7: Four-storey, historicized, plastered apartment building from around 1900 ( D ), today with holiday apartments
  • No. 9: Residential and commercial building with Lohmann's animal breeding facility
  • No. 10: Two-storey, historicizing plastered ( neoclassical elements) villa from around 1900, today with holiday apartments
  • No. 12: Apartment building ( D )
  • No. 13: Apartment building ( D )
  • No. 17: Five-storey brick-built newer residential building with holiday apartments
  • No. 18: Two-storey Villa Cux from around 1900 with corner turrets and holiday apartments
  • No. 23: Five-storey, very differentiated, newer holiday apartment house
  • No. 26: Four-storey house from around 1900 ( D ), today a hotel
  • No. 27: Newer four-storey residential building with a stacked storey at the location of the former seafarers' hospital, today apartments and holiday apartments
  • One-storey public lavatory from 1926 with five round arcades ( D )
  • Marina with sailing fair, bar, ship announcement service and parking lot
  • No. 34: Five-storey newer house North Sea View 2
  • No. 36: Two-storey new building from 1959 of the State Maritime School in Cuxhaven with a three-storey central building; former location of Fort Grimmershörn, the existing by the short time only in 1914 tram Cuxhaven has been reached
  • No. 38: Seven-storey, staggered newer building as Seeterrassen Grimmershörn with restaurant and apartments

Notes on

  • At the old port No. 5: 4-gesch. Continental house from 1886 ( D ), formerly the Schifferhaus inn , now a hotel with restaurant
  • Döser Sea Dike No. 1–4: Four plastered, two-storey houses Döser Sea Dike 1 to 4 ( D ), built around 1900 as residential and holiday homes in the style of the buildings of the turn of the century

Web links

Commons : Am Seedeich (Cuxhaven)  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Cuxpedia: roads .
  2. ^ List of architectural monuments in Cuxhaven

Coordinates: 53 ° 52 ′ 23.2 "  N , 8 ° 42 ′ 3"  E