Except for the grinding mill
Except for the grinding mill | |
---|---|
Street in Bremen | |
Except the grinding mill: south side | |
Basic data | |
city | Bremen |
District | Easter Gate |
Cross streets | Am Dobben , Rembertistraße, Parkallee , Schleifmühlenweg, Dobbenweg, Schwachhauser Heerstraße |
Buildings | Commercial building Except grinding mill 17 , Except grinding mill 27 , Except grinding mill 65 |
use | |
User groups | Cars, bikes and pedestrians |
Road design | two and four lane roads |
Technical specifications | |
Street length | 400 meters |
The street besides the grinding mill is a historical street in Bremen in the district Bremen-Mitte , district Ostertor . It leads out of town in a west-east direction from the street An der Weide / Am Dobben to Bismarckstraße .
The cross streets were named as Am Dobben after a body of water, Rembertistraße after the Archbishop of Bremen Rembert ( Rimbert , 830-888), Friedenstunnel , Parkallee after the adjacent public park , Schleifmühlenweg after the former Schleifmühle there and Dobbenweg after the way on the waterway Dobben; otherwise see the link to the streets.
history
Surname
The street was named after the grinding mill that had stood here since the 15th century. On July 25, 1459, Johann Runge received permission from the Bremen council to build and operate a water-powered grinding mill . It originated near the stone tower ( Steen Thorn ) of the since 1309 Page Tower ( Page Thorn ) outpost of the Bremen city wall was. In 1686/89 a Dutch miller converted it into a fulling mill . The mill was demolished around 1725, presumably due to complaints from farmers about the excessive amounts of water that flooded the adjacent meadows and fields.
development
The district of Ostertor did not develop until after 1849, when the Bremen gate was lifted and suburban citizens were given the same civil rights as the old town citizens.
With the expansion of Schwachhauser Heerstraße , this street was also increasingly frequented. By 1910, the urban development on the street was largely complete.
traffic
The Bremen tram crosses or touches Am Dobben with lines 1 ( Huchting - Am Brill - Hauptbahnhof - S Bf Mahndorf ), 4 ( Lilienthal - Hauptbahnhof - Domsheide - Arsten ) and 10 ( Gröpelingen - Walle - Hauptbahnhof - Sebaldsbrück ).
In transport in Bremen bus line runs on the road 25 ( Weidedamm -South - Osterholz ).
Buildings and facilities
There are mostly three to four-story buildings on the street.
- No. 17: four-tier Apart from the grinding mill 17 from 1900 according to plans by Heinrich Wilhelm Behrens , in Art Nouveau style .
- No. 27: five-tier Residential and commercial building Except for Schleifmühle 27 from 1906 based on plans by Heinrich Behrens-Nicolai , in Art Nouveau style.
- No. 65: three-fold. Residential house In addition to Schleifmühle 65 from 1875 based on plans by Eduard Gildemeister for Dr. med. Bastian, neoclassical .
- Dobbenweg 11/12 corner Except the Schleifmühle: Dreigesch. Centaur pharmacy from 1928 based on plans by Carl Heinrich Behrens-Nicolai, in the style of brick expressionism
Notable buildings
- No. 2 / Parkallee 1: one or two storeys. historicizing building from around 1880 as a police station with hipped roof and 4-storied. Clock tower, damaged in World War II and rebuilt; today u. a. Restaurant ( LEOS )
- No. 7: four-tier Residential and commercial building from around 1910
- No. 13: three-part. Crafts shop from around 1900
- No. 16: three-fold. historicizing business and office building
- No. 18: four-tier neoclassical office and residential building
- No. 19 and 23: two-part. typical Bremen houses from around 1900
- No. 40: two-storey neoclassical house from 1868, built for the timber merchant and consul Heinrich de Voss, since 1919 in the possession of the physician Heinrich Widmann (18 ?? - 1959), who practiced here; then gallery , then from 1979 house of Klaus Ziemann and u. a. also art and auction house. Today (2018) office of the North German Institute for Short-Term Therapy .
- No. 67: three-fold. historicizing ( neo-renaissance ) office building
- No. 51: four-storey residential building with mezzanine floor and bay window from around 1925
- No. 55–61: Residential and office building with the German Paritätischer Wohlfahrtsverband , Landesverband Bremen
- No. 73: four-tier Building with an Italian gourmet restaurant ( Al Pappagallo )
- No. 80: five-tier Newer residential and commercial building with the pharmacy. Besides the grinding mill
Memorial plaques
-
Stumbling blocks for the victims of National Socialism according to the list of stumbling blocks in Bremen :
- No. 27: for Curt Caspary (1882–1941) and Gertrud Caspary (1894–1941), murdered in Minsk
- No. 77: for Irma Heidemann (1897–1941) and salesman in a department store Iwan Heidemann (1883–1941), murdered in Minsk
See also
literature
- Herbert Black Forest : The Great Bremen Lexicon . 2nd, updated, revised and expanded edition. Edition Temmen, Bremen 2003, ISBN 3-86108-693-X (first edition: 2002, supplementary volume A – Z. 2008, ISBN 978-3-86108-986-5 ).
- Monika Porsch: Bremer Straßenlexikon , complete edition. Schünemann, Bremen 2003, ISBN 3-7961-1850-X .
Individual evidence
- ^ Monument database of the LfD
- ↑ Monument database of the LfD Bremen
- ↑ Monument database of the LfD Bremen
- ^ Gerhard Steinfeldt: House Widmann . In: Detlev Gross, Peter Ulrich: Bremen houses tell history , Volume 1, Döll Edition, Bremen 1998, ISBN 3-936289-30-1 .
Coordinates: 53 ° 4 ′ 47 " N , 8 ° 49 ′ 20" E