Lammertwiete

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The Lämmertwiete

The Lämmertwiete is a street in the old town of Hamburg-Harburg . In with cobblestones cobblestone pedestrian street, numerous dining establishments have settled.

location

Half-timbered house on Lämmertwiete 9

The Lämmertwiete is 100 meters long and runs parallel to federal highway 73 . It is limited to the west by Neue Straße and to the east by Schloßmühlendamm .

Edge development and history

In the Lämmertwiete 2009

The road itself was laid out around 1650. The buildings erected along the Lämmertwiete in the following years are the last half-timbered houses in Harburg that have remained almost closed. The simple, eaves-standing structures were typically built for the lower middle class. The oldest building at house number ten was built around 1536 and another storey was added in 1622. The houses number two and four were built in 1716, the house number six in 1719. These are mostly reproductions. The Mayrsche Haus at number 14 also dates from the 17th century. It had previously been on the Kleiner Schippsee.

The gabled house number nine, built in 1683, is the former council pharmacy. House number twelve replaced a house that was demolished in 1967 and originally built in the 17th century. House number 47, built in the mid-17th century, has a cantilevered truss gable with stained walls and a two-story Utlucht with gable. This house is the most representative surviving structure in the group of buildings.

In 1975, the Harburg District Office, the Office for Monument Protection, the Association for the Promotion of Harburg Old Town, together with the landowners, decided to redesign the street into a pedestrian zone. During the following construction work, four of the original twelve buildings were more or less preserved. Four houses were faithfully reproduced, the rest of the original substance was lost. Today, a large part of the building is used in particular for gastronomic purposes.

Web links

Commons : Lämmertwiete  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Lämmertwiete. Hamburg Tourismus, accessed on May 14, 2020 .
  2. Lars Hansen: At the Lämmertwiete at half past twelve. Hamburger Abendblatt, May 28, 2018, accessed on May 14, 2020 .
  3. all information on architecture taken from: Ralf Lange : Architektur in Hamburg - The great architecture guide . 1st edition. Junius Verlag, Hamburg 2008, ISBN 978-3-88506-586-9 , p. 309 .
  4. ^ Franklin Kopitzsch , Daniel Tilgner (ed.): Hamburg Lexikon. 4th, updated and expanded special edition. Ellert & Richter, Hamburg 2010, ISBN 978-3-8319-0373-3 , p. 424.

Coordinates: 53 ° 27 '48.3 "  N , 9 ° 58' 52.1"  E