Farger Strasse (Bremen)

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Farger Street
coat of arms
Street in Bremen
Farger Street
Farge power station and Farger Strasse at the top of the picture
Basic data
city Bremen
district Blumenthal
Cross streets On the Amtsweide, Alte Str., Kapellenstrasse, Wasserweg, Bundesstrasse 74n , Uppe Höchte , Wilhelmshavener Str., Koloniestr., Betonstr., Witteborg, Pötjerweg, Versflether Weg, Hildeboldstrasse, Bernhardtring, Johann-Kroog-Str.
use
User groups Cars, bikes and pedestrians
Road design two lane road
Technical specifications
Street length 2200 meters
No. 19: Municipal House
Bremen-Farge volunteer fire brigade

The Farger road is a central access road to Bremen , district Blumenthal , district Farge . It leads in an east-west direction from Dillener Straße to Rekumer Straße to Rekum .

It is divided into the sub-areas

The cross streets and connecting streets were u. a. named as Dillener Straße after the name Auf dem Düllen for Neu Rönnebeck mentioned in 1586 , An der Amtsweide after a pasture that belonged to the office, Alte Straße after an old path, unnamed path, Kapellenstraße after a former chapel in St. Magnus, waterway, which led to the Weser, Bundesstraße 74n , Uppe Höchte = on the height, unnamed ways (2 ×), Wilhelmshavener Straße to the city, Koloniestraße after the English colonists who lived here , unnamed way, concrete road , which was so called by the citizens, Witteborg (i.e. white castle), which was a customs post on the Weser in the 13th century and was destroyed by Bremen in 1221, Pötjerweg as a reminder of the potters (= Pötjer ) of the Witteborg stoneware factory from 1852 to around 1945, Versflether Weg after that in the Weser sunken place, the county and the castle as a customs station, Hildeboldstraße 1957 after the Archbishop of Bremen Hildebold von Wunstorf († 1273), Bernhardtring after the first name, Johann-Kroog - Straße nach dem Politiker ( SPD ) and member of the Bremen citizenship (1877–1947) and Rekumer Straße to the district to which it leads; otherwise see the link to the streets.

history

Surname

Farger Strasse was named after the Farge district in Blumenthal. The Low German word Farge means ferry, which still exists today. The name is first recorded in 1586.

development

The road is an old connection from Rönnebeck to and in Farge.
Blumenthal is Bremen's northernmost district. The Bremer Council bought the castle in 1436 Blomendal with the Bailiwick and the Court Blomendal. In 1654 the place came to the Duchy of Bremen under Swedish sovereignty and in 1715 to the Electorate of Braunschweig-Lüneburg , later to the Electorate or Kingdom of Hanover and in 1866 as the Province of Hanover to the Kingdom of Prussia and in 1939 to Bremen.
Farge existed as a small ferry village as early as the 16th century. The independent municipality, which grew rapidly from the 1850s to around 1914, belonged to the Blomendal district or
the Blumenthal district . In 1905 the Rönnebeck-Farge church was built and in 1902 the Farge volunteer fire brigade was founded.

traffic

The street is also the federal highway 74 . In 2009, the extension of the 74n federal road to the A270 motorway took place parallel to the road .

NordWestBahn line RS1

The regional S-Bahn Bremen / Lower Saxony with the line RS1 ( Verden - Achim - Bremen Hbf - Burg - Vegesack - Farge) has been running to Farge station with the NordWestBahn since 2011 . In 2007, this railway already offered advance service on the Bremen-Farge-Bremen-Vegesack railway line , which had been reactivated for passenger traffic and had existed since 1888.

In the local traffic in Bremen, the bus line 90 runs through the street (Gröpelingen ↔ Neuenkirchen).

Buildings and facilities

On the street there are mostly one and a few two-story houses.

Bremen monuments

  • No. 17/21 Church Rönnebeck-Farge : 1-gesch. Parish hall with 2-storied Gable risalit, pastor's house and hall church with octagonal roof turret of the Protestant Reformed parish Rönnebeck-Farge; Buildings from 1905 according to plans by August Abbehusen and Otto Blendermann with renovation and connection construction from 1962 according to plans by Schulze-Herringen; Bell from 1796, organ from 1958, colored windows from KG Rohde.

Notable buildings and facilities

  • No. 1: 1-sch. Plastered older gable- independent house with thatched roof and Uhlenloch
  • No. 15: 1-sch. plastered house from 1911 with 2-storied. Gable
  • No. 17/21: Church s. above
    • Behind An der Amtsweide: Kirchfriedhof, also called Farger Friedhof , although located in Rönnebeck
  • Waterway No. 23: 1-sch. plastered gable permanent residence with hipped thatched roof
  • Between numbers 32 to 44: grassland
  • No. 42: 1-sch. Plastered gable-independent residential house with bay window from around 1920/30
  • Power line from the Farge power plant
  • Between No. 66 to 100: grassland and arable land; behind: ENGIE power plant Farge
  • No. 99: 1-gesch. shopping mall
  • No. 100: 1-sch. clinker-bricked inn to the green hunter
  • Concrete road No. 3: Deutsche Post branch
  • No. 103a: 1-gesch. plastered house of the pharmacy
  • No. 109: 1-sch. former farmhouse with thatched roof; today haulage company
  • No. 100 to 115: town center with commercial buildings
  • No. 115: 2-sch. Newer residential and commercial building with a branch of the Sparkasse Bremen
  • No. 121: 1-gesch. shopping mall
  • No. 127: 2- to 4-layered Farge station of the S-Bahn with the RS 1 line (Verden - Bremen Hbf - Brm-Farge)
  • No. 134: 1-sch. Gabled house from 1940 of the Bremen-Farge volunteer fire brigade from 1902
    • Behind Bernhardtring 2: 1-gesch. Factory buildings with shed roofs and a. of Spinnbau GmbH

See also

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Monument database of the LfD Bremen

Coordinates: 53 ° 12 ′ 5 "  N , 8 ° 31 ′ 26.9"  E