Hartwigstrasse (Bremen)
Hartwigstrasse | |
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Street in Bremen | |
Schwaghausen: Map by CA Heinenken from 1803; On the left the Bürger Vieh Weide ( Bürgerpark ), next to it the Parkallee and parallel to it on the left the line (corridor boundary) on which Hartwigstraße runs today. | |
Basic data | |
city | Bremen |
district | Schwachhausen |
Created | Late 19th century |
Cross streets | Wachmannstrasse , Benquestrasse, Franziusstrasse, Bulthauptstrasse , Arnold-Böcklin-Strasse, Otto-Gildemeister-Strasse, Fitgerstrasse, Schwachhauser Ring |
use | |
User groups | Cars, trams, bicycles and pedestrians |
Road design | two lane road |
Technical specifications | |
Street length | 670 meters |
The Hartwigstraße is a central access road to Bremen , district Schwachhausen , the district public park. It leads in a south-north direction from Wachmannstrasse to Schwachhauser Ring and Crüsemannallee in Neu-Schwachhausen .
The cross streets and connecting streets were named u. a. as Wachmannstraße after the Bremen council syndic and envoy Johann Wachmann the Elder (1592-1659), Benquestraße 1890 after the landscape architect Wilhelm Benque (1814-1895), Franziusstraße after the hydraulic engineer and chief construction director Ludwig Franzius (1832-1903), Bulthauptstraße 1905 after the Bremer Playwright Heinrich Bulthaupt (1849–1905), Arnold-Böcklin- Strasse 1933 after the painter (1827-1901), Otto-Gildemeister- Strasse after the liberal-conservative politician, Senator and Mayor of Bremen (1823-1902), Fitgerstrasse after the businessman , Editor-in-chief of the Weser-Zeitung and member of the Bremen citizenship Emil Fitger (1848–1917), Schwachhauser Ring after the district and the ring road system and Crüsemannallee after the merchant and co-founder of Norddeutscher Lloyd (NDL) Eduard Crüsemann (1826–1869); otherwise see the link to the streets.
history
Surname
Hartwigstrasse was named in 1890 after the important Archbishop Hartwig I (1118–1168). From 1148 to 1168 he ruled the Archdiocese of Bremen .
development
Apart from a small triangle in the northeast, the residential development of the Bürgerpark district is in the area of the Pagenthorn Feldmark, which was incorporated in 1849. The development took place from the end of the 19th century for mostly upper class classes.
traffic
Tram line 7 in western Schwachhausen was opened to Wachmannstrasse in 1911 and extended to Hartwigstrasse in 1914. Line 15 went to Hartwigstrasse in 1952 and was extended from 1960 through Crüsemannallee to Kulenkampffallee. In 1959 the route was Kulenkampffallee - Markt - Airport. In 1967, the previous lines 15 and 16 received the line numbers of the discontinued lines 5 and 6. Line 5 ran from Kulenkampffallee via Domsheide to Huckelriede, with the section Hauptbahnhof - Kulenkampffallee being served together with the new line 8. Line 8 has been running to Kulenkampffallee on its own since winter 2002/03 and since 2006 only during the day to Huchting and in the evening only to the main station.
The Bremen tram runs through the street with line 8 ( Huchting - Kulenkampffallee)
In local transport in Bremen, line 6 ( university - airport ) touches the street on Wachmanstrasse and bus line 22 (Kattenturm ↔ university) on Schwachhauser Ring.
Buildings and facilities
The street is mainly built up with two to three-story residential buildings.
Notable buildings and facilities
- No. 2 at the corner of Wachmannstraße 52/54: 3-storey. Plastered residential and commercial building with hipped roof from around 1900/10
- No. 2a to 2d: 2-ply Residential houses as Bremen houses from around 1900/1910 base storey
- Corner of Benquestraße 43: 2-storey. Villa with hipped roof
- Corner of Benquestraße 41: 2-storey. Residential house with bay window, gable risalit and gable roof
- Corner of Benquestraße 44: 2-storey. House with hipped roof with decorated parapet elements
- No. 12 to 20: 2-ply Residential houses, some with gable elements, as Bremen houses from around 1900/10
- Nos. 24 to 36 and 44a to 46a; 2-tier Residential houses as Bremen houses
- No. 27/29 and 31: 2-cut. brick-built houses from around 1910/1930 with hipped roofs
- Corner of Fitgerstrasse No. 40: 1-gesch. Residential and office building from around 1920 with a mansard roof
- No. 37 to 53: 1- and 2-layered detached houses and villas from around 1920/30
- No. 37: 2-sch. Pape brick-built house with hipped roof from 1927 based on plans by government builder Carl Krahn for the merchant Georg Heinrich Friedrich Pape. The villa has been a listed building in Bremen since 2001 .
- No. 47: 2-sch. Villa with a gable roof and diagonal brick ornaments in the gable
- Note: In the neighboring Bulthauptstrasse is the listed 2-gesch. Residential house group Bulthauptstrasse from 1906 to 1913 according to plans by various architects consisting of 35 residential buildings in the Bremen house type.
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 ° 5 ′ 19.8 " N , 8 ° 49 ′ 59.5" E