General von Seidel barracks
General von Seidel barracks | |||
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General von Seidel barracks |
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country | Germany | ||
status | closed in 2009 | ||
local community | trier | ||
Coordinates : | 49 ° 44 ' N , 6 ° 36' E | ||
Opened | 1952/53 | ||
Formerly stationed units | |||
Telecommunications area 92 Zentr EK FlgWaSys |
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Location of the General von Seidel barracks in Rhineland-Palatinate |
The General von Seidel barracks was a barracks in Trier . It was built in 1952/53 and bears the name of Hans-Georg von Seidel , Luftwaffe officer and General der Flieger in World War II. It was located in the Trier-West / Euren district between Luxemburgerstrasse, Gottbillstrasse and northwest of the Moselle Railway (Trier – Bullay).
history
The barracks was built on the then undeveloped Eurener corridor. After completion of the construction work in April 1953, the headquarters of the 4th Allied Tactical Air Fleet (HQFOURATAF) of NATO was established there. The HQ 4. ATAF stayed there until 1959 and was relocated to Ramstein , near Kaiserslautern . This was followed on February 25, 1959 to January 12, 1972 by the Air Force Supply Regiment 4 (LwVersRgt 4) of the Bundeswehr. From 1965 the telecommunications area 70 (FmBer 70) was housed in parts of the barracks. This was later renamed Telecommunications Area 92 (FmBer 92) as part of structural measures by the Bundeswehr. The area was enlarged significantly in the direction of the railway line through renovation and expansion measures. With the end of the Cold War , the Bundeswehr gradually withdrew its units from the General Seidel barracks. After the last unit was removed in 2012, the barracks became a conversion area .
future
In February 2014, the Reception Center for Asylum Seekers (AfA) of the State of Rhineland-Palatinate in Trier opened a further branch for 150 asylum seekers in a building of the former General von Seidel barracks . Only male asylum seekers traveling alone should be accommodated in the barracks, who should usually be relocated to another residence hall in Rhineland-Palatinate after a stay of six weeks. At the beginning of 2015, the General von Seidel barracks already housed 800 refugees, some of whom had to be housed in tents due to lack of space.
Stationed units
Long text | abbreviation | Lineup | resolution | at the location |
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Telecommunications area 70 | FmBer 70 | April 1, 1971 | July 31, 2002 | 1971 to 2002 |
Telecommunications area 92 | FmBer 92 | August 1, 2002 | March 31, 2009 | 2002 to 2009 |
Telecommunication Service Group 431/20 | FmDstGrp 431/20 | April 1, 1981 | November 30, 1994 | 1981 to 1994 |
Telecommunication headquarters Trier A | FmKdtr Trier | 1958 | 1976 | 1958 to 1976 |
Telecommunications sector 62 B | FmSkt 62 | April 1, 1988 | July 1, 2002 | 1988 to 2002 |
Pilot South C | FlgFhr South | 1958 | 1958 to 1961 | |
Air Force First Aid Squadron Telecommunications Area 70 | LwSanStff FmBer 70 | |||
Air Force Security Squadron 51070 | LwSichStff 51070 | |||
Air Force Supply Regiment 4 | LwVersRgt 4 | January 1, 1959 | July 1, 2002 | 1959 to 1972 |
Radio analysis center | ZfFu | 1961 | April 1, 1971 | 1965 to 1971 |
Central Office for Threat Adjustment of Electronic Combat Command and Control Devices for Air Force and Navy D | ZBA | October 1, 1980 | April 1, 1988 | 1984 to 1988 |
Center for Electronic Combat, Flying Weapon Systems | ZEK FlgWaSys | July 1, 2002 | March 31, 2012 E. | 2002 to 2012 |
literature
- Adolf Welter: Trier during the occupation 1918–1939. Petermännchen-Verlag der Trier Münzfreunde, Trier 1992, ISBN 3-923575-11-4 .
- Elisabeth Dühr, Frank G. Hirschmann, Christl Lehnert-Leven: Trier Garrison Book . City Museum Simeonstift Trier, Trier 2007, ISBN 3-930866-22-6 .
Web links
- History of the Air Force a website of the Bundeswehr
- Chronicle of FmBer 70 on kurklinikmiramar.de (private site)
- Overview of telecommunications and radio reconnaissance Luftwaffe FmBer 70 and 92, manfred-bischoff.de (private site)
Individual evidence
- ^ The last roll call. Trierischer Volksfreund , March 4, 2009.
- ^ Defense / Bonn Outdated like a bow and arrow. Der Spiegel 20/1955, July 13, 1955 on spiegel.de
- ↑ Helmut Kämmerer: The directional radio network of NATO between Allied Forces Central Europe (AFCENT) and the command posts 2. ATAF / NORTHAG / 4. ATAF / CENTAG 1952–1967. Leverkusen, December 31, 2010 (PDF; 583 kB) at subbrit.org.uk
- ^ History of the LwVersRgt 4 retrieved from geschichte.luftwaffe.de
- ↑ New depreciation branch opened in Trier ( memento of the original from October 6, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , Ministry for Integration, Family, Children, Youth and Women of the State of Rhineland-Palatinate from February 12, 2014
- ↑ http://www.volksfreund.de/nachrichten/region/trier/Heute-in-der-Trierer-Zeitung-Trier-Fluechtlinge-haben-in-Zelte-ein-Caritas-Direktor-Das-ist-eine-Notloesung ; art754,4133434