Kadiner Strasse

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Residential houses on the east side of Kadiner Strasse

The Kadiner Straße (zip code 10243) is located in the Berlin district of Friedrichshain ( Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg district ). It begins north on Hildegard-Jadamowitz-Strasse and flows south into Grünberger Strasse.

The eastern side of the street is dominated by the school-leisure complex between Lasdehner and Kadiner Straße, which includes the Ludwig Hoffmann and Temple Grandin schools and the associated school grounds, which can be reached from Lasdehner Straße, as well as the children - and youth leisure facility Regenbogenhaus and the meeting place for young women and girls Phantalisa in Kadiner Straße 9 with the associated leisure area. The rainbow house, with its history well documented in several exhibitions and publications, has been of importance for children, young people and families not only in the immediate vicinity for decades.

Architectural accents are set with the northern corner houses Kadiner Straße 23 (residential and practice building with the Diagnostic-Therapeutic Center at Frankfurter Tor - DTZ Berlin) and Kadiner Straße 1 (residential building with the meeting place for joie de vivre on the ground floor) as well as the listed residential and commercial building Kadiner Straße 11, which with its magnificent brick Gothic design is reminiscent of the architecture of the Lazarus Church, which was also called "Cathedral of the East". It stood on the corner south from 1907 to 1949. The residential complex built there in 1955, which also includes the house at Kadiner Strasse 12, is also a listed building.

The east side of the street is characterized by residential buildings, including restored former factory buildings, the rooms of which have been converted into modern loft apartments . All loopholes caused by the war were closed here.

The house number counting follows the horseshoe principle, starting at the northwest corner with the number 1 and ending at the northeast corner with the number 23.

Parking has been prohibited in the street Tempo 30 and in front of the Rainbow House since 1992 .

Street history

View from the passage from Karl-Marx-Allee to Kadiner Straße almost to the right. 2019.

The Kadiner street was named (originally Cadiner Street) on 11 June 1902 after the West Prussian town Kadinen (also Cadinen), today Kadyny in Poland ( province Warmia and Mazury ). It was laid out as Straße 9a, Section XIV, of the development plan.

The current eastern area of ​​Hildegard-Jadamowitz-Straße from number 24 to the corner of Lasdehner Straße was originally the continuation of Boxhagener Straße west of Warschauer Straße to Frankfurter Allee . To the east of the confluence of Boxhagener and Lasdehner Strasse in Frankfurter Allee, Kadiner Strasse met Boxhagener Strasse, which is curved here, like the former Boxhagener Weg.

A photo from 1889 already shows the layout of the streets, albeit a few mostly low houses on the property.

Boxhagener Strasse was already densely built in 1906, and the northeast corner of Kadiner Strasse was adorned by a particularly representative five-storey residential building with balconies on the façade of the sloping corner, covered by a tall spire with a lantern .

Until the destruction in World War II, the appearance of Kadiner Strasse was determined by five-story residential buildings from the period after 1900, restaurants and shops. There were workshops in the backyards and a few factory buildings on the east side facing Warschauer Strasse. At the south-western end of the street the dome of the Lazarus Church towered high at the end of the row of houses.

After the war, the street was part of the planning area for the Friedrichshain cell. This cleared a large area of ​​the ruins on the terrain between Kadiner and Lasdehner Strasse. Only the Hoffmann'sche school building remained on Lasdehner Strasse, the houses number 3 and 11 on Kadiner Strasse.

The completion of the day nursery and kindergarten in 1952 initiated the use of a large part of this area by children's facilities and changed the character of Kadiner Straße. With the construction, renovation and redesigning measures as part of the “Urban Redevelopment East” program from 2002, this was consolidated and raised to a new level. The renovation of the historical school building in Lasdehner Strasse 2002–2012, the construction of the extension for the Ludwig Hoffmann Elementary School 2010–2012, the design of the green area to the south of this building, which was inaugurated in 2011, the Lasdehner Strasse 17 building, which was converted into a after-school house with adjoining play area in 2008 , the renovation and redesign of the building at Kadiner Straße 9 (Regenbogenhaus and Phantalisa) with the adjoining play and leisure area (2005–2009) and the opening of the new football field for schools and the Rainbow House (2008) are important elements of this development.

On the east side of Kadiner Straße, after the war, small workshops and companies were established, especially in the old factory buildings, some of which lasted until the early 2000s. Especially in the 1990s, clubs and social projects also settled here. They had to move out as the refurbishment of the factory buildings and the filling of the gaps with buildings with high quality housing began.

Some buildings, plants and facilities

Residential buildings at Kadiner Strasse 1–2

The residential buildings Kadiner Strasse 1–2, which were only occupied in 1998, belong to a U-shaped apartment block, which also includes the houses Hildegard-Jadamowitz-Strasse 18 and Lasdehner Strasse 1, 3, 5 and 7. To the north they connect to the only house in this area that was preserved after the war, Kadiner Str. 3.

There were previously 2 barracks parallel to Kadiner Straße, probably the last construction workers barracks on the former Stalinallee . The windowless rear faced Kadiner Strasse, the entrance from Lasdehner Strasse.

Meeting place joie de vivre (Kadiner Straße 1)

The house at Kadiner Straße 1 with the Club Lebensfreude on the ground floor 2019.

The residential building Kadiner Straße 1 protrudes on the corner with its narrow northern side from the street front of Hildegard-Jadamowitz-Straße and from the 1st floor cantilevers over the semicircle of a facade of framed glass surfaces with the entrance door to the meeting place "Lebensfreude", behind the a cozy room opens up. The subsequent event and function rooms were designed according to the needs of the senior citizens' club during construction . A sound insulation was missing and was installed later. The club of the social association VdK , which was established in 1992 on the ground floor of the residential building Lasdehner Strasse 30 instead of a residential area club , moved into the new rooms in 1998, which were officially opened on November 20, 1998. Since October 2011, the premises have been a communal meeting place.

Here you can meet informally, have coffee or tea and cake, do handicrafts, experience dance events, pursue your hobby in one of the interest groups (Spheregroove choir, chess, hiking group ...), attend one of the courses (English ...) or listen to lectures .

Sociability, education, advice and help can be found in the meeting place. This is where u. a. the Friedrichshain district group of the General Association for the Blind and Visually Impaired in Berlin, founded in 1874 e. V.

Children's and youth leisure facility Regenbogenhaus (Kadiner Straße 9)

Buildings and grounds

East and north facade of the rainbow house 2013
East and south facade of the Rainbow House 2008

The two-storey, colorful house with the gable facing the street is set back from the street front and borders directly to the west on the north wing of the Hoffmann school building in Lasdehner Straße.

As part of the renovation and redesign of the rainbow house from 2005 to 2009, the facade was repainted in 2006.

Starting with red at the western end of the north facade and ending with blue at the western end of the south facade, the rainbow colors were applied over a large area. Curved arcs and circles on it structure the facade and convey dynamism.

The artist Torsten Brill (born 1959), who planned and implemented the facade design in consultation with the Rainbow House team, explained to the city detectives:

“… You have insulation protection underneath… There is plaster on it that has to breathe a little. Silicate paints were then applied to it. As you can see ... they shine very nicely ... Since the colors may have to be painted over with dirt or something ... small segments should be inserted so that the segments can be repaired without having to make the entire area the same. "

To the north of the front garden and the house, a football field and a spacious playground with table tennis, trampoline, swings, climbing wall, hammocks, water playground, pavilion and a large lawn invite you to play.

Current information on children's and youth recreational facilities

The showcase at the entrance to the area of ​​the Rainbow House 2019.

The Rainbow House is an establishment of FiPP e. V. (advanced training institute for educational practice) and is financed by the child and youth support of the Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg district office.

The rainbow house focuses on leisure activities for girls and boys from school entry up to 14 years of age. In the open area, as part of regular offers and on the outdoor area, children and young people can spend their free time independently and help shape it.

On three floors (including the basement), functional and imaginatively designed rooms with a wide range of options are available to children, young people and families - sports room, media workshop, neighborhood club, exercise and theater room, sound workshop, studio, relaxation room, creative workshop, pottery and wood workshop , Children's kitchen, small niches and a large event hall.

Climbing, radio rainbow, children's gymnastics for 4- to 6-year-olds, dance studio, garden of encounter, chess group, family pottery, cooking studio, table tennis, city detectives, surf & play, pottery workshop, sewing workshop, media workshop and creative activities in the open meeting are part of the weekly offer .

There is also twice a month the teenage time for children from 12 years in the evening and other projects and events announced in the program such as summer party, garden party, overnight stay, flea market, family night, excursions. Visitors can also always expect a special holiday program.

There are also offers for younger children and the whole family.

These include the family café with a play area for children under 6 and an open play area for older children. These are accessible during opening hours, except on Friday. There are also regular offers such as parent-child gymnastics or family pottery.

History of the establishment

School center 1989–1992 and rainbow house 1992–2020

In his letter of congratulations on the 10th anniversary of the Rainbow House in 2002, the former Mayor of Friedrichshain, Helios Mendiburu, outlined the importance of the house:

“The house was and is very important to me. Thousands of Friedrichshain children were able to spend meaningful free time here under the guidance of committed educators, and honoring and preserving this was the motive of my support. "

On January 8, 1992, youth councilor Lorenz Postler unveiled the new nameplate for the facility “Freizeithaus Regenbogen”. Later the name rainbow house became common. The naming was preceded by the efforts of parents, educators and children to secure the Friedrichshain Student Center in Kadiner Straße as a leisure center. The facility emerged from the Friedrichshain Pioneer House in 1989 in the course of political changes and, as a “student center”, still belonged to the district education and culture department.

At the debate on September 13, 1991 in the Friedrichshain District Assembly , in which the school councilor drew attention to the lack of classrooms and Mayor Mendiburu fought to secure the recreation center as such, around 200 children and young people were present and displayed signs with their demands to maintain the student center. They cheered when the decision was made to transfer the building on Kadiner Strasse to the specialization department of youth, family and sport.

The creation of an open area, which did not exist in the pioneer house, and the redesign of the house according to the leisure interests of the children and young people, was intensified in 1992. Gradually, the entire ground floor with table tennis room, creative room, sports room, Kiez-Klub and Club P12 became an open area, plus the computer room on the upper floor. Now all boards have been removed from the rooms that were from the time it was used as a school. The team, led by Wolfgang Wudtke, got what was needed, designed and renovated. For a mini-cinema, for example, the cinema seating and the projection device for 35 mm films were provided. The room theater was furnished with suitably painted curtains. The educationalist Helga König wrote the plays herself.

The bear with the spade, the symbol of the national structure, adorned the street-side facade until the rainbow house was redesigned in 2005. It was an occasion for the city detectives in the Kiez-Klub to deal with the history of the house.

The Kiez-Klub was founded as early as 1990 with city exploration groups (city detectives), city games and excursions for school classes and after-school care groups, as well as the open Kiez-Klub. The Kiez-Klub-Raum, refurbished again in 2006, has since offered many opportunities for regional history activities with children. From 1990 to 2014 the Rainbow House published the school newspaper “Kiez-Blatt”, which was produced by the city detectives under the direction of the pedagogue Fritz Wollenberg.

The children were encouraged to exercise their rights in a variety of ways, and the facility took part in many activities. She also helped to organize the annual city district festival “Around the Weberwiese”.

In the 1990s, the many large house, yard and family celebrations of the Rainbow House were popular - especially during the school holidays - with hundreds of children.

Although new educators now mainly enriched the open leisure work, the number of employees in the Rainbow House gradually decreased, so that in 2001 the eastern half of the upper floor was handed over to Phantalisa, a leisure facility for girls and young women. A partition wall was put in place to separate the facility.

In the 2000s, the artistic area of ​​the house was expanded to accommodate young families through more family offers, such as B. family potters and family celebrations as well as offers for children under 6 years, z. B. Early musical education , responds.

In 2002, parents and employees founded the support association of the Rainbow House to gain sponsors, finance trips, the family café and much more. The association was dissolved when the house was handed over to FiPP eV.

The new play area of ​​the Rainbow House 2009, delimited from Kadiner Straße by the new arched fence.

From 2005 to 2008 the house was bought for half a million euros, e.g. Partly from EU funds, starting with the roof, with the exception of short necessary closing times during ongoing operations, extensively renovated and redesigned. In accordance with the team's concept, some larger rooms such as the family café, the open play area and the theater were created by removing walls, adding large windows to the hallway, creating more transparency and an inviting atmosphere and creating new opportunities for play and activity with the design of the open spaces Provided.

The old fence was replaced by an arched fence, only a few old pillars were preserved as reminiscences.

When it became known in the summer of 2009 that savings in the children and youth sector in Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg were to be combined with the de-communalization of all existing communal children and youth recreational facilities, there were decisive protests from parents, children and teachers, including from the Rainbow House.

This was discussed controversially in the District Assembly (BVV). Friedrichshain politicians explained the following to the city detectives from the Rainbow House:

Andy Hehmke, chairman of the SPD parliamentary group and chairman of the youth welfare committee: "We have spoken out against this step of transferring all municipal institutions to independent agencies ... the question is that now the parties continue to discuss, those affected continue to discuss, and then hopefully we will do not take the suggested step. "

Monika Hermann , District Councilor for Youth, Family and School: “What you love to do in the Rainbow House will also be passed on. What is sad about this is that the educators you know will probably no longer be there. "

Daniel Wesener , Chairman of the Bündnis 90 / Die Grünen parliamentary group: “We want all locations and all facilities for child and youth work to be retained. The problem that the Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg district has is that the state of Berlin, the Senate, has cut us 2 million. We have 2 million euros less available than we would need to continue the work with children and young people, as it is in the Rainbow House and elsewhere. "

Götz Müller, CDU parliamentary group chairman: "This is because the Senate gives us too few funds to properly finance the Rainbow House and other facilities ... As far as I know, it should not be closed, but rather handed over to independent sponsorship. With facilities that work as well as the Regenbogenhaus, I think it's wrong to do that ... The Rainbow House in particular is known beyond the borders of Berlin. "

Claudia Richter, district councilor Die Linke: My party - we have spoken out in favor of the children's leisure centers remaining as they are today. "

On December 16, 2009, BVV Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg decided to keep four municipal facilities and a cooperative, and to hand over the others, including the Rainbow House, to independent organizations involved in child and youth work. It was planned to equip it with fewer staff and fewer resources.

After a selection process, FiPP eV took over the children's and youth recreational facility in July 2010, and the new team began an innovative work with parents and new partners based on a new concept, following on from the traditions and developments of the house, developing new forms of participation of children, e.g. B. Children's conferences, and went to the redesign of the rooms and the establishment of open workshops.

House of Young Pioneers Friedrichshain 1978–1989
This long row of stone pillars, originally with fence panels made of wooden slats, later with metal fence panels, demarcated the area of ​​the children's facilities between Kadiner and Lasdehner Strasse from Kadiner Strasse for a few decades. It only disappeared with the redesign of the open spaces and a beautiful arched fence was put in place. Some stone pillars have been preserved slightly lower than historical reminiscences.

In 1978, the House of Young Pioneers in Friedrichshain moved to the upper floor of what is now the Rainbow House.

It was created in 1967 from the station of the Junge Techniker und Naturforscher, which was located on the ground floor of the residential building at the corner of Rigaer Strasse at the corner of Liebigstrasse from 1960 to 1962 and at Rigaer Strasse 92 from 1962 to 1967.

From 1968 to 1978 it was housed in an old backyard factory building at Voigtstrasse 25, in which there were hardly any opportunities for events with children, so that these took place mainly in schools.

After the number of employees had increased in 1979, the entire building at Kadiner Strasse 9 was handed over as a pioneer house in December 1982 and was also given the name Max Christiansen Clausen . Richard Sorge's radio operator in Japan (1935–1941) lived on Richard-Sorge-Strasse (previously Tilsiter Strasse) in Friedrichshain after the war.

The Pionierhaus mainly employed teachers from various fields who themselves offered courses, working groups and events, and also recruited and supported people from different areas as freelance workers and volunteers to work with children.

This turned the building previously used by schools into a leisure center. The rooms were redesigned according to the new requirements. However, the leisure activities also included courses and working groups in which top-class funding was pursued in some areas, e.g. B. Maths and Russian, so the blackboards were left in many rooms.

In the small house there were soon 150 working groups (interest groups) - model railway construction and electrical engineering , chess and drawing, young fire protection workers and young historians, rhythmic gymnastics ( aerobics ), dance, choir, instrumental groups and many others.

We cooperated with groups in the schools, e. B. with the construction engineering group and the biology station in the school Helsingforser Straße.

Artistic groups worked together in the pioneer ensemble. There was a pioneeringurania in which experts from various fields appeared in front of the children. The program also included trips and specialist camps, discos, carnival and children's parties and events such as the Little Peace Tour - a cycling race.

Establishment and use of the house as a day care center and school 1959–1982
The street-side east facade of the Rainbow House 2005 with the facade design from the time the building was built, the symbol of the NAW (bear with spade) and the year 1959 (year of the laying of the foundation stone) under the letters NAW. The painting was created in 2003. Participants in a European work camp painted motifs from their home countries.

The house was built from 1959 to 1961 on the initiative of the parents' council of the 3rd POS in Lasdehner Strasse. The parents wanted a nursery so that the children don't have to spend their free time in classrooms.

5 students from the engineering school for civil engineering at Straßmannstraße 14 designed the house as an examination task. After the laying of the foundation stone in September 1959, the shell was erected by around 60 students of this school during the summer holidays. Site manager Rudolf Wendel said in 2007: “We worked in two shifts including Saturday and Sunday. ... The roof structure was nailed by some of the young men in the Schorfheide ... We didn't have cranes. We had to pull the roof trusses up over two long poles with ropes over a slope ... I was proud that we had done it - in two months. "

This ceramic on the rainbow house was unveiled in 2009 and is reminiscent of the earlier facade design.

The house was built as part of the National Construction Work (NAW). Until the renovation in 2006, a large bear with a spade, the NAW symbol, dominated the northern half of the facade facing the street and the letters NAW and the year 1959, the year the foundation stone was laid, could be read on the southern half.

In 1961, in addition to the after-school care center, the physically challenged school moved into the house, so that many classrooms were set up.

At first only the first to fourth grades were accommodated here, from 1972 the entire school. In 1977 the physically handicapped school - today's Carl-von-Linné-Schule - got the new building at Paul-Junius-Straße 15 in Lichtenberg , and in 1978 the after-school care center moved back to the school building of the 3rd POS.

1978–1982 the 1st – 3rd floor were on the ground floor and in the basement. Classes of the Alfred Kowalke School housed. They moved to Palisadenstrasse in 1982. Today's Temple Grandin School emerged from this school.

Phantalisa - room for girls and young women (Kadiner Straße 9)

You can get to Phantalisa via these stairs on the south facade of the house at Kadiner Strasse 9.

Phantalisa is an institution for girls from 6 years and young women up to 21 years. Phantalisa points out on its website that behind the categories "girls" and "women" there are diverse identities and that it regards itself as a place for everyone who see themselves as a girl * or woman *, who no longer want to be or would like to be want to be. It's about supporting them in their strengths and in their self-determined life.

The facility is located on the upper floor of the house at Kadiner Straße 9 and can be reached via an external staircase on the south side of the building.

It has a café, the dance and exercise room, and the chill room. a workshop, the magic kitchen and an outdoor area accessible during opening hours.

In addition to use as a place to stay or meeting point and access to computers and the Internet, support is offered in all situations and advice.

There is a regular weekly offer, consisting of fabric design with screen printing, dance for 6-11 year olds, dance for 11 to 21 year olds with a mix of modern dance, urban dance, jazz dance and improvisation, do it yourself (making soap, Bracelets, photo collages, origami and other things), magic kitchen, music time with singing, rapping , learning music texts or karaoke , chill-out evening (playing and / or chatting), open sewing workshop, film evening (P 13) and a changing Saturday offer. In addition, group offers, projects, workshops, overnight trips and other activities are part of the program.

The institution is run by the FRIEDA-Frauenzentrum eV in Proskauer Str. 7, 10247 Berlin. The work of Phantalisa is financed by the child and youth support of the district office Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg.

Phantalisa was established in 1991 and in 2001 moved from the ground floor of a residential building in Bänschstrasse on Forckenbeckplatz to the house at Kadiner Strasse 9.

Residential and commercial building Kadiner Strasse 11

Residential and commercial building Kadiner Strasse 11 2005.

The splendid residential and commercial building at Kadiner Strasse 11 in the Brandenburg brick Gothic style was built in 1903–1904 based on designs by the architect H. Heinig under the direction of the architect Johannes Ernst for the master painter Wilhelm Lohmann.

In the center, a semicircular bay dominates the symmetrically designed facade, above the middle part of which a gable rises with a rose window in the attic. Loggias can be found on both sides on all upper floors .

Of the original complex with side wings and transverse building, only the front building and part of the side wing have been preserved. The facades on the sides and towards the courtyard are elaborately worked. In 2000 the building was modernized and repaired.

The reason why this building is so striking is that the construction of the Lazarus Church was already planned on the neighboring property to the south when Wilhelm Lohmann applied for the construction of his house on December 21, 1903. He needed the approval of the parish council, which demanded that it be recorded in the land register that “there are no disruptive operations here, in particular no music performances” and that the “external furnishings of the building must adapt to the character of the church in terms of style and material”.

Today this house gives an idea of ​​the architecture of the Lazarus Church, which no longer exists.

Lazarus Church or "Cathedral of the East" (formerly Kadiner Strasse and Grünberger Strasse)

Kadiner corner Grünberger Straße 2013. Where the listed houses from the 1950s stand today, including the house at Kadiner Straße 12, was the Lazarus Church from 1907, the ruins of which were blown up in 1949.

At the corner of Kadiner Strasse and Grünberger Strasse, where listed residential buildings from the 1950s now stand as the southern end of the Friedrichshain living cell , the imposing neo-Gothic St. Lazarus Church made of red brick with a "porch in graceful forms in white terracotta stood from 1907 to 1944 (1949) ", Also known as the" Cathedral of the East "- 53 meters long, 25 meters wide with a 66-meter high tower crowned by an eight-sided dome with a lantern. The roof, covered with green "monk and nun tiles", was pulled down low. There was room for 1400 people.

In the book “Der Berliner Osten” it says about the interior design: “With the red marble columns in the room and the Gothic cross and star vaults, it has become downright historical. The windows also contribute to this. Those in the chancel and the roses in the end walls of the transept are artistically most wanted services ... Great importance was attached to good wood carvings on the altar, pulpit and pew. "

Jan Feustel describes it in more detail: “The old building descriptions raved about the glass windows of the polygonal choir closure - based on boxes by the Stuttgart painter Velin, they depicted biblical events in Bethanien , the home of Lazarus ... Luther and Melanchthon were also depicted in three-part windows. Above the gallery , a glass painting depicted the coat of arms of its founder, the Berlin Butchers' Guild ... on the capitals of the pillars, not only the two deaconesses of the community and the architect Wever were depicted, but also Pastor Köster, the first pastor, next to the pulpit. " for him the "three large electric ring crowns, the imperial, royal and electoral crowns are reproduced", which as the "supreme authority" always floated "symbolically above the heads of churchgoers".

The building was built according to plans by the Potsdam building councilor Friedrich Wilhelm Wever. The foundation stone was laid in 1905 and the inauguration took place on December 14, 1907.

In 1896 the Lazarus parish was spun off from the expanding Markus parish and had had a makeshift half-timbered building at the corner of Gubener Strasse and Lithauer Strasse (today Lasdehner Strasse) as the first Lazuarus church with 700 seats since 1892 , which was not enough. It was demolished and rebuilt in 1905 for the Hope Thaler Foundation Lobetal near Bernau . It is still there today.

Dirk Moldt writes at the end of the "Cathedral of the East":

“In November 1943 the church was already damaged by a bomb, which broke the rose window. In autumn 1944 the last services were held in the damaged, already open nave. Then they took place in the parish hall in Memeler Strasse 53/54 (today Marchlewskistrasse 40). During one of the last air raids on Berlin the church was badly hit on April 13, 1945 and burned down completely ... On September 10, 1949 the ruins and the still mighty tower were blown up. "

Memorial plaque for Georg Lehnig (Kadiner Straße 16)

The resistance fighter Georg Lehnig (1907–1945) lived in the house at Kadiner Straße 16 . Here a plaque commemorates him. The first plaque was installed around 1950, and one was renewed in 1976.

Residential building (formerly a factory) Kadiner Strasse 17

The former factory building at Kadiner Straße 17 before the renovation in 2003.

From 2004 the old backyard factory building (transverse building and both side wings were preserved) was converted into a modern residential building with lofts.

Horst Zock's “Mechanische Werkstätten” was the last company to close here in 2004. On a workshop door was still emblazoned in gold letters: 1974–1999 25 years of Margarete Weber printing company.

The Comunika 17 project house has also closed its doors. In 2000, the “kunstkreuz” project showed the controversially discussed documentary “Whispering and Screaming” by Roland KG Gernhard.

The gallery level 85 and other projects no longer exist here either.

Club K 17 for fans of metal, rock and gothic moved to Pettenkoferstraße 17 in 2003. It was founded in 1992 as a small pub at Kadiner Straße 16, then expanded to Kadiner Straße 17 and became known here as the K17 Club from 1999.

Before the Second World War, when the old front building still existed, one of three sex counseling centers of the Unity Committee for Proletarian Sexual Reform was opened in October 1931 in the pub "Welt am Abend" at Kadiner Strasse 17 , which according to information in the journal of the Union for Proletarian Sexual Reform and Maternity Protection "The waiting" from November 1931 was directed by trained doctors. The doctor and sex reformer Hans Lehfeldt (1899–1993) reported that they were founded by Wilhelm Reich (1897–1957) and "made the psychoanalytic treatment of sexual conflicts their special task".

Stumbling block for Alfred Renzel (Kadiner Str. 19)

The stumbling block for Alfred Renzel (1905–1943), deported to Auschwitz , was moved on July 21, 2012 in front of his home at 19 Kadiner Strasse.

Kadiner Strasse 20

A sign at the entrance of the house at Kadiner Straße 20 draws attention to the renovation of the old woolen yarn factory in 2004 and carries the information somewhat obscured: Sample loft in the courtyard on the left 1st floor.

In 2004 the old woolen yarn factory was extensively refurbished. Lofts with spacious terraces and balconies have been created.

The factory was built in 1905. In 1938 it was entered in the commercial register at the Central District Court under "Grandma" Wollgarnfabrik Alfred Voelker KG. The company manufactured and sold yarn, hosiery, and related items.

“A stuffed antelope head with imposing antlers watches over almost 100 square meters of living space. Below him, fine parquet meets the sandblasted brick wall. A white sofa set and a large dining table are loosely grouped in the room, which is lit by floor-to-ceiling windows ... The well-heeled buyer should not lack any amenity in the lofts designed by the architect Carlos Zwick. The bathroom is equipped with fine fittings and natural stone floors. The washbasins are made of painted rust steel. The mirror extends from one wall to the other. The Instabus system , installed as standard, can raise the blinds at the push of a button or via the Internet or switch on the microwave and oven. The luxury costs: 360,000 euros for a loft apartment of 145 square meters on the fourth floor, including underground parking space. The first owners should move in in March 2004. "

This is how Rita Gudermann describes a model loft in the new building in 2003.

The Baptist congregation found a home on the second floor of this backyard factory building. On November 12, 1950, the inauguration ceremony was held in the community hall. In 1982 the congregation moved to the newly built church at Matternstrasse 17/18.

Practice and residential building (Kadiner Str. 23)

The building

The residential and practice building at Kadiner Straße 23 / Hildegard-Jadamowitz-Straße 20 with the Diagnostic-Therapeutic Center (DTZ Berlin) 2019.

The representative residential practice building at Kadiner Strasse 23 / Hildegard-Jadamowitz-Strasse 20 with the futuristically designed sloping corner was specially designed by the architect from 1999 for the needs of the Diagnostic-Therapeutic Center (DTZ Berlin) with its special requirements for nuclear medicine , radiation therapy and radiology Peter Lyssy, who also oversees the construction and functionality there to this day.

In addition to apartments, there are other practices in the building.

A six-storey new building with the same eaves height was brought up to the corner and then at an acute angle to the Hildegard-Jadamowitz-Strasse 21 building on the individually standing five-story old building at Kadiner Strasse 23 .

The V-shaped building is architecturally held together by the cladding of the base and the façades that run towards the corner up to the first floor with turquoise-colored porcelain stoneware panels , interrupted by narrower, horizontally running, light-colored tile strips. The old building on Kadiner Straße is incorporated through the same design of the facade up to below the windows on the ground floor.

The sloping corner is dominated by larger balconies that cantilever further with each floor from the 2nd floor, vertically connected by a central streak that widens upwards and is inclined towards the front. Two pilaster strips that stretch upwards from the base to the eaves and widen upwards , also covered with stainless steel sheet, form the side of this modern corner of Berlin .

Corner entrance of the DTZ 2019.

A six-step, turquoise marbled staircase leads to a platform covered by the cantilevered upper floor and to the semicircular stainless steel sheet-clad vestibule, behind which a revolving door leads to the reception area of ​​the DTZ Berlin. Above the entrance area, the Aesculapian staff with Atomium can be seen on the bright plastered facade between the two towers of the Frankfurter Tor , the logo of the DTZ Berlin as a forge.

The roof ends in a semicircle above the balcony of the top floor. The roof was covered with titanium zinc using the standing seam technique. Its cornice widens towards the corner. A concave curved bay window over four upper floors with adjoining balconies gives the facade in Hildegard-Jadamowitz-Straße a sweeping eastern end.

The roof and courtyard are green.

Some rooms in the main building are radiation-proof. House 2 of the Kadiner Höfe, accessible via a passage at Hildegard-Jadamowitz-Straße 20, was built as a new building for radiation therapy. There are 3 bunkers with linear accelerators .

The DTZ

The Diagnostic-Therapeutic Center Berlin, founded in 1990 by Professor Jürgen Schmidt and Professor Wolfgang Mohnike , the medical director, has been located in the corner house at Kadiner Strasse 23 since 2003

In the self-presentation it says:

“The DTZ Berlin is an ISO 9001 and GMP certified medical care center with a focus on oncology . The facility has four departments that are closely interlinked and technically equipped at the highest level. These include the two diagnostic centers for nuclear medicine and radiology as well as the two therapeutic centers for interventional oncology & radionuclide therapy as well as for radiation therapy. "

Corner entrance of the DTZ Berlin with the logo as a blacksmith work above the entrance - Aesculapian staff with Atomium, flanked by the two towers at Frankfurter Tor.

Around 100 employees work at the DTZ Berlin, including 17 specialists - radiologists, nuclear medicine specialists, radiation therapists, 2 doctors in training, 8 physicists / radiochemists and 42 MTRAs . With more than 55,000 treatment cases per year, a weekly in-house tumor conference and a wide range of high-tech medical devices, the DTZ Berlin is one of the largest oncology-oriented facilities in Germany.

CT, MRI (radiology) or scintigraphy (nuclear medicine) are available to conventionally diagnose "classic" diseases. Ultrasound, X-rays and mammography are also used. With innovative combination methods (hybrid imaging) such as PET / CT, PET / MR, SPECT / CT and SPECT / MR, specific diseases are precisely diagnosed.

Both benign, primarily inflammatory-degenerative diseases and malignant cancer can be treated in a targeted manner at the Center for Radiation Therapy at the DTZ Berlin.

With its own radiochemistry facility, the DTZ Berlin has been able to manufacture the substances required for diagnostic procedures itself since 2009.

Since 2017, the DTZ Berlin has had a drug approval for the "FluTor" tracer , which can also be given to other institutions.

The only outpatient cyclotron in Germany supplies the departments.

The DTZ Berlin was also involved in the field of scientific studies. The first results of the GEPARPET breast cancer study were presented at the high-level European congress EANM in October 2018.

As part of a further training authorization, prospective specialists in nuclear medicine and radiology are trained at the DTZ Berlin. Furthermore, the DTZ Berlin works closely with Berlin hospitals for comprehensive patient care.

In addition to its location at Frankfurter Tor, the DTZ Berlin will open another location at the OZB Onkozentrum Berlin in Köpenick in 2020 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. 10 years of the Rainbow House. Exhibition of the city detectives in the Rainbow House 2002
  2. ^ Kiez-Klub im Regenbogenhaus - Establishment of the Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg youth development fund : 1959–2009 Experienced in Kadiner Straße - 50 years (RAINBOGEN) HAUS. Exhibition of the city detectives in the Rainbow House 2009.
  3. ^ Kiez-Klub im Regenbogenhaus - Establishment of FiPP eV: 20 years Rainbow House in the mirror of the Kiez-Blatt. Exhibition of the city detectives in the Rainbow House and in the Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg Town Hall in 2012
  4. ^ Förderverein des Regenbogenhauses eV, project group headed by Fritz Wollenberg (ed.): Kadiner Straße 9 - A house for children. Experiences from almost 50 years. Berlin 2007.
  5. Landesdenkmalamt Berlin, monument database. Obj.-Doc.-No .: 09045166
  6. Landesdenkmalamt Berlin, monument database. Obj.-Doc.-No .: 09085142
  7. ^ Kiez-Klub im Regenbogenhaus - Establishment of the youth development program Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg (Ed.): Demo in the Kadiner for Tempo 30, no parking and zebra crossing. Kiezblatt, December 1992, pp. 4-5.
  8. Willi Gensch, Dr. Hans Liesigk, Hans Michaelis (editor): The East of Berlin. Berliner Handelsdruckerei, Berlin 1930, p. 289, Fig. 116 Boxhagener Weg and Frankfurter Allee 1889.
  9. ^ Heike Naumann: Historical views from Friedrichshain. Heimatmuseum Friedrichshain 1994, p. 24, photo: Boxhagener Str. / Corner of Kadiner Str. Around 1906.
  10. ^ Heike Naumann: Historical views from Friedrichshain. Heimatmuseum Friedrichshain 1994, p. 24, photo: Kadiner Straße. Around 1925.
  11. ^ Johann Friedrich Geist, Klaus Kürvers: The Berlin tenement house 1945–1989. Prestel-Verlag, Munich 1989, p. 304.
  12. ^ Urban redevelopment Ostkreuz Friedrichshain - public green area between Kadiner and Lasdehner Straße
  13. ^ Urban redevelopment Ostkreuz Friedrichshain - New open spaces for the educational and leisure location around the Ludwig Hoffmann School .
  14. Homepage speregroove
  15. ^ SG NARVA Berlin eV, Chess Department
  16. website ABSV - General Blind and Visually Impaired Association Berlin founded in 1874 e.. V., Friedrichshain district group
  17. ^ Website of the artist
  18. Kiez-Klub in the Rainbow House - establishment of the youth development Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg (Ed.): New colors for the house. In: Kiez-Blatt from June 2006, pp. 5-6.
  19. Web page of FiPP eV - advanced training institute for educational practice
  20. ^ Website of the Rainbow House
  21. Thomas Frey: Under the Rainbow: Children, youth and family center celebrates anniversary. In: Berliner Woche from July 2, 2017.
  22. ^ Letter of congratulations from Helios Mendiburu from October 2002 on the 10th anniversary. In: Kiez-Blatt from January 2003, p. 3
  23. ^ Friedrichshain: Children saved school center. In: Berliner Kurier from September 14, 1991
  24. ^ Kiez-Klub im Regenbogenhaus - Establishment of the youth development program Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg (Ed.): BVV decides: The house Kadiner 9 remains a leisure center. Kiez-Blatt from March 1992, pp. 2-3
  25. ^ Helga König: Ulrike - fairytale theater play. Plöttner-Verlag, Leipzig 2006, ISBN 3-938442-09-3 , ISBN 978-3-938442-09-8
  26. ^ Kiez-Klub im Regenbogenhaus - Establishment of the youth development program Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg (ed.): Children get involved in a child-friendly Friedrichshain. Kiezblatt, December 1992, pp. 2-3
  27. Playground of the Rainbow House - the newly designed area was opened with balloons and lots of fun. December 2008
  28. New open spaces for the educational and leisure location around the Ludwig Hoffmann School
  29. Implementation plan for the outdoor area
  30. Inauguration of the outdoor area of ​​the rainbow children's leisure facility
  31. ^ Kiez-Klub im Regenbogenhaus - Establishment of the youth development program Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg (Ed.): Opinions on the transfer. Kiez-Blatt from September 2009, pp. 2-4.
  32. ^ Kiez-Klub im Regenbogenhaus - Establishment of the youth development program Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg (Ed.): Protests continue. Kiez-Blatt from October 2009, pp. 2–3.
  33. Printed matter - DS / 1572 / III On the transfer of children's and youth leisure facilities of the Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg youth welfare office to independent sponsorship
  34. Kiez-Klub im Regenbogenhaus - Establishment by FiPP eV (Ed.): Everything in the green area - new color for the play area. In: Kiez-Blatt from March 2011, p. 2.
  35. ^ Förderverein des Regenbogenhauses eV, project group headed by Fritz Wollenberg (ed.): Kadiner Straße 9 - A house for children. Experiences from almost 50 years. Berlin 2007.
  36. Rudolf Wendel: I was the site manager. In: 1959–2009 - Experienced in Kadiner Strasse 9 - 50 years (RAINBOGEN) HAUS. Exhibition of the city detectives from the Rainbow House.
  37. A day care center is created in the NAW. In: Bulletin "Der Friedrichshainer" January 1961
  38. ^ Förderverein des Regenbogenhauses eV, project group headed by Fritz Wollenberg (ed.): Kadiner Straße 9 - A house for children. Experiences from almost 50 years. Berlin 2007.
  39. Phantalisa web site
  40. Web page FRIEDA-Frauenzentrum eV
  41. ^ Jan Feustel: Walks in Friedrichshain . Berlin Reminiscences No. 64. Haude & Spener, Berlin 1994, ISBN 3-7759-0357-7 , p. 109.
  42. ^ Jan Feustel: Churches between tenements - architecture and social history of Berlin churches using the example of Friedrichshain. Spreehund Verlag, Berlin 2013, pp. 117–130.
  43. Willi Gensch, Dr. Hans Liesigk, Hans Michaelis (editor): The East of Berlin. Berliner Handelsdruckerei, Berlin 1930, p. 385.
  44. ^ Jan Feustel: Churches between tenements - architecture and social history of Berlin churches using the example of Friedrichshain. Spreehund Verlag, Berlin 2013, pp. 124–126.
  45. Dirk Moldt: The cathedral of Friedrichshain. In: Friedrichshainer Zeitzeiger
  46. Kiez-Klub in the Regenbogenhaus - establishment of the youth development program Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg (Ed.): Are you a time jumper? First reports from the time jump team from the Rainbow House. Kiez-Blatt from February 2004, p. 2.
  47. ^ ND Freizeit July 5, 2000
  48. ^ "Girls' protocols" in the Friedrichshain gallery level 85 taz March 15, 1995
  49. The Berlin K 17 is now celebrating its sixth birthday on March 28, 2005
  50. ^ Andreas Peglau: Wilhelm Reich in Berlin-Friedrichshain. In: Friedrichshainer Zeitzeiger
  51. Stumbling block for Alfred Renzel
  52. ^ Rita Gudermann: Light and luxury in Berlin lofts. In: Tagesspiegel from July 26, 2003
  53. Baptist Places in Berlin and Brandenburg - Alte Wollgarnfabrik
  54. ^ Based on information from the architect Peter Lyssy.
  55. DTZ website
  56. Information brochure of the DTZ Berlin