Dreibergen (Bremerhaven)
Dreibergen | |
---|---|
Street in Bremerhaven | |
Basic data | |
city | Bremerhaven |
district | Wulsdorf |
Created | 19th century |
Cross streets | Lindenallee , Thunstraße, Sandfahrel, Lützowstraße, Osnabrücker Straße, Nettelbeckstraße, Hamelner Straße, Hildesheimer Straße, Ringstraße, Wulsdorfer Rampe |
use | |
User groups | Cars, bikes and pedestrians |
Road design | two lane road |
Technical specifications | |
Street length | 1200 meters |
The street Dreibergen is a central access street in Bremerhaven , district Wulsdorf , district Dreibergen. It leads in a south-north direction from Bremer Strasse and Lindenallee to Wulsdorfer Rampe and Daimlerstrasse.
Dreibergen is also a district in the north of Wulsdorf with a size of 1.5 km² and around 5200 inhabitants.
The cross streets and the connecting streets were often named after cities, u. a. as Bremer Strasse, Lindenallee after the tree, Thunstrasse after the Acker bei Thun corridor, Sandfahrel (the area has sandy soil, fahrel = small furrow), Lützowstrasse after Major General Ludwig Adolf Wilhelm von Lützow and his Freikorps , Osnabrücker Strasse, Nettelbeckstrasse after the defender Kolbergs Joachim Nettelbeck , Hamelner Strasse, Hildesheimer Strasse, Ringstrasse, which leads around the district in a half-ring, Wulsdorf ramp to the railway bridge and Daimlerstrasse after the car designer Gottlieb Daimler (1834–1900); otherwise see the link to the streets.
history
Surname
The district and the street Dreibergen was named after the three sand ridges between the Markfleet and the Rohr valley. The sand ridge used to be higher and belongs to a geest tongue in the geest ridge on the glacial valley of the Weser . Here were in the 19th and 20th Century a series of sand pits.
development
Wallestorpe was first mentioned in 1139. The cluster village belonged to the judicial district of Vieland around 1500 . In 1715 the area came to the Electorate of Braunschweig-Lüneburg , since 1815 Kingdom of Hanover . In 1850 the around 600 inhabitants of the rural community (1840) lived around the church in mostly thatched houses. After the construction of the Weser ports, the district grew considerably and in 2017 it had 11,351 inhabitants. In the area around Ringstrasse / Krummenacker, Stäwog built a very simple, three-storey row development in the 1950s that was renovated and partly demolished around 2004.
The 9.3 hectare Bremerhaven cemetery in Wulsdorf from 1871 is located in the Dreibergen district. Since 2019, the urban development funding project “It's all in the mix - living and working in Wulsdorf-Dreibergen” has been running here.
traffic
In BremerhavenBus' local transport, the road touches lines 501, 506 and ML on Lindenallee and the 501 and ML on Ringstrasse.
Buildings and facilities
Most of the street has one to two-story open-plan construction.
Notable buildings and facilities
- Lindenallee No. 23: 1-sch. Building of the Wulsdorf Volunteer Fire Brigade
- Brakhahnstrasse No. 23: 2-storey. Day care center with playground
- Dreibergen No. 21: 2- and 3-ply New building from around 1961 and other buildings for the Paula Modersohn School ( Die Paula ), a high school
- Wulsdorf district meeting place
- Hildesheimer Strasse No. 9 at the corner of Dreibergen: 1-gesch. newer New Apostolic Church
- Corner of Dreibergen / Thunstraße: 1944 location of the Dreibergen women's camp with 350 Eastern workers
- For information:
- Bremer Straße: Romanesque , Protestant Dionysius Church as a field stone church and fortified church from the 11th century, free-standing bell tower from the 15th century.
- Sandbredenstraße No. 11: 2- and 3-storey, brick- faced , four-class Altwulsdorf school from 1866 with other buildings; today a primary school
literature
- Harry Gabcke , Renate Gabcke, Herbert Körtge, Manfred Ernst: Bremerhaven in two centuries; Volumes I to III from 1827 to 1991. Nordwestdeutsche Verlagsgesellschaft, Bremerhaven 1989/1991, ISBN 3-927857-00-9 , ISBN 3-927857-37-8 , ISBN 3-927857-22-X .
Individual evidence
- ^ Herbert Körtge: The street names of the seaside town of Bremerhaven . 1992.
- ^ Paul Homann: Bremerhaven route networks (public transport) since 1881 . In: BremerhavenBus website.
- ↑ Monument database of the LfD Bremen
- ↑ Monument database of the LfD Bremen
Coordinates: 53 ° 30 ′ 33.1 ″ N , 8 ° 36 ′ 3.2 ″ E