Hochschulring (Bremen)
Hochschulring | |
---|---|
Street in Bremen | |
University of Bremen : Right past the drop tower of the Hochschulring; above-right the Stadtwaldsee | |
Basic data | |
city | Bremen |
district | Horn Lehe |
Created | around 1968 |
Cross streets | Autobahn feeder University, Linzer Str., Badgasteiner Str., Am Fallturm, Klagenfurter Str., Am Biological Garden, Leobener Str., Wiener Str., Wilhelm-Herbst-Str., Kuhgrabenweg, Am Stadtwaldsee, Wetterungsweg, Ernaweg, Blocklander Hemmstr., Am Neuwerk, Hemmstraße , Bei den Oken, Ottilienweg, Hoffnungsweg, Überseestadt motorway slip road |
use | |
User groups | Cars, bikes and pedestrians |
Road design | two lane road |
Technical specifications | |
Street length | 4100 meters |
The Hochschulring is an access road in Bremen , Horn-Lehe district, Lehe district and Findorff district, In den Hufen district. It runs in an east-west direction from the University motorway slip road (A27) to the Überseestadt slip road in Findorff.
It is divided into the sub-areas
- Autobahn feeder University to Kuhgrabenweg am Kuhgraben
- and Kuhgrabenweg to the Überseestadt motorway slip road in Findorff
The cross streets and connecting streets were named u. a. to Austrian cities and as a motorway feeder University, Linzer Strasse, Badgasteiner Strasse, Am Fallturm after the 146 meter high fall tower Bremen , Klagenfurter Strasse, Am Biological Garden 1990 after the establishment of the university, Leobener Strasse, Wiener Strasse, Wilhelm-Herbst- Strasse 1992 after the dentist, inventor, entrepreneur and founder of BEGO (1842–1917), Kuhgrabenweg after the Kograve (= Kuhgraben ) mentioned in 1277 as Grenzgraben (ndt. Ko = border), Am Stadtwaldsee after the quarry pond at Bremer Stadtwald , unnamed path, Wetterungsweg after a Feldmark in Blockland and a former village, Ernaweg after the first name, Blocklander Hemmstraße after the former village Hemme in Blockland, Am Neuwerk after the, Hemmstraße after the village Wallerhemme in the Niederblockland mentioned in 1139 , Bei den Oken after the Eichen (ndt. Oken ), Ottilienweg (In den Hufen) after the first name, Hoffnungsweg (unclear) and the Überseestadt motorway slip road ( Bundesstraße 6 ); otherwise see the link to the streets.
history
Surname
The Hochschulring was named around 1971 at the time the University of Bremen was founded .
development
The general planning for the construction of the university has been carried out by the Bremen University Building Authority (UBA) since 1966 . In the marshland area, about five meters of marshland had to be replaced with sand; the 28.2 hectare Uni-See , later named Stadtwaldsee , and the "Uni-Wildnis" were created. Studies began in 1971/72. The central area with the State and University Library Bremen, the central area (ZB), the cafeteria, GW 2, NW 2, the central multi-purpose high-rise (MZH) and then the sports buildings in the east were completed between 1974 and 1976. The other buildings for the university, institutes and companies were then built on the Hochschulring in the Bremen Technology Park, which has also been known as this since 1988, with 550 companies, institutes and research facilities.
As of 2017, the university had around 19,500 students and around 3,500 employees, as well as an annual budget of 344 million euros.
traffic
The Bremen tram crosses the street with line 6 (Universität-Nord - Flughafen-Süd).
In the local traffic in Bremen the bus lines 28 (Überseestadt ↔ Universität-Nord), partly 22 (Kattenturm-Mitte ↔ Universität-Ost) and 31 (Borgfeld Ost ↔ Horn ↔ Nedderland) pass through and it crosses the line 21 (Blockdiek ↔ Sebaldsbrück ↔ Universität- North) the street. .
Buildings and facilities
On the street there are mostly two to four-story buildings of the university, institutes and companies.
Notable buildings and facilities
North side:
- Linzer Strasse No. 3: 4-storey. Building of the Deutsche GVZ-GmbH and the Brüel & Kjaer GmbH
- Linzer Strasse No. 4: 2-storey. Building of the Center for Media, Communication and Information Research (ZeMKI) of the University from 2011
- Linzer Strasse No. 5: 4-storey. Building of Techem Energy Services GmbH
- Linzer Strasse No. 8: 2-storey. Building of the Convivo group of companies
- Hochschulring No. 40: 2-sch. Office building of the STZ Bremen
- At drop tower No. 1: 4-gesch. Building with u. a. of the Fraunhofer Institute for Digital Medicine MEVIS
- At drop tower No. 2: 2-ply. Building of the ZARM drop tower operating company with the 146 meter high drop tower Bremen from 1990 based on plans by Rosengart und Partner
- Hochschulring No. 20: 2- and 3-sch. Building with u. a. the Bremen Institute for Production and Logistics (BIBA) from 1992 based on plans by Oswald Mathias Ungers
- At the biological garden no. 2: 3-gesch. Fiber Institute Bremen
- Hochschulring No. 18: 3-sch. Building of the University of Bremen, Cognium
- Am Biological Garden No.?: 1-gesch. Building of the university's biological garden from around 1980 based on plans by senior building officer Peukert (UBA)
- Wilhelm-Herbst-Strasse: 3-storey. Building the BEGO ( Bremer Goldschlägerei )
- Hochschulring No. 6: 2-sch. Building of the digital think tank
- Hochschulring No. 4: 3-sch. University building: Faculty of Economics (FB7) and WING
- Kuhgraben towards the Autobahn, Kuhgrabensee , Untere Wümme and Landhaus Kuhsiel
- Kuhgrabenweg No. 30: 1-gesch. Restaurant Zum Platzhirsch
- District heating line from the waste incineration plant in Bremen to the university
- Waste-to-energy plant from 1969, expanded in 2004, operated by swb AG : The MHKW produces district heating of around 200,000 MWh and over 75,000 MWh of base load electricity per year. Up to 550,000 tons of waste can be incinerated annually .
South side:
- Badgasteiner Straße Nr. 1a: Sports fields, sports buildings of the university and sports pool from around 1976 according to plans by the Medium planning group and hall of the Federal Center for Rhythmic Gymnastics from 1991 according to plans by Roland Kutzki (HBA)
- Badgasteiner Straße No. 11: 3-storey. Building of the International School of Bremen (ISB) from 2011 according to plans by Thomas Klumpp
- Klagenfurter Strasse No. 5: 3-storey. Building of the Bremen Institute for Applied Beam Technology (BIAS) Institute from 1977 and Institute for Light and Optical Technologies (LION) from 2014 according to plans by ksg architects and city planners, Cologne.
- Klagenfurter Strasse No.?: 2-gesch. University building from 1974
- Leobener Strasse No. 8: 3-storey. Building of the Center for Marine Environmental Sciences at the University of Bremen ( MARUM ) from 2001
- Wiener Strasse No. 41: 2-storey. Institute building
- Wiener Strasse No. 12: 3-storey. Fraunhofer Institute for Manufacturing Technology and Applied Materials Research (IFAM) from 2013 based on plans by Jürgen Brenner & Partner, Stuttgart
- Kuhgraben towards the city forest
- Am Stadtwaldsee No. 1: 1-gesch. Houses of the campsite HanseCamping Bremen
- 11.4 hectare nature reserve Am Stadtwaldsee (university wilderness)
- Stadtwaldsee from 1970: 28.2 hectares in size, up to 16.5 m deep, with an eastern nudist beach , southern sunbathing lawns and sandy beach, western area for surfing, fishing and diving.
- Allotment garden area of the oak allotment gardener community
See also
literature
- Peter Meier-Hüsing: University of Bremen - 40 years in motion . Edition Temmen, Bremen 2011, ISBN 978-3-8378-1015-8 .
- 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: Bremen Street Lexicon. Complete edition. Schünemann, Bremen 2003, ISBN 3-7961-1850-X .
Individual evidence
- ^ Eberhard Syring: Architecture Guide Bremen / Bremerhaven . Ed .: Bremer Zentrum für Baukultur, DOM publishers, Berlin 2019, ISBN 978-3-86922-569-2 .
- ↑ swb AG: swb Environmental Report 2013, p. 28 ( Memento from June 1, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) (PDF)
- ↑ Frauke Fischer: International School moves into a new building. In: Weser courier . Oct 4, 2011.
- ^ Eberhard Syring: Architecture Guide Bremen / Bremerhaven . Ed .: Bremer Zentrum für Baukultur, DOM publishers, Berlin 2019, ISBN 978-3-86922-569-2 .
- ↑ architecture guide bremen
Coordinates: 53 ° 6 ′ 54 ″ N , 8 ° 50 ′ 9.5 ″ E