Friesickestrasse

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Friesickestrasse
coat of arms
Street in Berlin
Friesickestrasse
View of a typical house on Friesickestrasse
Basic data
place Berlin
District Weissensee
Created before 1874
Cross streets Streustraße, Langhansstraße , Charlottenburger Straße , Pistoriusstraße
use
User groups Pedestrian traffic , bicycle traffic , car traffic
Technical specifications
Street length 450 meters

The Friesickestraße in Berlin is a secondary road that in the district of Berlin-Weissensee of Pankow runs. It is located in the Weißensee founding district , the streets and squares of which are named after people who made outstanding contributions to the development and expansion of Weißensee during the founding period .

course

Friesickestrasse begins on Streustrasse , crosses Langhansstrasse and Charlottenburger Strasse and ends on Pistoriusstrasse . The speed limit is 30 km / h on the entire route.

The plots are counted using horseshoe numbering . It begins on the east side of Friesickestraße at the corner of Streustraße 45 with the number 6 and the used property 7 runs to the property Frieseckestraße 26 / Pistoriusstraße 104 and leads back on the (north) west side of the street from 27 to 47. The crossing streets are numbered with the adjacent properties. Numbers 9 and 11 remain for Friesickestrasse around Langhansstrasse and residential corner house 43 on the opposite side on the southwest corner.Around Charlottenburger Strasse , the property at Friesickestrasse 19 / residential building Charlottenburger Strasse 104 forms the southeast corner and the residential building Charlottenburger Strasse 43 forms the northeast corner . The opposite side of the street consists of the corner house Friesickestraße 33 / Charlottenburger 44 and on the south-west corner of the vacant property area Friesickestraße 36.

history

Friesickestrasse was laid out in 1874 and named after the lawyer and local politician Adolph Friesicke (1837–1907). He was a land registry judge and local court advisor in Weißensee and all land purchases and sales went through the responsible land registry III and through Friesicke's hands. It was declared public on September 17, 1875. Originally, Friesickestrasse was marked between the soft tissue border between Berlin and Neu-Weißensee and Pistoriusstrasse; the cemetery area already existed on the latter. At the southern end, the route was planned over to Berlin territory and connected to the grid of the Hobrecht plan ( Straße 22 ). A later tour from Ostseestrasse to the northeast was planned, but was only carried out from the Weißensee district boundary. The route planning on the Prenzlauer Berg side went into Gubitzstrasse and was implemented with its residential buildings on both sides. The hesitant residential development on the Weißensee border with Berlin led to small-scale commercial properties along Lehderstrasse. During the reconstruction after the Second World War , Friesickestrasse was shortened by expanding the industrial area around Lehderstrasse south of Streustrasse. The previous course of the street can still be seen in the plot of land, for example between Lehderstrasse 35 and 36 and opposite with the plot of land at Lehderstrasse 85a. The properties at Friesickestraße 1–5 and 48–51 between Streustraße and the Prenzlauer Berg / Weißensee suburbs went into this industrial area.

On August 28, 1910, the Baptist Immanuel Chapel at Friesickestraße 15 was inaugurated. This chapel is popular in the church service of the Evangelical Free Church (Baptist) Berlin-Weißensee, especially from East Berlin with a membership of 160. In the Second World War, the chapel as well as numerous residential buildings on Friesickestrasse were badly destroyed. Only 20% of the historical building fabric was preserved. In the 1950s and 1960s, new, mostly two- or three-story residential buildings - some of them as gap structures - were built. The Friesickestrasse, however, belonged to a district of Berlin-Weißensee that fell into disrepair in the 1970s and 1980s. Even after the fall of the Wall in 1990 , Friesickestrasse received no attention and the buildings on Friesickestrasse continued to deteriorate. The Berlin Senate decided to renovate the residential buildings in Weißensee, Friesickestrasse was not part of the redevelopment area.

In the 1890s, a glass factory was established on the corner of Friesickestrasse and Langhansstrasse. After the reunification in 1990 the glass factory was closed. In the 2000s, the ailing factory building of the disused glass factory was torn down.

The house number 17 was renovated after 2000 and the art foundry Marco Flierl moved in. Property number 18 was renovated in 2006/2008 by the owner and photo designer Peter Gregor. In May 2009, the creative center Friesicke18.de moved in , and the loft gallery for photography was also opened.

Friesickestrasse for the Berlin suburb of Neu-Weißensee is included in the 1900 address book (25 years after the public declaration ). The property count begins on Langhansstrasse with plots 1-7a, there are five residential buildings with one party and three six-party houses on Charlottenburgerstrasse, as well as the construction site of a ship owner on 4. The undeveloped plots (construction site) 8/10 and 11/13 are listed on Pistoriusstrasse , opposite are also registered 14-18 as a construction site and the corner lot 19 belongs to Charlottenburger Straße 61, this is a six-party apartment building. Plots 20, 23 and 24-27 facing Langhansstrasse are undeveloped and listed as a construction site, with the two apartment buildings 21 and 22 in between.

According to the address book from 1943, Friesickestrasse begins on Streustrasse. Plots 1–5 do not exist and 6–9 belongs to Langhansstrasse 112 and across the intersection the property 10 belongs to Langhansstrasse 42. House 11 is a small residential building, on 12/13 the commercial building of the Berlin model industry and machine factory Hasse follows . After the 20 family house 14, number 15 belongs to the Baptist congregation, apart from the preacher, also inhabited by four tenants. Towards Charlottenburger Strasse are the small residential buildings 16 and 17 and the eight-party houses 18 and 19. The property 20 with a trucking business on Charlottenburger Strasse follows on Pistoriusstrasse on 21 and 22 and on 25/26 construction sites, with the rental houses on 23 and 24 in between The opposite side is defined by the apartment block from Pistoriusstrasse with 28 and 29, 30 again as a construction site, 31 the house of a building contractor, 32 and 33 again five-storey multi-family houses in closed construction into Charlottenburger Strasse, across this follows on Holzplatz 34 / 35 (together with Langhansstraße 43/47) the hat mold factory, then a vacant lot 36 (construction site) and on 37 the residential building and 37/42 industrial site of the "Akt.Ges. Warnicke & Böhm Lacke und Farben ”to Langhansstrasse. Then the tenement houses Friesickestrasse 43/44 and Langhansstrasse 111 (24 tenants). The apartment buildings 44 and 45/46 (the latter also Streustraße 46) of the Charlottenburg resident Mallwitz, whose profession is named as the owner, are up to Streustraße.

Transport links

Friesickestrasse is connected to the Berlin tram network with a stop named after it. The Friesickestraße stop is on Langhansstraße, which is served by lines 12 and M13. The night bus line N26 operates at night. There is also access via the bus line in Pistoriusstraße.

Web links

Commons : Friesickestraße  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Friesicke FIS Broker (map of Berlin 1: 5000 (K5 color edition)) of the Senate Department for Urban Development and Environment Berlin
  2. Friesickestrasse. In: Street name lexicon of the Luisenstädtischer Bildungsverein (near  Kaupert )
  3. Situation map of Berlin with the Weichbilde and Charlottenburg. Berlin-Verlag by Dietrich Reimer, 1880, digitized version in the State Library
  4. Weißensee around 1932  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.alt-berlin.info  
  5. ^ Plan of Berlin . Sheet 4324, compare the years 1928 and 1953 ( Memento of the original from November 9, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / histomapberlin.de
  6. Follow your nose to the service - A congregation for the local people
  7. compare the marking on the northern edge of the map, building damage 1945 .  ( Page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. Publishing house B. Aust, i. A. of the Senator for Urban Development and Environmental Protection@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.alt-berlin.info  
  8. Friesickestrasse . In: Address book for Berlin and its suburbs , 1900, part = V. Theil, p. 246.
  9. Friesickestrasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1943, Part IV, p. 2358.
  10. In the address book, construction site does not indicate an actual construction intention.

Coordinates: 52 ° 33 ′ 8 ″  N , 13 ° 26 ′ 22 ″  E