Hannoversche Strasse (Bremen)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hannoversche Strasse
coat of arms
Street in Bremen
Basic data
city Bremen
district Hemelingen
Cross streets Christernstrasse ., An der Grenzpappel, Rathausplatz, Westerholzstrasse, Gartenstrasse, Am Saal, Autobahn slip road Hemelingen, Ringstrasse, Schlengstrasse, Marschstrasse, Sandhofstrasse.
use
User groups Cars, bikes and pedestrians
Road design two lane road
Technical specifications
Street length 1300 meters
Hemelingen town hall
Hannoversche Strasse and Marschstrasse
View from Hemelinger Heerstraße to Hannoversche Straße

The Hannoversche Strasse is a central access road to Bremen , district Hemelingen , Hemelingen. It mainly leads in a north-south direction from Hemelinger Bahnhofstrasse / Christernstrasse to Hemelinger Heerstrasse .

It is divided into the sub-areas

  • Hemelinger Bahnhofstrasse to the motorway slip road and
  • Hemelingen motorway slip road to Hemelinger Heerstraße.

The cross streets and connecting streets were named u. a. as Hemelinger Bahnhofstraße, which leads to the train station, Christernstraße after the mayor Alfred Christern (1856–1929), An der Grenzpappel after a well-known poplar on the border with Bremen, Rathausplatz from 1902 after the Hemelingen town hall , Westerholzstraße after the forest from which the calibrating the town hall originate, garden road to the garden of the soap manufacturer of Buren, at the hall after the hall designation (ndt .: sale = willows) Autobahnzubringer Hemelingen, ring road after the former arcuate course, Schlengstraße after schlengelichen course through the hollows, Marschstraße after Landform, Sandhofstraße 1861 after the big dune there , Hemelinger Heerstraße after the place as the usual Heerstraße at that time ; otherwise see the link to the streets.

history

Surname

The Hannoversche Straße was named after the state capital of Lower Saxony Hanover . Hemelingen belonged to the Kingdom of Hanover until 1866 and from 1866 to the Prussian province of Hanover .

development

In the middle of the 19th century industrialization began with the connection to various railway lines in Hemelingen. The population increased sharply from 1855 to 1905 from 2275 to 7214 inhabitants.

In 1905/06 the Hemelingen town hall was built on the street. The Tivoli cinema (no. 11) had 250 seats after the First World War in 1918 , then 450 and from 1940 up to 900 seats; it operated until around 1962.

traffic

With the opening of the A 1 motorway in 1963, Hannoversche Straße was opened up to long-distance traffic through the Hemelingen motorway feeder. The direct connection between the motorway feeder and Pfalzburger Strasse was completed in 1969, relieving the Hannoversche Strasse.
After the construction of the Hemelinger Tunnel by 2003, the volume of traffic in the surrounding area decreased and in the Schlengstraße / Hannoversche Straße area there were around 5,000 fewer cars.

In local transport in Bremen, bus line 29 (Kattenturm-Mitte ↔ Neue Vahr-Nord) runs through the road from Christernstraße to An der Grenzpappel as well as lines 40, 41 (Mahndorf ↔ Weserwehr station) and 44 (Mahndorf ↔ Sebaldsbrück station) between Schlengstraße and Marschstraße and 41S (Marschstraße ↔ Weserwehr).

Buildings and facilities

There are mostly one to two-story buildings on the street.

Bremen monuments

Notable buildings and facilities

  • Bridge over the Wanne-Eickel – Hamburg railway line
  • No. 12: 2-sch. Gabled house with a round gable
  • No. 9/11: 2-sch. Aladin Music Hall and Tivoli Bremen; Building built as an inn from 1890/91, cinema from 1920 to 1975, then disco
  • No. 21: 2-sch. Residential and commercial building with a characteristic corner gable tower

No. 23 to 27: 2-sch. Houses with bay windows

  • No. 24: 2-sch. Newer commercial building with Sparkasse Bremen - self-service branch
  • No. 64: 2-sch. newer office building with off-center, round gable with a printing shop; the sculpture Great Bacchus II on the forecourt
  • Access to the pedestrian bridge over the motorway slip road
  • Access to the Hemelingen motorway slip road
  • Bridge under the railway line
  • Corner of Schlengstraße No. 1: 1-gesch. Shopping market
  • No. 138: 1-sch. Shopping market
  • Hemelinger Heerstraße 4: 2-sch. Newer office building with a penthouse with the branch of the Sparkasse Bremen

Art objects , memorial plaques

  • No. 64: Sculpture Great Bacchus II from 1992 by Waldemar Otto
  • Stumbling blocks for the victims of National Socialism according to the list of stumbling blocks in Bremen :
    • No. 69 for Frieda Alexander (1895–?) Fled to Argentina in 1938, Günther Alexander (1922–1942 / 44), deported to Warsaw and missing, Iwan Alexander (1893–1943), Inge Rose Alexander (1924–1942), Levy Alexander (1860–1942), all three murdered in Auschwitz.

See also

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Monument database of the LfD Bremen
  2. Monument database of the LfD Bremen

Coordinates: 53 ° 3 ′ 6.1 "  N , 8 ° 53 ′ 11.3"  E