Julius-Brecht-Allee

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Julius-Brecht-Allee
coat of arms
Street in Bremen
Julius-Brecht-Allee
Julius-Brecht-Allee in the direction of
Konrad-Adenauer-Allee
Basic data
city Bremen
district Vahr , Schwachhausen
Created around 1956
Cross streets Konrad-Adenauer-Allee , Beneckendorffallee , Eislebener Str., Sonneberger Str., In der Vahr
Buildings Secondary school on Julius-Brecht-Allee
use
User groups Cars, trams, bicycles and pedestrians
Road design four lane road
Technical specifications
Street length 840 meters
Confluence with Eislebener Strasse. Direction of view: Kurt-Schumacher-Allee
Pedestrian bridge on Eislebener Strasse. Direction of view: Konrad-Adenauer-Allee

The Julius-Brecht-Allee is a central thoroughfare in Bremen , district Vahr , district Gartenstadt Vahr . It leads in a south-north direction from Steubenstrasse to Kurt-Schumacher-Allee .

The cross streets and connecting streets were u. a. named as Steubenstrasse after the Prussian officer and US major general and baron Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben (1730–1794), Konrad-Adenauer-Allee after the politician ( German Center Party , CDU ) and first Federal Chancellor Konrad Adenauer (1876–1967) the field Marshal and Reich President Paul von Beneckendorff and von Hindenburg (1847-1934), Eislebener road to the Eisleben , Sonneberger road to the town in Thuringia, in the Vahr and Kurt-Schumacher-Allee after the Social Democrats and the first SPD -Bundesvorsitzenden Kurt Schumacher (1895-1952); otherwise see the link to the streets.

history

Surname

Julius-Brecht-Allee was named after the SPD politician Julius Brecht (1900–1962). He was a member of the Hamburg Parliament from 1949 to 1953 and a member of the German Bundestag from 1957 to 1962 . He worked in the areas of social housing in many cities, including Bremen.

development

The Vahr (1167 Vare , later Voren ; Fuhren = furrow) is a very young part of Bremen. The garden city of Vahr was planned by Ernst May ( Neue Heimat , Hamburg) for Gewoba from 1956 ; Later on, the architects Max Säum and Günther Hafemann (both from Bremen) joined in as planners.
From 1954 to 1964 around 14,000 u. a. Socially supported apartments built in the large housing
estate for over 33,000 residents. Gewoba was the client for many apartments.
In 1972 the Julius-Brecht-Allee school center was built. In 2005 it received a new wing.

traffic

The new line 1 tram ran from Arsterdamm to Blockdiek in 1967 , to Osterholz in 1968 and to Tenever and Mahndorf train station since 2012 . In the area of ​​Julius-Brecht-Allee, Eislebener and Sonneberger Straße, there were difficulties until 1972 because of a plot of land owned by a nursery. The owner did not want to sell his property and was therefore expropriated. Until 1972 the tram circumnavigated the area south on a short provisional route.

The Bremen tram runs through the street today with line 1 ( Huchting - Mahndorf ).

For local transport in Bremen, the street runs through bus lines 21 (Blockdiek ↔ Sebaldsbrück ↔ Universität-Nord).

Buildings and facilities

There are mainly four to six-story buildings on the street.

Notable buildings and facilities

  • Corner of Konrad-Adenauer-Allee 86: 4-storey. Secondary school on Julius-Brecht-Allee with 550 students; Building from around 1972, renovated in 2001 (architect Horst Rosengart, Bremen) and in 2005 new 3-storey. Tract based on plans by Michael Schröder, Bremen (BDA Prize 2006)
  • No. 8 to 24: Drei 4-gesch. Houses from around 1970
  • Corner of Eislebener Straße 77: 6-storey. Residential building
  • Corner of Eislebener Strasse 72/74: 1- to 3-storey. Kurfürstenmarkt shopping and office center
  • No. 56 to Eislebener Straße 2: five 2-tier. Row houses with pitched roofs
  • Pedestrian bridge from Eislebener Straße to the allotment area and the school
  • Eislebener Straße 1 to 5: 4-storey. Residential building
  • Corner of Sonneberger Straße 2 / 2a: 3- and 4-storey. Service center with u. a. Pharmacy and practices
  • Corner In der Vahr 65: 3-gesch. Paracelsus Clinic Bremen , formerly the Kurfürstenklinik
  • On the east side there are allotments as well
  • Corner to the street In der Vahr No. 75: 2-gesch. Building complex from 1958 with pavilions of the elementary school in the Vahr with around 240 students (2018); built in 1958 and 1962 according to plans by Max Säum and Günther Hafemann
  • In the Vahr 75: 1-gesch. Vahr Mothers' Center from 1986 with children's groups, crèche, counseling and courses

See also

literature

  • Monika Porsch: Bremer Straßenlexikon , complete edition. Schünemann, Bremen 2003, ISBN 3-7961-1850-X .

Individual evidence

  1. Eberhard Syring: Bremen and his buildings - 1950 - 1979 , pp. 58ff, 135.Schünemann Verlag, Bremen 2014, ISBN 978-3-944552-30-9 .

Coordinates: 53 ° 4 ′ 39.4 ″  N , 8 ° 52 ′ 22 ″  E