List of streets in Oberhausen-Bermensfeld

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The list of streets in Oberhausen-Bermensfeld describes the street system in the Oberhausen district of Bermensfeld with the corresponding historical references.

overview

Bermensfeld, together with the Marienviertel in Oberhausen , the Knappenviertel , the northern city center, the Neue Mitte , Schlad and the east of Dümpten, form the postcode area 46047. The statistical district of Bermensfeld had 4,772 inhabitants at the end of 2014, although a large part of the district of Bermensfeld belongs to the statistical district of Bermensfeld .

Starting in the north, the district is bounded clockwise as follows: Railway line Duisburg-Dortmund to Neue Mitte, Dellwiger Straße, Schenmannsfeld, Essener Straße and an imaginary line east of Steeler Straße to the Essen district of Frintrop , Nathlandstraße, Werdener Straße, Kettwiger Straße and Katzenbruch to Dümpten and to the west Mellinghofer Straße and its intended extension to the Duisburg – Dortmund railway line to Schlad and the Knappenviertel.

In Bermensfeld there are 26 designated traffic areas, including one square. Of these, seven streets are only partially in the district:
four streets partly belong to Dümpten ( Kettwiger Straße , Mellinghofer Straße , Nathlandstraße , Stockstraße ), two streets lead over the city limits to Essen-Frintrop ( Dellwiger Straße , Jagdstraße ), Essener Straße becomes in the New Center continued.

Overview of streets and squares

The following table gives an overview of the existing streets, paths and squares in the district as well as some related information.

  • Name: current name of the street or square.
  • Length / dimensions in meters:
  • The length information contained in the overview are rounded overview values ​​that were determined in Google Earth using the local scale. They are used for comparison purposes and, if official values ​​are known, are exchanged and marked separately.
    For squares, the dimensions are given in the form a × b.
  • The addition in the district indicates that the length is that of the street section within Bermensfeld, provided that the street continues into neighboring districts.
  • The addition without spur streets indicates the length of the "main street" for branched streets.
  • The addition (all street sections together) indicates that the street is so winding that there is no “main street”. Instead, the length of all road sections is added together.
  • Derivation: origin or reference of the name
  • Notes: additional information
  • Image: Photo of the street or an adjacent object
Surname Length / dimensions
(in meters)
Derivation Date of designation Remarks image
Adolfstrasse 360
without access roads: 300
Adolf , male first name Adolfstraße is located in a workers' settlement belonging to Gutehoffnungshütte from the 1920s, in which all streets are named after male first names. It leads from Walterstrasse to Rudolfstrasse.
At the frog pond 600
without access roads: 450
Frog pond, formerly a body of water Before the settlement of this street, the water table was so high that ponds were formed in which frogs lived. The street Am Froschenteich begins on Hattinger Strasse and makes a right-angled curve to Hausmannsfeld, behind which it continues as Steeler Strasse. There are three access roads between Am Froschenteich and Hausmannsfeld, which are also assigned to Am Froschenteich.
At the Lepkesbach 340
without access roads: 160
Läppkes Mühlenbach The street is near the Läppkes Mühlenbach, which flows on the city limits between Oberhausen and Essen. Am Lepkesbach leads from Bermensfeld to Hausmannsfeld, several small stalls are assigned to the street.
Bermensfeld 900 old cadastral designation 1915 The Bermensfeld has its name like the district of the manor Bermen in the Lipper Heide , which was subordinate to the Essen monastery. It was mentioned for the first time in 1556, it was located in the marshland of the Nathlandbach. The name "Bermen" is derived from an old word for "slope".

The road was Bermensfeld since 1862 boundary road between Oberhausen and Frintrop and called Heidestraße . When Unterfrintrops, today's east of Bermenfeld, was incorporated into Oberhausen in 1915, it was renamed Bermensfeld . It leads north from Katzenbruch to behind Stahlstraße.

Bleysfeld 540
(all road sections together)
Bleyshof, old farm The Bleysfeld, a winding new building area, was created in the fields of the Bleyshof and is therefore called that. The Bleyshof was north of Nathlandstrasse on Läppkes Mühlenbach and had belonged to the Bermen family since 1644.
Dellwiger Strasse 200
in the district
Dellwig , district of Essen 1915 Dellwiger Straße is the continuation of the street of the same name in Essen-Frintrop, where it continues to Dellwig. Until 1915 it was called Bahnhofstrasse .
Essener Strasse 1600
in the district
eat 1915 Essener Strasse begins in the Neue Mitte as a continuation of Duisburger Strasse. It crosses the Neue Mitte and goes over to the Bermensfeld area behind the Duisburg – Dortmund railway line. It takes its name from the neighboring town of Oberhausen to which it leads. There it is continued as Frintroper Straße. Until 1892 the Essener Straße was called Meiderich-Steeler Provinzialstraße , until 1915 in Bermensfeld it was called Oberhausener Straße .
The entire length of Essener Strasse is part of Bundesstrasse 231 in the Oberhausen city area .
Hattinger Strasse 400 Hattingen Hattinger Strasse leads from Bermensfeld to Steeler Strasse.
Hausmannsfeld 1100 Hausmannshof, old yard 1915 The street is laid out in the fields of the Hausmannshof and is therefore called that. It leads from Nathlandstrasse to the northern border of Bermensfeld on Dellwiger Strasse. Until 1915 it was called Lippernstrasse .
Hellstrasse 130 "Höhenstraße" The name "Hellstraße" means "Höhenstraße" and hereby means the main terrace on the Rhine, which it presumably led to in the past. Today it is below the main terrace of the Rhine and leads from Bermensfeld to Stockstrasse.
Hugo-Rasch-Strasse 850
(all road sections together)
Hugo Rasch , 1913–1960, politician of the SPD 1968 Hugo-Rasch-Straße is a winding settlement from the late 1960s, which was built by the non-profit Reichsbund Housing and Settlement Society. It is located at the northern end of the Hausmannsfeld and bears its name after the regional chairman of the Reich Association of War and Civil Disabled Persons, Social Pensioners and Survivors , Hugo Rasch.
Hunting route 120
in the district
Jägersküpper , old peasant kotten The Jagdstraße is the continuation of the Frintroper Straße of the same name in the Oberhausen area. It is only accessible via Frintrop and ends after a few meters behind Schemmannsfeld.
Cat break 180 old hallway name, "swamp with cat stools " 1915 The Katzenbruch is a short connecting road between Mellinghofer Straße and Stockstraße. Until 1915 the street was called Weststraße . It is the border road between Dümpten and Bermensfeld.
Kettwiger Strasse 110
in the district
Kettwig , district of Essen Like several other streets in the area, Kettwiger Strasse bears the name of an Essen district. It leads from Stockstrasse to Werdener Strasse and is on this piece of the border road between Dümpten and Bermensfeld, after which it is offset by a few meters in Dümpten as a short spur road to Werdener Strasse.
Lotharstrasse 200
without access roads: 100
Lothar , male first name Lotharstraße is located in a workers' settlement belonging to Gutehoffnungshütte from the 1920s, in which all streets are named after male first names. It leads from Adolfstrasse to Bermensfeld.
Mellinghofer Strasse 1000
in the district
Mellinghofen , old residential area Mellinghofen is still a district of Oberdümptens today, which is located on the site of a former peasantry. The name is derived from an earlier forest area, the "Mallingforst". Mellinghofer Straße leads to Mellinghofen and is therefore called that. It begins on Essener Strasse, crosses Bermensfeld and then forms the border between Dümpten and the Schladviertel, before it lies completely in the Dümpten area and merges into the Mülheim city area, where it leads to Mellinghofen under the same name.
Mellisstrasse 250 Melliskottos , old court 1915 The nearby Melliskotten has led to the name of the former Sophienstrasse in Mellisstrasse . This street leads from Hattinger Straße to Essener Straße.
Nathlandstrasse 750 Nathlandbach , a body of water formerly located here The Nathlandbach , which bears its name because it runs through “wet land”, used to flow through this area . As early as 1823, the area around the stream was called "Im Nathland". The Nathlandstrasse continues as a continuation of Falkensteinstrasse in the Knappenviertel to the city limits to Essen, on its piece between Werdener Strasse and the city limits it forms the border between Bermensfeld and Dümpten.

The part of Nathlandstrasse between Bermensfeld and the city limits was called Kahrstrasse until 1915 .

Nierfeldweg 490
old cadastral designation ("Nierfeld") The Nierfeldweg leads eastwards from Bermensfeld and then makes a right-angled curve to the north (the continuation to the east is called Bleysfeld), followed by two spur roads, which are also assigned to the Nierfeldweg, before it again makes a right-angled curve, again to the east, and at the Steeler Strasse ends.
Rudolfplatz 40 × 20 Rudolf , male first name 1915 Rudolfplatz is located in a workers' settlement belonging to Gutehoffnungshütte from the 1920s, in which all streets are named after male first names. It is located at the Adolfstrasse / Rudolfstrasse intersection.
Rudolfstrasse 250 Rudolf , male first name 1915 Rudolfstrasse is located in a workers' settlement belonging to Gutehoffnungshütte from the 1920s, in which all streets are named after male first names. It leads from Mellinghofer Straße past Rudolfplatz to Mellisstraße. Until 1915 it was called Paulstrasse .
Stahlstrasse 130 Steel , metallic alloys important for industry The name "Stahlstraße" is reminiscent of the industry and the Gutehoffnungshütte . The street leads from Bermensfeld to Mellisstraße.
Steeler Street 750
without access roads: 700
Steele , district of Essen Like several other streets in the area, Steeler Strasse bears the name of an Essen district. It leads north from Nathlandstrasse to behind Hattinger Strasse and then makes a right-angled curve to Hausmannsfeld, where it ends.
Stockstrasse 150
in the district
Simon Stock or Wilhelm Stock Stockstrasse is named either after the long-established butcher Simon Stock, who built the first house here, or the first mayor of Borbeck, Wilhelm Stock. Until 1915 the street belonged to Borbeck like much of what is now east of Oberhausen. It leads from Dümpten from Frintroper Straße as a continuation of Kaisersfeld northwards to Bermensfeld and ends at Nathlandstraße.
Walterstrasse 190 Walter , male first name Walterstraße is located in a workers' settlement belonging to Gutehoffnungshütte from the 1920s, in which all streets are named after male first names. It leads from Bermensfeld to Hausmannsfeld, four small spur streets to Walterstraße are also assigned to it.
Rolling mill 425
without access roads: 250
Rolling mill Neu Oberhausen The name derives from the rolling mill Neu Oberhausen the Gutehoffnungshütte ago that all was near. The street leads from Hattinger Strasse to Essener Strasse; five small stalls leading to Walzstrasse are also assigned to it.

List of former streets in Bermensfeld

The list of former streets shows previous or deleted street names in the Bermensfeld district. Most of them were exchanged in 1915 when the city of Borbeck was dissolved and the main part fell to Essen, while the west of Frintrop - today's Bermensfeld - was incorporated into Oberhausen.

Surname from to renamed to (current) Derivation Remarks
Bahnhofstrasse 1915 →  Dellwiger Strasse The road continues past the Dellwig train station.
Heidestrasse 1915 →  Bermensfeld The Heidestrasse led through the Lipper Heide . Between 1862 and 1915, Heidestrasse was the border road between Oberhausen and Frintrop.
Kahrstrasse 1915 →  Nathlandstrasse
Lipperstrasse 1915 →  Hausmannsfeld The road was near the Lipperheidebaum customs post .
Meiderich-Steeler Provinzialstrasse 1892 →  Essener Strasse The road connected Meiderich with Steele . After 1892 the street was first named Oberhausener Straße .
Oberhausener Strasse 1892 1915 →  Essener Strasse The street led to the mayor's office in Oberhausen. Before 1892 the street was called Meiderich-Steeler Provinzialstraße .
Paulstrasse 1915 →  Rudolfstraße
West Street 1915 →  cat break The street was to the west of the Frintrop mayor's office.

Other locations in the district

In Bermensfeld there is the bus stop "Lipperheidebaum", the name of which does not refer to a street name, as is usually the case, but to a former customs station in Lipperheide (which was provided with a barrier).

The “Primary School at the Froschenteich” derives its name from a large pond with frogs that actually used to be here. Until 1988 it was called "Bermensfeld Primary School", but was then renamed because it had the same name as the neighboring "Bermensfeld Secondary School".

See also

Individual evidence

  1. Unless otherwise stated, the source used is: Alfred & Ulrich Lindemann: 500 kilometers of Oberhausen street history. 1997.
  2. Oberhausen social structure atlas. Retrieved September 6, 2015 .
  3. ↑ Tourist office Oberhausen: Information board customs station. (PDF) (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on April 15, 2016 ; accessed on October 30, 2016 . 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 notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.verkehrsverein-oberhausen.de
  4. Primary school at the frog pond. Retrieved October 30, 2016 .