Seehausen (Bremen)

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District of Bremen
Seehausen
Häfen (Bremen) Blockland Blumenthal (Bremen) Borgfeld Burglesum Findorff (Bremen) Gröpelingen Häfen (Bremen) Häfen (Bremen) Hemelingen Horn-Lehe Huchting (Bremen) Mitte (Bremen) Neustadt (Bremen) Oberneuland Obervieland Östliche Vorstadt Osterholz (Bremen) Schwachhausen Seehausen (Bremen) Strom (Bremen) Vahr Vegesack Walle (Bremen) Woltmershausen Weser Bremerhaven NiedersachsenCity of Bremen, Seehausen district highlighted
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Basic data  rank 
Surface: 11.102  km² 15/23
Residents : 1059 20/23
Population density : 95 inhabitants per km² 20/23
Proportion of foreigners: 4.0% 23/23
Unemployment rate: 4.0% 22/23
Coordinates : 53 ° 7 '  N , 8 ° 42'  E Coordinates: 53 ° 7 '0 "  N , 8 ° 41' 35"  E
District: Seehausen
Postal code : 28197
District : south
Local office : Seehausen
Website: Website of the Seehausen local authority
All area information as of December 31, 2014.

All demographic information as of December 31, 2016.

Seehausen ( Low German Seehusen ) is a district of Bremen and belongs directly - without a district level - to the Bremen district south.

Geography and parts of the village

The Seehausen district is about 10 km from the city center. The former villages of Seehausen and Hasenbüren extend directly on the left side of the Weser .

The Ochtum flows past Seehausen and flows into the Weser at the border with Lemwerder .

The neighboring districts / districts are Strom and Huchting in the south, Rablinghausen and Woltmershausen in the east , the city of Delmenhorst in the south-west and the municipality of Lemwerder in the west, in particular with its districts of Ochtum, Altenesch , Deichshausen, Braake and Tecklenburg. On the other side of the Weser are the districts of Häfen and Gröpelingen . To the west is the marshy landscape of Stedingen in the Wesermarsch district of Oldenburg .

Politics, administration

Advisory board election 2019
Turnout: 70.7%
 %
70
60
50
40
30th
20th
10
0
61.7%
38.4%

Advisory Board

The Seehausen Advisory Board meets regularly and usually publicly in the local office or in other institutions such as B. Schools. The advisory board is composed of the representatives of the political parties or individual candidates elected at the district level. The advisory board elections take place every four years, at the same time as the elections for the Bremen citizenship . The advisory board discusses all issues of the district that are of public interest and makes decisions on this, which are passed on to the administration, the state government and the townspeople. He forms specialist committees for his work. The advisory board has its own budget for district-related measures.

Local office

The Seehausen local office has been a local administrative authority since 1946. It supports the advisory board in its political work. It is intended to participate in all local tasks that are of public interest. It is led by an honorary local office manager proposed by the advisory board and confirmed by the Senate.

Gerd Aumund has been the local office manager since 2016.

history

A Roman naval station was archaeologically uncovered near Seehausen. This settlement can be dated to a time after the Varus Battle , so there was still Roman-Germanic exchange of goods and trade along the Weser with products from the Roman Empire. In addition, numerous Roman millstones made of Eifel basalt were found on the Middle and Lower Weser and Hunte .

Seehausen was first mentioned in 1187 as Sehusen and in 1338 as Sehuzen . It belonged to the Goh Vieland . A fortified house belonging to the Lords of Seehausen was destroyed by the Stedians in 1212 . Sandwerder was first mentioned in a document in 1310.

The Seehausen parish formed a community with Hasenbüren and was mentioned in 1187. The parish church of St. Jacobi was built by County Hoya in the 13th century . They had church patronage . After they died out in 1582, the Duchy of Braunschweig-Lüneburg (later the Electorate of Hanover ) became a feudal lord; Seehausen remained Lutheran and was in dispute with Reformed Bremen for almost 200 years .

After Hanover waived its claims in 1804, Bremen, which already had territorial rights in Seehausen, also received the right of patronage over the church. During the French period in Bremen , Seehausen belonged to the Mairie Woltmershausen from 1810 to 1813 .

In the middle of the 19th century the Seehauser Landstrasse was paved. Around 1848 there was a parish school next to the church with two classes and 136 students. In 1854 a new building replaced the old school, which was expanded by one class in 1878 and another class in 1880 for 178 students. The extension was demolished in 1959.

In 1936 the volunteer fire brigade was founded. With the construction of the Neustädter Hafen the district lost a part of the area. In 1963 an Eeke , an oak boat, from the 13th / 14th Century. A sewage treatment plant was built in Seehausen from 1962 to 1966. The construction of the goods traffic center (GVZ) in 1983 and the expansion of the industrial area in nearby Woltmershausen required large areas previously used for agriculture and changed the landscape.

Attractions

  • The Gothic, Protestant village church of St. Jacobi , consecrated to the Apostle James around 1250 , was built by the Counts of Hoya after the Stedinger Wars . Conversions took place in 1637 and 1797.
  • The bell stone dates from 1357.
  • The hiking trail on the Weser with various excursion restaurants.

Public facilities

Seehausen volunteer fire department

General

school

  • The Seehausen School , Seehauser Landstrasse 141 is a primary school

Sports

  • The TSV Hasenbüren , Old Wurten 16
  • The water sports club Woltmershausen , Hasenbürener Deich

Economy and Transport

economy

The district in the Niedervieland consists of mainly agricultural grassland. The Seehausen sewage treatment plant, a dredged material disposal facility and parts of the freight center are located in Seehausen .

Seehausen sewage treatment plant

Seehausen sewage treatment plant

In 1957, the Bremen Senate decided to reorganize wastewater disposal with the main objective of building a central sewage treatment plant on the Weser near Seehausen, including the necessary supply lines. The Seehausen sewage treatment plant, located directly on the left bank of the Weser, was built between 1962 and 1965 and initially only started operating in 1966 with purely mechanical pre-treatment of the wastewater. In 1967 the site of the sewage treatment plant was flooded by floods from the Weser . In the course of this accident, today's dike line was built to protect the sewage treatment plant.

In 1984 the plant was expanded with a two-stage activated sludge plant to become a biological sewage treatment plant. Finally, in 1996 there was a further expansion according to the state of the art, whereby the wastewater is freed from nitrogen and phosphorus compounds as far as possible by eliminating nutrients. Current modernizations are aimed at reducing energy requirements. For example, processed digester gas is used in a combined heat and power plant to drive gas engines and thus produce electrical energy and compressed air for the activation process. Any waste heat is used to heat the digester. A wind power plant supplements the regenerative self-generated energy.

Sewage treatment plant capacities

The Seehausen plant, which has been operated by hanseWasser Bremen GmbH since 1999, is designed for a peak load of one million population equivalents and is fully utilized with around 600,000 connected residents and 400,000 population equivalents from commercial wastewater. Around 130,000 m 3 of wastewater is cleaned every day, more than double that in rainy weather. The central control room of the sewage company hanseWasser GmbH located in Bremen-Seehausen monitors and controls over 200 sewage systems in the city.
The volume of wastewater treated annually in the sewage treatment plant is 45.2 million m 3 , including 35.2 million m 3 of wastewater. The catchment area is the entire city of Bremen (with the exception of the districts north of the Lesum, which are connected to the Bremen-Farge sewage treatment plant) as well as the neighboring municipalities of Lilienthal, Ritterhude, Stuhr / Weyhe and parts of Oyten and Achim. Due to the catchment areas, the largest proportion of wastewater comes from the right bank of the Weser and reaches the sewage treatment plant through two Weser
culverts .

Freight center

In addition to residential development, the Bremen Freight Transport Center (GVZ) has been developing since 1985 in the Seehausen and Strom districts and the harbors district . The GVZ covers almost 500 hectares, half of which has been occupied. Around 150 companies employ over 8,000 people here. The hall space for logistics, production and wholesale covers an area of ​​1.2 million m². The post freight center DPD German Parcel Service is one of the larger companies . The GVZ Entwicklungsgesellschaft mbH Bremen is representing the interests of companies. The largest high-bay warehouse in Europe is located here. Since the GVZ was founded, it has been ranked first according to a ranking table from an ILS study.

The GVZ can be reached directly by rail and the A 281 motorway .

traffic

Public transport

With the bus lines 62, 65 and 66 of the Bremer Straßenbahn AG (BSAG) from Stromer Straße (Rablinghausen) via Georg-Heschel-Straße the districts Seehausen and Hasenbüren can be reached.

Streets

Seehausen can be reached from Woltmershausen via Senator-Apelt-Straße and from Strom via Stromer Landstraße and Wiedebrok- / Weißefeldstraße. The federal motorway 281 currently leads from Neustadt to the freight center. It is intended to cross the Weser as a tunnel in the Seehausen area . The district is opened up with the Hasenbürener Landstrasse and the Seehauser Landstrasse.

Biking and hiking trails

The 4 km long bike and hiking trail on the Weser dike is very popular. It leads from the Neustadt outer harbor to the Hasenbüren sports harbor and the Ochtum barrage. Strom is reached by the cycle path on Stromer Landstrasse , which leads west to Deichhausen, Sandhausen and Delmenhorst .

Personalities

  • Werner Fischer (1929–2018), member of the advisory board and the Bremen citizenship (CDU, 1975–1991).

Individual evidence

  1. Bremen small-scale information system at www.statistik-bremen.de - Table 449-01: Floor area according to type of actual use
  2. Bremen small-scale information system at www.statistik-bremen.de - Table 173-01: Population by gender
  3. Bremen small-scale information system at www.statistik-bremen.de - Table 173-61: Foreign population by nationality group and gender
  4. Bremen small-scale information system at www.statistik-bremen.de - Table 255-60: Unemployed according to selected groups of people and unemployment rate
  5. § 36 Local Law on Advisory Boards and Local Offices. transparenz.bremen.de, accessed on April 14, 2016 .
  6. hanseWasser GmbH: Seehausen sewage treatment plant [1]
  7. homepage hanseWasser GmbH [2]

literature

Web links

Commons : Seehausen  - Collection of images, videos and audio files