List of abandoned structures in Lübeck-St. Lorenz South
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The list of abandoned structures in Lübeck-St. Lorenz Süd contains buildings in the Lübeck district of St. Lorenz Süd 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.
Post office 2 at the main station (often incorrectly referred to as the main post office due to its location , although Lübeck never had a main post office) was expanded in 1963 and had been vacant since 1994.
At the train station 7
Hotel Neuer Bahnhof
1908
after 1945
In the picture on the right in May 1915 in the background with the departure of (replacement) troops.
At the train station 11
Residential and commercial building
before 1913
1942
Flower Street
Address and / or location
designation
Built
Destroyed
Special features and comments
Illustration
Bakery booths , later gardeners' cottages
1585 or a little later
1959
In 1585 the Lübeck bakers were given a city-owned area in front of the Holsten Gate by the council, where they could create eleven pig pens and fatten pigs with unsold bread. As accommodation for the pig herders and their families, an eaves row building with small apartments was built immediately to the northwest of today's Lindenplatz , which was originally called baker's shack , but later, when the area was used by gardeners, was known as gardeners' cottages . Due to its horticultural use, the short street running here was named Blumenstraße when it was dedicated in 1887 . In 1959 the Blumenstrasse was closed and the gardeners' cottages were demolished to make way for the post office to be built.
The building last housed a brothel. Franz Kafka once moved to the hotel right next to the railway tracks of the main train station during his stopover in the city in 1914. In his records he incorrectly stated it as the Hotel Schützenhaus . After one night he moved to the Hotel Kaiserhof on the Untertrave.
Fackenburger Allee 5 (before 1884: Bürger-Schützenhof, suburb of St. Lorenz )
Rebuilt several times since it was founded in 1558. Canceled for the construction of the new main station.
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.
The late classicist villa on the corner of Hansestraße and Lindenplatz was demolished on May 2, 2018 to make room for a new building at the central bus station.
Lindenplatz 7 (before 1884: suburb of St. Lorenz on the way to the side courtyard )
Café Lindenpavillion
19th century
1960
The building was originally owned by Johann Carl Joseph von Melle (1782–1860), pastor of St. Lorenz , and was the residence of his widow after his death. It later came into the possession of a teacher named Hupe , with whom Thomas Mann presumably sublet in the spring and summer of 1892. After the gastronomic use in the first half of the 20th century, the house housed the office and archive of the Landsmannschaft West Prussia in Lübeck after the Second World War , until it was demolished for the construction of a post office.
Lindenstrasse
Address and / or location
designation
Built
Destroyed
Special features and comments
Illustration
Lindenstrasse 19
Heinrich Jacobsen colonial goods
after 1871
Most of the house has been removed: The upper floors were removed at a point in time that has not yet been determined and the remaining ground floor was provided with a roof, so that today only a ground floor building remains.
Built in 1906 in Art Nouveau form as an operetta theater Hansa-Theater , converted into a cinema Hansatheater-Lichtspiele in 1925 , renamed Delta-Palast in 1929 and Holstentor-Lichtspiele from 1952 until the closure in 1980
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 / Leipzig 1900
Gustav Lindtke: Old Lübeck city views. Catalog of the pages of the St. Anne's Museum up to 1914. (= Lübecker Museumhefte. Issue 7). Lübeck 1968.
Max Metzger : The old secular architecture of Lübeck. Charles Coleman publishing house in Lübeck, undated (1911) (424 illustrations on 120 plates and 83 text images)
Rudolf Struck: The old bourgeois house in Lübeck. Lübeck 1908.
Without statement of responsibility: Guide through Lübeck. B. [ernhard] Nöhring, Lübeck o. J.
Father Urban Leaves. Formerly an illustrated supplement to the Lübeck advertisements