Hemelinger Bahnhofstrasse

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Hemelinger Bahnhofstrasse
coat of arms
Street in Bremen
Basic data
city Bremen
district Hemelingen
Created 19th century
Newly designed 1997
Cross streets To Sebaldsbrücker Bahnhof, Ahlringstrasse, Grete-Stein-Str., Osenbrückstrasse, Brauerstr., An der Silberpräge , Godehardstrasse, Diedrich-Wilkenss-Str. , Brunostr., Hannoversche Str. , Christernstr.
Buildings Old pharmacy , factory building Wilkens & Sons
use
User groups Cars, bikes and pedestrians
Road design two lane road
Technical specifications
Street length 500 meters

The Hemelinger Bahnhofstrasse is a street in Bremen district of Hemelingen . It leads in a north-south direction from the Sebaldsbrücker train station to Christernstraße .

The cross streets and connecting streets were named as Zum Sebaldsbrücker Bahnhof, Ahlringstraße after Johann Rulff Ahlringe (1696–1775) and the family who owned a farm here, Grete-Stein-Straße (2008) after the local politician Grete Stein (1898–1982), Osenbrückstraße after the iron foundry, machine factory and wood trading company Osenbrück & Co founded in 1871 , Brauerstraße after the Hemelinger Actien brewery , An der Silberpräge after the silver factory Wilkens & Sons , Godehardstraße after Bishop Godehard von Hildesheim (960-1038) and the cath. Church of St. Godehard from 1900, Diedrich-Wilkens-Straße after the entrepreneur Diedrich Wilkens , Brunostraße after the Hemelinger mill owner Brün Ehlers, Hannoversche Straße and Christernstraße after Hemeling's mayor Alfred Christern (1856–1929), from 1904 to 1922 mayor.

history

Surname

The street was named after the train station from 1873 on the Münster-Wanne-Eickel railway line , which was built from 1870 to 1874. Before 1939 it was called Verdener Strasse . When Hemelingen came to Bremen and there was already such a street there, it was renamed.

development

Hemelingen ( Low German Hemeln after the Hemelo family ) was first mentioned in 1238 and came to Bremen from Prussia in 1939. By the railway Bremen and Hannover in 1847 and the railway line Bremen-Ruhr region of 1873/74 industrialization took place in Hemelingen. The silver goods factory MH Wilkens & Sons moved its headquarters to this street in 1859 in order to produce more cheaply within the boundaries of the customs union. The Hemelinger Actien brewery had its headquarters here from 1876 to 1981. A rapid urban expansion took place between the train station and Hemelinger Rathausplatz .

In 1985 the Senator for Construction published an urban planning concept for the Center Hemelingen . It was not until 1997 that the city center of Hemelingen became a redevelopment area . As part of the urban development funding , the Hemelinger Bahnhofsstraße was improved and a. according to plans by the architects Lepère und Partner.

traffic

The Bremen tram touches the area with line 2 ( Gröpelingen - Domsheide - Sebaldsbrück )

In local transport in Bremen , the bus routes 40/41 ( Mahndorf - Arbergen - Föhrenstraße - Weserwehr ) and 42 (La-Rochelle-Straße - Hemelingen station - Föhrenstraße - Weserwehr) operate on the street .

The S-Bahn line RS 1 (Farge - Bremen Hbf - Achim - Verden) runs from the Sebaldsbrück train station.
The S-Bahn line RS 2 ( Bremerhaven - Bremen Hbf - Syke - Bassum - Twistringen ) runs from Hemelingen station .

Buildings and facilities

Old pharmacy
Country house family Wilkens, now a town house

There are one to three-story buildings on the street.

  • Railway station from 1873 as a two-storey brick building.
  • No. 1: three-part. Residential and commercial building from around 1900.
  • No. 4: two-part. Plastered house with tail gable from around 1900.
  • No. 10: Deutsche Post branch in retail.
  • No. 13: two-part. New building with the Free Church Baptist Congregation Bremen.
  • No. 15: two-story, historicizing , old pharmacy from 1889 with mezzanine floor according to plans by Reinhard Ahlemann; monument
  • No. 16: two-part. Commercial building with the Hemelinger pharmacy.
  • No. 17: two-story, plastered and renovated office building with stepped gable ; Headquarters of the private college for social education Bremen (ibs).
  • No. 24: site of the Hemelinger Actien brewery from 1876 to 1981; today newer, 3-tier. Coca-Cola bottling plant .
  • No. 26: Bunker with wall painting (see below)
  • No. 28: two-part. House from around 1900.
  • No. 29: included Villa Wilkens with a large park.
  • No. 34–42: Parking lot, including the 593 meter long Hemelinger Tunnel from 2003.
  • No. 44: two-part. IGMG Quba Mosque Hemelingen / Kuba Camii
  • No. 56: two-part. Residential and commercial building from around 1900.
  • At silver embossing number 5: Wilkens & Sons silver goods factory
  • Godehardstrasse No. 4: two-storey. Hemelingen community center (since 1984), former country house of the Wilkens family.
scenario
Wilkensbrunnen
Mural Greetings from Hemelingen

Monuments, fountains, memorial plaques

  • Sculpture group scenario from 2007 as six blue polyester figures on stainless steel pipes by Gisela Eufe on the occasion of the redesign of the Hemelinger market square on the Hemelinger Bahnhofstrasse / corner of Osenbrückstrasse.
  • Wilkensbrunnen from 2004 made of stone in Wilkens Park.
  • Mural Greetings from Hemelingen from 2005 by Jürgen Schmiedekampf and Jana Przygodzki.
  • Stumbling blocks for the victims of National Socialism according to the list of stumbling blocks in Bremen :
    • No. 16: for Betty, Rika and Siegfried Fränkel; all murdered in Minsk in 1941.

See also

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ The Senator for Construction: Center Hemelingen , August 1985.
  2. State Office for Monument Preservation Bremen
  3. k: art in public space bremen

Coordinates: 53 ° 3 ′ 33 ″  N , 8 ° 53 ′ 9 ″  E