Debstedter way

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Debstedter way
coat of arms
Street in Bremerhaven
Basic data
city Bremerhaven
district Leherheide
Created Late 19th century
Cross streets Langener Landstrasse, Breitenbachstrasse, Mecklenburger Weg, Blumenauer Weg, Kastanienweg, Otto-Oellerich-Strasse, Hermann-Schröder-Weg, Wacholderweg, Ahornweg, Hermann-Löns-Strasse, Brillemoor, Brunnenstrasse, Fehrmoorweg, Drangstedter Weg, Plätternweg
use
User groups Cars, bikes and pedestrians
Road design two lane road
Technical specifications
Street length 2800 meters

The Debstedter way is a central access road in Bremerhaven , district Leherheide . It leads in a south-west-north-east direction from the Langener Landstrasse to Langen , district Debstedt .

The cross streets and connecting streets were named u. a. as Langener road to the place Breitenbachstraße after the Prussian Minister of Public Works Paul von Breitenbach, Mecklenburg named road to the former country Blumenauer way earlier gelegenem in this way, "Good Blumenau" Chestnut on the tree, Otto Oellerich -Straße after the Leher politician (SPD) and member of the state parliament (1862–1921), Hermann-Schröder-Weg after the local researcher, Wacholderweg after the plant, Ahornweg after the tree, Hermann-Löns- Strasse after the writer (1866-1914), Brillemoor after a field name , Brunnenstraße, unnamed path, Fehrmoorweg after the field name of the Fehr-, Feer-, Veer-, Fer- or Fernemoor (fehr = fern), Drangstedter Weg after the place, Plätternweg after the hall Pladderinge and then unnamed paths; otherwise see the link to the streets.

history

Surname

The Debstedter Weg was named after the village Debstedt to which it leads. The parish with the Dionysius Church Debstedt has existed since the 9th century. In 2017 the place had 2064 inhabitants

development

In the slightly hilly Leher-Haide ( Lehe or Lieth = hill) there were first settlements from the middle of the 19th century. a. by immigrants from Mecklenburg, after whom a street was named. The Hermann Löns settlement came around 1900 ; many rather small settlements followed until the end of the 1920s. In 1909 the Leherheider School was inaugurated on Debstedter Weg. From 1950 the Brillemoor / Bernhard-Lohmüller-Siedlung was built. In the 1960s, 3500 apartments were built in Leherheide-West by Neue Heimat , Gewog and Gewoba in four to eight-story houses. A waterworks developed in the municipal utility forest from 1901 and was expanded in 1962. In 1971 Leherheide became a district with today (2017) 16,469 inhabitants. The highest point in Bremerhaven, 11.1 m high, is Debstedter Weg at the corner of Brunnenstrasse.

traffic

The road to Debstedt was already an agricultural road connection in the Middle Ages, which also led to the church from 797 and from around 1200. The access road was not expanded until the 20th century.

In the BremerhavenBus local transport, lines 501 (Leherheide West - Wulsdorf) and 502 (Leherheide West - Grünhöfe) and 511 (Leherheide Ost - Wulsdorf) run through the street and lines 505 and 506 (Langen - Wulsdorf) touch them on Langener Landstraße.

Buildings and facilities

The street is mostly built on with one to four-story houses.

Notable buildings and facilities

  • Corner of Langener Landstrasse No. 266: 5-storey. plastered residential, office and commercial building with 6-storey. Corner turret
  • No. 9: 3-sch. Building of the AOK Bremen / Bremerhaven from around 1920/30 with a new 1- and 2-storey. Cultivation
  • No. 11: 2-sch. Office building from around 1920/30 with a pitched roof and the Weser-Elbe Sparkasse
  • No. 15: 2-sch. Residential and commercial building with hipped roof and restaurant
  • No. 16: 1-sch. Shopping mall;
    • From 1953 to 1966 the Odeon cinema was located here with 675 seats
  • No. 22 to 32: 1-cut. Residential houses
  • No. 29a to 29f and Seegerweg No. 10 to 20: 3- and 4-layered. Residential complex
  • No. 40 to 70 and 39 to 59: 1-cut. detached houses
  • Nos. 24 to 36 and 44a to 46a; 2-tier Residential houses
  • No. 67 to 79: 2-sch. Row houses from around 1980
  • No. 81: 1-gesch. Building and church; Evangelical rectory and parish of St. Andreas
  • No. 84: 2- and 3-layered Leherheid School from 1909, today Fritz Husmann School as a primary school
    • behind the Johann-Gutenberg-Schule, a secondary school with around 700 pupils (2018)
  • No. 83 to 99, 115 to 137 and 86 to 122: 1- and 2-shifted detached houses
  • No. 142A: Leherheide waterworks from 1901
  • Königsheide forest area
  • No. 144c and Fehrmoorweg to No. 20 and U-shaped Buchenweg: settlement with 1-storey. Single family homes
  • Fields and pastures to Debstedt
  • Note on Mecklenburger Weg no. 100: Nearby is the 20,000 square meter park Thieles Garten , from 1925 by Gustav Thiele and Georg Thiele

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Herbert Körtge: The street names of the seaside town of Bremerhaven . Ed .: Men von Morgenstern, Bremerhaven 1992.
  2. ^ Monument database of the LfD

Coordinates: 53 ° 35 ′ 49.3 "  N , 8 ° 36 ′ 45.1"  E