Fetscherstrasse
Fetscherstrasse | |
---|---|
Street in Dresden | |
Artushof at Fetscherstrasse 30. | |
Basic data | |
place | Dresden |
Hist. Names | Fürstenstrasse |
Connecting roads | Stübelallee / Comeniusplatz, Waldschlößchenbrücke / Käthe-Kollwitz-Ufer |
Cross streets | Comeniusstraße, Wallotstraße, Nicolaistraße, Reinickestraße, Haydnstraße, Holbeinstraße, Gabelsbergerstraße, Dürerstraße, Blasewitzer Straße , Fiedlerstraße, Tatzberg and Pfotenhauerstraße |
Places | Fetscherplatz |
Buildings | Artushof , 6th middle school "JA Comenius" |
use | |
User groups | Motor traffic , pedestrian traffic , bicycle traffic |
The Fetscherstraße is a street in the Dresden districts Striesen and Johannstadt between the Great Garden and the Waldschlößchenbrücke on the Elbe. Like the Fetscherplatz along it , it has been named after the doctor, researcher and social hygienist Rainer Fetscher (1895-1945) since 1946 .
description
From the palace in the Great Garden , Fürstenallee leads out of the Great Garden at right angles to the main avenue in a north-easterly direction . Comeniusplatz in Striesen-Süd forms the further course of the traffic route, which was previously known as Fürstenstrasse from there . Its intersection with the multi-lane Stübelallee represents the beginning of the likewise multi-lane traffic route for motorized traffic in the direction of the Elbe, which has been called Fetscherstrasse since 1946 from the Comeniusstrasse crossing a little later.
In its further course it crosses Wallotstraße before a little later in the area of Fetscherplatz the Nicolaistraße and Reinickestraße join it and it crosses the Striesener Straße / Borsbergstraße . This is followed by further crossings with the again subordinate residential streets Haydnstraße, Holbeinstraße, Gabelsbergerstraße and Dürerstraße (with a branch into Wormser Straße) before it crosses Blasewitzer Straße as the next major traffic route. After crossing Fiedlerstrasse, the previous north-east direction swings to the north. To the east is the Carl Gustav Carus University Hospital Dresden and to the west is the New Jewish Cemetery , which almost extends to the Tatzberg road, where the Center for Regenerative Therapies Dresden is adjacent to the Bioinnovation Center . The intersection with Pfotenhauerstraße in Johannstadt-Nord follows before Fetscherstraße reaches the Waldschlößchenbrücke bridge over the Elbe. The connection to the Käthe-Kollwitz-Ufer road, which runs close to the Elbe, is established via two ramps, also named Fetscherstraße .
Transport: tram line 2
In the post-war period, tram line 2 ran on Fetscherstrasse. On March 1, 1950, line 2 was relocated between Schillerplatz and Fetscherstrasse or Dürerstrasse. On May 16, 1950, line 2 was moved between Schillerplatz and Blasewitzer- / Fetscherstraße. The left turn in Fetscherstrasse was made here from Sachsenplatz / Blumenstrasse. In addition, it was possible to change left and cross into Fetscherstrasse. On October 13, 1950, line 2 was extended to 11.8 kilometers for the opening of the newly built Gleisdreieck in Calberlastraße in Loschwitz .
In the course of the construction of the Waldschlößchenbrücke and the widening of Fetscherstraße up to Blasewitzer Straße, the tracks in this area were removed. They once served the line 26 (→ 26er Ring ) as access to the Johannstadt track loop . In the current line network, line 12 runs from the direction of Striesen from Blasewitzer Straße to Fetscherplatz via Fetscherstraße and serves the Blasewitzer Straße / Fetscherstraße and Gabelsbergstraße stops in this area . The tracks from Fetscherplatz to Gleisdreieck at Comeniusplatz (Stübelallee) serve as a diversion route.
date | Route of tram line 2 |
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03/01/1950 | Schillerplatz - Naumannstraße - Goetheallee - tram station Pfotenhauerstraße - Pfotenhauerstraße - Fetscherstraße |
04/16/1950 | Schillerplatz - Loschwitzer Strasse (formerly Residenzstrasse) - Blasewitzer Strasse - Fetscherstrasse |
October 13, 1950 | Schlachthofring - Schlachthofstraße - Magdeburger Straße - Waltherstraße - Friedrichstraße - Paul-Gruner-Straße - Ammonstraße - Carolaplatz - Wiener Platz - Wiener Straße - Canalettostraße - Stephanienplatz - Nicolaistraße - Fetscherplatz - Fetscherstraße - Blasewitzer Straße - Königsheimplatz - Loschwitzer Straße - Schillerplatz - Loschwitzer Bridge - Loschwitzer Straße Elbbrückenstrasse - Körnerplatz - Pillnitzer Landstrasse - Calberlastrasse |
Development
There are several listed buildings in Fetscherstraße, including Fetscherstraße 22, 24, 26 and 36, 39, 111 and 113.
- No. 2 ( 6th middle school "Johann Amos Comenius" ): The school building was built by the architects Gottfried Kintzer and Ehrenfried Kubin in 1957/1958 as a pavilion school . It consists of a three-storey main class wing with two pavilions that are connected by intermediate wings. The window parapets are colored plastered; the building has a flat gable roof . The main entrance is flanked by sandstone arcades . The open spaces were designed by Heinz Hirsch.
- No. 30 - Artushof: The Artushof was built in 1899 by Franz Oskar Hartmann in historicist forms with echoes of Art Nouveau .
- No. 33–37: By closing the gap in Fetscherstraße 33–37 , Wolfram Starke rebuilt a residential development from the turn of the century that was destroyed in the air raids on Dresden .
- No. 72 - Factory building: The factory and administration building with ancillary buildings is a listed building .
- No. 74
- City Hospital Johannstadt: The City Hospital Dresden-Johannstadt with the departments of surgery, internal medicine and ophthalmology was built according to plans by city building officer Edmund Bräter on today's university premises . Construction began in September 1898 and opened on December 2, 1901. While the two- to four-storey buildings were built in the style of historicism, the decorative details (arched garments of the portals and windows, curved gable lines and floral ornaments) were kept in Art Nouveau style.
- Children's clinic: The Dresden children's clinic , built in the New Building style by city planner Paul Wolf between 1929 and 1930 , was demolished in 2000. The structural implementation of the "then revolutionary city theories of the light-air-sun principle" was clearly visible in the building of the Dresden children's clinic. There were balconies that opened in long rows to the south.
- No. 111 - Clara-Zetkin-Heim : The senior citizen and nursing home named after Clara Zetkin is a listed building.
literature
- Walter May, Werner Pampel, Hans Konrad: Architectural Guide GDR, Dresden District . VEB Verlag für Bauwesen, Berlin 1979.
- Gilbert Lupfer, Bernhard Sterra, Martin Wörner (eds.): Architecture guide Dresden . Dietrich Reimer Verlag, Berlin 1997, ISBN 3-496-01179-3 .
- Volker Helas, Gudrun Peltz: Art Nouveau architecture in Dresden . KNOP Verlag for Architecture - Photography - Art, Dresden 1999, ISBN 3-934363-00-8 .
Web links
Individual evidence
- ^ The tram line 2. Friedrichstadt - Blasewitz. dresdner-nahverkehr.de, February 4, 2003, archived from the original on February 7, 2009 ; Retrieved February 1, 2013 .
- ↑ May et al., No. 94 (Polytechnische Oberschule Otto Grotewohl)
- ^ State capital Dresden, Office for Culture and Monument Protection (Ed.): Dresden and his architects. Currents and tendencies 1900–1970. Post-war modernity . February 2006, p. 3.
- ↑ May et al., No. 95 (apartment block Fetscherstr. 33–37)
- ↑ Helas / Peltz, p. 186 (Fetscherstraße, former city hospital), p. 70–76, image no. 81
- ↑ Medical Academy (extensions) In: das-neue-dresden.de , accessed on May 21, 2019
Coordinates: 51 ° 3 ′ 8 " N , 13 ° 46 ′ 38" E