Cherbourger Street

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Cherbourger Street
coat of arms
Street in Bremerhaven
Basic data
city Bremerhaven
district Leherheide , Lehe
Created Late 20th century
Newly designed around 2015 to 2021
Cross streets Eichenweg , Lotjeweg, Adolf Kolping -Straße, Langmirjen, Dudweilerstraße, Langener highway , Claus Groth Street, Grubke, Adolf Butenandt -Straße, Brinkmann street, Dr. Franz-Mertens Street, Wurster road , Alfred Wegener -Straße , Weserportstrasse
use
User groups Cars, partly bicycles and pedestrians
Road design four lane road
Technical specifications
Street length at 5800 meters

The Cherbourger road is a central thoroughfare in Bremerhaven , neighborhoods Leherheide (West) and Lehe (Ecker field Speckenbüttel). It leads east / west and later north from the federal motorway 27 connection Bremerhaven-Überseehäfen and Bremerhavener Straße in Schiffdorf to Wurster Straße and to the Bremen ports (container terminal, north port, east port, turning basin) as ports in Bremerhaven .

It is divided into the sub-areas

  • Motorway to Langener Landstrasse
  • Langener Landstrasse to Adolf-Butenandt-Strasse and
  • Adolf-Butenandt-Straße to Wurster Straße.

The cross streets , which are often not directly connected, and the connecting streets were named u. a. as Eichenweg after the tree, Lotjeweg, Adolf-Kolping -Straße after the theologian (1909–1997), Langmirjen, Dudweilerstraße after the Saarland town, Langener Landstraße after the town of Langen , Claus-Groth -Straße after the writer (1819-1899) , Grubke, Adolf-Butenandt -Straße after the Leh biochemist and Nobel Prize laureate (1903-1995), Dr.- Franz-Mertens -Straße after the botanist (1764-1831), Wurster Straße after the northern country Wursten , unnamed way, Alfred- Wegener Strasse after the geoscientist and polar researcher (1880-1930), Weserportstrasse after the port area and again Wurster Strasse; otherwise see the link to the streets. Some cross-street relationships are changing due to construction work.

history

Surname

The Cherbourger road was after the French twin town Cherbourg named, in a self to 2000 commune in the Manche department in the region of Normandy in northern France was and since then a district of Cherbourg-en-Cotentin (80,000 inhabitants). There has been a town partnership with Bremerhaven since 1961. The street was named in December 1971.

development

The Bremerhaven port group of the Bremen ports was continuously expanded with the Bremerhaven container terminal from 1968 until 2008. In 2017, 3.21 million containers (5.50 million  TEU ) with 54.9 million t were handled here. Around 1 million TEU are transported by truck on the road. The handling of automobiles in the north port also increased, but most of them are delivered and delivered by rail.

traffic

Cherbourger Strasse was developed into an important road link from the 1976 motorway to the ports in various stages. In order to create an efficient port connection, after lengthy preparations (since 2006, legal proceedings since 2013), a further expansion u. a. as a tunnel that relieves the critical junctions of Cherbourger Straße and separates port traffic from other urban individual traffic.

A comparison of many variants led to a tunnel route south of the current course of Cherbourger Strasse, in the eastern section around 200 meters south of Cherbourger Strasse below Eichenweg, in the middle section below Claus-Groth-Strasse and then west under the existing course of Cherbourger Strasse .

The Cherbourger Strasse tunnel is being built in individual construction phases as a so-called open trough with a north tube (1,848 meters long) and a south tube (1,659 meters long). These roads above the tunnel will then be restored. The pure construction costs should amount to 180 (2014) to 201 million euros (as of 2019), financed by the federal government, the state of Bremen, the city of Bremerhaven and the port industry. The measures should be completed in mid-2021. Around 15,000 vehicles are expected to drive through the tunnel in both directions every day.

Public transport

Cherbourger Straße has been served by bus routes 7 and 8 on an already completed section since 1971. Today (2019) there will be operation on sections with bus lines 503 and 508 of Bremerhaven Versorgungs- und Verkehrs-GmbH.

Buildings and facilities

Most of the street has no residential development.

Notable buildings and facilities

  • Motorway A27 from 1976, connection Bremerhaven-Überseehäfen
  • Wooded area and footbridge towards Ferdinand-Lassalle-Straße and Leherheide West
  • Old Cherbourger Street:
    • Adolf-Kolping-Strasse No. 4: 1- to 4-storey. Building group with u. a. Hotel and service providers
    • Between Lotjeweg / Adolf-Kolping-Straße and Langener Landstraße: mostly 1-storey. detached family houses
    • Bridge on the Bremerhaven – Cuxhaven railway line
    • West of the Langener Landstrasse: 1-gesch. detached family houses
  • After the road tunnel from Wurster Straße:
    • Wurster Str. No. 101: 16-gesch. High-rise residential building from around 1980
    • Lower road
    • North side: Single-family housing estate in Speckenbüttel and Speckenbütteler Park
    • South side: North Sea Stadium from 1975 for 10,000 spectators, with football stadium and athletics facility as well as side places
  • Pedestrian bridge to the northern and southern settlements and the sports complex
  • Forest areas on both sides
  • Bridge over the New Aue that the Weserportsee leads
  • Southwest: BLG parking spaces for car handling
  • Note : North-west of the street on Wurster Straße , the US Carl Schurz barracks had stood as a port of embarkation with the transmitter of the American Forces Network AFN-Bremerhaven (1949–1993): today the port area.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Herbert Körtge: The street names of the seaside town of Bremerhaven .
  2. Port connection A27
  3. Patrick Reichel: Port tunnel is delayed further . In: Weser-Kurier from October 12, 2017.
  4. to Bremerhaven: port tunnel. Expansion of the transport links between the ports and the A27 motorway
  5. ^ Paul Homann: Bremerhaven route networks. In: Bremerhaven route networks. Retrieved October 5, 2019 .

Coordinates: 53 ° 35 ′ 1.5 "  N , 8 ° 35 ′ 44.5"  E