Feldbrunnenstrasse

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Map of Feldbrunnenstrasse from OpenStreetMap

The Feldbrunnenstraße is about six hundred feet long road in Hamburg's Rotherbaum . It lies between Rothenbaumchaussee and Heimhuder Strasse and is essentially oriented in a south-north direction. It begins on Moorweidenstraße, is crossed by Johnsallee and Binderstraße and finally turns into one hundred and twenty meter long Mollerstraße, which runs at an angle towards Harvestehuder St. Johanniskirche .

After the construction of Johnsallee (1868), the area was sold by the city as a landowner until 1889, thereby establishing the area's villa character. In the 1900 city map, the street ended shortly after the Johnsallee junction in front of an area known as the Velodrom. In the northern area, west of the street, are the sports fields of the University of Hamburg .

building

The area was originally intended for upscale residential development, but commercial use currently predominates on the street. Seventeen houses are listed.

The development consists of mostly three-storey buildings, which are designed as town villas, townhouses or multi-part ensembles in the style of the Wilhelminian era in stone, sandstone, clinker or plastered.

  • 3 Art Nouveau villa 1900 by George Radel
  • 11-13 - Semi-detached house built in 1891 by George Radel
  • 19-21 - Row villas 1891, by JB Heyn
  • 43 - Irish Honorary Consulate
  • 50–54 - Ensemble, 1906/07 Lundt & Kallmorgen Italian consulate general
  • 56 - House Behn, now: House of the ZEIT Foundation, 1908, Lundt & Kallmorgen
  • 58 - Villa Ballin, 1908/09, Lundt & Kallmorgen, now UNESCO Institute for Lifelong Learning
Prestigious villa built for Albert Ballin with a facade made of shell limestone and sandstone. It has been a listed building since 1982.
  • 64-66 ; Semi-detached house, 1910, Lundt & Kallmorgen
  • 67 To the north of Binderstraße, on the west side and on the back of the Ethnographic Museum, the tennis courts were given up and in 2008 the Yu Garden , a "Hamburg - Shanghai - Tourism and Culture Center Europe" opened. The city gave the 3,500 m² property on a long lease free of charge for 30 years. The construction was carried out to a large extent with materials that were imported from China.
  • 70 - Villa Heilbuth, 1910 Hans and Oskar Gerson , now: Faculty of Education, Psychology and. Movement Science from the University of Hamburg
  • 72 - Czech Honorary Consulate

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Hermann Hipp : Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg. History, culture and urban architecture on the Elbe and Alster , Cologne 1989, p. 373f
  2. List of monuments for Hamburg Eimsbüttel (PDF; 509 kB) accessed October 20, 2010
  3. ^ Ralf Lange : Architecture in Hamburg - The great architecture guide. Junius Verlag, Hamburg 2008, ISBN 978-3-88506-586-9 .
  4. Press release on hamburg.de accessed January 23, 2011

Coordinates: 53 ° 33 ′ 59 ″  N , 9 ° 59 ′ 27 ″  E