Gastfeldstrasse

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Gastfeldstrasse
coat of arms
Street in Bremen
Basic data
city Bremen
district Neustadt
Created 1875
Cross streets Friedrich-Ebert-Str., Hegelstr., Kantstr., Ottostraße, Hermannstr., Rasingstr., Lehnstedter Str., Meyerstr., Geschwornenweg, Sedanstr., Waterloostr., Kolberger Str., Graudenzer Str., Tauroggener Str., Gottfried- Menken-Str., Gneisenaustr., Yorckstr., Friedrich-Wagenfeld-Str., Roßbachstr., Gellertstr., August-Hinrichs-Str., Claudiusstr., Kirchweg
use
User groups Cars, bikes and pedestrians
Road design two lane road
Technical specifications
Street length 1100 meters
Gastfeldstrasse 67: Haus Gastfeld

The guest Field Road is a historic street in Bremen district Neustadt , districts Süder suburbs , Garden City South and Buntentor . It leads in a north-west-south-east direction from Pappelstraße (1863) / Friedrich-Ebert-Straße to Kirchweg .

The cross streets were named u. a. after philosophers (Philosophenviertel), poets, generals and battlegrounds as Friedrich-Ebert- Strasse (from around 1914) after the politician (SPD) and Reich President, Hegelstrasse after the philosopher Hegel , Kantstrasse after the philosopher Kant , Ottostrasse (1873) after the property owner Otto Meyer, Hermannstraße (1873) after the property owner Hermann Raising, Rasingstraße after the property owner, Lehnstedter Straße after the field name, Meyerstraße after the building contractor, Geschwornenweg after the jury of the peasantry, Sedanstraße after the Battle of Sedan , Waterloostraße after the Battle of Waterloo , Kolberger Strasse after the fortress town of Kolberg , Graudenzer Strasse after the town of Graudenz , Tauroggener Strasse after the town of Tauroggen and the Tauroggen Convention , Gottfried-Menken- Strasse after a theologian, Gneisenaustrasse after Field Marshal Gneisenau , Yorckstrasse after the General Wartenburg , Friedrich-Wagenfeld - Street according to the script plate, Roßbachstrasse after the Battle of Roßbach , Gellertstrasse after the poet Gellert , August-Hinrichs- Strasse (1876) after the writer, Claudiusstrasse after the poet Claudius , Kirchweg after the Jacobi Church there; otherwise see the link to the streets.

history

Gastfeld is the Low German word for barley field. The street got its name in 1875 after the Feldmark, where there were barley fields .

development

The area on the left bank of the Weser south of the old town was previously referred to as Süderort and later as Neustadt. From 1623 the fortifications to the left of the Weser were built and removed from 1802. It was not until after 1870 that roads and houses were built in the Gast-Kamp in Feldmark Neuenlande ( Nielandt ) in the Obervihlandt area . Gastfeldstrasse was laid out in 1875. Increased development took place between 1900 and 1914. Initially, it was planned to build up to No. 67, Haus Gastfeld. The State Office for Monument Preservation Bremen found: "The building marks an important urban development situation, as its design and arrangement refers to a plan that has got stuck, namely the extension of Sedanstrasse beyond Gastfeldstrasse ...." This is how a corner house without a corner was created .

The air raids in 1944/45 destroyed parts of the old new town; only a few houses were destroyed on Gastfeldstrasse. After the war, the Gewoba tenement housing estate was built in the garden city south from 1957 to 1960.

traffic

Gastfeldstrasse was laid out in 1875.

Tram line 6 ran through Gastfeldstrasse from 1958 to 1967, starting at Kirchweg and leading to Hemmstrasse in Findorff.

The Bremen tram crosses the street on Friedrich-Ebert-Straße with line 6 ( airport - university ).

In transport in Bremen bus lines run through 26 ( Huckelriede - Walle (- Huckelriede) and 27 Findorff / Weidedamm ) the road.

Buildings and facilities

On the street are u. a. two to five storey houses.

Bremen monuments

  • No. 67: 3-sch. Haus Gastfeld from 1907 with a mansard roof , ornamental framework in the side gable and a striking, four-story corner tower with a bell dome according to plans by Johann Diedrich Biermann, a cultural bar that has been in existence for more than 100 years as a tavern in the Neustadt.

Notable buildings and facilities

  • No. 4 and 17–19: 4-sch. Residential houses with plastered and clinker facades in the modern style from 1930/31 of the trade union housing cooperative (Bauhütte Hansa in Bremen, today Gewoba ) based on plans by JB Berner and E. Bohne
  • No. 53: 2-sch. House with the Zion Kita of the Zionskirche
  • Meyerstraße: 2- and 3-storey. Upper middle class houses in Bremen
  • No. 61: 3-sch. Residential and commercial building with the DHL parcel shop
  • No. 67: See above and next to it
  • No. 69: 4-sch. House as a corner house without a corner from around 1910 with a bay window; Sedanstrasse was not extended here
  • No. 76: 2-sch. House from around 1910 with a gable
  • No. 78: 3-sch. Residential and commercial building from around 1910 with a gable on the corner of Sedanstrasse
  • Waterloostraße: 2-storey. Bremen houses
  • Kolbergstrasse: 2-storey. Residential houses
  • Graudenzstraße: 2-storey. Residential houses
  • Gellertstrasse: 2-storey. Bremen houses
  • No. 122-134: 5-ed. Residential and commercial building from the 1970s / 80s
  • No. 148–158: newer 3- to 4-tier. Residential houses
  • No. 133–159: Vier 4-gesch. Residential houses with flat roofs in the garden city south from 1957 to 1960 by Gewoba, based on urban planning by the architects Max Säum and Günther Hafemann

Memorial plaques

  • Stumbling blocks for the victims of National Socialism according to the list of stumbling blocks in Bremen , Querstraßen:
    • Kantstrasse 42 for Alfred Bostelmann (1921–1943), executed in the Brandenburg-Görden prison
    • Hermannstraße 101 for Neti (1905–1941), Tonie Ginsberg (1938–1941); Both murdered in Minsk, Walter Ginsberg (1906–19 ??), fled to England in 1939

See also

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Monument database of the LfD Bremen

Coordinates: 53 ° 3 ′ 46 "  N , 8 ° 47 ′ 58"  E