Long country road
Long country road | |
---|---|
Street in Bremerhaven | |
Basic data | |
city | Bremerhaven |
district | Leherheide, Lehe |
Created | around |
Cross streets | Horse bathing, Hermann-Legenhusen-Str., Krummahlen, Anton-Biehl-Str., Leibnizstr., Großer Blink, Twischlehe, Lipperkamp, Auf der Tötje, Claus-Groth-Str., Cherbourger Str. , Heideweg, Parkstrasse , Vor dem Grabensmoor , Saarbrücker Str., Debstedter Weg , Bramskampweg, Ottweilerstr., An der Königsheide |
use | |
User groups | Cars, bikes and pedestrians |
Road design | four lane road |
Technical specifications | |
Street length | 2400 meters |
The Langener Landstrasse is a historic street in Bremerhaven , districts of Lehe and Leherheide .
It leads in a south-north direction from Flötenkiel / Stresemannstrasse to Leher Landstrasse in Langen and on to Cuxhaven .
It is divided into the sub-areas:
- Flute Quill to Cherbourger Strasse and
- Cherbourger Straße to the border and the Leher Landstraße in Langen.
The cross streets were named as flute keel after the flute shape (mouthpiece: keel = wedge) of the tapering streets, horse baths after a former horse bath, Hermann-Legenhusen-Straße after the patron who donated land on the flute keel to the city, Krummahlen (?), Anton -Biehl-Strasse after the freedom fighter (1788-1835) in the fight against the French (1813) in Lehe on the Franzosenbrücke, Leibnizstrasse after the philosopher and mathematician Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz , Großer Blink, here major demonstrations took place around 1953 because of the construction of Apartments for the US Army, Twischlehe after the location between Leherheide and Lehe, Lipperkamp (floor name), Auf der Tötje (floor name), Claus-Groth-Straße after the Low German poet Klaus Groth , Cherbourger Straße to Cherbourg , the French godfather town of Bremerhaven , Heideweg after the heather to which it leads, Parkstrasse to the neighboring Speckenbütteler Park , Before the Grabensmoor (field name), Saarbrücke r road to the city of Saarbrücken , Debstedter Weg to the place to which it leads, Bramskampweg (field name), Ottweilerstraße to the small town in Saarland and An der Königsheide to the district of Leherheide and the former Heide to which the road leads and through which the To have ridden King of Hanover ; otherwise see the link to the streets.
history
The Langener Landstrasse was named after the northern municipality of Langen , where it leads to.
development
Leherheide was a place with individual farms. Farm workers from Mecklenburg who worked in the port settled here in 1846. Around 1900 there was a settlement around Langener Landstrasse with a center at the intersection with Debstedter Weg .
The road became the most important route from the north to Lehe. The street belonged to Reichsstraße 6 from 1937 and was then Bundesstraße 6 until the end of the 1970s . With the opening of the A 27 motorway , the B 6 was replaced as a federal trunk road.
In 1971 Leherheide became a district. Since 1974 there has been a feeder from the A27 motorway via Cherbourger Straße to Wurster Straße and into the ports as well as to Langener Landstraße.
traffic
The tram was electrified by 1908. Since 1919 the extended tram line 2 of the Bremerhaven transport company (VGB) ran via Speckenbüttel through the road to Langen-Friedrichsruh and from 1961 to 1982 to the city limits. In 1961, the tram and bus station opened on the city limits of Langen.
Today (2018) the BremerhavenBus bus lines operated by Verkehrsgesellschaft Bremerhaven AG (VGB) operate here in parts or entirely .
No. | route |
---|---|
501 | (from Parkstraße) Schnellbus Leherheide West - City Administration - City Center - Central Station - Grünhöfe - Wulsdorf , Bahnhofstr. |
502 | (from Parkstraße) Leherheide West - Lehe - city center - main station - green courtyards |
503 | Leherheide West - City Administration - Central Station - Surheide |
505 | Wulsdorf - Central Station - Rotersand - City Center - Langen - Debstedt |
506 | Wulsdorf - Central Station - City Center - Rotersand - Langen |
511 | (from Parkstraße) Express bus: Leherheide Ost - Rotersand - city center - Wulsdorf |
Buildings and facilities
On the street there are mostly one-, two- and three-story residential and commercial buildings as well as petrol stations and businesses.
Architectural monuments
- No. 45: Bremerhaven-Langener Landstrasse water tower from 1885 based on plans by Walter Pfeffer, the third oldest of four water towers in Bremerhaven, which was in operation until 1996 and is now privately owned.
Notable buildings
- No. 18–22: 2-sch. Newer bank of the Weser-Elbe Sparkasse - Flötenkiel branch
- No. around 128–160 at Twischlehe: Several markets such as Aldi , Lidl , Netto , Penny and a bowling hall
- Around no. 173/210 and 225/226: Railway bridge from 1896 on the Bremerhaven – Cuxhaven railway line over Langener Landstrasse / Cherbourgstrasse.
- No. 237: 2-sch. Postbank banking house
- No. 248: Ev. Luth. Johanneskirche from 1936 (reconstruction according to plans by the Westphal office) and parish of Speckenbüttel ; Municipal house from 1958.
- No. 266: 3-sch. older residential and commercial building from (?) with the Heide pharmacy at the main intersection of Debstedter Weg
- No. 271: 3-sch. Newer residential and commercial building with the social station of the German Red Cross
- No. 277: 2-sch. Newer residential and commercial building with the Albatros pharmacy
- No. 299: 2-sch. modern residential building
literature
- Harry Gabcke , Renate Gabcke, Herbert Körtge, Manfred Ernst: Bremerhaven in two centuries; Volumes I to III from 1827 to 1991. Nordwestdeutsche Verlagsgesellschaft, Bremerhaven 1989/1991, ISBN 3-927857-00-9 , ISBN 3-927857-37-8 , ISBN 3-927857-22-X .
Individual evidence
- ^ Herbert Körtge: The street names of the seaside town of Bremerhaven .
- ^ Jens U. Schmidt: Water towers in Bremen and Hamburg. Hanseatic water towers . Regia-Verlag, Cottbus 2011, ISBN 978-3-86929-190-1 .
- ↑ Nordsee-Zeitung of February 22, 2005: Dickskädel as a store keeper .
- ^ Monument database of the LfD: 3381
Coordinates: 53 ° 35 ′ 0 ″ N , 8 ° 35 ′ 53 ″ E