List of abandoned structures in Lübeck-St. Lorenz North

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The list of abandoned structures in Lübeck-St. Lorenz Nord contains buildings in the Lübeck district of St. Lorenz Nord 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.

Federal motorway 1

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Bundesautobahn 1 (originally Reichsautobahn Hamburg-Lübeck ) Lübeck motorway rest area 1937 1970 The rest area, about 700 meters west of the Lübeck junction (now Lübeck-Zentrum) on both sides of the motorway, included a rest area and a gas station. In the post-war period, the petrol station and the service area were assigned to the Herrendamm south of the autobahn, but had no house numbers. In the middle of 1970 the system was completely and without replacement removed.
Motorway Service Area Lübeck - 1968.jpg

Einsiedelstraße (originally Einsegelstraße)

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Einsiedelstrasse 22 Single sail 18th century 1939 The name is derived from the fact that a hermit ( curia eremitae ) lived at this point on the northern bank of the Trave around 1360 , who also served the ferry here. In the course of the centuries, the term " Einsegel" abated , with the folk etymological derivation that at this point in the river the ships entering the port supposedly had to haul in the sails. Since the 18th century there has been a fully licensed ferry house called Einsegel , which later developed into an excursion restaurant.
WP Einsegel Lübeck - Mahlberg.jpg
WP Einsegel.jpg
Einsiedelstrasse 48 2011 Factory of a wood processing company
HL Back then - Einsiedelstrasse.jpg

Fackenburger Allee (house numbers 9–75 odd and 4–104 even)

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Fackenburger Allee 7–9 1870 1905 The late Classicist villa was built by the then star architect Julius Grube from Lübeck for Ludwig Possehl and was later the residence of Emil Possehl . In 1905 the building had to give way to the construction of the new main train station.
WP Fackenburger Allee 9.jpg
Fackenburger Allee 9 Café Bernhardt 1909 1942 After the completion of the new main station, the Art Nouveau building was built on a remaining part of the property of the Possehl Villa directly on the station bridge and was destroyed in the bombing of 1942.
WP Fackenburger Allee 9 1909-1942.jpg
Fackenburger Allee 10a 18th century 1942
HL Back then - Fackenburger Allee.jpg
Fackenburger Allee 31–43 Old barracks 1869 1976 The first barracks in Lübeck, built by the North German Federation to accommodate the III. Battalion from 2nd Hanseatic Infantry Regiment No. 76 . From the anniversary of Otto von Bismarck's birthday in 1897, Lübeck received its own 3rd Hanseatic regiment . Its 2nd battalion, the 1st had to camp on the green meadow until 1899, moved into the barracks. After the war, as long as the military had withdrawn from Lübeck, the building was used as a police barracks. It later became the "Adolf Hitler Barracks" and, after the Second World War, "Churchill's Baracks".
Barracks InfRgt 162 II. Btl.jpg
Fackenburger Allee 40-42 Lübeck Concert Hall 1901 1942
WP Konzerthaus Lübeck - Nöhring 1908.jpg

Katharinenstraße (until 1911 Catharinenstraße )

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Katharinenstrasse 11 Military hospital 1874 1981 The building was built as a military hospital for the Lübeck garrison and originally had the address Catharinenstraße 17 ; the house numbers in the street were redistributed in 1907. In 1936 the hospital was moved to a new location on Mönkhofer Weg, but the house remained imperial property. In the 1950s it was the seat of a branch of the health department and was then used by the district military replacement office. Until its demolition, it was owned by the Federal Property Administration.
WP Katharinenstrasse 11.jpg

Krempelsdorfer Allee

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Krempelsdorfer Allee? Tattooed shed The tattooed shed in Krempelsdorf (around 1911) was cited as an example of vulgar, intrusive overloading of buildings with advertising messages.
HL Back then - Krempelsdorfer Allee x.jpg

Meierstrasse

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Overpass of Meierstrasse over the tracks of the main station St. Lorenz Bridge (commonlycalled Meier Bridge) 1907 2008 The bridge on which Meierstrasse was led over the station tracks over to Wisbystrasse opposite was too low for the overhead lines that were built during the electrification of the Lübeck-Hamburg line. Therefore, on January 2, 2008, the demolition of the bridge began, which was then replaced by a new construction that was opened to traffic on November 29 of the same year.
St-Lorenz-Bridge.jpg

Schönböckener Strasse

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Schönböckener Strasse 5–11a WFL Beth, machine factory 1887 The dedusting industry company founded in 1887 by the Lübeck industrial pioneer Wilhelm Beth achieved a worldwide reputation. Later it was continued as Beth GmbH, Waisenallee 10, until bankruptcy in 1996.
HL Beth - Letterhead.jpg

Schwartauer Allee

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Schwartauer Allee 1 1942
WP Schwartauer Allee 1.jpg
Schwartauer Allee 2 probably around 1890 2018
WP Schwartauer Allee 2.jpg
Schwartauer Allee 50 (corner of Matthäistraße) Kühlhaus Lübeck AG 1912/13 1987 The cold Lübeck AG still exists as part of the Nordfrost group, and their Luebeck cold stores are still on the site at the Schwartau Avenue. However, the part of the property on the corner of Matthäistraße has meanwhile been developed with a supermarket, and the current address of the cold store complex refers to Katharinenstraße, which borders the area on the opposite side.
WP cold store Lübeck 1931.jpg
Schwartauer Allee 92 Polishing mug 1892 after 1985 The restaurant Zum Polierkrug existed until at least 1975
WP Schwartauer Allee 92.jpg

Steinrader Hauptstrasse

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Steinrader Hauptstrasse (no house number), at the confluence of the Suterland street at the western exit of the town. Steinrader Mill around 1830 1971 The Dutch windmill , built around 1830, was the landmark of the village of Groß Steinrade for a long time . In 1935 the milling operation was stopped and on the evening of March 23, 1971 the mill was destroyed by fire.
WP Windmill Groß Steinrade.jpg

Steinrader Weg

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Steinrader Weg 5 1890 The house built on a previous gardening plot no longer exists.
WP Steinrader Weg 5.jpg

Wisbystrasse

Address and / or location designation Built Destroyed Special features and comments Illustration
Wisbystraße 2 Viehmarkthalle ( station barracks during the First World War ) 1912 1994 Erected as a stable hall for the livestock and breeding market; Architect: Carl Mühlenpfordt . During the First World War, recruiting barracks for the Reserve Regiment of Infantry Regiment No. 84 . Until 1979 cattle market hall, then until 1984 guard of the volunteer fire brigade in the city center and finally until it was destroyed by a fire on July 23, 1994 camp of the Office for Prehistory.
WP station barracks Lübeck 2.jpg
Wisbystraße 2 Käselau restaurant 1913 1997 The restaurant shared the address with the cattle market hall on the same property (on the photo on the right).
WP Restaurant Käselau.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. Published by Charles Coleman 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