Grambker Heerstrasse
Grambker Heerstrasse | |
---|---|
Street in Bremen | |
1806 Gohgericht Werderland (detail), map by Christian Abraham Heineken ; Middle-right: Grambke with the way from Oslebshausen to Burg | |
Basic data | |
city | Bremen |
district | Groepelingen |
Created | 17th century |
Newly designed | 1822 |
Cross streets | On the Sandbreiten, Grambker Kirchweg, Grambker Dorfstrasse, Auf den Delben, Mittelbürener Landstrasse, Am Niederhof, Dwerhagenstrasse, Ellerbuschort, Im Föhrenbrok, Am Geestkamp, Grambker Geest, Sinaistr., An Smidts Park |
use | |
User groups | Cars, bikes and pedestrians |
Road design | two lane road |
Technical specifications | |
Street length | 1450 meters |
The Grambker Heerstraße is a central thoroughfare and access road in Bremen , Burglesum district, Burg-Grambke district . It leads in a south-north direction from Oslebshauser Heerstraße to Burger Heerstraße through Grambke to Burg.
The cross streets and connecting streets were named u. a. as Oslebshauser Heerstraße after the district, Bundesautobahn 281 , Auf den Sandbreiten 1990 after a field name, Grambker Kirchweg after the church from 1687, Grambker Dorfstraße after the village, Auf den Delben 1927 after a field name, Mittelbürener Landstraße after the town and former district of Büren , Am Niederhof after an old farm, Dwerhagenstraße after the councilor and senator family Dwerhagen, Ellerbuschort after a field name (ndt. Eller = alder ), In Föhrenbrok after a field name ( Föhren = pine , brok = break as a terrain warpage), Am Geestkamp after a Field name (ndt. Kamp = field), Grambker Geest after a field name, unnamed path, Sinaistraße to the peninsula of Egypt with Mount Sinai ( Mosesberg ), An Smidts Park after the former park of the politician and theologian Mayor Johann Smidt (1773-1857 ), unnamed path and Burger Heerstraße 1916 after the street built in 1821/22; otherwise see the link to the streets.
history
Surname
The Grambker Heerstraße was named after the village. Grambke was called Grambeke around 1200 and was the name of a family of ministers who had their seat here. In Bremen and Umzu, many military roads were built after 1800 or roads were named as military roads (see Bremen streets ).
development
The old village of Grambke on the Bremer dune belonged to the ore monastery of Bremen and in the 15th century to Goh Werderland . The baroque church in Grambker was built in 1722 and a neo-Gothic tower from 1864 was added in 1864. In 1803, Burg and Grambke became Bremen's land area. In 1850 Grambkermoor came to Grambke. In 1905 Grambke had 1620 inhabitants, in 1921 it was incorporated.
After the Second World War , intensive residential development took place in the district badly affected by the war. The old school on Grambker Heerstraße was given a gym in 1952.
traffic
The Grambker Heerstraße was formerly part of the Bundesstraße 6 and was replaced by the A27 motorway .
In transportation in Bremen bus lines pass through 90 (Gröpelingen ↔ Neuenkirchen), 91/92 (Gröpelingen ↔ Rönnebeck), 93 (Gröpelingen ↔ Marßel), 95 (Gröpelingen ↔ fenugreek) and partially 80/81 (Gröpelingen ↔ industrial ports) and 660 (Bremen Hbf - Hagen) and 680 (Gröpelingen - Wallhöfen) the street.
Buildings and facilities
There are mostly single and three-story houses on the street.
- Kirchweg Nr. 6: Protestant Baroque Grambker Church from 1722 as a single-nave brick church with a neo-Gothic tower from 1864.
Notable buildings and facilities
- Federal freeway 281 without connection, it leads to federal freeway 27 (Cuxhaven – Autobahn triangle Walsrode)
- Bridge under the railway line to the industrial port
- No. 5: 1-sch. Buildings from around 1900
- No. 10: 1-sch. Industrial hall of FEAG Bremen for electrical engineering and photovoltaics
- To Grambker Kirchweg: Grambker Church (see above) with a rectory and Protestant cemetery from the 17th century with the tombstone from 1698 for an “honorable and virtuous woman”.
- No. 24 and 28c: Two 1-gesch. Plastered houses from around 1900 with a crooked hip roof
- No. 38: 1- to 2-layered Residential building with a mansard roof , behind it a red stone-faced farmhouse with a crooked hip roof
- No. 46: 1-sch. historicizing house with gable and facade elements of neoclassicism and renaissance
- No. 49: 1-sch. newer flat roof construction
- according to No. 48 to 92: green space and allotment gardens, behind the 40 hectare sports park lake Grambke with regatta course and bathing beach
- Between No. 65 to Am Geestkamp: Park-like green zone with an elongated 2.4 hectare Grambker See , which is used as a bathing lake, with Grambker Seebad in the eastern area
- Am Geestkamp No. 3: The Bremen cinema Wilhelmshöhe (Lichtburg) with 348 seats was located here from 1953 to 1962
- No. 118: 2-sch. newer, brick-built residential complex with a mezzanine floor
- No. 121: 1- and 2-layered Elementary school Grambke ( school on Grambker Heerstraße ) with 182 children (2019)
- No. 137: 1-sch. KiTa Grambke of the AWO
- Green area with three-part Burger Lake
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
Coordinates: 53 ° 8 ′ 46.4 " N , 8 ° 42 ′ 42.9" E