List of area monuments in Frankfurt (Oder)
Frankfurt (Oder) has many monuments because of its long history . In addition to monuments in the narrower sense , architectural and ground monuments and monument areas, there are many area monuments in Frankfurt (Oder) .
Village green with surrounding Boossen
Hohenwalde village green
Hohenwalde
Cemetery of honor for prisoners of war and forced laborers from several nations in Güldendorf
Güldendorf , Güldendorfer Strasse
Manor house with park in Kliestow
Kliestow, Berliner Chaussee 76
Manor house and park in Boossen
Boossen, Bergstrasse 14
Manor house and park in Rosengarten
Rose garden, Siedlerplatz 2
Lubusz suburb
bounded by Berliner Straße, including Karl-Ritter-Platz and Herbert-Jensch-Straße 1–3
Lennépark
see main article Lennépark Frankfurt (Oder)
The Lennépark is a green space in Frankfurt (Oder) that was named after its garden architect Peter Joseph Lenné . It is an elongated park area of 8.9 hectares with a length of around 900 m and a width of around 95 m with an artificial waterfall, flowing water, fountain, ponds, bridges and works of art. The park, designed in the English style, is the second oldest public park in Germany (after Theresienstein).
Lienau Park with a monument to Michael Lienau
Lienau, known as Frankfurt's patron , received an obelisk made of white marble as a memorial in 1861. There is a picture of Lienau on the front. On the back plinth is the inscription To the careful head of the family, the faithful friend, the caretaker of the arts, the admirer of nature. His grateful son . The monument is now located on the site of the open-air theater, which was once a family garden in Lienau Park . (Half City 29)
Place at the Friedenskirche (formerly Untermarkt)
limited by Collegienstraße, Schulstraße, Oderpromenade
Soviet cemetery of honor in Boossen
Boossen, at the memorial
Half a city street
delimited by the development of Halbe Stadt (western property line) and Lennépark
Paulinenhof housing estate
Magistrale
Karl-Marx-Strasse 8–22, 176–191
The history of buildings in Frankfurt (Oder) says that on August 4, 1956, the foundation stone for the construction of new houses in the old town, which was destroyed at the end of the Second World War, began on Karl-Marx-Straße. The development planning was carried out by VEB Hochbauprojektierung Frankfurt. The distance between the curbs of the street is 19.20 meters and there are two tram tracks in the middle. The houses facing each other on the main road are between 42 and 58 meters apart. The completion took place in 1963/1964. The six newly built apartment blocks each had space for shops on the ground floor. The street is a listed building. [9]
Residential complex with front garden August-Bebel-Straße 29–32, Maxim-Gorki-Straße 1–5, Rathenaustraße 1–3, Fontanestraße 4, 5
August-Bebel-Straße 29–32, Maxim-Gorki-Straße 1–5, Rathenaustraße 1–3, Fontanestraße 4, 5
Housing complex August-Bebel-Straße 116–124, Albert-Fellert-Straße 42, 43
August-Bebel-Strasse 116–124, Albert-Fellert-Strasse 42, 43
Residential complex Huttenstrasse 1–13, Thilestrasse 1–3, Ebertusstrasse 13–15
Huttenstrasse 1–13, Thilestrasse 1–3, Ebertusstrasse 13–15
Residential development on Kiliansberg with a monument to the fallen railway workers
Kiliansberg 1–7, Ferdinandstraße 14, Bahnhofsplatz 18
Not far from the train station on Kiliansberg is the memorial to the railway workers who died in World War I and the subsequent border wars. The wish for such a memorial was expressed as early as 1921, but it was not until 1931 that the district association of railway associations decided unanimously to collect donations for such a work. The architect and Reichsbahnrat Beringer designed the monument. Three steles symbolize the three administrative districts of Posen , West Prussia and Danzig , in which the fallen soldiers had worked. The base that unites the steles symbolizes the East German Railway Directorate , to which the districts were united. At the top of the work there is a winged bronze wheel symbolizing the work of the railroad workers. The monument was inaugurated on July 3, 1932.
Residential development with front gardens and rear courtyard areas, the small square on Bahnhofstrasse and Spieckerstrasse and the substructure in front of Heilbronner Strasse 11-14
Bahnhofstrasse 1–4, 15–19, 22–26, Heilbronner Strasse 3, 4, 6–8, 10–14
Footnotes
- ↑ Bernhard Klemm, Frankfurter Denkmalgeschichte - told on the basis of the fate of individual monuments in communications from the historical association of Frankfurt (Oder) eV, issue 1/1997, p. 10
- ↑ Bernhard Klemm, Frankfurter Denkmalgeschichte - told on the basis of the fate of individual monuments , in communications from the historical association of Frankfurt (Oder) eV, 1997, issue 1, pp. 17-18