Friedehorstpark

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Friedehorstpark
Lehnhofpark
Bremen coat of arms (middle) .svg
Park in Bremen
Basic data
place Bremen
District St. Magnus
Surrounding streets Brunnenhofstrasse, Holthorster Weg
Technical specifications
Parking area 9 ha
Elevation in Friedehorstpark
Friedhorstpark 20160619.jpg
height 32.5  m above sea level NHN
location in Friedehorstpark on the border of Bremen and Lower Saxony ( Germany )
Coordinates 53 ° 10 '39 "  N , 8 ° 40' 23"  E Coordinates: 53 ° 10 '39 "  N , 8 ° 40' 23"  E
Friedehorstpark (Bremen)
Friedehorstpark
Normal way Promenade
particularities highest natural elevation in Bremen
f6

The Friedehorstpark , also called Lehnhofpark , is an approximately 9  hectare park in the Bremen district of Burglesum  - on the border with Lower Saxony . He points with 32.5  m above sea level. NHN has the highest natural elevation in the Free Hanseatic City of Bremen . The publicly accessible park is owned by the Bremen Evangelical Church .

geography

location

The Friedehorstpark is located in St. Magnus , a district of the Burglesum district. It borders on the Lower Saxony district of Osterholz  - in the east on the village of Platjenwerbe, which belongs to the municipality of Ritterhude, and in the north and west on Löhnhorst , a village in the municipality of Schwanewede .

Highest points in Bremen

With a height of 32.5  m - near the northern border between Bremen and Lower Saxony - the Friedehorstpark is the summit of the highest natural elevation in Bremen.

The summit of the landfill in the Hohweg district of the Walle district of Bremen , which according to various sources is between 42  m and 49  m high, towers above the park elevation.

Landscape protection area

The Friedehorst Park and in the west bordering Lehnhofsiedlung located in 1968 reported, multipartite and 32.81  km² large conservation area Bremen 1968 ( CDDA -No. 378515).

history

The Friedehorstpark was created around 1875 around the Lehnhof estate of the consul general, banker and senator Johannes Theodor Lürman, probably by Wilhelm Benque , the creator of the Bremer Bürgerpark , in a landscape style. The mansion, originally a Swiss -style building , was built in 1857 and replaced in 1904 by a new building in neo-baroque style , which in turn was demolished in the 1930s. The park was originally larger than it is today with around 17 hectares. The Friedehorst Foundation with its facilities borders the park to the east. In 1950/51 the Lehnhofsiedlung was built in the west of the park area.

Web links

Commons : Friedehorstpark (Bremen)  - Collection of images

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Environment: Parks & Green Areas: Facts & Figures. (Section Non-Municipal Green Areas ). In: Environment.bremen.de. BUISY , accessed January 31, 2016 .
  2. a b c Statistical Yearbook 2014. (PDF) 1 Area and land use: 1.1 Location and area. In: statistik.bremen.de. Statistisches Landesamt Bremen , December 2014, p. 25 , accessed on December 13, 2015 (3.5 MB).
  3. ^ A b Julia Ladebeck: Researched the history of Friedehorst Park. In: weser-kurier.de. Weser Kurier , June 2, 2013, accessed on December 13, 2015 .
  4. Caroline Süss: Panoramic views and facts on the mountain tour. In: weser-kurier.de. Weser Kurier, May 24, 2012, accessed June 4, 2015 .
  5. ^ Herbert Farr: Germany's highest peak . Books on Demand , Norderstedt 2009, ISBN 978-3-8370-3316-8 , pp. 32–35 ( limited preview in Google Book Search [accessed December 13, 2015]).
  6. Protected areas in Germany. In: geodienste.bfn.de. BfN , BKG , 2011, accessed on December 12, 2015 (map).