Karl-Marx-Strasse (Bremen)

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Karl-Marx-Strasse
coat of arms
Street in Bremen
Basic data
city Bremen
district Obervieland
Created 1971
Newly designed planned to start in 2019
Cross streets Baumhauser Weg , Hasencleverstrasse, Zechstrasse, Senator-Balcke-Strasse, Senator-Theil-Strasse, Ohserstrasse, Piependamm, Dantzweg, Anna-Seghers-Strasse, Pfarrfeldsweg
use
User groups Cars, bikes and pedestrians
Road design two lane road
Technical specifications
Street length 1150 meters

The Karl-Marx-Strasse is a central access road to Bremen , district Obervieland , district Habenhausen . It leads in a south-north direction from Arster Landstrasse to Friedrich-Engels-Strasse.

The cross streets and connecting streets were named u. a. as Arster Landstrasse after the district Arsten , Baumhauser Weg 1905 after a homestead surrounded by trees , Hasencleverstrasse after the writer Walter Hasenclever (1890-1940), Zechstrasse after the writer Paul Zech (1881-1946), Senator-Balcke-Strasse after the politician and building senator ( SPD ) Alfred Balcke (1894–1972), Senator-Theil-Strasse after the politician (SPD) and building senator Emil Theil (1892–1968), unnamed paths, Ohserstrasse after the draftsman and caricaturist Erich Ohser alias eo plauen (1903–1944 ), Piependamm after a drainage ditch on the border to Feldmark Wümmesiede, unnamed paths, Dantzweg after the school reformer and writer Carl Dantz (1884-1967), Anna-Seghers- Strasse after the writer (1900-1983), Pfarrfeldsweg after a field name for one Field owned by the pastor and Friedrich-Engels- Strasse after the philosopher, social theorist and revolutionary (1820–1895); otherwise see the link to the streets.

history

Surname

Karl Marx 001.jpg

Karl-Marx-Strasse was named around 1978 after the philosopher, economist, social theorist, journalist and protagonist of the labor movement Karl Marx (1818-1883).

Together with Friedrich Engels, he became the most influential theoretician of socialism. The Marxism influenced the history and social sciences as well as economics and political science. The streets named after the two people form a traffic axis.

development

The first settlers of habenhausen were probably Dutch colonists. From 1598 the village belonged to the Goh Obervieland and in 1921 it was incorporated into the city of Bremen. In habenhausen many worked as stone setters and road builders. In 1888 the Bremen Stone Setter Association was founded to represent workers' interests. In 1905 habenhausen had 1281 and in 2009 around 8000 inhabitants.
To the south of the old village of habenhausen, large housing estates with single-family and row houses emerged on the habenhauser Mark after the Second World War, to the east and west of the street, mostly in the 1970s to 1990s.

traffic

In transport in Bremen , the bus drives through 51 ( Huckelriede ↔ Kattenturm Klinikum Links der Weser ) the road.

Buildings and facilities

There are mostly one and two-story houses on the street.

Notable buildings and facilities

West side

  • Bunnsacker Fleet, south of the street at the same time border of the district habenhausen
  • No. 2 to 70: 2-sch. Plastered terraced houses, partly in a row construction across the road.
  • No. 74 to 134: 2-sch. plastered and bricked terraced houses
  • No. 136 to 168a: 2-tiered Single-family houses with flat roofs
  • No- 168: 2-sch. Residential and commercial building
  • No. 170 to 266: 2-ply Terraced houses, partly in row construction
  • No. 268/270: 3-cut. Newer plastered residential and commercial building with a staggered storey and clinker-clinkered basement as a corner building facing Anna-Seghers-Strasse.

East Side

  • No. 3 to 27a: 1-gesch. brick-built single-family houses
  • No. 29 to Piependamm: 1-gesch. Townhouses
  • Engelkestrasse No. 2 / Pieperdamm 35: 1-gesch. Engelkestrasse day care center and playground
  • No. 35 to 81: 1-cut. plastered row houses
  • Corner of Pfarrfeldsweg: four 2- and 3-storeys. newer distinctive residential buildings

See also

literature

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

Individual evidence

  1. Jürgen Hinrichs: At home with Karl Marx . In: Weser-Kurier of April 30, 2018.

Coordinates: 53 ° 2 ′ 27.9 ″  N , 8 ° 51 ′ 1.7 ″  E