Beuel-Ost

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Beuel-Ost
Federal city of Bonn
Coordinates: 50 ° 44 ′ 31 ″  N , 7 ° 8 ′ 7 ″  E
Height : 60 m above sea level NHN
Residents : 2194  (Dec. 31, 2018)
Incorporation : 1st August 1969
Postcodes : 53227, 53229
Area code : 0228
Alt-Godesberg Auerberg Beuel-Mitte Beuel-Ost Brüser Berg Buschdorf Bonn-Castell Dottendorf Dransdorf Duisdorf Endenich Friesdorf Geislar Godesberg-Nord Godesberg-Villenviertel Graurheindorf Gronau Hardthöhe Heiderhof Hochkreuz Hoholz Holtorf Holzlar Ippendorf Kessenich Küdinghoven Lannesdorf Lengsdorf Lessenich/Meßdorf Limperich Mehlem Muffendorf Nordstadt Oberkassel Pennenfeld Plittersdorf Poppelsdorf Pützchen/Bechlinghoven Ramersdorf Röttgen Rüngsdorf Schwarzrheindorf/Vilich-Rheindorf Schweinheim Südstadt Tannenbusch Ückesdorf Venusberg Vilich Vilich-Müldorf Weststadt Bonn-Zentrummap
About this picture
Location of the Beuel-Ost district in the Beuel district
St. Paulus Beuel

Beuel-Ost is the middle part of the Beuel district of Bonn .

It is a typical residential district with private homes and multi-family houses, which over the past 25 years has increasingly developed into a social hotspot in the foothills of Siegburger Strasse at the height of high-rise buildings built in the 1960s. Above all, resettlers from the former Soviet republics colonize the street section, as well as increasingly people with a migration background from Turkey and Romania. The southeast area of ​​the district is dominated by an industrial area. In the Schwarzen Weg south of Maarstrasse, which divides the industrial park in half from east to west, there is a mosque in a residential area in Limperich . The police station responsible for Bonn-Beuel was located on Königswinterer Strasse, and in autumn 2006 it moved to the new police headquarters in Ramersdorf at the junction with the A 562 . At the beginning of Maarstrasse is the only police station on the right bank of the Rhine for the Bonn professional fire brigade , Fire Station 2.

At the height of St. Paulus Church at the beginning of Königswinterer Straße, the “LiKüRa” train traditionally sets up on Carnival Sunday during the Rhenish street carnival session, which continues on Königswinterer Straße here in the southern part of the city through the Beueler towns of Limperich, Küdinghoven and Ramersdorf runs, where it then dissolves. Siegburger Strasse leads to the B 56 , an accident-prone connecting road between the district town of Siegburg and Bonn, Hangelar and Sankt Augustin . The comprehensive school Bonn-Beuel has settled between Beuel-Ost and Pützchen (district Pützchen / Bechlinghoven). Since the 1990s, it has developed into a regionally renowned type of school through the integration of different nationalities and disabled people. Next to the comprehensive school Beuel-Ost there is an integrative rehabilitation center that looks after the severely disabled.

The former Beuel jute spinning mill on Siegburger Strasse opposite the Pauluskirche has been used by the Theater Bonn as a warehouse ( lamp warehouse ) under the name Halle Beuel since 1981 and also as a venue under the name Schauspielhalle Beuel until 2016 . This venue has been used by the Pantheon Theater since October 2016 .

The traditional ice cream shop Pino, which was on the corner of Maarstrasse and Siegburger Strasse, no longer exists. Maarstrasse belonged in part to a former Beuel workers' residential area. The nougat company Kessko covers Beuel-Ost with a sweet chocolate scent that wafts as far as Beuel-Mitte, depending on the wind direction. The standard gauge rails of the RSE Rhein-Sieg-Eisenbahn run through the industrial area in Beuel-Ost . The narrow-gauge Bröltalbahn used to run through the northern part ; this ended at a small transport and transshipment station on the banks of the Rhine in Beuel-Mitte , which was converted into a popular restaurant decades ago, in the traditional “little train station”. The infrastructure in Beuel-Ost is well developed.

traffic

From Bonn, Beuel-Ost can be reached either via the Kennedybrücke and Beuel-Mitte or via the A 565 towards the Bonn-Nordost motorway triangle , then via the A 59 exit Bonn-Pützchen.

The bus lines 529, 603, 608 and 609 (of the VRS ) cross Bonn-Ost via the Pantheon Beuel stop in the northern part, the lines 537, 635 and 636 in the southern part.

history

The Beuel industry

In the 19th century, Beuel was one of the most important industrial locations in the Rhineland. The major changes since the 1970s have meant that traditional companies have had to cease operations. Today only the historical factory buildings, such as B. the former Rhenish wallpaper factory from this era. The heart of Beuel's industry is in Beuel-Ost, between Königswinterer Strasse, Marquartstrasse, Auguststrasse, Siegburger Strasse and Maarstrasse.

The Beuel jute spinning mill

One of the largest industrial companies in Beuel-Ost was the “Vereinigte Jutepinnerei und Weberei AG”. At times it employed over 1000 people. The Beuel factory was founded in 1868 by the entrepreneur Alfred Hieronymus. Shortly after it was founded, the plant became the property of the “Rheinische Jutepinnerei Solf, Daverport & Co” company. It was the first factory in Germany to process the delivered jute from the raw fiber to the finished fabric. In the factory, a coarse fabric was made from the jute fibers. This was used to make sacks and as a carrier material for linoleum floors. As a result of the economic crisis (1873), production figures fell until the Rheinische Jutepinnerei finally had to file for bankruptcy in the mid-1880s. In 1887 the company was re-established under the name "Westdeutsche Jutepinnerei und Weberei". During this time, too, there were crises due to strong price fluctuations. Nevertheless, the work developed very well. During the First World War , production had to be stopped due to the lack of raw materials . In 1924 the jute spinning mill was able to reopen as part of the company “Vereinigte Jutepinnereien und Webereien AG, Hamburg”.

During the Second World War , the factory produced almost exclusively for military purposes. The operation was kept up by forced laborers who were mainly recruited from Poland and the Soviet Union . In an air raid on February 4, 1944, the factory was destroyed except for the surrounding walls.

In 1945 production was resumed in temporary halls. However, no more jute products were made, but floor coverings. After 1966 the factory moved to the Dynamit Nobel company. In 1981 the city of Bonn acquired the property. The former production halls now serve as a venue for the Pantheon Theater. In addition, the theater workshops of the city of Bonn are housed here.

The imposing brick buildings with their decorated ornamental gables and partly high arched windows essentially come from two construction phases. The center of the facility is the large spinning and weaving room from 1868, which was roughly doubled to the east in 1898. The original buildings still include the boiler house with the 46 meter chimney, the machine house and a smaller workshop building . The former director's villa is on the opposite side of Siegburger Straße.

The Church of St. Paul

Beuel-Ost belonged to the Catholic parish of St. Josef in Beuel. From 1924 until 1938 Sunday masses were held in the hall of the Catholic kindergarten in the rooms of the jute spinning mill (Paulusstraße 19) and a church was planned between Paulusstraße and Königswinterer Straße. However, that did not happen. Starting in 1954, plans to build a church on Siegburger Strasse became concrete; on June 30, 1957, the foundation stone for the St. Paulus Church was laid, and on October 12, 1958, it was consecrated. Beuel-Ost had already received the status of an independent rectorate parish. Since around 2008, Beuel-Ost has belonged again to the parish of St. Josef and Paulus.

See also

Web links

Commons : Beuel-Ost  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Population in Bonn by districts (according to the main statute) on December 31 , 2018 , Federal City of Bonn - Statistics Office, February 2019
  2. ^ Dorothee Haentjes-Holländer : St. Paulus in Beuel-Ost. The last church building by Dominikus Böhm (= Monument and History Association Bonn-Rechtsrheinisch eV [Hrsg.]): Contributions to memorials and history in Bonn on the right bank of the Rhine . Volume 9 ). Bonn 2018, ISBN 978-3-9812164-7-9 (91 pages).