List of streets in Oberhausen-Lirich-Süd
The list of streets in Oberhausen-Lirich-Süd describes the street system in the Oberhausen district of Lirich-Süd with the corresponding historical references.
overview
Lirich-Süd is a social district of the city of Oberhausen, which is often combined with Lirich-Nord to Lirich . Because of its heterogeneous structure - compared to the north of Lirich - the district is listed here separately from Lirich, whose street names can be found in the list of streets in Oberhausen-Lirich .
8,206 people live in Lirich-Süd (as of December 2016) on an area of 1.51 km². Together with Lirich and Alstaden an der Ruhr, the district forms the postcode district 46049. The district is often also called City West or simply Bero-Zentrum . Historically, it is mainly located in the Lipper Heide , partly in the south-western part of the Alstadener Heide , after which the district in the south (south-west of Würpemberg-, Luisen- and Alleestrasse) is still sometimes called "Alstaden-Heide". Originally, Lirich-Süd was the western expansion of the city center around the Altenberg zinc factory settlement , today it is a mixed district with an industrial area, the Bero-Zentrum Oberhausen shopping center and residential areas.
Starting in the north, Lirich-Süd is bounded clockwise as follows: Railway Duisburg – Quakenbrück to Lirich-Nord, Oberhausen – Arnhem railway to Neue Mitte Oberhausen , Duisburg – Dortmund railway to the city center, Oberhausen – Duisburg-Ruhrort railway to Alstaden and Niebuhrstrasse to Duisburg - Obermeiderich .
There are 36 designated traffic areas in Lirich-Süd, including no space. Of these, five streets are only partially in the district:
two streets continue to Alstaden ( Bebelstraße , Ruprechtstraße ), Buschhausener Straße leads to Lirich, Niebuhrstraße continues behind federal motorway 3 in Obermeiderich and Duisburger Straße leads to Neue Mitte.
The following state roads and Oberhausen district roads run through Lirich-Süd :
- Landesstraße 215: (coming from the city center) Hansastraße - Buschhausener Straße (further in Lirich)
- Landesstraße 452: (coming from the New Center) Duisburger Straße (further in Alstaden)
- Kreisstraße 5 : (coming from Alstaden) Bebelstraße - end at K 19
- Kreisstraße 19 : Start on the L 215 - Concordiastraße (continue in Lirich)
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 of the street section is that within Lirich-Süd, provided 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 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Albertstrasse | 140 | Albert , male first name | 1936 | Albertstrasse is a short strait to Duisburger Strasse. Until 1936 it was called Schützenstrasse . | |
Avenue street | 1400 | avenue-like planting | 1945 | Alley-like trees have been planted on both sides of the street, which is why the street was named that way.
The Alleestraße crosses the Alstadener Heide and leads from the Duisburger Straße as a continuation of the Glasstraße eastwards to the Oberhausen city center, where it is continued as Marktstraße. The municipal Concordia School is located here. Between 1936 and 1945 the Alleestraße was called König-Heinrich-Straße . |
|
Altenberger Strasse | 700 | Altenberg zinc factory | Altenberger Straße is close to the old Altenberg zinc factory, which today serves as the LVR industrial museum in Oberhausen . Altenberger Straße leads from Concordiastraße to Gustavstraße. | ||
At the headframe | 900 | Pit 2/3 of the Concordia colliery | The Concordia 2/3 mine was located on the current site of the Bero Center until 1968. Until now located on the street Am Förderturm an old shaft of the mine drainage is used.
The street Am Förderturm leads from Rombacher Strasse as a continuation of Würpembergstrasse to the roundabout on Concordiastrasse, behind which it continues as Hansastrasse. The Hans Sachs Vocational College is located at it. |
||
Annastrasse | 400 | Anna , saint | Saint Anne is a patroness of the mining industry.
The Annastraße leads in the Alstadener Heide from the parallel to Weberstraße. |
||
Bebelstrasse | 1000 in the district |
August Bebel , 1840–1913, German politician | 1947 | The Bebelstraße leads north from Alstaden to Concordiastraße, behind which it continues as Gustavstraße. It used to be called Westendstraße in the Oberhausen part , in 1937 the Alstaden name Kaiserstraße was adopted for both parts of the street. It has had its current name since 1947. | |
Buschhausener Strasse | 850 in the district |
Buschhausen | 1945 | The Buschhausener Straße leads from Lirich to Buschhausen. It is the extension of Ebertstrasse behind Hansastrasse, which leaves Lirich-Süd in a north-west direction. The street was laid out as Friedrichstraße in 1846 and renamed Ludendorffstraße in 1918 . In 1945 the street was given its current name. | |
Concordiastrasse | 1100 | Concordia colliery | 1936 | The Concordia colliery was the most important colliery in the Lirich district and one of the most important collieries in the entire Ruhr area. Shaft 2 of the system still stands today on the Am Förderturm road and is used for dewatering . Today the Bero Center is located on the site of the 2/3 mine .
Concordiastraße leads from the city center past the Bero-Zentrum to Duisburger Straße in a north-west direction, behind which it continues in Lirich as Wilmsstraße. Originally it was called Wasserleitungsstrasse , from 1911 between Gustavstrasse and Duisburger Strasse Wilmsstrasse and between Hansa and Gustavstrasse connecting street . In 1921, both parts were assigned to Wilmsstraße before they were jointly named Concordiastraße in 1936 . |
|
Dorotheenstrasse | 110 | Dorothea Sophie , 1636–1689, Duchess of Brandenburg | 1933 | Dorotheenstrasse connects the avenue and parallel streets. She was called to 1933 construction road . | |
Duisburger Strasse | 2900 in the district |
Duisburg | 1892 | Duisburger Strasse is the main street in the Lirich-Süd district. It runs as an extension of Obermeidericher Straße in Meiderich and Alstaden in a north-east direction to the New Center and crosses Lirich-Süd. The former Babcock factory, the Pauluskirche as well as several shops and discounters are located on it. Until 1892 it was called Meiderich-Steeler-Provinzialstrasse . | |
Family street | 140 | Family building , nickname of a workers' settlement owned by the Altenberg company | The Altenberg company built houses here for the families of their employees around 1850, after whose nickname “Family Building” the street was named. Familienstraße is a dead end to Altenberger Straße. | ||
Glass Street | 55 | Oberhausen glass factory | At the end of this street the Oberhausen glass factory was founded in 1877, which was demolished in 1981. Glasstrasse is the short connection between Schmelzstrasse and Duisburger Strasse. Behind Duisburger Strasse, it continues as Alleestrasse. | ||
Güterstrasse | 190 | Freight station Oberhausen West | Güterstraße is an old heather dividing route that leads to the Oberhausen West freight yard. It lies between Hansa and Gustavstrasse. | ||
Gustavstrasse | 850 | Gustav , male first name | 1899 | Gustavstraße was built in 1899 as part of the Altenberg zinc factory settlement. It forms the continuation of Bebelstraße behind Concordiastraße and leads to Hansastraße. The Catholic Church of the Holy Family from 1958, which was the parish church of Lirich-Süd and was demoted to "another church" in 2007 as part of the restructuring in the diocese of Essen, rests with her. Since then it has been used by the Oberhausener Tafel. | |
Hans-Joachim-Balcke-Strasse | 140 | Hans Joachim Balcke, 1862–1933, inventor from Oberhausen | Hans-Joachim-Balcke-Straße is a dead end to Duisburger Straße at the Babcockwerke, which leads to behind Schmelzstraße. | ||
Hansastrasse | 1000 | Hanse , Association of Low German Merchants | Hansastraße leads from Concordiastraße as a continuation of Am Förderturm to Buschhausener Straße and behind this leads in an arc northwards to Duisburger Straße. The LVR Industrial Museum in Oberhausen is located here . The street was called Concordiastraße between 1921 and 1936 in the southern part . | ||
In the heather | 200 without access roads: 190 |
In the heather there is a new building area between Güterstrasse and Hansastrasse. | |||
Klarastrasse | 110 | Klara , female name | Klarastraße is a short connection between avenue and parallel street, parallel to Dorotheenstraße. | ||
Konradstrasse | 210 | Konrad , male first name | Konradstrasse leads from Duisburger to Rombacher Strasse. It was called Hanielstraße until 1934 . | ||
Leopoldstrasse | 330 without access roads: 220 |
Leopold , male first name | Leopoldstrasse leads from Rombacher to Duisburger Strasse, behind which it continues as Ruhrorter Strasse. Until 1934 it was called Grabenstrasse . | ||
Luisenstrasse | 640 without spur roads: 500 |
Luise von Mecklenburg-Strelitz , 1776–1810, as the wife of Friedrich Wilhelm III. Queen of Prussia | Luisenstrasse connects Parallelstrasse with Würpembergstrasse in the Alstadener Heide. | ||
Metzgerstrasse | 350 | urban slaughterhouse | Metzgerstrasse is located in the northeast and arches connecting Duisburger and Buschhausener Strasse. The Oberhausen slaughterhouse was opened here in 1891. | ||
Niebuhrstrasse | 300 in the district |
Barthold Georg Niebuhr , 1776–1831, historian, statesman and minister | 1927 | Niebuhrstrasse is a dead end to Duisburger Strasse in the southwest of the district. After the A3 motorway, it will continue in Duisburg-Meiderich. Until 1927 it was called Meidericher Straße . | |
Ottilienstraße | 400 | Ottilie , female name | 1929 | The Ottilienstraße connects the Duisburg with the Luisenstraße in the Alstadener Heide. Until 1929 it was called Tannenwegstraße . | |
Parallel street | 1500 | Course of the road | 1947 | The parallel road runs parallel to the Oberhausen – Duisburg-Ruhrort railway line . It thus leads in the Alstadener Heide from Duisburger Strasse to Alleestrasse. It used to be called Düsseldorfer Straße , later between 1936 and 1947 Lettow-Vorbeck-Straße . | |
Rhenaniastrasse | 210 | Rhenania AG | Rhenaniastrasse connects Hansa and Altenberger Strasse. | ||
Rombacher Strasse | 400 | Rombach , city in Lorraine | 1936 | Rombacher Strasse bears its name in reference to a merger planned in 1914 between Concordia-Bergbau AG and Rombacher Hüttenwerke AG from Rombas in Lorraine. The First World War ruined these plans.
The street leads from Würpembergstraße to Konradstraße. Until 1892 it was called Schlachthofstraße , then until 1936 Schachtstraße . |
|
Ruprechtstrasse | 350 in the district |
Ruprecht , male first name | 1945 | Ruprechtstrasse runs through the entire Alstadener Heide, begins at Alstadener Strasse in Alstaden and leads north to Weberstrasse. It was called Michelstrasse until 1937 , then Wilhelm-Gustloff-Strasse until 1945 . | |
Melting line | 260 | Oberhausen glass factory | The name of the melting line refers to the melting process in the Oberhausen Becker glass factory, whose private street it used to be. The Schmelzstraße runs between Glas- and Hans-Joachim-Balcke-Straße, parallel to Duisburger Straße. | ||
Sunshine road | 170 | Seam of sunshine , coal seam of the Bochum layers | The Sunshine seam was mainly mined in the Concordia colliery .
The Sonnenscheinstrasse is located in the Alstadener Heide, between Weberstrasse and Ottilienstrasse. |
||
Theresenstrasse | 300 | Therese , female name | Theresenstraße is an old heather dividing path between Altenberger and Duisburger Straße. | ||
Ursulastrasse | 110 | Ursula , female name | 1957 | Ursulastraße is a cul-de-sac in the Alstadener Heide to Alleestraße. | |
Von-Stephan-Strasse | 90 | Heinrich von Stephan , 1831–1897, organizer of the German postal system | Von-Stephan-Straße is a dead end to Konradstraße. | ||
Weberstrasse | 750 | Weber , job title | Weberstrasse is either an arbitrary name or it used to be a weaving mill. In the Alstadener Heide the street connects the parallel street with the Alleestraße and then makes an arc to the Würpembergstraße. | ||
Werner Street | 160 | Werner Walbeck, factory owner | Werner Walbeck built an artificial stone factory on this street. Wernerstraße leads from Gustavstraße to Duisburger Straße. The Josef School used to be located here. | ||
Würpembergstrasse | 270 | Würpemberg , formerly located here elevation ("cube-shaped mountain") | "Am Würpemberg" is an old cadastral designation for this area that goes back to the Wurperberg , Worpelberg , an elevation whose name means "cube-shaped mountain". This Wurperberg that lay at the crossroads today Weber / Würpembergstraße, formerly marked the boundary between the eating Indian Lirich, the Cleves Meiderich and bergischen Alstaden.
Würpembergstraße leads eastwards from Duisburger Straße to Rombacher Straße, behind which it is continued as Am Förderturm. |
List of no longer existent streets in Lirich-Süd
Former street names or deleted streets mentioned in the overview are explained in detail here.
Surname | from | to | renamed to (current) | Derivation | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Construction road | 1933 | → Dorotheenstrasse | |||
Brunnenstrasse | 1926 | moved in | The Fountain Street was a connection between Gustav and Duisburg street, in the amount of road freight. The city slaughterhouse was later built where it was. | ||
Concordiastrasse | 1921 | 1936 | → Hansastrasse | The road is near the Concordia colliery . | Between 1921 and 1936, the street between the main post office in Oberhausen, the railway underpass, the roundabout and the intersection of Hansa- / Buschhausener Straße (then Ludendorffstraße ) was called Concordiastraße before it was given to the then Wilmsstraße . |
Düsseldorfer Strasse | → parallel street | Düsseldorf , Rhenish city | The street was later called Lettow-Vorbeck-Straße until 1947 . | ||
Friedrichplatz | 1846 | 1929 | moved in | Until 1918 Friedrichstrasse and Hansastrasse crossed here . In 1918, Friedrichstrasse was renamed Ludendorffstrasse , which is why in 1929 the council finally decided to repeal the name Friedrichplatz as well. Today it is no longer recognizable that there was once a square here, it is a normal intersection. | |
Friedrichstrasse | 1846 | 1918 | → Buschhausener Strasse | The intersection of Friedrichstrasse and Hansastrasse was called Friedrichplatz . After 1918 the street was first named Ludendorffstraße . | |
gardenstreet | 1933 | moved in | The Garden Road once ran from the Duisburg road with the Gustavstraße. After 1933 it was initially called Juliusstrasse . | ||
Grabenstrasse | 1934 | → Leopoldstrasse | A drainage ditch used to be located here. | After 1934 the street was first named Leo-Kausch-Straße . | |
Hanielstrasse | 1934 | → Konradstrasse | Franz Haniel junior , 1842–1916, entrepreneur | ||
Juliusstrasse | 1933 | 1972 | moved in | The Juliusstraße once ran from the Duisburg with the Gustavstraße. Before 1933 it was called Gartenstrasse . | |
Kaiserstrasse | 1937 | 1947 | → Bebelstrasse | The street was named after the German emperors . | Until 1937 the name Kaiserstraße only referred to the Alstadener part, the street section in Lirich-Süd was called Westendstraße . |
Koenig-Heinrich-Strasse | 1936 | 1945 | → Alleestraße | The street is named after one of the many kings named Heinrich . | |
Leo-Kausch-Strasse | 1934 | 1945 | → Leopoldstrasse | Leo Kausch, miner, had an accident in 1925 at the Concordia colliery . He is said to have been one of the first SA men in Oberhausen. | Before 1934 the street was called Grabenstrasse . |
Lettow-Vorbeck-Strasse | 1936 | 1947 | → parallel street | Paul von Lettow-Vorbeck , 1870–1964, during the First World War commander of the protection force for German East Africa | Originally the street was called Düsseldorfer Straße . |
Ludendorffstrasse | 1918 | 1945 | → Buschhausener Strasse | Erich Ludendorff , 1865–1937, general and politician, chief of the Third Supreme Army Command during the First World War | Before 1918 the street was called Friedrichstrasse . |
Marienstrasse | 1937 | moved in | The Marienstraße connected the shafts I and II / III of the Concordia colliery on what is now the Bero-Zentrum . It ceased to exist around 1937. | ||
Meiderich-Steeler Provinzialstrasse | 1892 | → Duisburger Strasse | The road used to connect Meiderich with Steele . | ||
Meidericher Strasse | 1927 | → Niebuhrstrasse | The road was the border road between Lirich and Meiderich. | ||
Michelstrasse | 1937 | → Ruprechtstrasse | Michel , male first name | After 1937 the street was initially called Wilhelm-Gustloff-Straße . | |
Shaft street | 1892 | 1936 | → Rombacher Strasse | The street is located near the Concordia II / III mine. | Before 1892 the street was called Schlachthofstraße . |
Schlachthofstrasse | 1892 | → Rombacher Strasse | The city slaughterhouse was supposed to be built here earlier. | After 1892 the street was initially called Schachtstraße . | |
Schlachthofstrasse | 1955 | moved in | The street was on the slaughterhouse grounds. | ||
Schützenstrasse | 1936 | → Albertstrasse | The street used to lead to the target stand of the Oberhausen rifle club, which had been laid out on the meadow of the Uhlenbruckhof. | ||
Tannenwegstrasse | 1929 | → Ottilienstraße | The Tannenweg was an old connection between the Alstaden and Meidericher Heide. | ||
Connecting road | before 1911 | 1921 | → Concordiastraße | Originally the whole of today's Concordiastraße was called Wasserleitungsstraße . Between Gustavstrasse and Duisburger Strasse it was called Wilmsstrasse around 1911 and between Hansa and Gustavstrasse it was called the connecting road . In 1921 both parts were assigned to Wilmsstraße , and in 1936 it was renamed Concordiastraße . | |
Water main road | around 1850 | before 1911 | → Concordiastraße | There used to be a trench for draining the Concordia I mine, which was popularly known as the aqueduct . | Later the street was called partly connecting and partly Wilmsstraße . From 1921 both parts were called Wilmsstraße and from 1936 Concordiastraße . |
Westendstrasse | 1937 | → Bebelstrasse | The street was to the west of the Oberhausen mayor's office. | Westendstraße only referred to the northern part of today's street in Lirich-Süd and Alstaden-Heide. After 1937, the Alstaden name Kaiserstraße was initially adopted for both parts, before they were given the name Bebelstraße in 1947 . | |
Wilhelm-Gustloff-Strasse | 1937 | 1945 | → Ruprechtstrasse | Wilhelm Gustloff , 1895–1936, National Socialist and head of the NSDAP foreign organization in Switzerland | Before 1937 the street was called Michelstrasse . |
Wilmsstrasse | 1911 | 1936 | → Concordiastraße | Even today, Concordiastrasse is the extension of Wilmsstrasse from Lirich. It used to lead past Wilmshof there . | Originally the street was called Wasserleitungsstraße . By 1911 the western part from Gustavstrasse had already been assigned to Wilmsstrasse , from 1921 the former connecting road and thus the entire street from Lirich to the city center was also called Wilmsstrasse . In 1936 it was renamed Concordiastraße . |
Zinc road | moved in | The street was near the Altenberg zinc factory . | The zinc road linking Gustav and Duisburg road between Werner and Therese Street. |
See also
- List of streets in Oberhausen
- List of streets in Alstaden
- List of streets in downtown Oberhausen
- List of streets in Oberhausen-Marienviertel
Individual evidence
- ↑ Unless otherwise stated, the source used is: Alfred & Ulrich Lindemann: 500 Kilometer Oberhausener Strassegeschichte , 1997
- ^ City of Oberhausen: Statistical Yearbook 2016 (PDF) Retrieved on August 18, 2018 .
- ↑ Open Street Map. Retrieved September 11, 2015 .