List of abandoned structures in Lübeck-St. Jurgen

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The list of abandoned structures in Lübeck-St. Jürgen contains buildings in the St. Jürgen 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.

At the Brink

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Am Brink 9 (before 1884: At the Kienräucherhofe, suburb of St. Jürgen ) Wilhelm Theater 1867 1970
WP Wilhelm-Theater outside.jpg

At the airfield

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
At airfield 1 Commanders Villa 1936/37 2014 The commandant's villa of the Hanseaten barracks , which was dissolved in 1993, was ultimately only used as occasional accommodation for road construction teams. The demolition took place in December 2014, as the site is to be renatured as part of the compensatory measures for the construction of the new section of federal highway 207 in this area.
WP Kommandantenvilla.jpg

Backerstrasse

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Bäckerstrasse 1b Society House St. Jürgen 1881 1981 The building was last owned by the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Lübeck.
WP Bäckerstraße 1b.jpg

Beidendorfer Hauptstrasse

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Beidendorfer Hauptstrasse House Harms 1785 or earlier 1928
WP House Harms.jpg

Blankenseer Strasse

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Blankenseer Strasse 101 Lübeck Airport warehouse 1916 2017 The warehouse was the last remaining structure of the original Prussian military flight school. It was canceled in mid-September 2017.
WP warehouse at Lübeck Airport.jpg

Brömbsenmühle

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Brömbsenmühle 1 Brömbsen windmill Multiple construction dates; last mill from 1827 1973/1993; The ruin still exists The Brömbsen windmill consisted of several windmills that were built one after the other in close proximity to one another. How many mills there were is just as unclear as the precise locations and designs of the older buildings, as the documents do not allow any clear conclusions. In 1760/61 a Krummesser windmill was mentioned for the first time, the origins of which cannot be determined. New buildings could have been built in 1784 and 1801, but there is no ultimate certainty. Only the last mill is clearly tangible, a Dutch windmill built in 1827 . The mill, which had been shut down for a long time, burned down in 1973, the charred wooden skeleton collapsed in January 1993. The octagonal ground floor made of brickwork is still in ruins.
WP Brömbsen-Windmühle.jpg

Fairy meadow

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Feenwiese 20 (before 1884: rescue house on the third fisherman's hut ) Rescue house 1846/47 1901 In place of the old third fisherman's hut , a dilapidated fisherman's cottage on the Wakenitz , the rescue house was built as a rescue house (home) for neglected children and adolescents based on the model of the Rauhe Haus . The building burned down in 1901 when a pupil was set on fire. At the same place a new building was built, which today belongs to the Wakenitzhof children's and youth home .
WP Rescue House 3 Fischerbuden.jpg

Friedrichstrasse

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Friedrichstrasse 22 Friedrich-Franz-Halle 1928 The excursion restaurant with a hall was demolished for the construction of a residential complex that still exists today.
WP Friedrich-Franz-Halle.jpg

Geniner Street

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Geniner Strasse 54 Voss House and Villa Kunterbunt 19th century KW 34 2010 Once known as the “Voss-Haus” restaurant. Standing directly on Berliner Platz , it was almost exclusively known in Lübeck under the synonym Villa Kunterbunt , since it recently housed a widely popular restaurant of this name .
HL Damals - Voss-Haus.jpg

Hüxtertorallee

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Hüxtertorallee without number Entrance gate of the St. Anne's cemetery 1808 1952 The classicist gate was built in 1808 when the St. Anne's cemetery was expanded. There have been no more burials in the cemetery since 1868, and between 1898 and 1900 a large part of the cemetery area was reshaped with excavated earth from the construction of the Elbe-Lübeck Canal and converted into a park, but the gate remained in its location. In 1952, when the Mühlentorplatz was rebuilt, the Hüxtertorallee was laid over the former cemetery; a tree that was felled fell on the gate and smashed it, with which the last visible remnant of the St. Anne's cemetery disappeared.
WP St-Annen-Kirchhof.jpg
Hüxtertorallee 4 Boathouse of the Lübeck Rowing Society from 1885 1902 1979 The clubhouse of the rowing club was demolished in order to build a new building in the same place.
WP LRG-Bootshaus.jpg
Hüxtertorallee 26 Mill Gate Pavilion probably 1894 1955 The half-timbered house at the tram stop housed public toilets and was probably built in the course of the electrification of the line in 1894. In 1955 it was demolished and a successor building built in the style of the 1950s, which is still there today.
WP Mühlentor Pavilion 1905.jpg
Hüxtertorallee 41 Children's hospital 1859 1952 The children's hospital based on the Hamburg model was built thanks to a foundation set up by Victorine Boissonnet in 1856 and opened in May 1859. In 1913 the children's hospital was relocated to Kahlhorststrasse and from then on the building served as a residential and commercial building. The demolition took place in 1952; the new residential building built on the property the following year still exists today.
WP Children's Hospital Lübeck.jpg

Krog

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Krog 2 1755 1926 The half-timbered barn, built by Johann Iwe (according to the inscription above the gate Iohann Iwee ), belonged to the old homestead Iwe , the main house of which was destroyed by fire in autumn 1986.
WP Scheune Vorrade.jpg

Kronsford Avenue

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Kronsford Allee 25 (before 1884: suburb of St. Jürgen on Hamburger Chaussee ) Colosseum or Coliseum 1875 1972 The buildings of the old Colosseum were replaced by a block of flats during a renovation between 1972 and 1974; the actual concert hall was retained and integrated into the new building.
WP Coliseum Lübeck 1902.jpg

Kronsford Highway

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Kronsford Landstrasse 60-68 Hansa brick factory 1920 2013 The brick factory, which was closed in 2005 and was founded in 1920 as the steam brick factory Röthebeck, Cronsford Chaussee, owned by Carl Beckmann , was demolished in October and November 2013.
WP Hansa-Ziegelei.jpg

Ratzeburger Allee

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Ratzeburger Allee 24 Adlershorst , formerly Hornung's garden house Early 19th century 1951 The building was originally built by Joseph Christian Lillie as a summer house , later became an inn and served as a forced laborer accommodation during the Second World War. In 1951 the house was demolished to make room for the expansion of a DKW car dealership with an attached workshop, which had previously used part of the property. Today there is a supermarket at this point.
WP Adlershorst HL.jpg
Ratzeburger Allee 29 (before 1884: on the "white angel", suburb of St. Jürgen ) White angel 1910 The White Angel was one of the oldest inns in Lübeck and has been traceable since the late Middle Ages; its earliest documented name is Taterkrug (Zigeunerkrug), around 1800 it was called Blauer Engel and from 1828 (with an interruption in 1911 when it was briefly named Heinrichshof ) until the establishment closed in 1966, Weißer Engel . From 1910 the restaurant was located in a new building that still exists today.
WP White Angel HL.jpg
Ratzeburger Allee 75 (before 1884: on the "large vineyard", suburb of St. Jürgen ) To the vineyard 2nd half of the 1980s The former excursion restaurant no longer exists, but the adjacent Weinbergstrasse named after it has kept its name
WP Weinberg Lübeck.jpg
Ratzeburger Allee 50-74 1952 2014/15
Lübeck Ratzeburger Allee 011.JPG
Ratzeburger Allee 47b-51c 1952 2019 The demolition of the clinker apartment blocks on the north side of Ratzeburger Allee, staggered in two rows, began on January 17, 2019.
WP Ratzeburger Allee 47-51.jpg

Ratzeburger Landstrasse

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Ratzeburger Landstrasse 2 (before 1884: on the Grönauerbaum, suburb of St. Jürgen ) Grönau tree Late 18th century 1990 The plastered half-timbered building was on the old border of the Lübeck territory. The border post got its name from the barrier that blocked the road leading to Grönau . As part of his remuneration, the tree man also held the jug justice, so that the customs house was always an inn at the same time. The last of a series of customs houses standing here was built in the late 18th century, was run as an inn until the 1960s, then stood empty and fell into disrepair. Before the renovation, decided in the late 1980s, could be carried out, the dilapidated building collapsed in a storm on January 26, 1990 and was completely destroyed in the process. In the same place today there is a new building built in 1995, which is based on the old house in terms of appearance and dimensions.
WP Grönauer Baum.jpg

Wakenitzstrasse

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Wakenitzstrasse 38 Asylum 1786 1972 The insane asylum , founded in 1786, was in its original domicile until the Strecknitz sanatorium was set up in 1912. Afterwards, the building was extensively remodeled, which also included a new facade, transformed into a residential building and demolished in 1972.
WP Insane Asylum.jpg

Wulfsdorfer Weg

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Wulfsdorfer Weg 90 Syringe house 2017 The syringe house of the Wulfsdorf-Vorrade fire brigade was demolished in December 2017 after an acute risk of collapse was determined for the roof in February of the same year.
Spritzenhaus Lübeck-Wulfsdorf 2011.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

Web links

Commons : Former buildings in Lübeck  - collection of images, videos and audio files