List of abandoned buildings in Lübeck
The list of abandoned buildings in Lübeck contains buildings in Lübeck , primarily in Lübeck's old town , which no longer exist. The oldest views are wood and copper engravings. In the 19th century, Carl Julius Milde recorded many buildings in Lübeck with a pencil. The first systematic photographic cityscape recording of Lübeck began around 1843 by the photography pioneer Joseph Wilhelm Pero . Johannes Nöhring , who was active until 1903, continued his work in the last quarter of the 19th century .
The buildings are sorted according to street names and house numbers, whereby - except in exceptional cases - the current street layout and the house number system introduced in 1884 are used as a basis. The previous house number scheme , used since 1796, is not compatible with the current one and cannot be transferred either, as it was based on a completely different counting method.
- Buildings in the area of the Lübeck-Kücknitz district are listed in the list of abandoned buildings in Lübeck-Kücknitz .
- Buildings in the area of the Moisling district are listed in the list of abandoned buildings in Lübeck-Moisling .
- Buildings in the area of the Lübeck-Schlutup district are listed in the list of abandoned buildings in Lübeck-Schlutup .
- Buildings in the area of the St. Gertrud district are in the list of abandoned buildings in Lübeck-St. Gertrud listed.
- Buildings in the area of the St. Jürgen district are on the list of abandoned buildings in Lübeck-St. Jürgen listed.
- Buildings in the area of the St. Lorenz Nord district are on the list of abandoned buildings in Lübeck-St. Lorenz Nord listed.
- Buildings in the area of the St. Lorenz Süd district are on the list of abandoned buildings in Lübeck-St. Lorenz Süd listed.
- Buildings in the area of the district of Travemünde are listed in the list of abandoned buildings in Lübeck-Travemünde .
Buildings without street allocation
designation | Location | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bellevue | Northern end of the Wall Peninsula , on the former bastion Bellevue or Teufelsort | 1851 | 1885 | The popular garden restaurant disappeared when the remains of the bastion were removed for the port expansion. | |
Advertising pillars | 2012 | In March 2012, almost all advertising pillars in the city were removed without replacement. The one at the Moltkebrücke was replaced. The rear one was removed and the front one was its replacement. In the meantime, however, almost all removed advertising pillars have been replaced by next-generation advertising pillars following the conclusion of a new contract, so that the city is again richly equipped with these advertising media and the entry is no longer necessary. |
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Dammannsturm | Wall peninsula , Bastion Dammannsturm (on the site of today's car park opposite the music and congress hall ) | 1854 | 1893 | The soil that had accumulated during the construction of the railway systems from 1850 had been piled up on the Dammannsturm bastion. The resulting artificial hill of 103.5 feet above the mean level of the traverse was included in Lenné's design of the ramparts and, at its highest point, was given this 37 foot high observation tower made of railway sleepers . The official name of the tower was Schwellenturm , but it was changed to Dammansturm. The official name of the hill was Eisenbahnhöhe , but in Lübeck it was only known as Chimborasso . Although this was not as high as its real namesake, it was still an overview of the western half of Lübeck. Because of the view, it was a much-visited place for both Lübeck residents and foreigners. In 1885, the Chimborasso was partially removed in favor of the port expansion, but the rest, including the Schwellenturm, which is very popular in Lübeck, was only removed in 1893 with the entire Dammannsturm bastion. In Ludwig Ewers ' Lübeck novel Die Großvaterstadt , the Dammannsturm appears several times as a setting. With the fall of the ramparts, and thus the tower, the Lübeck Association for the Promotion of Tourism was looking for a replacement for it. Only years later this was created on the tower of the Petrikirche . | |
Olausburg | Not clear; probably on Hüxterdamm | before 1329 | after 1534 | The castle complex with moat, drawbridge and tower lay in ruins in 1560 and was completely demolished in the following period; no remains have been found so far. Their exact location is not known. |
Aegidienstrasse
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aegidienstraße 1 | Klingenberg 678 JohQ. | 1942 | Because of the changes in the course of the street, parceling and house numbering after the destruction of the Second World War, the location of the house does not correspond to today's Aegidienstraße 1. | ||
Aegidienstraße 3, Deutsches Haus | 1903 | 1942 | Due to the changes in the course of the street, parceling and house numbering after the destruction of the Second World War, the location of the house does not correspond to today's Aegidienstraße 3. |
Alfstrasse
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alfstrasse 9 and 11 | Alfstrasse 53 and 54 MQ. | No. 11: Core building from the 13th century, classical facade. No. 11: late 14th century | 1942 | House no. 11 is on the left in the picture, house no. 9 is the adjacent building on the left | |
Alfstrasse 12 | Alfstrasse 43 MQ. | 1942 | until 1884 house of the Adler pharmacy | ||
Alfstrasse 14 and 16 | Alfstrasse 42 and 41 MQ. | 1942 | No. 14 is on the right of the photo; No. 16 is the building on the left. House No. 14 with the Renaissance stepped gable was modernized by the architect Alfred Dinter at the end of the 1930s . | ||
Alfstrasse 22, 24 and 26 (from the right) | Alfstrasse 38, 37 and 36 MQ. | 22 and 26 around 1600, 24 around 1700 | 1942 | Argentine Consulate (Alfstrasse 26) | |
Alfstrasse 29 | Alfstrasse 63 MQ. | Gothic | 1942 | ||
Alfstrasse 35 | Alfstrasse 67 MQ. | 1652 | 1942 |
At the wall
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
At the wall 17, Aalhof bunker | 1941 | 2010 | The high bunker was built in a shape that was based on the brewery water art on Hüxterdamm , which was demolished in 1874 . As with some of the other air raid shelters in Lübeck, brick cladding was planned to further harmonize the exterior and better fit into the cityscape, but this was no longer implemented during the Second World War and was not made up later. | ||
At the wall 51a, Krähenteich bathing establishment | 1900 | 1954 | The outdoor pool at the Krähenteich (which is part of the Wakenitz ) consisted of a long wooden walkway that connected both banks; The wooden buildings on stilts were located above the water on this jetty. In 1954, during a comprehensive renovation of the outdoor pool, the dilapidated old buildings were demolished and replaced by contemporary new buildings on the bank of the old town; However, the footbridge connecting the banks remained until the 1980s, when it was also removed because of dilapidation and not rebuilt. | ||
On the wall 57 | On the wall 767 JacQ. | 1822 | 1898 | The house was built in place of the new customs booth , which connected to the east side of the inner mill gate and which was sold by the city in 1821. The location does not correspond to today's building with the number 57, but rather to the corner house Mühlenbrücke 1 , because the plot of land has now been slightly shifted in this area . | |
On the wall 344 JacQ. , Küterhäuser | First construction no later than 1262 | 1876 | The slaughterhouses, which had existed since the Middle Ages, were built as pile dwellings on the banks of the Wakenitz, which was still considerably wider until the Elbe-Lübeck Canal was built. Its location is no longer recognizable today due to embankments, but it roughly corresponded to the current properties at Fleischhauerstraße 116/118. |
On the Obertrave
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
At the Obertrave 16 | 462 MarQ. | 1803-1804 | 1984 | 1803–04 major renovation by Joseph Christian Lillie for the later mayor of Lübeck Wunderlich . Demolition in favor of the concert hall of the music college. During his time in Lübeck, the captain and later Lieutenant General Albert von Zingler lived in this house . | |
At Obertrave 20, Im Reinfeld | At the Trave 598 MarQ. | 17./18. century | 1938 | The house with the wooden gallery, which is atypical for Lübeck, was located on a piece of land that was originally owned by Reinfeld Monastery . After the demolition, an air raid shelter was built at the same location, the outer shape of which is based on the shape of the demolished building. | |
At Obertrave 58 / Effengrube 13 | 809 MarQ. | Gothic | 1904 | House no.13 (on the right in the picture), which was on the corner of Effengrube, also had house number Effengrube 13. The gothic gabled houses were demolished to make way for a new multi-storey residential building that is still there today is located. Since the south side of the Effengrube was parceled out after the war destruction, the building is now number 7. |
On the Untertrave
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Baumerhaus | 761 MMQ. | 1851 | The building below the Kleine Altefähre , already mentioned at the beginning of the 17th century, was located directly on the banks of the Trave and originally served a servant who opened and closed the water tree as an official residence, later a former skipper who held the office of customs collector . In 1851 it was demolished when the port was expanded. | ||
Lower scales | after 1564 | shortly after 1873 | The second urban scale next to the upper scale was located between the confluences of Alfstrasse and Mengstrasse , across from today's An der Untertrave 96 building . | ||
At Untertrave 1, Seemannsheim | 1913 | 1966/67 | Brick building in homeland security architecture , architects Willy Glogner & Paul Vermehren | ||
At Untertrave 1, Seemannsheim | 1966–1967 / 1977 (extension) | 2012 | Demolition for the construction of the European Hanseatic Museum | ||
At the Untertrave 1a, air raid shelter | 1941 | 2012 | The bunker built during the Second World War was structurally integrated into the new building of the seaman's home in 1966/67. From 1975 to the end of 2008 it housed the jazz club Dr. Jazz . Demolition for the construction of the European Hanseatic Museum | ||
arsenal | 760 MMQ | 1625 | 1857 | The simple, large-scale structure was the successor to a warehouse built between 1334 and 1337, in which, among other things, ship guns were stored, from which the name of the building was derived. In 1857 the construction was canceled in the course of widening the port area. | |
At Untertrave 2, Arsenal | 760 MMQ. | 1858 | 1912 | Instead of the old arsenal, a new building was built, which inherited the name of its predecessor and served as a warehouse for the port administration and for other subordinate purposes. It was laid down in 1912 for the construction of the seaman's home. | |
Blue tower | 277 MMQ. | 1452 | 1853 | ||
At the Untertrave 48/49 | 637/636 MMQ. | 1879 | 1941 | The building on the corner of Engelsgrube was demolished to make way for an air raid shelter that still exists today and has now been converted into a residential building. | |
At the Untertrave 51 | 485 MMQ. | ||||
At the Untertrave 52/53 | 484/483 MMQ. | Around 1600 | 1995 | The house was almost completely destroyed by fire on January 7, 1995. The reconstruction in a modified form was completed in March 1999. | |
At the Untertrave 52a | 1955 | 2016 | The pavilion on the swing bridge housed a public toilet and facilities for the electricity supply. As part of the redesign of the area, the city of Lübeck decided to demolish the building, which took place in November 2016. | ||
At the Untertrave 54 | 482 MMQ. | 1910 | |||
At the Untertrave 54b, Fisch-Hütte | 1955 | 2016 | The pavilion directly at the swing bridge was built as a kiosk in 1955 and has housed the Fisch-Hütte snack bar since 1968 . As part of the redesign of the area, the city of Lübeck decided to demolish the building without replacement, which took place in November 2016. | ||
At the Untertrave 56, Speicher Der Elephant | 479 MMQ. | 18th century | 1972 | Demolition for the new building of the customs office | |
At the Untertrave 57 | 478 MMQ. | 17th century with a simple plastered facade from around 1800 | 1972 | Demolition for the new building of the customs office | |
At Untertrave 75, Old German Wine Bar | 298 MMQ. | 1289 | 1942 | Badstube until 1327, then bequeathed to St. Mary's Church, which it quickly sold again. Since the 18th century, the house had the vine wreath license, at that time it was also called Weinkranz or Der Kranz . The interior of the wine tavern, the carvings of which they made into a counterpart to the Fredenhagen room , which is now in the house of the merchants , was sold to the Thaulow Museum in 1904 and is now in the Schleswig-Holstein State Museum Schloss Gottorf . | |
At the Untertrave 77 | 296 MMQ. | Gothic | 1942 | ||
At the Untertrave 78 | 295 MMQ. | 1942 | |||
At the Untertrave 80 | 293 MMQ. | 1914 | |||
At the Untertrave 84 | 280 MMQ. | 1913 | |||
At the Untertrave 88 | 104 MMQ. | 2nd half of the 17th century | 1911 | ||
At the Untertrave 92 | 100 MMQ. | 1908 | |||
At the Untertrave 93 | 99 MMQ. | 1903 | |||
At the Untertrave 94 | 98 MMQ. | 1908 | |||
At the Untertrave 97 | 28 MMQ. | around 1566 | 1871 | ||
At Untertrave 100, Logenhaus | 72 MMQ. | 1857 | 1942 | from 1910 lodge house of the Good Templar Order | |
At Untertrave 104, Hotel Kaiserhof | 1887 | 1942 | The building was acquired by the city on November 19, 1918 and used as an employment office after renovation. | ||
At Untertrave 110, Gasthof zur Sonne | 157 MQ. | 1902 | The double-gabled building originally consisted of two separate houses. | ||
At the Untertrave 111/112 | 1904 | 1981 | |||
At the Untertrave (without house number), Travepavillon (also Travenpavillon and other variants) | 1879 | 1927 (?) | The pavilion, which was located directly opposite the confluence with Braunstraße , was originally built as a waiting building for passengers on the Trave steamers. Later he housed a restaurant. From 1927 it no longer appears in the building directories of the address books and in the telephone books, so that it was probably canceled in that year. |
Balauerfohr
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Balauerfohr 18 | Balauerfohr 173 JohQ. | 1942 | |||
Balauerfohr 19, 21 and 23 | Balauerfohr 188, 187 and 186 JohQ. | different years of construction | 1942 | House number 23 is on the right in the picture. . No. 19 had a brick - stepped gable from the Renaissance on, No. 21 a. Volute from the 18th century and No. 23 a. Empire principal façade of the early 19th century. | |
Balauerfohr 27, Backhaus im Balauerfohr | Balauerfohr 183 JohQ. | 1942 | Pre-classical building on the corner of Krähenstrasse and Balauerfohr | ||
Balauerfohr 29 | Balauerfohr 182 JohQ. | 17th century, in essence certainly older | 1907 | The row house on the left was in Krähenstrasse (No. 2–6) |
Beckergrube
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Beckergrube 1 | 1942 | ||||
Breite Strasse 36–40 / Beckergrube 1–9 | 1965 | 2008 | The Landesbank building. | ||
Beckergrube 5 | 1910 | 1942 | The first floor was filled by the shop and hallway. The Haustein -ground had three massive, slanted pillars at the corners with indicated chapiter on. These carried a sturdy entablature that closed off the floors with a strongly profiled ledge . The central pillar between the door and the shop window also served as a conspicuous central support for the entablature. Strongly profiled volutes were supported over the corner pillars. As a kind of mezzanine , the first floor was not noticeably lower, but was characterized by the special arrangement of the two wide windows. A flat bay window dominated the second and third floors . The bay roof served as a balcony on the third floor. On the transverse semi- pitched roof, a wide roof bay continued the facade with a pressed-arched gable field . At its roots, the flat volutes of the substructure are repeated even more sharply than mere ornamentation. Otherwise the facade only showed brick ornamentation on the plaster base. The architect also designed the house at Grosse Burgstrasse 36 , which stands today . | ||
Beckergrube 7 | Beckergrube 151 MMQ. | 1876 | 1942 | ||
Beckergrube 9 | Beckergrube 150 MMQ. | 1942 | In 1895 the originally two-story building was extended for the studio of the photographer Julius Rogall , which is clearly recognizable on the photo by the large glass roof. | ||
Beckergrube 10 | Beckergrube 158 MMQ. | 1752 | 1857 | Lübeck's first public theater, the Ebbe'sche Theater . Developed through the reconstruction of the Lüneburger Hof . | |
Beckergrube 10-14 | Beckergrube 158, 159, 160 MMQ. | 1857 | 1907 | The second Lübeck theater, the so-called casino theater , is being built on the site of the previous building and on the acquired properties no.12 and no.14 | |
Beckergrube 11, The Bee | Beckergrube 149 MMQ. | 18th century | 1942 | One of the largest merchandise stores in Lübeck | |
Beckergrube 13 | Beckergrube 148 MMQ. | 1942 | |||
Beckergrube 15 | Beckergrube 147 MMQ. | 1942 | |||
Beckergrube 17 | Beckergrube 146 MMQ. | 1942 | |||
Beckergrube 19 | 1896 | 1942 | Access building to the market hall | ||
Market hall in the Wehdehof behind Beckergrube 19 | 1895 | 1942 | The market hall built inside the block also had the addresses Breite Straße 44 and Mengstraße 6 because of its three entrances . | ||
Beckergrube 20 | 1942 | ||||
Beckergrube 22 | Beckergrube 165 MMQ. | 1805 | 1942 | Classicist new building by the architect Joseph Christian Lillie for the merchant and shipowner Simon Hasse (1771–1860). | |
Beckergrube 24 | Beckergrube 166 MMQ. | 2nd half of the 18th century | 1942 | ||
Beckergrube 26 | Beckergrube 167 MMQ. | 1942 | Under a common roof truss with No. 30. With access (arch on the left) to the Ahrens Torweg corridor behind (Beckergrube No. 28) | ||
Beckergrube 29 | Beckergrube 140 MMQ. | 18th century | 1942 | ||
Beckergrube 30 | Beckergrube 169 MMQ. | 1942 | The facade was decorated with a terracotta frieze by Statius von Düren . Building under a common roof truss with No. 26. With access (arch on the right) to the Ahrens Torweg corridor behind (Beckergrube 28) | ||
Beckergrube 33 | Beckergrube 137-138 MMQ. | 1942 | Since 1841 the seat of the men's clothing store JC Brauer, which was previously located in Mengstrasse | ||
Beckergrube 35 | Beckergrube 136 MMQ. | 1942 | In the photo on the right in the picture | ||
Beckergrube 40 | Beckergrube 197 MMQ. | 16th Century | 1902 | Emil Possehl's birthplace , demolished in favor of the new Possehl office | |
Beckergrube 40 | 1902 | 1942 | Erected by architect Christoph Hehl for L. Possehl & Co. | ||
Beckergrube 44 | Beckergrube 199 MMQ. | 1942 | |||
Beckergrube 51 | 1582 | 1942 | |||
Beckergrube 52 | Beckergrube 203 MMQ. | 1881 | 1942 | Parental home of the brothers Heinrich and Thomas Mann, French consulate around 1910 | |
Beckergrube 60 | Beckergrube 208 MMQ. (1796), 229 (1820) | 1875 | Brauhaus, 1835–1866 Zunftbrauerei , 1870 Actienbrauerei , destroyed by fire on February 15, 1875 | ||
Beckergrube 60 | 1875 | 1942 | 1875–1894 Reichsbank branch |
Braunstrasse
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Braunstraße 4 | Braunstrasse 138 MarQ. | 1549 | 1878 | The façade terracottas by Statius von Düren were removed during the demolition and attached to the façade of the house sample sheet no.3 . | |
Braunstraße 9 | Braunstrasse 142 MarQ. | 14th Century | 1942 | ||
Braunstraße 11 | Braunstrasse 143 MarQ. | late 18th century | 1942 | ||
Braunstrasse 14 | 1961 | 2019 | The house was originally part of the complex of the Dorothea Schlözer School , built in 1961 , which took up a large part of the area delimited by Fischstraße , Einhäuschen Querstraße and Braunstraße. It was planned to completely demolish this part of the school building in preparation for the redesign of the founding quarter in spring 2010 and to clear the plot for a completely new building. However, it turned out that the adjacent historic gabled house No. 12 could be damaged or even collapse if the support by the neighboring house was lost. For this reason No. 14 was only gutted down to the absolutely necessary static basic structure: The facade, the attic and the non-load-bearing parts of the interior were removed, so that only a skeleton remained, which serves as the core of a new building. | ||
Braunstrasse 15 | Braunstrasse 145 MarQ. | before 1776 | 1942 |
wide street
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Breite Strasse 1 | Broad Street 770 JacQ. | 16th Century | 1907 | Lay down for the new building of the Lübeck bakery Junge | |
Breite Strasse 3 | Broad Street 771 JacQ. | 1907 | Lay down for the new building of the Lübeck bakery Junge | ||
Wide street 4 (right half) | Broad Street 798 MMQ. | 1882 | The building was torn down and rebuilt to match the facade of the classicist house (No. 799) from 1852 on the left and connected to it into a single building. | ||
Breite Strasse 5 | Broad Street 772 JacQ. | 1907 | Lay down for the new building of the Lübeck bakery Junge | ||
Breite Straße 7, carpenter's house | Broad Street 773 JacQ. | 1872 | The guild house of the house carpenters was bought by the carpenters guild in 1872 to the doctor Dr. Carl Johann Gottlieb Matz sold it, who had it demolished and a new building built. | ||
Breite Strasse 8 | Broad Street 801 MMQ. | 1838 | |||
Breite Strasse 10 | Broad Street 802 MMQ. | 16th Century | 1846 | ||
Breite Strasse 10 | Broad Street 802 MMQ. | 1846 | 1942 | Home of Hermann Wilhelm Fehling , later Gewerbehaus. | |
Breite Strasse 12 | Broad Street 803 MMQ. | 1942 | Dimpker's house . The building, which was originally provided with a stepped gable, was given a simple classical plastered facade at the beginning of the 19th century, which was replaced by a brick stepped gable in 1939. A rococo hall from the side wing has been located in Fleischhauerstraße 20 since 1905 . | ||
Breite Strasse 14 | Broad Street 804 MMQ. | after 1853 | 1942 | Business premises of the wallpaper shop Friedrich Matz (founded in 1808, warehouse of wallpaper, carpets, other decorative objects and all kinds of writing materials ) The facade was decorated with sgraffito painting. | |
Broad Street 16 | 1892 | 1942 | Built by the non-profit organization in the neo-renaissance style with special consideration of the needs of the savings and loan cash register in Lübeck , which was established here in 1817 . Headquarters of the North German grain bank . | ||
Breite Strasse 18 | Broad Street 806 MMQ. | Between 1500 and 1550 | 1910 | Demolished for the new building of the Sparkasse | |
Breite Strasse 18 | 1911/12 | 1967 | New and old company building of the savings and loan fund in Lübeck . Demolished for the second extension of the Sparkasse | ||
Broad Street 20 | Broad Street 807 MMQ. | 1965 | Demolished for the first extension of the Sparkasse | ||
Broad Street 22 | Wide street 808 MMQ. | 1965 | Demolished for the first extension of the Sparkasse | ||
Breite Strasse 24 | Broad Street 809 MMQ. | 1965 | 1909–1911 the building housed the Reform Theater cinema . Demolished for the first extension of the Sparkasse | ||
Breite Strasse 35 | Broad Street 787 JacQ. | 1908 | From 1848 to 1903 the house was the seat of the music store FW Kaibel , then the private bank Louis Wolff. | ||
Breite Strasse 36–40 / Beckergrube 1–9 | 1965 | 2008 | The Landesbank building; the glass cube in the foreground was not part of the building. | ||
38 Broad Street | Broad Street 816 MMQ. | 1788 | 1904 | Residence of the Mann family from 1872 and the birthplace of Thomas Mann | |
38 Broad Street | 1904 | 1942 | |||
Broad Street 39 | second half of the 18th century | 1904 | Wine wholesaler Massmann & Nissen | ||
Broad Street 40 | Broad Street 817 MMQ. | 1914 | In the picture on the left | ||
Broad Street 40 | 1903 | 1942 | Built by the Lübeck master builder Carl Heinrich Friedrich Blunck , Erich Blunck's father , as the new office building of the music store FW Kaibel (formerly Breite Straße 35), which moved here on November 1st, 1903. In 1914 the Kaibel music store moved to Beckergrube 2, and the building at Breite Strasse 40 became the headquarters of the Bank for Commerce and Industry | ||
Breite Strasse 42 | Broad Street 818 MMQ. | 1834 | 1913 | ||
Broad Street 44 | Broad Street 819 MMQ. | Renaissance | 1903 | From 1605 at the residence of Johann Füchting and after his death until 1662 in the possession of his heirs. The facade is only recognizable in a single photo. | |
Broad Street 44 | 1903 | 1942 | |||
Market hall in the Wehdehof behind the Breiten Straße 44 | 1895 | 1942 | The market hall built inside the block also had the addresses Mengstraße 6 and Beckergrube 19 due to its three entrances . | ||
Broad Street 46 | 1907 | 1942 | No. 46 is the neo-baroque gabled house in the foreground | ||
Breite Strasse 48 | Broad Street 821 MMQ. | 1805 (formative) | 1942 | In the photo on the right. Conversion with a new facade design by the architect Joseph Christian Lillie (around 1805) for the Lübeck doctor Jacob August Schetelig . The facade on the first floor was significantly changed in 1920 by installing large shop windows on both sides of the entrance door. | |
Breite Strasse 50, Haus Böse | Broad Street 822 MMQ. | 1821 | 1942 | Classicist new building on an asymmetrical plot by Joseph Christian Lillie for the protonotary Christian Heinrich Lembke . The house served as the office of the Nordic Society until it was destroyed . | |
Breite Strasse 51 | Broad Street 795 JacQ. | 14th century (neo-Gothic facade from 1861) | 1901 | The successor building from 1901 was the seat of Dierck's Hansa-Kinematographen , Lübeck's first cinema , in 1906/07 | |
Broad Street 53 | Broad Street 796 JacQ. | 17th century | 1942 | ||
Broad Street 54 | Broad Street 824 MMQ. | 1925 | From 1869 the Mann family's home and the birthplace of Heinrich Mann, as is remembered by a plaque on the current bank building of Commerzbank AG. The building underwent such extensive renovation in 1925 that it was close to being a new one. | ||
Broad Street 54 | 1925 | 1942 | Since 1919, the building has been owned by Commerz- und Privatbank, who had the house rebuilt and added so extensively in 1925 by the architects Schöß and Redelstorff that it came close to a new building. This was particularly noticeable through the plastered facade, which combined expressionistic elements with the formal language of old Lübeck gables. | ||
Breite Strasse 55, Ratsapotheke | Broad Street 797 JacQ. | 1582 | 1855 | ||
Broad Street 55 | Broad Street 797 JacQ. | 1855 | 1942 | From 1863 to 1910 the Commerz-Bank was based in Lübeck | |
Breite Strasse 57 | 1888 | 1906 | The Wilhelminian style house on the corner of Johannisstrasse (today: Dr.-Julius-Leber-Strasse) was demolished for the construction of the Karstadt department store | ||
Broad Street 59 | Breite Strasse 969 JohQ. | From 1755 to 1904 the seat of the Stolterfoht drapery | 1906 | Demolished for the construction of the Karstadt department store | |
Breite Strasse 57–61, Karstadt department store | 1906 | 1942 | Art Nouveau department store built on the property in Breite Strasse 59–61 and Johannisstrasse 2–8, expanded in 1913. Rebuilt in the same place after the Second World War and replaced by two new buildings in 1995–96. | ||
Breite Strasse 60, Düffckes Hotel | Broad Street 827 MMQ. | 1855 | 1942 | The hotel, built by the innkeeper Johann Carl August Düffcke , was built in place of two older houses. The building on the corner of Mengstrasse, which had to give way to the new building, was once owned by the printer Johann Balhorn and belonged to Mayor Friedrich Nölting , whose widow sold it to Düffcke for 32,000 Lübische Marks . | |
Broad Street 61a | Alter Schrangen 963 JohQ. | 1855 | 1928 | The syringe house was in operation until 1906 when the fire brigade moved into its new main fire station , which it finally left in 1988. The demolition of the syringe house and the rear adjoining buildings, the streets were age Schrangen and Small Schrangen the present Schrangen merged | |
Breite Straße 62 (belonging), apartment of the town hall attendant | around 1640/50 | 1893 | The town hall attendant's apartment with the early baroque porch facing the Breite Straße was located in the southernmost yoke of the arcades under the war room building of the Lübeck town hall . When the adjoining renaissance staircase was dismantled in preparation for the new building, the apartment and its porch were removed and an ogival passage created. | ||
63 Broad Street | Breite Strasse 960 JohQ. | 1893 | The house on the corner of Schrangen was demolished in favor of a new building, which still exists today in a modified form. | ||
Breite Strasse 67, The Great Lobben | Breite Strasse 958 JohQ. | 1557 | 1889 | From 1557 to 1802, the so-called Grosse Lobben was the shouting of the mountain drivers . | |
Breite Strasse 85-87 | 1888 | 1942 | Built in 1888 by the Karstadt company as the first department store in Lübeck and used until the move to the new building in 1906. From 1906 to 1921 it was the seat of the Metropol cinema , after which the office of the architects “Hahn & Runge ” was located here , after the war DANAT on the first two floors , then Dresdner Bank . Until 1914, Lorenz Christensen's studio was on the second floor, then the “Thora Thomsen” studio. The company kept its name after Thora's marriage in 1919 and death in 1939. In the III. Harry Maasz's "Atelier for Garden Design " resided on the 1st floor . | ||
Breite Strasse 89, Niedegger house | Breite Strasse 947 JohQ. | shortly before 1806 | 1942 | Parent company of the Niederegger company ; built in place of an older gabled house | |
91 Broad Street | Breite Strasse 946 JohQ. | 1942 | The adjoining Renaissance gabled house No. 93 (see below) was also destroyed in 1942. | ||
93 Broad Street, To the King of England | Breite Strasse 945 JohQ. | early 17th century | 1942 | ||
Broad Street 95 | Breite Strasse 945/944 JohQ. | around 1800 | around 1890 | Tea, spice and hops shop A. Behn & Sohn | |
97 Broad Street | Breite Strasse 944 JohQ. | 2nd half of the 18th century | 1942 | One of the few Rococo palaces in the city. From 1814 to 1818 the seat of the council office. | |
Breite Strasse 103, Everssches Haus | Breite Strasse 940 JohQ. | around 1580 | around 1889 | House number on the corner of Breite Strasse and Wahmstrasse that is no longer assigned today ; the formerly very narrow Wahmstrasse was considerably widened in the course of the reconstruction after 1945. | |
Broad Street 103 | around 1889 | 1942 | House number on the corner of Breite Strasse and Wahmstrasse that is no longer assigned today ; the formerly very narrow Wahmstrasse was considerably widened in the course of the reconstruction after 1945. | ||
Breite Straße, right before the confluence with Kohlmarkt , Grubesche Planke | 1830 | 1899 | The Grubesche Planke was one of the most curious buildings in old Lübeck: The hardware dealer Johann Friedrich Benedikt Grube owned Kohlmarkt 269 MQ in 1824 . (from 1884: Markt 2), which was located at the very end of Breite Strasse and was therefore free on three sides (Breite Strasse, Kohlmarkt and Markt). The house had a booth attached to the Breiten Straße and a basement apartment, the access stairs of which were also located in the Breiten Straße. In 1830 Grube had the house torn down and a new one built, now without a booth or basement access. He wanted to make the space that both of them had taken up until then clearly recognizable as his property and therefore had a massive wall made of wooden planks erected, which narrowed the wide street. It could not be eliminated until mid-September 1899 - after long negotiations. Grube's house itself was destroyed in the 1942 bombing; because of the widening of the Kohlmarkt there is no longer a corresponding plot of land. |
Castle Gate Bridge
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Castle gate guard | 1767 | 1878 | |||
Mortuary of the Marstall Prison | 1882 | 1928 | The morgue of the Marstall Prison was on the field side of the castle gate and was demolished to create another pedestrian passage. | ||
Grosse Burgstrasse 595 JacQ. | 1806 | 1890 | The small building on the field side of the castle gate was erected in 1806 as a pleasure house on the street side of the brewery garden , which was available to the heads of brewing water art in front of the castle gate . It later housed a garden tavern, which still existed in 1880. The short stretch of road in front of the castle gate was still counted as Große Burgstraße at that time . | ||
Große Burgstrasse 1a and 3 | 1a: 1899/1900; 3: between 1882 and 1899 | 1908 | In the place of the old Brauergartenhaus there was initially the residential building at Große Burgstrasse 3, which was placed directly against the city wall. The striking field-side windowless fire wall can still be seen in photos on which the bridge structures over the Elbe-Lübeck Canal already exist, so the building must be in this state until 1899. On the other hand, postcards issued on the occasion of the opening of the canal in 1900 already show the attached house 1a, which must have been built in 1899/1900 (strangely enough, house number 1 without any additions did not exist). The massive residential buildings in front of the historic city gate were considered an eyesore; In 1906 they were acquired by the Lübeck state and demolished in 1908. The short stretch of road in front of the castle gate was still counted as Große Burgstraße at that time . |
Clemensstrasse
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Clemensstrasse 2–4, St. Clemens Church | Clemenstwiete 292 MMQ. | 13th Century | 1899 |
Thank you pit
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dankwartsgrube 6-18 | different centuries | 1942 | House number 18 is on the left in the picture. | ||
Dankwartsgrube 14 | Dankwartsgrube 635 MQ. | between 1700 and 1730 | 1942 | ||
Dankwartsgrube 36/38 | Dankwartsgrube 622/621 MQ. | 1929 | House number 36 is on the right in the picture. | ||
Dankwartsgrube 45 | Dankwartsgrube 690–691 MQ. | 1905 | |||
Dankwartsgrube 55/57/59/61/63/65/67/69 | Dankwartsgrube 696–703 MQ. | several centuries | 1935 | The houses and associated corridors were demolished during the renovation of the Gängeviertel in 1935. |
Cathedral cemetery
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
paradise | Without an address, as it is part of Lübeck Cathedral | around 1250 | 1946 | The vestibule of Lübeck Cathedral , built in Romanesque-Gothic transitional style, survived the bombing of 1942, but was smashed in February 1946 by the collapsing gable of the burned-out transept. 1975–1982 a reconstruction of the paradise was made. | |
Domkirchhof 851, 850 and 849 MQ. (in the picture from left to right) | 1857 | The house in front of the west facade of the cathedral, facing the Mühlendamm , served as apartments for the cathedral staff. The church servant's house (No. 852), which was the front building in the row and closest to the Mühlendamm, had already been demolished in 1844. After the demolition, no new buildings were built on the property, so that no current house numbers can be assigned. | |||
Servant house | Cathedral cemetery 852 MQ. | 1846 | The cathedral servant's house was located in front of the west facade of the cathedral, facing the Mühlendamm . Carl Julius Milde depicted it in his Lübeck ABC , but only as accessories for the depiction of the city's night watchman. After the demolition, no new building was built on the property, so that no current house number can be assigned. | ||
Cathedral cemetery 2–6, bishop's court | Cathedral cemetery 856 MQ. | 14th and 15th centuries | 1819 (last remains 1887) | ||
Domkirchhof 7, orphanage | Cathedral cemetery 854 MQ. | Built in 1574, rebuilt in 1806 in a classical style | 1942 |
Dr.-Julius-Leber-Strasse (formerly Johannisstrasse)
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Johannisstrasse 5 | Johannisstrasse 1 JakQ. | 1929 | |||
Johannisstrasse 5 | 1930 | 1942 | Architect: Wilhelm Schürer (1886–1975) | ||
Johannisstrasse 7 | Johannisstrasse 2 JakQ. | 16th Century | 1942 | ||
Johannisstrasse 8 | Johannisstrasse 4 JohQ. | 13th Century | 1837 | Gabled house in Romanesque - Gothic transition style | |
Johannisstrasse 9 | Johannisstrasse 3 JakQ. | 1942 | |||
Johannisstraße 16 (on the right on the photo) and 18 | Johannisstrasse 8a and 8 JohQ. | Around 1250 | 1929 | Originally, it was a single building in the shape of an eaves house, which was built in the middle of the 13th century, as indicated by the common early Gothic cellar dated to this time. It was not until 1859 that the house was divided into two halves, each with its own neoclassical facade. In 1927 Karstadt acquired both buildings and had them demolished in 1929. | |
Johannisstrasse 20 | Johannisstrasse 9 JohQ. | 1903 | Nölting's house ; 1829 acquired by consul Christian Adolf Nölting ; the interior of the house was modernized in 1835 by Carl Julius Milde while preserving the Gothic facade ; one room was added to the Hamburg Museum of Arts and Crafts in 1903 as a mild room . | ||
Johannisstrasse 20 | 1904 | 1929 | Demolished for an extension of the Karstadt department store, which was not implemented. The property remained undeveloped until 1950 as an open space for a gas station that was built instead. | ||
Johannisstrasse 50–52, club house | Johannisstrasse 23–24 JohQ. | 1938 | The clubhouse of the Lübeck workers' movement was the predecessor of the brick expressionist union building built between 1928 and 1930 on the neighboring property no . It was bought by the Lübeck cooperative bakery in 1896 (no. 50) and 1899 (no. 52) and rebuilt according to its new purpose; Among other things, it had a neo-baroque hall with a stage and gallery for 2000 people added in 1899/1900. It was destroyed by fire on April 13, 1938. A bunker was built on the property in 1942, and it still exists today. | ||
Johannisstrasse 73; St. John's Monastery , gatehouse and conventual interior houses | 1805-1808 | 1902 | The complex, built between 1805 and 1808 at the end of what was then Johannisstrasse, was demolished when the street was extended through the monastery grounds to the Elbe-Lübeck Canal . |
Effengrube
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Effengrube 11 and 13 | 807 and 809 MarQ. | Gothic | 1904 | House no. 11 is on the left in the picture. House no.13, which was on the corner of Obertrave , also had house number An der Obertrave 58 . The gothic gabled houses were demolished to make way for the new building of a multi-storey house, which is still there today. Since the south side of the Effengrube was parceled out after the war destruction, the building is now number 7. |
Angel's Pit
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Angel Pit 1–17 | 529 MarQ. | Gothic | 1908 | The front part of the Schiffergesellschaft for Schiffer widows and orphans maintained Schifferhofs in 1908 for a new building preserved until today, designed by Willy Glogner and Paul propagating canceled. |
Angel wipe
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Engelswisch 43/45 | 569/568 MMQ. | 16th century or earlier | 1904 | The peculiarity of this ancient house, as the father city papers explicitly pointed out in March 1904, was that it had two entrances. |
Narrow junk shop
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Narrow junk shop 1 | Narrow junk store 255 MQ. | late 15th century | 1942 |
Fishing pit
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fishing pit 19 | Fishing pit 335 MMQ. | 18th century (1747 in the gable) | 1938 | Starcky glazier, demolished for an extension of the city theater | |
Fishing pit 62 | Fishing pit 409 MMQ. | around 1750 (facade) | 1942 | ||
Fishing pit 68-70 | Fishermen's Pit 412-413 MMQ. | 1869 (No. 68); Renaissance No. 70 | 1942 | House no. 68 (on the photo on the right) was rebuilt in 1869 as a warehouse by the wine shop Lorenz Harms & Sons instead of an older building; In 1872 the company bought the neighboring house No. 70 (left). | |
Fishing pit 76 | Fishing pit 457 MMQ. | Gothic, gable redesigned in Baroque | 1942 | ||
Fishing pit 88 | Fishing pit 463 MMQ. | late 16th century | 1942 |
Fischstrasse
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fischstrasse 1 / Schüsselbuden 16 | Town house on cellar from the 13th century | 1942 / Keller 1969 | Until 1838 the location of the Fredenhagen room . Fredenhagen-Keller restaurant since 1899 | ||
Fischstrasse 2–6 / Schüsselbuden 14 | 1887 | 1942 | In the picture the building with the tower, seen from the Marienkirchhof . | ||
Fischstrasse 5–9 | 1964 | 2016 | The building, which emerged as part of the post-war development and was not based on the historic parcels, was built and used by the Evangelical Church . In November 2016 it was demolished to make way for the new development of the founding quarter. | ||
Fischstrasse 7-9 | Fischstrasse 97-98 MQ. | Between 1772 and 1782 | 1942 | ||
Fischstrasse 8-10 (8-28 today's count), Hanse-Schule - vocational school for economics and administration | 1954/1957 | 2013 | The vocational school was built in two construction phases on an area cleared of war ruins, which took up a large part of the area delimited by Fischstraße, Gerader Querstraße and Alfstraße . In March and April 2013 the school complex was demolished in preparation for the redesign of the founding district . | ||
Fischstrasse 11 | Fischstrasse 99 MQ. | 18th century | 1942 | The building behind the baroque facade was of older origin. | |
Fischstrasse 11–15 (11–27 today’s count), Dorothea-Schlözer-Schule - vocational school, health, textile and social economy | 1961 | 2010 | The vocational school, originally built as a women's technical school, was built on a site cleared of war ruins, which took up a large part of the area delimited by Fischstraße, Einhäuschen Querstraße and Braunstraße . From the beginning of March to the end of April 2010, the school complex was demolished in preparation for the redesign of the founding quarter . | ||
Fischstrasse 19 | Fischstrasse 103 MQ. | around 1400 | 1942 | Largely destroyed by bomb hits. The preserved facade was moved to Mengstrasse 6 in 1955 in order to fill the vacant lot next to the Buddenbrookhaus, which had been gained by demolishing a baroque facade that was still standing . Fischstrasse 19 was Lübeck's most exemplary high-Gothic facade around 1310. It had seven high panels above the underbody and attic levels in which blind and double hatches were arranged. The masonry was executed in alternating layers with glazed bricks, which indicates the closeness of the client to the council. The end of the season with its pointed arch frieze was taken directly from the church building (see transept of the Katharinenkirche ). The original double hatches were replaced by windows in the 19th century. Despite the representative appearance, the house probably served as a granary, the double hatches for ventilation and lighting of the warehouse floors. | |
Fischstrasse 25, Geibelhaus | Fischstrasse 106 MQ. | 1613 | 1942 | The house where Emanuel Geibel was born | |
Fischstrasse 27 | Fischstrasse 107 MQ. | around 1600 | 1942 | ||
Fischstrasse 33 | Fischstrasse 111 MQ. | 14./15. century | 1942 | ||
Fischstrasse 34 | Fischstrasse 79 MQ. | around 1550 | 1942 | In July 1912, the citizens' committee decided that the Senate, at the suggestion of the building deputation and the curator of Lübeck's architectural and cultural monuments, should provide money from public funds for the restoration of the dilapidated gable. The owner, Behrmann, was prepared not to abandon the gable to decay, to destroy it or to whitewash it over. It was an art-historically valuable gable that was important for Lübeck's reputation as a Nordic Nuremberg.
In the form shown, it was inhabited by Johann Glandorp between 1586 and 1612 . The rich architectural structure, numerous stone sculptures and the use of almost continuous glaze stones indicated that the builder once used rich means to create the gable. Above the front door was a carved stone image of the house brand and the inscription: “ Mortalium negotia. Fortuna versat. ” Only the Renaissance portal survived the bombing and was integrated into the new Schabbelhaus at Mengstraße 50. |
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Fischstrasse 36 | Fischstrasse 78 MQ. | Gable renaissance; Core building older | 1942 |
Fleischhauerstrasse
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fleischhauerstraße 13 | Fleischhauerstraße 102 JohQ. | 1974 | For many years this was the seat of the Wintergarten café ; the house had survived the Second World War, but was demolished in 1974, despite being listed as a historical monument, so that the Karstadt department store company could build a new building for its own needs. | ||
Fleischhauerstraße 14 | Fleischhauerstraße 115 JohQ. | 1591 | 1885 | The Renaissance building burned down on July 31, 1885. The portal was retained and was integrated into the successor building that still exists today. | |
Fleischhauerstraße 19 | 1920 | 1942 | Extension to the building of the advance and savings association in Lübeck | ||
Fleischhauerstraße 19 | 1890 | 1942 | Operating house of the advance and savings association in Lübeck | ||
Fleischhauerstrasse 90 | Fleischhauerstraße 219 JohQ. | 16th Century | 1899 | ||
Corresponds roughly to today's Fleischhauerstraße 116/118 | On the wall 344 JacQ. , Küterhäuser | First construction no later than 1262 | 1876 | The slaughterhouses, which had existed since the Middle Ages, were built as pile dwellings on the banks of the Wakenitz, which was still considerably wider until the Elbe-Lübeck Canal was built. Its location is no longer recognizable today due to embankments, but it roughly corresponded to the current properties at Fleischhauerstraße 116/118. |
Funfhausen
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fünfhausen 1 | Fünfhausen 27 MMQ. | around 1800 | 1942 | ||
Fünfhausen 8 | Fünfhausen 30 MMQ. | Renaissance | 1942 | ||
Fünfhausen 23-25 | Fünfhausen 15 MMQ. | 16th Century | 1942 | ||
Funfhausen 27 | Fünfhausen 14 MMQ. | Gothic in essence | 1905 | Demolished for the new construction of Schmidt-Römhild's publishing house in the following year |
Glockengießerstrasse
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Glockengießerstrasse 58, Storms Gang | Glockengießerstrasse 223 JacQ. | 1633 (first mentioned) | 1972 | The front building was number 60; The corridor was named in 1803 by the new owner of the front building, JD Storm. Previously, its name was pound sausage course after the jug name of the front building, Zum Pfundwurst |
Great Burgstrasse
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Grosse Burgstrasse 1 | Grosse Burgstrasse 595 JacQ. | 1806 | 1890 | The small building on the field side of the castle gate was erected in 1806 as a pleasure house on the street side of the brewery garden , which was available to the heads of brewing water art in front of the castle gate . Later it housed a garden tavern. The short stretch of road in front of the castle gate, today part of the castle gate bridge , was still part of the Große Burgstraße at that time . | |
Große Burgstrasse 1a and 3 | 1a: 1899/1900; 3: between 1882 and 1899 | 1908 | In the place of the old Brauergartenhaus there was initially the residential building at Große Burgstrasse 3, which was placed directly against the city wall. The striking field-side windowless fire wall can still be seen in photos on which the bridge structures over the Elbe-Lübeck Canal already exist, so the building must be in this state until 1899. On the other hand, postcards issued on the occasion of the opening of the canal in 1900 already show the attached house 1a, which must have been built in 1899/1900 (strangely enough, house number 1 without any additions did not exist). The massive residential buildings directly in front of the historic city gate were considered an eyesore. In particular, Eduard Kulenkamp, as the first chairman of the Society of Friends of Art , deserves the credit that the additions that disfigured the castle gate were acquired by the Lübeck state in 1906 and demolished in 1908. The short stretch of road in front of the castle gate was still counted as Große Burgstraße at that time . | ||
Grosse Burgstrasse 4 | Grosse Burgstrasse 592 JacQ. | 15th century | 1894 | The double-gabled building was the front building of the Marstallschmiede and, after a last renovation in 1882, was demolished for the construction of the courthouse. | |
Grosse Burgstrasse 6–12 | Große Burgstrasse 731 b – e JacQ. | 13th Century | 1894 | The brewery of the castle monastery on Burgstrasse was demolished in 1894 for the new construction of the courthouse; the actual brewery building had already been demolished in 1805, the front building facing the street followed as the last remnant in 1894. | |
Große Burgstrasse 14, Castle Monastery | 1276 | 1818 | The St. Maria Magdalena Church was a three-aisled brick basilica that belonged to the repealed Dominican monastery. The east wall of the choir formed the end of the Große Burgstrasse. The demolition took place after a pillar collapsed due to dilapidation. The plot of land on the corner of Hinter der Burg was later planned with the neo-Gothic school building that still exists today and the courtyard to the courthouse. | ||
Grosse Burgstrasse 27 | Grosse Burgstrasse 612 JacQ. | 1925 | The gabled house was demolished for the construction of a new brick Expressionist building that still exists today. | ||
Grosse Burgstrasse 36 | Grosse Burgstrasse 721 JacQ. | before 1700 | 1910 | The house, which had fallen into disrepair, was called Die Krone until 1704 |
Large building yard
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Large building yard no. St. Johann auf dem Sande |
1165 | 1652 | The first church on Lübeck's old town island. Demolished in 1652 after a partial collapse in 1648. Depiction (colored gray) in Elias Diebel's Lübeck panorama picture from 1552 . | ||
Large construction yard 6–9 (counted from the right on the photo) | Large building yard 819–822 MarQ. (counted from the left in the photo) | 1942 | |||
Large construction yard 10 and 11 (counted from the right in the photo) | Large building yard 838 and 839 MarQ. (counted from the right in the photo) | 1942 | |||
Large building yard 12–13 | Large building yard 840 MarQ. | 16th Century | 1942 | The half-timbered house directly opposite the cathedral was destroyed during the bombing by the falling, burning spiers of the church. |
Big pit
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Great Gröpelgrube 25 | Large Gröpelgrube 468 JacQ. | 16th Century | 1903 | A bakery since ancient times; in the 19th century the seat of the Kliefoth bakery |
Great Petersgrube
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Great Petersgrube 1–3 | Great Petersgrube 418–419 MQ. | 1942 | In the place of the historic eaves house destroyed in the war and the adjoining gabled houses on Schmiedestrasse, there is a parking garage built in the 1970s . |
Hartengrube
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hartengrube 2–4 | Hartengrube 741 MQ. | 14th Century; Rebuilt in 1829 and 1879 | 1942 | Former canon curia, acquired by the council of the cathedral chapter after the Reformation in 1530 and used as the residence of the cathedral preacher. |
Holstenstrasse
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Holstenstrasse 1 | Holstenstrasse 297 MQ. | 16th Century | 1883 | Today's plot of land at Holstenstrasse 1 is not precisely in the same place, as the confluence of Schmiedestrasse and Holstenstrasse was slightly relocated after the Second World War. | |
Holstenstrasse 1 | 1884 | 1942 | Today's plot of land at Holstenstrasse 1 is not precisely in the same place, as the confluence of Schmiedestrasse and Holstenstrasse was slightly relocated after the Second World War. | ||
Holstenstrasse 2 | Holstenstrasse 184 MQ. | 1874 | 1942 | ||
Holstenstrasse 11 | 20th century | 1942 | Tobacco, cigars, pipes and haberdashery | ||
Holstenstrasse 15, Behrens Hôtel | Holstenstrasse 303 MQ. | 1873 | 1942 | ||
Holstenstrasse 20 | 1942 | ||||
Holstenstrasse 19–21 | Holstenstrasse 310-311 MQ. | 1804/1805 | 1905 | Demolished for the widening of Holstenstrasse | |
Holstenstrasse 23 | Holstenstrasse 312 MQ. | 18th century | 1877 | In the photo in the center of the picture, on the corner of the Kolk ; on the left edge of the picture the house at Holstenstrasse 19–21 | |
Holstenstrasse 25 | Holstenstrasse 321 MQ. | 1877 | 1906 | Demolished for the construction of the Holstenhaus | |
Holstenstrasse 25–33, Holstenhaus , later Kepa | 1907 | 1965 | Erected as a department store for Leo Leibholz & Co , which was also the owner of the house, by the Düsseldorf department store architect Otto Engler (1861–1940), well-known at the time . From 1909 it was used by the department store Holstenhaus GmbH and later became a Kepa branch. Demolished in 1965 for the construction of a new building that still exists today. | ||
Holstenstrasse 39 | 16th Century | 1905 | |||
Holstenstraße 41 / An der Obertrave 1 | Holstenstrasse 330 MQ. | 16th Century | 1905 | The house on the corner of Obertrave , together with building No. 42 opposite, flanked the entrance to Holstenstrasse. Both buildings were demolished to widen the street. | |
Holstenstraße 42 / An der Untertrave 115 | Holstenstrasse 163 MQ. | 1601 | 1905 | The house on the corner of Untertrave , together with building No. 41 opposite, flanked the entrance to Holstenstrasse. Both buildings were demolished to widen the street. |
Holstentorplatz
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Holstentorplatz 3–7, Parkhotel | 1961/62 | 1988 | The Parkhotel, which opened in April 1962, took up the property that today forms the park in front of the Holstentorhalle , thus hiding the view of the hall. In 1977 the Horten group acquired the building and land in order to build a new department store that had been planned for several years in the immediate vicinity of the Holstentor. The heavily criticized project, for which the Holstentorhalle would have had to give way after a few plan variants, was finally abandoned again in the 1980s. The city acquired the building and land and had the hotel demolished. The resulting deserted open space was only designed in 2009 and the view of the hall from Holstentorplatz was made possible. | ||
Customs shed | 1872 | 1910 | On the site that is now the green area in front of the Holstentorhalle, a railway system was built in 1872 for the transshipment, temporary storage and handling of goods subject to duty. The tracks ended directly at today's Holstentorplatz. After the station was relocated in 1908, the building was no longer used. | ||
Old main station | At the wall a. MQ. | 1851 | 1934 | Lübeck's first train station, in operation from 1853–1908. For reasons that are no longer comprehensible, the station, which is clearly outside the city, was nevertheless counted as part of the Marien Quartier in the old town. | |
Outer Holsten Gate | 1585 | 1853 | Renaissance style city gate, demolished for the construction of the railway | ||
Customs house , also known as the fire keeper 's house | 17th century | 1831 | The customs office at the Holsten Gate stood next to the Holsten Bridge on the banks of the Trave and was demolished in May 1831. | ||
Booths at the Holsten Gate | Holsten Bridge 346–349 MQ. | 1853 | One of the stalls that had to give way to the renovations in 1853/54 was the Zingelschler's official residence until 1831. | ||
Holsten Bridge | 1516 | 1853 | Replaced in 1854 by a new building that still exists today in a heavily redesigned form |
Dog street
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dog Street 96 | Dog Street 58 JacQ. | 15./16. century | 1905 | Originally with No. 98 semi-detached house under one roof; No. 98 still exists today. |
Hüxstrasse
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hüxstrasse 7 | Hüxstrasse 315 JohQ. | 16th Century | 1861 | ||
Hüxstrasse 122, Kindts Gang | Hüxstrasse 376 JohQ. | 1476 (first mentioned) | 1942 | The front building of the aisle was number 120 | |
Hüxstrasse 123
Office building of the Ratzeburg boats |
Hüxstrasse 258 JohQ. | 15th or 16th century | 1905 | These were once moored in the Binnenwakenitz at the level of the Hüxtertor Bridge . Their packages were brought to the Böteramtshaus . This, which belonged to the city until 1293, was formerly called The Yellow Deer and was used as the official residence of the journeymen working on the Hüxtermühle.
Numerous cannon balls that penetrated the front facing the suburbs indicated that the house was a target when the French bombarded the city ( Battle of Lübeck ) from Marli . In the gable under the top windows, two French cannon balls testified to the 1806 event. |
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Hüxstrasse 126 | Hüxstrasse 378 JohQ. | 16th Century | 1900 |
Hüxterdamm
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hüxterdamm 2, Hüxtermühle | Wall at Hüxterthor 385 | around 1290 | 1874 | ||
Brewing water art | Hüxterthor Bridge 381 | 1540 | 1874 | Water tower built in the style of the brick renaissance | |
Citizen water art | Hüxterthor Bridge 380 | 1533 | 1874 | Water tower built in the style of the brick renaissance | |
Absalon Storm | around 1450 | 1805 | Tower of the city fortifications |
Jakobikirchhof
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jakobikirchhof 5 | Jakobikirchhof 702 JacQ. | around 1400 | 1907 | The residence of the main pastors of the Jakobikirche | |
Jakobikirchhof 704 JacQ. | 1837 | The sexton's house of the Jakobikirche; Sold for demolition due to dilapidation on July 8, 1837 and abandoned a week later. The property was not rebuilt, so there is no equivalent in today's house numbering scheme. |
Kapitelstrasse
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kapitelstrasse 8 | Pfaffenstrasse at the 917 MQ parade . | 17th century, 14th century cellar | 1942 | Until 1803 Canon Curia, trade school in the 19th century, classroom of the Lübeck teachers' seminar until 1903 , then Willibald Leo von Lütgendorff-Leinburg's painting school , cellar and shed preserved |
Little Burgstrasse
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kleine Burgstrasse 24–26, Bernstorff Curia | 1706 | 1901 | Demolished for the construction of the Ernestin School | ||
Kleine Burgstrasse 20, Pockenhof (Lübeck) , formerly the courtyard of the Teutonic Order (Lübeck) | before 1268 | 1806 (main house) |
Small building yard
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Small building yard 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 | No. 2–6: row houses with a common roof, at least from the 16th century; No. 7: 1877 | 1942 | The numbering no longer corresponds to today's; Until the building was destroyed in 1942, the residential buildings on the south side of the small building yard were counted continuously. The house in the front left is on the corner of Effengrube and bears the number 2. The very simple three-storey semi-detached house (no. 8 and 9) at the very back still exists today. | ||
Small building yard 11 and 13 | Small building yard MQ. | 1792 | 1942 | No. 11 is on the left in the picture. Erected as the house of the builder (No. 11) or the workmen (No. 13) of the municipal building yard. | |
Small building yard 15 | Small building yard 811-809 MQ. | 1763 | 1942 | Erected as the town builder's house; later, among other things, the main construction office of the Elbe-Trave Canal (1897) |
Klingenberg
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hotel Stadt Hamburg , Klingenberg 1-1a | Klingenberg 966-967 MQ. | 1840 | 1942 | The two lions at the entrance of the luxury hotel survived the bombing and have been standing in front of the Holsten Gate since 1949 . | |
Klingenberg 2, Knorr's Inn | Klingenberg 965 MQ. | 1942 | |||
Klingenberg 3 | Klingenberg 964 MQ. | 1904 | |||
Klingenberg 4 | Klingenberg 963 MQ. | 1904 | |||
Klingenberg 3-4 | 1904 | 1942 | |||
Klingenberg 5 | Klingenberg 962 MQ. | 1894 | |||
Klingenberg 5 | 1894 | 1942 | Headquarters of the Louis Levy clothing store | ||
Klingenberg 8-9 | Klingenberg 935 MQ. | 1372 | 1888 | ||
Klingenberg 8-9 | 1888 | 1960 | The building survived the 1942 bombing but was demolished in 1960 to make way for a commercial building that still exists today. | ||
Victory Fountain | 1875 | 1935 | Erected as a memorial to the victory in the Franco-Prussian War |
Koberg
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Koberg 1 | Kuhberg 791 MMQ. | around 1600 | 1888 | The building was demolished in favor of a new building erected in 1888/89 by the then Lübeck star architect Julius Grube for the Eschenburg family . | |
Koberg 4 | Kuhberg 794 MMQ. | 1694 | 1867 | The building is documented in only one image, which adorned a business card of the company located there. Without this illustration, there would be no information about the appearance of the house. | |
Koberg 16 | Kuhberg 765 JacQ. | 1897 | |||
Koberg 19th | Kuhberg 762 JacQ. | 1906 | |||
Koberg 19th | 1906 | 1942 | |||
Burrecht | 1696 (new building instead of a previous building that had existed since at least 1552) | 1840 | The court arbor was demolished when a visit from the Danish King Christian VIII was due in the summer of 1840 and the dilapidated building was so ashamed that the citizens decided to demolish it as soon as possible. | ||
Kobergwache | before 1614 | 1932 | Demolished for the construction of a similarly designed tram waiting hall |
Kohlmarkt
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kohlmarkt 1 / Sandstrasse 2 | Kohlmarkt 262 / Sandstrasse 1011 MarQ. | 1867 | 1942 | ||
Kohlmarkt 7 | Kohlmarkt 273 MarQ. | Detectable since the 13th century; 18th century facade | 1909 | Demolished for the construction of the bank on Kohlmarkt | |
Kohlmarkt 9 | Kohlmarkt 274 MarQ. | 1886 | 1909 | Built by the then star architect Julius Grube from Lübeck ; demolished for the construction of the bank on Kohlmarkt | |
Kohlmarkt 12 / Markt 3 | Kohlmarkt 268 MarQ. | 15th century | 1942 | The gable facing the Kohlmarkt dates from the time it was built, while the market-side facade was built in the 18th century. | |
Kohlmarkt 13 | Cabbage market 276 | around 1580 | 1942 | The proportions and shapes of the house served as a template for the facade design of the neighboring bank on Kohlmarkt . The façade of the house, which was largely destroyed by bombs, was structured with terracotta giants by Statius von Düren , but was removed in 1959. The Renaissance portal was initially stored and parts of the Haerder building at Sandstr. 17–23 built in (broken off in 2009) It housed the “Hotel Altdeutscher Hof”. | |
Kohlmarkt 14 | 1886 | 1942 | Built by the then star architect Julius Grube from Lübeck ; the corner house at the end of the so-called south wing flanked the entrance to the market together with the post office building opposite . | ||
Kohlmarkt 15 | Cabbage market 277 | 1843 | 1942 | ||
Kohlmarkt 17 | Cabbage market 278 | 1826 | 1942 | ||
Kohlmarkt 19 | Cabbage market 279 | 14th Century | 1942 | Headquarters of the Schabbel bakery | |
Kohlmarkt 21 | Cabbage market 280 | 15th century | 1880 |
Koenigstrasse
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Koenigstrasse 1 | Königstrasse 636–637 JacQ. | 1880 | |||
Koenigstrasse 3 | Königstrasse 638–639 JacQ. | 1906 | |||
Königstrasse 24 / Pfaffenstrasse 20-22 | Koenigstrasse 671 JacQ. / Pfaffenstrasse 672 JacQ. | 2nd half of the 17th century | 1910 | The gabled house at Königstrasse 24 formed a structural unit under a common roof with the row house on the right, Pfaffenstrasse 20-22 | |
Koenigstrasse 27 | Königstrasse 651 JacQ. | medieval? | 1873 | House of the custodian , gatehouse of the Katharinenkloster / Katharineum | |
Koenigstrasse 27 | Königstrasse 652-653 JacQ. | Gothic core, with neo-Gothic facades from 1837/38 | 1880 | Wing of the Katharinenkloster, demolished for the extension of the Katharineum | |
Koenigstrasse 29 | Königstrasse 654 JacQ. | late 18th century | 1886 | The lithographic printing shop's office from 1835 to April 15, 1886. 1824 Home of the theater director, Count Carl Hahn-Neuhaus . The classical house was demolished for the extension of the Katharineum . | |
Königstrasse 31, address house | Königstrasse 655 JacQ. | around 1250 | 1886 | Commercial building of the Lübeckischen advertisements from 1807 to March 29, 1886. The late Romanesque gabled house with baroque facade was demolished for the extension of the Katharineum . | |
Königstraße 33, 35, 37 and 39 (on the photo from left to right, starting with the stepped gable house) | Königstrasse 656, 657, 657a, 658 JacQ. | Different centuries | 1942 | House no. 33 on the corner of Hundestrasse was set back in anticipation of a planned street widening at the end of the 19th century and given a Wilhelminian gable; the other three houses remained unchanged. In 1930, the street was widened after all: Houses No. 35, 37 and 39 were moved back to the building line of the corner house and received new facades: No. 35 plastered, based on the previous facade from 1799, and No. 37 and 39 with brick clinkered. At the same time, corner house No. 33 received a new facade with a brick stepped gable. | |
Koenigstrasse 40 | Koenigstrasse 663 JacQ. | 1806 | 1942 | The house was rebuilt in whole or in large parts in 1806, because that year its value for tax collection skyrocketed. | |
Koenigstrasse 41 | Königstrasse 659 JacQ. | around 1250 | 1906 | 1375 together with the opposite house, today Löwen-Apotheke (Lübeck) as guest houses for Emperor Karl. IV and wife prepared. In the 18th century coffee house that also served as a music theater. In the 19th century coffee house with bowling alley and until 1861 Club Harmonie ; 1871 German Kaiser inn . Demolished in 1906, with the building line relocated for traffic reasons, new building by Bräck & Störmer in 1906 | |
Koenigstrasse 42 | Koenigstrasse 662 JacQ. | 1752 | 1892 | The rococo - Palais was for the construction of the Reichsbank stopped building benefited. | |
Koenigstrasse 44-46 | 18th century | 1942 | The buildings behind the late baroque facades were of older origin. | ||
Koenigstrasse 46a | 1942 | The neo-brick Renaissance building, built in the form of historicism, was purchased in 1919 by the neighboring publishing house Gebrüder Borchers to expand the company premises. | |||
Koenigstrasse 46 | 18th century | 1942 | Commercial building of the Lübeckischen advertisements in the Königstrasse No. 46 since March 29, 1886 until it was merged with the Lübecker General-Anzeiger in the 30s. The buildings behind the late baroque facades were of older origin. | ||
Koenigstrasse 50 | 1576 | 1928 | The house with the Renaissance stepped gable was between the alleys of Alter Schrangen and Kleiner Schrangen ; it was torn down when it was merged into today's Schrangen . | ||
Königstrasse 55 | 13th Century; Facade: 1920s | 1992 | House of the Lübeck General Gazette ; Facade by Runge & Lenschow ; demolished for the Königpassage, northern firewall with paintings preserved | ||
Königstrasse 59 (? - possibly inapplicable) | Koenigstrasse 876 JohQ. | 16th Century | 1866 | The house of Senator Johann Heinrich Gaedertz | |
Königstrasse 59, 61 and 63 | 15-18 century | 1942 | |||
Koenigstrasse 76 | No. 894 | well before 1939 | It was the home of Senator Georg Arnold Behn .
Friedrich Overbeck once spent his youth here. It was considered Overbeck's birthplace for a long time until it could be ascertained from the records that he was born in Sandstrasse. In a publication from 1939, the building was described as long since demolished . |
||
Koenigstrasse 91, Schrödersches Haus | 18th century | around 1900 | Corner house to Wahmstrasse ; in the late 18th century the location of operas; demolished for the construction of a commercial and residential building that still exists today | ||
Koenigstrasse 95 | 1942 at the latest | Recording was made for the 25th anniversary of Heinrich Vietig's private school (Vietig'sche Schule) | |||
Koenigstrasse 96 | Koenigstrasse 903 JohQ. | 1942 | |||
Königstrasse 102, 104 and 106 (on the photo from right to left) | Königstrasse 906, 907 and 908 JohQ. | 1942 | |||
Königstraße 108 / Aegidienstraße 15 | 1885 (remodeling 1938) | 1942 | The Wilhelminian style building (top photo) was significantly rebuilt after it was acquired by Bank der Deutsche Arbeit in 1938/39 in order to fit it into the historical street scene (bottom photo) |
Crow Street
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Krähenstrasse 5 | Krähenstrasse 418 JohQ. | 1645 | 1942 | The front building to the Gang Kocks yard | |
Krähenstrasse 12, 10 and 8 | Krähenstrasse 518, 517 and 516 JohQ. | Gothic | 1942 | ||
Krähenstrasse 11, 13 and 15 (on the photo from left to right) | Krähenstrasse 413, 412 and 411 JohQ. | different centuries | 1942/1955 | The set back house no. 13 was built around 1900 in expectation that the street would soon be widened instead of a previous building; however, the road was not widened. The house survived the air raid in 1942, but was demolished in 1955 when, as part of the reconstruction, Krähenstrasse was actually made wider than before and the building no longer fit into the new building line. The neighboring houses 11 and 15, however, were too badly damaged in 1942 and their ruins were later removed. | |
Krähenstrasse 19 | Krähenstrasse 408 JohQ. | Renaissance | 1942 | The house where Johann Heinrich Thöl was born ; Front building of Rudolfs Gang (No. 21). | |
Krähenstrasse 21, Rudolfs Gang | Krähenstrasse 404 JohQ. | 1663 (first mentioned as Diedrich Meyers Gang ) | 1942 | The front building of the aisle was number 19 |
Lastadie
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Drought | Lastadie 359 | 1678 | 1873-1886 | Demolished due to dilapidation and port expansion | |
Casting house | Lastadie 362 | 1666 | 1886 | Demolished due to port expansion |
Marienkirchhof
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Marienkirchhof 4–5, Old Marienwerkhaus | Marienkirchhof 217 MQ. | medieval | 1903 | Canceled by Willy Glogner for a new building |
market
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Market 234 MQ. | 1882 | Demolished for the construction of the new main post office | |||
Market 235 MQ. | 1882 | Demolished for the construction of the new main post office | |||
Market 236 MQ. | 1882 | Demolished for the construction of the new main post office | |||
Baeyer's Hotel | Market 237 MQ. | 1882 | Demolished for the construction of the new main post office | ||
Baeyer's Hotel | Market 238 MQ. | 18th century (gable) | 1882 | Probably the oldest gable of the west bar last. Demolished for the construction of the new main post office | |
Market 239 MQ. | 1882 | Demolished for the construction of the new main post office. The last resident was Obermeister Hermann Meeths | |||
To the Dutchman | Market 240 MQ. | 1882 | Demolished for the construction of the new main post office | ||
Markt 241 (left, with stepped gable) and 242 (right next to it) MQ. | 1872 | Demolished for the construction of the telegraph office | |||
Market 1, Telegraph Office | Market 241 MQ. | 1874/75 | 1882 | The new telegraph office built in place of three older houses was demolished seven years later, along with all the other buildings on the southern edge of the market, to make room for the new main post office. | |
Market 1, Main Post Office | 1882 | 2002 | Originally built in neo-brick Gothic style, the exterior was considerably simplified in the 1950s and given a completely new, simple brick facade (in the background below). Demolished for the construction of a department store | ||
Market 3 / Kohlmarkt 12 | Market 268a MQ. | 1391 | 1942 | The gable facing Kohlmarkt dates from the time it was built, while the market-side facade was built in the 18th century; the house number identification of the image file is incorrect. | |
Market 4 | Market 267 MQ. | 1805/06 | 1942 | Classicist residential and commercial building, probably designed by the architect Joseph Christian Lillie for the silk merchant Georg Heinrich Lücke | |
Market 5; The bell | Market 266b MQ. | shortly after 1490 | 1899 | Large half-timbered house, demolished for the construction of a new commercial building; the house number identification of the image file is incorrect. | |
Market 5 | 1899 | 1942 | Wilhelminian style commercial building, considerably redesigned in 1937. | ||
Market 13 | Market 256 MQ. | 1942 | The building, which formed a unit with the house at Breite Straße 62, was given a neo-Gothic brick facade after 1880, through which it was stylistically aligned with the adjoining town hall. | ||
Market fountain | 1873 | 1934 | Designed by the architect Hugo Schneider |
Market price
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Markttwiete 4 | Markttwiete 222 MQ. | 16th Century | 1942 | For decades the seat of a herring shop nicknamed Lord Heringtonn | |
Markttwiete 2–4 (Schüsselbuden 15) town house , actually administration building II | 1955-57 | 2003 | The administrative building of the town hall, which could no longer be renovated due to blatant construction defects, was demolished together with the post office on the market. |
Marles Pit
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Marlesgrube 11 | Marlesgrube 481 MQ. | Rebuilt in 1868 or considerably rebuilt | 1942 | ||
Marlesgrube 20 and 22 | Marlesgrube 529 MQ. (for later no.20) | No. 20: 1874; No. 22: 1904 | 1942 | House No. 24, cut on the left, was also destroyed in 1942. | |
Marlesgrube 22/24/26 | Marlesgrube 528/527/526 MQ. | No. 22 built at the end of the 13th century, Renaissance stepped gable facade (with terracottas by Statius von Düren ) built between 1550 and 1565; No. 24 built around 1359, classical facade from around 1800; No. 26 built in 1802 and rebuilt in 1888. | 1904 (No. 22); 1942 (No. 24 and 26) | No. 22 was the house with the stepped gable ( Gasthof zum Holsteinischen home ) and was demolished in 1904 in favor of a new building, which was destroyed in 1942. No. 24 is to the left of the photo, No. 26 at the far left of the picture. | |
Marlesgrube 27 | Marlesgrube 553 MQ. | Probably rebuilt in 1877 | 1942 | ||
Marles Pit 45 | Marlesgrube 563 MQ. | Gothic, probably 14th century | 1942 | The original stepped gable was reshaped into a beveled gable at an unknown point in time, and in the 17th century it had a curved end (outside the photo) in the style of the Baroque. | |
Marles pit 57 | Marlesgrube 568 MQ. | 1802 | 1978 | Front building of the Leganen Gangs (Marlesgrube 55). The new building that was built after 1978 did not have a doorway, access to the Leganen Gang was relocated to Düstere Querstraße ; However, the passage is still assigned to the Marlesgrube, although it can no longer be reached from there. |
Mengstrasse
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bakeries | Mengstrasse 205 a – k MQ. | different centuries | 1834 | The baker's booths, between the office building and Maria am Stegel , were seen as “spoiling the city” and were therefore bought up and demolished by the Society for the Promotion of Charitable Activities in order to beautify the townscape . | |
Mengstrasse 1, Maria am Stegel | 1425 | 1967 | After being burned out during the bombing raid in 1942, the former chapel stood in ruins for 25 years before it was finally demolished after being damaged by the storm. The base stones were set back into the ground, slightly offset. The house number 1, like the 3, was assigned to new buildings on the lower Mengstrasse beyond the Schüsselbuden after the war. | ||
Mengstrasse 3 | Mengstrasse 1 MQ. | 1908 | The house on the corner of the Schüsselbuden was built directly onto the Maria am Stegel chapel. | ||
Mengstrasse 3 | 1908 | 1942 | From 1936 until it was destroyed, the house housed the shop and workshop of the watchmaker Paul Behrens , who built the new astronomical clock in St. Mary's Church in 1967 after the original medieval clock had been destroyed in the war. House number 3, like number 1, was assigned to new buildings on the lower Mengstrasse beyond the Schüsselbuden after the war. | ||
Mengstrasse 6 | Mengstrasse 3 MMQ. | 18th century | 1942 | The building was destroyed in the war; the new building erected in its place was provided with the preserved facade of the house at Fischstrasse 19, which was also destroyed (see also Mengstrasse 6 ). | |
Market hall in the Wehdehof behind Mengstrasse 6 | 1895 | 1942 | The market hall built inside the block also had the addresses Breite Straße 44 and Beckergrube 19 due to its three entrances . | ||
Mengstrasse 7–11, Logehaus der Loge zur Weltkugel | <1914 | 1942 | Grown building of the Lübeck Lodge to the globe . After the lodge was dissolved (1933), it bequeathed its lodge house to the Lübeck churches, which from then on used it as a parish hall . | ||
Mengstrasse 8, Seniorat | 1530 | 1942 | The residential building in the inner courtyard of the Wehde (the front building of which has been preserved) served as the residence of the superintendents for centuries. | ||
Mengstrasse 10 | Mengstrasse 5 MMQ. | 18th century | 1942 | The old Lübeck wine company "W. Stolterfoth ”. She traded in Bordeaux wines and was purveyor to the Bavarian court. From 1884 the Adler pharmacy is located | |
Mengstrasse 15 | Mengstrasse 10 MQ. | 1942 | The classicistic facade was a younger addition to the older house behind it. | ||
Mengstrasse 16 | Mengstrasse 11 MMQ. | around 1580 | 1912 | The seat of the Schmidt-Römhild publishing house was demolished and replaced by a new brick building in the homeland security style , the appearance of which was based on the appearance of the Renaissance gabled house. After extensive destruction in World War II, it was rebuilt in the 1960s, which was almost completely identical in appearance to the building from 1912/13. | |
Mengstrasse 18 | Mengstrasse 43 MMQ. | before 1620 | 1886 | Schütting of the Schonenfahrer in Lübeck; after 1799 completely rebuilt in a classical style. Only one pictorial representation of the building is known. | |
Mengstrasse 18, Café Central | 1888 | 1910 | The example of Heinrich Mann's Professor Rath was often seen in the café . | ||
Mengstrasse 18 | 1910 | 1942 | Erected as the headquarters of the Lübeck credit bank | ||
Mengstrasse 28 | 1803 | 1942 | Erected as a completely new building for the wine merchant Bonaventura Winckler ; Acquired by the city in 1854, rebuilt in 1861–64 and added one floor, used as a courthouse from 1864–96, then the seat of various city authorities | ||
Mengstrasse 35 | around 1761 | around 1880 | In the 18th century, together with the neighboring house no. 33, was created through the conversion of older buildings; demolished around 1880 for the construction of the classicist house located there today | ||
Mengstrasse 36, Schabbelhaus | around 1590 | 1942 | From 1908 until its destruction in 1942, the original seat of the Schabbelhaus, which has been located at Mengstrasse 48–50 since 1955 | ||
Mengstrasse 42 | Mengstrasse 72 MMQ. | 1587 | 1858 | Birthplace of Johann Wilhelm Cordes ; replaced by a late classicist building that still exists today | |
Mengstrasse 66 | late 18th century | 1942 |
Moislinger Allee (house numbers 133–195 and 156–226)
Address and / or location | designation | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
Moislinger Allee 222 | Haus Sellschopp (former Lübeck club brewery ) | 1907 | 2017 | The complex of the Lübeck club brewery was only used for beer production until 1920, after which the buildings saw a series of changing uses by various commercial enterprises. The Lidl group had already acquired the facility in 2001 to tear down the buildings and build a supermarket on the property, but these plans could not be maintained. In February 2017, the demolition of the complex, which is still owned by Lidl, began in preparation for a complete renovation of the site, the further use of which had not yet been decided. |
Mill bridge
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mill bridge 6–8 | 1885 | 1942 (No. 6) / 1973 (No. 8) | The right part of the building (No. 6) was destroyed in the air raid in 1942; In its place a new building with the numbers 6a / b was built in 1956, which still exists today. The left part of the building (No. 8) on the corner of Wallstrasse was demolished for the construction of Dr. Klein & Co. AG | ||
Mill bridge 9 | 771 JohQ. | 1876 | 1904 | Demolished for the construction of the town hall | |
Mill bridge 9–13, town hall | 1903 | 1942 | While the front building located directly on the Mühlenbrücke and the connecting building with the foyer were only relatively slightly damaged in the air raid in 1942, the actual hall building - on the left in the photo - was destroyed and was replaced in 1951 by a new building that still exists today, however was completely gutted during a renovation in the years 1992-94. | ||
Mill Bridge 11–13, Concordia Garden | 771 a JohQ. | 1903 | Restaurant, demolished for the construction of the town hall | ||
Mill Bridge 15 | 771 b JohQ. | 1878 | 1942 | ||
Mill Bridge 17 | 771 c JohQ. | 1881 | 1942 |
Mill dam
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mühlendamm 2-6 | Mühlendamm 841 MarQ. | 1873 | 1942 | Pastorate of the cathedral |
Mühlenstrasse
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mühlenstrasse 1 | Mühlenstrasse 924 JohQ. | 1866 | The gabled house burned down together with the neighboring houses No. 3 and 5 in 1866; the first two modern-style apartment buildings were built in their place in Lübeck. | ||
Mühlenstrasse 19 | Mühlenstrasse 915 JohQ. | probably 1903 | The tax value for the house at Mühlenstrasse 19 was more than doubled in 1904. Therefore, the old building visible in the photo is likely to have been demolished in 1903 and replaced by the new building that still stands there today. | ||
Mühlenstrasse 21, In the Iron Cross | Mühlenstrasse 835 JohQ. | 1903 | |||
Mühlenstrasse 23, The Oelkrug | Mühlenstrasse 835 JohQ. | 1904 | |||
Mühlenstrasse 25 | Mühlenstrasse 834 JohQ. | 1904 | |||
Mühlenstrasse 27 | Mühlenstrasse 833 JohQ. | 1942 | From 1629 to 1868 the shoemaker's office | ||
Mühlenstrasse 29 | Mühlenstrasse 832 JohQ. | probably 1901 | In 1901 the taxation of the building at Mühlenstrasse 29 was increased threefold; therefore it can be assumed that the house was replaced by a new building that year. The successor building was destroyed in the bombing raid in 1942. | ||
Mühlenstrasse 31 | Mühlenstrasse 831 JohQ. | 1942 | |||
Mühlenstrasse 33 | Mühlenstrasse 830 JohQ. | 1942 | |||
Mühlenstrasse 35 | Mühlenstrasse 829 JohQ. | 1942 | |||
Mühlenstrasse 37 | Mühlenstrasse 828 JohQ. | around 1400 | 1893 | ||
Mühlenstrasse 40 | JohQ. | around 1300 | 1966 | ||
Mühlenstrasse 41, Derliens Gang | Mühlenstrasse 825 JohQ. | 17th century | 1942 | Derliens transition was only the last name of the residential gangs who repeatedly changed the name. The front building (No. 43) was older (Renaissance gable on the street side, Gothic gable on the back). The parchment- making course runs at the point of the corridor today | |
Mühlenstrasse 52 | Mühlenstrasse 882 MarQ. | 19th century | 1902 | The building came from the middle of the previous century. A bakery had stood on the property since 1338 . |
Sample web
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sample lane 8, cathedral monastery | Cathedral churchyard 859 MarQ. | 13th to 15th centuries | 1889 | Most of the remains of the former cathedral monastery on the south side of the cathedral were removed for the construction of the museum at the cathedral ; individual elements were integrated into the new building. | |
Sample web 8, Museum am Dom | 1892 | 1942 | The neo-Gothic style museum designed by Adolf Schwiening brought together the city's collections, which were previously scattered in several locations; Its contemporary address was Domkirchhof No. 2. In its place is now the post-war building of the Museum for Nature and Environment . | ||
Sample track 9, Elisabeth-Heim | Cathedral churchyard 865 MarQ. | 1878 | 1942 | The building previously used by the Oberrealschule opposite the cathedral has housed the Elisabeth-Heim women's monastery since 1930 ; it was damaged in the air raid on Lübeck on March 29, 1942 and blown up on April 23. | |
Sample web 19, maternity hospital | Cathedral churchyard 862 MarQ. | 1887 | From 1856 to 1887 the building housed the maternity ward of the General Hospital. |
parade
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Parade 2 | Parade 956 MarQ. | 1875 | 1924 | Erected on the site of a former canon curia instead of a previous building from 1822; Demolished in 1924 for the new construction of the trade school. | |
Parade 3 | Parade 951 MarQ. | around 1800 | 1914 | Former Canon Curia with originally only one upper floor, increased by one floor in 1888 for use as a Catholic Marien Hospital; Demolished in 1914 for the new building of the hospital. | |
Parade 4 | Parade 955 MarQ. | 1902 | Former Canon Curia, canceled in 1902 for the construction of the rectory of the Catholic Church of the Sacred Heart of Jesus | ||
Parade 5 (today's equivalent), Kurtzrocksche Kuria | Parade 952 MarQ. | 1655 | 1823 | Former Canon Curia; after the building was demolished in 1823, the property on the corner of the cathedral cemetery was used as the garden of the adjoining orphanage . In 1942/43 the air raid shelter Parade 5 (still preserved today as part of the Marien Hospital) and 7 (demolished in 2011) were built on the site. | |
Parade 7, cathedral cemetery bunker | 1942/43 | 2011 | |||
Parade 8 | Parade 953 MarQ. | 15./16. century | 1906 | The building, most recently the seat of the Lübeck cooperative dairy , was demolished for the construction of the Catholic journeyman's house. | |
Parade 12, Hauptwache | 1748 | 1878 | The building was the main station of the Lübeck military. |
Petrikirchhof
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Petrikirchhof 1a, morgue of the Petrikirche | 1600 | 1942 | The former morgue has been used as the workshop of the Petrikirche since 1882. |
Pfaffenstrasse
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pfaffenstrasse 20–22 / Königstrasse 24 | Pfaffenstrasse 672 JacQ. / Königstrasse 671 JacQ. | 2nd half of the 17th century | 1910 | The gabled house at Königstrasse 24 formed a structural unit under a common roof with the row house on the right, Pfaffenstrasse 20-22 |
Horse market
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Horse market 2 | 1861 | 1942 | An early example of a neo-Gothic house in Lübeck | ||
Horse market 4 | Klingenberg 959-960 MQ. | 1942 | The left half of the property was transferred to No. 6 in 1892 and the part of the building on it was demolished so that a larger house could be built on the expanded property No. 6. The remaining right half of the building was destroyed in the bombing of 1942. | ||
Horse market 8
Schlegelstiftung (private women's hospital) |
1905 | 1942? | From the previous private clinic of Dr. With the help of a German-American woman, Uter at the horse market 8 , who died in memory of her husband Dr. Uter had made a larger sum available for the purpose of refurbishing the previously insufficient rooms, the building, which was inaugurated on February 12, 1905, was erected. |
Possehlstrasse
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Possehl Bridge | 1956 | 2015 | Increasing signs of aging and stress damage made it necessary to replace the Possehl Bridge with a new building. The demolition of the prestressed concrete bridge on which Possehlstrasse crosses the Elbe-Lübeck Canal in the Kanatrave began on November 2, 2015. | ||
Guard house of the railway gate | 1854 | after 1934 | The guard house stood near today's Wieland Bridge on the Commis Bastion, which was cut through for the construction of the railway embankment (since 1920 Possehlstrasse) |
rose Garden
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rose garden 14–16 | Rose garden 39-38 JohQ. | 15th century | 1910 | The two gabled houses (right on the picture: No. 14) were demolished to make room for a new building that is now the seat of the Lübeck Music School . |
Sand road
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sand Road 1-3 | Sandstrasse 939-938 | 18th century | 1904 | Demolished for the construction of the August Haerder & Co. | |
Sandstrasse 1–5, Haerder department store | Core building at the corner of Sandstrasse / Wahmstrasse: 1950; Extension at the corner of Wahmstrasse / Königstrasse: 1954; Haerder Bridge (three-story glazed connecting bridge with a restaurant and sales rooms to the Breite Straße 99 building): 1956 | 2006 (Haerder Bridge); 2007 (building complex) | The post-war complex of the Haerder department store (Sandstrasse 1-5, Wahmstrasse 2-20 and Königstrasse 84-96) took up half a building block. | ||
Sandstrasse 2 / Kohlmarkt 1 | Sandstrasse 1011 / Kohlmarkt 262 MarQ. | 1867 | 1942 | ||
Sandstrasse 4 | 18th century | 1942 | |||
Sandstrasse 11 | Baroque gabled house | 1942? | Wine house since 1707, regular place for the protagonists in Ludwig Ewer's Lübeck novel: The Grandfather City | Butcher folder 60/189 | |
Sandstrasse 13 | In the 15th century home of Andreas Geverdes , see The strangled guarantor , there in the note. Consulate of Spain | ||||
Sandstrasse 15 | Sandstrasse 932 JohQ. | 1824 (formative) | 1942 | 1824 Conversion of the house (at that time still Klingenberg No. 932) in the classical style by the architect Joseph Christian Lillie for the silk merchant Gustav Boldemann. Later owner August Haerder (1860), goldsmith Heinrich Hermann Sack (1877) | |
Sandstrasse 16, Die Halbmond-Apotheke | Sandstrasse 1004 MQ. | May 1911 | Baroque | ||
Sandstrasse 16, the new half moon pharmacy | 1912 | 1942 | Architect Peter Sönnichsen ; only part of the facade survived in 1942 | ||
Sandstrasse 17 | Sandstrasse 931 JohQ. | probably 1859 | 1942 | ||
Sandstrasse 18 | Sandstrasse 1003 MQ. | 1942 | |||
Sandstrasse 19 | Sandstrasse 930 JohQ. | probably 1802 | 1942 | ||
Sandstrasse 20 | Sandstrasse 1002 MQ. | 1942 | |||
Sandstrasse 21 | Sandstrasse 929 JohQ. | 1868 | 1942 | ||
Sandstrasse 22 | Sandstrasse 1001 MQ. | 1942 | |||
Sandstrasse 23 | Sandstrasse 928 JohQ. | 1803 | In the picture on the far left | ||
Sandstrasse 23 | Sandstrasse 928 JohQ. | 1803 | 1942 | ||
Sandstrasse 24 | Sand road 1000 MQ. | 15th century | 1928 | The facade, newly built in the 18th century, was a listed building; Nevertheless, the demolition permit was granted for the construction of the consumer association's department store . During the First World War, the reserve Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 84 was housed in it | |
Sandstrasse 25 | Sandstrasse 927 JohQ. | 1826 | In the middle of the picture, with a stepped gable | ||
Sandstrasse 25 | Sandstrasse 927 JohQ. | 1826 | 1942 | The classicist facade of 1826 was mistakenly attributed to Joseph Christian Lillie in earlier literature . | |
Sandstrasse 26 | Sandstrasse 998/997 MQ. | 1893 | |||
Sandstrasse 26 | 1893 | 1928 | The Hohenschild brothers Georg and Wilhelm had their production facility at Sandstrasse 17 and expanded it to 19 in 1907. In 1907, Johs began selling the company as a separate company at 26. Wilh. Georg outsourced. From the second floor onwards, there was the owner's living area. Production moved to Fleischhauerstraße 15 from 17/19. When Hirschberg died in 1913, Karl Franke became the owner of the 26.
The company, founded in 1896, was bought in 1907 by the owner Curt Hirschfeld, who added a special department for typing, calculating and copying machines as well as office furniture and other modern office aids to its previous specialty - fine letter paper and elegant stationery. This particular department took up the first floor of the commercial building. In both departments only German makes were carried; of typewriters the brands Ideal, and Erika von Seidel & Naumann in Dresden and, by the way, the products of the well-known company F. Soennecken in Bonn, as well as the registration devices of System-Vertriebs-Gesellschaft mbH The large expansion of the machine business made it necessary to set up an own repair workshop for typewriters and calculating machines under the direction of a professionally trained mechanic. Demolished for the construction of the consumer association's department store |
||
Sandstrasse 27 | Sandstrasse 925-926 JohQ. | 1882 | Largest half-timbered house in Lübeck. Due to the changes in the course of the street, parceling and house numbering after the destruction of the Second World War, the location of the house does not correspond to today's Sandstrasse 27. | ||
Sandstrasse 28 | Klingenberg 998 MQ. | 1856 | |||
Sandstrasse 28 | Klingenberg 998 MQ. | 1856 | 1928 | Erected by the glazier Johann Jacob Achelius ; demolished for the construction of the consumer association's department store |
Schmiedestrasse
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Schmiedestrasse 5 | Schmiedestrasse 970–971 MQ. | 1875 | 1942 | Neo-Gothic extension of the JC Engelhard & Söhne wine shop | |
Schmiedestrasse 7 | Grosse Schmiedestrasse 972 MQ. | late 15th century | 1942 | Headquarters of the JC Engelhard & Söhne wine store (in the 20th century: owner Hans Sellschopp ) | |
Schmiedestrasse 7–15, health department | 1958/59 (first construction phase); 1962 (second construction phase) | 2007 | |||
Schmiedestrasse 10 | 1896 | 1942 | Headquarters and store of the colonial goods wholesaler Haukohl | ||
Schmiedestrasse 12-14 | 1901 | 1942 | Extension of the Haukohl reservoir | ||
Schmiedestrasse 26 | Schmiedestrasse 985 MQ. | <1535 | 1942 | Former office building of the forge. In possession of the office from 1535 to 1865. The official emblem above the front door . The Moltke medallion was cast by Johann Jürgen Huebner at Schmiedestrasse 24/26 and exhibited before it was unveiled. |
Schrangen
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Schrangen 20 (right) and 22–24 (left) | 1935 | 1975 | The houses formed a unit with the buildings at Fleischhauerstrasse 15 and 17, with which they stood back to back. |
Bowl stands
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bowl stands 2 | Bowl stands 201 MQ. | 1832 | 1942 | Rebuilt in 1832, incorporating some parts of the previous building. Gothic vaulted cellar and wall painting on the south wall of the first floor from 1331/38 and integrated into the new building from 1958, seat of the consulate of Great Britain and the Heinrich Leo Behncke wine shop | |
Bowl stalls 8, 6 and 4 (from left) | Bowl stalls 200, 199 and 198 MQ. | 18th century (the houses behind the gables are older) | 1942 | ||
Bowl stalls 11 | Bowl stands 212 MQ. | 1942 | On the picture the building on the right in front, seen from the Marienkirchhof . | ||
Bowl stalls 12 | Bowl stalls 196 MQ. | 16th Century | 1902 | From 1687 to 1853 Schütting of the Novgorod drivers ; demolished for the construction of the Central Hotel | |
Bowl stalls 14 / Fischstrasse 2–6 | 1887 | 1942 | In the picture the building with the tower, seen from the Marienkirchhof . | ||
Schüsselbuden 15, Pflügsches Haus | Bowl stands 221 MQ. | 1720 | 1942 | Rebuilt in 1805 by Joseph Christian Lillie for the owner Konrad Platzmann . Except for the top floor that was built later, the building dates from the beginning of the Rococo. A stucco slab in the basement bore the date 1720. From 1909 it fell into disrepair until the branch of the Lübeck Disconto-Gesellschaft was set up in the former Pflügschen wine shop in 1919. | |
Markttwiete 2–4 (Schüsselbuden 15) town house , actually administration building II | 1955-57 | 2003 | The administrative building of the town hall, which could no longer be renovated due to blatant construction defects, was demolished together with the post office on the market. | ||
Schüsselbuden 16 (formerly on the corner of Fischstrasse, today Fischstrasse 1–3) | Town house on cellar from the 13th century | 1942 | Until 1838 the location of the Fredenhagen room . The preserved Fredenhagen cellar (restaurant since 1899) was demolished in 1969 during the reconstruction except for a cellar called a chapel . Description of the post-war situation at Hartwig Beseler . | ||
Bowl stalls 20 | Bowl stalls 192 MQ. | 1764 | 1942 | Since 1892 the private bank's premises in Lübeck , from 1927 Deutsche Bank branch in Lübeck | |
Bowl stalls 22, Spethmann's Hotel | Bowl stalls 191 MQ. | 18th century | 1904 | hotel since 1884; Demolished in 1904 for the construction of the parcel post office | |
Bowl stalls 24 | Bowl stalls 190 MQ. | 1587 | 1904 | House of the shopkeeper until 1868. Demolished for the new building of the parcel post office; the Renaissance portal was moved to Braunstraße 1-3 | |
Bowl stands 32 | Bowl stands 186 MQ. | around 1550 | 1869 | ||
Bowl stalls 34 | Bowl stands 183–185 MQ. | 1860 | 1942 | The commercial building of the company HH Kahl & Sohn from 1882 | |
Bowl stands 232 MQ. | 1752 | 1882 | The commercial building of the company HH Kahl & Sohn on the corner of the Kohlmarkt ; demolished along with the other houses on the north side of the Schüsselbuden up to the Markttwiete for the construction of the new main post office. |
St.-Annen-Strasse
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
St.-Annen-Straße 1-1a, St.-Aegidien-Konvent | 1297 | 1888 | The building on the left, on the corner of Stavenstrasse , of the Beginenkonvent that was abolished in 1846 was demolished in 1888; the gabled house, which made up the right part, still exists today after renovations and bears house number 3. |
Wahmstrasse
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Wahmstrasse 76–86, Birgittenhof | Wahmstrasse 504 JohQ. | 1480 | Front building badly damaged in 1942, demolished after the war | Former branch of the Order of the Birgit from Marienwohlde | |
Wahmstrasse 90, Orkide Grill | 1949 | 2010 | The flat-roof shop pavilion on the corner of the Balauerfohr, which was built as a salon for master hairdresser Hermann Oldenburg during the reconstruction in the post-war years, was for many years the location of the Orkide grill, which is widely known in Lübeck . It was demolished on September 16, 2010 to make way for a new building. |
Wakenitz wall
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Wakenitzmauer 1, Tivoli | Kaiserstrasse 600 | 1837 | 1893 | The Tivoli , a summer theater with a large garden restaurant that stretched all the way to what was then the Wakenitz bank, had to give way to the preparations for the construction of the Elbe-Lübeck Canal . The property was counted as part of Kaiserstrasse before 1884 . |
Wallstrasse
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Wallstraße 3–5, Landwirtschaftliche Maschinen-Centrale (contemporary address: Am Holstentor ) | 1900 | 1926 | The exhibition and sales hall for agricultural machinery was located where a former petrol station with a garage, built in 1936, stands today in front of the salt storage facility. It was torn down in 1926 and a lawn was created in its place in order to upgrade the area around the Holsten Gate on the occasion of Lübeck's 700th anniversary. | ||
Wallstraße 40, observatory of the Maritime School Lübeck | Am Wall, navigation school | 1860 | 1925 | The seafaring school's observatory stood on the top of the wall next to the Kaisertor and had to give way to the expansion of the school. |
Next junk stalls
Address and / or name | Address before 1884 | Built | Destroyed | Special features and comments | Illustration |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Next junk shop 1 | Next Krambuden 246 MQ. | around 1565 | 1942 | ||
Next junk shop 2 | Next Krambuden 216 MQ. | 18th century | 1942 | ||
Next junk shop 4 | Next junk shop 245 MQ. | 18th century | 1942 | ||
Next junk shop 6 | Next Krambuden 243 MQ. | around 1800 | 1902 | The classicist building, still in its original form in the photo (center), was demolished around 1902 and replaced by a house with the appearance of a stepped gable house in the style of the neo-brick Renaissance with a half-timbered corner bay window. | |
Next junk shop 6 | 1902 | 1942 |
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.
- Father Urban Leaves. Formerly an illustrated supplement to the Lübeck advertisements
- From Lübeck's towers. Formerly an illustrated supplement to the Lübeck General-Anzeiger
Web links
- Archives of the Hanseatic City of Lübeck : Building and Architectural History, Urban Development in Lübeck: BASt - Bibliography and Citations
Individual evidence
- ↑ Was liquidated in 1935
- ↑ Manfred Finke: UNESCO World Heritage Site. Old town of Lübeck. City monument of the Hanseatic era. Neumünster 2006, pp. 72 and 74.
- ^ Arnfried Edler , Heinrich Wilhelm Schwab: Studies on the music history of the Hanseatic city of Lübeck. Kassel: Bärenreiter 1989, p. 114 (there incorrectly assigned today's house number 43 , but see building and architectural history, urban development in Lübeck (BaSt): Königstr. 22 to 59)
- ^ Arnfried Edler , Heinrich Wilhelm Schwab: Studies on the music history of the Hanseatic city of Lübeck. Kassel: Bärenreiter 1989, p. 114
- ^ Michael Brix : Nuremberg and Lübeck in the 19th century. 1981, ISBN 3-7913-0526-3 , p. 254
- ↑ The Three Kings Behind Glass , in: Citizens' Messages of BIRL , No. 109, Spring 2012, p. 16 ( digitized version ( memento of the original from March 15, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this note. ), See also description on Lübeck wall painting
- ^ Hartwig Beseler: Art-Topography Schleswig-Holstein . Neumünster 1974, p. 152