List of streets and squares in Berlin-Lichtenrade
The list of streets and squares in Berlin-Lichtenrade describes the street system in the Berlin district of Lichtenrade with the corresponding historical references. At the same time, this compilation is part of the lists of all Berlin streets and places .
overview
Lichtenrade has 51,955 inhabitants (as of December 30, 2019) and includes the postcode areas 12305, 12307 and 12309. There are 187 streets and 14 named places in the district. Eight streets also partially belong to the neighboring districts of Mariendorf , Marienfelde and Buckow .
The old town center around Alt-Lichtenrade forms the core of the settlement created by Flemish settlers, with today's Alt-Lichtenrade street extending beyond the Dorfstraße area and connecting on both sides to the Chaussee to Cottbus (since 1949: Lichtenrader and Kirchhainer Damm). The old village center was preserved through this street layout. On the other hand, this Chaussee, the federal highway 96 , promoted the connection to Berlin and the settlement and road expansion. The main road system with the main road as a north-south connection through the district is extended by the Buckower Chaussee - Marienfelder Chaussee and to the south by Schichauweg - Barnetstraße - Groß-Ziethener Straße, supplemented by Wünsdorfer Straße - Bahnhofstraße - Im Domstift as a cross connection. The connection with Buckow and Britz via Fehlingstrasse and Töpchiner Weg is also worth mentioning . Naturally, there are settlement roads, especially to the south towards the outskirts. In the first year of the war in 1915, the “Bavarian Quarter” in the southeast of the district, east of today's Kirchhainer Damm, was planned and roads were laid out, but the expansion was delayed due to inflation and the global economic crisis in 1929, even if land was in the “ Golden Twenties ” in 1927 / 1928 were sold (entered in the address book as a construction site). From around 1925 the expansion between Schichauweg and the state border began, "Lichtenrade West" west of the Dresden railway was expanded. Part of the development was on the Marienfelder Feldmark and was carried out by the Marienfelder Terraingesellschaft. As a result, some of today's Lichtenrader streets were initially located east of the grove on Königsgraben within the Tempelhof administrative district to the Marienfelde district. Due to the connection, the district boundary was moved to the west and in 1938 the Marienfeld area was assigned to the district of Lichtenrade. The name "Kolonie Marienfelde" still existed in the early 1960s. But even with the course of the border between the administrative districts of Neukölln and Tempelhof , between Marienfelde, Mariendorf, Buckow and Lichtenrade there were changes in the affiliations of the streets, which were then built on later in the outskirts of the district. Due to the construction of the wall , the south of the district came into a special peripheral position, but the influence on the course of the road or the expansion (apart from interruptions in the border area) was less in Lichtenrade than in other districts. The sorting of the name choice of the streets (in the list on the date of naming can be traced) shows the settlement development of the district on the outskirts of Greater Berlin and around the village center. Although the development plans of the settlements in Lichtenrade from the 1910s and 1920s document the current road layout, there have been structural changes. With the southern bypass road around 1930, the town center was relieved, the outer freight ring brought interrupted roads around 1940 and the development plans after the construction of the wall in 1961 led to changes in the course from Marienfelder to Barnetstrasse. In the streets on the outskirts, the wall probably led to quieter locations and open spaces that have been built on since 1990.
The main road system consists of the federal highway 96 which leads in the course of Mariendorfer , Lichtenrader and Kirchhainer Damm with a length of 4490 meters on the route of the old Chaussee through the district. The newly built Provinzial-Chaussee Berlin-Kottbus was opened to traffic on July 13, 1838 in the first construction phase. On October 1, 1838, the post coaches no longer drove to Dresden via Groß-Ziethen to Mittenwalde, but instead through Lichtenrade and on the Lehnschulzengut the post office was set up for the first horse change on the route of the Post Berlin - Luckenwalde. The road through the town center was laid over farmland as a bypass road until 1937 and expanded to its current state in the 1970s. Other main streets in Berlin's superordinate road network are Barnetstrasse (1320 meters), Buckower Chaussee (610 meters) and Schichauweg (510 meters). The main streets of regional importance ( StEP Class III) are the Wünsdorfer Straße - Prinzessinnenstraße - Bahnhofstraße - Goltzstraße with 2380 meters, Fehlingstraße - Töpchiner Weg with 1590 meters and Groß-Ziethener Straße with 1180 meters. There is only an indirect connection to the motorway from the district via the B 96 to Berliner Ring in the south, to the A 113 via the B 96a to junction 7 (Schönefeld-Süd) or via Marienfelder Chaussee to junction 3 (Johannisthaler Chaussee).
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.
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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 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Abendrotweg ( location ) | 260 | Westward plot of land census: at the evening glow (later: evening glow settlement) | Sep 9 1931 | The western part of the road between Franziusweg and Friedensweg was laid out in 1918 as a way home . The first section of the Abendrotsiedlung was built here in 1919, and in 1925 it was still referred to as “Block I”. The 'Abendrotsiedlung' is a small house settlement with the character of a garden city that was built in the period after the First World War . In the years 1919/1920 it was built according to the goals of the new residential construction: little effort, low costs, "healthy" living space and intended for broader population groups.
The eastern part of the street between Friedensweg and Wünsdorfer Straße was laid out in 1925 as Annenstraße . It was still undeveloped in 1928. Both parts of the street were merged in 1931. Address books up to 1932: The way home in 1922 is between Kaiser-Friedrich-Straße (now: Wünsdorfer Straße) and Friedensweg (here still undeveloped) and the forest path . Between Waldweg (now: Franziusweg) and Friedensweg , lots 4–10 and 11–18 are built on and inhabited. The Annenstraße is then listed in the address book in 1928, starting from Kaiser-Friedrich-Straße and undeveloped (1932: to Friedensweg, two built-up lots). In the 1932 address book there is a note: “At the time of printing, it was combined with the way home and renamed the Abendrotweg. [... under Abendrotweg:] see Annenstraße and Heimweg “From Kaiser-Friedrich-Straße , lots 1, 3, 7 (left) are built on and inhabited, lots 5–10 to Friedensweg (right) are designated as a construction site. |
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Alt-Lichtenrade ( location ) | 2060 + 280 (eastern bypass) |
Village street in the old village center of Lichtenrade. After the formation of Greater Berlin in 1920, there were many streets with that name in Berlin. These were renamed in 1949 and were given the prefix "Alt-", followed by the district name. | Aug 31, 1949 | The village street had been here since the 13th century. To the north, the street in the direction of Berlin followed, called Berliner Straße since 1921 . With the construction of the bypass road in 1926, Dorfstrasse and an adjacent section of Berliner Strasse (with lots 1–34) became side roads; both were combined in 1949 and renamed Alt-Lichtenrade.
Alt-Lichtenrade is a quiet residential street. The northern part leads from Potsdamer Straße (near Lichtenrader Damm) over the intersections of Töpchiner Weg / Fehlingstraße and Groß-Ziethener Straße. To the south of it begins the old village center with cobblestones and old manor houses. Behind the village church it divides into two branches and forms a circular path around the Giebelpfuhl and Hermann-Wundrich-Platz. To the south the branches are brought together again, at the southern end the road bends sharply to the east for about 30 meters. The southern end of the old village street became the footpath to the street Im Domstift. The well-preserved old village complex with church and village pond, old fire station, village jug and the parish farm provides a contrast to neighboring residential buildings. In 1898 the primary school with five classes for 238 children was set up by main teacher Klaffke in Alt-Lichtenrade 103 (now a youth café). The foundation stone for the fire station in Alt-Lichtenrade 97 was laid on October 20, 1909 , and the community council also met here. Address book 1922: Here is the Dorfstraße from Berliner / Lutherstraße with the smithy in plot 1 via Marienfelder Straße (between 9 and 10), Kaiser-Wilhelm- / Goltzstraße (22 and 23) and Dorfaue (28 Fourragehlassung and 29), Bayrische Straße (33 and 34) to Berliner / Groß-Ziethener Straße (plot 46, owner is the farmer Kaufmann). Berliner Straße is between Groß-Ziethener / Dorfstraße (plot 1) and plot 128 (construction site) on the north corner of Dorfstraße. |
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Alvenslebenplatz ( location ) | 110 × 80 × 80 | Constantin von Alvensleben (1809-1892), Prussian general | before 1921 | The square was named between 1914 and 1921. The triangular square with a central green area is located south on Kirchbachstraße and merges into Alvenslebenstraße in the south, from the north the Mellener Straße opens out at the western corner. The square is listed with two developed properties on both sides of Alvenslebenstrasse in the 1922 address book between Roon- / Kirchbachstrasse, Alvenslebenstrasse and Werder- / Kirchbachstrasse. The driveways around the central green area and a gravel path are paved. | |
Alvenslebenstrasse ( location ) | 270 | Constantin von Alvensleben (1809-1892), Prussian general | before 1921 | Alvenslebenstrasse got its name between 1914 and 1921. It is located between Alvenslebenplatz and Steinmetzstraße. In the 1922 address book, Alvenslebenstrasse is between Alvenslebenplatz / Manteuffelstrasse with undeveloped lots 1 and 9 (continuously) to Papestrasse , with built-up lots 3, 6, 7 (2, 4, 5 and and 8 are undeveloped) to Steinmetzstrasse . In the 21st century, the residential buildings at Alvenslebenstrasse 1–21a (odd) and 2–22 (even) are located on Alvenslebenstrasse. In Berlin-Schöneberg there is another street with the same name (1–26 consecutively). | |
Angermünder Strasse
( Location ) |
1200 | Angermünde , city in Brandenburg | after 1914 | The street lies between Rademeierweg and Potsdamer Straße, and ends south of the latter as a dead end in front of Schwedter Straße and to the east parallel to Bernauer Straße, which in turn joins Schwedter Straße. The street got its name between 1914 and 1921. With effect from January 1, 1977, the extension west of property 81 was included. | |
Aschaffenburger Strasse
( Location ) |
530 | Aschaffenburg , city in Bavaria | after 1914 | The street is assigned to the Bavarian Quarter and lies between Wittelsbacher and Tietjenstraße as an extension of Skarbinastraße parallel to the city limits. In 1929 it ran from Würzburger to Wittelsbacherstraße, and in 1938 it led to Groß-Ziethener Straße. On August 1, 1978, part of Aschaffenburger Strasse from Tietjenstrasse was renamed Skarbinastrasse. | |
Augsburger Platz
( Location ) |
110 × 50 | Augsburg , city in Bavaria | 1915 | Plots 3, 4 on the west side and 5–8 on the east side belong to Augsburger Platz. The Schmuckplatz has a green central part on which there is a playground, with Augsburger Straße leading around the square in two side streets in a north-south direction. In the north it is bordered by Nürnberger and Fürther Straße. In the south, Regensburger (to the west) and Landshuter Straße (to the east) form an arc. The green space has the shape of a sign. The square belongs to the Bavarian Quarter, although this name has faded because of the district of the same name in Schöneberg . According to the information in the 1922 address book, Augsburger Platz is already partially built on, while Augsburger Straße (indicated for Bamberger Straße) is still undeveloped. | |
Augsburger Strasse
( Location ) |
(across the square) |
110 + 530 Augsburg , city in Bavaria | 1915 | It lies between Bamberger and Pasinger Strasse and is predominantly built with one and two-storey residential buildings. It goes over the latter as a dead end street to the retirement home (in 8/19) on the parking area of the wood on Kirchhainer Damm. The plots on the street follow the horseshoe numbering , on the west side (right side of the street) from 1–19 (consecutive) and on the east side to the north from 30 to 48. The missing lot numbers lead to the parking area of the grove on Kirchhainer Damm. Augsburger Strasse was laid out and partially laid out in 1915 with the planning of the “Bayerisches Viertel” housing estate in the southeast of Lichtenrade. After the formation of Greater Berlin, according to the 1922 address book, it was still undeveloped; for 1929 the course between Bamberger Straße and Forst is listed with six developed properties, with arable land to the south of Wittelsbacherstraße. | |
Bahnhofstrasse
( Location ) |
750 | from the former town center to the Lichtenrade S-Bahn station , a stop since 1883 | around 1906 | The street is an extension of Prinzessinnenstraße between the railway line and Goltzstraße . It is a lively residential and commercial street and a popular shopping center in the south of the city. There are many shops run by the owners themselves and street life is encouraged by street cafes. After business hours, Bahnhofstrasse is a rather quiet residential street. The Berlin Wall Trail and the surrounding area can be reached via Prinzessinnenstrasse. The road was laid out and paved in 1906. In 1883, a stop on the Berlin – Dresden railway line was set up in Lichtenrade, far from the village. The train station in Lichtenrade was built in 1891/1892 and the expanded "new train station" was opened to traffic on September 30, 1910. | |
Bamberger Strasse
( Location ) |
620 | Bamberg , city in Bavaria | after 1914 | Bamberger Straße is located between Pechsteinstraße and Kirchhainer Damm in the south-east of the district on the outskirts. It is a quiet residential street with single family houses. The northernmost street (parallel to Nürnberger / Fürther Straße) of the settlement area, also known as the “Bavarian Quarter” because of its street names. From the beginning of the 20th century until 1948, the home and landowners association "Bayerisches Viertel" Berlin-Lichtenrade e. V. This settlement name has become less common because it usually refers to the district of the same name in Schöneberg . | |
Barnetstrasse ( location ) | 1320 | Barnet , borough of London , partner borough of Tempelhof | Apr 11, 1969 | The street lies between the level crossing of the Dresdener Bahn at Schichauweg station and Lichtenrader Damm. It is a wide thoroughfare with new residential buildings of medium height from the 1960s and 1970s, which offer a certain level of noise protection behind the trees that have grown since then. Barnetstrasse has category II in the Berlin road network as a higher-level road connection with a connection to the B 96 . The large housing estate on Barnetstrasse between Lichtenrader Damm and Steinstrasse was built in 1962–1968 by the Stadt und Land housing association, largely using panel construction. The greater part of Barnetstraße lies on the former route of Marienfelder Straße, which was renamed when the large housing estate was created and relocated to Lichtenrader Damm with a connection to Groß-Ziethener Straße. The street previously laid out under the name Reuterstraße after 1923 and named after the writer Fritz Reuter until 1925 was located here . It was included in Barnetstrasse in 1969, especially since there were several streets of the same name in Berlin (five outside Lichtenrades in 1923). In the address book from 1927 onwards, Reuterstraße is listed as undeveloped, starting from Lutherstraße, and in 1936 there are two developed properties. In 1943 there were four built-up lots on Reuterstraße , which was now between Dorfstraße and the southern bypass . Tempelhof has maintained partnership relationships with Barnet since 1955. | |
Beckmannstrasse
( Location ) |
230 | Max Beckmann (1884–1950), painter | Dec. 1, 1967 | The street lies between Tietjenstrasse and Würzburger Strasse on the route of Strasse 33 of the development plan. The surrounding streets named after painters led to the term “Malerviertel” for the residential area in the southeast of the Volkspark Lichtenrade, although this name has become more common for Neu-Friedenau in the former Schöneberg district . | |
Beethovenstrasse
( Location ) |
460 | Ludwig van Beethoven (1770–1827), composer | before 1922 | The two-lane paved road has sidewalks with a green strip on both sides and lies between Lortzingstrasse and the city limits of Mahlow , parallel between Hilbertstrasse and Brahmsstrasse. Over the former wall strip, which has been a strip of forest since the wall was torn down, it continues in the neighboring Brandenburg town as Arcostraße, whereby the city limits are noticeable in addition to the place name sign and the end of the 30s zone with the change from Berlin paved road to Brandenburg asphalt road . The street is built on with single-family houses on the plots 1-37 (continuously) and was laid out before 1922 in the Lichtenrade West settlement area together with other streets named after musicians and built after 1922. (Address book 1922: undeveloped from Lortzingstraße) | |
Bernauer Street
( Location ) |
1150 | Bernau near Berlin , city in Brandenburg | after 1919 | The Bernauer Straße lies between Rademeierweg (district border) and Schwedter Straße and continues the Künheimer Weg coming from Buckow . At the southern end of the Bernauer to the Schwedter Straße there is only a single lane road, from the Schwedter Straße there is no passage for motor vehicles to Alt-Lichterfelde. The Bernauer Straße is built on with older single-family houses and partly newer multi-family houses, partly the sidewalks are little developed. The street is listed in the 1922 address book and lies between arable land on Potsdamer Strasse and the Buckow district, via Frankfurter, Landsberger, Soldiner, Landsberger Strasse. Opposite between Frankfurter Strasse and Buckow is the "Block 3 settlement", although there is only one building, the Züche'sche house of an office clerk. | |
Blohmstrasse ( location ) | 1030 in the district |
Hermann Blohm (1848–1930), shipbuilding engineer and entrepreneur | Aug 4, 1930 | The street lies between Wünsdorfer and Egestorffstraße on the southwest edge of the district, it touches the city limits, accordingly it led past the wall , which has been a green strip since its demolition, and is only built on to the north in this area. At the west end of the road the road leads into the wood at the Königsgraben where there is a paved parking lot. Here, 180 meters of the southern roadside with the intercultural generation garden belong to the neighboring district of Marienfelde , the commercial enterprise is on the district boundary to the city limits, but mostly belongs to Lichterfelde. Blohmstrasse is predominantly built up with individual apartment buildings. The Victoria Street was included in the Blohmstraße on February 13 1957th In the 1943 address book, Blohmstrasse is noted for the Marienfelde district, Viktoriastrasse for Lichtenrade. Viktoriastraße is located between Wünsdorfer Straße / Prinz-Heinrich-Straße and the Marienfelde district (Blohmstraße); Rangsdorfer, Charlottenstraße (north) and Cecilienstraße are crossed, the street is almost entirely built on and rented out with multi-family houses. The Blohmstrasse, (Post Lichtenrade) on Marienfelder Flur, on the other hand, lies between the Osdorf district. Up to Egerstorffstraße there is farmland, via Grätzschmannpfad, Hoeschweg, Illigstraße it leads to farmland on Viktoriastraße to the Lichterfelde district. It is built up with three single-family houses and a summer house. The fact that the name Blohmstrasse was adopted in 1957 with the change in the boundary of the district is probably due to the fact that (1943) there were Viktoriastrasse in twelve Berlin districts. | |
Bodmerstrasse ( location ) | 160 | Johann Georg Bodmer (1786–1864), Swiss entrepreneur | Aug 4, 1930 | It was laid out as road 98 according to the development plan. The narrow concrete road with sidewalks lies between Nuthestrasse and Steinstrasse, extended to the east by John-Locke-Strasse. The street is built on with single-family houses. The namesake Bodmer designed the toothed wheels and produced the first rear-loading cannon for high explosive projectiles. In 1809 Bodmer moved to St. Blasien in the Black Forest and set up a cotton spinning mill and a mechanical workshop. In 1816 he was given responsibility for the grand ducal ironworks and the local rifle factory. In Manchester Bodmer built a machine and tool factory and made inventions in the field of cotton spinning, tool manufacture and mechanical engineering. In 1848 Bodmer was involved in the construction of the Austrian Semmering Railway . In 1943 the street was built on with two single-family and four summer houses. In today's directory, lots 1–11 (odd) and 2–12a (even) are listed. | |
Bohnstedtstrasse
( Location ) |
280 | Wilhelm Bohnstedt (1798–1866), landowner in Lichtenrade | Nov 1, 1953 | The street is laid out as street 26 according to the development plan and was laid out at the beginning of the 1950s, it is located between Im Domstift and Hanowsteig. The concrete road is built on the south side directly on the sidewalk with residential houses (2–26), the north half of the road is a green strip with lawn and trees, on which the houses (1–23) are, it still leads as a driveway over the Hanowsteig ( Land 27, 29 and 28, 28a) to Lichtenrader Graben. The Lichtenrader Graben is at the end of the street in a green strip in front of the Nahariya School grounds, street width (22 meters) five meters wide. Bohnstedt owned the Lehnschulzenhof with the post office on the way from Berlin to Zossen , which was not far on the Chaussee, from 1829–1856 . | |
Bornhagenweg
( Location ) |
850 | Wilhelm Gottlieb Bornhagen (1791–1866) and Carl Wilhelm Albert Bornhagen (1825–1898), owners of the Lehnschulzenhof and post office keepers in Lichtenrade | Nov 1, 1953 | The street is between Aschaffenburger Straße and Alt-Lichtenrade. The road 32 , which was laid out according to the development plan, was named Bornhagenweg in 1953, in this section there are primarily single-family houses, although some of the properties were later built on with larger houses. With the construction of the large housing estate in Lichtenrade from 1963, the course of Bayerische Strasse was changed and after its completion on February 1, 1969, a section was included in Bornhagenweg. Around 1915, the Bayerische Strasse was laid out with the “Bavarian Quarter” . For 1943, the course of Bayerische Strasse is indicated with Dorfstrasse , Strasse 23a, Strasse 20, Würzburger, Bamberger, Fürther, Landshuter, Wittelsbacherstrasse to the districts Groß- and Klein-Ziethen, the Bavarian streets are built on around half of the properties , but there are also summer houses, garden plots and farmland. The section of Bayerische Strasse south of the large housing estate was named Pechsteinstrasse. At the initiative of the Lichtenrade history workshop, a memorial with the railway tracks was erected at the point where prisoners were imprisoned in the barracks of a satellite camp of Sachsenhausen concentration camp on Bornhagenweg . The Catholic construction company Petruswerk built the settlement on Bornhagenweg from 1966 to 1970. | |
Brahmsstrasse
( Location ) |
140 | Johannes Brahms (1833–1897), composer | after 1914 | The narrow asphalt road with an unpaved sidewalk in front of the properties with residential houses was laid out and named between 1914 and 1921 in the area of the streets named after musicians in West-Lichtenrade. When Greater Berlin was formed, there were Brahmsstrasse in four districts. Lichtenrader Brahmsstraße is still undeveloped in 1922, in 1943 plots 2 and 3 are built on and inhabited. The street with lots 1–7a built on the east side lies between Lortzingstrasse and Weberstrasse. On the western side of the road, up to the Mahlower Seegraben, the Lortzingplatz (1943 as Lortzingpark) connects, which merges into the park of the night bay. | |
Braunfelsstrasse
( Location ) |
920 | Braunfels , city in Hesse | after 1914 | Braunfelsstraße was laid out between 1914 and 1921 in the northeast of the district and named, together with the surrounding streets, after Hessian locations. This quarter (initially Lichtenrade-Ost, now Taunus-Viertel) north of Groß-Ziethener Straße was initially clearly separated from the Bavarian quarter in the southeast by arable land. Braunfelsstrasse was the easternmost and runs along the edge of the district, the city limits to Großziethen, so that it was on the edge of the Berlin Wall , which ran behind the houses on the eastern side of the street. The street is divided into a northern section between Seltersstrasse and Kambergstrasse and a southern branch between Strasse 9 and Groß-Ziethener Strasse. The northern branch with the plots 3–45 (odd) and 10–45 (even) goes on both sides over the mentioned delimiting road as a stump, in the south signposted as a dead end, in the north to the apartment buildings 3–9 (odd) unpaved . The plots on the narrow asphalt road with wide, unpaved edge strips are built on with single and multi-storey residential buildings, and have been replaced by larger extension residential buildings in recent times. Plots 61-133 and 74-130b belong to the southern branch. Between the street parts there is a fallow / construction reserve area, which will be expanded from Kloster-Zinna-Straße and from where the access road along Braunfelsstraße to Straße 9 will also be expanded. The southern branch is also largely built on with single-family houses and commercial and vacant spaces will be condensed with multi-storey apartment buildings in the 2010s. In the southern branch on the western side of the street to Krontalstrasse between Wiesbadener and Homburgstrasse is the "School in the Taunusviertel". In the 1922 address book, Braunfelsstraße is continuously from Groß-Ziethener to Seltersstraße with a new building and a built-up and inhabited house 76/77: Innkeeper and baker are listed as owners, the other properties are assigned, but undeveloped (name in the address book is construction site). Even for 1943, less than half of the land has been built on, including several summer houses. The section of the Teltower Dörferweg, which was created as hiking trail no. 15 of the 20 main green paths in Berlin, runs along Braunfelsstrasse. A residential building on the east side towards the city limits at the northern end of the southern section of Braunfelsstrasse / corner of Kloster-Zinna-Strasse (61-65a) is blocked off as a private property with bollards against Kloster-Zinna-Strasse and only through an angular crossing, partially blocked with bollards Vehicles accessible. | |
Briesingstrasse
( Location ) |
410 | Laurentius Briesing (16th century), first pastor in Lichtenrade | Aug 31, 1949 | The street was planned after 1914 as Wilhelmstraße (without the addition “Kaiser”) and laid out between Bahnhofstraße and Goltzstraße. The street is traffic-calmed as a 30-zone . It is named after Briesing, the first pastor in Lichtenrade. He confessed to Luther's teaching and the farmers deposed him in 1547. At the north end of the street (to Bahnhofstrasse) is the Salvator Church with the outbuildings, to the south the city library and a school building. The western development is only loosely due to the proximity of the parallel railway line , furthermore the street is built on with single-family and multi-family houses. A sports hall and a multi-storey terraced house are located at the bridge over the Lichtenrader trench (roughly in the middle of the street). The Alexandra Foundation built the residential buildings on the corner of Briesingstrasse and Bahnhofstrasse and Gerstnerweg from 1952 to 1954. | |
Buckower Chaussee
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
600 Buckow , part of the Neukölln district | after 1907 | Buckower Chaussee was named between November 1907 and November 1910. The district includes the roads and the plots 1-24 and 135-162 on both sides of the street between Richar-Tauber-Damm / Halker line and Mariendorfer / Lichtenrader Damm. To the west, the so-called street in Marienfelde leads to the Buckower Chaussee S-Bahn station, to the east the Marienfelder Chaussee continues this main street in the south of Berlin, which in the district with its total length belongs to the superordinate Berlin network ( category II ). In keeping with this importance, it is a two-lane level traffic route with two lanes each and one parking and parking lane, whereby the bus lanes are separated by a wide green strip planted with trees and provided with additional turning lanes at the intersections. Despite this vehicle-dominated route, there are well-developed, wide sidewalks along the property boundaries. The loose development of the plots are single and multi-storey residential buildings. | |
Carl-Steffeck-Strasse
( Location ) |
250 | Carl Steffeck (1818–1890), painter | Dec. 1, 1973 | The access route to the housing estates between Im Domstift and Hanowsteig, which was laid out as Straße 24 according to the development plan , was named in 1973. In the 1943 address book, street 24 is already noted as being laid out. This is between street 23 or street 24a and street 20, the right side is built on and inhabited on plot 1–9 (continuously), arable land is noted on the left side. To the north of the street is the Lichtenrader Volkspark , on the other side of the street there are mostly single-family houses. | |
Cecilienstraße
( Location ) |
340 | Cecilie (1886–1954), last Crown Princess of the German Empire | before 1914 | Cecilienstraße is one of the streets in the southwest of the district, west of the railway line, which were laid out before 1914. The names of the imperial family were used, but without the addition of the title of nobility. In the 1922 address book, Cäcilienstraße (with ä) is recorded between Rohrbachstraße and Elisabethstraße, crossing Prinzessinnenstraße and Viktoriastraße. The plots are listed as a construction site (assigned, but undeveloped), in 1943 15 of 24 plots were built on and inhabited, one of which was noted as a new building. This residential street is located between Prinzessinnenstrasse and Elisabethstrasse, to the north in Franziusweg, and to the south in Rohrbachstrasse. | |
Charlottenstrasse
( Location ) |
340 | Sophie Charlotte (1668–1705), wife of the Prussian King Friedrich I. | before 1914 | Charlottenstraße is one of the streets in the southwest of the district, west of the railway line, which were laid out before 1914. The names of the imperial family were used, but without the addition of the title of nobility. This residential street is located between Prinzessinnenstrasse and Elisabethstrasse, north on Wildauer Strasse and continued south on Paetschstrasse. In 1922, the street in the parcels was allocated, but undeveloped, in the address book only one property of the marble and alabaster color Schrader & Co. between Elisabeth- and Viktoriastraße is named. In 1943 around half of the land was inhabited and built with single-family houses. In addition to single-family houses on plots 7–32 (continuously), the quiet residential street is built on with several multi-family houses from the 1950s. | |
Dielingsgrund
( Location ) |
500 | Dielingsgrund, old field name | Nov 1, 1953 | The road lies in the area of a low-lying area that was called Dielingsgrund. Floorboards were an addition to the hoof pieces. The road between Lichtenrader Damm and Bernauer Straße is offset by 20 meters along the Zeißweg that it crosses. According to the map from 1922, the eastern section belonged to the "Block 3 settlement". The settlement road laid out as road 6a according to the development plan (probably 1933) is listed in the address book from 1934 and between road 2 (now: Zeißpfad) and Bernauer Straße on the south side on ten plots of land are built and inhabited, in the address book 1943 it is also between Berlin (now : Lichtenrader Damm) and Bernauer Straße are noted as developed and inhabited. The "primary school in Dielingsgrund" is located here. | |
Dinnendahlstrasse
( Location ) |
350 | Franz Dinnendahl (1775–1826), first builder of steam engines in the Ruhr area | Aug 4, 1930 | The road 67 after the development plan is the route of the current road between Illig- and Egestorffstraße. In address 1931 the undeveloped Di finds mm endahlstraße from Illig road going off, but it is the district Marienfelde assigned. Like the other streets to the west of the "Kleinhaussiedlung Block I" (21st century: Abendrotsiedlung), these were named, furnished and laid out on the "Marienfelder Feldmark". Since the formation of Greater Berlin in 1920, both districts have belonged together to the Tempelhof administrative district. The 1943 address book also lists Dinnendahlstrasse (Post Bln = Lichtenrade) including the delimiting streets (between Illigstrasse, via Goldschmidtstrasse and Egerstorffstrasse) for Marienfelde, with 12 of the 24 numbered properties (1 does not exist) being built on and inhabited. The LOR address directory 2012 names the plots 2–24 (even) and 3–25 (odd) with single-family houses (some two-storey), the southern half of the street is paved with paved sidewalks, the north side of the (unused) street is unpaved, with Trees existed lawn. The Königsgraben runs on the north side. | |
( Location ) |
Dörfelweg
220 | Georg Samuel Dörffel (1643–1688), astronomer | Aug 31, 1949 | The Dörfelweg is a gently curved, quiet three-lane concrete road with residential buildings between Kettinger and Eisnerstrasse. The district boundary is on Eisnerstrasse and from this corner there is a 750-meter-long cycle and footpath along the railway line through grassland and industrial park in the Marienfeld area to the Buckower Chaussee S-Bahn station . Eight row houses (12, 12a, 16, 16a, 16b, 18, 18a, Rapstedter Weg 72a) were built in the 2000s on a triangular area on this (western) street corner, which protrudes into the Marienfeld industrial area, north of Dörfelstraße Plots 14–14e are still available. The Dörfelweg has been laid out as road 27 in the development plan . | |
Dossestrasse ( location ) | 210 | Dosse , river in Brandenburg | before 1921 | The street is located near the Schichauweg S-Bahn station between Nuthestraße and Barnetstraße (formerly Marienfelder Straße ), Rhinstraße goes off to the southeast . The street is recorded in the address book, but still vacant in 1931. The Holz'sche house is recorded for 1943 and property 9 is (continuously) built on and inhabited. 2012 Land in consist orientation numbering 1-11 (odd) and 4-14C (even). | |
Egestorffstrasse
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
660 Georg Egestorff (1802–1868), entrepreneur | around 1931 | Eggestorffstraße is located on the western edge of the district between Blohmstraße and Schichauweg. It lies completely between Blohmstrasse and Dinnedahlstrasse, to the north, to Schichauweg, but only the eastern properties are in the district. The street and the west side along the Poleigraben and the grove at the Königsgraben belong to Marienfelde . In the 1942 address book, the entire street, as well as the one to the east, is assigned to the Marienfelde district, as the development of the settlement led to Marienfeld corridor when the settlement was expanded. The equalization of the areas did not take place until 1950. Currently, the plots 1–59 (odd) and 30–60 (even) belong to the district. Eggersdorfer is a quiet residential street on the southern city limits, mostly with single-family houses and terraced houses. To the west of the road is the Marienfelder Feldmark with the grove on the Königsgraben. The street got its name between 1930 and 1932. In June 1929 the development plan for this Marienfelder terrain was presented and the Egestorffstraße was created when the plan was implemented. On January 30, 1933 the street name was corrected from Ege r storff- to Egestorffstraße. On April 1, 1969, the section between Poleigrund and Schichauweg was included as an extension of Motzener Straße. Egestorff further developed his father's company, founded the first sugar refinery and the Egestorff-Hall saltworks in 1824 and an iron foundry in 1835. From 1850 he founded a chemical factory in Linden and other companies ( Hanomag ). | |
Egsdorfer way
( Location ) |
190 | Egsdorf, part of the town of Teupitz in Brandenburg | May 16, 1938 | The street was laid out as Meyerbeerstraße on the populated corner in the night bay (Musikerviertel, zu Lichtenrade West). In the 1922 address book, Meyerbeerstraße is listed as an undeveloped side street off Straussstraße . In 1938 it was renamed during the National Socialist era due to the Meyerbeer's Jewish origins . The street lies in a right-angled course between Straussstrasse (eastward) and Lortzingstrasse (northward at Lortzingplatz) in the southwest of the district. The Egsdorfer Weg is a two-lane concrete road with developed sidewalks, today's plots 1–13 (odd) and 2–14 (even) are partly built with multi-storey residential buildings. In 1943, only the Kramer'sche and Donath'sche Haus were listed as built-up plots for Egsdorfer Weg between Straussstrasse and Feldmark. | |
Eisnerstrasse
( Location ) |
510 | Kurt Eisner (1867–1919), politician ( USPD ) | Aug 31, 1949 | The street lies between Dörfelweg and Kettinger Straße along the railway line that belongs to Marienfelde here . The street was called Straße 24a since the early 1930s . This area between the western side of the road and the railway line is designated as a commercial area as property 10 (north), in the official list 50–54 (straight) are also shown. The rectifier works Eisnerstraße 52 is listed as a cultural monument , on plot 54 is the area of the youth and dog association. Eisnerstrasse is a narrow strip of asphalt that provides access to the single-family houses on plots 9–51 (odd). Some of the plots here are staggered with background plots in the depths towards Kettinger Strasse; Scheerbartstrasse provides access in the northern part. According to the planning documents, there are rights of way for the background pieces of Eisnerstraße. The forest side of the street, which is designated as commercial space, is mainly used as space for the residents' vehicles to park. Here in the district was the confluence of the outer freight ring with the Dresden railway with an industrial track leading to the Marienfeld industrial area to the north. The situation around 1987 can be seen in the development plan XIII-223. | |
Ekensunder place
( Location ) |
150 × 150 × 80 | Ekensund (German name of Egernsund ), municipality in Denmark | May 16, 1938 | The square had been set up as a jewelry square before 1926 under the name Auerbachplatz , but in 1926 it was still vacant. It lies between Ekensunder Weg (north), Barnetstrasse (south) and Krusauer Strasse (west), up to the connection with Geibelstrasse (west). There is a green area with a tennis court and playground and a lawn with a few trees. No properties are assigned to the site. The northern Schleswig town, which gave it its name in 1938 , came to Denmark after a referendum in February 1920. | |
Ekensunder way
( Location ) |
400 | Ekensund (German name of Egernsund ), municipality in Denmark | May 16, 1938 | The Ekensunder Weg lies between Halkerzeile and Barnetstraße (Ekensunder Platz). The path is a three-lane paved road in a 30 zone and is not permitted for trucks (except residents). The street is built up with older single-family houses and newer type housing developments as well as some town villas. After the First World War , the street was laid out as Auerbachstrasse on Marienfelder Strasse, and in 1926 it was still undeveloped. The eponymous North Schleswig town came to Denmark as a result of the Versailles Agreement after a referendum in February 1920. | |
Elisabethstrasse
( Location ) |
540 | Elisabeth (1801–1873), wife of the Prussian King Friedrich Wilhelm IV. | before 1921 | The street lies between Wünsdorfer and Illigstraße in the area of street names named after female people of the Hohenzollern. | |
Erich-Hermann-Platz
( Location ) |
120 × 120 × 60 | Erich Hermann (1914–1933), victim of National Socialism |
or May 4, 2005 |
February 4, 2004 The square is on Wünsdorfer and Blohmstrasse. The square was laid out in 1893 as Kaiser-Friedrich-Platz with the settlement area, the name was deleted on May 11, 1938. The square, unnamed since then, was named after the young communist Erich Hermann in 2004. The then 18-year-old was stabbed to death by the SA man Fritz Osthof on New Year's Eve 1932/1933 . The perpetrator at the time was acquitted. | |
Falckensteinstrasse
( Location ) |
450 | Eduard Vogel von Falckenstein (1797–1885), Prussian general | before 1922 | The street is located in the south of the district between Horstwalder and Spirdingseestrasse, a little west of Kaiserplatz and forms a small triangular square on Paplitzer Strasse. | |
Fehlingstrasse
( Location ) |
230 | Jürgen Fehling (1885–1968), theater director | Feb. 1, 1974 | The street lies between Lichtenrader Damm and Alt-Lichtenrade. Originally the eastern part of Grimmstrasse, it was named as an independent street from Lichtenrader Damm in 1974. As a connection between Lichtenrader Damm and Töpchiner Weg, it is a regional main street in the Berlin road network . | |
Feldstedter way
( Location ) |
330 | Feldstedt (German name of Felsted ), municipality in Denmark | April 10, 1933 | The street was laid out as Bürgerstraße after 1914 and renamed in 1933. It lies between Lichtenrader Damm and Schillerstraße. In the 1930 address book, Bürgerstraße is located between Berliner, Arndt-, Gerhardt-, Uhland- and Schillerstraße with four residential buildings, the entire length of which also has land owned by an owner (noted as construction sites). | |
Fignerweg
( Location ) |
160 | Wera Figner (1852–1942), Russian revolutionary | Aug 31, 1949 | The road 30 according to construction plan was continued when equipped with this designation. It lies between Kettinger Straße and Rapstedter Weg, and continues over the latter as a dead end street to the district boundary to Marienfelde . A commercial area is attached to the Marienfeld area. | |
Finchleystraße ( location ) | 180 | Finchley , part of the London borough of Barnet , a partner district of Tempelhof | May 4th 1970 | Finchleystraße is a cul-de-sac from Barnetstraße to the south on the route of road 451 of the development plan. As an access road, it belongs to the large housing estate on Barnetstraße between Lichtenrader Damm and Steinstraße, which was built in 1962–1968 by the housing association Stadt und Land, mostly using panel construction. | |
Flotowstrasse
( Location ) |
120 | Friedrich von Flotow (1812–1883), opera composer | after 1925 | Flotowstraße is between Straussstraße and Lortzingstraße, the south side of the street is on the night bay with the Lichtenrader Graben. When planning in the 1920s, the road was planned on the southwest corner of Lichtenrade in a settlement area up to the Birkfelde district, which connects a forest area with a connection to the forest on the previous wall strip across the border. | |
Fontanestrasse
( Location ) |
440 | Theodor Fontane (1819–1898), writer | after 1918 | The street lies between Schiller and Geibelstraße and a section, No. 22-33, from Kettinger Straße (dead end). The street was named between 1918 and 1921 and initially only ran as far as Geibelstraße. The extension to Kettinger Strasse was included on January 12, 1932. | |
( Location ) |
Föttingerzeile
(in the district) |
170 Hermann Föttinger (1877–1945), electrical engineer, university lecturer at the Technical University of Berlin | July 1, 1977 | The street itself and its north side belong to Mariendorf . Plots 11–23 of the Föttingerzeile (south-western part) are in the district. The properties adjoining Lichtenrade are located in Marienfelde . The street runs between Kettinger Straße and Grimmingweg, as with effect from July 1, 1977 the section of Daimlerstraße was renamed Föttingerzeile as a result of the development between Grimmingweg and Kettinger Straße. | |
Franziusweg
( Location ) |
930 | Ludwig Franzius (1832–1903), hydraulic engineer | Aug 4, 1930 | The quiet residential street is mostly built on with row houses and runs in the Abendrotsiedlung on the route of the previous forest path partly in north-south direction (parallel to Friedensweg). It is located with lots 3–127a (odd) and 4–126 (even) between Schichauweg and Elisabethstraße, and continues as Cecilienstraße. The tennis club Weiß-Gelb is located on the corner of Maffeistraße . According to the development plan as road 162 , the Franziusweg was extended by road 416 and the forest path when the district boundary between Marienfelde and Lichtenrade was changed on August 31, 1949 . The 'Abendrotsiedlung' is a small house settlement with the character of a garden city that was built in the period after the First World War . In the years 1919/1920 it was built according to the goals of the new residential construction: little effort, low costs, "healthy" living space and intended for broader population groups. The district passed a conservation ordinance for the settlement in 2009 . In 1932, the forest path between Parkweg (plot 1), Heimweg (8/9), passage to Friedensweg (24/25) and Grenzweg (28) and on the west side back with 29-64 continues, with all plots being built on and inhabited. Franziusweg is also noted in the 1943 address book for the Marienfelde district. The forest path is (already) listed between Maffeistraße, Abendrotweg (8/9) and with plots 13–24 (continuously) over the passage to Friedensweg. | |
Freiertweg
( Location ) |
460 | Freed, old Lichtenrad farming family | Aug 4, 1930 | The street lies between Lichtenrader Damm and Soldiner Straße, it was laid out as street 1 of the development plan. Street 1 is recorded in the 1930 address book between Berliner Strasse , Bernauer Strasse and Strasse 2 and is built on three plots of land between arable land with residential buildings. | |
Peace way
( Location ) |
330 | A clear explanation for the name Friedensweg has not yet been determined | after 1923 | The street is on the edge of the Abendrotsiedlung, which is protected in the existing structure. There are mostly row houses in the quiet residential street. The Friedensweg for cars ends on Wünsdorfer Straße as a dead end street, pedestrians and cyclists can pass through. There are two public footpath connections through the gardens to Franziusweg. | |
Fuerth Street
( Location ) |
340 | Fürth , city in Bavaria | before 1922 | The quiet cobblestone street is mostly built with single-family houses. It lies between Würzburger and Nürnberger Straße and was already included in the current route when planning the Bavarian Quarter in Lichtenrade-Ost. | |
Füssener Strasse
( Location ) |
150 | Füssen , city in Bavaria | Apr 26, 1957 | The street was laid out as street 144 of the development plan, laid out and named in the immediate vicinity of the border before the wall was built. It is a T-shaped spur road from Aschaffenburger Strasse eastwards to the city limits. | |
Galluner Strasse
( Location ) |
650 | Gallun , part of the city of Mittenwalde in Brandenburg | Aug 31, 1949 | It lies between Horstwalder and Saalower Straße and leads over the latter as a dead end street to the city limits. The street runs west along Leopoldplatz and east along Kaiserplatz. In 1949 it was merged from Blumenthalstrasse and Leopoldstrasse and renamed. Both previous streets were laid out and named between 1914 and 1922 in the southern Lichtenrade between the railway line and the Chaussee (since then: Kirchhainer Damm). The name given to the northern street in the Horstwalder and Paplitzer Strasse section was given by the publicist and theater director Oscar Blumenthal . For the part from Leopoldplatz and the Mahlow district in the southern section, Leopold I, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau (called: the Old Dessauer), gave its name. | |
Gätzschmann path
( Location ) |
160 | Moritz Ferdinand Gätzschmann (1800–1895), mining engineer | Aug 4, 1930 | There are mostly single-family houses in the quiet residential street. With the location on the outskirts there are good transport connections to the city center and the proximity to the Berlin area and the Marienfelder Feldmark. The 'Weiß-Gelb' tennis club is located on the corner of Maffeistraße. The traffic route, routed as road 157 according to the development plan, lies between Maffeistrasse and Blohmstrasse. | |
Geibelstrasse
( Location ) |
1240 | Emanuel Geibel (1815–1884), poet | March 23, 1898 | As road 14a is laid out according to the development plan, it was laid out in 1898 and named in the initially built-up northern settlement area of the district. The street is between Raabe and Barnetstrasse / corner of Ekensunder Weg. | |
Gerstnerweg ( location ) | 200 | Franz Anton von Gerstner (1796–1840), railway engineer | Aug 4, 1930 | Gerstnerweg is located between Stein- and John-Locke-Straße, not far from the Lichtenrade S-Bahn station and was laid out as Straße 103 in the development plan . | |
Gessepfad
( Location ) |
200 | Gesse, old Lichtenrad farming family | Nov 1, 1953 | The Gessepfad lies between Freiertweg and Schwebelstraße and is routed as Straße 8 in the development plan. The street name takes up the details of the surrounding street according to local families, Gesse is the family name of residents of Lichtenrade around 1515, mainly farmers. On Schwebelstrasse she comes across the Church of the Holy Martyrs of Africa. | |
Glaserweg
( Location ) |
120 | Friedrich Carl Glaser (1843–1910), mechanical engineer | Aug 4, 1930 | The Glaserweg is located in the north of the district between Buckower Chaussee and Lenaustraße, it is routed as road 47 in the development plan . For 1943, the eight plots of land with a summer house each on Buckower Chaussee and six single-family houses are named. | |
Goethestrasse
( Location ) |
1100 | Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749–1832), poet | before 1922 | It lies between Lichtenrader Damm and Kettinger Strasse in the initially built-up north of the district, parallel between Lessingstrasse and Fontanestrasse. | |
Goldschmidtweg
( Location ) |
640 | Hans Goldschmidt (1861–1923), chemist | Aug 4, 1930 | Previously routed as road 158 , the Goldschmidtweg lies between Schichauweg and Maffeistraße. The street was laid out on Marienfelder Flur in Lichtenrade-Ost, but the settlement area always belonged to the Lichtenrader settlement, later the district allocation was adapted to this fact. | |
Goltzstrasse
( Location ) |
870 | Karl Friedrich von der Goltz (1815–1901), Prussian general | 28 Sep 1911 | Goltzstraße is located between the level crossing as an extension of Lortzingstraße and the Lichtenrader / Kirchhainer Damm / Im Domstift intersection. Here is the connection to the Alt-Lichtenrade area. The road lies in the course of the land route from the Teltow community of Lichtenrade to Klein-Beeren , this road was paved in 1908 and was named Klein-Beerener Straße from 1908 to 1911 . In 1943 it is listed between Dorf-, Bahnhof-, Roon-, Moltke-, Bismarck-, Wilhelmstraße , Berlin-Dresdener Eisenbahn , Pape-, Kessel-, Kirchbachstraße and Moltkeplatz and about half of it is built on with residential buildings. Some plots are gardens or unoccupied parcels, some are referred to as construction sites (vacant, vacant lots). Goltzstraße 33 is the rectory on Roonstraße , the cemetery (36) is organizationally part of Kaiserstraße 4. The 140 meters of Goltzstraße that continue Bahnhofstraße belong to category III of the Berlin street network , regional main street | |
Grenzweg
( Location ) |
300 | Runs on the former local border between Marienfelde and Lichtenrade | before 1922 | The street lies between Illigstrasse and Wünsdorfer Strasse. When the Gartenstadtsiedlung was created (since then: Abendrotsiedlung), the boundary between Lichtenrade and the Marienfelder Feldflur was here. The more northerly streets belonged to Marienfelde until 1949, with both districts belonging to the Tempelhof administrative district. | |
Griembergweg
( Location ) |
650 | Paul Griemberg (1863–1928), Tempelhof local politician | Apr 21, 1932 | The Griembergweg lies between Lichtenrader Damm and Töpchiner Weg. It was laid out beforehand and was named Frankfurter Straße between 1923 and 1925, matching the surrounding streets to Frankfurt (Oder) . | |
Grimmstrasse
( Location ) |
680 | Jacob Grimm (1785–1863) and Wilhelm Grimm (1786–1859), linguists , fairy tale collectors | before 1922 | The street lies between Lichtenrader Damm and Geibelstraße. A section of the Teltower Dörferweg, No. 15 of the “20 green main paths” in Berlin, runs along it. The length of which runs on the Teltower plateau in the south of Berlin in a zigzag course over the residential areas of Zehlendorf, Lichterfelde, Marienfelde, Lichtenrade, Buckow, Rudow and Adlershof. Grimmstrasse originally led from Geibelstrasse to Berliner Strasse (since then: Alt-Lichtenrade). Between 1937 and 1938, the extension of Grimmstrasse to Marienfelder / Nuthe- / Neanderstrasse of Grimmplatz was included in it. The section east from Lichtenrader Damm to Straße 471 was renamed Fehlingstraße on February 1, 1974. | |
Groß-Ziethener Strasse
( Location ) |
1160 | Großziethen , part of the community of Schönefeld in Brandenburg | before 1922 | The road lies between Lichtenrader Damm and the city limits of Groß-Ziethen (Langer Grund settlement) and is continued here by Lichtenrader Chaussee. It extends Barnetstrasse over Lichtenrader Damm and thus belongs to Berlin's main regional road system in the Tempelhof district. The road lies in the route of the local connection of the (formerly) Teltow communities Lichtenrade and Groß-Ziethen. This connection was interrupted between 1961 and 1990 by the construction of the Berlin Wall . The Wall Trail crosses at the city and state border with Brandenburg . On September 1, 1973, Strasse 469 was incorporated into Groß-Ziethener-Strasse. At the beginning of the 1960s, it runs west of Alt-Lichtenrade into Reuterstraße to Lichtenrader Damm across Happestraße, which is only north of Lichtenrader Graben. | |
Haeselerstrasse
( Location ) |
160 | Gottlieb von Haeseler (1836–1919), Prussian Field Marshal General | before 1923 | The short connection is between Goltzstrasse and Briesingstrasse. Named undeveloped in the address book in 1943, according to the map from 1961 there are already buildings on the outskirts of the city. In the south-east section a two-lane road, the north-west section is a narrow paved belt with a wide sidewalk and on the north side a strip for car parking. In front of the buildings of the Reinhold-Meyerhoff-Sporthalle, which are not assigned to Haeseler Straße, lots 3–9 belong to the street (odd, 5, 5a, 5b). Another Haeselerstrasse is located in Westend . | |
Halker line
( Location ) |
2120 | Halk , municipality in Denmark | Jan. 23, 1931 | The street is between Buckower Chaussee and Barnetstraße. It was laid out before 1922 as Gellertstrasse , named after the poet Christian Fürchtegott Gellert . In 1930 this is listed between the districts of Marienfelde, Hebbel-, Raabe-, Lessing-, Goethe-, Fontane-, Grimm-, Auerbach-, Marienfelder Straße and a quarter of the 132 numbered plots are built on with residential and summer houses. The street 88 and the Gellert street were renamed in 1931 in Halker line. In 1943 the plots 1-16 belong to Buckower Damm "politically to Bln. = Marienfelde", in the district the street is between Kettinger, Raabe-, Lessing-, Humboldt-, Goethe-, Fontane-, Grimm- and Marienfelder Straße and is almost halfway up to this. To the south of Marienfelder Strasse (plots up to 175–231, 174–232) there is arable land and at 235 the Lichtenrade pumping station. The plots up to 249 (left) are undeveloped plots, the right-hand side 238–248 is built on with houses up to Gerstnerweg, the plots up to 252 Riedingstrasse are still undeveloped. The area south of Marienfelder Strasse has not yet been cleared to Strasse 102 in 1961 (since then: Barnetstrasse).
To the south of Barnetstrasse, the Halker line was built over during the development in this area and the part of the street that remained south of it was renamed John-Locke-Strasse on March 1, 1969. Between Grimmstrasse and Barnetstrasse, on the east side of the road (to Lutherstrasse), there is the premises of the “Theodor Haubach Oberschule”, “Annedore Leber Elementary School” and the “Carl Zeiß Oberschule” with their outbuildings and sports field. The route of the outer freight ring was formerly located north of Fontanestrasse , today the allotment gardens for railway farming are located here. |
|
Hanowsteig
( Location ) |
260 | Johann Christoph Hanow (1707–1766), pastor in Lichtenrade | Nov 1, 1953 | The L-shaped traffic route is between Bornhagenweg and Carl-Steffeck-Straße. The street was laid out as street 20 of the development plan, an extension as street 20a was included on November 1, 1967, the Hanowsteig. Hanow had studied in Halle (Saale) until 1740 and worked as a pastor in Lichtenrade from 1740 to 1766, the choice of name follows on from the neighboring streets of the settlement. The path opens up as an access to the eastern properties of the one-family settlement, which is connected to the Lichtenrader Volkspark to the north and the park area at the Lichtenrader Graben to the east. | |
Happestrasse
( Location ) |
300 | Happe, old Lichtenrad farming family | Feb 13, 1957 | The street lies between Fehlingstrasse and Weißenthurmstrasse and even further south as a dead end to Lichtenrader Graben. The street lies in the alignment of street 41 of the development plan. The Happestrasse is located at the rear of the western property of Alt-Lichtenrade and between this and the Lichtenrader Damm, which was created as a southern bypass road in the 1930s as a town center bypass . The road was planned in 1957 between Fehling- and Marienfelder Straße, south of the Lichtenrader Graben, near Weilburgstraße, but it had not yet been built. With the redesign in the area and the new buildings west of the intersection of Barnet- / Groß-Ziethener Straße and Lichtenrader Damm, the planning was changed accordingly and the street section south of the Lichtenrader Graben was named Schlumpeterstraße . The Happes were an old farming family in Lichtenrade. In 1740 Hans Happe settled in Lichtenrade. Otto Happe, who died in 1920, was a community representative. Farmer Happe still has his farm with a little rural flair from Lichtenrade. | |
Heinitzweg
( Location ) |
250 | Friedrich Anton von Heynitz (1725–1802), Prussian minister and chief miner | Aug 4, 1930 | The street in Trasse Straße 48 and Straße 49 of the development plan is a dead end between Buckower Chaussee and Mariendorfer Damm, to which it does not, however, pass as a passable road. It opens up the residential area in an L-shape - mainly with residential buildings - northwest of Buckower Chaussee / Mariendorfer Damm to Kettinger Straße as an access road. From the western corner of the street, a green foot and cycle path leads along the Graben to Kettinger Straße. | |
Hendonstrasse ( location ) | 390 | Hendon , part of the London borough of Barnet , a partner district of Tempelhof | Apr 11, 1969 | The street between John-Locke-Straße and Gerstnerweg was laid out as street 450 of the development plan. It was created in connection with the large housing estate on Barnetstrasse, which was built between Lichtenrader Damm and Steinstrasse 1962–1968 by the housing association Stadt und Land, mostly in prefabricated construction. The development is closed in the south, but open in the north and not connected to the street. | |
Hermann-Wundrich-Platz
( Location ) |
130 × 130 × 90 | Hermann Wundrich (1887–1972), local chronicler from Lichtenrade | 1978 | The place on the Alt-Lichtenrade street is south of the village pond in the old village center. The square is a green area at the Alt-Lichtenrade village pond, but was not officially named. On the square there are benches and sunbathing areas with a view of the gable pool and the village church. On October 3, 1990, a beech tree was planted on the square to commemorate the reunification of Germany, which was divided until 1989. The namesake Hermann Wundrich was the landowner in Lichtenrade, 1903 chairman of the first house and garden owners association after the turn of the century and chronicler of the place Lichtenrade. | |
Hermione-von-Preuschen-Platz
( Location ) |
110 × 50 | Hermione von Preuschen (1854–1918), painter and poet | Nov 10, 2009 | Before 1913, the square was created as Kaiserplatz - named after the German Emperor - in the center of the then new settlement with streets named after people from the Hohenzollern family in West-Lichtenrade as a decorative square. Around 1914 it was named Hohenzollernplatz , as there was also a square of the same name in an eastern Lichtenrader settlement. The renaming of this park area with loose development north of Hohenzollernstrasse between Rangsdorfer and Paetschstrasse was renamed in 2009, especially since there are places of the same name in Berlin in Steglitz-Zehlendorf and Wilmersdorf-Charlottenburg. The Lichtenrad artist Hermione von Preuschen (1854-1918) lived only a few hundred meters away. | |
Hilbertstrasse
( Location ) |
550 | Karl Hilbert (1859–1942), landowner, parceled out and developed building sites in Lichtenrade | around 1909 | The street is between the Prinzessinnen- and Wolziger line. The asphalt road with both tree-lined sidewalks lies parallel to the railway line to the west , the residential buildings from the 1930s on the east side of the road are perpendicular to the road, while on the west side of the road there are mostly single-family houses and town villas. Hilbert bought land south of Bahnhofstrasse around 1900 . He undertook to have a paved driveway built through the land he had acquired within a short period of time. Together with master bricklayer Friedrich Krüger, he parceled out the site and made it accessible for further development. Hermann Gundlach's popular “Waldrestaurant” restaurant was located on the corner of Hilbertstrasse and Goltzstrasse. In 1913 Hilbert built two large houses on “his” street. | |
Hoeschweg
( Location ) |
210 | Leopold Hoesch (1820–1899), entrepreneur, founder of Hoesch AG | Aug 4, 1930 | The street 159 of the development plan was named in 1930 and the Hoeschweg lies between Maffei and Blohmstrasse. The namesake of these three streets have a symbolic connection as successful economic figures. | |
Hohenzollernstrasse
( Location ) |
570 | Hohenzollern , noble family | around 1914 | Hohenzollernstrasse is located in an area in which the southern part of the new Lichtenrade West settlement with streets named after people of the Hohenzollern family was established and laid out before 1914. It had a planning center with a Kaiserplatz. The street lies between Hilbertstrasse and the city limits, as a dead end over Rohrbachstrasse. Corresponding to this western end of the Straße zu Brandenburg, the Berlin Wall was located here until 1990 and now the access to the Berlin Wall Trail . | |
Homburgstrasse
( Location ) |
740 | Bad Homburg vor der Höhe , city in Hesse | before 1922 | The road runs between Töpchiner Weg and Braunfelsstrasse in Lichtenrade-Ost north of Groß-Ziethener Strasse. The streets here are named after places in the Taunus , which led to the name "Taunus Quarter". | |
Horstwalder Strasse
( Location ) |
960 | Horstwalde , part of the city of Baruth / Mark in Brandenburg | Aug 31, 1949 | The street runs between Kirchhainer Damm and Goltzstraße. The Großbeerenstraße, which had a connection to the Chaussee to Großbeeren (today: B 101 ), had been on this route since the 19th century . In 1904, after the lawyers Pape as Papestraße named the leader in the Civil Code had worked. In 1930 it is listed in the address book between Goltz-, Richard-Wagner- , Dresdener Bahn , Wrangel-, Falckenstein-, Alvensleben- and Blumenthalstraße. After 1914, Blücherstraße was added to the Chaussee as an eastern extension , named after Field Marshal Blücher von Wahlstatt , who went down in German history under the name "Marschall Vorwärts". The Blücher- and Papestraße were renamed in 1949 in Horstwalder street because there were several of the same name in Berlin. At the west end of the street, the Berlin Wall Trail leads along to cross the continuous railway line at Lortzing- / Goltzstraße. | |
Humboldtstrasse
( Location ) |
250 | Alexander von Humboldt (1769–1859), natural scientist | before 1921 | The street is between Halkerzeile and Uhlandstrasse, parallel between Goethestrasse and Lessingstrasse. In 1930 the street was still undeveloped, in 1943 there was still farmland between Schillerstrasse and Uhlandstrasse, and of the 20 plots on the street today (Humboldtstrasse 1–15 odd and 2–20 even), seven houses were built on. The Dietrich Bonhoeffer Church and the grounds of the "Bruno H. Bürgel Primary School" are located on Humboldtstrasse and Uhlandstrasse . In 1930 there was still a Humboldtplatz on the corner of Humboldtstrasse and the corner of Gellertstrasse (today: Halkerzeile). | |
Illigstrasse
( Location ) |
970 | Moritz Friedrich Illig (1777–1845), papermaker | Aug 4, 1930 | There are mostly single-family houses in the quiet residential street. According to the development plan , it is routed as road 160 , between Schichauweg and Blohmstraße. In the 1943 address book it is listed under Marienfelde , but under Post Lichtenrade. In 1943, a total of 23 plots of land were built on and inhabited, six summer houses and 47 were allocated, undeveloped plots (listed as a construction site). Three plots do not exist and parcel (not yet allocated land) is noted for eight. | |
In the cathedral monastery
( Location ) |
810 | Berliner Domstift , owner of Lichtenrade until 1872 | Nov 1, 1973 | The street is the eastern bypass of the historic center between Groß-Ziethener Straße and Lichtenrader / Kirchhainer Damm. With this connection and in continuation of Bahnhofstrasse to the east, it is a main street, which is only categorized under “other” in the Berlin road network . The street is laid out as street 23 in the development plan and on October 1, 1977 street 437 was also included. In 1515 the cathedral chapter of Cölln became the owner of most of the village of Lichtenrade and in 1688 it became the property of the cathedral church in Berlin until 1872. The plots Im Domstift 1–55 (odd) and 4–68a (even) belong to the street (5487 in the Berlin street system). | |
In the corner
( Location ) |
120 | Location description of the location | Dec 1, 1985 | A private road as an access road on the northern edge of the garden home settlement Grenzland, it goes off as a dead end from Kettinger Straße. In the development plan it was projected as road 432 . Plots 1–5b (odd) and 2–6 (even) belong to the street. The paved road can be blocked off with a swiveling barrier at the entrance to Kettinger Straße and is therefore not freely accessible to the public as a private road. | |
Jean-Paul Way
( Location ) |
120 | Jean Paul (1763-1825), writer | Aug 31, 1949 | The short connecting road lies between Rapstedter Weg and Kettinger Straße with the properties Jean-Paul-Weg 2–8 (even) and 3–7 (odd), previously laid out as street 28 in the development plan. The street is paved with paving stones and has no separate sidewalk. To calm traffic, bush zones have been planted along the entire street. | |
John-Locke-Strasse ( location ) | 700 | John Locke (1632–1704), philosopher | March 1, 1969 | The street lies between Steinstrasse and Riedingerstrasse. In 1969, a part of Halkerzeile that remained south of the new buildings on Barnetstraße was combined with the route of Straße 445 and named John-Locke-Straße as part of the development in the south of Lichtenrade and the redesign of Marienfelder to Barnetstraße. | |
Kaiserplatz
( Location ) |
120 × 120 × 120 | German emperor , head of the Hohenzollern family at the time of his appointment | before 1913 | Before 1913, two places in Lichtenrade were named Kaiserplatz: on the one hand in the Lichtenrade Süd settlement and on the other in the emerging Lichtenrade West settlement. The second was renamed as Hohenzollernplatz (today: Hermione-von-Preuschen-Platz ) in 1914 . The other name has been preserved to this day. Dreieckplatz is located between Paplitzer, Spirdingsee and Galluner Strasse, and Keithstrasse joins from the east. To the north, the square is complemented by the triangle of Leopoldplatz, so that a park area is created that is connected over the top and is bordered by Galluner Strasse and Paplitzer Strasse. | |
Kambergstrasse
( Location ) |
330 | Bad Camberg , town in Hesse | before 1922 | The street is between Töpchiner Weg via Braunfelsstraße and the city limits, here as a dead end . Here the road meets the Berlin Wall Trail . On the Brandenburg side there is arable land belonging to the municipality of Großziethen . | |
Karlstrasse
( Location ) |
270 | Prince Carl , son of the Prussian King Friedrich Wilhelm III. | before 1922 | The street lies between Hohenzollernstraße and Wolzigerzeile in the south of the (former) Lichtenrade West settlement, west of the Dresden Railway . Here streets were named after people from the Hohenzollern family. | |
Keithstrasse
( Location ) |
330 | James Keith (1696–1758), Prussian Field Marshal General | before 1922 | Keithstrasse is located between Lützowstrasse and Galluner Strasse on Kaiserplatz. Keithstrasse is noted in 1930 with eight residential buildings between Kaiserplatz, Leopoldstrasse, Seydlitzstrasse and Lützowstrasse in the address book. | |
Kesselstrasse
( Location ) |
150 | Gustav Friedrich von Kessel (1760–1827), Prussian lieutenant general | around 1900 | The street lies between Goltzstrasse and Horstwalder Strasse. The namesake Kessel had distinguished himself in various wars since 1792 with the Royal Body Regiment. Kessel was in high favor with the Prussian king and in 1819 was appointed commander of the Invalidenhaus . He held this post until his death. His grave is in the Invalidenfriedhof at Scharnhorststraße 25. | |
Kettinger Strasse
( Location ) |
1680 | Ketting , municipality in Denmark | Jan. 12, 1932 | Parts of the street had already been named and laid out as Hebbelstraße after the playwright Hebbel before 1922 , and in 1932 it was renamed due to another street of the same name in Greater Berlin since 1920 . The street is on the northwest edge of the district between Buckower Chaussee and Mariendorfer Damm. It is a broad asphalt road with a wide sidewalk and cycle lane on it and some parking spaces in the front garden area. There is a road connection to Föttingerzeile, which ends as a dead end. A footpath / bike path leads to Buckower Damm. In the address book from 1935, the right (western) side of the street is listed as “go. political z. Marienfelde “. The street itself lies with the east side and the lots 1–147 (most of them are undeveloped) between the districts Buckow / Buckower Damm, Lenaustraße, Halkerzeile, Fichte-, Raabe-, Lessing-, Goethe-, Fontanestraße. For the west side Fontanestrasse, Halkerzeile, Krusauer Strasse, (in the following partly arable land), Marienfelder Strasse and "Berlin = Dresdener Eisenbahn" are indicated. Of the listed plots 34–128, 14 have residential houses, one has a summer house, the others are sold but undeveloped (referred to as building sites) or parceled and not yet sold (referred to as parcels). | |
Kirchbachstrasse
( Location ) |
460 | Günther von Kirchbach (1850–1925), Colonel General | before 1923 | Kirchbachstrasse is between Goltzstrasse and Paplitzer Strasse. In 1930 there were five residential buildings, vacant lots and gardens on Kirchbachstraße with horseshoe numbering . The location is listed with Bismarckstrasse / Goltzstrasse, Moltkestrasse / -platz, Roonstrasse, Alvenslebenplatz, Kaiserstrasse, Werderstrasse. | |
Kirchhainer Damm
( Location ) |
1340 | Kirchhain, part of the town of Doberlug-Kirchhain in Brandenburg | Aug 31, 1949 | Even before 1902, the road leading through here from Lichtenrade to the south (Berlin – Dresden) was named Kaiser-Wilhelm-Straße and expanded. The street lies between the intersection of Goltzstraße / Im Domstift in continuation of Lichtenrader Damm up to the city limits. At the time of the Berlin Wall , the street led as an end street to the Wall at the GDR border at the southern end of West Berlin . Even today there is a turning area for vehicles (bus 275) at the exit sign. The B 96 runs on Kirchhainer Damm for a length of 1370 meters , which is why the road route, as Category II of the Berlin road network, is one of the higher-level road connections in the State of Berlin.
The wall memorial on the B 96 has been set up in the area of the former border crossing at Kirchhainer Damm, which was only used by garbage trucks . |
|
Klausdorfer way
( Location ) |
470 | Klausdorf , part of the municipality Am Mellensee in Brandenburg | Aug 31, 1949 | The one laid out here before 1923 and named as Manteuffelstrasse after the military and politician Edwin Freiherr von Manteuffel . The street was renamed in 1949 because of several Berlin streets of the same name. It lies between Paplitzer and Kesselstrasse. | |
Kloster-Zinna-Strasse
( Location ) |
470 | Zinna Monastery , part of the town of Jueterbog in Brandenburg | Jan. 2, 1975 | The Kloster-Zinna-Straße goes eastwards from Töpchiner Weg towards the city limits. It is the access road to the residential complex created here and ends in a turning hammer. The road is divided lengthways by a fence, with a narrow road as a 30 zone to the north and a driveway as an access road with a 20 zone limit to the south. On the north side there are residential houses with pitched roofs from the 1970s on the odd plots at Kloster-Zinna-Strasse 1–39a, on the south side at Kloster-Zinna-Strasse 2–14 (straight) there are five-storey corridor houses with flat roofs built later. A cause for the separation of the southern tramway and the northern one by a continuous fence is no longer recognizable in the 2010s. The development of Braunfelsstrasse in the 2010s creates a connection to Braunfelsstrasse, which, however, is not accessible due to bollards. Until the 1960s, there was arable land on both sides of the road north of the railway line of the outer freight ring on the now built-up area . | |
( Location ) |
Koenigsteinstrasse
720 | Königstein im Taunus , town in Hesse | before 1921 | The street is located in the Taunusviertel between Taunusstraße and Wiesbadener Straße, over which it still goes as a dead end. In the southern section, it goes westward from Taunusstrasse and turns north on the north bank of the Lichtenrader Graben. | |
Kraatzweg
( Location ) |
190 | Kraatz, old Lichtenrad farming family | Nov 1, 1953 | The road lies between Lichtenrader Damm and Zeißpfad, previously laid out as road 1a in this northern Lichtenrades settlement. The eponymous family Kraatz has been based in Lichtenrade since the end of the 18th century. | |
Kronacher Strasse
( Location ) |
360 | Kronach , city in Bavaria | Dec 13, 1934 | The road A was expanded in 1934 and named, it is between Wittelsbach and Pasinger road over which they have as impasse continues up to the grove on Kirchhainer Damm. The road A was created in 1930, between Erlanger and Wittelsbacherstraße is initially a house, but all land is acquired by a company owning to display in the address book. The neighboring street B between Erlanger Straße and the forest on the city limits to the district of Groß-Ziethen is built on with two houses. | |
Kronbergstrasse
( Location ) |
740 | Kronberg im Taunus , city in Hesse | before 1925 | The street lies between Alt-Lichtenrade and Braunfelsstraße in an east-west direction in the Lichtenrader Taunusviertel. It was laid out in Lichtenrade-Ost at the beginning of the 1920s, in the 1950s in a populated area of residential buildings and in 1930 it was built with 13 residential houses, mostly single-family houses, only on Berliner Straße (today: Alt-Lichtenrade) there is an apartment building. | |
Krontalstrasse
( Location ) |
760 | Kronthal, district of Kronberg im Taunus in Hesse | before 1922 | The entire length of the street lies between Töpchiner Weg and Groß-Ziethener Strasse, west of Braunfelser Weg in the Taunus district. The development in Kloster-Zinna-Strasse after the closure of the railway and the commercial area on Strasse 9 interrupt the course of the road planned for the route according to the development plan from the beginning of the 20th century. The northern section of the road from Töpchiner Weg still leads as a dead end over Kambergstrasse and here is the access road for properties 63–68c and 24–44a (continuously). In the southern section, the street is south of street 9 as a dead end street (plots 73, 74 and 25-28, continuous) over Wiesbadener street into Taunusviertel and Groß-Ziethener street. The residential complex on the south side of Straße 9 between Taunusstraße and Braunfelsstraße also belongs to Krontalstraße in terms of its postal address. On the eastern side of the Krontalstrasse between Wiesbadener and Homburgstrasse is the "Elementary School in the Taunusviertel". | |
( Location ) |
Kruger Street
500 | Friedrich Krüger (1859–1945), master bricklayer and landowner | around 1912 | The street was named between 1911 and 1913 and is located between Prinzessinnenstraße and Wolzigerzeile. Krüger parceled out and developed building sites in Lichtenrade. Together with the butcher Karl Hilbert, he parceled out the area of Lichtenrade West west of the Dresden Railway and made it accessible for building. Accordingly, the street was laid out between 1911 and 1913 and named after his name. | |
Krusauer Strasse
( Location ) |
1710 | Krusau (German name of Kruså ), place in Denmark | Jan. 23, 1931 | Created before 1922 as Kantstrasse , it was renamed Greater Berlin due to several streets of the same name . It runs between Kettinger and Barnetstraße (Ekensunder Platz), but is interrupted at the route of the former outer freight ring by allotment gardens of the railway agriculture and leads through as a walkway. This makes it a dead end from Goethestraße southwards and then continues as a driveway from Fontanestraße to Ekensunder Weg. At the beginning of the 1960s, Krusauer Strasse south of Marienfelder Strasse (today: Barnetstrasse) was still routed to Strasse 102 north of Gerstnerweg, but it was probably not built. The road 89 of the development plan was compiled with the Kantstraße. On April 11, 1969, the part of the intermediate part of residential buildings on the south side of Barnetstrasse and thus remaining in the southern section of Krusauer Strasse was renamed Hendonstrasse and linked to John-Locke-Strasse. | |
Küstriner Platz
( Location ) |
30 × 30 | Küstrin (today: Kostrzyn nad Odrą), city in Poland | after 1925 | Küstriner Platz is a not officially recorded name for a small open space at the intersection of Küstriner / Soldiner Strasse, where Oranienburger Strasse joins from the north. | |
Küstriner Strasse
( Location ) |
340 | Küstrin (today: Kostrzyn nad Odrą), city in Poland | before 1925 | The street was named between 1923 and 1925. It lies between Landsberger and Rathenower Strasse. | |
Landsberger Strasse
( Location ) |
380 | Landsberg an der Warthe (today: Gorzów Wielkopolski ), city in Poland | before 1922 | It is located between Töpchiner Weg and Bernauer Straße in the north of the district. | |
Landshuter Strasse
( Location ) |
500 | Landshut , city in Bavaria | before 1922 | Landshuter Strasse lies between Aschaffenburger and Augsburger Strasse (Augsburger Platz) and was laid out in the Bavarian quarter of Lichtenrades. | |
Lenaustraße
( Location ) |
350 | Nikolaus Lenau (1802–1850), writer | after 1923 | It is between Lintruper and Kettinger Straße. | |
Leopoldplatz
( Location ) |
(dragon square) |
150 × 110 Leopold I (1676–1747), Prince of Anhalt-Dessau , Prussian general | before 1929 | It lies as a triangle with the point facing south between Paplitzer, Galluner Strasse and Steinmetzstrasse. The further streets form another triangular square ( Kaiserplatz ) to the south , both of which form a common parking area over the top. | |
Lessingplatz
( Location ) |
190 × 190 × 80 | Gotthold Ephraim Lessing (1729–1781), poet | after 1923 | The open space at the intersection of Lessingstrasse and Geibelstrasse is not officially designated as Lessingplatz. | |
Lessingstrasse
( Location ) |
1010 | Gotthold Ephraim Lessing (1729–1781), poet | before 1914 | Lessingstrasse lies between Lichtenrader Damm and Kettinger Strasse. | |
Lichtenrader Damm ( location ) | 3110 | Lichtenrade bypass road | Aug 31, 1949 | The dam with the route of the federal highway 96 lies between Buckower Chaussee / Marienfelder Chaussee and Goltzstraße / Im Domstift. To the south the Kirchhainer Damm and to the north the Mariendorfer Damm continue the street and the main road. The street was formed in 1949 from the Berliner Straße leading north from Alt-Lichtenrade (then: Dorfstraße ) , which was part of the Chaussee through Lichtenrade, and the southern bypass road laid out in the late 1920s . The latter was laid out over farmland to the west to relieve the historical center. In the 1950s there was still a bridge over the outer freight ring , which can still be seen in a southerly direction when driving "over the mountain". The major settlement on the Barnetstrasse between light Damm and stone road was 1962-1968 from the housing association town and country largely in bricks built. | |
Lintruper Strasse
( Location ) |
1430 | Lintrup , municipality in Denmark | Aug 4, 1930 | When settling in the north of the district, the Arndtstrasse was laid out west parallel to the Chaussee (today: Lichtenrader Damm) and renamed Lintruper Strasse by merging with Strasse 46 according to the 1934 development plan. | |
( Location ) |
Löptener Strasse
220 | Löpten , part of the community Groß Köris in Brandenburg | Dec 15, 1970 | The street 456 , which was laid out in the development plan, was named after small Brandenburg towns in 1970 to match the neighboring streets. It is located between Mellener Strasse and Lichtenrader Damm. | |
Lortzingplatz
( Location ) |
140 × 70 | Albert Lortzing (1801-1851), composer | after 1923 | The Lortzingplatz is a green area between Lortzing-, Weber- and Brahmsstraße and connects directly to the night bay over the Lichtenrader Graben. | |
Lortzingstrasse
( Location ) |
440 | Albert Lortzing (1801-1851), composer | before 1922 | The street lies between the railway line (continuing Goltzstraße) and Flotowstraße at Lortzingplatz. | |
Löwenbrucher way
( Location ) |
600 | Löwenbruch , part of the city of Ludwigsfelde in Brandenburg | Aug 24, 1936 | This southernmost street in the district lies between Mozartstrasse and Beethovenstrasse and goes west of Beethovenstrasse as a dead end to Nachbucht and east in a short distance to Tiele-Wickler-Haus. The southern location between 1961 and 1990 and the proximity to the Berlin Wall brought about a special suburban location . The street was named in 1936 by merging Lisztstraße, which was laid out before 1923, and Schubertstraße, which was laid out before 1929. The first was named after the musician Franz Liszt and the second between 1925 and 1929 after the Austrian composer Franz Schubert . | |
( Location ) |
Lützowstrasse
560 | Adolf von Lützow (1782–1834), Prussian general | Feb. 28, 1911 | The street already existed before 1905 as Blankenfelder Straße and was named after the town of Blankenfelde to the south . With the expansion and planning of the settlement in Lichtenfelde Süd, it was renamed in 1911. The street is south of the Lichtenrader Friedhof between Paplitzer and Spirdingseestrasse. | |
Lutherstrasse
( Location ) |
520 | Martin Luther (1483–1546), reformer | before 1922 | The street lies between Grimmstrasse and Barnetstrasse, but in the area of the Lichtenrader Graben it does not go through as a road to Barnetstrasse to the south. On the west side is the site of the Theodor Haubach Oberschule, Annedore Leber Elementary School and the Carl Zeiß Oberschule with their outbuildings and sports field. | |
Maffeistraße
( Location ) |
670 | Joseph Anton von Maffei (1790–1870), entrepreneur, manufacturer of locomotives | Aug 4, 1930 | The street lies between Wünsdorfer Straße and Gätzschmannpfad. In the quiet residential street there are predominantly single-family houses and in the middle section it forms the southern edge of the Abendrotsiedlung, which is under protection. The tennis club Weiß-Gelb is located on the corner of Franziusweg. There are footpaths through the gardens to the Grenzweg. The road 161 according to construction plan in 1930 west of the at expanding the settlement railway designed and built since it was set up on Marienfelder hallway she belonged first to the district Mariendorf. On October 20, 1932, Parkweg was incorporated into Maffeistraße. The Parkweg was in the district of Lichtenrade in 1932 between Kaiser-Friedrich-Straße (today: Wünsdorfer Straße) and the private road. Maffeistraße, then Marienfelde (Post Bln. = Lichtenrade), is listed in the address book in 1933 as the location: Lichtenrade / Parkweg (construction site), Illigstraße, Wegner'sches, Ritter'sches Haus, Hoeschweg, Gätzschmannpfad. In the address book 1943 the location in Lichtenrade is noted for the plots 1–29 (odd) and 2–30 (even), in Marienfelde there are 31–37, 32–38 (construction site, summer house) to Illigstrasse, 39–47 to Hoeschweg / 40–52 to Goldschmidtweg and then 49–55 (odd) and 54, 56 to Gätzschmannpfad, five of which are built-up and inhabited properties. | |
Mariendorfer Damm
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
370 Mariendorf , part of the Tempelhof-Schöneberg district | Aug 31, 1949 | The Mariendorfer Damm belongs to the district between the intersection with the Marienfelder / Buckower Damm and the district boundary at the level of property 418. The dam itself, along with plots 420–446 (straight), belongs to the district, the opposite plots on the eastern edge of the street are in Britz and thus in the neighboring district of Neukölln . | |
Marienfelder Strasse
( Location ) |
230 | Marienfelde , part of the Tempelhof-Schöneberg district | before 1922 | The road initially ran from Schichauweg (at Schichauweg train station ) to the intersection of Bayerische Straße / Dorfstraße (today: Alt-Lichtenrade). A completely new route was created for the road through construction work from 1963. The part between Wünsdorfer Strasse and Lichtenrader Damm, which had been changed to the north, was renamed Barnetstrasse on April 11, 1969, with Reuterstrasse being included in the changed course . The remaining section east of Lichtenrader Damm was retained and runs in the old course between Lichtenrader Damm and Alt-Lichtenrade at the level of the village pond and the village church. | |
Mellener Strasse
( Location ) |
710 | Mellensee (until 1930 Mellen), part of the municipality Am Mellensee in Brandenburg | May 1st 1969 | Around 1900, the Roonstraße with the development on both sides of the Bahnhofstraße was laid out, in the south to Kirchbachstraße and to the north initially towards arable land. The street lies between Kirchbach and Rehagener Straße and leads over it as a dead end to the footpath that connects Lichtenrader Damm and Lichtenrader Graben and borders the sports ground in the south of the Georg Büchner Oberschule. | |
Miethepfad
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
90 Adolf Miethe (1862–1927), photo chemist | April 1, 1975 | The Miethepfad only belongs to the district between Schichauweg and the southern edge of the Poleigrund with road land and lots 1–7 (odd). The parking lot on the east side at Schichauweg station and the northward section in the industrial area along the railway line belongs to Marienfelde . The road 51 in the development plan (Lichtenrade) was named 1975th On February 1st, 1994 the road 489 (Marienfelde) was included. The Lichtenrade shooting club (founded on August 29, 1972) has its headquarters in Miethestrasse. | |
Motzener Strasse
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
120 Motzen , part of the city of Mittenwalde in Brandenburg | Jan. 1, 1963 | Only the east side with properties 45–51 (odd) between Poleigrund and Schichauweg belongs to the district. Road land and west side with the industrial area and the northern continuation belong to Marienfelde . On April 1, 1969, the newly laid road section between Motzener Strasse and Poleigrund was also named Motzener Strasse and the northern section of Egestorffstrasse was also named Motzener Strasse on the same day. These sections lie with the entire road area of Motzener Straße in the neighboring district of Marienfelde, although it was originally paved here as Lichtenrader Weg after 1918 . From 1966 the industrial area Motzener Straße developed, whereby the street was relocated a little. | |
Mozartstrasse
( Location ) |
550 | Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756–1791), composer | before 1911 | The street leads from Hilbertstraße and Löwenbrucher Weg as a dead end to the city limits. In the Brandenburg area, it turns into Keplerstrasse in the Waldblick settlement in Blankenfelde-Mahlow , where the former wall area was built on. Since the Berlin Wall Trail comes up against the railway line here , the Wall Trail leads north on Mozartstrasse to the level crossing on Goltzstrasse. Mozartstrasse and its neighboring streets in the Musikerviertel have existed unchanged since the construction of the settlement in Lichtenrade West (west of the railway line). | |
Munchener Strasse
( Location ) |
770 | Munich , capital of Bavaria | before 1922 | Münchener Strasse was laid out in the Bavarian Quarter in Lichtenrade Süd. Further south, Lindenstrasse was probably named between 1918 and 1922 after the planting when the street was set up with linden trees . It was the extension of Münchener Strasse and was included in it between 1932 and 1935. Münchener Strasse, with lots 1-44 (continuously), is between Pechsteinstrasse and Pasinger Strasse as a dead end to the grove on Kirchhainer Damm. At the southern end of the street there is the park at the Franz Neumann retirement home. Another Münchener Strasse in Berlin is in Schöneberg and Frohnau . | |
Nahariya Street
( Location ) |
600 | Nahariya , city in Israel , twin town of Tempelhof | Dec. 1, 1973 | The street is between Bornhagenweg and Groß-Ziethener Straße. It is a wide street with a 30-meter zone, which is built on with a new district with multi-storey houses. As in the Gropiusviertel, the residential buildings are behind parking lots with trees and hedges as noise protection. The previous street 17 was named in 1973 after the Israeli twin town of the then Tempelhof district; in 1970 it was the first communal partnership between a German and an Israeli community. The street gives an internally used name regionally as Nahariyakiez in the Volksparkviertel of the area. The new development area Lichtenrade-Ost (Nahariya and Skarbinastraße) for around 5000 residents was built between 1973 and 1977. The “Narahiya School” is located on the west side of the street between Skarbina and Tietjen Street. | |
Neanderstrasse
( Location ) |
830 | Joachim Neander (1650–1680), hymn poet | before 1922 | The street is between Geibelstraße (Lessingplatz) and Barnetstraße. However, it is interrupted in the area of the former outer freight ring . As a result, it leads from Barnetstraße as a dead end and 30er zone on a half-paved, otherwise unpaved piece of terrain with a car turning area from which a foot / cycle path continues. Here are the allotment gardens for railway farming on the west side of Neanderstrasse 24-29 (continuous), on the opposite side of Neanderstrasse 42 / Fontanestrasse 23. The planned Fontanestrasse is also interrupted as a driveway. The land count is continuous and starts counting north from Barnetstrasse, counting down from 33 to the west and counting up from 35 to the east. In the area of the interruption, the residential building is on property 40 and this is followed by undeveloped property 41 (here at the corner of Fontanestrasse ). Further north with single-family houses of different years of construction, the street goes from 23 or 43 with a paved path in the middle as a driveway in a third of the route width and on both sides unpaved or "edge" strips in front of the property. To the north of Goethestrasse there is a paved road with sidewalks and old trees, some of which are built on with residential buildings and some with multi-family houses. There is a playground in front of Lessingstraße, so that the development ends at 60 on the east side and continues on the west side at Lessingplatz to the corner of Geibelstraße. This street situation today coincides with the overview map from 1921, whereby at that time all the parcels of Neanderstraße were still undeveloped and the outer goods ring had not yet crossed. All in all, Neanderstraße was almost completely built on and inhabited with residential buildings in 1943. | |
Nespersteig
( Location ) |
100 | Eugen Nesper (1879–1961), high frequency technician | April 1, 1975 | The road 84 was named in 1975 and is located between Poleigrund and Schichauweg. The short street ends with the Poleigrund at the district boundary, a two-lane asphalt road in a 30s zone, on both sides sidewalks with pavement slabs and dense vegetation on the property front gardens. | |
New home
( Location ) |
340 | New home, as accommodation for refugees from the GDR | Aug 4, 1954 | The street lies in the west to south curve between Schiller and Grimmstrasse. The street name goes back to the use of the three-storey houses with apartments for refugees from the GDR , which were built here not far from the Marienfelde emergency reception center . | |
Norstedter way
( Location ) |
100 | Norstedt , municipality in Schleswig-Holstein | Nov 1, 1973 | The street lies between Rapstedter Weg and Kettinger Straße on the north-western edge of the district. On November 1, 1973, the path was initially named Nordstedter Weg. The correction of the name in Norstedter Weg was announced on August 6, 1973. | |
( Location ) |
Nürnberger Strasse
450 | Nuremberg , city in Bavaria , capital of Franconia | before 1921 ( 1876?) |
The quiet residential street in the “Bavarian Quarter” is mostly built up with single-family houses and is located between Kirchhainer Damm and Augsburger Platz. The district is located in the southeast of the district near the city limits, in the south and east (former strip of the wall) there are larger green spaces and parks (woods on Kirchhainer Damm). The street is indicated in the 1922 address book with the built up and inhabited southern plots 1–16 and on the other side of the street 17–19 (consecutive). Plots 2, 3, 7–9, 11, 12, 14 and the northern ones between Munich and Kaiser-Wilhelm-Straße (today: Kirchhainer Damm) are listed as construction sites (assigned, but undeveloped). Today there are developed plots 1–32 (continuous). Another Nürnberger Strasse is in the Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf district. | |
Nuthestrasse ( location ) | 1200 | Nuthe , river in Brandenburg | before 1922 | The Nuthestrasse lies east parallel to the railway line between Barnetstrasse and Steinstrasse. In the north, near the station, there are department stores on the railway side and in the southern area there are gardens for railway agriculture and commercial properties. The opposite side is built on with single and multi-family houses. | |
Oranienburger Strasse
( Location ) |
290 | Oranienburg , city in Brandenburg | before 1921 | The street is between Soldiner / Küstriner Straße (Küstriner Platz) and the district boundary on Rademeierweg. | |
Paetschstrasse
( Location ) |
500 | Wilhelm Paetsch (1858–1917), landowner in Lichtenrade | after 1922 | The paved road with two sidewalks lined with street trees got its name between 1922 and 1925. It is between Prinzessinnenstrasse and Wolzigerzeile. In 1943 there were 20 houses and summer houses on the street, some of them as multi-family houses with horseshoe numbering between Prinzessinnenstraße, Hohenzollernplatz, -straße and Wolzigerzeile. In the 1930 address book it has a connection to Charlottenstrasse beyond Prinzessinnenstrasse, but this is undeveloped. Today there are twelve residential buildings and on plot 33 there is an inhabited apartment building. | |
Paplitzer Strasse
( Location ) |
1200 | Paplitz , part of the city of Baruth / Mark in Brandenburg | Aug 31, 1949 | The street leads from Kirchhainer / Lichtenrader Damm over Saalower Straße as a dead end to the city limits. Here the Berlin Wall Trail leads at the east end of the railway bypass on the Brandenburg side, where arable land follows behind the forest of the former walled strip . The street in Lichtenrade-Ost was laid out around 1908 as Kaiserstraße . | |
Pasinger Strasse
( Location ) |
890 | Pasing , district of the city of Munich in Bavaria | July 20, 1938 | The street lies between Kirchhainer Damm and Wittelsbacherstraße and was named after the Erlanger and Rothenburger Straße , which were projected before 1922 and which in turn were named after cities in Bavaria. The Erlanger Road originally ran from the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Straße (now Kirchhainer Damm) on the Augsburgerstraße time. The course of Erlanger Strasse was changed around 1938, it then ran in an arc north to Wittelsbacherstrasse. | |
Passauer Strasse
( Location ) |
100 | Passau , city in Bavaria | before 1922 | It lies between Landshuter and Wittelsbacherstraße and was set up before 1920 with the project planning for the Bavarian Quarter in Lichterfelde Süd. | |
Pechsteinstrasse
( Location ) |
1180 | Max Pechstein (1881–1955), painter | Feb. 1, 1969 | The street leads between Im Domstift and Tutzinger Straße as a dead end to the city limits. Coming from the west, it bends southeast at Lichtenrader Graben (near Becksteinstrasse). A section each of Würzburger Strasse and Bayerische Strasse were merged in 1969 and renamed Pechsteinstrasse. The Bavarian road was built in the Bavarian district of Lichtenrade 1915 on the route of since before 1900 existing small-Ziethener Street, this resulted from Lichtenrade to Kleinziethen . The Bavarian road ran from the village street (now Alt-Lichtenrade) to the district line. From 1963, considerable construction work was carried out in this region and the route was partially built over. In 1969 a section was included in Bornhagenweg and another in Pechsteinstraße. | |
Petkusser Strasse
( Location ) |
520 | Petkus , part of the city of Baruth / Mark in Brandenburg | Aug 31, 1949 | Between Horstwalder (opposite Kesselstrasse) and Paplitzer Strasse, it lies parallel on the east side of the railway line and turns eastwards at the southern end because of the city limits. The planned eastern section of the railway bypass of the Wall Trail runs on Petkusser Straße . The course of the street was laid out in the 1920s with the settlement as Wrangelstrasse , after the popular Prussian military leader and governor of Berlin Papa Wrangel (1784–1877). | |
Pfarrer-Lütkehaus-Platz
( Location ) |
100 × 30 | Wilhelm Lütkehaus (1900–1980), pastor in Lichtenrade | Dec 20, 2001 | The square on Bahnhofstrasse has only the Salvatorkirche as a neighbor, a bus stop and several sales booths are located on the square opposite the Lichtenrade S-Bahn station . The square consists mainly of a parking lot at the S-Bahn station and a bus turning loop. Lütkehaus was pastor in Lichtenrade from 1932 to 1972, he was chairman of the St. Elisabeth Foundation, which runs the Christophorus Children's Hospital. In 1967 he received the Federal Cross of Merit, First Class. The district honored the life's work of Pastor Lütkehaus by giving it a name, the ceremonial inauguration of the previously unnamed square took place on December 22, 2001. The address of the church and its outbuildings is Pfarrer-Lütkehaus-Platz 1; it is located to the south in the depths of Bahnhofstrasse between the ground-level S-Bahn line and Briesingstrasse. | |
Polegrund
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
410 Poleigrund, old field name | Nov 1, 1953 | The road land and the commercial area on the north side are in Marienfelde , in the district the plots 3–39 (odd) are on the entire south side of the road. The road runs on an old raised bog area, where the Polei mint was (probably) native. The street lies between Motzener and Miethestrasse, halfway through the Nespersteig it is connected to the Schichauweg, which runs parallel to the south. The traffic route is laid out as road 92 in the development plan . The wide asphalt road with sidewalks (with pavement damage) on both sides is built on in the south with semi-detached houses with front gardens. The 30 zone is passable in both directions, from Miethestrasse it is forbidden for vehicles to enter, but it is free for cyclists. | |
Potsdamer Strasse
( Location ) |
580 | Potsdam , state capital of Brandenburg | before 1922 | Between Alt-Lichtenrade and Töpchiner Weg is Potsdamer Straße, which is not named after the direction, but together with the surrounding streets after cities in Prussia. | |
Prinzessinnenstrasse
( Location ) |
650 | princess | around 1912 | The quiet residential street is mostly built up with old and new city villas, there are only commercial units near the Lichtenrade S-Bahn station . The paved road ends (in the west) for cars as a dead end at a small wood that is located on the former strip of the wall in Brandenburg. The Hohenzollernstrasse is parallel to the south . 100 meters of the road between Wünsdorfer Straße and the railway overpass (continued from Bahnhofstraße) are paved and belong to the regional main road system of Berlin, the section leading to the outskirts to the west is classified as Category V (other). The S-Bahn station is on the northeast corner of the street, the railway overpass is barred, at ground level and single-track. Another Berlin street with the same name is located in the Kreuzberg district . | |
Prinz-Heinrich-Strasse
( Location ) |
320 | Prince Heinrich (1862–1929), German Grand Admiral , brother of Kaiser Wilhelm II. | before 1922 | The street is located between Blohmstrasse and Prinzessinnenstrasse not far from the Lichtenrade train station in the Hohenzollern district, where streets are named after the Hohenzollern people. | |
Raabestrasse
( Location ) |
870 | Wilhelm Raabe (1831–1910), writer | before 1922 | The street is numbered consecutively in the horseshoe numbering like the streets here in the poet's quarter in the north of the district. It is located between Lichtenrader Damm and Geibelstrasse (corner of Kettinger Strasse). | |
Rackebüller way
( Location ) |
1260 | Rackebüll (German name of Ragebøl), part of the town of Sønderborg in Denmark | 28 Sep 1935 | The Rackebüller Weg lies between Lenaustrasse and Goethestrasse and leads over the latter as a dead end street to the colony Wiesengrund, a garden for railway agriculture, which is here on the site of the former outer freight ring . The Gerhardtstrasse and Rückertstrasse , named after poets, were merged in 1935 and renamed Rackebüller Weg. After a referendum in February 1920, the north Schleswig town came to Denmark from Germany and had propaganda significance during the Nazi era as a result of the Treaty of Versaille . | |
Rademeierweg
( Location ) |
320 | Rademeier, old Lichtenrad farming family | Jan. 29, 1957 | The street, first street 13 of the development plan, runs between Bernauer and Oranienburger Straße. The street land and the southern plots 1–13 (odd) are in the district, the northern ones belong to Buckow , which means that the street also separates the districts of Tempelhof-Schöneberg and Neukölln . The eponymous Rademeier family is a Brandenburg farming and Schulzen family from Buckow, who had been based in Lichtenrade since 1697. After the separation, the land belonged to the Rademeier family. From 1720 to 1855, five family members provided the local mayors. | |
Rangsdorfer Strasse
( Location ) |
840 | Rangsdorf , municipality in Brandenburg | May 11, 1938 | The street is between Elisabethstraße and Wolzigerzeile. In 1938 Richterstrasse, which was laid out around 1913 and named after the theologian and politician Richter , was merged with Kaiserin-Augusta-Strasse , established around 1906 and renamed Rangsdorfer Strasse. | |
Rapstedter way
( Location ) |
790 | Rapstedt (German name of Ravsted ), municipality in Denmark | July 20, 1938 | The development plan XIII-223 was decided on May 15, 1987 for the Rapstedter Weg building area. Rapstedter Weg, previously street 19 of the development plan, is between Halkerzeile and Dörfelweg. The renaming in 1938, during the Nazi era , after the north Schleswig town, which came from Germany to Denmark after a referendum in February 1920 , also had propaganda reasons. | |
Rathenower Strasse
( Location ) |
520 | Rathenow , city in Brandenburg | around 1922 | The street between Bernauer Straße and Töpchiner Weg is located in an area in the northeast of the district in which streets are named after towns and cities near Berlin. | |
Regensburger Strasse
( Location ) |
410 | Regensburg , city in Bavaria | before 1915 | The street lies between Augsburger Straße (Augsburger Platz) and Kirchhainer Damm and was already planned for this route when the Bavarian Quarter was planned. | |
Rehagener Platz
( Location ) |
110 × 90 × 90 | Rehagen , part of the community Am Mellensee in Brandenburg | March 1, 1969 | Between 1923 and 1925, the square was named Moltkeplatz after the Prussian General Field Marshal Helmuth Karl Bernhard von Moltke (1800-1891), "Moltke the Elder (the Elder)" and was renamed in March 1969. It lies in the triangle between Rehagener, Goltzstrasse and Kirchbachstrasse, but is not included in the current official list. | |
Rehagener Strasse ( location ) | 900 | Rehagen , part of the community Am Mellensee in Brandenburg | March 1, 1969 | The street was planned and laid out before 1921, named after the Prussian General Moltke in the district with streets after Prussian military in Lichtenrade Süd between the railway line and the Chaussee . It runs from Mellener Straße to Horstwalder Straße. | |
Reichnerweg
( Location ) |
550 | Wilhelm Reichner (1885–1936), local writer and draftsman | Nov 1, 1953 | The street 3 is already mentioned in 1935 in the address book between Berliner Straße, Zeißpfad and Feldmark with a built-up and inhabited property. It is located between Lichtenrader Damm and Bernauer Straße on the northern edge of the district. It was named in 1953 as one of the numbered streets after Reichner, the local writer for the Teltow area, who was known for his hiking books about the Teltow ("Teltow Wanderer"). | |
Rennsteig
( Location ) |
290 | Rennsteig , Kammweg in the Thuringian Forest | Feb 13, 1957 | The street was laid out and laid out as Saalburgstraße in Lichtenrade-Ost (Taunusviertel) before 1922 . It is located between Groß-Ziethener Strasse and Weilburgstrasse. | |
Rhinstrasse ( location ) | 410 | Rhin , river in Brandenburg | around 1922 | Rhinstrasse is located between Dossestrasse and Steinstrasse; its location opens up three-story residential buildings southwest of Barnetstrasse from the 1960s. | |
Riedingerstrasse
( Location ) |
180 | Ludwig August Riedinger (1809–1879), entrepreneur | Feb 13, 1957 | The street lies between Bahnhofstraße and Gerstnerweg and connects to the residential area of John-Locke-Straße. On August 4, 1930, the previous road 87 was laid out as Riedingstrasse according to the development plan . In 1957 the name in Riedingerstraße was corrected. The paving of the road north of Gerstnerweg was not completed at the beginning of the 1960s and was probably also undeveloped. The final layout took place with the development on Barnetstrasse and the current alignment of Marienfelder Strasse to Barnetstrasse. | |
Rieflerstraße ( location ) | 160 | Sigmund Riefler (1847–1912), entrepreneur | Aug 4, 1930 | The road 96 according to the development plan was laid out in 1930 in its location between Nuthe and Rhinstrasse. | |
Ringelnatzstrasse
( Location ) |
340 | Joachim Ringelnatz (1883–1934), writer | June 1, 1970 | The Ringelnatzstraße lies between Alt-Lichtenrade and Fehlingstraße and continues the Happestraße over the latter. It was created with the development in the northern triangle between Alt-Lichtenrade and Lichtenrader Damm with three-story residential buildings. | |
Rohrbachstrasse
( Location ) |
500 | Franz Carl Emil Rohrbach (1854–1915), landowner in Lichtenrade | Dec. 19, 1903 | The street between Prinzessinnenstrasse and Wolziger was named after Rohrbach as co-founder and chairman of the landowners association in Lichtenrade. | |
Rotenkruger way
( Location ) |
1480 | Rotenkrug (German name of Rødekro ), municipality in Denmark | July 20, 1938 | The Rotenkruger Weg is interrupted between Fontane- and Goethestrasse in the poet's quarter Lichtenrades, the entire street route lies between Kettinger Strasse and Barnetstrasse ( Ekensunder Platz ). The Rotenkruger Weg is interrupted as a road in the area of the former outer freight ring north of Fontanestrasse. From Fontanestrasse, a dead end street leads 30 meters to a footpath that leads to the northern section of a cobblestone street with sidewalks. This section south of Goethestrasse is also a dead end, the necessary bypassing of the separation point to reach the properties is indicated as an additional sign at both points. | |
Rudolf-Pechel-Strasse
( Location ) |
280 | Rudolf Pechel (1882–1961), resistance fighter against National Socialism | March 3, 1969 | The road goes north from the former outer goods ring from Geibelstrasse in the arch. It surrounds the complex of a senior citizens' housing complex that was built on a site that was previously undeveloped. The street was previously specified as street 52a in the development plan in 1969 in the spelling Rudolph-Peschel-Straße and corrected to the current spelling that same year. | |
Saalower Strasse
( Location ) |
560 | Saalow , part of the municipality Am Mellensee in Brandenburg | Aug 31, 1949 | It is located between Paplitzer and Seydlitzstraße, west of the railway line on the southern edge of the district. With the developed land on the south side of the street, these border the city limits and were located on the Berlin Wall between 1961 and 1990. Via Seydlitzstraße, the street continues as a dead end 100 meters to the area of the “Parkwohnanlage Birkenhain” on Kirchhainer Damm, to the area of the old people's homes that have been here for many years. The already before 1922 (east of Galluner road) scale Kleist and the (Western) Winterfeldtstraße were merged in 1949 to Saalow road. | |
Scharnhorststrasse
( Location ) |
210 | Gerhard von Scharnhorst (1755–1813), Prussian general | before 1922 | Scharnhorststrasse is between Seydlitzstrasse and Lützowstrasse. In the district of Mitte there are an eponymous street. | |
Scheerbartweg
( Location ) |
110 | Paul Scheerbart (1863–1915), writer | Aug 31, 1949 | An already existing street was named in 1949 and goes west from Kettinger Weg, as a footpath a connection leads to Eisnerweg. The Scheerbartweg opens up the residential properties in the triangular settlement area that widens towards the north. | |
Schichauweg
( Location ) |
520 | Ferdinand Schichau (1814–1896), shipbuilding engineer and entrepreneur | Aug 4, 1930 | The Schichauweg is located between the railway bridge and Motzener Straße in the district. The plots 1–35 (odd) and 2–46 (even) belong to the district, the street continues to the west in Marienfelde . In the district, the Schichauweg is a busy residential street, which is mostly built up with single-family houses. From Motzener Strasse, in the Marienfelde district, there are some industrial settlements on the north side, access to the Marienfelde leisure park and the site of the former Marienfelde waterworks. The road ends for cars at an institute of the Federal Environment Agency . Pedestrians continue to Diedersdorfer Weg and the Marienfelde suburb. To the south of the road is the Marienfelder Feldmark with the grove on the Königsgraben. The Schichauweg S-Bahn station is right on the street . In the address book of 1932, the Schichauweg is assigned to Marienfelde, although the district boundaries within the Tempelhof district were not reorganized until 1949. | |
Schiller Street
( Location ) |
1630 | Friedrich Schiller (1759–1805), poet | before 1909 | Schillerstraße is located in the Dichterviertel, the northeastern settlement area in the district, between Kettingerstraße and Grimmstraße. However, to the north of Fontanestrasse, it is interrupted as a driveway by a footpath that leads through a green area between the gardens of the railway agriculture, which were created here on the railway site of the former outer freight ring . From Grimmstrasse northward, the cobblestone road merges westward into Fontanestrasse. From Goethestrasse in the north, a 250-meter-long cul-de-sac goes to a 30-meter-wide green area cordoned off by crash barriers. In the planned development of the settlement, Schillerstraße is parallel to Berliner Straße (today: Lichtenrader Damm) between Lenaustraße and through to Grimmstraße, in the south an unobserved Flurmark followed up to Marienfelder Straße. | |
Schottburger Strasse
( Location ) |
190 | Schottburg (German name of Skodborg ), municipality in Denmark | Oct 10, 1936 | The street lies between Lintruper and Uhlandstraße; it was already intended as Vossstraße when the settlement in the northeast of the district (Dichterviertel) was planned. The renaming took place in 1936 according to the pattern of the neighboring streets, as there were other Vossstraßen in Berlin, especially in central districts. For 1935, Vossstrasse is listed between Berliner, Lintruper, Gerhardtstrasse , Humboldtstrasse with five of 15 developed properties. | |
Schumpeterstrasse
( Location ) |
210 | Joseph Schumpeter (1883–1950), economist | April 1, 1975 | This street goes from the Groß-Ziethener Straße between Alt-Lichtenrade and Lichtenrader Damm to the north. A footpath continues across the green area at Lichtenrader Graben in Happestrasse. The street opens up several row houses to the west of the old town center and ends in a turning area. At the beginning of the 1960s, still intended as the southern part of Happestrasse and not precisely aligned, the road was probably expanded and laid out in connection with the new development in the district, which also led to a change in the route from Marienfelder to Barnetstrasse. In the development plan, the street lies in the route from street 479 and street 40 . | |
Schwalbachstrasse
( Location ) |
250 | Bad Schwalbach , town in Hesse | before 1922 | The road runs parallel to Krontalstrasse and the northern section of Braunfelsstrasse south of Töpchiner Weg and continues on Kambacher Strasse as a dead end. It was already entered in the planning of the settlement in the northeast of the district in this location to the south into the Feldmark, where the houses on Kloster-Zinna-Straße are today. | |
Schwebelstrasse
( Location ) |
390 | Oskar Schwebel (1845-1891), writer (history of Berlin and Brandenburg) | Nov 1, 1953 | Schwebelstraße was laid out and built on as Straße 10 in the 1930s . It lies between Lichtenrader Damm and Bernauer Strasse and continues on Landsberger Strasse. In the planning it is in the area of the "Settlement Building Block III" from the 1920s. The Church of the Holy Martyrs of Africa is on the south side of the eastern Schwebelstrasse . | |
Schwedter Strasse
( Location ) |
500 | Schwedt / Oder , city in Brandenburg | before 1922 | The street is located in the settlement area in the northeast of the district between Griembergweg and the junction of Bernauer Straße. From this connection a cul-de-sac continues to the south, which leads to the Alt-Lichtenrade as a footpath. The street is mainly built with single-family houses, to which open spaces were added in the 1990s, as well as two-storey terraced houses in particular at the south end. Schwedter Strasse, which was undeveloped at the time, is already listed in the 1921 plan in its current location. The Schwedter Straße is an unpaved road without road drainage, which is divided into thirds in width with an asphalt drive belt in the middle and edge strips designed by the residents, partly as a green area or paved sidewalk, but also unpaved. | |
Seltersstrasse
( Location ) |
100 | Selters , municipality in Hesse | before 1922 | Seltersstraße is located between Töpchiner Weg and Braunfelsstraße with the developed properties Seltersstraße 1, 1b (odd) and 2-4 (even). The road has a drivable asphalt strip and wide unpaved shoulders. It is the northernmost of the Taunusviertel in the district. The street is mentioned as Selterser Straße in the address books in the 1930s . | |
Seydlitzplatz ( location ) | 80 × 80 × 70 | Friedrich Wilhelm von Seydlitz (1721–1773), Prussian general | before 1923 | Seydlitzplatz is bordered by Paplitzer and Seydlitzstraße and on the south side of Scharnhorststraße. The place has a corresponding street sign, but it is missing from the official list. Surrounded by cobblestone streets, there is a tree (a large, old birch) on the lawn and three trees on the side of Paplitzer Strasse. Today's place is already marked in the settlement plan from 1921 in the same location. | |
Seydlitzstrasse
( Location ) |
580 | Friedrich Wilhelm von Seydlitz (1721–1773), Prussian general | before 1921 | The cobblestone street with the properties Seydlitzstrasse 1-40 (consecutive) in horseshoe numbering lies between Paplitzer and Saalower Strasse, over which it extends as a 60 meter long dead end street to the city limits. The dead end west of Kirchhainer Damm is provided with a lockable barrier and goes in the south as a footpath into a forest area in Brandenburg, where the Wall Trail is located. At the end of the dead end, the Berlin Wall ran beyond the West Berlin city limits between 1961 and 1990 . | |
Siekeweg
( Location ) |
270 | Sieke, old Lichtenrad farming family | Feb 13, 1957 | The Siekeweg, previously laid out as street 32a , is listed in the 1938 address book with five residential buildings. It lies in an L-shape between Aschaffenburger and Würzburger Strasse. The street with a strip of asphalt with a pavement edge opens up housing developments east of Aschaffenburger Strasse and the city limits. Broad unpaved edge strips of the road in the north-south part are overgrown with birch trees. The eponymous Sieke family is an old-established farming family in Lichtenrade. The Lehnschulzen family lived in Dorfstraße 6 (currently: Alt-Lichtenrade) until 1766. Johann Christian Sieke had to sell his farm because of indebtedness. | |
Simpsonweg
( Location ) |
340 | William von Simpson (1881–1945), writer | Jul 22, 1957 | The road 407 of the development plan was laid out in the mid-1950s and named in 1957, it lies between Nuthe and Geibelstrasse. The choice of name was based on the surrounding street names of the poets' quarter. | |
Skarbina Street
( Location ) |
540 | Franz Skarbina (1849–1910), painter | Aug 1, 1978 | The street lies between Tietjenstraße (extending Aschaffenburger Straße) and Nahariyastraße in an L-shaped arch. The Road 470 (East-West) and the northern part of the Aschaffenburg road were merged in 1978 and named in Skardinastraße. The new development area Lichtenrade-Ost (Nahariya and Skarbinastraße) for around 5000 residents was built between 1973 and 1977. | |
Sodenstrasse
( Location ) |
300 | Bad Soden am Taunus , town in Hesse | before 1922 | It is located between Weilburgstrasse and Groß-Ziethener Strasse and is shown in its current location on the map from 1921, at that time parceled but not yet built on. It belongs to the Taunusviertel. | |
Soldiner Strasse
( Location ) |
510 | Soldin (now Myślibórz ), city in Poland | before 1925 | The street was named between 1923 and 1925 and is located between Bernauer Straße and Töpchiner Weg. A street of the same name is located in the Berlin district of Wedding. | |
Spirdingseestrasse
( Location ) |
630 | Spirdingsee (now Śniardwy ), lake in Poland | May 11, 1938 | The street lies between Lützowstrasse and Petkusser Strasse. In the Lichtenrade Süd settlement between the railway line and the Chaussee , the eastern Bülow street between 1914 and 1925, and before 1922 the western Manstein street and the middle Schwerin street, all three named after Prussian generals, were laid out on this route . In 1938 these were combined to form Spirdingseestrasse. Around 1922, however, Bülowstrasse was planned to be continuous up to the Chaussee (today: Kirchhainer Damm) and the section between today's Seydlitzstrasse and Lützowstrasse was planned as Bülowplatz . | |
Steinmetzstrasse
( Location ) |
330 | Karl Friedrich von Steinmetz (1796–1877), Prussian field marshal | before 1922 | Steinmetzstraße lies between Petkusser and Paplitzer Straße with the properties Steinmetzstraße 1–9 (ongoing). | |
Steinstrasse ( location ) | 1060 | Heinrich Friedrich Karl vom und zum Stein (1757–1831), Prussian minister | before 1921 | Steinstrasse is between Barnetstrasse (Ekensunder Platz) and Bahnhofstrasse. In this street is the monument of the former malt house of the Schöneberger Schlossbrauerei, a five-storey brick building with high gables in the style of the neo-renaissance built in 1897/1898 . Around 1890 the Bornhagen estate was divided up and the general director of the Schöneberger Schlossbrauerei , Max Fincke, acquired 40 acres of land at the Lichtenrade stop of the Dresden Railway. In 1893 he had the "Wirt (h) shaus Lichtenrade" (later known as "Haus Buhr" and "Landhaus Lichtenrade") built at the Lichtenrade train station and beer was served in his brewery. Until the 1970s there was the Whitsun concert in the beer garden. For a long time, the malt house was the only industrial company in Lichtenrade, producing 60,000 quintals of malt annually . The major settlement on the Barnetstrasse between light Damm and stone road was 1962-1968 from the housing association town and country largely in bricks built. | |
Street ( Location ) |
9
570 | Number according to the development plan | before 1922 | It lies between Töpchiner Weg and Braunfelsstrasse. The street remained unnamed in a strip through the north of the Taunusviertel, in which commercial companies settled. This area was kept free for the use of the outer freight ring , which was retained by the subsequent changeover between West Berlin and the GDR, which ran east over Braunfelsstrasse . The industrial park itself was located south of the railway line of the outer freight ring. At the eastern end of Straße 9 (south side), a residential complex was built after 1995, some of the houses of which are also assigned to Taunusstraße and Krontalstraße, but cannot be reached by vehicles from the dead ends to the north on Wiesbadener Straße. | |
Street 40
( Location ) |
60 | Number according to the development plan | after 1940 | The officially listed street 40 goes from the Groß-Ziethener-Straße opposite the Schumpeterstraße to the south. The cul-de-sac, designated as a traffic-calmed area , opens up the assigned properties 1 and 3 (odd). It remained unnamed during the urban planning changes in the late 1960s / early 1970s. | |
Straussstrasse
( Location ) |
270 | Johann Strauss (1825–1899), composer | before 1922 | The street lies between Wolzigerzeile and Flotowstraße in the unofficially called Musikerviertel housing estate in the extreme southwest of the district. At the southern end it leads to the secondary bay at Lichtenrader Graben. In the planning based on the map from 1921, the continuation to the south to the city limits to the Mahlow district was planned. The route lies in the extension of Paetschstrasse. | |
Taunusstrasse
( Location ) |
690 | Taunus , low mountain range in Hesse | before 1922 | The Taunusstraße leads between Groß-Ziethener-Straße and Wiesbadener Straße after 60 meters as a dead end northwards to the industrial area south of Straße 9. A footpath goes through to Straße 9. This current route is still in line with the planning from around 1920. The Taunusstraße with the surrounding street names after locations in the Taunus is the name-building for the Taunusviertel, the street of the same name is also available in Friedenau and Grunewald . | |
Tietjenstrasse
( Location ) |
380 | Heinz Tietjen (1881–1967), theater director | Feb. 1, 1974 | Tietjenstraße was formed in 1974 by merging Straße 28 and Straße 440 , which lies between Aschaffenburger / Skarbinastraße and Beckmannstraße. It runs as a continuation of the Hanowsteig, connected to it by a footpath, to the five-story residential building on Aschaffenburger Straße. | |
Toepchiner way
( Location ) |
1340 | Töpchin , part of the city of Mittenwalde in Brandenburg | July 21, 1960 | The Töpchiner Weg connects Buckow and Lichtenrade , it lies between Gerlinger Strasse / Drusenheimer Weg and Alt-Lichtenrade. In the district it lies south of the district boundary , which crosses Rathenower Strasse a little north . This local connection is marked as Buckower Straße on a map from 1911 between Dorfstraße in Buckow (today Alt-Buckow) and Lichtenrader Dorfstraße. In the city map of 1920, the Buckower section of Buckower Straße from Dorfstraße (Buckow) to the border Lichtenrade was called Lichtenrader Straße . The continuation in Lichtenrade was still called Buckower Straße until 1960. During the planning in the 1960s after the Berlin Wall was closed around West Berlin , Töpchiner Weg was expanded as a main street and is now a wide four-lane street with continuous sidewalks. In the Buckower area, several renaming took place between the suburbs and the Buckower center up to the current road. It is shown in the Berlin road network as the main road of regional importance (Category III). It connects to the B 96 in the south via Fehlingstraße and has a connection in Buckow via Gerlinger to Buckower Damm or via Drusenheimer Straße to Marienfelder Chaussee , which was important as a Südstraße for West Berlin at the time of the Wall. The Lichtenrader Weg was renamed Töpchiner Weg in 1950 between the district boundary and Gerlinger Strasse. | |
Tutzinger Strasse
( Location ) |
470 | Tutzing , municipality in Bavaria | Nov 3, 1938 | The road goes from Pechsteinstraße to the southwest along the city limits. In the Bavarian Quarter, it is part of the settlement area planned in the 1920s as "Siedlung Baublock I". In the development plan, it is on the route from road 130 . The cul-de-sac ends southwest at the wooded area north of the “KGA Markische Heide” at the edge of the wood at Kirchhainer Damm. Between 1961 and 1990 the area of the Berlin Wall was located on Brandenburg territory behind the properties on the southeast side of the street . Today, after almost a quarter of a century, a strip of forest has grown through which the Berlin Wall Trail leads, and there are agricultural areas on the territory of Großziethen . There is a BMX track on the forest strip in Brandenburg from Tutzinger at the corner of Pechsteinstraße . | |
Uhlandstrasse
( Location ) |
840 | Ludwig Uhland (1787–1862), poet | before 1922 | Uhlandstrasse is located between Humboldtstrasse and Lenaustrasse. At its southern end (corner of Humboldtstrasse) is the Dietrich Bonhoeffer Church and the “Bruno H. Bürgel Primary School”. With its name and that of the surrounding streets, this area in the northwest of the district west of Lichtenrader Damm and north of Barnetstraße is referred to as the "poet's quarter" in the language of the Lichtenrader. | |
Warnitzer Strasse
( Location ) |
220 | Warnitz (German name of Varnæs ), municipality in Denmark | 28 Sep 1935 | The street goes as a dead end to the south from Goethestrasse and ends at the allotment gardens of the railway agriculture, which exist on the site of the track system of the former outer freight ring . In 1943, 15 of the 22 properties were built on with residential houses and two summer houses on the corner of Fontanestrasse are noted. The road was laid out on the route of road 44 in the development plan. The naming after Warnitz in North Schleswig, which came from Germany to Denmark after a referendum in February 1920, had propaganda significance against the "shame" of the Versailles Treaty during the Nazi era . Another Warnitzer Straße is in Hohenschönhausen . | |
Weberstrasse
( Location ) |
160 | Carl Maria von Weber (1786–1826), composer | before 1922 | The road leads between Beethoven and Brahmsstrasse. As a dead end, it still goes west to the Lichtenrader Graben on the eastern edge of the night bay. Here there is a parking area that has been expanded into a turning area. This now wooded area was also intended for settlement up to the Birkholz district. | |
Weilburgstrasse
( Location ) |
750 | Weilburg , city in Hesse | before 1922 | Weilburgstrasse is located between Alt-Lichtenrade (extending Weißenthurmstrasse) and Braunfelsstrasse. With the facility, it is the central street for a Lichtenrade-Ost settlement northeast of the village center, which is named Taunusviertel after the street name. In the 1922 address book it is listed in the location Berliner, Königstein-, Taunus-, Saalburg-, Kronthal-, Soden-, Braunfelsstraße, districts Klein- and Groß-Ziethen. The north side as sold undeveloped land and on the south side with four residential buildings on land 32–47 with horseshoe numbering . | |
Weißenthurmstrasse
( Location ) |
150 | Weißenthurm , town in Rhineland-Palatinate | April 1, 1970 | The street is between Alt-Lichtenrade and Happestraße. Weißenthurmstraße is a concrete road with two sidewalks that was laid out to the west as an extension of Weilburgstraße and which was initially unnamed. | |
Werfelstrasse
( Location ) |
230 | Franz Werfel (1890–1945), writer | Feb 13, 1957 | Werfelstrasse lies between Simpsonweg and Geibelstrasse in the route of Strasse 408 in the development plan. It is located in the south of the poet's quarter Lichtenrades, with this reference the street name was chosen. | |
Wiesbadener Strasse
( Location ) |
660 | Wiesbaden , capital of Hesse | before 1922 | The street is between Töpchiner Weg and Braunfelsstrasse. In the Lichtenrade-Ost settlement area known today as the Taunusviertel, it lies on the northern edge. In 1921 two plots of land were developed: on the southeast corner of Königsteinstrasse and on the northwest corner of Taunusstrasse. On the southern side of the street at the corner of Krontalstraße is the “School in the Taunusviertel” between Wiesbadener and Homburgstraße. | |
Wildauer Strasse
( Location ) |
340 | Wildau , city in Brandenburg | May 11, 1938 | The street opens up the residential buildings in the Maffei- / Wünsdorfer / Elisabethstraße / Franziusweg district in an L-shaped course (west to south) between Franziusweg and Elisabethstraße. The street was laid out as Luisenstraße as early as 1922 , which in 1930 is mentioned as undeveloped on Kaiserin-Augusta-Allee . In the 1939 address book, Wildauer Strasse between Elisabethstrasse and Strasse 41b is listed with 13 of the 30 inhabited plots, plots 27, 29, and 31 are designated as failed. 1938 neither Luisenstrasse nor Wildauer Strasse are mentioned. | |
Wittelsbacherstrasse
( Location ) |
1040 | Wittelsbacher , Bavarian noble family | Feb. 2, 1915 | Wittelsbacherstraße, named after the family of the rulers of the Kingdom of Bavaria at the time it was named, is the street bordering the south of the planned "Bavarian Quarter" settlement. In the south-east of the street, the “Siedlung Building Block II” is planned towards the Klein-Ziethen district. Wittelsbacherstraße with lots 1–89a (odd) and 2–92 (even) is between Kirchhainer Damm and Pechsteinstraße, further over this as a dead end street for 140 meters to the city limits. This cul-de-sac opens up a few apartment buildings as far as the strip of forest that has grown today on the site of the former Berlin Wall . A footpath leads to the Berlin Wall Trail and on to the agricultural area, which is located in Brandenburg. | |
Wolziger line
( Location ) |
680 | Wolzig , part of the community Heidesee in Brandenburg | Feb 12, 1935 | The street was laid out in 1889 as Richard-Wagner-Straße and was renamed in 1935. Before that, there were five Richard Wagner Streets in different parts of Greater Berlin , all of which were renamed in 1935 except for the Charlottenburger. In the 1936 address book, the Wolziger line between the Dresdner Bahn and the Birkholz district (outside Berlin) is recorded; Lortzing, Mozart, Strauss and Hilbert, Karl, Krüger, Paetsch, Nichter and Rohrbachstraße flow on the left. One third of the 64 numbered plots are built on and inhabited, the other part is construction sites or summer houses and gardens. Today plots 1–63 (odd) and 2–64 (even) are assigned to the street between Lortzingstrasse / the corner of Hilbertstrasse / Mozartstrasse and Rohrbachstrasse. A cycle and footpath continues the street over the city limits in the wall strip . Motor traffic is blocked by transverse guard rails. The asphalt road is built with partly larger housing estates and has sidewalks and tree-lined green verges. At the western end, the night bay borders at 180 meters on the southern roadside . | |
Wünsdorfer Strasse
( Location ) |
1360 | Wünsdorf , part of the city of Zossen in Brandenburg | May 11, 1938 | The street lies between Schichauweg and Prinzessinnenstraße. It is a moderately busy connecting road between the Lichtenrade S-Bahn station and the Schichauweg S-Bahn station . The street runs parallel to the railway line to the west and is predominantly built with single-family houses. There are a few inconspicuous buildings facing the railway . There is a large playground nearby at Erich-Hermann-Platz . The street had been laid out to the west along the Dresdner Bahn as Kaiser-Friedrich-Straße before 1900 , the street at the (then) Lichtenrade stop was important for the development of the Lichtenrade-Ost settlement area (building block I), the Schichauweg station was closed this time not yet. | |
Wurzburger Strasse
( Location ) |
500 | Würzburg , city in Bavaria | around 1915 | The road leads between Beckmannstrasse (bend in Pechsteinstrasse) over Aschaffenburger Strasse and Siekeweg, over the latter as a dead end street to the city limits. The road ends here and meets the Berlin Wall Trail . The former area of the Berlin Wall is now a strip of woods , behind the on Brandenburg territory farmland of the municipality Großziethen is. The former part of Würzburger Strasse between Alt-Lichtenrade and Beckmannstrasse was renamed Pechsteinstrasse together with part of Bayerische Strasse on February 1, 1969. The road was laid out with the project planning for the Bavarian Quarter in Lichtenrade Süd and set up as the northern boundary of the planned development area. | |
Zeißpfad
( Location ) |
(in the district) |
740 Carl Zeiß (1816–1888), entrepreneur | July 13, 1934 | The street lies between Baldersheimer and Griembergweg, but the district boundary is between Baldersheimer- and Reichnerweg, so that only lots 9–87 (odd) and 10–86 (even) belong to the district. The northern section is in Buckow . The Zeißpfad lies on the route from Straße 2 and Straße 39 of the development plan. In the address book of 1935 and 1936 it is assigned to the Mariendorf district in the overview, but not recorded in the name part. 1937 and 1938 are Lichtenrade and since 1939 Buckow and Lichtenrade are indicated as districts. Between the developed plots, further plots are indicated as construction sites, which refers to undeveloped, allocated plots, a total of 19 of the 54 existing plots are built on, with numbers being reserved for Buckow. | |
Zescher Strasse
( Location ) |
270 | Zesch am See , part of the municipality of Lindenbrück (district of the city of Zossen ) in Brandenburg | Aug 31, 1949 | The street is between Bahnhofstrasse and Haeselerstrasse. It had already been laid out as Bismarckstrasse before 1912 ; the location between Bahnhofstrasse, Goltzstrasse, Kirchbachstrasse and Moltkeplatz with the built-up property on Moltkeplatz, which belongs to Moltkestrasse, is in the address book for this in 1922. |
Some planned and former streets
In Lichtenrade a large number of streets were renamed compared to other Berlin districts. The location on the outskirts of Greater Berlin , Lichtenrade is only listed in the address book from 1922, the renaming of street names that have existed in Berlin several times since the formation of Greater Berlin, the change in the district boundaries within the administrative district are reasons for this. In the south-west of Lichtenrade, west of the railway line , the settlements, such as Lichtenrade-West, were built on previously unused farmland, or the existing district boundaries were exceeded during the expansion and new construction of roads, for example by using the Marienfelder Feldmark, and in retrospect the streets became uniform named. Often the streets in Lichtenrade were less developed or not yet developed, so that they were given new names, while the developed streets of the same name in more central districts were ignored by renaming.
In 1943 the following streets were laid out and built on without any special names: Straße 3, Straße 6a, Straße 8, Straße 10, Straße 13, Straße 20, Straße 20a, Straße 23, Straße 24, Straße 24a, Straße 26, Straße 32, Street 32a, Street 41, Street 41a, Street 41b, Street 102 (vacant), Street 144 . For 1930 there were street A, street B, street 1, street 2, street 87, street 88, street 89 , which are listed as laid out and developed with residential buildings, street 97, street 103 also come off Steinstraße , but not built on. Other streets in the development plan were also named with the route or layout.
Old names | from | to | renamed | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|
Annenstrasse | 1925 | Sep 9 1931 | → Abendrotweg | The Anne Street ran from the Wünsdorfer road to peace trail. The name probably refers to Anna , the mother of Mary and grandmother of Jesus. |
Arndtstrasse | before 1920 | Aug 4, 1930 | → Lintruper Strasse | On April 12, 1889, the extension (street no. 27 c, section II of the development plan) was also called Arndtstraße . It was named after the writer Ernst Moritz Arndt (1769–1860). |
Auerbachplatz | after 1925 | May 16, 1938 | → Ekensunder Platz | The square was laid out between 1925 and 1929 and is already listed in the 1926 address book. Berthold Auerbach (1812–1882), actually Moses Baruch Auerbacher, was named as the writer for the adjacent street and was renamed in 1938 due to the writer's Jewish origins . |
Auerbachstrasse | after 1914 | May 16, 1938 | → Ekensunder way | The street got its name between 1914 and 1921. Berthold Auerbach (1812–1882), actually Moses Baruch Auerbacher, writer was the namesake for the street south of Grimmstrasse. In 1938, due to the writer's Jewish origins , the street was renamed like other streets after Jewish personalities on the same day. The new name referred to a place in Denmark that was separated from Germany after the referendum in 1920. |
Bavarian Street | Feb. 2, 1915 | Feb. 1, 1969 | → Pechsteinstrasse → Bornhagenweg |
The Bavarian road ran from the village street (now Alt-Lichtenrade) until Gemarkungsgrenze by the (Lichtenrader) "Bavarian Quarter". From 1963, considerable construction work was carried out in this region. In 1969 one section was renamed Bornhagenweg and another to Pechsteinstraße. |
Berlin street | around 1921 | Aug 31, 1949 | → Alt-Lichtenrade | It led in the street of the Chaussee (today the B 96 ) to Dorfstraße and is named after the direction from northwards from Lichtenrade to Berlin. When Greater Berlin was formed, the direction given led to 29 Berlin streets, the number of which was reduced in various naming campaigns. The road was routed through the southern bypass road (today: Lichtenrader Damm) west of the village center, so when the main road system was redesigned in the southern districts, Berliner Straße was merged with Dorfstraße to Alt-Lichtenrade. |
Bismarckstrasse | before 1912 | Aug 31, 1949 | → Zescher Strasse | The street on Lichtenrader Bahnhofstrasse, named after Chancellor Otto von Bismarck , was one of over 25 streets of the same name in Greater Berlin and was therefore adapted to the surrounding street names during the extensive renaming in 1949. |
Blankenfelder Strasse | before 1905 | Feb. 28, 1911 | → Lützowstrasse | The overland route leading south from Lichtenrade towards Blankenfelde was renamed when it was expanded. |
Blücherstrasse | after 1914 | Aug 31, 1949 | → Horstwalder Strasse | The street was named after Gebhard Blücher von Wahlstatt (1799–1875), Prussian landowner and hereditary member of the Prussian manor house , when the settlement around the village center Lichtenrade was expanded . Since he was the namesake for streets in several Berlin suburbs, there were several streets of the same name in Greater Berlin and the street name was changed by merging with Papestrasse . As is the case with Bismarckstrasse in the outskirts, as the state of development was lower here than in the city center. |
Blumenthalstrasse | before 1922 | Aug 31, 1949 | → Galluner Strasse | The street was named between 1914 and 1922 after the Berlin publicist and theater director Oscar Blumenthal (1852-1917). The name was changed because there had been several streets with the same name in Berlin since 1920 . |
Buckower Street | after 1914 | July 21, 1960 | → Töpchiner Weg | The Buckower road was on the map of 1911 already, especially between the village street (now Alt-Buckow) in Buckow and Lichtenrader village street located. In the city map of 1920, the section of Buckower Strasse from Dorfstrasse (Buckow) to the border Lichtenrade was called Lichtenrader Strasse . The continuation in Lichtenrade was initially still called Buckower Straße . It was changed with the planning for the Buckow building reserve area (Gropiusstadt) together with the (planned) continuation. |
Bülowplatz | after 1914 | May 11, 1938 | → Spirdingseestrasse | The place, between 1914 and 1925 in connection with the neighboring street after the Prussian general Friedrich Wilhelm Bülow von Dennewitz (1755-1816), was canceled in 1938 - when the Spirdingseestrasse was named. |
Bülowstrasse | after 1914 | May 11, 1938 | → Spirdingseestrasse | The street was named between 1914 and 1925 after the Prussian general Friedrich Wilhelm Bülow von Dennewitz (1755-1816). There were several Bülowstrasse in Berlin, of which the Lichtenrader was renamed in 1938 in one act with other streets due to the lack of expansion in order to improve the clarity of street names in Greater Berlin. Initially, the road was intended to be continuous up to the Chaussee (today: Kirchhainer Damm) and the western connection was planned as Bülowplatz in Lichtenrade Süd. |
Bürgerstrasse | after 1914 | April 10, 1933 | → Feldstedter Weg | The street was named between 1914 and 1925 after the poet Gottfried August Bürger (1747–1794) and was laid out in the settlement area named after writers in the north of the district. |
Chausseestrasse | before 1900 | Aug 31, 1949 | → Mariendorfer Damm | The name of the Chaussee between Mariendorf and Lichtenrade (Berlin-Zossen) was (in contrast to the Chaussee running east of Buckow) named as a street. The renaming in 1949 took place in the course of the entire change in the road situation in the southern Teltow suburbs. |
Village street | 13th century | Aug 31, 1949 | → Alt-Lichtenrade | The street in the Angerdorf Lichtenrade was dissolved in 1949 as part of the replacement of the multiple village streets in the districts of Berlin by the prefix Alt- before the name of the district. |
Erlanger Street | before 1922 | July 20, 1938 | → Pasinger Strasse | The Erlanger Road was originally from the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Straße (now Kirchhainer Damm) on the Augsburgerstraße time. The course of Erlanger Straße was led in an arch north to Wittelsbacher Straße due to construction work around 1938, Rothenburger Straße was included in Pasinger Straße after the original name was omitted because of a street of the same name in Neukölln. |
Fichtestrasse | before 1920 | July 20, 1938 | → Rotenkruger Weg | Before street 10 of the development plan, it and the surrounding streets were also named after a writer of the Weimar Classics, the philosopher Johann Gottlieb Fichte (1762-1814). The street name existing seven times in Berlin was renamed Lichtenrade in 1938. |
Frankfurter Strasse | after 1923 | April 21, 1932 | → Griembergweg | The street parallel to Potsdamer Strasse was laid out in the area of the garden city settlement Block III in the north of Lichtenrad. According to the 1932 address book, it is located between Berliner and Landsberger Strasse, partly between arable land, partly unallocated parcels and only five developed plots, so that the name was changed in honor of the local politician Griemberg, who died in 1928 (district head of Tempelhof, church elder and treasurer in Lichtenrade). |
Gellertstrasse | before 1922 | Jan. 23, 1931 | → Halker line | The street parallel to Schillerstraße was named after the poet Christian Fürchtegott Gellert (1715–1769). This street name in the outskirts was given up in favor of the more centrally located Gellertstrasse in 1931 as part of the improvement of the clarity of Berlin streets. |
Gerhardtstrasse | before 1922 | 28 Sep 1935 | → Rackbüller way | The street is named after the hymn poet and theologian Paul Gerhardt (1607–1676). It is located in the north of the district, where there are several streets named after writers, some of which have been renamed. The Gerhardt and Rückertstraße were merged in 1935 and renamed Rackebüller way. |
Goebenstrasse | before 1922 | after 1932 | canceled | Goebenstrasse, named after August Karl von Goeben (1816–1880), Prussian general, ran between Goltzstrasse and Paplitzer Strasse (previously: Kaiserstrasse ). In 1935 there was already a cemetery at that time and it was partially built over. |
Grimmplatz | before 1922 | after 1937 | canceled | In the official overview plan of January 1, 1922, Grimmplatz , named after the Germanists and fairy tale collectors Brothers Grimm, is listed. Between 1937 and 1938, the name was probably withdrawn because Grimmstrasse had been extended to Marienfelder Strasse. The Grimmplatz was once on Marienfelder / Nuthestraße. |
Großbeerenstrasse | 19th century | 1904 | → Horstwalder Strasse | The municipality of Großbeeren (today: Teltow-Fläming district) is named after the battle of Großbeeren in 1813 and is in keeping with the surrounding streets . Greater importance was attached to Großbeerenstraße (outside the district), which comes from the city center and is still called today. |
Hebbelstrasse | before 1922 | Jan. 12, 1932 | → Kettinger Strasse | The street was in the settlement in the north of Lichtenrades with other streets named after writers after the playwright Friedrich Hebbel (1813–1863). The streets that existed several times in Berlin were also renamed with the same names as streets in the area. |
way home | around 1918 | Sep 9 1931 | → Abendrotweg | The way home ran from Franziusweg to Friedensweg. It was created in the block I settlement (a warrior settlement according to new aspects), the street name here refers to Heimstatt, a synonym for apartment and accommodation. When the street layout was changed, it was combined with Annenstraße and renamed. |
Humboldtplatz | before 1922 | before 1925 | canceled | In the official overview plan of January 1, 1922, this place is shown as a decorative place in the newly created settlement. However, the area was built on. It was located between Humboldtstrasse, Lessingstrasse and Uhlandstrasse and was probably not carried out when the settlement was expanded. The naming after the scientist Alexander von Humboldt (1769-1859) was based on the Humboldtstrasse. |
Kaiser-Friedrich-Platz | Jun 24, 1893 | May 11, 1938 | → Wünsdorfer Strasse | Before place E of Department II of the development plan, it was between Elisabeth- and Blohmstraße, on Kaiser-Friedrich-Straße (today: Wünsdorfer Straße) near the S-Bahn site. In 1938 the name was deleted. |
Kaiser-Friedrich-Strasse | before 1900 | May 11, 1938 | → Wünsdorfer Strasse | The road along the S-Bahn line between the two stations, which is important for the development of the Lichtenrade West settlement area, was built after Emperor Friedrich III, who died in 1888 . . |
Kaiserin-Augusta-Strasse | after 1906 | May 11, 1938 | → Rangsdorfer Strasse | The street was named after the wife of Emperor Wilhelm I Augusta von Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach (1811–1890) in the area of Prinzessinnenstrasse and Hohenzollernstrasse. The judge street and the Empress Augusta Road were merged in 1938 and renamed Rangsdorfer road. |
Kaiserplatz | before 1913 | around 1914 | → Hohenzollernplatz | The original Kaiserplatz (with reference to the German Emperor ) was intended for Lichtenrade West as a decorative square, but the name was given up in favor of the square of the same name in Lichtenrade East. |
Kaiserstrasse | around 1908 | Aug 31, 1949 | → Paplitzer Strasse | The street planned as the main street in Lichtenrade Ost was named in honor of the German Emperor , as Wilhelm and Friedrich were already taken in the suburb of Lichtenrade. The ambiguity of the street name in Berlin led to the renaming in 1949. |
Kaiser-Wilhelm-Strasse | before 1902 | Aug 31, 1949 | → Kirchhainer Damm | In honor of Emperor Wilhelm I (Friedrich Ludwig Wilhelm), who died in 1888 , the Chaussee (today B 96 ) leading through Lichtenrade was named, and the name was changed as part of the district-wide naming of the Chausseen in the south of Berlin. |
Kantstrasse | before 1914 | Jan. 23, 1931 | → Krusauer Strasse | The road 89 was named after the philosopher Immanuel Kant (1724-1804) when equipped in the north of the district and had the schleswigen soft (Danish) place as a name because of the ambiguity of the name in Greater Berlin. |
Klein-Beerener-Strasse | before 1908 | 1911 | → Goltzstrasse | It is the historic overland route between Lichtenrade and Klein-Bereren , with the expansion the more urban name was given to General Goltz. |
Klein-Ziethener-Strasse | before 1900 | around 1915 | → Pechsteinstrasse | Under this name, the road is the land route from the village of Lichtenrade to the neighboring village of Klein-Ziethen in the south-east. The renaming took place with the planning of the Bavarian Quarter, whereby the Pechsteinstraße is today due to the construction on this route. |
Kleiststrasse | before 1922 | Aug 31, 1949 | → Saalower Strasse | The street in the north of Lichtenrad was named after the playwright and lyric poet Heinrich von Kleist (1777-1811) and here, too, was renamed, as there was also a Kleiststraße in the center of Berlin. |
Queen Augusta Allee | before 1922 | around 1930 | omitted | It was planned to be north of Rangsdorfer Strasse between Elisabethstrasse and Maffeistrasse in Lichtenrade West, remained undeveloped and fell into disuse between 1929 and 1930. It was named after Augusta von Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach (1811–1890), Queen of Prussia and, as the wife of Kaiser Wilhelm I, German Empress. |
Leopoldstrasse | before 1922 | Aug 31, 1949 | → Galluner Strasse | It was named after Leopold I, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau (called the Old Dessauer) (1676–1747). The renaming was also done to reduce the ambiguity of Berlin street names. |
Avenue of lime trees | before 1922 | around 1933 | omitted | The Lindenallee ran from Bayerische Strasse over Buchenallee to the Großziethen district and was still undeveloped in 1929. It fell away between 1932 and 1935. |
Lindenstrasse | before 1922 | after 1932 | → Münchener Strasse | The Linde street was named 1918 to 1922. It was the extension of Münchener Strasse and was included in it between 1932 and 1935. |
Lisztstrasse | before 1922 | Aug 24, 1936 | → Löwenbrucher way | The street named after Franz Liszt (1811–1886), composer, in the 'composers' settlement' between the railway line and night bay was renamed in 1938 because of the ambiguity of the street name since the formation of Greater Berlin , like other surrounding 'musician' streets after Brandenburg towns . |
Lützowplatz | before 1923 | after 1938 | omitted | Lützowplatz still existed in 1938 and was named after Baron Ludwig Adolf Wilhelm von Lützow (1782–1834), Prussian general of the Lützow Freikorps. The square was located at the confluence of today's Paplitzer Strasse where Lützowstrasse meets. It was probably planned as a jewelry place, but was not implemented. |
Luisenstrasse | around 1922 | May 11, 1938 | → Wildauer Strasse | The street in Lichtenrade West near Prinzessinnenstrasse and Hohenzollernstrasse is named after Luise von Prussia (1838–1923) a member of the Hohenzollern family. The reason for the renaming in May 1938 is the frequency of this street name, especially in the center of Berlin and the will of the authorities to remove the ambiguity of Berlin street names. |
Mansteinstrasse | before 1922 | May 11, 1938 | → Spirdingseestrasse | Named after Gustav von Manstein (1805–1877), Prussian infantry general, Lichtenrader Strasse was renamed Berlin W to preserve Mansteinstrasse. |
Manteuffelstrasse | before 1922 | Aug 31, 1949 | → Klausdorfer Weg | Like other Lichtenraders named after the Prussian military, this one was named after Edwin von Manteuffel (1809-1885), General Field Marshal and first imperial governor of Alsace-Lorraine, in favor of the more developed streets of the same name in the central districts, especially since the street name in the administrative district Tempelhof was double. |
Mendelssohnstrasse | before 1922 | before 1925 | not executed | The planned street went from Richard-Wagner-Straße (today: Wolzigerzeile) and was named after the composer Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy (1809–1847) in the musicians' settlement, but was not carried out and therefore withdrawn as the street name. |
Meyerbeerstrasse | before 1887 | May 16, 1938 | → Egsdorfer Weg | The street is named after the composer Giacomo Meyerbeer (1791–1864), (actually Jacob Liebmann Meyer Beer) and was renamed with other streets in May 1938 because of its Jewish origins . |
Moltkeplatz | after 1923 | March 1, 1969 | → Rehagener Platz | Between 1923 and 1925, the square was named after Helmuth Karl Bernhard von Moltke (1800-1891), "Moltke the Elder (the Elder)", Prussian field marshal. The renaming obviously took place with reference to the simultaneous change of the name of the adjacent Moltkestrasse . |
Moltkestrasse | before 1921 | March 1, 1969 | → Rehagener Strasse | The Moltkestrasse named after the Prussian general Helmuth Karl Bernhard von Moltke (1800-1891) existed with the formation of Greater Berlin in 1922 in 16 districts, so that the renaming took place in 1969 as part of the reduction of street names of the same name in Berlin. |
Papestrasse | 1904 | Aug 31, 1949 | → Horstwalder Strasse | It was named after the lawyer Heinrich Eduard von Pape (1816–1888) due to its importance in the formation of the North German Confederation. The Blücherstraße and Papestraße were renamed in 1949 in Horstwalder road adapted to the surrounding streets. |
Park path | before 1922 | Oct. 20, 1932 | → Maffeistraße | The Parkweg was laid out as a street in the settlement planned as a garden city, but was included in Maffeistraße (which was already named on Marienfelder Flur) when the street was expanded in 1932. |
Reuterstrasse | after 1923 | April 11, 1969 | → canceled | The street was named after the Low German poet and writer Fritz Reuter between 1923 and 1925 . Reuterstraße was between Dorfstraße and the southern bypass road. In 1943 there was a lumber yard and a house next to vacant lots on the street. In connection with the redesign of the intersection of Barnet- / Groß-Ziethener Straße and Lichtenrader Damm, Reuterstraße was canceled, the street became part of Groß-Ziethener Straße and merged with the relocated Barnetstraße. |
Richard-Wagner-Strasse | 1889 | Feb 12, 1935 | → Wolziger line | The composer Richard Wagner (1813-1883) gave the street in Lichtenrade its name, which, however, had the same name in five other districts, so that it was renamed in the district in 1935 in order to reduce the ambiguity of Berlin street names. Especially since the road was still vacant in 1922. |
Richterstrasse | around 1913 | May 11, 1938 | → Rangsdorfer Strasse | The judge street and the Empress Augusta Road were merged in 1938 and renamed Rangsdorfer road. The street name goes to August Ferdinand Richter (1822–1903) who, as a local personality, was a member of the Prussian House of Representatives and a friend of the culture minister Adalbert Falk, on whose school laws he was instrumental. For 1922, Richterstrasse is listed in the address book between Kaiserin-Augusta- and Richard-Wagner-Strasse , crossing Prinzessinnenstrasse and Hohenzollernstrasse, ten of the 35 listed properties (some with apartment buildings) being built on and inhabited. |
Riedingstrasse | Aug 4, 1930 | Feb 13, 1957 | → Riedingerstrasse | The road 87 according to the development plan was named in 1930 after the entrepreneur August Riedinger (1845-1919), who worked on the development of steerable airships. The street name was corrected after the family name in 1957. |
Roonstrasse | before 1900 | May 1st 1969 | → Mellener Strasse | The street was named after the Prussian general and minister Albrecht von Roon (1803–1879), who achieved his popularity together with Bismarck and whose name was the template for street names in ten Berlin suburbs (which became districts with the formation of Greater Berlin). In the course of eliminating ambiguities in Berlin streets, Lichtenrader Strasse was renamed. |
Rothenburger Strasse | before 1922 | March 20, 1939 | → Pasinger Strasse | The street was named after Rothenburg ob der Tauber (today: District of Ansbach, Free State of Bavaria) in the "Bavarian Quarter" . As a result of construction work in this area, the alignment of Erlanger Strasse (today: Pasinger Strasse) was changed, and Rothenburger Strasse was also included in Pasinger Strasse. The street name was canceled in 1939. |
Rückertstrasse | before 1925 | 28 Sep 1935 | → Rackebüller way | The street was named after the poet and orientalist Friedrich Rückert (1788–1866) when the settlement was created in the north of the district between 1923 and 1925 . The street name also existed in Berlin C, Charlottenburg, Cöpenick, Steglitz and was changed to Lichtenrade in 1935 when Gerhardtstrasse and Rückertstrasse were merged to standardize the greater Berlin street names. |
Saalburgstrasse | before 1922 | Feb 13, 1957 | → Rennsteig | The Saalburg fort near Dornholzhausen (Bad Homburg), a Roman fort on the Limes in the Hochtaunus, gave its name to this street in the 'Taunusviertel'. A street of the same name in the Tempelhof district (same district) was the reason for the renaming. The Thuringian city of Saalburg an der Saale was presumably subordinated to the authorities, so that the historic Rennsteig (long-distance hiking trail in Thuringia) was chosen for the new street name . |
Schubertstrasse | after 1925 | Aug 24, 1936 | → Löwenbrucher way | The Austrian composer Franz Schubert (1797–1828) gave this street in the south-west of Lichtenrade its name (composers and musicians' quarter). During the expansion of the settlement, however, this street named between 1925 and 1929 (unbuilt from Lortzingstrasse) was merged with Lisztstrasse (between Lortzingstrasse and " Berl.-Dresdn. Eisenbahn " with nine inhabited houses) as the southernmost street in Lichtenrade West and renamed it. |
Schwerinstrasse | before 1922 | May 11, 1938 | → Spirdingseestrasse | The Prussian Field Marshal General (under Friedrich II.) Kurt Christoph von Schwerin (1684–1757) gave the street its name, also in Berlin W, Mariendorf and Zehlendorf he gave it its name, so that this ambiguity was removed by renaming in May 1938, along with other cases. |
Sophienplatz | before 1925 | May 11, 1938 | → canceled | The square on the northern edge of the "Prinzessinnenviertel" is named after the sister of the last German Empress Louise . According to the 1935 address book, it was located between Kaiser-Friedrich-Straße (today: Wünsdorfer Straße) and Grenzweg (today: Maffeistraße) and is still noted in 1939 as built with an apartment building. As a result of the change of alignment, the name was withdrawn and the place was canceled, in the address book in 1940 the note is: “s. Wünsdorfer Strasse ”. |
(Southern) bypass | after 1930 | Aug 31, 1949 | → Lichtenrader Damm | The bypass road was created for the western bypass of the village center Lichtenrade and relieved the Berliner Straße and the Dorfstraße (both today: Alt-Lichtenrade), as it bypasses the village center, the name is justified. In 1932, with a house between Berliner and Goltz- / Bahnhof- / Dorfstraße, she is listed for the first time in the address book. In the 1935 address book, the southern bypass road is given as Goltzstrasse / Bahnhofstrasse, Dorfstrasse, Marienfelder, Grimmstrasse, Goethestrasse, some of which leads through arable land, four residential buildings are noted as plots (without numbering). The same entry, supplemented by several summer houses, for 1942. In 1949 the street was included in the regular street system in the south of Berlin and the street names were redesigned. |
Viktoriastrasse | before 1922 | Feb 13, 1957 | → Blohmstrasse | The Victoria Street is street / in the address book in 1943 between Wünsdorfer Prince Henry Street and the district recorded Marienfelde, with the expansion of the settlement Lichtenrade West over the district border in the Marienfelder Feldmark into the continuing road was created in the neighboring suburb as Blohmstraße. In 1957 Viktoriastraße was incorporated into Blohmstraße within the Tempelhof district. In 1932 there were 17 Viktoriastraße in Berlin districts and in 1943 there were twelve. The street name goes back to the German Empress Victoria (Kaiserin Friedrich). |
Vossstrasse | around 1920 | 1936 | → Schottburger Strasse | The street named after the poet Johann Heinrich Voss (1751–1826) lay in the north of the district. When Greater Berlin was formed, the street came from the suburb to the Berlin urban area, where there was already a street with this name in Berlin W 8. The street in the district is still undeveloped from Uhlandstrasse, for 1935 the street is still between Berliner, Lintruper, Gerhardtstrasse and Humboldtstrasse and has four residential buildings. Between Berliner and Lintruper Strasse it was vacant in 1935, a section that was not named in Schottburger Strasse in 1936. |
Forest path | before 1922 | Aug 31, 1949 | → Franziusweg | With the creation of the settlement planned as a garden city, forest was chosen as the (symbolic) template for the naming of this settlement road . According to the 1922 address book, the forest path between Park- , Heim- and Grenzweg with its properties 1–28 and 29–64 (continuously) is completely built on and inhabited. After all, in 1932 Berlin had Waldweg / -straße as the street name in 19 districts, so that when the district boundaries were rearranged within the district, the forest path from Maffeistraße to Grenzweg was included in Franziusweg (previously on the Marienfeld side) in 1949. |
Werderstrasse | before 1922 | after 1961 | canceled | The Werderstraße led north of Kirchbachstraße towards the cemetery. The street is mentioned in the 1922 address book and is still listed in the 1942 address book, but it is still not built on. It was lifted in the early 1960s. The name was chosen after the Prussian general August von Werder (1808-1887), as other Prussian generals surrounding streets were named. |
Wilhelmstrasse | after 1914 | Aug 31, 1949 | → Briesingstrasse | The street is named after Wilhelm II (Friedrich Wilhelm Viktor Albert), the resident German Kaiser when the street was set up east along the railway line, the name Kaiser-Wilhelm-Straße was already given for the named Chaussee . In the 1922 address book, the street between Luther-, Marienfelder, Bahnhof-, Goltz-, Manteuffelstraße is recorded (which today includes the area of Nuthestraße), but there is only one pumping station of the community Lichtenrade between Bahnhof- and Marienfelder Straße (north the current situation). For 1942, Wilhelmstrasse is only listed between Bahnhofstrasse via Haeselerstrasse and Goltzstrasse, 15, 17, 19 and 32 and in particular plots 2/4 with the St. Elisabeth Foundation, house 6 the children's hospital and plot 8– 30 the nursery of the Catholic Hospital. |
Winterfeldtstrasse | before 1920 | Aug 31, 1949 | → Saalower Strasse | The Kleist and Winterfeldtstraße were merged in 1949 to Saalow road. It was named after the Prussian general Hans Karl von Winterfeldt (1707–1757) after (for example) 1932, however, streets in Schöneberg and Zehlendorf were also named. |
Other locations of Lichtenrade
Allotment colonies
- BLW Güteraußenring (Fontane- / Schillerstraße, Lage ), garden colony with 122 plots on 37,078 m² railway area. The system is divided into the subdivisions 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 with the street numbers 16160 to 16165. These gardens are located on the grounds of the outer freight ring .
- BLW sub-district Lichtenrade group Nuthestraße (RBS: 16166, Nuthestraße 24–57, location ), garden colony with 60 plots on 27,368 m² railway area.
- BLW Wünsdorfer Straße (Wünsdorfer Straße 41–97, Lage ), garden colony with 32 plots on 10,338 m² of railway area.
- Gartenheimsiedlung Grenzland (Kettinger Straße / Föttingerzeile, Lage ), a colony with 45 parcels on 25,621 m², which has not been subject to the Federal Allotment Garden Act since it was renamed on November 12, 1990 (No. 05956) as a "Gartenheimsiedlung" .
- KGA Märkische Heide (Kirchhainer Damm 67-69, Lage ), a permanent allotment garden colony with 51 plots on 29,866 m² of state-owned leased land.
- KGA Wiesengrund (Lichtenrader Damm 130, Lage ), a permanent allotment garden colony with 40 plots on 12,290 m² of state-owned leased land.
Parks and green spaces
Several of the squares mentioned in the above list have a park-like character due to their greenery and size and thus differ from city squares as they exist in the city center.
- Volkspark Lichtenrade ( Lage ) was created as a park out of nowhere by volunteers. The “Kaiserberg” and the “Kleine Arber” are located here, and because of the partnership with the Cham district in the Bavarian Forest, trails have been named after this area in Bavaria. The district of Cham has helped and still donates the Christmas tree every year, which ensures a neat Christmas atmosphere in front of the Tempelhof town hall.
- Kirchhof Lichtenrade ( location )
- Giebelpfuhl ( Lage ) in the Dorfaue, with the Alt-Lichtenrade street leading around this green area on both sides.
- Forests on Kirchhainer Damm ( Lage ), this park is part of the Düppeler Forest and is therefore subject to the forest administration.
- Night bay ( location )
- Green area on Barnetstrasse, which is officially classified as a green area, but not as a park.
See also
Web links
-
lichtenrade-berlin.de (private website) with
- Subitems street meanings and street renaming
- a map by Lichtenrade 1921 and a detail in the original
- Map of Berlin 1: 5000 with district boundaries. Senate Department for Urban Development Berlin, 2009, accessed on October 11, 2012 .
- Street directory Lichtenrade. kaupert media GmbH, accessed on September 25, 2012 .
- The founding years: 1903 to 1933 , house and landowners association Lichtenrade
- Office for Statistics Berlin-Brandenburg: Directory of streets and squares in the Tempelhof-Schöneberg district (as of February 2015); pdf
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c d e f g h i j k Overview plan of the Tempelhof administrative district . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1922, IV. Streets and Houses of Berlin> Administrative District Tempelhof, p. 1462.
- ↑ a b c d e f g h i Large Berlin city map. Verlag Richard Schwarz Nachf., Buckow around 1961 ( Memento of the original from December 14, 2015 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.
- ↑ Contemporary history: The B 96
- ↑ www.lichtenrade-berlin.de: Presentation of the traffic situation in Lichtenrade in the 1930s ( Memento of the original from October 21, 2013 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.
- ↑ a b c d e f g h Historisches - Chronik - 1926–2001 ( Memento of the original from March 24, 2010 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.
- ↑ a b c d e f Abendrotsiedlung: site plan and reasons for the conservation ordinance
- ↑ a b c d e f g h Situation in 1922 . In: Berlin address book , 1922, Tempelhof administrative district> Buckow, Lichtenrade, Mariendorf, Marienfelde, p. 1466.
- ^ Situation in 1928 . In: Berlin address book , 1928, Tempelhof administrative district> Buckow, Lichtenrade, Mariendorf, Marienfelde, p. 1712.
- ↑ a b situation in 1932 . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1932, Tempelhof administrative district> Lichtenrade, Mariendorf, Marienfelde, p. 1675.
- ↑ Berliner-Stadtplan.com: special streets
- ↑ Tempelhof-Schoeneberg: Walk in the district ( Memento of the original from December 2, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ^ Augsburger Strasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1929, Part IV. Streets and houses of Berlin> Tempelhof administrative district> Buckow, Lichtenrade, Mariendorf, Marienfelde, p. 1720.
- ↑ berliner-stadtplan.com: Bahnhofstrasse and Salvatorkirche
- ↑ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Map of Lichtenrade 1921 scale 1:10 000 detail in the original
- ↑ Blohmstrasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1943, Heads of Households, Companies and Commercial Enterprises Registered by Commercial Court, sorted by street, p. III.
- ↑ kauperts.de: on the person of Bodmer
- ↑ a b c d e f g h Waldweg-Wolziner line . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1943, heads of household, companies and commercial enterprises registered by the commercial court, sorted by street> Administrative District Tempelhof, p. 1792.
- ↑ a b c d November 17, 2013: A walk through the neighborhood through Lichtenrade
- ↑ a b 20 green main paths: Teltower Dörferweg
- ↑ Chronicle - 1926–2001 ( Memento of the original from March 24, 2010 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.
- ↑ a b c statistik-berlin-brandenburg: address directory of the district (status: 2013) ( memento of the original dated December 3, 2013 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.
- ↑ Dielingsgrund . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1934, Part IV. Inhabitants and companies sorted by street> Inhabitants and companies of the city of Berlin sorted by streets and house numbers Alphabetical list of all streets and companies listed in Part IV. Places Berlin, S. XV (street directory Straße 6a).
- ↑ Dielingsgrund . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1934, Part IV. Inhabitants and companies sorted by street> Tempelhof administrative district, p. 1644 (street 6a).
- ↑ Dossestrasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1931, Part IV. Streets and houses of Berlin> Administrative District Tempelhof, p. 1748.
- ↑ berliner-stadtplan.com: Egestorffstrasse-Marienfelder-Feldmark
- ↑ a b c d Clarification of the situation on a map of Berlin 1: 5000 (K5 color edition), carried out by the district surveying offices , accessed on October 16, 2013.
- ↑ Eisnerstrasse rectifier plant
- ↑ Overview map of the development plan / Lichtenrade / 223 / B-XIII-223
- ^ Kauperts: Erich-Hermann-Platz
- ↑ on www.gedenkenafeln-in-berlin.de
- ↑ a b c Unnamed streets . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1930, Part IV. Streets and houses of Berlin> Administrative District Tempelhof, p. 1735.
- ↑ berliner-stadtplan.com: Franziusweg
- ↑ Location of the Abendrotsiedlung conservation area ( memento of the original from September 21, 2013 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.
- ↑ Franziusweg . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1943, Head of Households, Companies and Commercial Enterprises Registered by Commercial Court, sorted by street, p. VI (street directory).
- ↑ a b c d K5 map of Berlin 1: 5000 (K5 - color edition) area Lichtenrader / Kirchhainer Damm
- ↑ a b c d e f g h i j k bridge path - contemporary history
- ↑ berliner-stadtplan.com: Hermann-Wundrich-Platz
- ↑ Illigstrasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1943, heads of household, companies and commercial enterprises registered by the commercial court, sorted by street> Tempelhof administrative district, S. IX (street overview).
- ↑ kauperts.de: on the person of Kessel
- ↑ a b Vossstrasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1935, residents and companies of the city of Berlin sorted according to streets and house numbers> Administrative District Tempelhof, p. 1646.
- ↑ Berliner Zeitung: Man sets the kitchen in Lichtenrade on fire . August 10, 2011
- ↑ Havelzeitung: The friend from old childhood beat down and robbed , November 2010 ( Memento of the original from December 3, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ a b compare the aerial photos from 1953 on google-earth
- ↑ primary school in Taunusviertel.de
- ↑ Website of the primary school in the Taunus district Berlin-Lichtenrade
- ↑ a b On this postcard from 1914 the "Restaurant zum Lindengarten, Kantstraße 42 corner Lessingstraße" is shown with both streets.
- ↑ Lichtenrader Chronik ( Memento of the original from March 24, 2010 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. : In the spring of 1954 the traffic on the outer freight ring in Lichtenrade was stopped by order of the Soviet zonal Reichsbahndirektion. Up to 20 freight trains rolled here every day.
- ↑ Maffeistraße . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1931, heads of household, companies and commercial enterprises registered by the commercial court, sorted by street> Tempelhof administrative district, S. X (street overview).
- ↑ Maffeistraße . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1943, Heads of Households, Companies and Commercial Enterprises Registered by Commercial Court, sorted by street> Tempelhof Administrative District> Mariendorf, Marienfelde, p. 1818.
- ↑ November 29, 2012: The wash house has to go on living!
- ↑ Pictures of the Nahariya School
- ^ Kauperts: Nürnberger Straße gives the year 1876. However, there is probably a confusion with the street of the same name in Schöneberg, which was named in the same year.
- ↑ berliner-stadtplan.com: Nuernberger-Strasse
- ↑ Location to the development plan / Lichtenrade / 223 / B-XIII-223K
- ↑ August 29, 2012: Young artists awaken the poet's quarter in Lichtenrade from its slumber
- ^ Contemporary history: Sanatorium
- ↑ berliner-stadtplan.com: Schichauweg-Marienfelder-Feldmark
- ↑ New Lichtenrader malt house shopping center
- ↑ Lichtenrade: From the former fire station to the Maelzerei
- ↑ Lichtenrader Mälzerei ( Memento of the original from July 23, 2013 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.
- ↑ primary school in Taunusviertel.de
- ↑ Website of the primary school in the Taunus district Berlin-Lichtenrade
- ↑ Wildauer Strasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1939, Head of Households, Companies and Businesses registered by the Commercial Court, sorted by street> Administrative District Tempelhof, p. 1789.
- ↑ Zeißpfad . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1937, Part IV. Inhabitants and companies sorted by street> Tempelhof administrative district> Mariendorf, Marienfelde, p. 1703.
- ↑ a b c d e f g Berliner Strasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1922, IV. Streets and houses of Berlin> Alphabetical index of all streets and places listed in Part IV., P. 237.
- ^ Frankfurter Strasse . In: Berlin address book , 1932, part IV. Streets and houses of Berlin> Tempelhof administrative district, p. 1681 (block III settlement).
- ↑ berlingeschichte.de: on the person of Richter
- ↑ Schubertstrasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1935, residents and companies of the city of Berlin sorted by street and house number> Administrative District Tempelhof, p. 1645 (Schubertstrasse 1935).
- ↑ Schubertstrasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1935, residents and companies of the city of Berlin sorted by streets and house numbers> Administrative District Tempelhof, p. 1642 (Lisztstrasse 1935).
- ↑ Sophienplatz . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1940, Heads of Households, Companies and Businesses registered by the Commercial Court, sorted by street> Administrative District Tempelhof, p. 1786 (keyword Sophienplatz).
- ↑ (Southern) bypass . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1932, Part IV. Inhabitants and companies sorted by street> Administrative District Tempelhof, p. 1681.
- ↑ (Southern) bypass . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1935, Part IV. Inhabitants and companies sorted by street> Administrative district Tempelhof, p. 1645.
- ↑ Viktoriastrasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1932, Part IV. Inhabitants and companies sorted by streets> Inhabitants and companies of the city of Berlin sorted by streets and house numbers, alphabetical index of all streets listed in Part IV. Places of Berlin, S. XVII.
- ↑ Werderstrasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1942, Part IV. Heads of household, companies and businesses registered by the commercial court sorted by street> Tempelhof administrative district, p. 1796.
- ↑ a b c Allotment gardens on land owned by Deutsche Bahn AG that is leased to the railroad farm. They are smaller groups of gardens that are close to railway tracks.
- ↑ a b Fictional permanent allotment gardens according to §§ 16 and 20a BKleingG, protected by the representation in the FNP as green space and additionally as allotment gardens