Hamburg Labor Court

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Entrance area of ​​the courthouse

The Hamburg Labor Court is a court of the labor courts .

Judicial district

The judicial district is the federal state of Hamburg .

Superior courts

The Hamburg Regional Labor Court and the Federal Labor Court are superordinate to the Hamburg Labor Court.

building

The former Schleidenstrasse school

The labor court and the regional labor court are located in a building complex on Osterbekstrasse in the Barmbek-Süd district . Part of the ensemble is the listed building of the former Schleidenstrasse elementary school.

On November 29, 1909, the Senate and Citizenship of the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg commissioned the then building deputation to build a 30-class elementary school on the corner of Schleidenstrasse and Osterbekstrasse according to the plans presented.

Within the building deputation, the older building director Zimmermann left the school building primarily to the younger architects. From 1906 to 1910, building inspector Albert Erbe designed almost all school buildings. On September 1, 1901, he had started as a master builder, 1st class in Hamburg, had been appointed building inspector from January 1, 1906, and took over the management of the structural engineering design office; from April 1908 he represented the then building director Zimmermann.

From May 1908, the primary school buildings were based on a building program that Albert Erbe and the building officer Meyer had worked out; it was decisive for the school building in Hamburg until 1918.

The school building in Schleidenstrasse is part of Albert Erbe's late work, when he abandoned the baroque elements (made of sandstone) that he initially used. He carried out the double school building (a 15-class boys 'school and a 15-class girls' school) simply in brick , in a four-storey construction with two head buildings and a high Hamburg roof (steep roof). The structural element of the facade are the windows of the classrooms, which were located on a corridor facing the courtyard (cell shape). Each part of the building had an entrance portal with columns (which can no longer be seen today). At the rear, a gymnasium supplemented the school building on the corner property between Schleidenstrasse (east side) and Osterbekstrasse (north side) and Hinrichsenstrasse (south side) with an adjoining common school yard, which was enclosed by a fence.

Albert Erbe left Hamburg a few years after Fritz Schumacher took over the management of the building construction department from Carl Johann Christian Zimmermann on November 1, 1909. On January 1, 1912, he began as a technical assistant for building construction in Essen. He died there on May 29, 1922. On April 1, 1912, the elementary school began operations; in November 1966 both schools (boys and girls, which had been merged after the 1960 summer vacation) were closed.

In addition to the regional labor court and labor court, the building houses the Senate coordinator's office for the interests of disabled people and the foundation for the politically persecuted.

For the 100th anniversary, a small exhibition is being put together in the building that provides information on how Barmbeck developed into a district of Hamburg, how boys and girls learned at the time and how their teaching and everyday life in elementary school changed up to the 1960s, and how the architect Primary schools planned, according to a concept that was in place until 1918.

See also

literature

  • Boris Meyn: The history of the development of the Hamburg school building. Kovač, Hamburg 1998, ISBN 3-86064-707-5 . (to Albert Erbe)
  • Dieter skull booklet to: In the footsteps of Albert Erbe in Hamburg: Hamburg city architect from 1901 - 1911. 2. revised. Edition Hamburger Feuerkasse, Hamburg 2007.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Hamburg Cultural Authority: List of monuments according to Section 6 (1) Hamburg Monument Protection Act of April 5, 2013, (HmbGVBl p. 142), extract for the Hamburg-Nord district. Status: April 18, 2016, monument number 38928, p. 888 ( online ; PDF, 2.8.8 MB; accessed on June 9, 2016).

Coordinates: 53 ° 35 ′ 3 "  N , 10 ° 1 ′ 57.7"  E