Franz-Schütte-Allee
Franz-Schütte-Allee | |
---|---|
Street in Bremen | |
Road, green patrol with crocuses , bike path | |
Basic data | |
city | Bremen |
district | Oberneuland |
Cross streets | Motorway A 27, Louis-Leitz-Str., Rockwinkler Landstr., Rockwinkeler Heerstr. |
use | |
User groups | Cars, bikes and pedestrians |
Road design | two lane road |
Technical specifications | |
Street length | 1900 meters |
The Franz-Schütte-Allee is a major thoroughfare in Bremen , district Oberneuland . It also runs as a motorway feeder mainly in a west-east direction from Richard-Boljahn-Allee in the Vahr and from the federal motorway 27 (No. 20 Bremen-Vahr ) to Rockwinkeler Heerstraße in Oberneuland.
The cross streets and connecting streets were named u. a. as Richard-Boljahn-Allee after the politician ( SPD ), trade unionist as Bremen DGB chairman, parliamentary group chairman of the SPD in the Bremen citizenship and chairman of the supervisory board of Gewoba Richard Boljahn (1912-1992), federal highway 27 , Louis-Leitz- Strasse 1999 after the Entrepreneur and inventor of the Leitz folder (1846–1918), unnamed path, Rockwinkler Landstrasse and Rockwinkeler Heerstrasse after the village of Rockwinkel; otherwise see the link to the streets.
history
Surname
The avenue was named after the merchant, oil importer and important patron Franz Schütte (1836–1911).
Schütte founded the German-American Petroleum Company (DAPG) in Bremen with the Standard Oil Company , later Esso AG . He bought a shipyard in Vegesack, from 1893 the shipbuilding and machine company Bremer Vulkan . As a patron he promoted u. a. the construction of the cathedral towers , the interior painting of the cathedral, the construction of the New Town Hall , the Weserlust excursion restaurant , the BSV swimming pool, land for the botanical garden , the Bismarck equestrian statue and the Rosselenker in the Bremen ramparts .
Richard-Boljahn-Allee also belonged to this street until 1993.
development
Settlement of Oberneuland began in 1113, when the Dutch began to cultivate the Hollerland . The villages of Oberneuland and Rockwinkel belonged to the Goh Hollerland, were united in 1888 as a Bremen rural community with around 2000 inhabitants and incorporated into the city of Bremen in 1921 and 1923.
Between the development of Oberneuland and the large housing estate Neue-Vahr is an almost two kilometer wide green zone. The large parcels of land, like the street, all faced east-west.
traffic
The road in Goh Hollerland was an old route through the Vahrer Feld to Oberneuland.
In local transport in Bremen, the bus routes 33 and 34 ( Horner Kirche - Sebaldsbrück ) touch the road on Rockwinkeler Landstrasse.
Buildings and facilities
The green avenue is built on with a few two-story residential buildings.
Notable buildings and facilities
- On the south side
- Bremen swimming club from 1889 (BSV) with Achterdiekbad as an outdoor pool from 1915, built with donations from Franz Schuette's heirs
- System from the Northwest Tennis Association
- The Bremen Golf Club is an 18-hole course in the third largest park in Bremen
- Hermann-Hollerith-Straße No. 10: Two 3-storey commercial buildings
- Bridge over the Rockwinkler Achterkampsfleet
- Bridge over the Rockwinkler Fleet
- On the north side
- No. 250: 2-sch. Office and residential building
- No. 254 and 256: two 2-fold Villas
- Rockwinkeler Landstrasse 13–15: 2-storey. Office building
- Rockwinkeler Landstrasse No. 5: Lür-Kropp-Hof park, which is more than 200 years old, with the single-storey farmhouse as a thatched low German two-column half-timbered house , the Meta-Rödiger-Hochtiedshuus from 2000 and the Lür-Kropp Foundation from 2006.
- New (around 2017) tunnel under the Bremen-Hamburg railway line
See also
literature
- Herbert Black Forest : The Great Bremen Lexicon. 2nd, expanded and updated edition. In two volumes. Edition Temmen , Bremen 2003, ISBN 3-86108-693-X (first edition: 2002, supplementary volume A – Z). 2008, ISBN 978-3-86108-986-5 .
- Monika Porsch: Bremer Straßenlexikon , complete edition. Schünemann, Bremen 2003, ISBN 3-7961-1850-X .
Individual evidence
- ^ CH Heinecken: Map of the Gohgrafschaft Hollerland from 1796
Coordinates: 53 ° 5 ′ 5.9 ″ N , 8 ° 55 ′ 12.9 ″ E