Hamburg-Heimfeld
Heimfeld district of Hamburg |
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Coordinates | 53 ° 27 '50 " N , 9 ° 57' 22" E |
surface | 11.7 km² |
Residents | 22,421 (Dec. 31, 2019) |
Population density | 1916 inhabitants / km² |
Post Code | 21073, 21075, 21079 |
prefix | 040 |
district | Harburg |
Transport links | |
Highway | |
Federal road | |
S-Bahn Hamburg | |
Source: Statistical Office for Hamburg and Schleswig-Holstein |
Heimfeld is a district of the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg . It is located in the Harburg district .
history
The settlement arose at one of I. Otto von Harburg created in 1535 Vorwerk to Harburg castle , which he to Heynfeld called. The name changed to today's home field through abrasion. In 1888 the village became part of the city of Harburg , which in turn was incorporated into Hamburg in 1937 by the Greater Hamburg Act .
statistics
- Minor quota: 17.3% [Hamburg average: 16.3% (2017)].
- Elderly rate: 15.6% [Hamburg average: 18.2% (2017)].
- Proportion of foreigners: 24.2% [Hamburg average: 17.1% (2017)].
- Unemployment rate: 5.7% [Hamburg average: 5.2% (2017)].
The average income per taxpayer in Heimfeld is EUR 30,132 annually (2013), the Hamburg average is EUR 39,054.
Religions
There are two Evangelical Lutheran parishes in Heimfeld. The St. Paulus parish in Petersweg and the Petrus parish in Haakestrasse.
The Pauluskirche was built in 1907. Its specialty is a Bible that was presented to the Paulus community by Empress Auguste Viktoria . The altar, organ and benches are from 1907 and are well preserved.
Christ Centrum Harburg , a congregation in the Bund Freikirchlicher Pentecostal congregations, is located on Stader Straße .
politics
Heimfeld is divided into two constituencies in elections for the Hamburg citizenship . The east of the district belongs to the Harburg constituency , while the west was added to the Süderelbe constituency . The 2015 general election in Heimfeld brought the following results:
- SPD 42.9% (-5.5)
- Greens 13.0% (+1.5)
- CDU 12.5% (-7.0)
- Left 11.3% (+2.9)
- AfD 8.5% (+8.5)
- FDP 6.2% (+1.7)
- Other 5.8% (-1.8)
Culture and sights
Buildings
At the beginning of the 20th century, Heimfeld was still dominated by agriculture, at this time villas were being built in the western part and dense urban development was forming in the eastern part. During the Second World War , the building structure was severely damaged by the numerous Allied bombing raids , but there are still pre-war buildings in some streets.
There are also several large building complexes in Heimfeld that were formerly used as barracks . One of them, the Scharnhorst barracks on Heimfelder Strasse used by a medical battalion , was abandoned in 1993 and demolished in the late 1990s in favor of a new housing estate on the newly created Hans-Dewitz-Ring, while another was used as a care home for some time . Heimfeld is no longer a Bundeswehr location today . Striking buildings are the Friedrich-Ebert-Halle with the adjoining Friedrich-Ebert-Gymnasium and the St. Paul's Church, built in north German brick Gothic at the beginning of the 20th century, the tower of which is visible from afar.
Sports
The tennis and hockey facility of the Heimfeld tennis company is located in the western Heimfeld field . In recent years this has been expanded to include an artificial turf field for the hockey department, for which parts of the former forest there have been cleared.
education
- Primary schools: Grumbrechtstraße, Am Kiefernberg
- Special school: Michael School - Waldorf School for healing education
- Friedrich-Ebert-Gymnasium
- Heisenberg High School Hamburg
- Vocational School for Social Pedagogy (W5)
traffic
The Hamburg-Heimfeld S-Bahn station is located in Heimfeld . The B73 is in the north of Heimfeld. Part of the seaport limits Heimfeld to the north.
line | course |
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Pinneberg - Thesdorf - Halstenbek - Krupunder - Elbgaustraße - Eidelstedt - Stellingen - Langenfelde - Diebsteich - Altona - Königstraße - Reeperbahn - Landungsbrücken - Stadthausbrücke - Jungfernstieg - Central Station - Hammerbrook - Elbbrücken - Veddel - Wilhelmsburg - Harburg - Harburg - Heimfeld - Neuenthal Town Hall - Heimfeld - Neuenthal - Fischbek - Neu Wulmstorf - Buxtehude - Neukloster - Horneburg - Dollern - Agathenburg - Stade | |
Altona - Holstenstraße - Sternschanze - Dammtor - Central Station | - Hammerbrook - Elbbrücken - Veddel - Wilhelmsburg - Harburg - Harburg Town Hall - Heimfeld - Neuwiedenthal - Neugraben | - Berlin Gate |
Personalities
The former German Defense Minister Volker Rühe (CDU) lives in Heimfeld . The house was under constant police surveillance during his tenure, but shortly after Rühes was replaced in his ministerial office, this was given up.
Furthermore, the musician Peter Heppner (known among others from the band Wolfsheim ) lives with his family in Heimfeld.
The judge and writer Thorsten Beck, whose previous three novels are all set in Harburg, also lives in Heimfeld.
See also
- Bostelbek , a district of Heimfeld
- List of streets and bridges in Hamburg-Heimfeld
- List of cultural monuments in Hamburg-Heimfeld
- List of stumbling blocks in Hamburg-Heimfeld
Web links
- District statistics (PDF file; 3.21 MB) of all Hamburg districts (as of 2010)
Individual evidence
- ^ Horst Beckershaus: The names of the Hamburg districts. Where do they come from and what they mean , Hamburg 2002, ISBN 3-434-52545-9 , p. 57.
- ↑ Quota of minors in the Hamburg districts in 2017
- ↑ Proportion of 65-year-olds and older in the Hamburg districts in 2017
- ↑ Proportion of foreigners in the Hamburg districts in 2017
- ↑ Unemployment rate in the Hamburg districts in 2017
- ↑ Statistical Office for Hamburg and Schleswig-Holstein (ed.): Hamburg District Profile 2016 (= NORD.regional . Volume 19 ). 2018, ISSN 1863-9518 ( Online PDF 6.6 MB [accessed February 12, 2018]).
- ^ Result of the 2015 state election (eastern part of the district) .
- ↑ Result of the citizenship election (western area of the district)