Treehouse path

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Treehouse path
coat of arms
Street in Bremen
Treehouse path
Obervieland 1809; at the top right Alt-habenhausen and a path to the south with the course of the road to Brunns Acker .
Basic data
city Bremen
district Obervieland
Created as a path in the 18th century
Newly designed after 1965
Cross streets Bunnsackerweg, habenhauser Windmühlenberg, Bollener Weg, Lunser Str., Bierdener Weg, Piependamm after a drainage ditch on the border with Feldmark Wümmesiede, Schönlankstrasse, Blenderstrasse, Christian-Seebade-Strasse, Karl-Marx-Strasse
use
User groups Cars, bikes and pedestrians
Road design two lane road
Technical specifications
Street length 1150 meters

The tree Weg is a central access road to Bremen , district Obervieland , district Habenhausen . It leads in a north-south direction from the village center of the former village habenhausen and from habenhauser Dorfstrasse to Arster Landstrasse .

The cross streets and connecting streets were named u. a. as habenhauser Dorfstraße after the old district, Bunnsackerweg after a hallway that belonged to the habenhausern farmers , habenhauser windmühlenberg after a hallway name (unclear whether and where a windmill was there), Bollener Weg 1935 after the neighboring village (today a part of Achim ), Lunser Straße 1938 to the place that is now part of Thedinghausen , Bierdener Weg 1933 to the neighboring town, Piependamm after a drainage ditch on the border with Feldmark Wümmesiede, Schönlankstraße after the writer Bruno Schönlank (1891-1965), Blenderstraße 1931 after the community , Christian-Seebade-Straße 1999 after the owner of a restaurant he designed (1875–1938), Karl-Marx-Straße after the philosopher and protagonist of the labor movement (1818–1883), Arster Landstraße after the Arsten district ; otherwise see the link to the streets.

history

Surname

The Baumhauser Weg was named in 1905 after a homestead surrounded by trees that stood on the border (formerly with a turnpike) between Arsten and habenhausen.

development

The first settlers of habenhausen were probably Dutch colonists. From 1598 the village belonged to the Goh Obervieland and in 1921 it was incorporated into the city of Bremen. In 1905 habenhausen had 1281 and in 2009 around 8000 inhabitants.
To the south of the old village of habenhausen, mostly many single-family houses were built on the habenhauser mark in the north of the street before and further south after the Second World War .

traffic

In local transport in Bremen, the bus route 51 ( Huckelriede ↔ Kattenturm Klinikum Links der Weser ) touches the road.

Buildings and facilities

  • There are mostly one- and two-story houses on the street.
  • The Bunnsacker Fleet flows at the confluence with Arster Landstrasse.
  • Further east of the road, the Weser flows with the jetty and the Hanse-Kogge water sports club .
  • At no. 7 a 3-fold was added. House built around 2017.
  • The Evangelical Simon-Petrus-Kirche from 1995 based on plans by Will Baltzer from Wuppertal , a branch church of St. Johannes Arsten, is located at the nearby habenhauser Dorfstrasse No. 42 .

See also

literature

  • Monika Porsch: Bremer Straßenlexikon , complete edition. Schünemann, Bremen 2003, ISBN 3-7961-1850-X .

Coordinates: 53 ° 2 ′ 28.1 ″  N , 8 ° 51 ′ 22.9 ″  E