List of streets and squares in Berlin-Kladow
The list of streets and squares in Berlin-Kladow describes the street system in the Berlin district of Kladow with the corresponding historical references. At the same time, this compilation is part of the lists of all Berlin streets and places .
overview
Kladow has 16,212 inhabitants (as of December 30, 2019) and includes the postal code area 14089. There are a total of 144 dedicated streets, most of which have the character of residential streets. Imchenplatz is the only dedicated traffic area named as a square. Three streets continue across the borders of Kladow. The total length of the 144 streets in the district is 69.8 kilometers.
The system of roads in Kladow (1925 still Cladow ) has grown over time, first at the village center to Alt-Kladow and Ritterfelddamm and Gutsstraße the former manor in Groß Glienicke (then as now outside Berlin) settlement roads were created. The urban population began to move into the area in the 19th century. A building contractor from Berlin bought the Neu-Kladow estate and numerous villas and summer houses with their access roads were built on the banks of the Havel . With the construction of the Blücher barracks and the (today's) General Steinhoff barracks in 1935 for the Gatow airfield , new streets with residential areas were built.
The main road system of the district forms the Potsdamer Chaussee along the northwestern edge (near the city limits), which is designated as Bundesstraße 2 , and in the eastern district of Haveln near Gatow the Kladower Damm . Both are connected by the cross knight field dam.
It should be noted the change in the affiliation of the streets due to the exchange of territory between the Allies (Soviet zone and British sector) in 1945 , the Kladower border line shifted with the city limits and the district border from Spandau over the Ritterfelddamm to the Groß Glienicker Flur to the middle of the Groß -Glienicker See , which made roads from Groß Glienicke to Kladow. The naming of streets at the beginning of the 1930s and the end of the 1950s also stands for the expanded settlement development. When the Wall was built, the district moved to the outskirts in the southwest of West Berlin . In the 1960s to 1980s, some individual designations were made. On the edge of the old village center, the Finnish houses were built in 1958 , with the Kladower Damm dividing the settlement into two unequal halves - the “rural” field side and the “elite” waterfront.
The German reunification made the settlement attractive again since 1990. With the withdrawal of the British troops in 1994, the area of Gatow airfield became vacant, and in the corner between An der Gatower Heide and Ritterfelddamm, roads for home construction as the country town of Gatow were laid on the southwest part of this vacated area . Despite this choice of name, all streets are in Kladow. However, the Gatower site was given to Kladow and the border between the districts was moved to the southwest. The streets in the country town are named after flight heroes like Daedalus and Icarus , pioneers of flight like Leonardo da Vinci or Jules Verne to the aviation pioneers of the 20th century like the Wright brothers and Charles Lindbergh . Due to the choice of topic, some names are duplicated with streets on the Johannisthaler Flugfeld . In 2011, streets in the area of the General Steinhoff Barracks (Luftwaffe) were renamed when this facility previously used by British troops in Berlin was redesigned.
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 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Maple Avenue
( Location ) |
540 | Maple , deciduous and avenue tree | around 1930 | The street lies between the Kurpromenade and Seebadstraße, west of the Gatow airfield. | |
Aiblinger way
( Location ) |
270 | Bad Aibling , town in the district of Rosenheim, Free State of Bavaria | July 20, 1938 | The road previously set up as road 212 according to the development plan lies between Schwabinger and Gautinger Weg and continues beyond this as a cul-de-sac . | |
Albrecht-Berblinger-Strasse
( Location ) |
270 | Albrecht Ludwig Berblinger (1770–1829), tailor, inventor and aviation pioneer | Jan. 1, 2002 | The street in the country town of Gatow lies between An der Gatower Heide and Johann-Landefeldt-Straße. | |
Alt-Kladow
( Location ) |
400 | The old village center of Kladow | May 3, 1935 | Until 1935 as a village street, the name was implemented in Berlin to rename the former village streets of the settlements incorporated in 1920 by putting “Alt-” in front of the previous place names. The street is between Imchenallee / Imchenplatz and Kladower Damm / Sakrower Landstraße. | |
At Donnerberg
( Location ) |
630 | Donnerberg: old local field name | Aug 15, 2000 | The footpath is in the area of the country town Gatow between Ritterfelddamm and Seekorso. | |
At the village forest
( Location ) |
190 | Village forest, woodland of the Kladow farmers | Sep 9 1931 | At the time it was named, the road led from the Krampnitzer Weg to the north over the Fuchsberge. On July 1, 1962, the northern part of the street to Ritterfelddamm, which was separated from the southern part of the street by the elementary school on Ritterfeld, was renamed Schallweg. | |
At Gatow airfield
( Location ) |
650 | Gatow airfield , inaugurated in 1935 as a training facility for pilots and observers of the German Air Force | Aug 1, 2000 | The street is in the area of the country town Gatow between Ritterfelddamm and Seekorso. | |
At the Kladower grove
( Location ) |
200 | adjoining wood | Nov 15, 2005 | Going south-east of Lanzendorfer Weg towards Blücher-Kaserne. | |
At the Gatow landscape park
( Location ) |
980 | Landscape park on the former runway of Gatow Airport | Aug 15, 2000 | The road is in the area of the country town Gatow between An der Gatower Heide and Am Donnerberg. | |
At the knight wood
( Location ) |
610 | Ritterholz, forest area of the manor | Sep 1 1973 | The street, previously street 128 , branches off to the west as a cul-de-sac from Eichelmatenweg. | |
At the red stone
( Location ) |
260 | Red stone, local field name | May 1, 1962 | The street, previously set up as street 116 , lies between Sakrower Kirchweg and Kirchweg, near the old village center. | |
On the Schwemmhorn
( Location ) |
110 | Schwemmhorn, a headland protruding into the Havel in the south of the Kladow district | Nov 15, 1955 | The road near the village center goes eastward from the Lüdickeweg. | |
Amelia-Earhart-Strasse
( Location ) |
260 | Amelia Earhart (1897–1937), American aviation pioneer | Aug 15, 2000 | The street is in the area of the country town Gatow between Leonardo-da-Vinci-Straße and Seekorso. | |
Amelie Beese line
( Location ) |
160 | Amelie Hedwig Boutard-Beese , called "Melli Beese" (1886–1925), the first woman in Germany to pass a pilot's test | Aug 15, 2000 | The street is in the area of the country town Gatow between Seekorso and Am Donnerberg. | |
At the bastion
( Location ) |
200 | Nearby are Bastion and Ravelin , on the former training ground of the Prussian army | Aug 1, 1966 | The road was laid out around 1960 south of Gatower airfield and goes from Ritterfelddamm north in an arch. | |
At the Gatower Heide
( Location ) |
710 | The Gatower Heide with the former shooting range of the British troops in Berlin lies to the northeast. | Aug 15, 2000 | The street lies between Ritterfelddamm and Johann-Landefeldt-Straße in the area of the country town Gatow. | |
Auguste-Piccard-Strasse
( Location ) |
370 | Auguste Piccard (1884–1962), Swiss physicist and inventor | Jan. 1, 2002 | The street is in the area of the country town Gatow between An der Gatower Heide and Johann-Landefeldt-Straße. | |
August-Euler line
( Location ) |
100 | August Euler (1868–1957), aircraft technician and aviation pioneer | Aug 15, 2000 | The road lies between Seekorso and Am Donnerberg in the country town of Gatow . | |
Bardelebenweg
( Location ) |
550 | Bardeleben (noble family), here probably Heinrich Adolf von Bardeleben | Aug 1, 1965 | The path is between the Kurpromenade and Seebadstrasse. The previous Akazienallee was renamed in 1965 to avoid confusion with streets of the same name in Berlin. The area in which the street is located belonged to the municipality of Groß Glienicke in the Osthavelland district until 1945 and came to West Berlin on the basis of Allied agreements . | |
Bartschweg
( Location ) |
330 | Karl Bartsch (1832–1888), Germanic medievalist and classical philologist | May 19, 1959 | The path lies between Zingerle- and Birlingerweg. Laid out as street 119 , its extension was included on August 28, 1963. The streets here bear the names of linguists and folklorists. | |
Bechsteinweg
( Location ) |
330 | Ludwig Bechstein (1801–1860), writer, librarian and archivist | July 1, 1964 | The road 199 in 1964 named as the surrounding streets after a speech watchers. It is located in an arc from and to Selbitzer Straße to the west. | |
Benfeyweg
( Location ) |
280 | Theodor Benfey (1809–1881), orientalist and linguist | Nov 1, 1971 | The street leads into the “Volkskundlerviertel” (with streets named after linguists and folklorists) and lies between Selbitzer Straße and Wossidloweg. | |
Birch avenue
( Location ) |
330 | Birch , deciduous tree, often along paths | around 1935 | The street between the Kurpromenade and Ahornallee was laid out after 1930. The area belonged to the community of Groß Glienicke in the Osthavelland district until 1945 and came to Spandau and thus to West Berlin in 1945 on the basis of Allied agreements . | |
Birlingerweg
( Location ) |
240 | Anton Birlinger (1834–1891), Catholic theologian and Germanist | May 1, 1962 | The street between Wrede- and Zingerleweg, previously street 120 , belongs to the district in which streets were named after personalities of linguistics and folklore. | |
Breitehornweg
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
760 Breitehorn, nearby promontory into the Havel | Nov 7, 1953 | The Breitehornweg forms the border to Gatow , whereby only the forest (Jagen 88 and 89) belongs to the district, the road itself to Gatow. The path goes east from Kladower Damm to the Havel. | |
Charles-Lindbergh-Strasse
( Location ) |
400 | Charles Lindbergh (1902–1974), American pilot, first solo crossing of the Atlantic from New York to Paris without a stopover | Aug 15, 2000 | The road, named after an aviation pioneer in the country town of Gatow, lies between An der Gatower Heide and Am Donnerberg . | |
Christopher Columbus Street
( Location ) |
1350 | Christopher Columbus (1451–1506), Italian navigator in Spanish service, discovery of America | Nov 1, 2011 | The road goes northwest from Kladower Damm and leads to the Air Force Museum , on the area of the General Steinhoff barracks. Before it was renamed, the street was called Käthe-Paulus-Straße . | |
Contessaweg
( Location ) |
680 | Salice-Contessa writers brothers | Oct 22, 1956 | The route in the course of roads 106 and 114, which were previously laid out according to the development plan, lies between Parnemannweg and Gößweinsteiner Gang, continues over this as a cul-de-sac . The two brothers Christian Jakob Salice-Contessa (1767-1825), Silesian merchant, local politician and romantic writer and Karl Wilhelm Salice-Contessa (1777-1825), Silesian poet of the Romantic period, both lived in Berlin, in particular the former was in the fortress Spandau was imprisoned. | |
( Location ) |
Daedalus Path
120 | Daedalus , Greek legendary figure with a dream of flying, father of Icarus | Aug 15, 2000 | The street is in the area of the country town Gatow between Leonardo-da-Vinci-Straße and Seekorso. | |
Dechtower Steig
( Location ) |
100 | Dechtow , municipality north of Spandau, today part of Fehrbellin (Brandenburg) | Nov 23, 1931 | A dead end street , going south from the Ritterfelddamm. | |
Drosselstrasse
( Location ) |
380 | Thrushes , a family of songbirds found worldwide | after 1930 | It is located south of the bend from and to the private road in the area that belonged to the community of Groß Glienicke until 1945 and was placed under the West Berlin administration on the basis of Allied agreements . To the north of the private road is the cuckoo road in the arch. | |
Edmund-Rumpler-Strasse
( Location ) |
330 | Edmund Rumpler (1872–1940), aircraft designer, Rumpler Taube | Aug 28, 2000 | The street lies between An der Gatower Heide and Johann-Landefeldt-Straße in the area of the country town Gatow . | |
Eichelmatenweg
( Location ) |
1030 | Eichel maten , field name for an area in the area of the Gatow airfield | Sep 1 1973 | The road 181 , which had long remained unnamed and undeveloped, was named Eichelmatenweg in 1973 and lies between Ritterfelddamm and beyond Am Ritterholz. | |
Elsa-Brändström-Weg
( Location ) |
180 | Elsa Brändström (1888–1948), Swedish philanthropist known as the "Angel of Siberia" | after 1930 | The street lies between Otto-von-Wollank-Straße and Jägerallee, west of the Gatow airfield in the area that until 1945 belonged to the Brandenburg municipality of Groß Glienicke in the Osthavelland district and then became part of West Berlin on the basis of Allied agreements . | |
( Location ) |
Fählmannweg
630 | Friedrich Robert Faehlmann (1798–1850), Estonian philologist and doctor | Jan. 29, 1958 | The road that was previously set up as road 134 goes off as a cul-de-sac north of Pfändnerweg. It is in a neighborhood where streets were named after linguists and folklorists. | |
Ferdinand Magellan Street
( Location ) |
240 | Ferdinand Magellan (1480–1521), Portuguese navigator on behalf of the Spanish Crown, began the first circumnavigation of the world. | Nov 1, 2011 | The road goes to the northeast from Christoph-Columbus-Strasse, on the area of the General Steinhoff barracks. Until 2011 it was called Waldstrasse . | |
Fischbrunner Weg
( Location ) |
210 | Fischbrunn , place in the Nürnberger Land, today part of Pommelsbrunn (Bavaria) | Feb. 1, 1965 | The road lies between Katzwanger Steig and Hersbrucker Weg and continues over the latter as a cul-de-sac . | |
Friedrich-Hanisch-Strasse
( Location ) |
330 | Friedrich Hanisch (1878–1962), master blacksmith and founder of the Kladow volunteer fire department. | 8 Sep 1979 | Laid out as Straße 175 lies between Kladower Damm and Mascha-Kaléko-Straße, via the latter as a spur road . | |
Fuchsbergeweg
( Location ) |
450 | Fuchsberge, 60 meter high elevation in the Kladow district | Aug 1, 1966 | It is located between Krampnitzer Weg and Straße 136. In 1966 the southern part of the street was named 217 , the northern part of the street was still called Straße 217 and was included on June 5, 1991 in the Fuchsbergeweg. The streets here were grouped under the name Fuchsberge in 1943. | |
Gallandiweg
( Location ) |
150 | Paul Gallandi (1877–1917), landscape gardener, under his direction the promenade was laid out in 1912 | Jun 4, 1962 | The road running north from Krampnitzer Weg in the direction of the Fuchsberge already bore this name unofficially in the 1920s and was officially given it in 1962. | |
Ganzhornweg
( Location ) |
160 | Wilhelm Ganzhorn (1818–1880), lawyer and poet (In the most beautiful meadow area) | Sep 1 1973 | Previously laid out as road 137 , it lies between Krampnitzer Weg and Rollenhagenweg and as a dead-end street over Rollenhagenweg. | |
Gautinger way
( Location ) |
370 | Gauting , town in Upper Bavaria | May 20, 1937 | The path lies between Schwabinger and Aiblinger Weg and goes over the latter as a cul-de-sac . The street 145 was named in 1937, and on July 20, 1938 the previous street 214 was included. The road consisted of two separate sections, so the western section was detached on January 1, 1965 and named Hersbrucker Weg. | |
Wright Brothers Street
( Location ) |
390 | Wright Brothers , American Aviation Pioneers (first powered flight) | Aug 15, 2000 | The road between Leonardo-da-Vinci-Straße and Seekorso lies in the area of the country town Gatow. | |
George Caylay Street
( Location ) |
280 | Sir George Cayley (1773-1857), British inventor, aviation pioneer (world's first glider in 1852) | Jan. 1, 2002 | The street in the area with streets named after aviation pioneers lies between An der Gatower Heide and Johann-Landefeldt-Straße in the country town of Gatow . | |
Gerstäckerweg
( Location ) |
200 | Friedrich Gerstäcker (1816–1872), writer of the modern travel and adventure novel | March 1, 1963 | The small residential street between Gößweinsteiner Gang and Hackländerweg was called Straße 161 before it was named . | |
( Location ) |
Gößweinsteiner course
760 | Gößweinstein , market in Upper Franconia (Forchheim district), Bavaria | Jan. 18, 1936 | The street is located between Krampnitzer Weg and Imchenallee (further on as the Stichstrasse ) and was initially called Eppsteiner Gang until 1936. The name was changed because the old street name sounded too Jewish for some NS residents . | |
Gottfried-Arnold-Weg
( Location ) |
110 | Gottfried Arnold (1666–1714), theologian | July 1, 1970 | The spur road , going southwest from the Ritterfelddamm, leads (parallel to the forest avenue) to the reed roof chapel “Zum Guten Hirten”, which was built here in the early 1950s. The street course borders on the former outskirts, which disappeared in 1945 due to the exchange of territory between Groß Glienicke and Staaken . No properties are addressed to the street. Between the residential buildings Waldallee 1–3 built in the 1970s, the properties on Ritterfelddamm 137–143, which can be reached from Gottfried-Arnold-Weg, are inserted into the depths of Ritterdamm. The reed roof chapel has the address Ritterfelddamm 145. | |
Gredinger Strasse
( Location ) |
120 | Greding , town in Middle Franconia | May 20, 1937 | The previous road 205 is between Katzwanger Steig and Ritterfelddamm. | |
Grimmelshausenstrasse
( Location ) |
530 | Grimmelshausen (around 1622–1676), writer ( Simplicissimus ) | May 1, 1962 | Previously laid out as road 139 , it leads northwards from Krampnitzer Weg to road 136 ( spur road ). | |
Green wall
( Location ) |
110 | Nearby walls of the former Prussian training ground for fortress battles in Kladow | Oct. 1, 1967 | The road branches off to the east from An der Bastion; The "Alte Schanze" is located nearby. | |
Gutsstrasse
( Location ) |
220 | Access to the former manor Groß Glienicke | 19th century | Gutsstraße lies between Ritterfelddamm and the city limits; it opened up the part of Groß Glienicke (east of Groß Glienicker See), which today belongs to Kladow, for the manor. Before 1945, this area in which the road runs belonged to the Havelland community of Groß Glienicke and was only then placed under the West Berlin administration on the basis of Allied agreements . | |
Hackländerweg
( Location ) |
310 | Friedrich Wilhelm Hackländer (1816–1877), writer and war correspondent | March 1, 1963 | Before it was named, it was road 141 in the development plan. It is located between Rollenhagenweg and Gerstäckerweg, over which it continues as a spur road . | |
Haltrichweg
( Location ) |
140 | Josef Haltrich (1822–1886), teacher, pastor and Saxon folklorist | Oct 22, 1956 | The path, previously known as road 121 , lies between Bechsteinweg and Zingerleweg ( Stichstraße ) in a settlement where streets are named after folklorists. | |
Harsdörferweg
( Location ) |
210 | Harsdörffer (1607–1658), Baroque poet in the Upper German writing language | March 1, 1963 | As 138 created after 1928, it is between Wickramstraße and Fuchsbergeweg in an area were named in the streets by linguists. | |
Hellmuth-Hirth line
( Location ) |
80 | Hellmuth Hirth (1886–1938), flight pioneer at Rumpler in Johannisthal | Aug 15, 2000 | The street is in the area of the country town Gatow between Seekorso and Am Donnerberg. | |
Hersbrucker way
( Location ) |
330 | Hersbruck , town in the district of Nürnberger Land, Bavaria | Jan. 1, 1965 | It lies between Fischbrunner Weg and Pegnitzring. At first it belonged to the Gautinger Weg, which consisted of two separate street sections; the western section became an independent road in 1965. | |
Hottengrundweg
( Location ) |
610 | , Formerly Hottengrund, broad valley north of Luis Mountain as Upstall used | Oct 22, 1956 | Laid out as Straße 160 after 1930 , the path lies between Sakrower Landstraße and Selbitzer Straße. | |
Icarus Path
( Location ) |
150 | Icarus , Greek legendary figure, son of Daidalos | Aug 15, 2000 | Street in the country town of Gatow between Leonardo-da-Vinci-Straße and Seekorso. | |
In the jackdaw
( Location ) |
170 | Probably after a field name | around 1955 | The cul-de-sac goes eastwards from the promenade at Groß Glienicker See. Until 1945, the street in the settlement lay in the Groß Glienicke district in the Osthavelland district, which came to Berlin (British sector) in 1945 on the basis of Allied agreements. The plots 2-14 (straight) and 1, 3, 11 from the back of the forest avenue were parceled out in the 1950s in the forest strip on the former outskirts and built on in the 1970s. | |
Imchenallee
( Location ) |
1940 | Imchen , Havel Island on the local shore | Nov 23, 1931 | The road lies between Sakrower Kirchweg and Mascha-Kaléko-Weg (here as a cul-de-sac at the waterworks) and runs along the banks of the Havel. The streets of Lindenweg and Uferstraße from the 19th century were combined with the name, as part of the elimination of double street names since the formation of Greater Berlin . | |
Imchenplatz
( Location ) |
(triangle) (+ adjacent green area) |
60 × 60 × 60 Imchen , Havelinsel with NSG | Nov 23, 1931 | When Imchenallee was named, the square at the transition to Dorfstrasse (today Alt-Kladow) was named as such. | |
Jägerallee
( Location ) |
500 | Hunter , job title | around 1935 | The street between Wald- and Birkenallee belonged to Groß Glienicke until 1945 and came through an exchange of territory between the Soviet occupation zone and the British sector of Berlin to today's district of Kladow as a locality Groß-Glienicke. | |
James Cook Street
( Location ) |
110 | James Cook (1728–1779), British navigator and explorer. | Nov 1, 2011 | The road goes to the northeast from Christoph-Columbus-Strasse, on the area of the General Steinhoff barracks. Until 2011 it was called Graf-Zeppelin-Straße . | |
Johann-Ewald-Weg
( Location ) |
160 | Johann Joachim Ewald (1727 to after 1762), poet, lived for a time with Kleist in Spandau | Jan. 23, 1964 | The path branches off as a cul-de-sac from Bechsteinweg to the southwest. | |
Johann-Landefeldt-Strasse
( Location ) |
710 | Johann Heinrich Landefeldt (1788–1846), landowner in Groß Glienicke | Aug 15, 2000 | It is located between Ritterfelddamm and An der Gatower Heide in the area of the country town Gatow . | |
Jules-Verne-Strasse
( Location ) |
640 | Jules Verne (1828–1905), French writer, is considered the founder of science fiction literature | Aug 15, 2000 | The street is Ritterfelddamm and Am Flugplatz Gatow in the area of the country town Gatow . | |
Kafkastrasse
( Location ) |
290 | Franz Kafka (1883–1924), writer from a middle-class Jewish merchant family | Aug 1, 1966 | The road lies between Sakrower Landstrasse and Sakrower Kirchweg, continuing as a spur road . | |
( Location ) |
Käthe Paulus line
120 | Käthe Paulus (1868–1935), first German professional air skipper, aerial acrobat and inventor of the collapsible parachute | Aug 15, 2000 | The street is a dead end between Seekorso and Am Donnerberg in the area of the country town of Gatow . A street on the site of the General Steinhoff barracks was named after Käthe Paulus after the British withdrew. | |
Katzwanger Steig
( Location ) |
510 | Katzwang , an independent community in the Schwabach district, today: a district of Nuremberg | May 20, 1937 | The Steig, previously Straße 144 , is located between Fischbrunner Weg and Selbitzer Straße in the housing estate south of Gatow airfield, with streets named after communities in Franconia. | |
Kindlebenstrasse
( Location ) |
420 | Christian Wilhelm Kindleben (1748–1785), theologian, writer and publicist | Oct 11, 1955 | The road lies between Sakrower Landstraße to Sakrower Kirchweg and was previously laid out as road 107 . | |
Kladower Dam
( Location ) |
2620 (in the district) |
Dam to Kladow - from Gatow | May 8, 1935 | The Kladower Damm lies between Alt-Kladow and the suburb of Gatow on Breitehornweg. In the northern part, 300 meters of the forest west along the road to the buildings do not belong to the district. The road continues north in Gatow and leads over Alt-Gatow and Gatower Straße to Heerstraße. It is one of the main streets of Kladow. To the northwest of the road there is a section of almost 1500 meters under the same name between the golf course and General Steinhoff barracks. | |
Krampnitzer way
( Location ) |
2110 | Way to Krampnitz , former Brandenburg municipality today to Potsdam | around 1922 | It lies between the Sakrower Landstrasse and the extended promenade. The old overland route from Kladow to Krampnitz has been in the official street directories since around 1922, it leads on the Brandenburg field through the Königswald nature reserve. Still in 1930 with "C" as Crampnitzer Weg . | |
Kreutzwaldstrasse
( Location ) |
760 | Friedrich Reinhold Kreutzwald (1803–1882), Estonian writer and doctor | Jan. 29, 1958 | The street 123 was named in 1958 to match the personalities in the "Volkskundlerviertel"; it lies between Pegnitzring and Selbitzer Strasse. | |
Krohnweg
( Location ) |
190 | Julius Krohn (1835–1888), Finnish poet, folklorist and literary scholar | Feb 13, 1958 | The road goes north from Runebergweg and has side streets to access the properties that belong to the Finnenhausviertel . | |
Cuckoo Street
( Location ) |
390 | Cuckoo , species of bird | around 1935 | The road curves north from and to the private road, opposite Drosselstrasse. It is located in the exchange area, which in 1945 between the Soviet occupation zone and the British sector of Berlin led to the fact that there is now a locality of Groß-Glienicke in the Kladow district. | |
Spa promenade
( Location ) |
1120 | Promenade in a health resort | around 1935 | It is located between Waldallee and Ritterfelddamm in the local area of Groß-Glienicke , which became part of the district in 1945 through the exchange of territory between the Allies. In the villa colony built in the municipality of Groß Glienicke after 1930, the recreational value should be emphasized in a way that matches the seaside resort on Groß Glienicke See and the promenade . | |
Lanzendorfer way
( Location ) |
530 | Lanzendorf , district of Himmelkron, district of Kulmbach, Free State of Bavaria | Dec. 1, 1936 | The road 125 was named in 1936 and is located between Notte path and look Weg and leave as a spur road on. | |
Leonardo da Vinci Street
( Location ) |
1240 | Leonardo da Vinci (1452–1519), Italian polymath and artist | Aug 15, 2000 | It is located between Ritterfelddamm and Am Flugplatz Gatow in the area of the country town Gatow . | |
Lerchenstrasse
( Location ) |
320 | Lark , songbird | after 1930 | The street curves from and to the Ritterfelddamm in the area of the Allied land swap from Groß Glienicke to Kladow. | |
( Location ) |
Lönnrotweg
220 | Elias Lönnrot (1802–1884), Finnish writer, philologist and doctor | Feb 13, 1958 | It lies between Topeliusweg and Straße 178, which it turns into. | |
Ludwig-Dürr-Strasse
( Location ) |
330 | Ludwig Dürr (1878–1956), airship designer | Aug 15, 2000 | The road that was newly laid out in 2000 between An der Gatower Heide and Johann-Landefeldt-Straße is located in the country town of Gatow . | |
Ludickeweg
( Location ) |
420 | Lüdicke, owner of the brickworks that was in this area and existed from 1846 to 1905. | Feb. 18, 1955 | The street between Am Schwemmhorn and Sakrower Landstraße was called Straße 118 from its creation until 1955 , an old path through the Kladower Feldmark also called Pflaumenallee . The Lüdickesche Ziegelei on Crampnitzer Weg on the then local border was operated between 1846 and 1905, south of it there was a factory for detonators. | |
Mannhardtweg
( Location ) |
300 | Wilhelm Mannhardt (1831–1880), folklorist, mythologist and librarian | May 1, 1962 | The street between Selbitzer Straße and Wossidloweg is the western section of the street 132 . The “Folkloristic Quarter” is an area with streets named after folklorists and linguists. The street 133 continues the Mannhardtweg to the west. | |
Manuelaweg
( Location ) |
210 | Manuela , female name | after 2010 | The path is to the east of Kladower Damm (in the area between Friedrich-Hanisch-Straße and Neukladower Allee) and is built on with residential buildings. | |
Marco Polo Street
( Location ) |
430 | Marco Polo (1254–1324), Venetian trader, known for his reports on his trip to China | Nov 1, 2011 | The street goes southwest of the Christoph-Columbus-Straße on the area of the General-Steinhoff-Kaserne. Before it was renamed after the British Air Force left the barracks, the street was called Otto-Lilienthal-Straße . | |
Marga-von-Etzdorf-Strasse
( Location ) |
300 | Marga von Etzdorf (1907–1933), aviator, flight from Berlin to Tokyo (1931/1932) | Aug 15, 2000 | The road between Leonardo-da-Vinci-Straße and Seekorso in the country town of Gatow lies in an area in which streets are named after aviation pioneers. | |
Mascha Kaléko way
( Location ) |
500 | Mascha Kaléko (1907–1975), poet of the New Objectivity | June 7, 1995 | Signed as Straße 179 until it was renamed , it lies between Imchen- and Neukladower Allee and leads through a small forest at Gut Neukladow. | |
Massolleweg
( Location ) |
410 | Joseph Massolle (1889–1957), film sound engineer | May 19, 1959 | The street lies between Sakrower Kirchweg and Imchenallee (here further as a stub road ), in the "housing estate on Quastenhorn" on the Havel it was called Straße 112 before it was named . | |
Nailaer way
( Location ) |
120 | Naila , town in Upper Franconia | May 20, 1937 | The street between Katzwanger Steig and Hersbrucker Weg belongs as street 206 to the streets named after Franconian communities south of Gatower airfield, in a settlement that was created in the 1930s for new apartments. | |
Neukladower Allee
( Location ) |
480 | Neukladow Castle | Sep 9 1931 | A poplar avenue from Kladower Damm in the direction of the Havel to Neukladow Castle was named in 1931, it is located between Kladower Damm and Mascha-Kaléko-Weg and leads out as a cul-de-sac . | |
Niendorfweg
( Location ) |
180 | Martin Anton Niendorf (1826–1878), poet and writer | Oct 22, 1956 | It is located between Sakrower Kirchweg and Contessaweg. In 1956 the eastern section of road 106 was named. | |
Nieplitzsteig
( Location ) |
190 | Nieplitz , tributary of the Nuthe in Brandenburg. | Sep 1 1973 | Located between Selbitzer Strasse and Nottepfad, it was previously called Strasse 147 . | |
Emergency path
( Location ) |
140 | Notte , left tributary of the Dahme in Brandenburg | June 1, 1974 | The road 152 was named in 1974 and is located between Krampnitz and lance Weg. | |
Otto-von-Wollank-Strasse
( Location ) |
550 | Friedrich Otto von Wollank (1862–1929), landowner in Groß Glienicke, Rittmeister | around 1935 | At the time it was named, the street was in Groß Glienicke between the Kurpromenade and Waldallee and came to Kladow in 1945 as a result of the exchange of territory between the Soviet zone and the British sector. | |
Parnemannweg
( Location ) |
380 | Parnemann, long-established farming family in Kladow | Sep 9 1931 | The street lies between Sakrower Kirchweg and Sakrower Landstraße. The Schütz farming family lived on the street, which is why the street was initially called Schütze'scher Weg . | |
Pegnitzring
( Location ) |
470 | Pegnitz , town in Oberfreanken (Bayreuth district, Free State of Bavaria) | Dec. 1, 1963 | The semi-circular road lies between Katzwanger Steig and Wickramstrasse and was called Strasse 146 until it was named . | |
Pfändnerweg
( Location ) |
370 | Christoph Pfändner (1893–1962), politician | Nov 4, 1987 | The street is between Krampnitzer Weg and Selbitzer Straße, previously Straße 132 . | |
Porthanweg
( Location ) |
80 | Henrik Gabriel Porthan (1739–1804), Finnish scholar ("father of Finnish historiography") | Jan. 12, 1960 | The short street goes west of Eichelmatenweg into the " Finnenhaussiedlung ". | |
Potsdamer Chaussee
( Location ) |
1600 (in the district) |
Chaussee Spandau– Potsdam | 1849 | Potsdamer Chaussee lies between the outer path and the city limits in the district. It continues to the north in Gatow and Wilhelmstadt, and to the south about 200 meters from the Ritterfelddamm the Chaussee continues in Groß-Glienicke and towards Potsdam. Bundesstraße 2 is on the Chaussee . In the entire district, the Berlin city limits accompany the Chaussee on the northwestern edge. The Berlin Wall ran through the forest between 1961 and 1990 . | |
Pottensteiner way
( Location ) |
430 | Pottenstein , town in Upper Franconia (Bayreuth district, Bavaria) | Dec. 1, 1936 | Previously laid out as street 124 of the development plan, it is located between Selbitzer Straße and Wublitzweg. | |
Private road
( Location ) |
480 | the formerly private road became the official name | after 1930 | The road between Am Landschaftspark Gatow and Ritterfelddamm belonged to the Brandenburg municipality of Groß Glienicke in the Osthavelland district until 1945 and came to the Kladow district (Groß-Glienicke locality) through the Allied exchange of territory. The street is a 30 zone , and the connection to the Am Landschaftspark street is a closed driveway (traffic ban sign 250; only permitted for emergency vehicles). | |
Pröhleweg
( Location ) |
90 | Heinrich Pröhle (1822–1895), teacher and writer, collector of German folk tales | July 1, 1964 | The Pröhleweg goes south from the Lüdickeweg. | |
Quastenhornweg
( Location ) |
230 | Quastenhorn, promontory protruding into the Havel | Oct 22, 1956 | The road curves eastwards from Massolleweg as a cul-de-sac . Previously as Straße 109 , it was listed in the address book from 1935 to 1937 until the address book in 1940 as Maubachstraße , from 1941 only with a reference to Straße 109 . | |
Rex Waite Street
( Location ) |
700 | Rex Waite (1901–1975), British Air Force officer, one of the fathers of the Berlin Airlift | Aug 15, 2000 | The street is between Ritterfelddamm and Johann-Landefeldt-Straße in the country town of Gatow . | |
Richard-Byrd-Strasse
( Location ) |
280 | Richard Evelyn Byrd (1888–1957), American polar explorer | Jan. 1, 2002 | The street is in the area of the country town Gatow between An der Gatower Heide and Johann-Landefeldt-Straße. | |
Ritterfelddamm
( Location ) |
3110 | Ritterfeld, old field name, field of the manor, included in the newly created airfield of the German Air Force in 1934 | July 20, 1938 | The street lies between Kladower Damm and Potsdamer Chaussee. The previous name was Groß Glienicker Chaussee, the course of the road goes back to the way to Seeburg . The section of this local connecting road on Berlin territory was named Ritterfelddamm in 1938 . In 1945, through the exchange of territory by the Allies, Staaken came to the Soviet-occupied zone of Germany and an eastern part of Groß Glienicke to the British Sector of Berlin (i.e. the administrative district of Spandau). The part of the street that had come to Berlin was included in the Ritterfelddamm on January 29, 1958 up to Potsdamer Chaussee. | |
Reed warbler
( Location ) |
180 | Reed warbler, to the warbler family | Sep 9 1931 | The path is between Alt-Kladow and Imchenallee. | |
Rollehagenweg
( Location ) |
180 | Georg Rollehagen (1542–1609), writer, educator and preacher | June 1, 1974 | Previously laid out as road 141 , it lies between the Ganzhorn and Hackländerweg. | |
( Location ) |
Röttenbacher way
120 | Röttenbach , Middle Franconian municipality, Erlangen-Höchstadt district, Bavaria | Dec. 1, 1936 | The road between Pottensteiner and Schauensteiner Weg was formed from road 207 in 1936 . | |
Runebergweg
( Location ) |
200 | Johan Ludvig Runeberg (1804–1877), Finnish writer | Feb 13, 1958 | The street is located between Sibeliusweg and Kladower Damm in an area with several streets that are named after Finnish personalities ( Finnenhaussiedlung ). | |
Saint-Exupéry Street
( Location ) |
230 | Antoine de Saint-Exupéry (1900–1944), French writer and pilot, attempted record New York - Tierra del Fuego | Aug 15, 2000 | The street lies between Leonardo-da-Vinci-Straße and Seekorso in the area of the country town Gatow, where several streets are named after aviation pioneers. | |
Sakrower Kirchweg
( Location ) |
1790 | Sacrow , a neighboring place, today part of the city of Potsdam | before 1900 | The road lies between Alt-Kladow and Sakrower Landstrasse. It was the way from the Kladow village church to Sacrow, the name can already be found in documents at the end of the 19th century. | |
Sakrower Landstrasse
( Location ) |
2190 | Sacrow , a neighboring place, today part of the city of Potsdam | May 3, 1935 | The Sakrower Landstrasse lies between Alt-Kladow and the city limits, where it continues as Kladower Strasse to Sacrow. It was previously run as Sakrower Chaussee , but was more of a land route; The name Landstrasse was made after the road was expanded in 1935 in connection with the construction of the airfield. | |
Sound path
( Location ) |
210 | Martin Schall (1844–1921), theologian and member of the German Reichstag | July 1, 1962 | The northern section of the street Am Dorfwald became an independent street in 1962 and was named Schallweg. It goes from the Ritterfelddamm to the southwest. | |
Schambachweg
( Location ) |
360 | Georg Schambach (1811–1879), German specialist in German | May 1, 1962 | The road lies between Benfeyweg and Mannhardtweg, over this as a cul-de-sac . The extension to the south was included on October 4, 1963. | |
Schauensteiner way
( Location ) |
360 | Schauenstein , Upper Franconian town, Hof district, Free State of Bavaria | Dec. 1, 1936 | Laid out as Straße 131 after 1930 , it lies between Lanzendorfer and Wublitzweg, over which it continues as a spur road . | |
Schwabinger way
( Location ) |
390 | Schwabing , a district of Munich, has been an artists' quarter since the beginning of the 20th century | July 20, 1938 | The street 213 was laid out before 1937 in the housing estate for the employees of the Gatow military airfield and named in 1938. It lies between Ritterfelddamm and across the Aiblinger Weg. | |
Seebadstrasse
( Location ) |
640 | Villa district on Groß Glienicker See, was considered a seaside resort | after 1930 | The street lies between Waldallee and Kurpromenade in the Kladow locality Groß-Glienicke. This area came to Berlin in 1945 through the exchange of territory between the Allies. | |
Maritime parade
( Location ) |
1120 | Korso as a posh main street, here to the Groß Glienicker See | after 1930 | The street was initially only between the Kurpromenade and Ritterfelddamm and before 1945 belonged to the Brandenburg municipality of Groß Glienicke in the Osthavelland district. Before 1938 it was renamed Adolf-Hitler-Allee , and in May 1945 that name was deleted; the street remained nameless for a short time. On August 30, 1945, the area became part of West Berlin on the basis of Allied agreements, and the street was renamed Seekorso. With the construction of the country town Gatow , the road was extended into this area. | |
Selbitzer Strasse
( Location ) |
3570 | Selbitz , Upper Franconian town (Hof district, Free State of Bavaria) | Dec. 1, 1936 | The street lies between Ritterfelddamm and Pottensteiner Weg. It was laid out as road 122 from the dam with the settlement. The bus runs on this street. | |
Setheweg
( Location ) |
210 | Paul Sethe (1901–1967), publicist, journalist and humanities scholar | May 1, 1980 | It goes from Temmeweg to the south as a cul-de-sac . | |
Sibeliusweg
( Location ) |
520 | Jean Sibelius (1865–1957), Finnish composer | Jan. 21, 1961 | Previously set up as Straße 177 according to the development plan, it is located between Imchenplatz and Friedrich-Hanisch-Straße in a settlement with streets named after Finnish personalities (" Finnenhaussiedlung "). | |
Sparnecker way
( Location ) |
140 | Sparneck , Upper Franconian municipality, Hof district, Free State of Bavaria | Apr 19, 1985 | The road goes north from Ritterfelddamm and is the access road to the golf course and especially to Gatow airfield . | |
Staudenweg
( Location ) |
80 | Perennials , perennials and herbaceous plants | after 1930 | The short cul-de-sac goes south from Seebadstrasse. It initially belonged to Groß Glienicke and came to Kladow in 1945 through the exchange of territory. | |
Storchenstrasse
( Location ) |
120 | Storks , a family of walking birds | after 1930 | The road between Ritterfelddamm and Lerchenstraße was laid out in Groß Glienicke and came to the district in 1945 when the Allies swapped territories. | |
Street 133
( Location ) |
180 | Numbering according to the development plan | after 1930 | It lies between the extended bank promenade and Wossidloweg and extends the Mannhardtweg. | |
Street 136
( Location ) |
100 | Numbering according to the development plan | after 1930 | The road lies between Fuchsbergeweg and Grimmelshausenstrasse. | |
Street 153
( Location ) |
90 | Numbering according to the development plan | after 1930 | The road branches off to the east as a spur road from Wublitzweg. | |
Street 178
( Location ) |
310 | Numbering according to the development plan | after 1930 | The road extends the Lönnrotweg as a cul-de-sac to the northwest. | |
Temmeweg
( Location ) |
460 | Jodocus Donatus Hubertus Temme (1798–1881), politician, lawyer and writer | Oct 22, 1956 | The street lies between Gößweinsteiner Gang and Sakrower Landstraße and was called Straße 103 before it was named . | |
Thea Rasche line
( Location ) |
110 | Thea Rasche (1899–1971), pilot and journalist | Aug 28, 2000 | The cul-de-sac between Seekorso and Am Donnerberg lies in the area of the country town Gatow . | |
Topeliusweg
( Location ) |
510 | Zacharias Topelius (1818–1898), Finnish poet | Feb 13, 1958 | The street in the " Finnenhaussiedlung " in Neu Kladow runs from Kladower Damm to the northwest and Lönnrotstraße, the latter being enclosed in an arch. | |
Waterfront
( Location ) |
1290 | Bank promenade on the east bank of the Groß Glienicker See | around 1935 | The road goes west from Ritterfelddamm to the lake and then along the bank to the south. The street was laid out in Groß Glienicke and came to the district through the Allied exchange of territory in 1945. | |
Umberto Nobile Street
( Location ) |
310 | Umberto Nobile (1885–1978), Italian airship pioneer and general | Jan. 1, 2002 | The street is in the area of the country town Gatow between An der Gatower Heide and Johann-Landefeldt-Straße. | |
Extended promenade
( Location ) |
730 | Continuation of the lakeside promenades | around 1935 | The street is the southern extension of the promenade and the Krampnitzer Weg. | |
Forest avenue
( Location ) |
810 | forest area previously located here | around 1935 | Located between Ritterfelddamm and the bank promenade, this street was laid out in the Brandenburg municipality of Groß Glienicke and came to Kladow in 1945 through the exchange of territory decided by the Allies. | |
Weihenzeller Steig
( Location ) |
120 | Weihenzell, Middle Franconian municipality, Ansbach district, Free State of Bavaria | May 20, 1937 | The street laid out as street 204 was named with the development in 1937 and is located between Hersbrucker Weg and Pegnitzring. | |
Weinholdweg
( Location ) |
250 | Weinhold (1823–1901), Germanist and Medievalist | Oct 22, 1956 | The southern section of the street 121 between Zingerleweg and Wredeweg was given the name in 1956, fitting the street name of the “Volkskundlerviertel”. | |
Wertheimweg
( Location ) |
200 | Wolf Wertheim (1867–1940), businessman, victim of the Nazi regime | Feb. 18, 1955 | The street previously run as street 111 between Sakrower Kirchweg and Quastenhornweg was named in 1955. | |
Wickramstrasse
( Location ) |
680 | Jörg Wickram (around 1505 – before 1562), early New High German writer | May 19, 1959 | The street 137 between Krampnitzer Weg and Pegnitzring was named after poets in 1959 to match the surrounding streets of the settlement. | |
Wisserweg
( Location ) |
370 | Wilhelm Wisser (1843–1935), high school professor and dialect researcher | May 1, 1962 | This street in the “Volkskundlerviertel” lies between Benfey- and Mannhardtweg and was extended in 1968 to the north. | |
Wossidloweg
( Location ) |
250 | Richard Wossidlo (1859–1939), founder of Mecklenburg folklore | May 1, 1962 | The path between Mannhardtweg / Straße 133 and Benfeyweg is in the “Folkloristic Quarter” with streets named after personalities in this area. | |
Wredeweg
( Location ) |
230 | Ferdinand Wrede (1863–1934), linguist for old Germanic dialects and dialect geography | Aug 28, 1963 | The street between Selbitzer Straße and Bartschweg is located in the “Volkskundlerviertel” with streets according to personalities in the field of ethnology. | |
Wublitzweg
( Location ) |
510 | Wublitz , right tributary of the Havel | Nov 1, 1971 | The path is between Krampnitzer and Schauensteiner Weg. It was formed in 1971 from the northern section of the road 126 , and on February 1, 1976 the remaining section up to the Hottengrund retirement home was included. | |
Zingerleweg
( Location ) |
470 | Ignaz Vinzenz Zingerle (1825–1892), Tyrolean literary scholar, Germanist and writer | May 19, 1959 | The street between Kreuzwaldstraße and Bartschweg, previously Straße 117 , is located in the "Volkskundlerviertel"; streets here are named after personalities in the field. |
Some renamed and former streets
In the address book of 1943, the streets 106, 107, 109, 111, 112, 116, 123, 147, 160, 177, 178, 198, 199 are listed as built-up (partly with summer houses) for the "Siedlung Hottengrund" "Siedlung am Krapnitzer Weg" with streets 136, 137, 138, 139 and 169 as well as the settlement on the Seebergen (with streets 117, 118, 119, 120, 121 and Selbitzer Straße) built on or at least plots named as construction sites. In 1935, the first of these streets was the settlement on the Seebergen (with street B and street 6 ), and streets 23, 44, 45, A, C, D, E, F are only mentioned as cross streets . The numbered streets are only listed in the table above. A special feature of the Kladow district is that in 1945 an exchange of territory between the Soviet occupation zone and the British sector of Berlin (see also Staaken ) resulted in the eastern part of Groß Glienicke becoming the West Berlin district from the middle of Groß Glienicker See in 1945 Spandau came. These now belong to Kladow as the Groß-Glienicke location. Until 1945, the Ritterfeld and the Ritterholz belonged to Groß Glienicke east of the Ritterfelddamm (Landstadt Gatow), to the west of it Hasenheide and Seebergen. The "Wochenend West" settlement was laid out here in the 1940s. The settlement houses were added in the 1950s; this area is limited in the north and west by the lake promenade , in the east by Ritterfelddamm and in the south by Waldallee . Exactly in Im Dohl as a connection to the lake promenade and Gottfried-Arnold-Weg on Ritterfelddamm. The plots of land on both streets were laid out in the 1950s on the forest strip along the former local border. The Seekorso between the neighboring parallel streets of Birkenallee and Seebadstrasse was planned as the central axis of the 1940s settlement and was then laid out as Adolf-Hitler-Allee . It should be noted that the Potsdam district is written without a hyphen as "Groß Glienicke" and the Spandau location with a hyphen as "Groß-Glienicke".
Old names | from | to | renamed | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|
Acacia avenue | after 1930 | Aug 1, 1965 | → Bardelebenweg | Acacias are deciduous and avenue trees. The renaming took place because of the duplication of street names since the formation of Greater Berlin . |
Dorfstrasse village square |
handed down | May 3, 1935 | → Alt-Kladow | The village center of Kladow, the first street in the former village of Kladow. |
Eppsteiner Gang | Nov 23, 1931 | Jan. 18, 1936 | → Gößweinsteiner course | Eppstein , city in Hesse |
Ernst-Kleßen-Strasse | before 1936 | Jan. 18, 1936 | Street 137 | A private road between Krampnitzer Weg and the Feldflur. The name was not officially adopted permanently. |
Fox mountains | 1931 | 1936 | This information is given as address information for the Goldberg'sche and the Preuß'sche Haus from Krampnitzer Weg in the address books in the mid-1930s for the Gatow district. Today there is a piece of forest (dog run area) in the corner between Ritterfelddamm and Krampnitzer Weg into which some access roads lead. | |
Gatower Chaussee | before 1900 | May 8, 1935 | → Kladower Damm | The road to the neighboring town of Gatow , also known as Spandauer Chaussee, as it continued beyond Gatow to Spandau. In 1935 the entire course of the road from Gatow was standardized. |
Graf-Zeppelin-Strasse | Oct 6, 1994 | Nov 1, 2011 | → James Cook Street | Ferdinand Graf von Zeppelin (1838–1917) is the inventor and namesake of the corresponding airships, and was chosen as the pioneer of aviation because of the proximity of the road to the airfield. |
Groß-Glienicker Chaussee | before 1920 | Jul 20, 1938 | → Ritterfelddamm | The road to the neighboring town of Groß Glienicke was the road to Seeburg and was renamed in the Berlin part in 1938. However, part of this street (before the area swap) was in Groß Glienicke and retained the older name. When parts of Staakens were exchanged for the eastern part of Groß Glienicke in 1945, the name of the street was still divided until in 1958 the northern part up to Potsdamer Chaussee was included in the Ritterfelddamm. |
Groß-Glienicker Gasse | before 1920 | Jul 20, 1938 | → Ritterfelddamm | The alley was in the corner of and to the Groß-Glienicker Chaussee, where the name is derived from this. |
Havelberg Havelufer |
before 1910 | after 1930 | canceled | The streets were named after an elevation on the Havel . The road Havelberg lay between the village square and Sakrower Kirchweg and the Havelufer between Havelberg and Kirchweg. |
Käthe-Paulus-Strasse | Oct 6, 1994 | Nov 1, 2011 | → Christopher Columbus Street | Käthe Paulus (1868–1935), first German professional air skipper, inventor of the collapsible parachute. With the changed street situation in Kladow, Columbus was chosen to give the street its name and the name Käthe Paulus was transferred to another street. |
Lindenweg | before 1900 | Nov 23, 1931 | → Imchenallee | Linden trees are a deciduous and avenue tree that lined this street. The path was renamed Imchenallee when it was paved, along with the adjoining Uferstraße . |
Marie-Elisabeth-Allee | before 1936 | after 1944 | canceled | A private street with summer houses between the Krampnitzer Weg and the Feldmark, past the Wilhelminensteig . |
Maubach Street | before 1936 | Jan. 18, 1936 | Street 109 | The name of this private road, which branches off from Sakrower Kirchweg, was canceled again in 1936 and initially used unofficially for road 109. It was probably named after Eduard Maubach . |
Otto-Lilienthal-Strasse | Oct 6, 1994 | Nov 1, 2011 | → Marco-Polo-Strasse | After the withdrawal of the British troops in Berlin from the airfield, the street was initially named after the aviation pioneer Karl Wilhelm Otto Lilienthal (1848-1896). |
Sagittarius way | before 1925 | Sep 9 1931 | → Parnemannweg | Farmer Schütze's homestead from Kladow was on the way between Sacrower Chaussee and Kirchweg. |
Spandauer Chaussee | before 1900 | May 8, 1935 | → Kladower Damm | The Spandauer Chaussee connected directly to the Groß-Glienicker Chaussee across the village square. |
Embankment | around 1894 | Nov 23, 1931 | → Imchenallee | The street ran along the banks of the Havel and was renamed together with the Lindenstraße from Alt-Kladow to Imchenallee. |
Forest road | Oct 6, 1994 | Nov 1, 2011 | → Ferdinand-Magellan-Strasse | The road led into the Helleberg forest. |
Other locations in the district
More settlements
- Breitehorn weekend settlement ( location )
- Havelfreude weekend settlement ( location )
- Havelwiese weekend settlement ( location )
Parks
- Gutspark Neu Kladow (RBS: 08223, location )
- Landscape park ( location )
- Dorfaue Kladow (RBS: 08151)
- Old gravel pit Kladow (RBS: 08206)
- Unkenpfuhlpark (RBS: 08171)
See also
literature
- Gesellschaft Wirtschaftshof Spandau eV (Hrsg.): Street chronicle with signposts through the Spandau economy . H. Born & Co Spandau, Berlin 1957.
Web links
- Street directory Kladow. kaupert media GmbH, accessed on September 29, 2012 .
- Prussian military center Spandau at the confluence of the Spree and Havel rivers. (PDF; 3.2 MB) Exhibition on the museum ship “Kurier” in the historic port of Berlin, 2007, archived from the original on February 14, 2010 ; Retrieved January 30, 2011 (autumn 2007).
- Office for Statistics Berlin-Brandenburg: List of streets and squares in the Spandau district (as of February 2015); pdf
- Map of Berlin 1: 5000 with district boundaries. Senate Department for Urban Development Berlin, 2009, accessed on September 29, 2012 .
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c d e f g From the Silva traffic plan of the city of Berlin . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1925. “Compare to Cladow in the picture below left (incl. Above right)”.
- ↑ a b c Clarifications on the current map of the Berlin surveying offices: Map of Berlin 1: 5000 (K5 color edition) on FIS Broker
- ↑ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Takeover of the Gatow airfield by the ritual occupying power ( memento of the original from April 16, 2014 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.
- ↑ Aerial photo from 1949
- ↑ Further information on the Contessa brothers
- ↑ On the local significance of Hanisch
- ↑ a b c d e f g h Heads of household ... sorted by street . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1943, part IV., P. Page 1181 ff. "Heads of household, companies and commercial enterprises registered by the court in Kladow (to Weihenzeller Steig on sheet number 5643)".
- ↑ On the person from Kladow, Gallandi
- ↑ a b c d e f g residents sorted by street: Kladow . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1936, IV. Part, p. 1171 and following.
- ^ Map of Berlin: Gottfried-Arnold-Weg
- ^ History of the Groß-Glienicke manor
- ^ Map of Berlin: Seepromenade / Im Dohl
- ↑ On the Landefeldt family
- ↑ a b c d e f Streets in Cladow 1925 . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1925, Part IV, pp. 1285 ff. "Streets and houses of Groß = Berlin: Spandau administrative district: Cladow ...".
- ↑ The places Gatow and Kladow played a role in Albert Speer's “Germania”, the plans for a gigantic world capital, as an elegant suburb for the wealthy. ( Memento of the original from April 16, 2014 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.
- ↑ On the person of Otto Wollank
- ↑ On the person Pfändner
- ↑ a b Residents and companies of the city of Berlin sorted by street and house number . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1935, Part IV., Pp. 1152 ff. "Residents and companies of the city of Berlin sorted by streets and house numbers: Kladow, pages 1152–1154".
- ^ Map of Berlin: Settlement in Groß-Glienicke
- ↑ This exchange was made to enable the British to use the Gatow airfield without restrictions. In addition, the Seeburger Zipfel (now the Gatow district) was handed over to Berlin, so that Potsdamer Chaussee ( B2 ) was continuously in Berlin.
- ^ Streets in Kladow 1937 . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1937. "Inhabitants and companies of the city of Berlin sorted according to streets and house numbers, administrative district Spandau, Kladow (pages 1178–1180)".
- ^ Streets in Kladow, 1939 . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1939. "Heads of household ... sorted by streets, Spandau administrative district, Kladow (pages 1201–1204)".
- ↑ Fuchsberge under the Gatow district . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1933, Part IV, p. 1151.
- ↑ Berlin address book 1934: Spandau administrative district, Kladow ( 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.
Remarks
- ↑ In August 1945 the British and Soviet occupation authorities in Berlin agreed on an exchange of territory. For use by the British troops, the entire area of the Gatow military airfield together with the demarcation of the eastern part of Groß Glienicke, which was separated off in the Groß Glienicker See, was transferred to British sovereignty, as the approach from Spandau to Kladow through Gatow, the Seeburger Zipfel became the British sector, Spandau administrative district , to hand over. In return, the Spandau parts of the Staaken airfield and also the Gatow corner of the Rieselfelder west of Potsdamer Chaussee came under Soviet jurisdiction . As a result, West Staaken came to the Soviet sector of Greater Berlin , which at the beginning of the 1950s led to the assumption of sovereignty by GDR authorities. From 1990, contrary to the efforts of the State of Brandenburg, the exchange of territory in the Gatow-Kladower area was not reversed. Weststaaken returned to Spandau on October 3, 1990.