List of streets and squares in Berlin-Dahlem
The list of streets and squares in Berlin-Dahlem describes the street system in the Berlin district of Dahlem with the corresponding historical references. At the same time, this compilation is part of the lists of all Berlin streets and places .
overview
Starting in the north, the district is bounded clockwise as follows: Lentzeallee , Breitenbachplatz , Englerallee , Altensteinstraße , Unter den Eichen , Schützallee , Sundgauer Straße , Waltraudstraße , Holzungsweg , Onkel-Tom-Straße , Hüttenweg , way to the hunting lodge Grunewald , Pücklerstraße , Platz on the wild boar .
The village of Dahlem belonged to knightly landlords and came to the Prussian domain treasury in 1841. On March 25, 1901, the law on the division of the domain land came into force, for the implementation of which the Royal Commission for the division of the Dahlem domain was responsible. Dahlem was developed as a villa suburb. The road structure in Dahlem can be divided into three location complexes.
- Domain Dahlem : the original area between Pacelliallee , Königin-Luise-Straße and the route of the incision railway .
- US Housing Area : the former settlements for US military personnel with the (now demolished) Truman Plaza and the General Lucius D. Clay Headquarters on both sides of Clayallee .
- Science location ("German Oxford"): the FU campus with other academic institutions, which stretches from Garystrasse via Thielallee to Königin-Luise-Strasse and Altensteinstrasse.
The most important east-west connections are the Königin-Luise-Straße , which leads through the old village center, the Hüttenweg and the street line Argentinische Allee - Saargemünder Straße - Brümmerstraße .
The most important north-south connections are Clayallee , Pacelli- / Thielallee, Podbielskiallee and Englerallee / Altensteinstraße. In road development plan are Altensteinstraße, Argentine avenue Clayallee, Dillenburger road Englerallee 100 meters Habelschwerdter Avenue, Queen Street Luise and 100 meters of Schorlemerallee as parent listed. Furthermore, the Habelschwerdter Allee in the remaining section, 2460 meters of the Hüttenweg, and the Pacelli, Podbielski- and Thielallee are classified as regional road connections . Archivstraße, Brümmerstraße, Fabeckstraße (150 meters), Garystraße, Ihnestraße (390 meters), Löhleinstraße (except 50 meters of parallel lane), Saargemünder Straße and the remaining section of Schorlemerallee are used as supplementary roads.
Dahlem has 16,929 inhabitants (as of December 30, 2019) and includes the postcode areas 14169 and 14195.
Overview of streets and squares
The following table gives an overview of the streets and squares in the district as well as some related information.
- Name / location : current name of the street or square. Via the link Location , the street or the square can be displayed on various map services. The geoposition indicates the approximate center of the street length.
- Traffic routes not listed in the official street directory are marked with * .
- Former or no longer valid street names are in italics . A separate list may be available for important former streets or historical street names.
-
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 for rectangular systems and for (approximately) triangular systems as a × b × c with a as the longest side.
If the street continues into neighboring districts, the addition ' in the district ' indicates how long the street section within the district of this article is. - Name origin : origin or reference of the name.
- Notes : further information on adjacent monuments or institutions, the history of the street and historical names.
- Image : Photo of the street or an adjacent object.
Name / location | Length / dimensions (in meters) |
Origin of name | Date of designation | Remarks | image |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Albrecht-Thaer-Weg
( Location ) |
380 | Albrecht Daniel Thaer (1752–1828), founder of modern agricultural science | Jan. 30, 1923 | It was laid out around 1920 as a private connecting route in the university district of Dahlem. The street connects the Lentzeallee with the Schorlemerallee. Here are the buildings of the Agricultural University, which are used today by various institutes of the FU and TU . | |
Altensteinstrasse
( Location ) |
1500 | Karl vom Stein zum Altenstein (1770–1840), Prussian politician | May 2, 1905 | From 1901 to 1905 Altensteinallee . Construction began in 1901. The road was continued by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain in 1902 and completed in 1911. It belonged to Dahlem until April 1, 1938. It connects the Königin-Luise-Straße with the Habelschwerdter Allee and forms the border to the district of Lichterfelde . This is where the “Royal Garden Academy” is located. Nobel laureate Otto Hahn lived in No. 48 from 1928 to 1944 . A memorial plaque is attached to the house. The co-founder of the Botanical Garden, Adolf Engler , lived in No. 2, and later General Field Marshal Friedrich Paulus in No. 19 , Commander-in-Chief of the 6th Army in the Battle of Stalingrad . | |
Altkircher Strasse
( Location ) |
70 | Altkirch , town in the Haut-Rhin department in the Alsace region | Aug 16, 1928 | Before street 403 . The short access road was developed and built in 1927 at the expense of the state tax office to build the Thielecksiedlung. | |
At the Anger
( Location ) |
160 | Anger , grassy land or a community-owned village square that can be used by all residents of the town or village | Oct 24, 1922 | It was laid out as Straße 70 and connects Thielallee with Straße Im Schwarzen Grund. Actor Albrecht Schoenhals lived in No. 3 . | |
At the alder bush
( Location ) |
400 | Alder , a genus of plants in the birch family | around 1912 | The road was built by the residents and taken over by the municipality on October 1, 1920 as municipal road land. The houses no.14a by Walter Gropius and 24 are listed architectural monuments. It runs between Schweinfurthstrasse and Englerallee. | |
At the Hegewinkel
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
350 Hegewinkel , field name that is increasingly frequented by game | Aug 4, 1930 | It was laid out as street F around 1928/1929 by Zehlendorf-Grunewald AG in the Jägerviertel and runs from street Am Waldfriedhof to Riemeisterstraße. The western part on Holzungsweg is in the Zehlendorf district . The settlement along the road was built for US military personnel. The building of the former Berlin American High School has been used by the Wilma-Rudoph-Oberschule since the late 1990s . | |
At the Hirschsprung
( Location ) |
1000 | Hirschsprung, term from the hunter's language. The name is said to refer to a ditch for game on the edge of the Grunewald | around 1912 | The traffic route was created around 1912 when the area was being developed and leads from Pücklerstrasse to Im Gehege street. The houses Bernhard , Am Hirschsprung 22, Am Hirschsprung 50a, and Am Hirschsprung 35 are listed architectural monuments. Reichsbauernführer Walter Darré lived in numbers 44-46, the first rector of the FU Friedrich Meinecke in number 13 , the President of the Prussian State Statistical Office Konrad Saenger in number 14 , and the chief of staff of the SA Viktor Lutze in number 63-65 and in No. 35 Regional Bishop Kurt Scharf . | |
At Petersberg
( Location ) |
190 | Petersberg , one of the mountains of the Siebengebirge near Bonn | Dec 27, 1999 | The street opens up the Zehlendorf low-energy settlement that was built between 1988 and 1999 . Before that, the Turner Barracks with the 6th Battalion, 40th Armored Regiment (tank battalion) of the Berlin Brigade were located here until 1994 . | |
At the student home
( Location ) |
430 | Arndt-Gymnasium | after the student home of theOct 24, 1922 | It was created as street 73 of the development plan and runs from Bitterstraße to Clayallee , between Clayallee and Föhrenweg only as a footpath. The actor Carl Raddatz lived in No. 6 . | |
At the forest cemetery
( Location ) |
560 | Dahlem forest cemetery located here | to theMarch 27, 1953 | It was laid out around 1935 as street C by Zehlendorf-Grunewald AG in connection with the Dahlem forest cemetery. It runs from Hüttenweg to Argentinische Allee. | |
Amselstrasse
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
270 Blackbird , the most common species of thrush in Europe | 1912 | The road was laid out between 1910 and 1919 by the commission for dividing the Dahlem domain into two construction phases. The first section was created in 1910 between Kronprinzenallee (since 1949 Clayallee ) and Pücklerstraße, and in 1919 it was extended to Dohnenstieg. The northern section of the road runs in Schmargendorf . The single-family house No. 22/24 from 1959 is a listed architectural monument. | |
Archive Street
( Location ) |
840 | Secret Prussian State Archives | May 1, 1916 | The road was laid out by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain between 1910 and 1919 in two construction phases as road 35b . The eponymous Prussian State Archive was created between 1915 and 1923 and is a listed architectural monument. It runs along the cut of the U3 from Königin-Luise-Straße to Podbielskiallee. | |
Argentine Avenue
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
620 Argentina , republic in the south of South America | Jan. 26, 1934 | As early as 1895 it ran as Linden Allee and Grunewald Allee from Potsdamer Chaussee to Alsen Strasse , and since 1933 Fischerhüttenstrasse. It got its course with the construction of the Onkel Toms Hütte settlements and the extension of the U3 in the 1920s and 1930s. It leads from Mexikoplatz to Clayallee . Only the part between Clayallee and Holzungsweg belongs to Dahlem. | |
Arnimallee
( Location ) |
580 | Johann Friedrich Bernd von Arnim (1850–1939), Prussian State and Agriculture Minister | before 1911 | From 1908 to 1911 it was called Arnimstrasse . It leads from Königin-Luise-Straße to Fabeckstraße. The 'Haus Hecht' (Carl Hecht, Prussian Minister), no. 8 and the 'Haus Auhagen' (Otto Auhagen, diplomat), no. 12 are listed monuments, as is the Museum of Ethnology, which was created between 1914 and 1925 . The actor Paul Albert Krumm lived in No. 17, the singer Marcel Wittrisch in No. 16-18 . | |
On the ridge
( Location ) |
790 | Ridge , ridge with slopes sloping on both sides. The origin is not clearly established | Oct 24, 1922 | They were laid out as street 75 and 72b according to construction plans of the commission for the division of the domain Dahlem from October 20, 1911 in the years 1919/1920. On the ridge, Clayallee connects with Gelfertstrasse. Houses 26, 35, 38 and 50 are listed architectural monuments.
No. 14 was occupied by Erich Koch-Weser , Minister of Justice of the Weimar Republic , No. 1 Colonel General Alfred Jodl , No. 50 by the director of the Kaiser Wilhelm Society, Ernst Telschow . |
|
Bachstelzenweg
( Location ) |
530 | White wagtail , songbird from the family of stilts and pipiters | Oct 24, 1922 | It was laid out as road 62 in two sections - from 1919 to 1920 and from 1926 to 1927 - by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain . House No. 18 is a listed building monument. John Kerry lived at Bachstelzenweg 16 from 1952 to 1954 , while his father Richard Kerry was a diplomat at the US High Commission in Berlin. In No. 16 the Vice Police President Bernhard Weiß . | |
Balbronner Strasse
( Location ) |
320 | Balbronn , commune in the Molsheim arrondissement of the Bas-Rhin department | Aug 31, 1937 | It was laid out in the mid-1930s by Grunewald AG as road 523 in the development plan. Several streets in Zehlendorf and Dahlem were named after places in Alsace-Lorraine , as the area was returned to France after the Treaty of Versailles . | |
Berlin street
( Location ) |
110 | Potsdam and old Berlin | Connection road betweenbefore 1878 | The road is part of the connection from Berlin to Potsdam. Only the properties between Thielallee and Schützallee with the Thielecksiedlung belong to Dahlem. | |
Bernadottestrasse
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
810 Folke Bernadotte (1895–1948), Swedish officer and philanthropist | Feb 6, 1958 | The previous names were Parkstrasse (before 1910-1934) and Helfferichstrasse (1934-1958). Parts of the street run in the districts of Grunewald and Schmargendorf . It was named in 1958 on the tenth anniversary of Bernadottes death. The Rudolf Steiner House of the Anthroposophical Society in Germany is located at No. 90–92 . V. The country house Neuhaus from 1906 by Hermann Muthesius , the residential group of houses at Bernadottestraße 94–96 and the Villa Drimborn, now the corp house of Marchia , are listed architectural monuments. The street begins in Grunewald, crosses Clayallee in Schmargendorf and reaches Dahlem on Pücklerstraße, where it joins Miquelstraße. The sculptor Hermann Hosaeus lived in house 86 and the actress Henny Porten in no.74 . | |
Bitscher Strasse
( Location ) |
210 | Bitche ( German : Bitsch), small town in the French Moselle department in Lorraine | Aug 16, 1928 | It emerged as road 77 of the development plan and was laid out by the municipality in the early 1920s. It connects Saargemünder Strasse with Gelfertstrasse. The Diercks house is a listed building monument. The street is in the Lorraine quarter. | |
Bitterstrasse
( Location ) |
610 | Karl Hermann Bitter (1813–1885), statesman and music writer | 1916 | It was laid out between 1915 and 1916 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain and runs from Königin-Luise-Straße to Thielallee. The house of Dr. Huth was built for Enno Walther Huth , the owner of the Albatros Flugzeugwerke , by Heinrich Straumer . Today it belongs to Patrick Alexander Graf von Faber-Castell . Furthermore, 'Haus Schlick' no. 14 and house no. 21 are listed architectural monuments. The former Federal President Richard von Weizsäcker and his brother Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker lived in No. 3, Grand Admiral Karl Dönitz in No. 14 , and actors Walter Gross and Hubert von Meyerinck in No. 22 . | |
Boetticherstrasse
( Location ) |
340 | Karl Heinrich von Boetticher (1833–1907), Prussian State Minister, Upper President of the Province of Saxony | May 2, 1905 | The street in the university quarter was laid out between 1902 and 1904 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain and runs between Thielallee and Unter den Eichen. The poet Stefan George lived in house number 15c . | |
Boltzmannstrasse
( Location ) |
500 | Ludwig Boltzmann (1844–1906), Austrian physicist and philosopher | Aug 16, 1928 | It was laid out as street 4 of the development plan 1913/1914 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain in the university quarter. It leads from Leichhardtstrasse to Van't-Hoff-Strasse. The FU's enrollment office was set up in No. 3 (formerly: Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Biology) in 1948 . The Max Planck Institute for the History of Science is housed in No. 14 . The botanists Carl Correns and Hans Spemann lived in house no . | |
Breisacher Strasse
( Location ) |
310 | Breisach am Rhein , city on the Upper Rhine | Aug 16, 1928 | It was laid out between 1927 and 1928 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain and runs from Thielallee to Hüninger Strasse. Colonel General Kurt von Hammerstein-Equord lived in No. 19 . | |
Breitenbachplatz
( Location ) |
(oval shape) |
200 × 100 Paul von Breitenbach (1850–1930), Prussian Minister for Public Works | Aug 26, 1913 | The previous name between 1892 and 1913 was Rastatter Platz . The garden architect Georg Kuphaldt designed the green areas of the square . Most of the square is in the districts of Dahlem and Steglitz . The Breitenbachplatz underground station and the Schorlemerallee – Spilstraße – Lentzeallee and Dillenburger Straße building complex are listed monuments. The actress Gisela Uhlen lived in No. 21 . | |
Brümmerstrasse
( Location ) |
1240 | Franz Brümmer (1859–1930), politician, lawyer, chairman of the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain | around 1925 | The street in the university district was laid out between 1913 and 1914 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain . It begins at the Harnack-Haus on Ihnestrasse and runs along the cut of the U3 to Königin-Luise-Strasse. The Institute for Meat Hygiene and Technology is located in No. 10. The general secretary of the Kaiser Wilhelm Society, Ernst Telschow, lived at Brümmerstrasse 1 . | |
Buchsweilerstrasse
( Location ) |
310 | Bouxwiller ( German : Buchsweiler), commune in the French region of Alsace in the Bas-Rhin department | Aug 16, 1928 | The street in the Lorraine quarter was laid out between 1927 and 1928 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain as street 401 of the development plan. It is located in the Thielecksiedlung. No. 18 was inhabited by the leader of the Reich Labor Service, Konstantin Hierl . | |
Buzzard path
( Location ) |
120 | Buzzards , medium-sized birds of prey from the hawk family | Nov 1, 1967 | The street was laid out as street 634 of the development plan around 1920 by the owners and residents. The Brücke Museum is located here . The Bussardsteig is a dead end . | |
Clayallee
( Location ) |
2660 (in the district) |
Lucius D. Clay (1898–1978), American general, initiator of the Berlin Airlift | June 1, 1949 | The previous names were Hauptstraße from 1878 to 1934 , Cecilienstraße from 1912 to 1934, and Kronprinzenallee from 1912 to 1949 . Along with Pacelliallee, Clayallee is one of the few streets in West Berlin that was named after a person who was still alive at the time. Other parts run in Grunewald , Schmargendorf and Zehlendorf . The most prominent buildings are the Luftkreiskommando II (later General Lucius D. Clay Headquarters ), the complex of the former Oskar-Helene-Heim and the Oskar-Helene-Heim underground station , the former US housing area with the (now demolished) Truman Plaza and the Allied Museum with the 'Outpost Kino'. Opposite is the school in Berlin named after Rudolf Steiner with a Waldorf kindergarten. The 'Haus Auerbach' at no. 38 is also a listed building monument. The conductor Ferenc Fricsay lived in house no. 70a . | |
Corrensplatz
( Location ) |
170 × 130 × 130 (triangular) | Carl Correns (1864-1933), biologist | 17 Sep 1938 | It was laid out as place C of the development plan and was called Wassermannplatz from 1930 to 1938 . The former royal testing and testing institute for water supply and waste water disposal now houses the institute for water, soil and air hygiene . | |
Dillenburger Strasse
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
100 Dillenburg , town in Hesse | Jan. 8, 1892 | A short section between Lentzeallee and Breitenbachplatz belongs to Dahlem . | |
Dohnenstieg
( Location ) |
750 | Dohne , noose for catching songbirds and snipes | before 1922 | Part of the road was laid out between 1900 and 1901 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain , the other part was built in the early 1920s by the owners and neighbors of the Finkenparkiedlung. On September 14, 1927, the section of Messelstrasse between Cecilienstraße and Dohnenstieg was also renamed Dohnenstieg. House no. 24a is a listed building monument.
Reichsführer SS Heinrich Himmler lived in No. 8a, director Alfred Weidenmann in No. 11-13 , Field Marshal Walther von Brauchitsch in No. 19 and the actor René Deltgen in No. 28a . |
|
Throttle path
( Location ) |
150 | Thrushes , a species-rich family of birds in the order of the passerine birds | after 1912 | The road was laid out in 1912 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain as a connecting route between Falkenried and Pacelliallee. The 'Haus Neutze' at No. 5 is a listed building monument. | |
Drygalskistraße
( Location ) |
350 | Erich von Drygalski (1865–1949), geographer, geophysicist and polar researcher | around 1910 | The road was laid out by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain between 1909 and 1914 in three construction phases and runs from Peter-Lenné-Straße to Rohlfsstraße. House No. 5 is a listed building monument. | |
Edwin Redslob Street
( Location ) |
400 | Edwin Redslob (1884–1973), art historian, editor of the Tagesspiegel , co-founder and rector of the FU | Nov 14, 2000 | The street lies on the newly developed area between the State Archives and the Königin-Luise-Straße. It was laid out as road 677 . | |
Ehrenbergstrasse
( Location ) |
720 | Christian Gottfried Ehrenberg (1795–1876), biologist and geologist | after 1904 | The street in the university district was laid out in two construction phases between 1904 and 1907. In 1938 the part of Ehrenbergstrasse bordering on Thielallee was included in Corrensplatz. It runs from Ladenbergstrasse to Altensteinstrasse. House no. 29 is a listed building monument. In the no. 21 lived Ferdinand Schrey , co-founder of shorthand, and the biochemist Otto Warburg , and the actress Hilde Körber , in no. 33 lived Albert Einstein and Sebastian Haffner . | |
Englerallee
( Location ) |
790 | Adolf Engler (1844–1930), botanist | 17 Sep 1938 | It was laid out around 1900 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain as Sachsenallee and fortified in 1903 and forms the border to Steglitz . It connects the Schorlemerallee with the Königin-Luise-Straße. The radio pioneer Hans Bredow and Field Marshal Albert Kesselring lived in house no.19 ; it is a listed building, as is house no.27. | |
Eppinger Strasse
( Location ) |
340 | Eppingen , city in the northwest of Baden-Württemberg | Aug 31, 1937 | It was laid out before May 1911 as road 551 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain and runs as a U-shaped access road from Breisacher Strasse. | |
Fabeckstrasse
( Location ) |
1340 (in the district) |
Hugo von Fabeck (1828–1870), major, commander of the Guard Rifle Battalion | 1905 | The historic Dahlemer Straße was expanded from 1903 by the commission to subdivide the Dahlem domain and renamed Fabeckstraße in 1905 to the Dahlem area, the Lichterfeld part was not given this name until 1924. The section between the street Unter den Eichen and the village green of Lichterfelde existed until 1936 as Dahlemer Straße and was then named Tietzenweg. At the request of the emperor, Fabeckstraße was given a bridle path around 1905, which was intended primarily for the guardsmen on their way from Lichterfelde to the Grunewald. It runs from Königin-Luise-Straße to Unter den Eichen. The Institute for Inorganic Chemistry of the FU and the computer center of the FU "zedat" are located here. House no. 48, designed by the architect Wassili Luckhardt, is a listed building monument. The physicist Gustav Ludwig Hertz lived in No. 11, the philosopher Eduard Spranger in No. 13 . | |
Falkenried
( Location ) |
390 | Falkenried, field name | before 1914 | It was laid out between 1910 and 1911 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain between the streets In der Halde and Im Gehege. The group of residential buildings (Falkenried 2 to 20) built between 1912 and 1933 according to plans by Bruno Ahrends and Heinrich Schweitzer is a listed building (see ' In the enclosure '). The biologist Elisabeth Schiemann lived in No. 4, the publisher Wolf Jobst Siedler in No. 6 , the Nobel Prize Winner for Physics Ernst Ruska in No. 7, and the former RIAS director and resistance fighter Ludwig von Hammerstein-Equord in No. 11 . House No. 30, which the author Christabel Bielenberg lived in with her husband Peter, was torn down in 2013 and replaced by a new building. The lawyer Carl Langbehn, who was involved in the resistance against National Socialism, lived in the neighboring house at No. 28 . | |
Faradayweg
( Location ) |
370 | Michael Faraday (1791–1867), British physicist and chemist | before 1914 | The street in the university district was laid out by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain from 1911 and connects Brümmerstrasse with Thielallee. The Protestant Jesus Christ Church from 1931 is a listed building monument. Hermann Jansen Architekt lived in No. 4/6, in house No. 8 (Fritz-Haber-Villa) lived the chemist Fritz Haber and his wife Clara Immerwahr , the chemist and head of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Physical Chemistry Robert Havemann , the chemist Peter Adolf Thiessen , the physicist Max von Laue , in No. 10 SS- Oberst-Gruppenführer Kurt Daluege , Bishop Otto Dibelius , the chemist Richard Willstätter , in No. 15 Field Marshal Erich von Manstein , in No. 19 the actress Elisabeth Bergner . | |
Finkenstrasse
( Location ) |
630 | Finches , a species-rich family from the order of the passerine birds | before 1914 | The road was laid out in 1910/1911 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain as a connection between Clayallee and Max-Eyth-Straße on the north side of the Finkenpark. House No. 9 is a monument. Actress Hildegard Knef lived in No. 11 . | |
Flanaganstrasse
( Location ) |
880 | Edward Flanagan (1886–1948), American Catholic clergyman | Dec. 1, 1955 | The street was laid out in the early 1950s as street B of the development plan and opens up the residential area for former US military personnel (US housing area). | |
Fliednerweg
( Location ) |
130 | Theodor Fliedner (1800–1864), Protestant pastor | Jan. 16, 1925 | It was laid out in 1912/1913 as Straße 44 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain in the university quarter. The actress Hilde Volk lived in No. 6-8 . | |
Fohlenweg
( Location ) |
300 | Foal , a domestic horse that is not yet a year old | March 29, 1939 | It was laid out as street 557 of the development plan and built on in 1936/1937 by the Wilmersdorf district . | |
( Location ) |
Föhrenweg
350 | Firs or pines, plant genus of coniferous plants in the pine family | Oct 24, 1922 | It was created in 1928/1929 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain as a link between the streets Auf dem Grat and Am Schülerheim. Boxer Max Schmeling and his wife, actress Anny Ondra and Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel lived in No. 16 . | |
Franz-Grothe-Weg
( Location ) |
860 | Franz Grothe (1908–1982), composer | Sep 12 1987 | The path was created as road 35a . It is a pedestrian / cycle path along the cutting line between Königin-Luise-Straße and Im Dol. | |
Gadebusch way
( Location ) |
170 | Gadebusch , town in the district of Northwest Mecklenburg, Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania | Jan. 29, 1937 | The previous name was Heideweg (1925-1937), which was already noted on a map from 1892. House no. 5 is a listed monument in which the architect Heinrich Schweitzer lived. | |
Garystrasse
( Location ) |
1080 | Max Gary (1859–1923), building materials expert, one of the first residents of the Dahlem villa colony, member of the estate agency of the Dahlem estate | Feb. 18, 1927 | It was laid out between 1918 and 1920 as street 6 in the university district by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain . It runs from Thielallee to Clayallee . Several FU facilities are located here : the pharmacological internship, the economics department, the Henry Ford building with the Audi Max and the university library . The former director's residence of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Cell Physiology No. 18 and the house Schuldfrey No. 26 are listed architectural monuments. | |
Gebweilerstrasse
( Location ) |
170 | Gebweiler ( French : Guebwiller), town in the French region of Alsace in the Haut-Rhin department | Aug 16, 1928 | It was laid out as street 404 in 1925/1926 on behalf of the municipality to develop the residential complex. | |
Gelfertstrasse
( Location ) |
1100 | Robert Georg August Gelfert (1864–1921), theologian | Oct 24, 1922 | It was laid out in 1922 as street 64 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain and runs from Königin-Luise-Straße to Löhleinstraße. Houses No. 15, House Schwebes No. 19–21, House Jandorf No. 32–34, No. 37, House Diercks No. 43, the student dormitory No. 45 and No. 47 / 47a are listed architectural monuments. The mathematician Ludwig Bieberbach and the historian Hermann Oncken lived in numbers 16-18, Ewald von Demandowsky and the actress Hildegard Knef in number 37, and the department store owner Adolf Jandorf in numbers 32-34 . | |
Goßlerstrasse
( Location ) |
480 | Gustav von Goßler (1838–1902), Prussian minister of culture | May 2, 1905 | The street was laid out around 1900/1901 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain in the university district. It runs from Kaiserswerter-Strasse to Unter den Eichen. The former German Entomological National Museum at No. 18, which today houses the FU Institute for Japanese Studies and Sinology , is a listed building monument. The Nazi propagandist Johann von Leers lived in No. 17, and State Secretary Arthur Zarden in No. 21 . | |
Gregor-Mendel-Strasse
( Location ) |
270 | Gregor Mendel (1822–1884), old Austrian monk and natural scientist | Feb 23, 1925 | It was laid out between 1911 and 1912 as road 47 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain and connects the Lentzealle with the Schorlemerallee. The residential complex of the Prussian Ministry of Finance is a listed building monument. | |
Gustav-Meyer-Strasse
( Location ) |
160 | Gustav Meyer (1816–1877), garden artist | around 1908 | It was created around 1902 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain as a connection between Altensteinstrasse and Königin-Luise-Strasse. Villa No. 3 is a listed building monument. | |
Habelschwerdter Allee
( Location ) |
740 | Habelschwerdt , district town in the former province of Lower Silesia , today: Bystrzyca Kłodzka, in the Lower Silesian Voivodeship in Poland. | July 13, 1937 | It was laid out as Werderstrasse around the turn of the century in several construction phases and leads as an extension of Drakestrasse to Thielallee. Lot No. 1 belongs to Lichterfelde . At the confluence with Thielallee is the “Rostlaube” of the FU . The houses No. 12 and No. 17 are architectural monuments. The director of the Bayreuth Festival, Winifred Wagner , lived in No. 16, while the political scientist and resistance fighter Otto Heinrich von der Gablentz , Karl Klindworth musician (formerly Werderstrasse 16) , lived in No. 24 . | |
Harnackstrasse
( Location ) |
290 + 190 | Adolf von Harnack (1851–1930), theologian and church historian | Aug 16, 1928 | It was laid out as street 3 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain . It leads from the Harnack-Haus from Ihnestraße to Garystraße and then slightly offset to Leichhardtstraße. The Dutch physicist Peter Debye and the German physicist Werner Heisenberg lived in No. 5 . | |
Hechtgraben
( Location ) |
120 | Karl-Ernst Hecht (1864–1927), lawyer, politician, lived in Arnimallee when the street was named | Oct 24, 1922 | It was laid out as Straße 17b between 1911 and 1913 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain in the university district and leads from Königin-Luise-Straße to Arnimallee. The part behind the FU Institute for Physics is a footpath. | |
Heinrich-Stahl-Weg
( Location ) |
140 | Heinrich Stahl (1868–1942), chairman of the Jewish community in Berlin, victim of the Nazi regime | Apr 19, 1993 | This is a footpath from Im Dol to Finkenstraße. | |
Hellriegelstrasse
( Location ) |
260 | Hermann Hellriegel (1831–1895), agricultural chemist | before 1920 | It was created around 1911/1912 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain and connects the Podbielskiallee with the Lentzeallee. On January 16, 1925, street 48 was also named Hellriegelstrasse. | |
Hittorfstrasse
( Location ) |
540 | Johann Wilhelm Hittorf (1824–1914), physicist and chemist | around 1915 | The street in the university district was laid out between 1911 and 1913 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain and runs from Thielallee to Van't-Hoff-Straße. The Protestant Jesus Christ Church from 1931 is a listed building, as is house no. 12 and no. 14. The biochemist Carl Neuberg lived in house no . | |
High ears
( Location ) |
140 | Supposedly old hallway name, it was probably the route taken by the Dahlem schoolchildren through cornfields in the past | after 1912 | They were created between 1910 and 1912 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain and connect the street Am Hirschsprung with the Falkenried. The TV presenter Karl-Eduard von Schnitzler lived in No. 7 . | |
Holzungsweg
( Location ) |
360 | Logging, a small forest or a larger group of forest trees that are too little extended for actual forestry use | Aug 4, 1930 | It was laid out as Straße 321 by Sommerfeld AG at the end of the 1920s and runs from Argentinischen Allee to Sprungschanzenweg. It is only a footpath between Argentinischer Allee and Stewardstrasse. It forms the border to the district of Zehlendorf . | |
Hüninger Strasse
( Location ) |
550 | Hüningen ( French : Huningue), town in the Haut-Rhin department in the Alsace region | Aug 16, 1928 | It was laid out as street 113 in the early 1920s by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain in the university district. It leads through the Thielecksiedlung. Hans Scharoun's house no. 39 is a listed building monument. | |
Hüttenweg
( Location ) |
3000 (in the district) |
bee hut | after a backward position on thisOct 24, 1922 | It was laid out as road 81 in the development plan. On March 27, 1953, a concrete road existing as an extension was also named Hüttenweg. Parts of the street are in Wilmersdorf and Zehlendorf . The houses No. 7, No. 9, No. 15, as well as the service houses for Air Force officers No. 21 and 25 are listed architectural monuments, as is the United States Army Chapel and the ceremony hall of the forest cemetery and the restaurant "Forsthaus Paulsborn" located on Lake Grunewaldsee . The road initially runs from Im schwarzen Grund as a walkway through Thielpark and from Auf dem Grat as a drivable road to Kronprinzessinnenweg and further into Grunewald . West of Clayallee is the former US housing area with the building of the Thomas A. Roberts School, which is now used by the Quentin Blake Europe School and the Biesalski School. The Dahlem Forest Cemetery is also located here . The German-American Fair took place on the open-air site behind the Truman Plaza from 1961 to 2010 .
Tenor Rudolf Schock lived in house No. 10 and the President of the People's Court Roland Freisler at No. 14a . |
|
His street
( Location ) |
970 | Ernst von Ihne (1848–1917), architect and court builder | Aug 16, 1928 | It was laid out as street 30 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain from 1913 and was completed in 1915. It leads from Saargemünder Strasse over Garystrasse to Schützallee. This is where the Otto Suhr Institute of the FU and the Harnack House are located , both listed architectural monuments. Building 22-24, now used by the Otto Suhr Institute, housed the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Anthropology, Human Heredity and Eugenics until 1945 , whose directors Eugen Fischer anthropologist and Otmar Freiherr von Verschuer human geneticist also lived here. Friedrich Glum , General Director of the Kaiser Wilhelm Society lived in house number 14. | |
Iltisstrasse
( Location ) |
130 | SMS Iltis , gunboat of the Imperial Navy that took part in the fighting for the Taku forts on June 17, 1900 during the Boxer Rebellion in China | 1906 | The street in the university quarter was laid out as street 15 around 1900 and paved in 1906 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain . It leads from Brümmerstrasse to Lansstrasse. | |
In the Dol
( Location ) |
1620 | Dol, Tal, Hohe Dolen or Hohedohlen, name of a hill after which Dahlem is said to have been named | around 1912 | The road was laid out around 1900 and expanded and paved between 1901 and 1906 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain . Im Dol is the shortest street name in Berlin. The name was given by the wife of the Dahlem architect Schweitzer, who purchased land in this street in 1910 for a property (no. 39). The road runs - following the contour line - from Podbielskiallee to Clayallee. Furthermore, houses No. 27–29, No. 48, No. 50, No. 51, and No. 71 are listed monuments.
The chemist Bernhard Lepsius lived in house No. 2–6 ; the house was later used by the private Jewish Kaliski school. The actor Carl-Heinz Schroth lived in No. 7, the CDU politician Peter Kittelmann in No. 15, the architect Heinrich Schweitzer (until 1932), who was important for Dahlem, in No. 39 , and the industrialist Carl Friedrich in No. 41 from Siemens and later the actress Sabine Sinjen ; Heinrich Stahl , the chairman of the Jewish Community in Berlin , lived in building 32–34, Colonel General Friedrich Fromm in No. 38 and Lucius D. Clay in No. 46–48. |
|
In the enclosure
( Location ) |
200 + 80 | Enclosure , fenced off area that is used to house animals | 1911 | The road was laid out around 1900 and expanded and paved in 1911 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain . The street leads from Königin-Luise-Straße to the streets Am Hirschsprung and Falkenried , where it borders an unnamed square. This is where the Gail S. Halvorsen School is located (until June 15, 2013: Alfred Wegener High School). The row house settlement No. 2-5, the school building and the house No. 9 by Hermann Muthesius are listed architectural monuments. The actor Henning Schlueter lived in No. 10 . | |
In hunting
( Location ) |
1140 | Hunting , unit of forest area | handed down | The unpaved road runs from Clayallee across from Königin-Luise-Straße to the “Chalet Suisse” inn and continues as a forest path to the Grunewald hunting lodge . In the street directory it is given as a footpath (RBS class: FUWE). | |
In the black ground
( Location ) |
490 | hallway name | Probably based on an oldaround 1920 | It was laid out in 1911/1912 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain and fortified around 1913. The houses no. 4, of the architect and Reichsbank director Philip Nitze , no. 18, are listed architectural monuments. Andrei Andrejewitsch Vlasow (Russian general) lived in No. 12, the journalist Margret Boveri in No. 16 and 18 , the actors Werner Krauss and Ernst Petersen , architect, actor in the Petersen House (No. 27) in No. 17 . | |
In the corner
( Location ) |
340 | according to the course of the road | around 1930 | The street in the university quarter was laid out by the residents and owners around 1911. In 1920 it was expanded and fortified by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain . It leads at right angles from Archivstrasse to Königin-Luise-Strasse. House No. 37 is a listed building monument. The actress Brigitte Helm lived in No. 5 . | |
In the dump
( Location ) |
350 | supposed old hallway name | Feb 23, 1925 | It was laid out between 1911 and 1912 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain and connects Pacelliallee with Am Hirschsprung street. Houses 6–8 and 18–20 are historical buildings. The publisher Karl Ullstein lived in house no. 4, the actor Paul Hubschmid in no. 6–8 and the industrialist Carl Friedrich von Siemens in no. | |
Jürgen-Fuchs-Platz
( Location ) |
(semicircular) |
100 × 50 Jürgen Fuchs (1950–1999), GDR civil rights activist and writer. | May 9, 2011 | The square is on the Königin-Luise-Straße / corner of Arnimallee . Wolf Biermann and Ralph Giordano gave the laudatory speech at the festive naming of the square on May 9, 2011, the 12th anniversary of Jürgen Fuchs' death . | |
( Location ) |
Käuzchensteig
270 | Owls , a number of genera of the family of authentics owl | March 29, 1939 | It was laid out as Straße 558 on the instructions of the then General Building Inspector for the Reich capital, Albert Speer . A spacious studio was built for Arno Breker on plot 8–12 (straight) . Between 1949 and 1995, the artist Bernhard Heiliger used the east wing of the studio building. The Bernhard Heiliger Foundation has been located there since 1996 . Well-known artists such as Wolf Vostell and László Lakner also worked in the studio.
The area that previously belonged to Wilmersdorf came under the administrative reform of April 1, 1938 to Dahlem. In the street directory the Käutzchensteig is indicated as a footpath (RBS class: FUWE). |
|
Kaiser-Wilhelm-Platz
( Location ) |
240 × 140 | Wilhelm I (1797–1888), King of Prussia , German Emperor | before 1905 | The square was laid out by the residents around 1890 and expanded in 1898 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain . The square is one of the few parks that were already included in Walter Kyllmann's development plan . This is where the Podbielskiallee underground station is located . | |
Kaiserswerther Strasse
( Location ) |
320 | Kaiserswerth , a district of Düsseldorf on the Rhine | around 1900 | The street in the university quarter was laid out around 1900 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain and runs between Thielallee and Habelschwerdter Alle at Triest Park. The association house of the public fire insurance institutions located here served as the seat of the Allied commandant's office from 1945 to 1991 and has been used as the FU's office since 1994 . House No. 17 is the first house in the single-storey bungalow style of the American style that was built in Berlin. In the no. 17 lived before the destruction of the "Crown Jurist of the Third Reich " Schmitt 14 of the actors, in the no. Robert Taube . | |
Kehler way
( Location ) |
120 | Kehl , town in the Ortenaukreis, Baden-Wuerttemberg | Aug 16, 1928 | The path was laid out as road 76 in the university district around 1900 by the owners and paved around 1901 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain . It connects the Gelfertstrasse with the Saargemünder Weg. | |
( Location ) |
Queen Luise Square
50 × 30 | Luise von Mecklenburg-Strelitz (1776–1810), Queen of Prussia | 1906 | The square is at the entrance to the Botanical Garden on Königin-Luise-Straße . | |
Queen-Luise-Strasse
( Location ) |
2000 (in the district) |
Luise von Mecklenburg-Strelitz (1776–1810), Queen of Prussia | March 1906 | The traditional connecting route between Steglitz and the Grunewald hunting lodge was expanded into a paved road from 1889. In 1906 it was named after the Queen Luise Foundation located on Podbielskiallee . The first 180 meters of the street still belong to Steglitz .
The Steglitz tram , built in 1905, ran from Steglitz train station to Grunewaldgatter (today around the corner of Königin-Luise-Straße and Gelfertstraße). The tram was later extended to today's Clayallee and replaced by buses in 1959. The western part of the street (today from Gelfertstraße to Clayallee) was not paved until 1908, before it was still a sandy forest path. In the Queen Louise Street there are many institutions and monuments: The in Lichterfelde lying Botanical Garden and the Institute of Plant Physiology and Microbiology at the FU. The Julius Kühn Institute at No. 17–19 with the buildings of the former Imperial Biological Institute for Agriculture and Forestry, the Royal Gardening College at No. 22, and at No. 47–51 the Dahlem Domain at No. 88 –98 the student colony Dahlem in the village center of the Eiskeller from 1709, in No. 55 the oldest building in Dahlem, the St. Anne's Church from around 1300, the Dahlem-Dorf underground station , in No. 33 the St. Bernhard -Kirche in No. 52 the former milk tenant house, which is used today as a restaurant "Alter Krug" and in No. 80–84 the Arndt Gymnasium . The street forms the center of Dahlem with the old village center. The politician Andreas Hermes lived in No. 17 , Ottilie Kirchner was the last tenant of the Dahlem domain in No. 49 , the actress Leny Marenbach in No. 89a , and the actor Hannes Stelzer in No. 89b . |
|
Koserstrasse
( Location ) |
580 | Reinhold Koser (1852–1914), historian and Prussian state archivist | Sep 14 1927 | Planned from 1900 by the commission to subdivide the Dahlem domain , around 1921 Straße 34 and Straße 43 , from 1922 to 1927 Kirschenweg . Before the road was built, there were gardens here, among others. a. with a row of cherry trees, which ultimately led to the name Kirschenweg . The street continued south until 1939 to the Königin-Luise-Straße. On March 29, 1939, it was pivoted to the west by including a street that was previously called Straße 38 (around 1921), Selmastraße (around 1925) and Bailleustraße (1927-1939) into Koserstraße. Since then it has led from Schweinfurthstrasse on Kaiser-Wilhelm-Platz to Archivstrasse. The villa on property 8-12 is a listed building monument. The Art History Institute of the Free University of Berlin is located on property no. | |
Cuckoo's Way
( Location ) |
270 | Cuckoo , belongs to the order of the cuckoo birds and to the family of the cuckoos | Oct 24, 1922 | It was laid out as road 71 in two sections in 1919 and 1920 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain and leads from Thielallee to Bachstelzenweg. | |
Ladenbergstrasse
( Location ) |
440 | Johann Philipp von Ladenberg (1769–1847), Prussian politician; Honorary citizen of Berlin | May 2, 1905 | The street in the university district was laid out as street 39 of the development plan between 1902 and 1904 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain . It leads from Habelschwerdter Allee to Corrensplatz. Housing complex No. 22–24 is a listed building monument. | |
Landoltweg
( Location ) |
490 | Hans Heinrich Landolt (1831–1910), Swiss chemist | around 1913 | The street in the university district was laid out in 1912–1913 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain . It connects the Habelschwerdter Allee with the Brümmerstraße along the Thielpark and Triestpark. | |
Lansstrasse
( Location ) |
330 | Wilhelm Andreas Jacob Emil Lans , von Lans since 1913, (1861–1947), naval officer and admiral in the Imperial Navy . Commander of the gunboat SMS Iltis | around 1906 | The street in the university district was laid out as street 32 between 1900 and 1901 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain . It runs from Königin-Luise-Straße to Fabeckstraße. The Berlin-Dahlem Museum Center is located here . | |
Leichhardtstrasse
( Location ) |
770 | Ludwig Leichhardt (1813–1848), explorer | Sep 14 1927 | It was laid out as road 5 between 1914 and 1915 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain . It runs from Breisacher Straße to Clayallee . | |
Lentzeallee
( Location ) |
1260 | August Lentze (1860–1945), local and financial politician | Nov 26, 1917 | Parts of the street run in the districts of Wilmersdorf and Schmargendorf . Here is the residential complex of the Prussian Ministry of Finance. The political scientist Ernst Fraenkel lived in No. 5, in No. 7-9 the sparkling wine manufacturer Carl Henkell and Reich Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop . | |
Liebensteinstrasse
( Location ) |
130 | Bad Liebenstein , health resort in the Thuringian Forest | 1907 | The street in the university district was laid out between 1901 and 1904 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain . It leads from Altensteinstrasse to Schwendenerstrasse. House No. 4 is a listed building monument. | |
Limonenstrasse
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
60 Limes , several types of citrus fruits | Oct 6, 1908 | It was laid out as street 3b of the development plan. On July 6, 1927, the part of Takustraße between Altensteinstraße and Malvenstraße, the extension of Limonenstraße, which had existed in Lichterfelde since 1908 , was renamed Limonenstraße. Due to the change in the district boundary in 1938, only numbers 16 and 16a of Limonenstraße belong to Dahlem today. Limonenstraße is located in a district that is also called the flower district because of its street names. Most of it is in Lichterfelde. The building contractor Adolf Sommerfeld lived in No. 16 . | |
( Location ) |
Löhleinstrasse
1060 | ophthalmologist Walther Löhlein (1882–1954) | Emil Löhlein (1866–1929), politician, Secret Chief Finance Councilor. It is also possible to name it after thearound 1930 | The street in the university district was laid out before 1908 and, as part of the construction of the subway in 1913, the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain expanded and fortified it. On September 24, 1990, the extension of Löhleinstraße between Königin-Luise-Straße and Fabeckstraße was also named Löhleinstraße. House no. 21 is a listed building monument. | |
( Location ) |
Löwenburgweg
160 | Löwenburg , mountain in the Siebengebirge | Dec 27, 1999 | The street is located in the new development area on the former festival site . | |
Lohrbergweg
( Location ) |
130 | Lohrberg , one of the seven great mountains of the Siebengebirge | Dec 27, 1999 | The street is located in the new development area on the former festival site . | |
Lützelsteiner way
( Location ) |
690 | Lützelstein ( French : La Petite-Pierre), commune in the Bas-Rhin department in Alsace | May 21, 1941 | It was laid out as street 505 of the development plan between 1910 and 1911 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain . It runs from Garystrasse to Sundgauer Strasse. The housing estate for US officers is a listed building monument. | |
Markircher way
( Location ) |
170 | Markirch ( French : Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines), capital of the canton of the same name in the Haut-Rhin department in Alsace | Aug 16, 1928 | It was laid out as road 405 around 1920 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain . It is located in the Thieleck settlement. | |
Marshall Street
( Location ) |
360 | United States Army | George Frederic Marshall (1910–1942), Lieutenant Colonel in theDec. 1, 1955 | The street was laid out in the early 1950s as street A of the development plan and opens up the former residential area for US military personnel (US Housing Area). It leads from Argentinische Allee to Hüttenweg. | |
Max-Eyth-Strasse
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
550 Max Eyth (1836–1906), engineer and writer | June 29, 1911 | The street was laid out in 1910 as street 59 . It leads from Clayallee to Pacelliallee. The part north of Max-Eyth-Straße belongs to Schmargendorf . Houses 7, 8 and 12a are listed architectural monuments. The director Fritz Kortner lived in No. 5, the actress Zarah Leander in No. 12 , the actor Curd Jürgens in No. 27 and the double-bass player Rainer Zepperitz in No. 35 . | |
Meisenstrasse
( Location ) |
340 | Titmouse , species-rich family in the order of passerine birds , subordinate to songbirds | Oct 24, 1922 | It was laid out in 1911 as street 80 of the development plan by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain and runs from Gelfertstraße to Clayallee . The conductor Wilhelm Furtwängler lived in house No. 1, the actress Camilla Spira in No. 4 and the former Federal President Richard von Weizsäcker in No. 6 . | |
Messelstrasse
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
330 Alfred Messel (1853–1909), architect | Apr 10, 1910 | The road was in 1938 in Ruhland avenue renamed because Alfred Messel was of Jewish descent, and 1947 rückbenannt again. It leads from Clayallee to Dohnenstieg. The part north of Pücklerstrasse belongs to Schmargendorf . House No. 1 is a listed building monument. The General Secretary of the Kaiser Wilhelm Society, Ernst von Simson , lived at Messelstrasse 7-11 , and the department store owner Wilhelm Wertheim had a villa on property 13-29 (today in Schmargendorf) , which he had to sell in 1938. The house was demolished and the property was parceled out. It was created u. a. a house for Leni Riefenstahl . | |
Milowstrasse
( Location ) |
180 | Milow, owner of the Ritterhof Dahlem, predecessor of the Dahlem domain | Dec 6, 1925 | It was laid out in 1922 as road 46 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain . Here is the residential complex of the Prussian Ministry of Finance. | |
Miquelstrasse
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
820 Johannes von Miquel (1828–1901), Prussian Minister of State and Finance | May 2, 1905 | The previous name was Street 21 . It runs from Hohenzollerndamm to Im Dol street. The part north of Pücklerstrasse belongs to Schmargendorf . Houses No. 58, 66–68, No. 72, 83 and 90 are listed buildings. The architect Bruno Ahrends ( White City ) lived in house no. 66 (now the official residence of the Bundestag President ), the philosopher Alfred Baeumler and the director of the Komische Oper Walter Felsenstein lived in no . | |
Molsheimer Strasse
( Location ) |
310 | Molsheim , town in the Bas-Rhin department in the Alsace region . | Aug 16, 1928 | It was laid out as road 117 of the development plan. The Mühlenau elementary school is a listed building monument. | |
Musäusstrasse
( Location ) |
200 | Johann Karl August Musäus (1735–1787), writer | Oct 24, 1922 | It was laid out as street 72a of the development plan by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain and leads from Bitterstrasse to Kuckucksweg. Landhaus Supf at No. 2 is a listed building monument. Actress Luise Ullrich lived in house number 4 . | |
Nebinger Strasse
( Location ) |
140 | Nebing (until 1915, since then: Nebingen, French : Nébing), commune in the Moselle department in the Lorraine region | Aug 31, 1937 | It was laid out as road 522 of the development plan. It leads from Molsheimer Strasse to Leichhardtstrasse. The theologian Helmut Gollwitzer lived in house number 10 . | |
Oskar Helene Park
( Location ) |
550 | Oskar-Helene-Heim (1914–2000) former private orthopedic institute for children and young people | Sep 15 2015 | The Ringstrasse is located on the newly developed site of the former Oskar-Helene-Heim. The access road goes from the Clayallee and opens up the newly created residential area in a trapezoid. | |
Otto-Appel-Strasse
( Location ) |
180 + 120 | Otto Appel (1867–1952), phytomedicist | Jan. 3, 2001 | The street lies on the newly developed area between the State Archives and the Königin-Luise-Straße. The access road branches off from Königin-Luise-Straße and leads to Straße Im Winkel. | |
Otto Hahn Square
( Location ) |
120 × 60 × 80 | Otto Hahn (1879–1968), chemist | Nov. 26, 1982 | The space limited by Reichensteiner Weg, Ehrenbergstrasse and Altensteinstrasse is opposite the former home of Otto Hahn at Altensteinstrasse 48. | |
Otto-von-Simson-Strasse
( Location ) |
440 | Otto von Simson (1912–1993), art historian, President of the German UNESCO Commission | Nov 8, 1999 | From 1922 to 1999 Kiebitzweg . It was laid out around 1915 as road 42 of the development plan by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain and fortified around 1919. The ceremonial renaming took place on November 11, 1999. | |
Pacelliallee
( Location ) |
1330 | Eugenio Maria Giuseppe Giovanni Pacelli (1876–1958), Pope Pius XII from 1939 to 1958. | March 31, 1949 | The part of the historic Dahlemer Weg was named Cecilienstraße in 1907 and Cecilienallee in 1909 . In 1949, the avenue was named Pacelliallee at the instigation of Ernst Reuter . Alongside Clayallee, it is one of the few streets in West Berlin that was named after a person who was still alive at the time. It leads from Platz am Wilden Eber to the village center of Dahlem and then turns into Thielallee. Bank director Emil Georg von Stauß lived in house No. 14, and later it served as the office of the US city commandant . Today it is used as the federal government's guest house . Reich Minister of Justice Franz Gürtner and the agricultural scientist and State Secretary Eberhard Ramm lived in No. 27, and the Jewish lingerie manufacturer Richard Semmel with his private art collection at No. 19-21. In 1933 he fled to the Netherlands and sold the house to the vinegar manufacturer Wilhelm Kühne from there far below value. According to widespread but unproven information, the papal nuncio (and later Pope Pius XII) Eugenio Pacelli lived here . However, he was recalled from Berlin on December 9, 1929, during Richard Semmel's ownership, to work as cardinal state secretary in Rome. Director Wolfgang Staudte lived in No. 31, humorist Ludwig Manfred Lommel in No. 59 , and theologian Martin Niemöller in the rectory of the village church in Dahlem . Houses 18, 43–45, 47 and 55 are also listed monuments. Until December 16, 1996, the AFN Berlin transmitter mast stood on the grounds of the Dahlem domain . | |
Patschkauer way
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
250 Patschkau ( pol .: Paczków), city in Silesia , today in the Powiat Nyski in Poland | July 13, 1934 | From 1908 to 1934 Goebenstrasse , which was given this name south of Altensteinstrasse in Lichterfelde before 1893. The publisher Heinz Ullstein lived at number 56 . | |
Unlucky Path
( Location ) |
100 | Pechüle, district of Bardenitz in Treuenbrietzen in the southwest of Brandenburg | Feb. 18, 1927 | The path between Podbielskiallee and Bernadottestraße was laid out around 1915 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain . | |
Peter-Lenné-Strasse
( Location ) |
740 | Peter Joseph Lenné (1789–1866), Prussian garden artist and landscape architect of German classicism | before 1911 | The street runs from Archivstrasse on Kaiser-Wilhelm-Platz to Königin-Luise-Strasse. The southern section is already marked on the map from 1907. The houses no. 1, in which the religious house of the Masonic Lodge is located, no. 7, no. 18, and no. 28–30 and no. 32–34 are listed monuments. The actor Bernhard Minetti lived in No. 14 , the archaeologist Theodor Wiegand in No. 28–30 , the physicist Ferdinand Kurlbaum in No. 32–34 , and Foreign Minister Julius Curtius in No. 40–42 No. 42 the diplomat Hans Bernd von Haeften . | |
Podbielskiallee
( Location ) |
1570 | Victor von Podbielski (1844–1916), Prussian Lieutenant General à la suite, Minister of State and Minister of Agriculture, and State Secretary of the Reich Post Office | May 2, 1905 | The road was laid out in 1901/1902 as one of the first roads by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain . It leads from Platz am Wilden Eber to Englerallee. This is where the embassy of Iran and the Podbielskiallee underground station are located . The houses No. 5, No. 25-27, No. 28, No. 34, No. 42, No. 57, No. 61, and the Königin-Luise-Stiftung are listed monuments. The sculptor Arthur Lewin-Funcke lived in No. 15, the entrepreneur Wilhelm Quantmeyer in No. 14-18, the boxer Max Schmeling and his wife, the actress Anny Ondra , in No. 42 . | |
Pritchardstrasse
( Location ) |
260 | Vernon Pritchard (1892–1949), American military man, commander of the US 6th Infantry Regiment from 1939 to 1945 | May 21, 1954 | The street was laid out in the early 1950s as street D of the development plan and opens up the former residential area for US military personnel (US Housing Area). | |
Pücklerstrasse
( Location ) |
1180 | Erdmann Graf von Pückler (1792–1869), registrar , Prussian civil servant and politician | from 1905 | The road was laid out in 1900/01 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain . At the time it was named, it led from Platz am Wilden Eber to Parkstrasse (today: Bernadottestrasse). In 1913 it was extended in a westerly direction to today's Clayallee , and since 1950, following the inclusion of the S 93 road, it has run to the corner of Goldfinkweg in Dahlem. Its entire length forms the border with Schmargendorf . Martin Bormann lived in No. 20, the film producer Artur Brauner in No. 18 , and the singer Erna Sack in No. 43 . No. 36 is also a monument. No. 14 is the Federal President's office villa. From 1999 to 2001 it was used by the then Federal Chancellor Gerhard Schröder . | |
Reichensteiner way
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
320 Reichenstein ( pol .: Złoty Stok), town in the powiat Ząbkowice Śląskie in the Lower Silesian Voivodeship in Poland | July 13, 1934 | The street in Dahlem was laid out around 1900 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain and was called Zietenstraße from 1905 to 1934 . The part in Lichterfelde (south of Altensteinstrasse) had been named since 1895. The Reichensteiner Weg leads from Schwendener Strasse to Unter den Eichen. House No. 24–26 is a listed building monument. | |
Reichshofer Strasse
( Location ) |
440 | Reichshofen ( French : Reichshoffen), town in the Bas-Rhin department in the Alsace region | May 21, 1941 | Before street 506 . On November 1, 1970, the southern part of the street, which was separated from the main part of the street by the buildings of the Max Planck Society , was renamed Von-Wettstein-Straße. It leads from Garystrasse to Leichhardtstrasse. | |
Rheinbabenallee
( Location ) |
30th | Georg von Rheinbaben (1855–1921), Prussian politician | May 2, 1905 | The first name was street S 22 from 1885 . Only the property Rheinbabenallee 49 belongs to the district. The rest of the street is in Schmargendorf. A building of the FU (France Center) stands on the Dahlem property, which is located across Pücklerstrasse directly on Platz am Wilden Eber . In front of the development with administration buildings there were residential buildings, a stumbling block reminds of a resident who perished during the Nazi era (picture). | |
Ripleystrasse
( Location ) |
120 + 100 | George Ripley (1802-1880), American writer | around 1957 | The street opens up to a former US housing estate. | |
Rohlfsstrasse
( Location ) |
490 | Gerhard Rohlfs (1831–1896), Africa explorer | around 1919 | The street was laid out in 1909/1910 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain and runs from Schorlemerallee to Englerallee. The general music director Erich Kleiber lived in house number 14 . | |
Rudeloffweg
( Location ) |
470 | Max Rudeloff (1857–1929), engineer, professor of materials testing and director of the Royal Materials Testing Office in Berlin | May 16, 1938 | The street was laid out between 1900 and 1901 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain and was named Friedbergstraße in 1905 . The name was changed in 1938. It leads from Unter den Eichen to Kaiserswerther Strasse. | |
Rudi-Dutschke-Weg
( Location ) |
330 | Rudi Dutschke (1940–1979), Marxist sociologist and spokesman for the West German and West Berlin student movement of the 1960s | 1999 | The path on the former FU fruit growing area was given this name in spring 1999. | |
Saargemünder Strasse
( Location ) |
540 | Saargemünd ( French : Sarreguemines), city in the Moselle department in the Lorraine region | Aug 16, 1925 | It was laid out as street 35a of the development plan and leads from Clayallee to Löhleinstraße and Brümmerstraße. Until 1994 the studios of the AFN Berlin station were here . Today the Japanese-German Center Berlin is located there . The former service apartments for Air Force members No. 14–22 are listed architectural monuments. | |
Schorlemerallee
( Location ) |
740 | Clemens Freiherr von Schorlemer-Lieser (1856–1922), Prussian Minister of Agriculture | before 1920 | The road was laid out in 1900/01 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain . It leads from Breitenbachplatz to Podbielskiallee. Houses No. 6, No. 7a-23a, No. 12-12c, No. 14 and the copper house in No. 16 are listed monuments.
The director Fritz Lang lived in No. 7a, the actress Brigitte Helm in No. 12 and the dancer La Jana in No. 28 . |
|
( Location ) |
Schützallee
(in the district) |
760 Franz Schütz (1857–1933), director of Grunewald-Terrain AG, community representative | March 20, 1929 | It was laid out as street 303 of the development plan and was named Schützstraße in 1927 . In 1929 it was renamed Schützallee when Straße 118 was included . It leads from Onkel-Tom-Strasse to Berliner Strasse. Only the section between Sundgauer Strasse and Berliner Strasse is in Dahlem. It forms the border to Zehlendorf . The Thielecksiedlung is a listed building monument. The painter Karl Schmidt-Rottluff lived in No. 136 . | |
Schweinfurthstrasse
( Location ) |
1340 (in the district) |
Georg August Schweinfurth (1836–1925), Africa explorer | May 14, 1909 | It was laid out as street 23 between 1900 and 1901 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain. It leads from Heiligendammer Strasse in Schmargendorf to Englerallee. The row house settlement No. 58–72 and the Kohtz house are listed monuments in which the architect Otto Kohtz lived. The actress Brigitte Horney and her mother, the psychoanalyst Karen Horney , lived in house No. 4, the CDU politician Otto Lenz at No. 60 , the actor Paul Edwin Roth at No. 62 and the actress Antje Weisgerber at No. 66 . | |
Schwendenerstrasse
( Location ) |
720 | Simon Schwendener (1829–1919), Swiss botanist and university professor | July 13, 1934 | It leads from Altensteinstrasse to Habelschwerdter Allee. No. 1 is the Faculty of Biology, Chemistry, and Pharmacy at the FU. The previous name was Humboldtstrasse . State Secretary Erich Neumann lives in house number 1, the publisher Alfred Hugenberg in house number 12 , film producer Dietrich von Theobald in number 14 and the head of the reserve army Hans Jüttner in number 51 . | |
Spechtstrasse
( Location ) |
400 | Woodpeckers , a species-rich bird family from the order of the woodpecker birds | before 1892 | It leads from the Königin-Luise-Strasse to the Starstrasse. House No. 21–23 is a listed building monument. The Soviet colonel and member of the Soviet military administration in Germany, Sergei Ivanovich Tjulpanov, lived in No. 19 . | |
Spilstrasse
( Location ) |
190 | Brandenburg noble family 'Spil' (also 'game') | after theDec 6, 1925 | It was laid out in the mid-1920s as road 46a by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain . It connects the Lentzealle with the Schorlemerallee. It is located in the residential complex of the Prussian Ministry of Finance. Paul Fridolin Kehr , General Director of the Prussian State Archives, lived in No. 3 . | |
Star Street
( Location ) |
330 | Starlings , a species-rich family of songbirds | around 1892 | It leads from Clayallee to Am Hirschsprung Street. The actor Rudolf Platte lived in No. 7 . | |
Steward Street
( Location ) |
550 | George Steward, chief physician of the US military hospital in Berlin | March 27, 1953 | The street was laid out in the early 1950s as street B of the development plan and opens up the former residential area for US military personnel (US Housing Area). | |
Sundgauer Strasse
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
400 Sundgau , landscape in the southern area of the Haut-Rhin department in the Alsace region | Feb 12, 1932 | Before it was named, it was street 408 in the development plan. On December 19, 1934, the section from the Wannseebahn to Finckensteinallee was also named Sundgauer Straße. Further extensions to Dahlemer Weg were named in 1961 and 1973 in Sundgauer Straße. It leads from Clayallee via Schützstraße and in Zehlendorfer area via Berliner Straße to Dahlemer Weg. | |
Takustraße
( Location ) |
650 | Taku Fort , fortifications near Tianjin , named after the fort was stormed during the Boxer Rebellion on June 17, 1900 | 1906 | It was laid out between 1900 and 1903 as road 16 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain . In 1927 the part of Takustraße between Altensteinstraße and Malvenstraße, the extension of Limonenstraße, which had existed in Lichterfelde since 1908, was renamed Limonenstraße, with the exception of two house numbers. It leads from Schwendenerstrasse to Königin-Luise-Strasse. The Institute for Chemistry and Biochemistry of the FU (No. 3 and No. 6) and the Institute for Computer Science of the FU (No. 9) are located here. The architect Alex Baerwald lived in No. 3 . | |
Taylor Street
( Location ) |
720 | Zachary Taylor (1784–1850), American general and politician | Dec. 1, 1955 | The street was laid out in the early 1950s as street D of the development plan and opens up the former residential area for US military personnel (US Housing Area). | |
Thanner path
( Location ) |
100 | Thann , town in the Haut-Rhin department in the former Alsace region | March 20, 1929 | The previous name was street 401a of the zoning plan. It is located in the Thieleck settlement. | |
Thielallee
( Location ) |
1900 | Hugo Thiel (1839–1918), politician, chairman of the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain | 1911 | It leads from the Königin-Luise-Straße to the Unter den Eichen street. The Hahn-Meitner building of the FU (house no. 63), the Thiel and Triest parks, the “Silberlaube” of the FU with the philological library, the parish hall of the Ev. Dahlem parish. Further listed architectural monuments are the Thielecksiedlung, the group of houses No. 20–24, the farm workers houses No. 2–4, the house No. 8, the house No. 10, the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Experimental Therapy No. 69 and 73. Lise Meitner and the President of the Reichsfilmkammer Carl Froelich lived in house no. 67, in no. 89 the Reich Finance Minister Johann Ludwig Graf Schwerin von Krosigk and in no. 101 the Reichsfrauenführer Gertrud Scholtz-Klink . | |
Thielplatz
( Location ) |
Hugo Thiel (1839–1918), politician, chairman of the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain | undedicated | The square that gave the Thielplatz underground station its name does not exist in the cadastre , but the “Thielpark” in which it is located does. The Thielplatz underground station was renamed Freie Universität (Thielplatz) in 2016 . | ||
Tom Sawyer Way
( Location ) |
110 | Tom Sawyer, title character in Mark Twain's novel The Adventures of Tom Sawyer | Feb 13, 2001 | The footpath connects the new building area on the former festival site with Marshallstrasse. The “Tom Sawyer Children's Home” is located here. | |
Trumanplaza
( Location ) |
210 × 160 | Harry S. Truman (1884–1972), American President | around 1950 | The Trumanplaza comprised the area between Clayallee , Hüttenweg, Marshallstraße and Argentinischer Allee. A shopping center and other facilities for US military personnel were located here until 1994 . Currently (2012) the residential area “Fünf Morgen Dahlem Urban Village, Berlin” with around 100 residential units is being built there. | |
Bypass
( Location ) |
1000 | Chaussee , term taken from French for a well-developed country road | undedicated | The Umgehungschaussee is a forest path that runs from the Hüttenweg , near the Fenngraben, in a large arc around the Grunewald hunting lodge on the Grunewaldsee to Koenigsallee. It is not a dedicated street, in the street directory under number 5721 the Käutzchensteig bypass is indicated as FOST (forest road). | |
Under the oaks
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
850 Oaks , plant genus from the beech family, greenery accompanying the road | Jan. 6, 1911 | From 1792 to 1911 it was Potsdamer Chaussee . The name was chosen after the oaks were planted. Only the section between Habelschwerdter Allee and Schützallee belongs to Dahlem. The road area belongs to Lichterfelde . The building complex of the former Imperial Health Department is a listed building monument. The Federal Institute for Materials Testing located here is also known . | |
Van't Hoff Street
( Location ) |
480 | Jacobus Henricus van 't Hoff (1852–1911), Dutch chemist, first Nobel Prize winner for chemistry | around 1914 | The street in the university quarter was laid out in 1909/1910 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain . This is where the FU cafeteria and the law department, the Fritz Haber Institute for Electron Microscopy, and the Fritz Haber Institute of the Max Planck Society are located . The residential building No. 15 is also a listed building monument. The biochemist Adolf Butenandt lived in No. 2–4 . | |
Vogelsang
( Location ) |
430 | Birdsong , utterances of birds | around 1892 | The street connects the Königin-Luise-Straße with the street Im Dol. The name is a reference to the numerous bird species that populated the tree-lined median of the street at that time, it is in the context of the neighboring streets with bird names. The group of houses No. 9–15a is a listed building monument. The Reichsbank President Hjalmar Schacht and the actor Heinz Spitzner lived in house number 9, and the publisher Karl Ullstein in number 10 . | |
Von-Laue-Strasse
( Location ) |
310 | Max von Laue (1879–1960), physicist and Nobel Prize winner | June 1, 1961 | The previous name from 1905 to 1961 was Herrfurthstrasse . A section of the street was renamed Wassermannplatz in 1930 (today: Corrensplatz). It leads from Unter den Eichen to Ladenbergstrasse. | |
Von-Wettstein-Strasse
( Location ) |
130 | Fritz von Wettstein (1895–1945), Austrian botanist | Nov 1, 1970 | In 1970 the southern part of Reichshofer Strasse, which was separated from the main part of the street by the buildings of the Max Planck Society, was renamed Von-Wettstein-Strasse. | |
Quail Street
( Location ) |
420 | Quail , about a star great, living in secret Hühnervogel | before 1910 | The road runs from Im Dol to Am Hirschsprung. | |
Waltraudstrasse
( Location ) |
630 | Waltraud, feminine given name | around 1900 | The road was laid out around 1900 by Zehlendorf-Grunewald AG . It leads from Sophie-Charlotte-Straße to Argentinische Allee. It forms the border to Zehlendorf . The composer Heino Gaze lived in No. 5, the chemist Paul Rosbaud in No. 15 . | |
Wichernstrasse
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
360 Johann Hinrich Wichern (1808–1881), theologian | before 1911 | The road leads from Schwendenerstrasse to Altensteinstrasse. The director Paul Verhoeven lived in No. 7, the actress Ilse Steppat in No. 14 , and the diplomat Friedrich Gaus in No. 20 . | |
Wolkenburgweg
( Location ) |
260 | Wolkenburg , mountain in the Siebengebirge in the urban area of Königswinter and Bad Honnef | Dec 27, 1999 | The street is located in the new development area on the former festival site . |
Former and renamed streets
As a suburb of Berlin, the Dahlem domain was first recorded in the 1905 address book. On the city map from 1907, the district of Dahlem is shown in yellow. The streets around Kaiser-Wilhelm-Platz are laid out but vacant and do not coincide with the existing streets. In the 1904 address book the map of the "Handelsgesellschaft für Grundbesitz" is given, south of Hundekehlestrasse the Grunewald forest is listed.
The following streets for Dahlem are included, plus the streets in the suburb of Dahlem, which belong to neighboring post office districts. Some of the route details are marked on the left and back on the right.
- Altensteinstrasse : Werderstrasse - Gustav-Meyer-Strasse - Strasse 29 - Strasse 15 - Fabeckstrasse - Werderstrasse . From Werderstrasse to Willdenowstrasse, the street belongs to the Groß-Lichterfelde postal district and from Wildenowstrasse to Dahlemer Chaussee to the Steglitz post office district. Between 1901 and May 2, 1905, it was laid out as Altensteinallee .
- Bötticherstrasse: undeveloped from Potsdamer Chaussee.
- Fontanestrasse: Potsdamer Chaussee - Str. 3a vacant
- Friedenthalstrasse (since 1938): Schellendorffstrasse : undeveloped from Hundekehlestrasse
- Hammersteinstraße : undeveloped from Warnemünder Straße
- Herrfurthstrasse: undeveloped from Potsdamer Chaussee
- Heydenstrasse : undeveloped from Hundekehlestrasse
- Königsmarckstraße : Hohenzollerndamm undeveloped
- Lansstraße: undeveloped from Steglitzer Chaussee
- Luciusstrasse : Hundekehlestrasse vacant
- Miquelstraße : undeveloped from Steglitzer Chaussee
- Podbielskiallee: a new building from Steglitzer Chaussee
- Sachsallee : undeveloped from Steglitzer Chaussee , still undeveloped in 1920.
- Selchowstrasse : undeveloped from Hundekehlestrasse, still undeveloped in 1920.
- Street 15: Altensteinstraße - Straße 29
- Warnemünderstraße : undeveloped from Hundekehlestraße
- Werderstraße: from Altensteinstraße: undeveloped
- Willdenowstraße : from Potsdamer Chaussee: undeveloped
Streets belonging to the Groß-Lichterfelde postal district:
- Fabeckstrasse : Potsdamer Chaussee - Altensteinstrasse - Steglitzer Chaussee - Altensteinstrasse - Potsdamer Chaussee
- Friedbergstrasse : Potsdamer Chaussee - Ladenbergstrasse - Strasse 27 - Ladenbergstrasse - Potsdamer Chaussee
- Goßlerstrasse : Potsdamer Chaussee - Ladenbergstrasse - Potsdamer Chaussee
- Ladenbergstrasse: Altensteinstrasse - Werderstrasse - Goßlerstrasse - Friedbergstrasse - Herrfurthstrasse - Friedbergstrasse - Goßlerstrasse - Werderstrasse
- Potsdamer Chaussee: Steglitzer Feldmark - (No. 10: Botanical Garden is part of the Steglitz Post District) - Groß-Lichterfelder Feldmark - Goßlerstraße - Friedbergstraße - Herrfurthstraße - Bötticherstraße - (Imperial Health Office) - Groß-Lichterfelder Feldmark - (Imperial Materials Testing Office) - Street 3a - Groß-Lichterfelder Feldmark
- Pücklerstrasse : Rheinbabenallee - (a new building) - Miquelstrasse - Parkstrasse
- Rheinbabenallee: Pücklerstraße - (a new building) - Hammersteinstraße
- Street 3 : Potsdamer Chaussee - Fontanestrasse - Potsdamer Chaussee
- Ziethenstrasse : Potsdamer Chaussee - Altensteinstrasse - Potsdamer Chaussee
Streets belonging to the postal district Grunewald:
- Cronbergerstraße: Hohenzollerndamm - Königsmarckstraße - Grunewald - Königsmarckstraße - Hohenzollerndamm - Parkstraße
- Hohenzollern-Damm : Parkstrasse - Miquelstrasse - Rheinbabenallee - Hundekehlestrasse - Cronberger Strasse - Königsmarckstrasse
- Hundekehlestrasse : Hohenzollerndamm - Rheinbabenallee - Luciusstrasse - Friedenthalstrasse - Heydenstrasse - Selchowstrasse - Warnemünder Strasse - Schmargendorfer Feldmark
- Parkstrasse: Strasse 40 - Pücklerstrasse - Hammersteinstrasse - Heydenstrasse - Luciusstrasse - Hohenzollerndamm - Cronberger Strasse - Königsmarckstrasse - Hagenstrasse - Grunewald
Street belonging to the Steglitz postal district:
- Steglitzer Chaussee: Grunewaldstraße - Steglitzer Feldmark - Sachsallee - Podbielskiallee - (Imperial Health Department) - (Trial fields of the Royal Agricultural University) - (Windmill) - (Official houses of the Domain Treasury) - Straße 40 - (Church) - (Workers' house of the Domain -Fiskus) - Strasse 40 - (Workers' House of the Domain Treasury) - Strasse 48 - (IV., V. VI. Workers House of the Domain Treasury) - Landstrasse - Gustav Meyerstrasse - Altensteinstrasse - (New building of the Botanical Museum, Pharmaceutical Institute) - Grunewaldstrasse - Steglitzer Feldmark
The streets indicated in 1905 were partially renamed or came to neighboring districts through the district reform of 1938.
- Cronberger Straße: According to the address book from 1920, Cronberger Straße leads north across the border from Dahlem to Grunewald via Hagenstraße . Due to the district reform of 1938 it came to Grunewald in full, since July 4, 1929 in the spelling with K as Kronberger Straße .
- Dorfstraße: The street of the former village of Dahlem was laid out between 1889 and 1901 and named in March 1906 as the central street of the villa suburb in Königin-Luise-Straße .
- Fontanestrasse: The street south of Potsdamer Chaussee ( Unter den Eichen ) was laid before 1893 at the Lichterfelde-West S-Bahn station and belonged to Dahlem until the district reform on April 1, 1938. It was named on November 10, 1971 due to the large number of streets with the same name in Adolf-Martens-Straße .
- Herrfurthstrasse (since May 2, 1905): was renamed Von-Laue-Strasse on June 1, 1961 , a section was renamed Wassermannplatz in 1930 (since 1938: Corrensplatz ). It was named after the lawyer and politician Ernst Ludwig Herrfurth (1830–1900). He improved the municipal law in 1892 with the implementation of his draft of a rural community order for the six eastern provinces of Prussia. On the map from 1920 as Erfurthstraße, however, referred to in the address book as Herrfurthstraße .
- Parkstrasse: It was named after the Messelpark (formerly Ruhlandpark) on which the street ran. The road was laid out between 1902 and 1911 in three construction phases by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain. It ran north of the park from Spohrstrasse in Grunewald to Pacelliallee in Dahlem. On April 4, 1934, the separation was carried out of the northwest section between Spohr and Hagen Street and the inclusion in the existing in Grunewald since October 24, 1922 game trail . The remaining part of Parkstrasse was renamed Helfferichstrasse in 1934 and on February 6, 1958, Bernadottestrasse . Karl Theodor Helfferich (1872–1924) was an economist, banker and politician and, after 1918, a leading representative of the German right.
- Potsdamer Chaussee (Berlin-Potsdamer Chaussee): The main street between Steglitz and Potsdam had been laid out since 1792 and one section ran through Dahlem. As a section of the order introduced in 1911 as Reichsstrasse 1 , it was named Unter den Eichen on January 6, 1911 after the planting on the edges .
- Sachs-Allee: The Sachsallee was laid out around 1900 by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain and paved in 1903. Until April 1, 1938, Sachsallee belonged exclusively to Dahlem. When the district borders were moved in 1938, it runs through Steglitz. In Dahlem, the name was changed to Englerallee on September 17, 1938 . The name for the Sachsallee was the Schumacher, Meistersinger and poet Hans Sachs (1494–1576).
- Straße 17: In the 1910 address book it is mentioned between Altensteinstraße and the Groß Lichterfelde district.
- Straße 3 and Straße 30: Both streets were laid out by the commission for the division of the Dahlem domain from 1913 and were completed in 1915. The street 3 was named Harnackstraße on August 16, 1928 , whereby the initial route over the Dahlem district boundary was shortened from Berliner Straße from Leichhardstraße. The parallel street 30 was renamed Ihnestraße on the same day and begins at Schützallee, the district boundary . The streets are in the university district.
- Straße 40 : It is mentioned in the 1910 address book under Post Steglitz. It is located on Königin-Luise-Straße on a section of the Steglitzer Chaussee described in the address book in 1905 , which is still listed in 1906 and is no longer listed in 1907. In the city map from 1907 the route of the Steglitzer Chaussee is integrated into the Königin-Luise-Straße and would have been assigned to the planned street to the villa colony Zehlendorf-Grunewald.
- Werderstrasse (since September 12, 1895): was renamed Habelschwerdter Allee on July 13, 1934 . Werderstrasse was laid out around the turn of the century in various construction phases to subdivide the Dahlem domain and lay in the Zehlendorfer area. It was named after the military August Leopold Karl Wilhelm 1st Count of Werder (1808-1887), who was awarded the title of Count by the Kaiser due to his military successes.
- Ziethenstraße: was renamed Reichensteiner Weg on July 13, 1934 . It was named after the Prussian military Hans Joachim von Zieten (1699–1786). By including the suburbs to Greater Berlin, there were several streets of the same name in the larger city.
Other locations in Dahlem
Housing estates
- Thielecksiedlung from 1927 to 1930
- Housing estate for US military personnel (US housing area)
Parks
- Dreipfuhlpark (7770, location ) it is located on the Dreipfuhl with a southern point facing Schützallee between Sudgauer Straße, Lützelsteiner Weg, Reichshofer Straße and the Max Planck Institute on the south-western edge of the district on 5.8 hectares.
- Erlenbusch (8128, Lage ) is located south of the street Am Erlenbusch and borders on Englerallee in the east. It occupies an area of almost 2.6 hectares.
- Finkenpark (7756, Lage ) is located on 4.1 hectares east of Clayallee between Finkenweg and Starstraße / northern properties of Im Dol. Hirschsprung and Heinrich-Stahl-Weg cross and divide the green area; the Finkenteich is located on the eastern edge (Max-Eyth-Straße).
- Messelpark (7804, Lage ) is located south of Pücklerstraße in the district and across Pacelliallee between Messelstraße / Im Dol and Bernadottestraße. The area in the district is 4.3 hectares, in the part of the park east of Pacelliallee lies the Messelteich. It continues north in Schmargendorf.
- Thielpark (7834, location ) is located to the north and south of the Thielplatz underground station , to the west by Auf dem Grat and Faradayweg and to the east by Im Schwarzen Grund and Landoldtweg on an area of 10.2 hectares.
- Triestpark (7900, location ): is the eastern continuation of the Thielpark on 1.3503 hectares across Thielallee between Landg, Habelschwerdter Alle and Kaiserswerther Straße.
- Forest Park Onkel-Tom-Straße ( Lage ) with the street number 8132, it is located across the suburb of Zehlendorf (Onkel-Tom-Siedlung) to Fenngraben in the northwest of the district - east of Onkel-Tom-Straße. It is crossed by the Wannseeweg .
Other facilities
- Grunewald (forest) : Dachsheide, NSG Langes Luch
- Campus of the FU
- Museum Center Berlin-Dahlem
- several institutes of the Max Planck Society
- former hospital: Oskar-Helene-Heim
- Dahlem cemetery
- Dahlem forest cemetery
- Domain Dahlem
- former Luftgaukommando III, later US Headquarters Command
See also
- List of cultural monuments in Berlin-Dahlem
- List of cinemas in Berlin-Dahlem
- List of stumbling blocks in Berlin-Dahlem
literature
- Landesdenkmalamt Berlin (Hrsg.): Monuments in Berlin district Steglitz-Zehlendorf - district Dahlem . Michael Imhoff Verlag, Petersberg 2011, ISBN 978-3-86568-679-4 .
- Harry Balkow-Gölitzer et al. A classy address - celebrities in Berlin-Dahlem and their stories . be.bra verlag GmbH, 2006, ISBN 3-8148-0136-9 .
Web links
- Map of Berlin 1: 5000 with district boundaries. Senate Department for Urban Development Berlin, 2009, accessed on December 25, 2011 .
- Street directory Dahlem. kaupert media GmbH, accessed on December 25, 2011 .
- Office for Statistics Berlin-Brandenburg: List of streets and places in the Steglitz-Zehlendorf district (as of February 2015); pdf
- Strolling in Berlin A straightforward résumé. Klaus Gaffron, accessed February 16, 2012 .
- Hermann Jansen: Expert opinion on the project of the Berlin-Zehlendorf district office to designate an additional traffic route from Zehlendorf towards Berlin-Mitte
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c d Landeskartenwerk Berlin: data query on the detailed network for the district of Dahlem
- ↑ Agricultural college
- ↑ Royal Garden Academy
- ↑ a b c d e f g h i j Thielecksiedlung of the Landesfinanzdirektion Berlin
- ↑ House mason
- ↑ Braasch house with garage
- ↑ Bernhard House
- ↑ Single-family house Am Hirschsprung 50a
- ↑ Residential building Am Hirschsprung 35
- ↑ Senate Department for Urban Development and the Environment Low-Energy Building Berlin-Zehlendorf
- ↑ Berlin Brigade Turner Barracks ( page no longer available , search in web archives ) Info: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ Single-family house Amselstraße 22–24
- ↑ Secret Prussian State Archives
- ↑ House pike
- ↑ Auhagen house with roadside fence
- ↑ Museum of Ethnology
- ↑ Single-family house Auf dem Grat 26
- ↑ Single-family house Auf dem Grat 35
- ↑ Residential house & studio building Auf dem Grat 38
- ↑ Country house on the ridge 50
- ↑ Single-family house Bachstelzenweg 18
- ↑ Anthroposophical Society in Germany e. V .: Rudolf Steiner House
- ↑ Neuhaus country house
- ↑ Residential building group Bernadottestraße 94–96
- ↑ Villa Drimborn
- ↑ House of Diercks
- ↑ House Dr. Huth with outbuildings
- ↑ House Schlick
- ↑ Two-family house Bitterstrasse 21
- ↑ Max Planck Institute for the History of Science ( Memento of the original from September 28, 2006 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link has been inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Cell Physiology & Archive on the History of the Max Planck Society
- ↑ Breitenbachplatz underground station
- ↑ Breitenbachplatz 8-18
- ↑ Breitenbachplatz 8
- ↑ Residential building & row of shops at Breitenbachplatz 10–18
- ↑ FU Berlin Institute for Meat Hygiene and Technology ( Memento of the original from September 5, 2011 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 notice.
- ↑ Luftkreiskommando II (later US Headquarters Command)
- ↑ Oskar-Helene-Heim underground station with reception building and road bridge
- ↑ Outpost cinema
- ↑ House Auerbach
- ↑ Former Royal Research and Testing Institute for Water Supply and Wastewater Disposal
- ↑ Single-family house Dohnenstieg 24a
- ↑ House Neutze
- ↑ House Drygalskistraße 5
- ↑ House Ehrenbergstrasse 29
- ↑ House Bredow
- ↑ House Dassbach with garage
- ↑ House Luckhardt
- ↑ Falkenried 2 to 20, row house development, 1912–1933 by Heinrich Schweitzer and Bruno Ahrends
- ↑ a b Ev. Jesus Christ Church with rectory and parish hall
- ↑ House Witt
- ↑ Residential building Gadebuscher Weg 5
- ↑ Garystraße 3, Free University of Berlin, pharmacological internship
- ↑ Garystraße 21, Free University of Berlin, Faculty of Economics and Social Sciences
- ↑ Garystraße 35/37, Free University of Berlin, Henry Ford Building
- ↑ Garystraße 18, Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Cell Physiology, director's residence
- ↑ Garystrasse 26, Debtfrey house
- ↑ Gelfertstrasse 15, residential building
- ↑ Gelfertstrasse 19–21, Schwebes house
- ↑ Gelfertstrasse 32/34, house Jandorf
- ↑ Gelfertstrasse 37, Villa
- ↑ Gelfertstrasse 43, Diercks house
- ↑ Gelfertstraße 45, student dormitory with community hall
- ↑ Gelfertstraße 47 / 47a, apartment building
- ↑ Goßlerstraße 18, German National Entomological Museum, with the director's residence
- ↑ a b c d Housing complex of the building construction department of the Prussian Ministry of Finance
- ↑ Gustav-Meyer-Strasse 1–3, villa
- ↑ Habelschwerdter Allee 12, House Kahle, rental villa, 1905–1906 by Robert Kleinau
- ↑ Habelschwerdter Allee 17, Borchert house, residential building, 1911 by Heinrich Straumer and Hans Hermann
- ↑ Hittorfstraße 12, single-family house
- ↑ Austrian Consulate (former residential building)
- ↑ Hittorfstrasse 18, Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Experimental Therapy, residential building for the head of the biochemical department
- ↑ Hüninger Strasse 39, residential building, 1936–1937 by Hans Scharoun
- ↑ Hüttenweg 7, Haus Landefeld, residential building with chauffeur house, 1922–1923 by Edmund Meurin
- ↑ Hüttenweg 9, Haus Isay, residential building, 1930–1931 by Fritz August Breuhaus de Groot
- ↑ Hüttenweg 15, Scheuermann House, residential building, designed by Otto v. Estorff and Gerhard Winkler
- ↑ Hüttenweg 21, 25, residential buildings for Air Force officers 1935–1937 by Ernst Sagebiel
- ↑ Hüttenweg 46, United States Army Chapel, 1957 by Carl Mertz Tayorstrasse
- ↑ Hüttenweg 47, celebration hall of the Dahlem forest cemetery, 1931–1932 by Heinrich Schweitzer
- ↑ Hüttenweg 90, Forsthaus Paulsborn restaurant, 1905–1906 by Friedrich Wilhelm Göhre
- ^ Berlin Brigade Berlin Brigade Housing Area , accessed on January 29, 2011.
- ↑ Ihnestrasse 22–24, Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Anthropology, Human Heredity and Eugenics, 1926–1927 by Carl Sattler
- ↑ Ihnestraße 16–20, Kaiser Wilhelm Society, Harnack House, 1928–1929 by Carl Sattler
- ↑ In Dol 39, residential building, 1911–1912 and extensions 1920–1921, 1923 by Heinrich Schweitzer
- ↑ Kauperts: Im Dol
- ↑ In Dol 27–29, residential building, 1913 by Wilhelm Büning
- ↑ In Dol 48, residential building, 1914–1915 by Otto Bartning; Extension in 1926 by Heinrich Schweitzer
- ↑ In Dol 50, residential building, 1922–1923 by Otto Rudolf Salvisberg
- ↑ In Dol 51, residential building, 1929 by Georg Thoféhrn
- ↑ In Dol 71, residential building, 1955–1956 by Kurt Kurfiss
- ↑ In Gehege 2–5, terraced housing estate, 1912–1933 by Heinrich Schweitzer and Bruno Ahrends (partly in Germany)
- ↑ In Gehege 6–8, Lyceum of the Dahlem community, 1910–1911 and 1916–1920 by Heinrich Schweitzer
- ↑ In Gehege 9, residential building, 1927 by Hermann Muthesius (D)
- ↑ Grunewald hunting lodge
- ↑ Im Schwarzen Grund 4, Haus Nitze, residential building, 1914 by Philipp Nitze
- ↑ Im Schwarzen Grund 18, Lützkendorf house, residential building, 1967–1968 by Erwin Eickhoff and Siegfried Hoffie
- ↑ Petersen House with a sculptor and architecture studio
- ↑ Im Winkel 37, residential building, 1927–1928 by Wilhelm Fahlbusch
- ↑ In the Halde 6–8, Villa, 1923–1924 by Heinrich Schweitzer
- ↑ In the Halde 18-20, residential building, 1927-1928 by Heinrich Möller
- ↑ Atelier Arno Breker
- ↑ Bernhard Heiliger Foundation: History of the Atelier Building Käuzchensteig 8–12 ( Memento of the original from September 23, 2015 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 notice.
- ↑ Kaiserswerther Straße 16/18, Association House of the Public Fire Insurance Institutions, 1926–1927 by Heinrich Straumer
- ↑ Kaiserswerther Strasse 17, residential building, 1955–1956 by Fehling & Gogel and Peter Pfankuch
- ↑ Imperial Biological Institute for Agriculture and Forestry
- ↑ Royal gardening school with institute building, director's residence, pergola, greenhouse, boiler house and coach house, 1902–1903 by Preller
- ↑ Domain Dahlem
- ↑ Dahlem student colony, boarding school building, 1906–1911 by Reimarus & Hetzel, Friedrich and Wilhelm Hennings and Heinrich Schweitzer
- ↑ Queen-Luise-Strasse, Eiskeller, 1709
- ↑ Queen-Luise-Strasse 55, St. Anne's Church with enclosure; Long house, around 1300
- ↑ Dahlem-Dorf underground station with reception building, bus shelter, 1912–1913 by Friedrich and Wilhelm Hennings
- ↑ Catholic St. Bernhard Church, 1932–1934 by Wilhelm Fahlbusch
- ↑ Milk tenant house, restaurant "Alter Krug", 18./19. Century
- ↑ Queen-Luise-Strasse 80–84, Arndt-Gymnasium, 1907–1909 by Friedrich and Wilhelm Hennings
- ↑ Koserstraße 8–12, Villa, 1925–1929 by Hildebrandt
- ↑ Ladenbergstrasse 22/24, Dahlem II rental housing complex, 1904–1906 by Erich Köhn (D)
- ↑ Liebensteinstrasse 4, House Deckert, Villa, 1904 by Ludwig Otte
- ↑ Löhleinstrasse 21, residential building, 1934–1935 by Fritz Schopohl
- ↑ Lützelsteiner Weg 3–5, 6, 8–17, housing estate for US officers, 1956–1957 from the Engineer Division and the Senate Department for Building and Housing
- ↑ Max-Eyth-Straße 7, Landhaus, 1929–1931 by Hans Claus
- ↑ Max-Eyth-Straße 8, Dr. Landmann, 1933–1934 by Fritz August Breuhaus de Groot
- ↑ Max-Eyth-Straße 12a, House Lille (Kleine Insel) , 1934 by Fritz August Breuhaus de Groot (D)
- ↑ Messelstrasse 1, Raffloer house, residential building, 1912–1913 by Heinrich Schweitzer (D)
- ↑ Miquelstrasse 58, Haus Hermann, Hans Hermann's house in 1911
- ↑ Miquelstrasse 66–68, residential building, 1911–1912 by Bruno Ahrends
- ↑ Miquelstraße 72, garage building with chauffeur's apartment, 1921–1922, by Bruno Ahrends
- ↑ Miquelstrasse 83, Freudenberg House, residential building, 1912–1913 by Hans Hermann
- ↑ Miquelstrasse 90, Landhaus, 1912–1913 by Otto Bartning (D)
- ↑ Mühlenau primary school
- ↑ Musäusstrasse 2, Haus Supf, Landhaus, 1926–1927 by Philipp Nitze
- ↑ Pacelliallee 14, Haus Stauss, Villa, 1913–1914 by Cremer & Wolffenstein (D)
- ↑ Pacelliallee 27, Landhaus, 1909 by Heinrich Schweitzer
- ↑ Pacelliallee 19–21, Semmel house, villa with gardener's house, 1925–1926 by Adolf Wollenberg
- ↑ Three neighbors, no future. Retrieved January 29, 2020 .
- ↑ Pacelliallee 61, Ev. Dahlem rectory, 1909–1910 by Heinrich Straumer (D)
- ↑ Pacelliallee 18, Landhausgarten, 1912–1913 by Hermann Muthesius
- ↑ Pacelliallee 18, Cramer House, 1912–1913 by Hermann Muthesius
- ↑ Pacelliallee 43–45, Haus Stenger, residential building with garage, 1922 by Paul Renner)
- ↑ Pacelliallee 47, Haus Edelstein, house with garage, 1922–1923 by Eugen Schmohl)
- ↑ Pacelliallee 55, Haus Neutze, two-family house, 1912 by Otto Rudolf Salvisberg)
- ↑ Berlin city map 1907: Dahlem
- ↑ Peter-Lenné-Straße 1, Heydenreich house, residential building, 1914–1916 by Paulus & Lilloe
- ↑ Great State Lodge of the Freemasons of Germany
- ↑ Peter-Lenné-Straße 7, residential building, 1914–1915 by Heinrich Straumer
- ↑ Peter-Lenné-Straße 18, Dr. Jahn, Landhaus, 1937 by Hans Köhler
- ↑ Peter-Lenné-Straße 28/30, Wiegand house, residential building, 1911–1912 by Peter Behrens
- ↑ Peter-Lenné-Straße 32/34, residential building, 1912–1913 by Cremer & Wolffenstein
- ↑ Podbielskiallee, Podbielskiallee underground station with reception building, 1911–1913 by Heinrich Schweitzer
- ↑ Podbielskiallee 5, Brukenhaus house, country house, 1911–1912 by Heinrich Straumer (D)
- ↑ Podbielskiallee 25/27, residential building, 1926–1927, by Helmut Grisebach & Hans Rehmann
- ↑ Podbielskiallee 28, Haus Penzlin, house with garden, 1928–1930 by Otto Rudolf Salvisberg (D)
- ↑ Podbielskiallee 34, Haus Sternberg, residential building, 1923–1924 by Hermann Karpenstein
- ↑ Podbielskiallee 42, residential building, 1913–1914 by Fritz Redlin
- ↑ Podbielskiallee 57, residential building, 1928 by Mebes & Emmerich
- ↑ Podbielskiallee 61, Haus Gaedicke, residential building, 1907–1908 by Otto Knopf
- ↑ Podbielskiallee 78, Königin-Luise-Stiftung School with enclosure, 1905–1907 by Paul Kieschke and Eduard Fürstenau
- ↑ Pücklerstraße 18, residential building, 1922–1923 by Georg Jacobowitz (D)
- ↑ Pücklerstrasse 36, residential building, 1939–1940, by Fritz August Breuhaus de Groot
- ↑ Reichensteiner Weg 24/26, Paulinum, 1907–1909 by Karl Kujath
- ↑ Address search Rheinbabenallee in Dahlem on an official map
- ↑ Press and Information Office of the Free University: Rudi-Dutschke-Weg in the fruit tree area
- ↑ Saargemünder Strasse 14–22, service houses for Air Force members, 1937–1938 by N. von Seela
- ↑ Schorlemerallee 6, single-family house, 1922–1923 by Paul Voss
- ↑ Schorlemerallee 7a / 23a, rows of terraced houses and residential houses, 1925–1930 by Hans and Wassili Luckhardt & Alfons Anker
- ↑ Schorlemerallee 12–12c, row of terraced houses, 1929–1930 by Hans and Wassili Luckhardt & Alfons Anker (D)
- ↑ Schorlemerallee 14, residential building, 1936–1938 by Hans and Wassili Luckhardt (D)
- ↑ Schorlemerallee 16, Kupferhaus, 1931 by Hirsch Kupfer- und Messingwerke AG
- ↑ Row house development Schweinfurthstrasse 58–72
- ↑ Schweinfurthstrasse 24 Kohtz house
- ↑ Alt-Berlin-Info: City map from 1926 ( page no longer available , search in web archives ) Info: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ Spechtstraße 21/23, residential building, 1938–1939 by Fritz August Breuhaus de Groot
- ↑ Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Chemistry & Hahn-Meitner-Bau at the Free University
- ↑ Parish hall of the Protestant St. Annen parish
- ↑ Thielallee 20–24, group of residential buildings
- ↑ Thielallee 2/4, farm workers' houses with stables, 1888 by W. Bohne
- ↑ Thielallee 8, residential building, 1927–1928 by Karl Hoffmann (D)
- ↑ Thielallee 10, chauffeur's house with garage, 1927–1928 by Karl Hoffmann
- ↑ Thielallee 69, Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Experimental Therapy, assistant and porter's house, built in 1913 by Ernst v. You
- ↑ Thielallee 73, Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Experimental Therapy, institute building, 1912–1913 by Ernst von Ihne and Max Guth
- ↑ Union Aid Organization: German-English Children's Home Tom Sawyer ( Memento of the original from March 4, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link has been inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ Berlin Brigade Truman Plaza ( page no longer available , search in web archives ) Info: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ Unter den Eichen 82–84, bacteriological department and veterinary department of the Imperial Health Department, before 1903–1908, 1927 (building numbers 1–3, 5, 6, 12–15, 18, 19, 21, 26, 27)
- ↑ Free University cafeteria
- ↑ Van't-Hoff-Straße 17, Fritz Haber Institute for Electron Microscopy, Ernst-Ruska-Bau, laboratory building 1974 by Gerd Hänska
- ↑ Van't-Hoff-Straße 15, house, 1936 by Fritz Schopohl
- ↑ Vogelsang 9 / 15a, group of houses, 1922–1924 from the Reichsbank construction office (head of Philipp Nitze) (D)
- ↑ Dahlem . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1904, Part V, p. 1. “On Charlottenburg with Westend follows Friedenau.”.
- ↑ dahlem (Teltow district) . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1905, Part V., p. 125. “Transport connections with Berlin: Wannseebahn (Steglitz, Groß-Lichterfelde-West). Western suburban railway. Tram: Zoological Garden - Schöneberg - Steglitz, Zoological Garden - Friedenau - Wilmersdorf - Kaiserallee - Steglitz, Linkstrasse (Potsdamer Platz) - Schöneberg - Friedenau - Steglitz, Linkstrasse - Wilmersdorf - Roseneck ”.
- ↑ Large transport plan for Berlin and its suburbs. Drawn and designed by Alfred Mende in Berlin, Geogr.-Lithogr. Institute
- ↑ Grunewald . In: Berlin address book , 1904.
- ↑ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q suburb of Berlin-Dahlem (domain, Teltow district) . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1920. "In 1920 the street still has the same name as it was named in the address book in 1905".
- ↑ When the National Socialists renamed all streets named after Jews, Friedenthalstrasse was given the name Schellendorffstrasse in 1938.
- ↑ a b c d e f g Due to the change in the district and suburb boundaries, it is now part of Schmargendorf.
- ↑ Due to the change in the district and suburb boundaries, it now belongs to Grunewald.
- ↑ As a result of the district reform of 1938, the north-western section came to the district of Schmargendorf.
- ↑ Due to the change in the district and suburb boundaries, it is now part of Lichterfelde.
- ↑ a b Map of the Kgl. Domain and the estate district of Dahlem (Teltow district) . In: Berlin address book , 1910.
- ↑ - Cronbergerstrasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1904. "← Hubertusbaderstraße → / 1,3 construction sites / ← Taunusstraße → / 5–17 / ← Hagenstraße → / 19 / ← Spandauer Forst → / 22 / ← Hagenstraße → / 20 / ← Hagenstraße → / 18– 8 / ← Taunusstraße → / 6–2 / ← Hubertusbaderstraße → “(only for Grunewald, Dahlem is not listed as a suburb.).
- ↑ Cronbergerstrasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1904. "indicated on L8 for Grunewald".
- ↑ a b c d Map with the streets of the domain and manor district of Dahlem . In: Berlin address book , 1920.
- ↑ Street 17 . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1910, V. Teil, p. 186. "On the left side with a new building by the lifeguard H. Salow and otherwise construction sites."
- ↑ Street 40 . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1910, Part V., p. 186. “Construction site, (I). Official house of the domain treasury, construction site // IV. Workers house of the domain treasury, construction site, III. Workers' House of the Domain Treasury. ”.
- ↑ Steglitzer Chaussee . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1906, V. Teil, S. 140. "between Selchowstraße and Straße 15: ← Grunewaldstraße → / ← Steglitzer Feldmark → / Construction sites, Woreschke'sches Haus / ← Sachs-Allee → / ← Podbielski-Allee → / Construction sites, biolog. Rst f. Land u. Forestry d. Kaiserl. Health Department, test fields d. Kgl. Agricultural university, construction sites, I. Civil servants' house d. Domain Treasury, Sauer'sches Haus, II. Official House d. Domain Treasury, III. Official House d. Domain Treasury / ← Straße 40 → / Construction site, church, I. Workers' house d. Domain Treasury // ← Street 48 → // II. Workers' House d. Domain Treasury / ← Street 40 → / III. Workers' house d. Domain Treasury, Restaurant zum Alten Krug (E: Treasury) / ← Fabeckstrasse → / IV. Workers' house d. Domain Treasury, V. Workers' House d. Domain Treasury, VI. Workers' house d. Domain Treasury, construction site, I. Schilling'sches Haus, II. Schilling'sches Haus / ← Lansstrasse → / Construction sites, Kgl. Gardener's training institute / ← Gustav Meyerstraße → / Construction sites / ← Altensteinstraße → / New building (tax office), new building d. Offered. Museum, pharmacist. Institute / ← Grunewaldstrasse → / ← Steglitz district → “.
- ↑ Steglitzer Chaussee . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1907, V. Teil, p. 154. “on Selchowstrasse follows street 49”.
- ↑ a b c d e f g Berlin map series (1: 5000)