Hans-Böckler-Strasse (Bremen)
Hans-Böckler-Strasse | |
---|---|
Street in Bremen | |
Volkshaus and street | |
Basic data | |
city | Bremen |
district | Walle |
Cross streets | Auf dem Kamp , Bürgermeister-Hildebrand-Str., Lloydstr., Zweigstr., Wolfardstr., Friedrich-Naumann-Ring, Hansestr. |
Buildings | Volkshaus |
use | |
User groups | Cars, trams, bicycles and pedestrians |
Road design | four- to six-lane road |
Technical specifications | |
Street length | 900 meters |
The Hans-Böckler-Straße is a historic street in Bremen , Walle district, Utbremen district . It leads in a south-north direction from Doventorscontrescarp / Doventor and Bundesstraße 75 to Nordstraße / Hansestraße.
The cross streets were named Auf dem Kamp ( campus ) after a hallway name of a property enclosed by ditches or hedges, Bürgermeister-Hildebrand-Straße (1956) after the Bremen mayor Hermann Hildebrand , Lloydstraße after the formerly largest Bremen shipping company Norddeutscher Lloyd , today part of Hapag-Lloyd , Wolfardstrasse (1956) after the editor Adolf Wolfard , who was killed in his editorial office by a parcel bomb in 1951, Zweigstrasse as a junction of Baumstrasse (Waller Schlagbaum), Friedrich-Naumann-Ring after the liberal politician ( DDP ) Friedrich Naumann and Hansestrasse after the Hanseatic League , to which Bremen belonged since 1260; otherwise see the link to the streets.
history
Surname
In 1951, Hans-Böckler-Strasse was named after the politician ( SPD ) and trade union functionary Hans Böckler (1875–1951), who had worked in the Weimar Republic and after 1945 in building the unions and who was the first chairman of the German Trade Union Confederation in 1949 ( DGB) was. Postage stamp from the Deutsche Bundespost Berlin (1961) on the 10th anniversary of death.
This street was previously part of Nordstraße.
development
The village of Walle was first mentioned in 1139 and in 1179 the court wall of the Lords of Walle .
With the construction of the free port after 1888, the districts of Walle developed. The large jute spinning and weaving mill in Bremen on Nordstrasse employed over 2,000 workers around 1895, who lived here in mostly densely built-up residential areas.
During the Second World War , Walle was largely destroyed in 1943/44. Under the name Western suburbs emerged from 1953 to 1955 in Utbremen, Steffensweg and West by the Gewoba that Bremer Trust and the lap , designed by Max hems , Günther Hafemann , Wilhelm Wortmann , Bernhard Wessel , Werner Hebebrand , Walter Schlempp and Günther marshal a larger, loosened up housing estate. The heavily damaged Volkshaus was rebuilt with minor changes.
traffic
Line 3 used to run through the street. The new route of line 3 has been running parallel to the previously existing route through Überseestadt since 2006 . The previous line in Hans-Böckler-Strasse was retained as an operating line.
The Bremen tram runs through the street with line 2 ( Gröpelingen - Sebaldsbrück ) in the southern area.
In transport in Bremen , the bus drives through 25 ( Weidedamm -South ↔ Osterholz ) the road.
Buildings and facilities
On the street are u. a. two to three storey residential buildings and four to seven storey commercial buildings. Except for the Volkshaus and the bunker, all buildings date from after 1945.
- No. 9: 4-sch. clinkered Volkshaus , built in 1928 according to plans by Richard Jansen with over 400 rooms for the trade unions, 1933 to 1938 house of the German Labor Front of the Nazis, then municipal property, today: Social Center 2 for Gröpelingen and Walle.
- Eight sculptures by Bernhard Hoetger from 1928 to 1933; Six figures as a cast from 1979.
Notable buildings and facilities
- Eastern side
- On the Kamp: Open, 3-tier. Residential development from the 1960s / 70s
- No. 5-7: 3-sch. Residential houses
- No. 9: Volkshaus (see above)
- No. 55-71: 2-sch. Residential houses
- No. 75: 1- and 3-layered Commercial building
- Western side
- B 75 / driveway: high-bay warehouse for coffee products from around 1990, today at the Bremer Lagerhaus-Gesellschaft (BLG)
- Corner of Lloydstrasse 12: 6-storey. Commercial building
- No. 48/50: 7-gesch. Commercial building u. a. with Stute Logistics KG
- No. 56: 4-sch. Commercial building
- No. 58: Deaconess bunker made of concrete
Art objects, memorial plaques
- No. 9: Eight sculptures as a cycle of Hoetger's work at the Volkshaus from 1928; the figures are replicas from 1979 by Manfred Lohrengel (see above).
- Stumbling blocks for the victims of National Socialism according to the list of stumbling blocks in Bremen : See at Nordstrasse.
See also
literature
- Herbert Black Forest : The Great Bremen Lexicon . 2nd, updated, revised and expanded edition. 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
- ^ Monument database of the LfD
- ↑ Thorsten Wübbena: The Volkshaus and Bernhard Hoetger's sculptures. Delmenhorst 2001, ISBN 3-932292-23-5 .
Coordinates: 53 ° 5 ′ 12 ″ N , 8 ° 47 ′ 21 ″ E