Lahnstrasse (Bremen)

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Lahnstrasse
coat of arms
Street in Bremen
Basic data
city Bremen
district Neustadt
Created around 1905
Cross streets Hohentorsheerstr., Friedrich-Wilhelm-Str., Langemarckstr., Moselstr., Rheinstr., Isarstr., Donaustr., Delmestr., Illerstr., Biebricher Str., Wiesbadener Str., Bachstr., Friedrich-Ebert-Str.
use
User groups Cars, bikes and pedestrians
Road design two lane road
Technical specifications
Street length 850 meters
Lahnstrasse 27 / Delmestrasse 21
Lahnstrasse 29
Lahnstrasse 31
Delmestrasse 21

The Lahnstraße is a historical street in Bremen , district Neustadt , district Hohentor . It leads in a north-west-south-east direction from Hohentorsheerstraße to Friedrich-Ebert-Straße and turns into Kornstraße .

It is divided into the sub-areas

  • Hohentorsheerstraße to Langemarckstraße and
  • Langemarckstraße to Friedrich-Ebert-Straße / Kornstraße.

The cross streets were named u. a. often after river names (hence river district) and Hessian cities as Hohentorsheerstraße after the earlier high gate in the Bremen city wall , Friedrich-Wilhelm-Straße after Kaiser Friedrich III. , Langemarckstraße (formerly New and Great Avenue (18th century), Small Avenue (1800) and meters of road from 1909) in 1937 according to the site Langemark in the Belgian province of West Flanders , Mosel street, Rhein street, Isar street, Danube street (1905 ), Delme road (before 1903), Iller road, Biebrich road, Wiesbaden street Bachstraße 1873 after the composer Johann Sebastian Bach , Friedrich-Ebert -Straße (from about 1914) to the politician (SPD) and the President; otherwise see the link to the streets.

history

Surname

The road is named in 1905 after the Lahn , a 245.6 km long right and eastern tributary of the Rhine , which is navigable from Gießen .

development

The area on the left bank of the Weser south of the old town was previously referred to as Süderort , and later as Neustadt. From 1623 the fortifications to the left of the Weser were built and removed from 1802. It was not until after 1870 that roads and houses were built in Mittel-Kamp in Feldmark Neuenlande (Nielandt) in the Obervihlandt area , and there was increased development from around 1900. The listed school Delmestraße was inaugurated in 1931.

The air raids in 1944/45 destroyed parts of the old new town; A number of houses on Lahnstrasse were destroyed, mainly in the north-western area. In 1966 the Protestant Hohentorskirche was built according to plans by the architects: Friedrich Schumacher and Claus Hübner.

An action by residents of Lahnstrasse became known, in which in 2017 two large blue stripes were sprayed across the lane at the intersection with Bachstrasse to indicate a dangerous situation and thus to achieve more consideration. In 2000 there was already a similar campaign.

traffic

The Bremen tram touches the street on Langemarckstraße through lines 1 ( Huchting - Mahndorf ) and 8 (Huchting - Schwachhausen ( Kulenkampffallee )) and Friedrich-Ebert-Straße with line 6 ( airport - university ).

In local transport in Bremen, bus routes 26 ( Huckelriede - Walle ), 27 (Huckelriede - Findorff / Weidedamm ) and 63 (Hauptbahnhof ↔ Güterverkehrszentrum (GVZ)) touch the street on Langemarckstraße.

Buildings and facilities

On the street are u. a. two to four storey houses.

Bremen monuments

  • No. 27 ( gable corner house ), 29 (gable house), 31 (house with gable ) and 33 (corner house with hipped roof) of the Lahnstrasse group of houses : 3-storied. plastered residential and commercial buildings from 1905, built for a middle class.

Notable buildings and facilities

Northwest side

  • According to No. 2: 3-sch. Plastered corner house at Friedrich-Wilhelm-Straße 23
  • Friedrich-Wilhelm-Strasse: Many 2-tier. Bremen houses in the north
  • After No. 12 at the corner of Langemarckstraße 141: 3-gesch. brick-built residential and commercial building with a distinctive oriel tower on the corner
  • No. 20: 3-sch. Corner house from around 1960/70
  • No. 24/26: 4-ply Residential and commercial building from around 1970/80
  • No. 34: 2-sch. Bremen house from around 1910
  • No. 44-52: 4-gesch. Residential rental houses from the 1970 / 80s
    • No. 46: 1950 to 1963 Oase - Neustadt a Bremen cinema with 590 seats
  • In front of No. 66 / corner of Delmestraße: 2-storey. Plastered Bremen house with heavily decorated facades and hipped roof
  • Delmestrasse: Many 2-storey. plastered Bremen houses
  • No. 70: 1-sch. plastered house with gable and mansard roof
  • No. 76-90: 2-sch. plastered Bremen houses
  • No. 106: 3-sch. brick-built residential and commercial building from the 1920s on the corner of Friedrich-Ebert-Straße 119

Southeast side

  • No. 1 corner of Hohentorsheerstraße: 4-gesch. plastered houses from the 1980s / 90s
  • No. 5–9: Three 2-sided plastered Bremen houses
  • Moselstrasse: Many 2-storey. plastered and clinkered Bremen houses
  • Rheinstrasse: Many 2-storey. plastered and clinkered Bremen houses
  • No. 21: 3-sch. Plastered residential and commercial building with the Flusshexe restaurant
  • Donaustraße: Many 2-storey. plastered houses in Bremen
  • No. 27 to 33: 3-ply Listed residential buildings (see above)
  • No. 35: 3-sch. Plastered house with two gables and bay windows as well as a gallery in the river district
  • No. 59: 4-sch. plastered house with bay window
  • No. 61: Planned: residential building, previously 3-storey. Furniture store Dete and then for several years until 2014 temporary use as a cultural center
  • Corner of Friedrich-Ebert-Straße 121: 3-storey. Residential and commercial building (café)

See also

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Monument database of the LfD Bremen
  2. Karin Mörtel: Again the intersection painted blue . In: Weser-Kurier of July 3, 2017.
  3. Monument database of the LfD Bremen
  4. Monument database of the LfD Bremen
  5. Monument database of the LfD Bremen
  6. Monument database of the LfD Bremen
  7. Monument database of the LfD Bremen

Coordinates: 53 ° 4 ′ 11 "  N , 8 ° 47 ′ 29"  E