Hasenbürener Landstrasse
Hasenbürener Landstrasse | |
---|---|
Street in Bremen | |
1806: Bürener area, Hasenbüren below the Weser | |
Basic data | |
city | Bremen |
district | Seehausen (Bremen) |
Created | 12th century |
Newly designed | 1876 |
Cross streets | Zum Bruchdeich, Am Glockenstein, Weißefeldstrasse, Wiedbrokstrasse |
use | |
User groups | Cars, bikes and pedestrians |
Road design | two lane road |
Technical specifications | |
Street length | 1700 meters |
The Hasenbürener Landstrasse is an access road in Bremen , district Seehausen . It leads mainly in an east-west direction from the Seehauser Landstrasse to the Hasenbürener Deich as well as to the marina on the Weser and the mouth of the Ochtum .
The cross streets and connecting streets were named u. a. as Seehauser Landstraße after the district, Zum Bruchdeich 1995 after a dike breach at this point, two unnamed streets, Am Glockenstein 2009 after the old landmark and orientation symbol of the fishermen near Hasebüren, Weißefeldstraße (1952) / Wiedbrokstraße after the local Weidenbruch ( Wied = Weide ) and Hasenbürener Deich; otherwise see the link to the streets.
history
Surname
The Hasenbürener Landstrasse was named after the place that was a parish together with Seehausen . Hazenburen was first mentioned in 1319 as part of the former village of Büren , which still consisted of Nedderstenburen , Middelburen and Lewenbüren . The Weser then changed its course and the districts separated by the Weser. Lewenbüren merged into Hasenbüren.
development
Seehausen was first mentioned in 1187 as Sehusen . It belonged to the Goh Vieland . Before that there was a naval station of the Romans here. The Seehausen parish formed a community with Hasenbüren and was Lutheran. The bell stone was built in 1357 . From 1804 the place belonged to Bremen. The central streets were paved in the middle of the 19th century, the Hasebürener Landstrasse in 1876. In the past, the fishermen's houses on the path dominated the flat marshland.
traffic
The federal motorway 281 , which is currently under construction , crosses Seehausen and leads as a tunnel under the Weser to Gröpelingen and the A 27, or in a south / east direction to the Neustadt and the A 1.
In the local traffic in Bremen the bus line 62 ( Woltmershausen - Jachthafen) runs through the street.
Buildings and facilities
There are mostly single-story buildings on the street.
- Evangelical-Lutheran, Gothic parish church of St. Jacobi from the 13th century, probably 1234.
Notable buildings and facilities
- Seehauser Landstrasse 99: Seehausen sewage treatment plant from 1965, two-stage activated sludge plant from 1984, further expansion in 1996, since 1999 hanseWasser Bremen has been the operator
- Seehauser Landstrasse No. 141: 1- and 2-storey. Seehausen primary school
- No. 9: 1-sch. Residential house with half-timbered gable and crooked hip
- No. 18a: 1-gesch. Building with a gable as the Seehausen local authority
- No. 58: 1-sch. former farmhouse with half hip
- No. 65: 1-sch. Building of the volunteer fire brigade Bremen-Seehausen from 1936
- No. 68: 1-gesch. Hasenbürener mug since 1973
- No. 78: 1-sch. Farmhouse with a crooked hip
- No. 83: 2-sch. Gasthaus and Hotel Weser Utkiek
- No. 102: 1-sch. Farmhouse with side barn door and richly decorated redstone gable with two round decorative elements above the windows.
- No. 110: 1-sch. Half- timbered farmhouse with Grotdörgiebel and large hall gate, above the gate for the attic
- Am Glockenstein 23: Fährhaus Wessels excursion restaurant from 1950 to 2010/12 (demolished after heightened the dike), previously run by Ada and Hermann Wessels. The ferry service was stopped around 1975.
Plaque
- Bell stone from 1357 with the relief of a bell, first mentioned in 1682, landmark and orientation symbol of the fishermen, at this point since 2009.
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
- ↑ Monument database of the LfD Bremen
- ↑ Information about the parish, Dehio: 1250.
- ^ Christian Meyer: Restaurant Fährhaus Wessels closes on October 31st. The tenant moves into the "Weser Utkiek" . In. Weser-Kurier from October 31, 2010.
- ↑ Monument database of the LfD Bremen
Coordinates: 53 ° 6 ′ 59.4 " N , 8 ° 41 ′ 51.8" E