List of abandoned structures in Lübeck-St. Gertrud

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The list of abandoned structures in Lübeck-St. Gertrud contains buildings in the St. Gertrud district of Lübeck that no longer exist.

The buildings are sorted according to street names and house numbers, whereby - except in exceptional cases - the current street layout and the house numbering scheme used today are used as a basis.

Buildings without street allocation

designation Location Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Wakenitzhorst Huntenhorst Eastern shores of Wakenitz at the height of Müggenbusch 1759 1961 The former fishing nest was demolished after the last resident moved into a new apartment in 1961 and subsequent use failed due to the requirements of water protection .
Wakenitzhorst Second fishing booth Eastern bank of the Wakenitz on today's railway line to Bad Kleinen 1672 1910 At the beginning of the 19th century an excursion economy was established here, which enjoyed great popularity; after a fire in 1830 the second fisherman's hut was not rebuilt and abandoned; In 1870, the railway line to Bad Kleinen was laid across the site, and in 1910 the last remaining buildings were demolished, so that today there are no more traces of this eyrie.
WP Second fishing booth 1870.jpg

At the cornfield

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
At the cornfield 2 Johannes-Kepler-Realschule (ex Marli-Mittelschule ) and Lübeck observatory 1957 Demolished in early 2017
Lübeck observatory in autumn.jpg

At the Burgfeld

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Am Burgfeld 6/7 Hindenburghaus 1956 Erected as a villa for the family of consul Carl Müller in the second half of the 19th century by Heinrich Thormann , acquired by the Landeskriegerverband in 1924 and called Hindenburghaus in January 1925 , expanded in 1926 with a hall building in Art Deco style, 1936 military district command; after 1939: military hospital; 1945: Reception camp for foreigners, then Varieté Atlantic , demolished for the court house (Lübeck)
Hindenburghaus 1926.jpg

Ballastkuhle (formerly ballastkuhl )

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Ballast well 3 Ballastkuhle restaurant 1799 1929 The Ballastkuhle restaurant on the banks of the Trave was originally a Krughaus built in 1799. It stood empty from 1923 until it was demolished in 1929. The name of the street - of which only a stub about 60 meters long is left today, as the rest was added to an industrial site - was changed in 1857 from the original spelling Ballastkuhle to Ballastkuhl ; In the Lübeck address book, the name of the restaurant was written accordingly, but it was actually still called Ballastkuhle and was also recorded that way in the official telephone books. After there had been no houses at all on Ballastkuhl street since 1942, the name was changed again when a building was erected there at the end of the 1950s, namely back to Ballastkuhle .
WP Restaurant Ballastkuhle.jpg

Buchenweg

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Buchenweg 29 Farmer's cottage Late 18th century 2000 The thatched Israelsdorfer Kate , which is under monument protection and last housed an inn called Bauernkate , burned down as a result of a short circuit.
WP Buchenweg 29 - Israelsdorf.jpg

Burgfeld

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Burgfeld (without address) Singing Festival Hall July 1887 August 1887 Erected for the 10th Lower Saxony Choir Festival, July 30th to August 2nd, 1887
HL Damals - Sängerfesthalle.jpg
Reserve Hospital III ; from 1920 on the Burgfeld (barracks) Barracks hospital 1914 1952 (last remaining barracks) The war management of the IX. At the beginning of the First World War , the Army Corps from Altona had the largest hospital of the corps built on the Lübeck Burgfelde , which was to be the largest in Germany during this war. The hospital received its own tram connection on the site for patient transport. The term "barracks hospital" was established for the hospital .
HL Damals - Bl Anschluss.jpg

Gertrudenstrasse

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Gertrudenstrasse 3 1820s Winter 1904/05 The former summer house of Senator Georg Heinrich Nölting
WP summer house Nölting.jpg
Gertrudenstrasse 5 around 1820 Winter 1904/05 The former summer house of Councilor Röttger Ganslandt
WP summer house Ganslandt.jpg

Hafenstrasse

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Hafenstrasse 52 1893/94 1997 At first the building was a seaman's home. In 1985, the Diakonisches Werk converted it into accommodation for asylum seekers. It became known worldwide through the Lübeck arson attack in January 1996. The building was demolished in December 1997.
HL Back then - Hafenstrasse 52.jpg

Hasselbruchweg

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Hasselbruchweg 2-4 Gesellschaftshaus Israelsdorf or Gesellschaftshaus Muuß 1969 The restaurant closed on December 31, 1968 and was demolished the following year.
WP Gesellschaftshaus Muuß Israelsdorf.jpg

Holy Spirit Camp

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Holy Spirit Camp 1 Omnibus hall 1938-43 1998 Construction of of building director Hans Pieper designed Omnibus hall of Stadtwerke Lübeck that the bus and tram depot at the Roeckstraße belonged, began in April 1938. Although the concrete foundations in October 1939 had been completed and it has started construction of the iron hall construction, but after At the topping-out ceremony on December 23, construction work had to be stopped due to the war. They were only continued in September 1942; the hall was completed in the summer of 1943, but not yet ready for use due to operational restrictions. After the end of the war, the bus shed was initially confiscated by the British occupying forces, was only released again in 1952 and from then on used to house the bus fleet for the following decades. After the transport company had moved to a new depot, the hall was demolished in 1998 to make space for the site to be rebuilt.
WP Omnibus Hall Lübeck.jpg

Jerusalem Mount

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Mount Jerusalem 1–3 Smallpox court around 1820 1965 The excursion business did not get its name from an infirmary , but from an old farm with the Low German name Poggenhof , where Poggen means something like toads . In 1965 the Pockenhof was demolished to make room for the construction of the vocational Dorothea Schlözer School, which was completed in 1970.
WP Pockenhof.jpg

Rabbit Mountain Path

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Rabbit Mountain Rabbit Mountain Mill 1st half of the 18th century Probably 1857 The Galerieholländer windmill was originally built as an oil mill , but during its existence it was also used as a grain mill , grist mill and for the production of iron goods, medicines , paints, tan and starch . On October 15, 1857, an interested party applied to the Senate to purchase the mill for the extraction of building materials for demolition. Presumably, the request was granted, as the rabbit mountain mill is no longer mentioned from the following period.
WP Rabbit Mountain Mill.jpg

Schulstrasse

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Schulstrasse 4 Asylum for the deaf and the blind 1838 1874
WP for the deaf-mute institution Lübeck.jpg

Travemünder Allee (until 1936 Israelsdorfer Allee )

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Leaving town on the right of Travemünder Allee at the confluence with Adolfstrasse gallows middle Ages 1750 The medieval gallows, a massive brick structure with five towers, was demolished in 1750 and replaced by a simpler new building. In 1794 the place of execution was relocated to today's Rabenstrasse.
WP Lübeck gallows.jpg

Travemünder Landstrasse (until 1914 Travemünder Chaussee )

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Travemünder Landstrasse (without house number; on today's Herreninsel ) Men's ferry Probably 16th or 17th century 1905 Since the opening of the Herrenbrücke in 1902, the ferry house of the Herrenfähre has served exclusively as an excursion restaurant. On August 5, 1905, the building burned down as a result of a lightning strike.
WP Herrenfähre 1899.jpg
Travemünder Landstrasse 81 Herrenbrücke restaurant 1960 The excursion restaurant at the entrance to the old men's bridge over the Trave, built in 1901/02, had to give way to the access ramp for the new men's bridge built in 1960-64 .
WP Restaurant Herrenbrücke.jpg
Herrenbrücke 1901/02 1964 The swing bridge over the Trave, opened on April 2, 1902, replaced the men's ferry, first mentioned in 1190 . On April 24, 1909, she was badly damaged by the Finnish steamer Baltic ; During the repairs, which took several months, the old ferry platform was put back into service. The swing bridge was dismantled after the completion of the new men's bridge built between 1960 and 64.
WP Alte Herrenbrücke.jpg
Herrenbrücke 1960-64 2005/2006 The successor to the first Herrenbrücke was the largest bascule bridge in Europe for years, but suffered chronically from a lack of technical reliability, construction weaknesses, unfavorable dimensions of the clearance height when closed and severe signs of aging. It has been replaced by a toll tunnel.
Herrenbruecke240803.jpg

Forest road

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Waldstrasse 2-4 Israelsdorfer Forsthalle 1896 1971 The excursion restaurant with a large event hall was built by the city of Lübeck itself; important was the intention to have a venue for school outings and similar occasions that was completely under the control of the city authorities. In 1971 the forest hall, which always remained the property of the city, was demolished in order to expand the zoo .
WP Forsthalle Israelsdorf.jpg
Lübeck, Schleswig-Holstein - Israelsdorf Forest Hall (Zeno Postcards) .jpg
Waldstrasse 41-43 Twiehaus before 1742 2013 The building, first mentioned in a document in 1742 and fully licensed since 1743, was the oldest and last existing of five large tourist restaurants in Israelsdorf ; As early as 1782, the then owner Arnold Hornemann set up a coffee house here. Since 1921 it has been owned by the Twiehaus family after it had previously had 10 different operators under changing names. Since the gastronomic business was no longer profitable, the Twiehaus closed in April 2013 and demolition began on June 11th.
WP Twiehaus 1900.jpg
Waldstrasse 52 Under the linden trees 1907 The Israelsdorf excursion restaurant burned down on October 10, 1907.
WP Unter den Linden - Israelsdorf.jpg
Waldstrasse 52 Lindenhof 1911 1961 The Lindenhof Society House was the successor to the Unter den Linden restaurant that burned down in 1907 . It was demolished in 1961 so that a nursing home with the same name could be built in its place.
WP Lindenhof.jpg

literature

  • Wilhelm Brehmer : Contributions to the building history of Lübeck. In: ZVLGA
  • Wilhelm Brehmer: Lübeck house names. Lübeck 1890
  • F. [riedrich] Bruns: Lübeck. A guide through the Free and Hanseatic City and its immediate surroundings. With drawings by Otto Ubbelohde . Lübeck no year
  • Ilsabe von Bülow: Joseph Christian Lillie (1760-1827) . Berlin 2008. ISBN 978-3-422-06610-6
  • Theodor Hach : The beginnings of the Renaissance in Lübeck. Lübeck 1889
  • Adolf Holm : Lübeck, the free and Hanseatic city. Bielefeld and Leipzig 1900
  • Gustav Lindtke: Old Lübeck city views. Catalog of the pages of the St. Anne's Museum up to 1914. Lübecker Museumhefte, Heft 7, Lübeck 1968
  • Willibald Leo von Lütgendorff-Leinburg : Lübeck at the time of our grandfathers. Lübeck 1906.
  • Max Metzger : The old secular architecture of Lübeck. 424 illustrations on 120 panels and 83 text images. Charles Coleman publishing house in Lübeck, undated (1911)
  • Rudolf Struck: The old bourgeois house in Lübeck. Lübeck 1908
  • Without statement of responsibility: Guide through Lübeck. B. [ernhard] Nöhring, Lübeck o. J.
  • City Papers ; Formerly an illustrated supplement to the Lübeck advertisements
  • From Lübeck's towers ; Formerly an illustrated supplement to the Lübeck General-Anzeiger
  • Jan Zimmermann: St. Gertrud 1860–1945. A photographic foray. Bremen 2007 ISBN 978-3-86108-891-2 .

Web links

Commons : Former buildings in Lübeck-St. Gertrud  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Demolition of the Kepler School has started , hl-live from January 2, 2017, accessed on January 2, 2017
  2. The former Múller houses , in Vaterstädtische Blätter 1924/25 ( digitized version ), p. 38