List of streets and squares in Berlin-Tempelhof

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Overview map of Berlin-Tempelhof

Tempelhof 1925

The list of streets and squares in Berlin-Tempelhof describes the street system in the Berlin district of Tempelhof with the corresponding historical references. At the same time, this compilation is part of the lists of all Berlin streets and places .

overview

statistics

Tempelhof has 62,248 inhabitants (as of December 30, 2019) and comprises the postcode areas 12099, 12101, 12103, 12105, 12109, 12099 and 12279. According to the official directory of the RBS database , the district has eleven places and 138 dedicated streets. The total length of all roads (city, federal roads , but without the motorway sections) in the district is 74.8 kilometers. The Tempelhof street system developed centrally in Berlin in particular in the 20th century and so there are 24 streets and squares that are named beyond the boundaries of the district. The planning areas of the district are Neu-Tempelhof (41), Lindenhofsiedlung (42), Manteuffelstraße (43), Marienhöhe (44), Tempelhof Town Hall (45) and Germaniagarten (46).

Road system

The city ​​motorway is located in the district with 8,760 meters of main lanes, which are part of the extensive road system in Berlin. Entrances, exits and the connecting lanes to Gradestrasse belong with 4870 meters to the superordinate and the 1,200 meters of entrances and exits to Oberlandstrasse belong to the regional road system according to the Berlin road development plan . The higher-level system (Category II) includes the section of Bundesstraße 96 on the Tempelhofer / Mariendorfer Damm route with a length of 3600 meters, plus Alarichstraße , Arnulfstraße , Attilastraße , Columbiadamm , Friedrich-Karl-Straße , the larger part of Manteuffelstraße, the Ringstrasse , Schöneberger Strasse and Ullsteinstrasse . In total there are 6670 meters of city streets in this category. The main road system in the district is supplemented by regionally significant roads : Alboinstraße , Alt-Tempelhof (for the most part), Ballonfahrerweg , Boelckestraße , General-Pape-Straße , partly Germaniastraße , Gersdorfstraße , Gottlieb-Dunkel-Straße , Komturstraße , 100 meters from Loewenhardtdamm (the further section is considered a supplementary road), the Manteuffelstraße for 700 meters, sections of the Oberlandstraße and in its entire length the Ordensmeister- , Röbling- , Schätzelberg- , Teilestraße and the Tempelhofer Weg , this category III of the regional roads requires the street maintenance of 12,290 Meters.

District development

The district is bounded in the west by the S-Bahn and federal motorway to the Schöneberg-Nord region . In the north, Dudenstrasse , south side of Schwiebusser Strasse , Friesenstrasse 15a, and Columbiadamm border as the district border with Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg . The district border to Neukölln runs 300 meters west of Neuköllner Oderstrasse across the eastern airport grounds to Eschersheimer Strasse . In the south, the Teltow Canal and the north side of Ullsteinstrasse delimit the Mariendorf region .

Tempelhof developed around Dorfstrasse (today: Alt-Tempelhof) from which the local connections to the neighboring towns of Rixdorf , Britz , Lankwitz , Schöneberg branched off. The road system developed south of the Ringbahn, which has been adjacent since the end of the 19th century, and the first and last names of builders and landowners were often the namesake. When the military treasury made the western part of the Tempelhof parade ground (east of the barracks located in Schöneberg) available for civil use, the garden city of Neu-Tempelhof was planned, an extensive road system with a predominantly choice of names according to the ruling families of the German Empire was planned. This plan was only partially implemented in the northeastern part. After World War II and inflation , the plans were determined by the airfield that was being built in the east . On 4 August 1930 five streets were given names by fighter pilots of the First World War . On "Air Force Day" (April 21, 1936) - in the quarter now known as the "Fliegerviertel" - further streets were given names of fighter pilots from the First World War on the instructions of Hermann Göring on the 18th anniversary of the death of fighter pilot Manfred von Richthofen . The Udetzeile got its name on April 29, 1957. The streets in Neu-Tempelhof (west of today's Tempelhofer Freiheit ) have a (partial) ring structure around the Paradeplatz with the extensive park ring: the northern streets are named "-ring", the southern streets are called " -plan ”, the north-south streets concave to the west and radial streets were called“ -korso ”. The Boelcke- and Manfred-von-Richthofen-Straße (the latter in the northern section), named after military pilots, are now the main streets in the Aviation District.

The road system in Tempelhof and the traffic flows through the district were influenced by the construction of the motorway with plans in the 1960s and later expansion and further development. The routes along the Sachsendamm were long unfinished and those in the eastern part of the village interfere with the road system. An eastern bypass planned on the route of the Neukölln-Mittenwalder Bahn along Schaffhausener Strasse, which is equivalent to a federal motorway, was not implemented.

On August 12, 2014, the Senate issued the Twelfth Ordinance to Change the District Boundaries , which stipulates that the district boundary in the Columbiadamm / Züllichauer Straße / Lilienthalstraße area will be changed, so that these streets and the enclosed area will now become the Friedrichshain- Kreuzberg belong.

Overview of streets and squares

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

  • Name / location : current name of the street or square. Via the link Location , the street or the square can be displayed on various map services. The geoposition indicates the approximate center of the street length.
  • Traffic routes not listed in the official street directory are marked with * .
  • Former or no longer valid street names are in italics . A separate list may be available for important former streets or historical street names.
  • Length / dimensions in meters:
    The length information contained in the overview are rounded overview values ​​that were determined in Google Earth using the local scale. They are used for comparison purposes and, if official values ​​are known, are exchanged and marked separately.
    For squares, the dimensions are given in the form a × b for rectangular systems and for (approximately) triangular systems as a × b × c with a as the longest side.
    If the street continues into neighboring districts, the addition ' in the district ' indicates how long the street section within the district of this article is.
  • Name origin : origin or reference of the name.
  • Notes : further information on adjacent monuments or institutions, the history of the street and historical names.
  • Image : Photo of the street or an adjacent object.
Name / location Length / dimensions
(in meters)
Origin of name Date of designation Remarks image
Adolf Scheidt Square

( Location )

0080
(diameter)
Adolf Scheidt (1870–1947), politician March 23, 1925 Adolf-Scheidt-Platz , designed by Fritz Bräuning and Rudolf Fischer between 1924 and 1931, is a typical decorative square of the 1920s. The central square in the garden city of Neu-Tempelhof (also: Fliegerviertel) is located on Manfred-von-Richthofen-Strasse and Paradestrasse and was initially named Paradeplatz after the parade field that was located here. In 1925 it got its current name after the local politician Adolf Scheidt, who played an important role in the construction of the housing estate. During the Third Reich , Adolf-Scheidt-Platz was renamed Paradeplatz back in 1934, because Adolf Scheidt's ideological views contradicted the National Socialists. In 1955 it was renamed Adolf-Scheidt-Platz again. In the middle of the square the stork fountain rises up in 1931 based on a design by Ernst Seeger . The semicircular and green square with a fountain is a listed garden monument. Semicircular green space with a fountain between Paradestrasse and Manfred-von-Richthofen-Strasse. Adolf Scheidt Square

Adolf Scheidt Square

Alarichplatz

( Location )

0120 × 50 (30)
( trapezoidal shape )
Alaric I (370-410), King of the Visigoths Jan. 25, 1910 The small green area is between Alarichstrasse, Wolframstrasse and Konradinstrasse. The place was laid out as place H of the development plan. The Paul Klee primary school is located on the north side of the square. The densely built-up Tempelhof quarter is loosened up by the space surrounded by trees, there is a playground, a sunbathing lawn and benches. Alarichplatz
Alarichstrasse

( Location )

0400 Alaric I (370-410), King of the Visigoths Jan. 25, 1910 Alarichstrasse, laid out as Strasse 66 , is located between Attilastrasse and Germelmannbrücke, where it turns into Rathausstrasse. The busy inner-city residential street is surrounded by good old buildings and some commercial units. Alarichstrasse
Alboinplatz

( Location )

0175
(diameter)
Alboin (around 526-572, also Albuin ), King of the Longobards, Jan. 23, 1931 The almost circular square, designed as square Q , lies on the border with Schöneberg. The road area of ​​the square is in Schöneberg , only the eastern properties are in the district. In 1945 it was planned to name the Alboinplatz in Egerlandplatz, but the renaming was not confirmed by the magistrate. Berlin-Tempelhof Alboinplatz
Alboinstrasse

( Location )

0950 + 250
(interruption by the Alboinplatz)
Alboin (around 526–572, also Albuin ), King of the Lombards Jan. 23, 1931 The previous name was Albionstraße from 1913 to 1931 , street 12a before that . The name is said to have originated accidentally, possibly through a corruption of the name Alboin. During the First World War, attempts were made to rename it several times, but it did not take place until 1931. It is on the border with Schöneberg, the road area belongs to Schöneberg . In 1945 it was planned to rename Alboinstrasse Egerlandstrasse, but the renaming was not confirmed by the magistrate. On August 1, 1965, the southern section of Alboinstrasse, which lay between Attilastrasse and Arnulfstrasse, was renamed Paul-Schmidt-Strasse . On April 1, 1976, the newly laid out street - between Schöneberger Strasse and Alboinstrasse - was also named Alboinstrasse. The development plan XIII-21 was determined in 1972 for the course and the connection of the city ring, whereby the private railway road was planned. The land use of the Gerdsmeyerweg (then: Marienhöher Weg) and the adjoining area northeast of the Marienhöhe is determined in the development plan 32; road 418 (now: Paul-Schmidt-Strasse) was laid out to connect to Arnulfstrasse . Alboinstrasse
Albrechtstrasse

( Location )

1300
(+ 260 as a footpath)
Albrecht of Prussia (1809–1872), military before 1878 Albrechtstraße originally extended from Alboinstraße (boundary) to Ordensmeisterstraße. However, it was interrupted by the development in the area of ​​Wittekindstrasse. The small part of the street between Alboinstraße and Rothariweg was included in Rothariweg on April 27, 1936. Today it runs from Gäßnerweg via Felixstraße and on as a footpath to Komturstraße. At the corner of Albrechtstrasse 57 and Friedrich-Franz-Strasse 6 is the "August Buch House", a compromise between villas with bay windows and modern country house construction. The "Spukvilla" at Albrechtstrasse 110 / Blumenthalstrasse 7 was built around 1867 in the style of a Swiss house and is the only structure of the original villa and country house development in Tempelhof that has been preserved. Albrechtstrasse
Old Tempelhof

( Location )

0800 Old village center of Tempelhof Aug 31, 1949 It leads from Germaniastraße and Fuhrmannstraße to Manteuffelstraße and Schöneberger Straße at Berlinickeplatz and crosses Tempelhofer Damm ( B 96 ) where the Alt-Tempelhof underground station is also located. The street forms the former village green . The previous name from the 13th century to 1949 was Dorfstrasse . In 1949 the previous Dorfstrasse was renamed to 'Alt-Tempelhof', as happened for other districts after the incorporation into Greater Berlin . The Eva fountain by an unknown artist from 1927 stands on the western central island . Old Tempelhof
Arenholzsteig

( Location )

0120 Burchard von Arenholz (14th century), theologian, was mentioned in a document in 1344 as commander of the Tempelhof commandery Nov 23, 1931 The small street on the route from street 12 of the development plan is a dead end from Eresburgstraße. It is bordered on the east by the KGA Feldschlößchen. There are apartment buildings on the west side. There is a connection to Schöneberger Straße for pedestrians and cyclists. Arenholzsteig
Arnulfstrasse

( Location )

0570
(in the district)
Arnulf von Kärnten (around 850–899), East Franconian king and Roman-German emperor around 1911 The road planned as road 78 runs from Prellerweg and Röblingstraße to Attilaplatz. Part of the street is in Schöneberg . The Tempelhof section was named around 1911, but according to an aerial photo from 1928, it had not yet been built. The Schöneberg part between Röblingstrasse and Domnauer Strasse was called Gartenstrasse from around 1919 to 1925 . The land use of the Gerdsmeyerweg (then: Marienhöher Weg ) and the adjoining area northeast of the Marienhöhe is determined in the development plan 32; road 418 (now: Paul-Schmidt-Strasse) was laid out to connect to Arnulfstrasse . Arnulfstrasse
Attilagarten

( Location )

0080 Attila (also Etzel , † 453), King of the Huns after 1932 The private road between Attilastraße and Wolframstraße was newly laid out and was named between 1932 and 1935. The quiet residential street with post-war buildings runs parallel to Chlodwigstraße and can only be used by residents . Pedestrians and cyclists can use the passage between Wolframstrasse and Attilastrasse during the day. To the south there is a direct footpath to the Wulfila-Ufer on the Teltow Canal. Attilagarten
Attila Square

( Location )

0050
(diameter)
Attila (also: Etzel, † 453), King of the Huns around 1910 Manteuffel-, Friedrich-Karl-, Alarich-, Attila- and Arnulfstraße flow onto the square. It is an important traffic junction. Attila Square
Attilastrasse

( Location )

1360
(in the district)
Attila (also Etzel , † 453), King of the Huns around 1909 The road is an important traffic connection to Lankwitz and is located between Attilaplatz and Kaiser-Wilhelm-Straße / Maulbronner Ufer via Friedrich-Karl-Straße. Previous names were Tempelhofer Weg (19th century – around 1899), Lankwitzer Weg (before 1882 – around 1900), Lankwitzer Strasse (around 1900 – around 1909) and Tempelhofer Strasse (around 1899–1928). Lankwitzstrasse in Tempelhof was renamed Attilastrasse around 1909. On January 7, 1928, Tempelhofer Strasse was incorporated into Attilastrasse. On July 20, 1960, Kaiser-Wilhelm-Straße between Sieversbrücke and Attilastraße was incorporated into Attilastraße. A few blocks of flats, city villas and a large commercial area - close to the S-Bahn station - characterize the busy street. The southwestern part of the street runs in Steglitz . In the block between Attilastraße, Paul-Schmidt-Straße and Tankredstraße there is a large inner courtyard with tenants' gardens. At the corner of Röblingstrasse, a footpath leads over stairs to Marienhöher Weg and Marienhöhe . Attilastrasse

Attilastrasse

Bacharacher Strasse

( Location )

0410 Bacharach , town in the Mainz-Bingen district in Rhineland-Palatinate around 1911 The road leads on the east side of the Bärensiedlung from Oberlandstraße to Schaffhausener Straße, next to which the A 100 tunnel entrance is located. The road borders the Bärensiedlung in the east and ends in the south at the entrance to the Britz autobahn tunnel, a park has been created above the autobahn tunnel. Bacharacher Strasse
Baden Ring

( Location )

0610 Grand Duchy of Baden , federal state of the German Empire after 1913 The street in the Fliegerviertel lies between Manfred-von-Richthofen-Straße and Loewenhardtdamm. There is a development plan from 1956 for the area between Bayern- and Badener Ring. In this quarter, which was projected as a garden city, streets were named after federal states and ruling families of the German Empire . The centrally located and quiet residential street with apartment buildings from the 1920s has good transport links. The church is on the Tempelhofer Feld on the corner of Boelckestrasse. There are several pedestrian passages through the block development to the Bayernring. Baden Ring
Church on the Tempelhofer Feld
Balloon path

( Location )

0100
(in the district)
after the airship and balloonists of the Prussian Guard Pioneer Battalion stationed on the Tempelhofer Feld nearby July 24, 2006 The road between Werner-Voss-Damm and Sachsendamm was opened to traffic on December 1, 2006 and officially opened on December 8, 2006. The southern part of the street runs in Schöneberg . Balloon path
Tree plan

( Location )

0140 + 140
(interruption due to residential development)
Paul Bäumer (1896–1927), fighter pilot in the First World War Apr 21, 1936 The street in the Fliegerviertel leads from Loewenhardtdamm to Werner-Voss-Damm and is offset between Wüsthoffstraße and Wintgenstraße. It was previously part of the Deutscher Ring and Preussenring, which were named before 1914 . In 1936 the two streets were renamed: A section of the Prussian ring was named Peter-Strasser-Weg, the part of the Prussian ring between the Bundesring and the Zähringerkorso was renamed Rumeyplan and part of the Deutscher Ring and the Prussian ring streets were renamed Bäumerplan. The part of the German Ring between Wettinerkorso and Bundesring was renamed Schreiberring in 1936 and the part from Tempelhofer Damm to Loewenhardtdamm was named Wolfring . For the area to the west there is a development plan from 1949. Tree plan
Bayernring

( Location )

0910 Kingdom of Bavaria , federal state of the German Empire after 1913 The Bayernring runs from Tempelhofer Damm to Loewenhardtdamm. There is a development plan from 1956 for the area between Bayern- and Badener Ring. This is where Fritz Bräuning and Paulus & Paulus built the residential complex in 1931 . Bayernring
Bergholzstrasse

( Location )

0440 Benedix Bergholz (* 15th century), landowner in Tempelhof around 1909 The street in the industrial area is a dead end from Gottlieb-Dunkel-Straße, there are only a few houses on the corner, the street ends in the Tempelhof industrial area on the Teltow Canal and there is heavy traffic on the cobblestone street.

The A. Druckenmüller GmbH acquired the entire area between the road and the newly built in 1907 Teltow Canal , where he built a large steel plant. From 1929 it operated as Krupp -druckmüller GmbH.

Bergholzstrasse
Berlinickeplatz

( Location )

0050 × 40
(triangular shape)
Johann Gottlieb Berlinicke (1805–1880), farm owner and community leader in Tempelhof Apr 17, 1863 The small green space lies between Alt-Tempelhof street (which branches off to the east of the square and then runs with two arms) and Manteuffelstraße. There is a taxi waiting stand on the south side. Berlinickeplatz
Blumenthalstrasse

( Location )

0320 Leonhard von Blumenthal (1810–1900), Prussian field marshal Oct. 24, 1874 Blumenthalstrasse runs from Parkstrasse to Kaiserin-Augusta-Strasse and is interrupted by Friedensplatz. There is also a Blumenthalstrasse in Schöneberg. The "Spukvilla" at Albrechtstrasse 110 / Blumenthalstrasse 7 was built around 1867 in the style of a Swiss house and is the only structure of the original villa and country house development in Tempelhof that has been preserved. Blumenthalstrasse
Boelckestrasse

( Location )

1420 Oswald Boelcke (1891–1916), fighter pilot in the First World War Apr 21, 1936 The busy residential street with two lanes in each direction and a central island leads from north to south through the aviation district. In the north it connects to Katzbachstrasse and in the south it merges into Manteuffelstrasse. From Dudenstrasse to Manteuffelstrasse, where it crosses under the A 100 city ​​motorway . As the most important north-south connection through the Aviation District , it is designed with two directional lanes with green strips. From 1914 to 1936 it was called Wittelsbacherkorso . The development consists of both row houses and apartment buildings, most of which were built in the 1920s. The Tempelherren Elementary School and the Hugo Gaudig School as well as the church on Tempelhofer Feld are located on the street. The Parkring with its green spaces and playgrounds is crossed twice by Boelckestrasse. A development plan from 1956 exists for the area between Bayern- and Badener Ring. Boelckestrasse
Borussiastrasse

( Location )

1000 Borussia, neo-Latin name for Prussia 1901 Borussiastraße is located between Schöneberger Straße and Ringbahnstraße. The Tempelhof professional fire station is located at No. 16/17. The development plan 7-6 from 2006 describes the use of the area Schöneberger, Ringbahn-, Manteuffel-, Borussiastraße. Borussiastrasse
Bosestrasse

( Location )

0750 Julius von Bose (1809-1894), Prussian general 1897 Bosestrasse leads from Parkstrasse and Blumenthalstrasse to Alboinstrasse at the southern end of the Bosepark . The Friedrich-Ebert-Sportanlage, on which the BFC Viktoria 1889 is based, is located between Gäßnerweg and Alboinstraße . The part of Bosestrasse that today belongs to Schöneberg was also known as the extended Bosestrasse before the First World War . This part, between Bessemerstrasse and Alboinstrasse, was renamed Engelingzeile on March 28, 1958. The rest of the street in Tempelhof kept the name Bosestrasse. In 1961, the development plan 63 was determined for the residential area south of Bosestrasse, including Gäßner- and Rothariweg to the north of the (already existing) properties on Kaiserin-Augusta-Strasse. Bosestrasse
Federal ring

( Location )

0350 after the North German Confederation (1867–1871) before 1914 The Bundesring in the Fliegerviertel leads from Wolffring via Paradestrasse to Rumeyplan and Peter-Strasser-Weg. It is an elongated green strip with two lanes on each side, which is part of the Neu-Tempelhof park ring, which stretches almost like a horseshoe around the entire settlement. The quiet residential street in a central location is built on with the row houses typical of the Aviation District. On the median as part of the park ring, there is a playground and green spaces as well as a bunker from the Second World War. Federal ring
Burchardstrasse

( Location )

0500 Burchard von Arenholz , Commander of the Order of St. John in Tempelhof in the 14th century around 1910 The quiet residential street is built on with multi-family houses, most of which date from the 1920s. Burchardstrasse is located between Manteuffelstrasse on Berlinickeplatz and Alboinstrasse on the north side of the Friedrich-Ebert-Sportanlage. The street 76 from Wittekindstraße via Berlinickeplatz to Dorfstraße (now: Alt-Tempelhof) was also named Burchardstraße on August 21, 1931. There are several footpaths through spacious green areas to Eresburgstrasse. On the south side of the street is the Friedrich-Ebert-Stadion, in which with the Berlin FC Viktoria 89 one of the oldest German soccer clubs has its home. In 1957, the development plan for the residential building land Eresburg-, Schöneberger, Burchardstraße was drawn up, which also extended Gäßnerstraße. Burchardstrasse
Burgemeisterstraße

( Location )

1150 Otto Burgemeister (1883–1957), local politician 04th July 1960 The street runs from Wenckebachstraße via Tempelhofer Damm and Manteuffelstraße to Alboinplatz. It ends at Alboinplatz and is only connected there to the eastern, traffic-calmed carriageway. A two-lane spur road opens up the plots 55a – f and 56a – e. The previous name was Kaiser-Wilhelm-Straße from around 1899 to 1960 . The quiet inner-city residential street is mainly built up with old buildings and some post-war buildings. To the north of the street there are four parks at some distance (Bosepark, Lehnepark, Alter Park and Franckepark). Burgemeisterstraße

Berlin-Tempelhof Burgemeisterstraße

Burgherrenstrasse

( Location )

0160 Lords of the castles , owners of castles after 1910 The Burgherrenstrasse connects the Dudenstrasse with the Schulenburgring. It is mentioned for the first time in the Berlin address book from 1913 as undeveloped. Burgherrenstrasse
Chlodwigstrasse

( Location )

0230 Clovis I (466–511), King of the Franks around 1910 The road leads from Attilastraße to Wulfila-Ufer on the Teltow Canal . The quiet inner-city residential street is built on the eastern side with residential blocks from the post-war period, opposite one-family houses. In its layout it was planned from Wolframstrasse to the confluence of Tankredstrasse and Wittekindstrasse to Wolframstrasse. On January 7, 1928, the section between Wolframstrasse and Wulfilaufer was included in Chlodwigstrasse. Chlodwigstrasse
Colditzstrasse

( Location )

0850 Nickel von Colditz , knight and last commander of the Tempelhof Commandery around 1911 Colditzstrasse leads from Albrechtstrasse to Ullsteinstrasse and crosses the Teltow Canal . The part south of the Teltow Canal (industrial site) is not listed in the 1913 address book. The street is part of the Britz-Buckower Weg , one of the 20 main green routes in Berlin . Colditzstrasse
Columbiadamm

( Location )

1230
(in the district)
after the plane "Miss Columbia" with which the pilots Clarence Chamberlin and Charles Levine made the first flight from New York to Berlin in 1927 Aug 14, 1950 The area between Platz der Luftbrücke and Lilienthalstraße is in the district. Between Friesenstrasse and Lilienthalstrasse the road area belongs to Tempelhof , from Lilienthalstrasse to Neukölln . Since August 12, 2014, the district boundary has been on the northern part of the street. The Columbiadamm was not built in its current form until the end of the 1940s due to plans for the construction of the new Tempelhof Airport. From 1898 to 1929 the section bordering Kreuzberg was called Prinz-August-von-Württemberg-Straße . On March 20, 1929, this part was renamed Columbiastrasse . The section between today's Platz der Luftbrücke and Friesenstrasse was called Neue Flughafenstrasse . The route to the east was called Friedhofstrasse as far as Neukölln and Flughafenstrasse. In 1950, the entire street between Platz der Luftbrücke and changing into Flughafenstrasse in Neukölln was named Columbiadamm. "Columbia Club" on Columbiadamm in a former cinema theater

Columbia concentration camp memorial with radar tower in the background

Dudenstrasse

( Location )

0950
(in the district)
Konrad Duden , philologist and lexicographer 0Jan. 3, 1949 According to the development plan, the traffic route was laid out as Straße 6, Department III at the end of the 19th century. It served as a route for the military columns to the Tempelhofer Feld . On January 9, 1901, the street 6 was named Dreibundstrasse . This was a reminder of the three-party military alliance Germany, Austria-Hungary and Italy, which had been sealed as a defense alliance in 1882. On January 18, 1936, the Berlin administration gave her the name Immelmannstrasse after Max Immelmann (1890-1916), a fighter pilot. When street renaming was planned after the Second World War , the traffic route was initially to be included in the already named Kolonnenstrasse. However, it was given the independent name Dudenstrasse in 1949. The road area and the north side of the road are in Kreuzberg . For the Boelcke-, Duden-, Mussehlstraße, Bayerring area there is a development plan from 1966 with the old road routes. Dudenstrasse

Dudenstrasse 9

Eresburgstrasse

( Location )

0420
(in the district)
Eresburg, people's castle of the Saxons in Westphalia June 12, 1913 The quiet residential street is built on with multi-family houses, most of which date from the 1920s. There are several footpaths through green areas to Burchardstrasse. The passage to Alboinstrasse is closed to cars. The street planned as street 2 in the development plan is a continuation of Borussiastraße between Schöneberger and Bessemerstraße. The western part of the street belongs to Schöneberg and changes the character to Industriestrasse. In 1957 the development plan for the residential building land Eresburg-, Schöneberger, Burchardstraße was drawn up, which also extended Gäßnerstraße. Eresburgstrasse
Erika-Gräfin-von-Brockdorff-Platz

( Location )

0220 × 170 × 60
(
uneven square in the district )
Erika Gräfin von Brockdorff (1911–1943) resistance fighter of the resistance movement of the Red Orchestra February 11, 2011 The previously unnamed station forecourt was named after Erika Countess von Brockdorff in 2011 as part of a decision by BVV Tempelhof-Schöneberg to name new streets and squares after women's names. Since the district boundary to Schöneberg crosses the eastern forecourt, only the eastern area is in the district. The district boundary lies to the north (General-Pape-Straße) and south (Ballonfahrerweg) along the railway facilities and between them goes along the access road to the station car park, so that only the western tip of this open space like the western station forecourt (Hildegard-Knef-Platz) in Schöneberg lies. Erika-Gräfin-von-Brockdorff-Platz on the east side of the Südkreuz train station
Eschersheimer Strasse

( Location )

0370 Eschersheim , district of Frankfurt am Main Apr 20, 1912 The road between the Oderstrasse Bridge and Gottlieb-Dunkel-Strasse was created by merging Strasse 167b (north: Oberlandstrasse) and Strasse 172 in the development plan. The east side of the street belongs to Neukölln . Eschersheimer Strasse
Eschwegering

( Location )

0150 Rudolf von Eschwege (1895–1917), fighter pilot in the First World War Apr 21, 1936 The street in the Fliegerviertel lies between Manfred-von-Richthofen-Straße and Boelckestraße. From around 1913 to 1936 it was part of the Thuringian Ring , which was shortened by the development. Eschwegering
Felixstrasse

( Location )

0620 Felix Reinert (1859–1908), entrepreneur, co-founder of the "Industrie-Viertel Berlin-Tempelhof GmbH" around 1908 Felixstrasse is located between Germaniastrasse and Albrechtstrasse. Initially, only the part on Albrechtstrasse was named. Straße 21 , located between Germaniastraße and Götzstraße, was included on April 21, 1932. The rest was added after the allotment garden was closed on November 1st, 1967.

Special feature: The road was initially on the route of today's Nackenheimer Weg. It is recorded in the Berlin address book from 1909 to 1931. From 1933 it appears in its current location. For 1932 the address book shows no entry for Felixstrasse. The development plan XIII-9 was drawn up in 1955 for the use of the residential building land between Felix-, Götz-, Werberg-, Germaniastraße. In 1957, a development plan was drawn up for the northeast of Straße 6 / Felixstraße, which changed the course of Götzstraße and planned street 410 (today: Zastrowstraße).

Felixstrasse
Friedensplatz

( Location )

0060
(diameter)
after the Peace of Frankfurt of 1871 around 1902 The circular Friedensplatz is on Albrechtstrasse and Blumenthalstrasse. At Friedensplatz there is a villa in which Napoleonic grenadiers fleeing after the Battle of Großbeeren in 1813 are said to have buried their war chest. During later construction work, remains and uniform parts were discovered, but no war chest. The ghosts of the dead French soldiers are said to have been whispering around on creaking floorboards in the "haunted villa" since the beginning. Friedensplatz
Friedrich-Franz-Strasse

( Location )

0740 Friedrich Franz II. (1823-1883), Grand Duke of Mecklenburg-Schwerin around 1880 The quiet inner-city residential street is between Bosestrasse and Friedrich-Karl-Strasse. At the intersection of Kaiserin-Augusta-Straße is the religious church from 1915 and opposite the Reform-Realgymnasium Tempelhof (today: Askanisches Gymnasium ) from 1911. On the street there are mostly apartment blocks from the 1920s and some post-war buildings. Friedrich-Franz-Straße was named before 1882 and is part of the development plan for the Tempelhof manor, which was drawn up around 1878. At the corner of Albrechtstrasse 57 and Friedrich-Franz-Strasse 6 is the "August Buch House", a compromise between villas with bay windows and modern country house construction. Friedrich-Franz-Strasse

Askanisches Gymnasium

Friedrich-Karl-Strasse

( Location )

0550 Friedrich Karl Nikolaus of Prussia (1828–1885), Prussian prince and general around 1897 The street leads from Attilaplatz to Tempelhofer Damm . It originally ran from Alboinstrasse, which was not yet named at the time, to Berliner Strasse (today: Tempelhofer Damm). Part of Friedrich-Karl-Strasse - from Manteuffelstrasse to Berliner Strasse - was renamed Lankwitzer Strasse around 1903. On July 21, 1960, Friedrich-Karl-Strasse between Alboinstrasse and Manteuffelstrasse was renamed Totilastrasse. There are numerous well-preserved old and post-war buildings on the busy inner-city residential and commercial street. Friedrich-Karl-Strasse
Friedrich-Wilhelm-Strasse

( Location )

1400 Wilhelm I (1797–1888), German Emperor before 1899 Friedrich-Wilhelm-Straße runs from Ordensmeisterstraße to Alboinplatz . Their extension to Alboinplatz was the private road . It was incorporated into Friedrich-Wilhelm-Strasse before 1945. The Herz-Jesu-Kirche is located between Werderstrasse and Friedrich-Franz-Strasse at no. 70/71 , next to it the Maria Montessori primary school. The quiet inner-city residential street is mostly surrounded by old buildings and some post-war buildings. The street ends as a dead end for cars at Alboinplatz . The most striking building is the Tempelhof market hall, a former tram depot. Friedrich-Wilhelm-Strasse
Friesenstrasse

( Location )

0200
(in the district)
Friedrich Friesen (1784–1814), co-founder of the German gymnastics movement and teacher 25 Sep 1884 The street is between Bergmannstraße and Columbiadamm , the street area belongs to Kreuzberg , only house numbers 15a – h (west side between Schwiebusser Straße and Columbiadamm) are in Tempelhof. It was created as Straße 21, Section II of the development plan on the site of a former chemical factory in 1864 and has been a public road since 1878. Another part was named on August 4, 1897. Friesenstrasse
Fritz-Bräuning-Promenade

( Location )

0100 Fritz Bräuning (1879–1951), architect and town planner, designer of the garden city of Neu-Tempelhof Aug 10, 2002 The Fritz-Bräuning-Promenade is a short walk from Boelckestrasse to Adolf-Scheidt-Platz. The naming ceremony took place on September 4, 2002. Fritz-Bräuning-Promenade
Fuhrmannstrasse

( Location )

0120 Albert Fuhrmann (1826–1906), local politician in Tempelhof 0Nov 1, 1953 The residential street projected as street 20a is between Alt-Tempelhof and Borussiastraße. In 1943 there is no street between Borussia- and Dorf- / Germaniastraße (from Berliner to Ringbahnstraße), as was the case on the map from 1954. As a paved city street, three lanes with wide footpaths and front gardens were built on with houses from the 1950s / 1960s. The gas lanterns with the typical lamp posts as street lighting are striking. The extension to today's Straße 20a is likely to be planned via Alt-Tempelhof , but the planning has been changed. Fuhrmannstrasse
Gäßnerweg

( Location )

0640 Ernst Gottfried Gäßner (1830–1900), teacher and cantor in Tempelhof Aug 16, 1928 The connection, routed as street 12c , leads from Burchardstraße to Kaiserin-Augusta-Straße through the housing estate built by Walter Hämer in 1926–1928 . In 1957 the development plan for the residential building land Eresburg-, Schöneberger, Burchardstraße was drawn up, which also extended the Gäßnerweg. In 1961, the development plan 63 was established for the residential area south of Bosestrasse, including Gäßner- and Rothariweg to the north of the (already existing) properties on Kaiserin-Augusta-Strasse, with which Wittekindstrasse was extended to the north. Gäßnerweg
Geiserichstrasse

( Location )

0180 Genseric (390-477), king of the Vandals and Alans July 26, 1927 The short residential street between Attilastraße and Wulfila-Ufer was created as street 41 of the development plan. There are single-family houses on the quiet residential street, the KGA 'Geiserich' is on the western side of the street. There is a pedestrian connection on the Teltow Canal or through the allotment garden to Gersdorfstrasse . Geiserichstrasse
General-Pape-Strasse

( Location )

1190 Alexander von Pape (1813–1895), Prussian general 0Feb. 2, 1897 The former Papestrasse station, which opened in 1901 and expanded in 2006 and renamed Südkreuz , was named after this street . The street and the adjacent area originally belonged to the Schöneberg district and were only added to the Tempelhof district during the regional reform in 1938 . At the north end of the street, the heavy load body was built in 1941 . The street with moderate traffic is part of the history course and there are mainly former barracks and military buildings that are reminiscent of the time of the railway regiments. At the corner of Loewenhardtdamm (General-Pape-Straße 60) the heavy load structure stands as a striking structure. The Robert Koch Institute (formerly the Federal Health Office) has a branch in the former building of the railway regiment. The KGA Papestrasse is located between the buildings. With the Alfred-Lion-Steg there is a connection for pedestrians and cyclists via the Anhalter Bahn between the districts of Tempelhof and Schöneberg. The former barracks of the 2nd and 3rd railway regiments are located at General-Pape-Straße 2-66 General-Pape-Strasse

Barracks of the railway regiment

Gerdsmeyerweg

( Location )

0200 August Gerdsmeyer (1903–1958), local politician in Tempelhof 0Aug 1, 1965 The Gerdsmeyerweg was created in the 1960s as part of the development of the Marienhöhe . It starts from Paul-Schmidt-Straße and ends in a turning hammer. There is a foot / bike path between Gerdsmeyerweg and Marienhöher Weg . The quiet inner-city residential street is built on with multi-family houses from the 1970s. There are generous green spaces between the houses and pedestrian connections to Arnulfstraße, the Marienhöhe park is directly adjacent to the narrow street, which has limited parking spaces. An educational garden trail leads through the adjacent KGA Eschenallee. At the Marienhöhe the road for cars ends as a dead end, pedestrians and cyclists can continue through the park. The land use of the Gerdsmeyerweg (then: Marienhöher Weg) and the adjoining area northeast of the Marienhöhe is determined in the development plan 32; road 418 (now: Paul-Schmidt-Strasse) was laid out to connect to Arnulfstrasse . Gerdsmeyerweg
Germania garden

( Location )

0160 Germania , personification of Germany after 1930 The street in the Bärensiedlung opens up one of the three courtyards. It was created together with the Oberlandgarten when the settlement was built around 1930. The settlement is located at the entrance to the Britz autobahn tunnel, which is surrounded by industrial settlements in the north and west. The noise of the motorway can hardly be heard inside the apartment block. Germania garden
Germaniastrasse

( Location )

1140 Germania , personification of Germany 06 Sep 1898 Today the street runs from Alt-Tempelhof to Rohdestraße. It was named in Tempelhof on September 6, 1898, and originally ran to Britzer Weg, which was incorporated into Germaniastraße between 1902 and 1905. The Germaniastraße only existed in Britz after the border change of the Berlin districts on April 1, 1938. The route of the Germaniastraße was considerably shortened by the construction of the city ​​motorway . On July 1, 1982, the eastern section in Britz was included in Tempelhofer Weg. A section in Tempelhof came to Schaffhausener Strasse. The development plan XIII-9 was drawn up in 1955 for the use of the residential building land between Felix-, Götz-, Werberg-, Germaniastraße. Germaniastrasse
Gersdorfstrasse

( Location )

0240
(in the district)
Runder Gersdorf and Langer Gersdorf , two former pools in Tempelhof 0Aug 8, 1935 The road runs from Attilastraße to Ringstraße, the part south of the Teltow Canal is in Mariendorf . From before 1902 to 1913 it was part of Schöneberger Strasse, which was renamed Röblingstrasse (northwest of Attilastrasse) and Gersdorfstrasse (southeastern part) on August 8, 1935. Gersdorfstrasse
Götzstrasse

( Location )

1000 Ferdinand Goetz (1826–1915), physician and politician 1912 Originally, Götzstraße, laid out as Straße 6a , ran from Berliner Straße (today: Tempelhofer Damm ) to Germaniastraße / Oberlandstraße. To the east of Felixstrasse, Götzstrasse was extended on February 13, 1957. Another section that went south from Felixstrasse and led to a former garden colony was also called Götzstrasse on November 1, 1967. The route of the Götzstraße had been significantly changed in its alignment. The development plan XIII-9 was drawn up in 1955 for the use of the residential building land between Felix-, Götz-, Werberg-, Germaniastraße. In 1957 a development plan was drawn up for the north-east of Straße 6 / Felixstraße, which changed the course of Götzstraße and planned street 410 (today: Zastrowstraße). The southern arch of Götz- to Felixstraße was created by the development plan XIII-79 for the residential area between Straße 6 , the extended Templerzeile and Koseler Weg, whereby all three boundaries have not become regular streets and on the area the Paul Simmel elementary school and a church Senior residential park stand. Götzstrasse
Gontermannstrasse

( Location )

0910 Heinrich Gontermann (1896–1917), fighter pilot in the First World War Apr 21, 1936 The street in the Fliegerviertel runs from Loewenhardtdamm to Werner-Voss-Damm. Between 1927 and 1935 it was called Braunschweiger Ring and Württemberger Ring (northern part). The newly built part of the road to Loewenhardtdamm was named on April 29, 1957. On April 1, 1963, the part of Gontermannstrasse that was south of the Hansakorso was renamed Hoeppnerstrasse . The Hertha-Block-Promenade ( east-west green corridor ), which opened in 2012, begins on Gontermannstrasse and connects the garden city of Neu-Tempelhof with the Schöneberger Rote Insel via the Alfred-Lion-Steg . The quiet residential street has a good connection to the city center, where the St. Joseph Hospital is located. Gontermannstraße is part of the history course. A development plan from 1949 is available for the northern area. Gontermannstrasse
Gottlieb-Dunkel-Strasse

( Location )

1500 Gottlieb Dunkel (1839–1907), owner of a farm and community leader in Tempelhof 0May 3, 1906 Gottlieb-Dunkel-Strasse is the connection between Rixdorfer Strasse in Mariendorf and Mariendorfer Weg in Britz . Between Teilestrasse and Ullsteinstrasse , it crosses the industrial area there. Before the motorway ring was continued, it started connecting traffic . At the intersection of Ullsteinstrasse and Gradestrasse are the "Friedhof an der Gottlieb-Dunkel-Strasse" and the Neue St. Michael Friedhof, followed by industrial plants as far as the Teltow Canal and the Mussehl Bridge. After the canal, there are fallow land and industrial ruins on both sides. Green areas cover the A 100, which is hidden under a tunnel, on the corner of Holzmannstrasse, and there are residential buildings between the autobahn tunnel and Mariendorfer Weg . The development plan 17a was drawn up in 1976 for the Gradestrasse junction (as A 102 ) southeast of Gottlieb-Dunkel-Strasse towards the Teltow Canal freight station. The remained Straße 59 received and 60 Street was planned. Gottlieb-Dunkel-Strasse
Greveweg

( Location )

0170 Edmund Greve (1846–1892), physician and community leader in Tempelhof 0Aug 4, 1930 Laid out as street 14 , the path runs through a housing estate between Burgemeisterstraße and Totilastraße. Greveweg
Haberechtstrasse

( Location )

0120 Haberecht, Tempelhof peasant family Feb 13, 1957 The street that was built around 1910 was called Weilburgstraße until 1957 , it was given a new name in 1957 because there was already a Weilburgstraße in the Lichtenrade district. The street leads to a small settlement of five three-story houses grouped around the turning area. Haberechtstrasse
Hattenheimer Strasse

( Location )

0210 Hattenheim , district of Eltville am Rhein in the Rheingau-Taunus district in Hesse around 1911 Hattenheimer Strasse leads from Gottlieb-Dunkel-Strasse to Tempelhofer Weg through an industrial site. Hattenheimer Strasse
Hessenring

( Location )

0500 Grand Duchy of Hesse , federal state of the German Empire after 1910 The street in the Fliegerviertel lies between Wintgensstrasse and Boelckestrasse. The route is the southwestern route on the Parkring planned for the garden city. In 1958, a development plan was drawn up for the (today) eastern section of the Hessenring on the Rumeyplan, Boelckestrasse, Hessenring, Werner-Voss-Damm area in order to provide space; today daycare centers, youth clubs and the KGA Zähringer Korso are located here. Hessenring
Hertha Block Promenade

(Location)

0180
(in the district)
Hertha Block , resistance fighter against the Nazi regime , she was imprisoned in the nearby SA prison in Papestrasse 0Nov 8, 2012 The Hertha-Block-Promenade connects the districts of Tempelhof and Schöneberg , it is divided into three sections: from Gontermannstrasse to Alfred-Lion-Steg over the Bahn-Trasse and from there to Schöneberger Insel to Leuthener Platz . With a length of 560 meters, it is part of the newly created east-west green corridor , which was opened to the public on November 8, 2012 in the presence of the Senator for Urban Development and the Environment, Michael Müller , and the District Mayor of Tempelhof-Schöneberg, Angelika Schöttler . Hertha Block Promenade
Höhndorfstrasse

( Location )

0200 Walter Hohndorf (1892–1917), fighter pilot in the First World War 0Aug 4, 1930 The short street in the Fliegerviertel between Dudenstraße and Bayernring was created as street 6 of the development plan. Höhndorfstrasse
Hoeppnerstrasse

( Location )

1080 Ernst von Hoeppner (1860–1922), General Apr 21, 1936 The quiet residential street is divided into two sections. Between Tempelhofer Damm and Werner-Voss-Damm it was built as street 16 of the development plan and was named Braunschweiger Ring on February 18, 1927 . It is the southernmost street in the Aviation District . The section between Tempelhofer Damm and Werner-Voss-Damm was named Hoeppnerstraße. On April 1, 1963, the Werner-Voss-Damm southwest of the Gontermann- / Hoeppnerstrasse street and the section of Gontermannstrasse south of the Hansakorso was also named Hoeppnerstrasse. In the section between Tempelhofer Damm and Boelckestrasse, the development consists of apartment buildings on one side of the street and terraced houses on the other. In the section between Boelckestrasse and Werner-Voss-Damm, on the other hand, the development consists exclusively of apartment buildings. Hoeppnerstrasse
Holzmannstrasse

( Location )

0420 Philipp Holzmann (1836–1904), building contractor before 1907 The road connects Oberlandstrasse and Gottlieb-Dunkel-Strasse. The Marianne Cohn School special educational support center is located in house number 7. The residential street, which is quiet except on Oberlandstraße, consists mainly of apartment buildings that were built in early 1930. A green corridor creates a pedestrian connection to Nackenheimer and Eschersheimer Straße. At the southern end is the church of the Serbian Orthodox community with a day care center. In 1964 a development plan was drawn up between Holzmannstrasse and Schwanheimer Strasse south of Rohrbeckstrasse, which left Hilzmannplatz as an unnamed path. Holzmannstrasse
Industriestrasse

( Location )

0680 The road leads through the industrial area on the Teltow Canal around 1910 Industriestraße is located between Schätzelbergstraße and Gottlieb-Dunkel-Straße in an industrial area traditionally with steel trading companies (ArcelorMittal, formerly Ravené ). The street lies in the so-called “steel triangle” (Industriestrasse, Bergholzstrasse, Teilestrasse), in which many steel construction companies had settled after the construction of the Teltow Canal. The development plan 17a was drawn up in 1976 for the Gradestrasse junction (as A 102 ) southeast of Gottlieb-Dunkel-Strasse towards the Teltow Canal freight station. The eastern section was retained as street 59 (today leads to the Tempelhof-Schöneberg Employment Agency) and street 60 was re-planned. Industriestrasse
Ingostrasse

( Location )

0120 Ingo , north Germanic god Dec 15, 1930 The short cul-de-sac branches off Attilastraße and was created as Straße 36 . The quiet residential street for cars ends at the Marienhöhe allotment garden, pedestrians continue to the hiking trail on the Teltow Canal . Ingostrasse
Kaiserin-Augusta-Strasse

( Location )

1160 Augusta von Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach (1811–1890), German Empress 0Dec 6, 1874 The street runs from Wenckebachstraße (Metzplatz) to Alboinstraße. Between Kaiserin-Augusta-Strasse and Friedrich-Wilhelm-Strasse, west of Tempelhofer Damm, lies the former Tempelhof depot of Jean Krämer . The forecourt was built on in 1972 with post office buildings that house telecommunications systems, so that the building is no longer visible from the street. The Askanisches Gymnasium is on the corner of Friedrich-Franz-Straße. Kaiserin-Augusta-Strasse
Imperial parade

( Location )

0420 Wilhelm II , German Emperor after 1913 When it was named, the street in the Fliegerviertel ran between the northern and southern parts of the Hohenzollern Corso (now: Manfred-von-Richthofen-Straße), today only to Wolffring. The southern part between the Hohenzollern Parade and the Deutscher Ring (today: Wolffring) was renamed Kleineweg on April 21, 1936. Imperial parade
Kanzlerweg

( Location )

0270 Imperial Chancellor , State Office in the German Empire after 1910 The Kanzlerweg is a quiet residential street with the row houses typical of the Fliegerviertel from the 1920s is located north and south of the Paradestrasse in the Fliegerviertel, both branches end as a dead end in a turning hammer. Kanzlerweg
Kleineweg

( Location )

0790 Rudolf Kleine (1886–1917), fighter pilot in the First World War Apr 21, 1936 The street in the Fliegerviertel leads as a continuation of the Kaiserkorso to the southern end of Manfred-von-Richthofen-Straße. The section of the Kaiserkorso between Hohenzollernkorso (now: Manfred-von-Richthofen-Straße) and Deutschem Ring (now: Wolffring) was renamed Kleineweg in 1936. The quiet residential street has the row houses typical of the Aviation District from the 1920s. Kleineweg
Komturstrasse

( Location )

0660 Commander , high office in a religious knightly order around 1911 Komturstrasse originally led from Ordensmeisterstrasse to Burggrafenstrasse (today: Ullsteinstrasse). The northern part from Germaniastraße was not built until later, today there are some residential buildings on the street and several allotment gardens. Between Ordensmeisterstraße and the Teltow Canal there is an industrial development with some dilapidated buildings. The part south of the Teltow Canal was renamed on March 8, 1935 in Schätzelbergstrasse. Komturstrasse
Konradinstrasse

( Location )

0520 Konradin (1252–1268), Duke of Swabia and King of Sicily around 1910 The street is between Friedrich-Karl-Straße and Wolframstraße on Alarichplatz, where the Paul-Klee-Grundschule is located. It is a quiet inner-city residential street with apartment blocks from the first half of the 20th century. Konradinstrasse
Kunigundenstrasse

( Location )

0060 Kunigunde of Luxembourg (980–1033), German queen and Roman empress around 1912 The short street is between Viktoriastraße and Konradinstraße. In the 1913 address book the street between Werder-, Konradin- and Wolframstraße is given. Kunigundenstrasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1913. “← Werderstrasse → / No. 1 (apartment building) s. a. Werderstrasse 14, No. 2 construction site / ← Konradinstr. → / 3, 4 construction sites, 5 four-party houses / ← Wolframstr. → ". Kunigundenstrasse
Kurt-Pfennig-Platz

( Location )

0030 × 20
(triangular shape)
Kurt Pfennig (1936–2000), entrepreneur Jun 16, 2005 The triangular square is between Borussiastraße and Ringbahnstraße opposite the Kurt-Pfennig-Haus in Ringbahnstraße, where the salads and delicatessen factory was located until it was closed in 2000. It was named on the fifth anniversary of the entrepreneur's death. The greyhound on the square used to be in front of Café Möhring, which was part of the company, on Uhlandstrasse and Kurfürstendamm. Kurt-Pfennig-Platz
Leonhardyweg

( Location )

0600 Leo Leonhardy (1880–1928), aviator major in the First World War Apr 21, 1936 The quiet residential street with the row houses typical of the Fliegerviertel from the 1920s is a continuation of the Schuleburgring between Wolffring and Thuyring. This part of the Schuleburgring was renamed Leonhardyweg in 1936. Leonhardyweg
Loewenhardtdamm

( Location )

0820 Erich Loewenhardt (1897–1918), fighter pilot in the First World War Apr 21, 1936 The street in the Aviation District was called Wettinerkorso from 1914 to 1936 in the planned garden city . The Loewenhardtdamm lies between Duden- and Manfred-von-Richthofen-Strasse and leads across Boelckestrasse into the center of the aviation district at Adolf-Scheidt-Platz. The lanes are separated by a median. The Catholic Church of St. Judas Thaddäus is located in numbers 48–54 . The quiet residential street has a good connection to the city center and there are allotment gardens (KGA Steingrube, KGA Papestrasse) and the Parkring on the corner of Wolffring and Schreiberring. At the western corner of General-Pape-Strasse is the heavy load body , which is one of the stops on the history trail. Loewenhardtdamm
Lorenzweg

( Location )

0080 Carl Lorenz (1844–1889), technician and entrepreneur July 22, 1916 The short street is the access from Ordensmeisterstraße to the factory premises of the former Standard Elektrik Lorenz . The main building of C. Lorenz AG was built from 1916 to 1918. The factory building was sold in 1989 and converted into a commercial center in 1990–1991. From 1910 to 1916 it was called Ratzenberger Straße . Lorenzweg
Luise-Henriette-Strasse

( Location )

0090 Luise Henriette of Orange (1627–1667), Electress of Brandenburg before 1899 The short street leads from Tempelhofer Damm to Reinhardtstraße. In the 1913 address book Luise-Henriette-Straße . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1913. “← Berliner Str. → / 1/2 apartment building / ← Reinhardtstr. → / ← Reinhardtplatz → / Church / 3, 4, 5 / ← Berliner Str. → “. Luise-Henriette-Strasse
Manfred-von-Richthofen-Strasse

( Location )

0960 Manfred von Richthofen (1892–1918), fighter pilot in the First World War Apr 21, 1936 Manfred-von-Richthofen-Straße runs in an arc from the Platz der Luftbrücke to Tempelhofer Damm at Tempelhof station. Along with Boelckestrasse, it is the second north-south connection in the Aviation District and is largely two-lane with a median. From 1913 to 1936 it was called the Hohenzollern Corso . A development plan from 1956 exists for the area between Bayern- and Badener Ring. Manfred-von-Richthofen-Straße entrance

Manfred-von-Richthofen-Strasse

Manfred-von-Richthofen-Strasse

Manteuffelstrasse

( Location )

1640 Edwin von Manteuffel (1809–1885), Prussian Field Marshal General and politician before 1878 Manteuffelstraße is a busy inner-city residential street with two lanes in each direction and a central island and an important north-south connection as an extension of Boelckestraße to Attilaplatz. There is a mixed development with old, new and post-war buildings, with multi-family houses from the 1920s predominating. Walter Hämer's residential complex built in 1928 is located between Albrechtstrasse and Bosestrasse . Manteuffelstrasse
Mariendorfer Damm

( Location )

0110
(in the district)
Mariendorf , a district of Berlin and an independent rural community until 1920 Aug 31, 1949 The Mariendorfer Damm leads to the Lichtenrader Damm as an extension of the Tempelhofer Damm. It is part of the federal highway 96 , most of the road runs in Mariendorf . From before 1901 to 1949 it was called Chausseestrasse . With the Ullsteinhaus (Mariendorfer Damm 1–3) only the part between the Stubenrauchbrücke over the Teltow Canal to Ullsteinstraße belongs to the district. Mariendorfer Damm
Marienhöher way

( Location )

0820 Marienhöhe , hill around which the road runs 0Aug 8, 1935 The road going off Attilastraße leads around Marienhöhe and ends as a dead end . There is a foot / bike path between Gerdsmeyerweg and Marienhöher Weg. It was created by merging streets 1 and 2 . It is a quiet, cobblestone residential street, the settlement was built in the late 1930s and consists mostly of semi-detached houses with large gardens. The northern branch of the street ends as a dead end for cars at Marienhöhe. For pedestrians, a path leads through the park to Gerdsmeyerweg with a large playground. A pedestrian connection with stairs leads to Attilastraße and to the top of the Marienhöhe mountain terrace with a beer garden. The development plan XIII-1 from 1953 describes the route and its connection to Attilastrasse and Alboinstrasse. Marienhöher way
Mehringdamm

( Location )

0090
(in the district)
Franz Mehring (1846–1919), Marxist publicist July 31, 1947 The Mehringdamm is part of the Bundesstraße 96 and merges into the Tempelhofer Damm at the Platz der Luftbrücke . Most of the street is in Kreuzberg , only number 129, part of the airport building between Schwiebusser Straße and Platz der Luftbrücke, is in Tempelhof. Previous names were Belle-Alliance-Strasse (1864-1946) and Franz-Mehring-Strasse (1946-1947). Mehringdamm
Metzplatz

( Location )

0070
(diameter)
Metz , capital of the Moselle department in France around 1905 Metzplatz is located on Wenckebachstrasse and Kaiserin-Augusta-Strasse at Wenckebach Hospital , the former garrison hospital. Metzplatz was named before November 1905. He is not yet shown in the address book of 1904. The square was written at the time it was named Metz square . Metzplatz
Poppy seed dough

( Location )

0210 Eberhard Mohnicke (1898–1930), fighter pilot in the First World War Aug 21, 1931 The street in the Fliegerviertel lies between Hessenring and Hoeppnerstraße. The previous name was Street 27 . Poppy seed dough
Mussehlstrasse

( Location )

0380 Friedrich Mussehl (1855–1912), first full-time mayor of Tempelhof after 1910 The street in the Fliegerviertel leads from Dudenstrasse to Wolffring. The part from Bayernring via Badener Ring to Wolffring is just a footpath. A development plan from 1956 exists for the area between Bayern- and Badener Ring. Mussehlstrasse
Nackenheimer way

( Location )

0350 Nackenheim , municipality and wine-growing area in the Mainz-Bingen district in Rhineland-Palatinate July 20, 1938 The residential street between Oberlandstraße and Gottlieb-Dunkel-Straße was created as street 50 of the development plan. Felixstrasse is shown in its place on the map from 1926, as is the Pharus map from 1921. In the address book from 1926, a Felixstrasse on Gottlieb-Dunkel-Strasse is listed as "undeveloped". Nackenheimer way
New street

( Location )

0280 New road created during the expansion of the Tempelhof village center before 1882 The Neue Straße connects the Ringbahnstraße with Alt-Tempelhof. The Tempelhofer Baugesellschaft began in 1873 with the expansion of the old Tempelhof village center. This is how Neue Straße was created. Originally built for the administrative officers of the Guard Train Battalion , the houses were sold to craftsmen. Many of them are listed architectural monuments. New street
Oberlandgarten

( Location )

0140 Oberland , field name in the Tempelhofer Feldmark around 1930 The street was created when the Bärensiedlung was built around 1930 together with the Germaniagarten street. At the confluence with Oberlandstrasse, a memorial stone commemorates Hatun Sürücü who was murdered here in 2005 . Oberlandgarten
Oberlandstrasse

( Location )

1420 Oberland , field name in the Tempelhofer Feldmark around 1909 The Oberlandstrasse leads as an extension of the Silbersteinstrasse to the Germaniastrasse, it is predominantly industrial and accordingly congested. Various industrial companies (Gilette, Bahlsen) and the film studios of the Berliner Union-Film are located here on the former UFA site, now for ZDF . At the southeast end there is residential development with the listed Bärensiedlung with the Germaniagarten and the Oberlandgarten. Oberlandstrasse

UFA-Studio Oberlandstrasse

Ordensmeisterstraße

( Location )

1140 Order master , office within an order around 1910 As an extension of Friedrich-Karl-Straße, the street leads from Tempelhofer Damm to Teilestraße. It was part of Friedrich-Karl-Strasse until around 1910, and in 1911 it appears in the Berlin address book. To the south of the busy inner-city residential and commercial street are the Tempelhofer Hafen and the Teltow Canal, which runs parallel to the street. Numerous industrial companies have settled between the street and the canal. On the north side, there is a large apartment block, some old buildings, followed by the Wenckebach Hospital (Vivantes Wenckebach Clinic) and subsequent residential developments and other industry. The Tempelhof harbor is adjacent to Tempelhofer Damm at the western end of Ordensmeisterstraße, the use of the area is determined by the development plan 7-20ve of July 1, 2008. The street is part of the Teltow Canal Path, one of the 20 green main paths in Berlin , which is separated from the canal bank by commercial space Ordensmeisterstraße
Ottokarstrasse

( Location )

0190 Ottokar II. Přemysl , King of Bohemia and Duke of Austria around 1910 Ottokarstraße runs as an extension of Friedrich-Franz-Straße from Friedrich-Karl-Straße to Alarichstraße. Ottokarstrasse
Paradestrasse

( Location )

0440 after the military parades that on the adjacent Tempelhof were held around 1913 The quiet residential street is the central east-west connection in the Fliegerviertel with the typical row houses from the 1920s and is located between Tempelhofer Damm and Adolf-Scheidt-Platz. At the intersection of Paradestraße and Tempelhofer Damm there was an imperial oak , where parades were taken down after 1871. Paradestrasse
Parkstrasse

( Location )

0340 to the surrounding parks Dec 18, 1903 The quiet residential street has a good old building structure with a view over the park at Klarensee. Parkstrasse is an extension of Bosestrasse between Blumenthalstrasse and Schönburgstrasse and is named after the adjacent parks (Lehnepark, former Kleiner Park and Alter Park). The name before 1903 was Grundpfuhlweg . The Tempelhof village church from the second third of the 13th century is located here. The road is interrupted as a driveway in the area of ​​the old Tempelhof village church, here the park road runs as a pedestrian and cycle path. From Tempelhofer Damm there is only a small driveway to Parkstrasse, then it ends as a dead end for cars . Parkstrasse
Paul-Schmidt-Strasse

( Location )

0500 Paul Schmidt (1889–1959), architect and local politician in Tempelhof 0Aug 1, 1965 The street curves from Arnulfstraße to Atillastraße. It was created by merging road 418 and the southern part of Alboinstrasse. A narrow, quiet inner-city residential street with apartment blocks from the 1920s and 1960s. In the block between Tankred- / Attila- / Paul-Schmidt-Straße there is a large inner courtyard with tenants' gardens, some of the houses are listed. The KGA 'Eschenallee' is located on the street, through which an educational garden trail leads up to the Marienhöhe . The land use of the Gerdsmeyerweg (then: Marienhöher Weg ) and the adjoining area northeast of the Marienhöhe is determined in the development plan 32, road 418 (today: Paul-Schmidt-Straße) was laid out to connect to Arnulfstraße . Paul-Schmidt-Strasse
Peter-Strasser-Weg

( Location )

0270 Peter Strasser (1876–1918), airship soldier in the First World War Apr 21, 1936 The part of the Prussian ring between Tempelhofer Damm and Bundesring was named Peter-Strasser-Weg. The quiet residential street is located in the aviation district with the typical row houses from the 1920s. Peter-Strasser-Weg
Airlift Square

( Location )

0150 × 80
(semicircular)
after the Berlin Airlift , the air connection created to overcome the Berlin blockade in 1948/1949 to supply the population of West Berlin June 25, 1949 Tempelhofer Damm , Columbiadamm , Mehringdamm and Dudenstraße all flow onto the square . It was created during the construction of the airport building in 1938/1939, although Ernst Sagebiel's plans , which included a representative, round forecourt, were not carried out. Instead, a semicircular lawn was created between Tempelhofer Damm and the airport building. From February 1949 until the airlift memorial was inaugurated on July 10, 1951, the square was simply redesigned. Another redesign took place in 1957/1958 after Columbiadamm had received a new street layout and after renovations at the subway exits a year earlier. The airlift memorial designed by Eduard Ludwig in 1951 is located on the square . The green space in front of the former Tempelhof Central Airport at the busy intersection of Columbia- / Mehring- / Tempelhofer Damm / Dudenstraße muffles the traffic noise with bushes and trees. Trees were planted along the road to commemorate the victims of the airlift. Floor slabs with the following text indicate the event. “This tree was planted in memory of the victims who perished during the Berlin Airlift 1948–1949. Airlift Foundation ". Some of these planted trees have decayed. Airlift memorial with the former terminal building of Tempelhof Airport

1954 Airlift Square

Podewilsstrasse

( Location )

0140 Friedrich Heinrich von Podewils (1746–1804), landowner in Tempelhof and Oberhofmarschall 04th August 1930 On August 4, 1930, the street 4 between Manteuffelstrasse and Gäßnerweg was given the name Podewilsstrasse. For a long time, Podewilsstraße was a planned road in the area northeast of today's Wenckebach Hospital . In 1925 it was still shown as undeveloped in the Berlin address book. In the address book of 1919, this area is intended for an artillery barracks. Podewilsstrasse
Reinhardtplatz

( Location )

0080 × 40 Carl Franz von Reinhardt , owner of the Tempelhof manor in the 18th century before 1902 The space used today as a car park is between Reinhardstrasse and Luise-Henriette-Strasse. It is first mentioned in the Berlin address book from 1904. Reinhardtplatz
Reinhardtstrasse

( Location )

0070 + 50
(interruption by Reinhardtplatz)
Carl Franz von Reinhardt , owner of the Tempelhof manor in the 18th century around 1899 The road leads from Parkstrasse to Alt-Tempelhof. Reinhardtstrasse
Renate private street

( Location )

0120 Renate Nather , house and landowner in Tempelhof 1930 The dedicated street leads from Burgemeisterstraße to Friedrich-Karl-Straße. A quiet inner-city residential street that is built on with apartment blocks from the 1920s. Renate private street
Richnowstrasse

( Location )

0110 Gottlieb Richnow (1840–1908), landowner in Tempelhof around 1909 The street lies between Schönburgstrasse and Stolbergstrasse. It is first noted in the Berlin address book from 1909. Richnowstrasse
Ringbahnstrasse

( Location )

1530 after the Berlin Ringbahn, which runs parallel here after 1889 The street runs from Germaniastraße to Schöneberger Straße. In 1902 and 1905, their route was extended to the Tempelhof station marshalling yard. The street that was created was called the Extended Ringbahnstraße and was included in the Ringbahnstraße between 1929 and 1932. At the west end, the warehouse of the Guard Train Battalion and the service building of the Reichspostzentralamt have been preserved as a monument. While only apartment buildings are lined up on the south side of the street, commercial and administrative buildings alternate on the north side. The main workshop of the Berlin city cleaning service is located on property 88–124 . Further architectural monuments are in the Ringbahnstraße 10-14 the Reichsmonopoly administration for spirits, in the Ringbahnstraße 16-20 the fence factory of Lerm & Ludewig, the only industrial yard in Tempelhof. On the south side of the busy street there are mostly multi-storey houses, while there are industrial settlements on the north side. Ringbahnstrasse

Warehouse of the Guard Train Battalion

former fence factory Lerm & Ludewig

Ring road

( Location )

0300
(in the district)
after the arched course of the road around 1905 The southern part of the street runs in Mariendorf . It is first mentioned in the Berlin address book from 1905. The previous name was Ringchaussee from before 1900 to 1904 . Ring road
Röblingstrasse

( Location )

0790
(in the district)
John August Roebling (1806–1869), engineer and bridge builder June 12, 1913 The street runs from Eythstraße to Attilastraße. The northern part is in Schöneberg . The previous name was Street 58 . Its course followed a section of the earlier Black Path . On June 12, 1913, the street section north of today's Arnulfstrasse was renamed Röblingstrasse in Schöneberg, and on August 8, 1935, a section of Schöneberger Strasse in Tempelhof was renamed Röblingstrasse. Röblingstrasse
Rohdestrasse

( Location )

0230 Rohde, name of a fiefdom family in Tempelhof around 1910 The Rohdestraße leads from the Germaniastraße to the Teilestraße. The Rohde andteile families were probably the only survivors of the Thirty Years' War in Tempelhof. Rohdestrasse
Rohrbeckstrasse

( Location )

0140 Rohrbeck, name of a farming family in the Tempelhof around 1910 The street connects Bacharacher Strasse with Holzmannstrasse . The quiet inner-city residential street is only built with semi-detached houses on the south side of the street. On the north side there is an overgrown park and a playground. On the corner of Holzmannstrasse is the church of the Serbian Orthodox community and a daycare center. Rohrbeckstrasse
Rothariweg

( Location )

0280 Rothari , King of the Lombards , (around 606–652) Nov 23, 1931 The street lies between Bosestrasse and Kaiserin-Augusta-Strasse. At the plant street 12b . On April 27, 1936, the western section of Albrechtstrasse, which had been separated by extensive construction work, was included in Rothariweg. In 1961, the development plan 63 was established for the residential area south of Bosestrasse, including Gäßner- and Rothariweg to the north of the (already existing) properties on Kaiserin-Augusta-Strasse, with which Wittekindstrasse was extended to the north. Rothariweg
Rumey plan

( Location )

0290 Fritz Rumey (1891–1918), fighter pilot in the First World War Apr 21, 1936 The street in the Fliegerviertel with the typical row houses from the 1920s got its name from the renaming of the Prussian ring between the Bundesring and the Zähringerkorso. It runs from the Bundesring to Werner-Voss-Damm. The Rumeyplan is part of the parking ring with its median. In addition to various green areas, there is a bunker system from the Second World War . In 1958, a development plan was drawn up for the (today) eastern section of the Hessenring on the Rumeyplan, Boelckestrasse, Hessenring, Werner-Voss-Damm area in order to provide space; today daycare centers, youth clubs and the KGA Zähringer Korso are located here. Rumey plan
Saalburgstrasse

( Location )

0560 Saalburg Castle near Frankfurt am Main around 1910 The street in the industrial area south of the Teltow Canal leads from Gottlieb-Dunkel-Straße to Cafeastraße in Neukölln , where there is also a turning area. On the road there are industrial settlements and the track systems of the Neukölln-Mittenwalder Railway , which operated the Teltow Canal freight station here, where the waste transfer station for the BSR Gradestrasse waste plant was located until 2011. Saalburgstrasse
Sachsenhauser Strasse

( Location )

0320 Sachsenhausen , district of Frankfurt am Main Jan. 23, 1931 The street connects Germaniastraße with Teilestraße. On the west side is the Südring colony, while the east side is an industrial park. The route, laid out as street 38 , is already shown in the address book from 1911. It was named Sachsenhausener Straße in 1931 , but on February 15, 1931 the name was corrected to Sachsenhauser Straße. Sachsenhauser Strasse
Schätzelbergstrasse

( Location )

0480 Schatzelberge, field name of an elevation in Tempelhof 0March 8, 1935 The street in the industrial area on the Teltow Canal leads as an extension of Komturstrasse to Ullsteinstrasse. One of the Berlin animal cemeteries is located on Schätzelbergstrasse, the “Berlin Tierbestattung Tempelhof” . Schätzelbergstrasse
Schaffhausener Strasse

( Location )

0530 Schaffhausen , capital of the canton of the same name in Switzerland around 1911 The road between Oberlandstrasse and Schwanheimer Strasse initially runs south parallel to the Bärensiedlung . Then next to the city ​​motorway A 100 and ends in a green area that was created when the motorway was built over. The autobahn tunnel in the town center of Britz begins halfway up the road, causing noise pollution for the residents. The section of Germaniastraße separated by the construction of the city motorway was incorporated into Schaffhausener Straße in July 1982. An eastern bypass planned on the route of the Neukölln-Mittenwalder Bahn along Schaffhausener Strasse, which is equivalent to a federal motorway, was not implemented. Schaffhausener Strasse

Bear settlement

Schönburgstrasse

( Location )

0300 Otto von Schönburg -Hartenstein (1791–1846), owner of the Tempelhof manor in the 19th century after 1893 The quiet street at Lehnepark lies between Alt-Tempelhof and Parkstraße and has a well-preserved old building fabric. It partially borders the Lehnepark, which means that from some apartments there is a view of the park with the Wilhelmsteich. The Lehnepark is part of a green belt consisting of the Bose Park, the Lehnepark, the Old Park and the Franckepark. Schönburgstrasse
Schöneberger Strasse

( Location )

0660 Schöneberg , a district of Berlin, was an independent city until 1920 after 1902 The centrally located inner-city business and residential street with a high volume of traffic is the connection between Alt-Tempelhof at Berlinickeplatz and Sachsendamm . It was created as a former country road between the places Schöneberg and Tempelhof. The name before 1882 until after 1902 was Schöneberger Weg and was elevated to a street between 1902 and 1904. The tests for the first television system, which was shown at the 1936 radio exhibition, took place at Ringbahnstrasse 126–134 at the corner of Schöneberger Strasse 11–15. Schöneberger Strasse
Scribe ring

( Location )

0400 Wilhelm Paul Schreiber (1893–1918), fighter pilot in the First World War Apr 21, 1936 The street in the Fliegerviertel got its name from the renaming of the part of the Deutsches Ring between Wettinerkorso (now: Loewenhardtdamm) and Bundesring. It is part of the Neu-Tempelhof park ring. The quiet but central residential street is only built on the south side with single-family houses, terraced houses and town villas. The north side borders the Parkring. Between Schreiberring es Wolffring, in the middle of the green corridor, there is a bunker from the Second World War, which is used by a Tempelhof rifle club as a training facility. Scribe ring
Schuleburgring

( Location )

0460 Rudolf von der Schulenburg (1860–1930), Prussian politician around 1913 The Schuleburgring now runs from Mussehlstraße to Wolffring and Leonhardyweg, originally to Sachsenring (now: Thuyring). The part between Thuy- and Wolffring was renamed Leonhardyweg in 1936. On May 2, 1945, Helmuth Weidling , the last combat commandant of the Battle of Berlin , signed the surrender of the Berlin garrison in the house in Schulenburgring 2, where the command staff of the Soviet 8th Guard Army was based for a few days. The house is the childhood home of the Governing Mayor Michael Müller . Schuleburgring 2
Commemorative plaque for the surrender at the House of Schulenburgring 2

Berlin-Tempelhof Schulenburgring 128

Schwanheimer Strasse

( Location )

0170 Schwanheim , district of Frankfurt am Main before 1910 The Schwanheimer Straße goes from the Rohrbeckstraße and ends at the Schaffhauser Straße as a dead end . The short residential street is mostly built with single-family houses and on the east side there is a church of the Serbian Orthodox community and a daycare center. For cars, the road ends as a dead end at the entrance to the Britz town center tunnel on the A 100 . A green area was created above the motorway route, so the street is largely spared from the motorway noise. In 1964 a development plan was drawn up between Holzmannstrasse and Schwanheimer Strasse south of Rohrbeckstrasse, which left Hilzmannplatz as an unnamed path. Schwanheimer Strasse
Schwiebusser Strasse

( Location )

0540 Schwiebus , former German town in Neumark , now in Poland Feb 12, 1898 The street runs between Mehringdamm and Friesenstraße and forms the border between Tempelhof and Kreuzberg. The road area and the north side of the road are in Kreuzberg , only the properties on the south side with the Columbiahaus (administration building of Tempelhof Airport) are in the district. Schwiebusser Strasse
Sennockstrasse

( Location )

0090 Fritz Sennock (1878–1930), local politician in Tempelhof Aug 21, 1931 The cul-de-sac from Neue Strasse was laid out as Strasse 1a . Sennockstrasse
Siegertweg

( Location )

0170 Wilhelm Siegert (1872–1929), inspector of the German aviation and airship troops in the First World War 0Aug 4, 1930 The path in the aviation district was laid out as street 33 . It is between Manfred-von-Richthofen-Straße and Hoeppnerstraße. The quiet residential street has the row houses from the 1920s that are typical of the Aviation District. Siegertweg
Stolbergstrasse

( Location )

0340 Stolberg , noble family with real estate in Tempelhof around 1900 Stolbergstrasse runs on both sides of Alt-Tempelhof from Richnowstrasse to Borussiastrasse. It was first shown in 1900 in the Berlin address book. In the southern area, Stolbergstrasse is a quiet residential street with a direct view of a small park that arose from the former Old Tempelhof cemetery. Some grave sites can still be found here. There is direct access to the Bose Park. Stolbergstrasse
Street 20a

( Location )

0130 Numbering of the development plan after 1965 The course is the continuation of Fuhrmannstraße over the Anger from Alt-Tempelhof to the south. The street has no assigned land, the residential buildings standing here are listed in the cadastre as Götzstraße 15, 15a, 15b . Street 20a is listed in the official directory as a public street with street number 8537 and is located between Alt-Tempelhof (southern section) / Germaniastraße and Götzstraße, where it ends opposite the Stadtbad Tempelhof. On the map from 1954, there is a larger commercial area with no continuous streets. Today it is a three-meter-wide entrance to the six-story row of houses here. On the map from 1961, the course of the street 20a over Alt-Tempelhof is still referred to as Fuhrmannstraße. A canceled road 20b ran further west. The development plan XIII-57 from 1965 for the residential area Alt-Tempelhof 1–15, Germaniastraße 1–3 and Götzstraße 3–17 specifies the use of street 20a. Berlin-Tempelhof Strasse 20a
Tankredstrasse

( Location )

0230 Tankred of Tiberias (1072–1112), crusader and Norman prince around 1911 Tankredstrasse in the “Attilahöhe” estate leads from Attilastrasse to Paul-Schmidt-Strasse. There are several listed multi-family houses on the quiet residential street. In the Attila-, Paul-Schmidt- and Tankredstraße block there is a large inner courtyard with tenants' gardens. At the corner of Paul-Schmidt-Straße, a footpath leads through the KGA Eschenallee to Marienhöher Weg and Marienhöhe . Tankredstrasse
Parts road

( Location )

1080 Parts, name of a farming family in Tempelhof, which after the Thirty Years' War was probably the only surviving family in the village of Tempelhof, alongside the Rohde family. The short Rohdestrasse, one of the two side streets of the Teilestrasse, keeps the name of the second surviving family alive. around 1909 The Teilestraße is an industrial road as an extension of the Ordensmeisterstraße between Komturstraße and Gottlieb-Dunkel-Straße. There are several industrial monuments on the street , in particular a portal crane from 1935, Teilestraße 3–8. and the Sarotti plant in Tempelhof

The street used to end at the old Tempelhof churchyard, which is now a green area. By connecting the Gradestraße to the motorway, the street was extended to Gottlieb-Dunkel-Straße. A multi-armed motorway feeder runs across the street, in between the street crosses the route of the Neukölln-Mittenwald railway . The bridge of a former industrial railway runs parallel to the street, also over the railway line.

Parts road
Teja Street

( Location )

0110 Teja , King of the Ostrogoths in the 6th century Dec 15, 1930 Tejastraße is a dead end from Attilastraße . It was projected as street 35 . The quiet inner-city residential street is built on with apartment blocks from the post-war period. To the south there is a view of the Marienhöhe allotment gardens and the Teltow Canal. The short street ends as a dead end at the sports field of the Dag Hammarskjöld secondary school. Teja Street
Tempelhofer Damm

( Location )

3490 Tempelhof , a district of Berlin, was an independent rural community until 1920 Aug 31, 1949 The Tempelhofer Damm (colloquially known as “Te-Damm”) runs as part of the Bundesstraße 96 from the Platz der Luftbrücke to the Stubenrauchbrücke over the Teltow Canal and then merges into the Mariendorfer Damm . The previous names were Berliner Straße (before 1882-1949) and in the northern part between 1900 and 1913 Tempelhofer Chaussee . The former Tempelhof Airport (east) and the Fliegerviertel (east, also on former military grounds) are north of the Ringbahn with the Tempelhof train station , where there is also an access to the A 100 city motorway . The actual shopping street with residential administration buildings begins south of the autobahn. Here the old Tempelhof town center crosses with the Alt-Tempelhof street (Tempelhofer Damm 165) and the Tempelhof town hall, which was inaugurated in 1938, and this is where the Alte Park is located . On the north side (Tempelhofer Damm 227–235) of the Teltow Canal is the Tempelhof harbor, which is now used as a sports boat harbor, with a shopping center, and the Tempelhof tax office is between Viktoriastraße and Wulfilaufer. To the west at the north end to Kreuzberg is the State Criminal Police Office. After the wall was built, the development plan 49 was drawn up in several parts in 1962 in order to widen Tempelhofer Damm in its importance as a federal road and as a planned traffic route from the city ring to the south. The adjacent cross street was influenced.
Airlift Monument

Tempelhof Town Hall

Ullsteinhaus

Tempelhof harbor

Tempelhofer Weg

( Location )

0140
(in the district)
Tempelhof , a district of Berlin, was an independent rural community until 1920 before 1899 The Tempelhofer Weg leads from Gottlieb-Dunkel-Straße to Britzer Damm. Most of the street is in Britz . It is already shown in the 1899 address book. Presumably, however, it existed much earlier. As a country road it connected the places Tempelhof and Britz. On July 1, 1982, the section of Germaniastraße in the Neukölln (Britz) district was renamed Tempelhofer Weg. The street is part of the Teltow Canal Path, one of the 20 green main paths in Berlin , which is separated from the canal bank by commercial space. Tempelhofer Weg
Templar line

( Location )

0150 Members of the Templar Order , with reference to the name of the district 0Aug 1, 1965 The Templerzeile goes off the Albrechtstrasse as a dead end street. It got its name by renaming the section of Werbergstrasse between Albrechtstrasse and Koseler Weg. Templar line
Theodor-Francke-Strasse

( Location )

0120 Theodor Francke (1830–1896), operator of an ivory bleaching shop and landowner in Tempelhof March 23, 1925 Theodor-Francke-Straße lies between Tempelhofer Damm and Franckepark , which can be reached through a house passage. At the corner of Tempelhofer Damm (Tempelhofer Damm 171–173 / Theodor-Francke-Strasse 10–11) is the post office built in 1917 . The quiet inner-city residential street has mostly old buildings and some post-war buildings. In 1986 the post office was extensively restored and the interior was rebuilt and modernized. Theodor-Francke-Strasse
Theodorstrasse

( Location )

0150 Theodor Francke (1830–1896), operator of an ivory bleaching shop and landowner in Tempelhof around 1909 As was customary at the beginning of the 20th century, streets were named after the first name, so this street name also refers to Theodor Francke. It is located between Albrechtstrasse and Kaiserin Augusta Strasse. Theodorstrasse
Thuyring

( Location )

0530 Emil Thuy (1894–1930), fighter pilot in the First World War Apr 21, 1936 The quiet residential street in the Fliegerviertel with its typical row houses from the 1920s was called Sachsenring in the planning of the garden city from 1913 to 1936 . It runs from Tempelhofer Damm to Hoeppnerstraße. Thuyring
Totilastrasse

( Location )

0400 Totila , king of the Ostrogoths in the 6th century July 21, 1960 The street in the “Attilahöhe” estate leads from Alboinstraße via Wittekindstraße to Manteuffelstraße, where it ends as a dead end. The section of Friedrich-Karl-Strasse between Alboinstrasse and Manteuffelstrasse was renamed Totilastrasse in 1960. On the quiet residential street there are several listed multi-family houses from the 1970s and old buildings from the 1920s. There is a pedestrian passage to Arnulfstraße and at Manteuffelstraße the Totilastraße ends as a dead end for cars , for pedestrians and cyclists the path continues to Attilaplatz. Totilastrasse
Udetzeile

( Location )

0120 Ernst Udet (1896–1941), fighter pilot in World War I, entrepreneur and general aviation master (1939–1941) Apr 29, 1957 The street in the Fliegerviertel starts from Gontermannstraße and ends as a dead end in a turning hammer. Udetzeile
Ullsteinstrasse

( Location )

1700
(in the district)
Leopold Ullstein (1826–1899), founder of Ullstein Verlag July 12, 1927 Ullsteinstrasse leads from Gradestrasse in Mariendorf via Gottlieb-Dunkel-Strasse, Schätzelbergerstrasse and Tempelhofer Damm to Rathausstrasse in Mariendorf. Between Gottlieb-Dunkel-Straße and Tempelhofer Damm the northern properties belong to the district, the rest belong to Mariendorf. East of the Tempelhofer Damm it leads through an industrial area with the Ullsteinhaus as the most striking building. Due to the location between the two villages (later between the suburbs) the street was called Grenzweg in the 19th century until 1908 , Burggrafenstraße from 1908 to 1927 and was named Zastrowstraße during the National Socialist era from 1935 to 1949 . Ullsteinstrasse
Extended Friedrich-Wilhelm-Strasse

( Location )

0070 Wilhelm I (1797–1888), German Emperor before 1899 Under this name, the street is a private street on the green courtyard between the eastern houses at Alboinplatz 8/9 and the western buildings on Wittekindstrasse (38–44, straight). For the northern buildings (45–48 consecutive) and south 49–52 (consecutive) the count of Friedrich-Wilhelm-Straße has been included. This redevelopment of the western part of Friedrich-Wilhelm-Straße creates an inner courtyard (30 × 70 meters) belonging to the building owner, which, on the other hand, is recorded as a separate street in the official register with the addition "Extended" due to the continuous plot numbering. This renaming of the section obviously does not conflict with deedication , the street is included in the official directory. The street width is smaller compared to Friedrich-Wilhelm-Straße, so that it is set up as a one-way street from Alboinplatz to Wittekindstraße. The east bypass of Alboinplatz is cordoned off from Alboinstraße in the south and can be reached from Burgemeisterstraße, as well as through the access from the north end (Alboinstraße) of the square. Berlin-Tempelhof Extended Friedrich-Wilhelm-Strasse
Viktoriastrasse

( Location )

0200 Viktoria Luise of Prussia (1840–1901), German Empress before 1902 Viktoriastraße leads from Tempelhofer Damm to Werderstraße and Wolframstraße. The ufaFabrik is located here . Viktoriastrasse
Volkmarstrasse

( Location )

0580 Volkmar, name of a Master of the Templars around 1913 Volkmarstrasse in the industrial district south of the Teltow Canal leads from Schätzelbergstrasse to Ullsteinstrasse. The administration and production buildings of the former Standard Elektrik Lorenz AG, built between 1938 and 1941, are located between Ullsteinstrasse and Colditzstrasse . This building complex was partially used as a refugee camp for people from the former GDR from 1952 to 1961 . Berlin-Tempelhof Volkmarstrasse

Berlin-Tempelhof Volkmarstrasse

Wenckebachstrasse

( Location )

0250 + 120
(interruption by Metzplatz)
Karel Frederik Wenckebach (1864–1940), professor of medicine Feb 13, 1957 Wenckebachstrasse lies between Albrechtstrasse and Ordensmeisterstrasse and is interrupted by the circular Metzplatz . The street is located in a Wilhelminian-style residential area, the street grid of which goes back to the Tempelhof estate's development plan from 1872. On the east side of the street is the large Wenckebach Hospital complex , which was known as the 2nd Garrison hospital 'was built. The previous name was Moltkestrasse from around 1883 to 1957 . The quiet Tempelhofer residential street has good transport connections and ends in the north at Franckepark, which, together with the Alten Park, the Lehnepark and the Bose Park, forms an inner-city green belt.

There is an evangelical free church between Metzplatz and Franckepark.

Wenckebachstrasse
Werbergstrasse

( Location )

0150 Hermann von Werberg , master of the order and theologian in the 14th century around 1910 Werbergstraße leads from Germaniastraße to Götzstraße, but originally to Albrechtstraße. On August 1, 1965, the section of Werbergstrasse, which lay between Albrechtstrasse and Koseler Weg, was renamed Templerzeile . The development plan XIII-9 was drawn up in 1955 for the use of the residential building land between Felix-, Götz-, Werberg-, Germaniastraße. Werbergstrasse
Werderstrasse

( Location )

0520 August von Werder (1808–1887), Prussian general before 1889 Werderstrasse runs from Kaiserin-Augusta-Strasse as a continuation of Blumenthalstrasse to Viktoriastrasse and Wolframstrasse. It is mentioned for the first time in the Berlin address book from 1889. However, the pages are missing from the 1888 address book. Werderstrasse
Werner-Loebermann-Weg

( Location )

0900 Werner Loebermann (1902 – unknown), first director of the Berlin Airport Company after the Second World War after 2012 The street in the Tempelhofer Freiheit , which was not dedicated to the former airfield area, runs parallel to Tempelhofer Damm from the Paradestraße junction to the Bayernring on the opposite side of the street. The verge is used for reserved parking spaces. Berlin-Tempelhof Werner-Loebermann-Weg

Berlin-Tempelhof Werner-Loebermann-Weg

Werner-Voss-Damm

( Location )

0900 Werner Voß (1897–1917), fighter pilot in the First World War Apr 21, 1936 Today the street in the Fliegerviertel runs from Manfred-von-Richthofen-Straße to General-Pape-Straße. In 1936 the Zähringer Korso was given its current name. In 1963 the Hansakorso was then included in Werner-Voss-Damm and the street swiveled in a westerly direction. The remaining plots of the former route were built over and the remaining plots were included in Hoeppnerstrasse (plots 105–123). The allotment garden 'Hansakorso' is reminiscent of the former Hansakorso . In 1933 the SA prison in Papestrasse was located in the barracks at Werner-Voss-Damm 54a . At Werner-Voss-Damm 52-68 there are former barracks of the 2nd and 3rd railway regiments Werner-Voss-Damm
Wiesenerstrasse

( Location )

0390 Fritz Wiesener (1880–1929), Mayor of Tempelhof Feb. 18, 1927 The street in the Fliegerviertel as street 30 of the development plan is located on Manfred-von-Richthofen-Straße on both sides. The quiet residential street has the row houses from the 1920s that are typical of the Fliegerviertel. The northern part ends as a dead-end street in a courtyard with a residential parking lot, the southern part runs to Hoeppnerstrasse. Wiesenerstrasse
Wintgensstrasse

( Location )

0350 Kurt Wintgens (1894–1916), fighter pilot in the First World War 0Aug 4, 1930 The street in the Fliegerviertel runs from Boelckestrasse to Gontermannstrasse on the south side of the Sankt Joseph Hospital. Wintgensstrasse
Wittekindstrasse

( Location )

0900 Wittekind , Duke of the Saxons around 1911 Wittekindstrasse is between Bosestrasse and Tankredstrasse. The section between Arnulfstrasse and Tankredstrasse belongs to the 'Attilahöhe' settlement built in 1930. In 1961, the development plan 63 was established for the residential area south of Bosestrasse, including Gäßner- and Rothariweg to the north of the (already existing) properties on Kaiserin-Augusta-Strasse, with which Wittekindstrasse was extended to the north. Wittekindstrasse
Wölfertstrasse

( Location )

0130 Friedrich Hermann Wölfert (1850–1897), publisher and aviation pioneer 0Aug 4, 1930 The street in the Fliegerviertel lies between Hessenring and Gontermannstrasse. The previous name was 23 Street . Wölfertstrasse
Wolffring

( Location )

1290 Kurt Wolff (1895–1917), fighter pilot in the First World War Apr 21, 1936 The street in the Fliegerviertel was laid out in the garden city in 1913 as the Deutscher Ring , which was renamed in 1936 according to changes in planning into the Bäumerplan, the Schreiberring and the Wolffring. The quiet street is part of the Neu-Tempelhof park ring and has very different buildings and is located between Tempelhofer Damm and Loewenhardtdamm. The church is located at Wolffring 72 on Tempelhofer Feld . Opposite the Kynastteich there are some allotment gardens and the church on the Tempelhofer Feld, and the neighborhood and self-help center (NUSZ) with the ufafabrik e. V. operated day-care center and the "Elementary School on Tempelhofer Feld". It closes the Wolffring on which is no longer on the green area and is built on both sides with row houses from the 1920s. Between Wolffring and Schreiberring there is a bunker from the Second World War, which is used by a Tempelhof rifle club as a training facility. Wolffring
Wolframstrasse

( Location )

0950 Wolfram von Eschenbach , medieval poet around 1911 The street leads from the intersection Kunigunden-, Werder-, Viktoriastraße over Alarichplatz to Geiserichstraße. The Tempelhof-Schöneberg job center is located on property 89–92. It is a quiet inner-city residential street with different types of development, with mostly semi-detached houses from the late 1920s between Geiserichstrasse and Chlodwigstrasse, followed by apartment buildings from the 1920s and 1960s. There are several pedestrian passages to the Wulfila-Ufer and a passage to Attilastraße via the Attilagarten. Wolframstrasse
Wüsthoffstrasse

( Location )

0350 Kurt Wüsthoff (1897–1926), fighter pilot in the First World War 0Aug 4, 1930 The street in the Fliegerviertel on the north side of the Sankt-Joseph-Krankenhaus runs from Boelckestraße to Gontermannstraße. A development plan from 1949 is available for the northwestern area. Wüsthoffstrasse
Wulfila Bank

( Location )

0620 Wulfila , bishop of the Goths in the 4th century 0Jan. 7, 1928 The Wulfila-Ufer is located on the Teltow Canal between Gersdorfstrasse and Alarichstrasse and continues as a footpath to Tempelhofer Damm . The quiet inner-city residential street is built on with multi-family houses, between Geiserichstrasse and Alarichstrasse there are apartment blocks (some with tenants' gardens) from the late 1920s and the post-war period . The bank is only built on on the north side, with an unobstructed view of the canal bank. The street is part of the Teltow Canal Route, one of Berlin's 20 main green routes . Wulfila Bank
Zastrowstrasse

( Location )

0100 Dietrich von Zastrow , theologian and Commander of the Order of St. John in Tempelhof Feb 13, 1957 The road between Felixstrasse and Götzstrasse was created as road 410 of the development plan on former allotment grounds. In 1957 a development plan was drawn up for the north-east of Straße 6 / Felixstraße, which changed the course of Götzstraße and planned street 410 (today: Zastrowstraße). Zastrowstrasse

Former and only planned streets

In 1910, the Prussian military administration, the largest landowner, sold a huge area west of the airport for 72 million gold marks (adjusted for inflation in today's currency: around 419,761,000 euros). The district of Neu-Tempelhof was created, which was later unofficially called the Aviation District . In particular, the plans for the use of the Guard Exercierplatz near the city center as a garden city at Neu-Tempelhof (western Tempelhofer Feld) resulted in several routes with named streets around 1910/1913. As a result of the First World War , the plans for a garden city (as in other Berlin suburbs) were not or only partially implemented. After the war and inflation, new plans for the aviation district (located at the airport) came up north of the Ringbahn and planned routes were changed. There, in 1936, a total of 16 streets were ceremoniously named after the heroes of the World War II who had previously been related to the German Empire. The single-family houses and apartment blocks were inhabited by ground and air personnel from the nearby airport. In addition to simple renaming (for example as a result of the Prussian strike ) and changes in use, the road system was influenced in the 1960s by the construction of the motorway along the Ringbahn. In addition to the streets listed here, there were street names numbered according to the development plan, some of which existed as numbered streets for a longer period, especially in the 1930s. The street 6 north of the town hall on Tempelhofer Damm to Felixstraße was planned as another street between Götzstraße and today's Franckepark until this area was planned. Further numbered roads were omitted in the planning of the city ring along the Ringbahn and the east bypass planned as a motorway (but not implemented) on the railway line of the Neukölln-Mittenwalder Railway from 1972. Thus, a Tempelhof interchange was also omitted, which influenced Bacharacher and Schwanheimer Strasse would be.

Surname from to today named after Location / Notes
Achenbach promenade 1913 1945 overbuilt Heinrich von Achenbach (1829–1899), Ministerialrat in the Prussian Ministry of Culture The promenade was in the garden city between Badener Ring and Dreibundstraße . For the Boelcke-, Duden-, Mussehlstraße, Bayerring area there is a development plan from 1966 with the old road routes. In the 1912 address book, the entry “vacant” can be found in 1913.
Albion Street 1913 Jan. 23, 1931  →  Alboinstrasse Albion , ancient name of the British Isles The street 12a of the development plan on the border to Schöneberg is said to have accidentally or distorted the name Alboin . During the First World War, attempts were made to rename it several times, but it did not take place until 1931.
Alvenslebenstrasse Nov. 24, 1874 around 1900 omitted Alvensleben , Konstantin Reimar von Alvensleben (1809-1892), Prussian military The street N, Section III of the development plan was laid out by the Berliner Bankverein on the "Schöneberg Netherland-ends" and probably fell away when the Teltow Canal was built (from December 1900 to January 1906). It remained undeveloped and is not to be found in the 1900 address book and, for example, in 1880 under Schöneberg and under Tempelhof.
At the Ringbahn 1895 around 1914  →  Ringbahnstrasse Ringbahn , railway line leading to downtown Berlin The street running parallel to the Ringbahn was also called the street on the Ringbahn at the same time . In turn, it was located on the Reichsbahn site south of the Ringbahn. Because of this restricted use, it became a private road around 1914 and, more precisely, between 1935 and 1938 as the Reichsbahn-Privatstrasse . Ultimately, the route was omitted due to the motorway construction after 1960.

http://digital.zlb.de/viewer/image/01405003X_1898/2983/

Arenholzstrasse before 1913 Oct 16, 1923 moved in Burchard von Arenholz (14th century), Commander of the Tempelhof Commandery The road was laid out between 1907 and 1913 and withdrawn in 1923 due to the redefinition of the building alignment lines. It went from Ordensmeisterstraße to Albrechtstraße and was vacant in 1914. The Arenholzsteig is located elsewhere.
Berlin street before 1882 Aug 31, 1949  →  Tempelhofer Damm Berlin , direction of the connection The Berlin street was in 1882 the old road from the direction of Zossen to Berlin, the further north at Tempelhof Field along leading location Tempelhof Chaussee came with the expansion of the Garden City yet added. The post and trade route between the former villages of Tempelhof and Mariendorf ran west of the current route and was later Provinzialchaussee, then Reichsstraße and is now Bundesstraße 96 . The street name that existed several times with the formation of Greater Berlin was changed to Tempelhof in 1949.
Brunswick Ring Feb. 18, 1927 April 21, 1936  →  Gontermannstrasse
 →  Hoeppnerstrasse
Braunschweiger , country in the German Empire The street in the garden city of Neu-Tempelhof was laid out as street 16 . In this quarter, the planned garden city, streets were named after the countries and ruling families of the German Empire proclaimed in Versailles. The planned Braunschweiger Ring was only partially implemented during the expansion of the Aviation District, so that today Gontermannstraße corresponds to its western section and Hoeppnerstraße to the southern section.
Britzer way before 1898 after 1902  →  Germaniastrasse Britz , southeastern neighbor The Britzer Weg is the connection from Tempelhof to Britz and got its name (probably long ago) before 1890. Between 1902 and 1905 the course was incorporated into Germaniastraße, the eastern continuation of Dorfstraße (today: Alt-Tempelhof). This route was shortened with the construction of the city ​​motorway .
Columbiastrasse March 20, 1929 Aug 14, 1950  →  Columbiadamm Columbia , name of the aircraft with which Clarence Chamberlin crossed the Atlantic in 1927 Two years after the transatlantic flight in 1927 with landing at the airfield Tempelhof was the northerly from the airport Prince-August-von-Württemberg-Straße in Kreuzberg in Columbia street named and later the continued lying in Tempelhof was on both sides as the New Airport Road (access from Tempelhofer Damm to the airport) and combined with the expansion of Tempelhof together with Neuköllner Friedhofstrasse and Flughafenstrasse , which adjoins to the east . For 1938 the address book shows the distribution between Kreuzberg and Tempelhof as a section of the traffic route that was renamed “Damm” in 1950 according to the character of this connection between Hasenheide and Tempelhofer Feld .
German ring after 1913 April 21, 1936  →  Tree plan

 →  Schreiberring
 →  Wolffring

German , the nation-state in addition to the "Kaiserland" Prussia As a German ring was in the garden city planning before the First World War, the planned Garden Ring from the northern section of Berlin street named. The southern section was also called the Preußenring . When the garden city was redesigned to become the “Aviator Quarter”, the garden ring was only partially implemented. The northern section from the Deutsches Ring to the Schreiberring on the southern edge, the Wolffring on the northern edge of today's Parkring and the western section is part of the Bäumer plan.
Village street before 1700 August 31, 1949  →  Old Tempelhof Dorfstraße , the oldest street in the village first mentioned in 1247 At the village street was in the 13th century, the manor of the Knights Templar, later Hahnehof. Due to the orientation of the church , it was perpendicular to the Chaussee ( Berliner Strasse to the north). She went west to Schöneberger Strasse and east to Britz ( Germaniastrasse ). In contrast to other districts in Greater Berlin, the name Dorfstraße (instead of Hauptstraße) was retained, so that in 1949 this multiple street name in Berlin was renamed from "old" to the district.
Dreibundstrasse 0Jan. 9, 1901 April 21, 1936  →  Dudenstrasse Triple Alliance , secret defensive alliance between the German Empire, Austria-Hungary and the Kingdom of Italy The route corresponds to Straße 6, Section III of the Berlin development plan on the edge of Kreuzberg . It is (essentially) the approach used by the troops from Charlottenburg and Moabit to the training area on Tempelhofer Feld . This "Kolonnenweg" led from the west on the Berlin Weichbild border to the practice area on the Tempelhofer Feld . The name of the street in Schöneberg is Colonnenstrasse to this day . The naming after the military alliance results from this military use. During the National Socialist era , the name was changed to Immelmannstrasse in 1936 after Max Immelmann , a fighter pilot in the First World War . This renaming from the Nazi era was followed in 1949 by the renaming after the philologist Konrad Duden .
Unit street after 1910 after 1938 moved in Unity , here as a national unity The street was named before June 1914 in reference to the unification of the German nation (from many sub-states) to form the German Empire, whereby the location between Wittelsbacherkorso and Hohenzollerkorso emphasizes the connection between the ruling families in the Empire. It ran parallel to the Bayernring south of Dreibundstrasse . Planned in the garden city and not implemented in the aviation district, it must have been moved in after 1938, as it was no longer shown on the map from 1940. For the Boelcke-, Duden-, Mussehlstraße, Bayerring area there is a development plan from 1966 with the old road routes.
Friedhofstrasse 1920 March 20, 1929  →  Columbiadamm Cemetery , garrison burial place The cemetery road leading to the 1865 newly created garrison burial ground, which belonged to Gutsbezirk Hasenheide, and the "old shooting galleries" on the Tempelhof Field bordered. It lay in the route of today's Columbiadamm (between Golßener and Lilienthalstrasse) and was initially laid out without a name as the burial place of the garrison, from 1901 onwards as an extension of the Prinz August von Württemberg Strasse between the barracks and the pioneer site and named as Kirchhofstrasse and around 1919 as Friedhofstrasse 1929 on Columbiastraße .
Green way before 1786 before 1935 omitted Course through green garden area Grüner Weg is an old popular name that can be found between Tempelhof and Rixdorf by name on a map from 1786. The path led across the Tempelhofer Feld to the cemeteries in Neukölln. It led over the Rollberge from Tempelhof to Böhmisch-Rixdorf, but was only named that way around 1904. Its route had changed in the course of time, on the map from 1912 it is located in the south of what will later be the airfield from Germaniastraße in Tempelhof to Thomasstraße in Neukölln. In the address book of 1930 it is listed as undeveloped from Germaniastraße . From Germaniastraße (east of the mouth of the Ringbahnstraße) it crosses under the railway line to the northeast, over the south of Tempelhofer Feld, and later through the allotment garden colony located here. Between 1932 and 1935 the part in Tempelhof was canceled in favor of the airfield.
Hohenzollern parade after 1913 April 21, 1936  →  Manfred-von-Richthofen-Straße , fighter pilot with the most aerial victories in the First World War . The German Kaiser came from the dynasty of the House of Hohenzollern The Hohenzollern Parade got its name before June 1914 with a central location in the planned garden city of Neu-Tempelhof . The route of the central street lay as a westward arch between Berliner Strasse in the north (near Kreuzberg) and in the south (near Ringbahn). With the planning change for the Fliegerviertel, some of the street names were renamed according to the countries and rulers of the German Empire to match the Tempelhof Airport .
Hansa parade before 1918 0April 1, 1963  →  Werner-Voss-Damm Hansa , part of the German Empire are the Hanseatic cities The Hansa parade is planned in the garden city between the Preußen- and Braunschweiger Ring to the south-west, probably through the ring railway to the Sachsendamm in Schöneberg. It was named between 1914 and 1918, but remains undeveloped. In the 1950s, the part between the Papestraße S-Bahn station and the Werner-Voss-Damm, which faces south from there, bore this name. In 1963 he was included in the Werner-Voss-Damm, which instead of going south now leads west to the S-Bahn station.
Heerbannstrasse after 1910 before 1940 omitted Army ban , all free landowners who are capable of weapons are invited to join the army The street was planned and named for the garden city between November 1910 and June 1914. It was withdrawn after 1938 because it remained undeveloped and probably not built. It is no longer shown on the map from 1940. It was between Dreibundstrasse (today: Dudenstrasse) and Einheitsstrasse , parallel to Mussehlstrasse. For the Boelcke-, Duden-, Mussehlstraße, Bayerring area there is a development plan from 1966 with the old road routes.
Hermione Path Aug 21, 1931 after 1956 overbuilt Hermin , Germanic tribe The road 37 according to the development plan ran parallel to today's Gersdorfstrasse between the Attilastrasse and the Wulfilaufer on the Teltow Canal and was named ( dedicated ) in 1931 (to match Wulfila ). After 1961 the street was closed due to construction work, today the properties Atillastraße 120–127 and the “KGA Marienhöhe” are located here.
Holzmannplatz 1911 0August 6, 1965 moved in Philipp Holzmann , building contractor in railway and building construction Holzmannplatz was named between 1910 and 1911. It was between Holzmannstrasse, Rohrbeckstrasse and Schwanheimer Strasse and is still on the map in 1961. In 1965 the triangular square along Schwanheimer Strasse was built up and was moved into. Today there is a playground along Rohrbeckstrasse. On the area of ​​the former Holzmannstraße (18, 22) there is a youth club and a senior club. In 1964 a development plan was drawn up between Holzmannstrasse and Schwanheimer Strasse south of Rohrbeckstrasse, which left Hilzmannplatz as an unnamed path.
Immelmannstrasse April 21, 1936 0January 3, 1949  →  Dudenstrasse Max Immelmann , fighter pilot in the First World War The Dreibundstraße on the northern edge of the Aviation District was named Immelmannstraße in 1936. There is no entry in 1936; it was first entered in the address book in 1937. On the 120th birthday of Duden it was renamed after him.
Kaiser-Wilhelm-Strasse 1898 04th July 1960  →  Burgemeisterstraße Kaiser Wilhelm , (1888–1918 incumbent) German Emperor and King of Prussia This route (between Friedrich-Wilhelm- and Friedrich-Karl-Straße) was led in 1890 from Berliner Straße 49 and 50 as Lankwitzer Weg . In 1895 and 1898 the course of the Lankwitzer Weg to Werderstraße is listed. Kaiser Wilhelmstrasse is then mentioned for the first time in the 1899 address book. The renaming in 1960 took place because of the ambiguous street name in the Berlin urban area .
Kirchhofstrasse before 1901 around 1920  →  Columbiadamm Kirchhof , older name here for the burial place The Kirchhofstraße was between (today) and Golßener Lilienthalstraße and led to the 1865 newly created garrison burial ground, which belonged to Gutsbezirk Hasenheide, as well as the old shooting range in the north of Tempelhof Field. It lay in the route of today's Columbiadamm between the barracks and the garrison burial ground , from which the name derives. On the map from 1918 Kirchhofstrasse was still marked by name, in the map from 1920 it was called Friedhofstrasse . The newer term cemetery prevailed against the older churchyard. In 1929 it entered Columbiastrasse .
Lankwitz way before 1880 around 1900  →  Attilastraße Lankwitz , south-western neighboring town (today a district) in the western neighboring district. The Lankwitzer Weg was shown in the Berlin address books for Tempelhof as early as 1882. It is the connection route from Tempelhof to Lankwitz south of the Rauen Berge. Although it is not mentioned in the address book of 1899, it was raised to Lankwitzer “Strasse” around 1900 and designated as Tempelhofer Strasse around 1903 from Berliner Strasse in Tempelhof as an extension of the district boundary. Since around 1909, the name Attilastraße to Attilaplatz came up from the boundary. Around 1910, Lankwitzer Strasse in the section between Manteuffel- and Berliner Strasse and Attilastrasse was renamed Friedrich-Karl-Strasse.
Linzer Strasse after 1925 after 1987 omitted Linz am Rhein , city in the north of Rhineland-Palatinate The street continued east of the industrial railway track along Schaffhausener Straße south of Germaniastraße to Teilestraße. In 1940 the street is listed in the address book with this course and without its own properties. During the construction of the city ​​motorway , the area was used up and the road that was in the industrial area has been removed.
Moltkestrasse around 1883 February 13, 1957  →  Wenckebachstrasse Moltke (1800–1891), Prussian field marshal, chief of the general staff Moltkestrasse was named between 1882 and 1883 and was located between Ordensmeisterstrasse and Albrechtstrasse. In the 1910s there was an (unnamed) continuation to Straße 6 , with plans for street 20b to Dorfstraße; today Franckepark is located here.
Ordensmeisterplatz around 1910 around 1943 canceled Ordensmeister , supreme office of the Templar Order (Grand Master) who owned Tempelhof The seat

was bordered by Albrechtstrasse and Ordensmeisterstrasse, the west side initially formed a projected street parallel to the east of Felixstrasse, in 1919 Podewilsstrasse (today: Colditzstrasse) was drawn in for this. By building on the square and Albrechtstrasse at the east end. It was omitted around 1943 and is no longer recorded on the map in 1954. Today there is a commercial area on this area from Komtur- / Ordensmeisterstraße westwards, among other things for a shipping company.

Paradeplatz after  0April 5, 1934 1955  →  Adolf-Scheidt-Platz Parade , military training and parade field of the Tempelhof field At first there were barracks on the western site, which led with a (parade) road to the Tempelhofer Feld parade and training area to the east of today's Tempelhofer Damm . The central square of the garden city at the western end of Paradestrasse with the Hohenzollernring was to be given the name Paradeplatz (near the railway regiment) and was not listed in the address book until 1925. The square was given a new name for 1926 . On April 5, 1934 the renaming took place, in particular Paradeplatz for local public transport in the north of Tempelhof was highlighted. In 1954 it is marked on the map as Paradeplatz , in 1955 it was renamed after the Prussian politician Scheidt, who was active in settlement construction in 1947, who died in 1947 .
Podewilsstrasse around 1910 March 20, 1924 canceled Podewils (1746–1804), royal Prussian district administrator Podewils acquired the Tempelhof manor in 1796 for 63,000  thalers . The Podewilsstraße was named between 1909 and November 1910 and was between Albrecht Strasse (corner Ordensmeister place) for road 6 and configured to Germaniastraße. On March 20, 1924, the city council decided to revoke this name due to changes in the terrain. In 1930, at another location, street 4 was named Podewilsstraße according to the development plan .
Prussia ring 1913 April 21, 1936  →  Tree plan

 →  Peter-Strasser-Weg  →  Rumeyplan

Prussia , a state that emerged from the Electorate of Brandenburg The Prussian ring was planned and laid out in the planned garden city as the southern part of the park ring beginning at Tempelhofer Chaussee . It is supplemented by the Deutsche Ring , located north of the (then continuous) Paradestrasse . The naming of these two sections of the park ring stands for the national state of the German Kaiser and his territory as King of Prussia. Other street names are named after sub-states or the ruling families of the empire. It is listed in the 1913 address book and is first recorded on the map. In 1935 it was built on. The northern section was renamed to Bäumerplan, the southern section from Werner-Voss-Damm to Bundesring was partly a one-way system around the parking ring strip and ultimately the connection to Tempelhofer Damm is called Peter-Strasser-Weg.
Prinz-August-von-Württemberg-Strasse Feb 12, 1898 March 20, 1929  →  Columbiadamm August von Württemberg (1813–1885), commandant of the Guard Corps The 37, Abt. I of the development plan, to the barracks north of Tempelhof up to the western edge of the pioneering training area in Gutsbezirk Hasenheide was named 1898th It was located between today's Friesenstrasse and Golßener Strasse and was named Columbiastrasse in 1929. In 1943, the Kreuzberg part of (today's) Columbiadamm is named Columbiastraße, the Tempelhof section to the east (Golßener Straße) and west (Friesenstraße) is named Neue Flughafenstraße . The road area of Prinz-August-von-Württemberg-Straße , as well as the corresponding section of Columbiadamm today, was then (not in Tempelhof) manor districts of Hasenheide and Kreuzberg , but properties are on the southern edge of the street, which means that the official prison belonged to Tempelhof.
Private road before 1932 after 1938  →  Extended Friedrich-Wilhelm-Strasse Private property of the building association The private road on the route of the road according to the development plan in the extension of Friedrich-Wilhelm-Strasse to Alboinplatz came to an end during the expansion of the residential buildings east of the Schöneberg border (at the Alboinplatz named in 1931) between Wittekind-, Kaiserin-Augusta- and Kaiser-Wilhelm-Strasse (today : Burgemeisterstraße) within the building block. The street is integrated through gate openings at the cross streets. It was incorporated into Friedrich-Wilhelm-Strasse between 1938 and 1944 and is still entered in the official RBS database for Tempelhof as Extended Friedrich-Wilhelm-Strasse.
Reichsbahn private road after 1914 after 1964 omitted lying on private railway site The street An der Ringbahn was renamed Privatstraße between 1914 and 1918 . Between 1935 and 1938 it was given the name Reichsbahn-Privatstrasse . The street ran parallel to the Ringbahnlinie and the Ringbahnstraße between Schöneberger and Berliner Straße (today: Tempelhofer Damm ) on the Reichsbahn premises . With the construction of the motorway on Sachsendamm between AS Alboinstraße and AS Tempelhof, the Reichsbahn area was used and the road has been eliminated. The development plan XIII-21 was laid down in 1972 for the course and the connection of the city ring to Alboinstraße , whereby the Reichsbahn-Privatstraße was planned.
Sachsenhausener Strasse around 1910 Jan. 23, 1931 omitted Sachsenhausen , Hessian town, now part of Frankfurt am Main The Sachsenhausen street was named 1908-1910. It ran from Germania via Rohrbeck to Oberlandstrasse. Then in 1932 Sachsenhauser Straße it is still undeveloped. Due to construction work in 1930, the street fell away in this course, but the name for street 38 from Germaniastraße was adopted further west.
Schöneberger Weg before 1882 after 1902  →  Schöneberger Strasse Schöneberg , neighboring town to the west, today part of the district The Schöneberger Weg is the local connection from Tempelhof to Schöneberg, in today's location from Manteuffelstraße / Alt-Tempelhof on Alboinstraße to Sachsendamm. Due to a change in the district boundaries, there were two streets with the same name in the Tempelhof area. The Schöneberger Strasse in the southwest (southwest of Marienhöhe ), renamed in 1935 as Röblingstrasse and Gersdorfstrasse , belonged to the Mariendorf- Südende district at that time and was the connection route from Mariendorf to Schöneberg.
Taxi street 0Aug 4, 1930 1947 canceled Taxis , noble family, based in Frankfurt as a postal company The road 13 of the development plan was a private road and not served by public transport. Taxistraße ran (west of Manteuffelstraße) between Schöneberger / Borussiastraße and Ringbahnstraße. It was abolished around 1947. The development plan 7-6 from 2006 describes the current use of the area Schöneberger, Ringbahn-, Manteuffel-, Borussiastraße.
Tempelhofer Chaussee after 1902 around 1913  →  Tempelhofer Damm Tempelhof , from Berlin north of the Ringbahn to Tempelhof The route through the military area of Tempelhofer Feld to Kreuzberg initially had no name of its own. With the conversion of the area near the city to the north of the Ringbahn , the city of Berlin gave the name of a road to Tempelhof with the adjoining Berliner Straße . In the Pharus plan 1905 the route is shown as Tempelhofer Chaussee . As a result of the plans for the garden city of Neu-Tempelhof , Tempelhofer Chaussee was named Berliner Straße around 1913 before the current name was changed to Tempelhofer Damm for the entire main street in 1949 due to the ambiguity of this street name .
Templersteig Aug 21, 1931 Aug 31, 1937 omitted Templars , members of the Temple Order to which the Tempelhof belonged in the Middle Ages The street 12a according to the development plan was named in the undeveloped area in 1931 between Eresburgstrasse and Burchardstrasse. As a result of a change in the development plan, the Templersteig was no longer available and is not mentioned in the 1938 address book.
Thuringian Ring around 1913 April 21, 1936  →  Eschwegering Thuringia , area of ​​two states of the German Empire The Thuringian Ring was named for the garden city before June 1914 , here streets were named after the countries and rulers of the German Empire, which was proclaimed in Versailles on January 18, 1871. The Thüringer Ring is located as a ring road further out to the Parkring around the central (today) Adolf-Scheidt-Platz. It is the southern section of this ring in continuation of the Hessenring between Zähringer Korso and Schulenburgring. In 1925, the entire southwest of the garden city was omitted. With the change of plan as a Fliegerviertel, the Hessenring was extended to the current road system to Boelckestrasse and the section between this and Manfred-Richthofen-Strasse to the Eschwegering, named after the fighter pilot of the First World War, a planned section to the east was omitted
Embankment 1925 0January 7, 1928  →  Wulfila-Ufer Bank of the Teltow Canal In 1919 and 1925, only the Wolframstrasse remote from the Teltow Canal is shown. Until 1928 the Uferstrasse address book was not included, and from 1929 the Wulfilaufer was included.
Voigts-Rhetz-Strasse before 1878 around 1911 omitted Voigts-Rhetz (1809–1877), Prussian officer, most recently general of the infantry Voigt-Rhetz was in German war French German Chief of Staff of the 1st Army and the war commanding general of the Army Corps of the province Hanover. The street lay between Friedrich-Franz-Straße via Werderstraße and today's Tempelhofer Damm, parallel to Viktoriastraße. It is not explicitly mentioned in the address books around 1900. When the industrial site (film factory) was expanded, it ceased to exist between 1910 and 1911.
Weilburgstrasse around 1910 Feb 13, 1957  →  Haberechtstrasse Weilburg , city in Hesse The street was south-east of Gottlieb-Dunkel-Straße on the route of today's Haberechtstraße, with the space in front of the cemeteries on the Britz district. The choice of names after Hessian places also applied to the surrounding streets. In the 1913 address book it is recorded as undeveloped. In 1957 the name was changed because of the ambiguity of this street name .
Wettin parade 1913 April 21, 1936  →  Loewenhardtdamm Wettiners , old noble family from Central Germany The street was planned in the garden city and was named before June 1914, like the surrounding ones, after the ruling families of the German Empire, which was proclaimed in Versailles on January 18, 1871 . It is in the 1913 address book starting from Dreibundstrasse and recorded as undeveloped. On the map from 1913, the location from the central Paradeplatz to the northwest to the Schöneberg district with a connection to the Colonnenbrücke is shown. In the course of the change from aristocratic names to pilot names of the First World War , the name was used to this day in 1936.
Wittelsbach parade after 1913 April 21, 1936  →  Boelckestrasse House Wittelsbach , one of the oldest South German noble houses The street in the garden city in a central location in north-south direction was given its name before June 1914. The street runs through the garden city, later known as the Fliegerviertel, between Dreibundstraße (today: Dudenstraße) and the Ringbahn.
Württemberger Ring before 1914 before 1938 omitted Württemberg , part of the German Empire The (projected) westernmost part of the ring in the Garden City was named before June 1914 and was the continuation of the Bayernring in the north from Wettiner Korso and the continuation of the Sachsenring in the south from Hansa Korso. Before 1938, the street fell away due to the creation of allotment garden colonies (today: KGA Papestrasse) between built-up areas, and in 1935 it was no longer in the address book. The barracks hospital of the military treasury is listed for 1920, with various military authorities adjoining to the west in Schöneberg, and in 1926 the Reichsversorgungsamt.
Zähringer Korso after 1913 April 21, 1936  →  Werner-Voss-Damm Zähringer , Swabian princely family The Zähringer Korso leads north of the Ringbahn in the garden city from the central Paradeplatz to the southwest over the ring structure of Württemberger / Sachsenring / Straße 16 . Before it was renamed in 1936, the street was largely built on.

Further locations of Tempelhof

Allotment gardens

The Tempelhof allotment gardens , which are included in the allotment garden development plan, cover an area of ​​51.1  hectares and offer allotment gardeners space on over 1,400 plots, but some areas have already been converted and are not permanently secured. The fictitious permanent allotment gardens are to be treated according to the Federal Allotment Garden Act, but did not exist when it was passed or are to be treated separately due to other conditions.

  • KGA 'Albrechtshöhe' (7002a, Lage , Felixstraße / east of Komturstraße) 81 parcels of this allotment garden in the area between Germania- / Albrecht- / Komturstraße are permanently secured on 32,262 m² of state-owned leased land (RBS: 6106). A further 34 parcels with a permanent user (07002b) on 13,526 m² of state-owned leased land are only temporarily secured and, according to the zoning plan, intended for other use.
  • KGA 'Am Flughafen' (7004, location ) is located on Columbiadamm at an angle to Züllichauer Straße in the northeast corner of the district. The 99 parcels on 21,100 m² of private land are designated as unsecured in the allotment garden development and are intended for another use
  • KGA 'Bergfrieden' (Komturstrasse, Lage ). On 94 parcels there are fictional allotment gardens in the area of ​​Germania- / Albrecht- / Komturstraße. According to the allotment garden development plan (7009), these 35,219 m² of leased land are permanently secured as grassland (permanent allotment gardens) and are recorded in the official register under RBS 6195.
  • The KGA 'Borussia' (Ringbahnstrasse 109–115, Lage ) is located in the area of ​​the Ringbahnstrasse / Manteuffelstrasse. On the state's own leased land, 18 plots for fictitious permanent allotment gardens on 4,094 m² are laid out, but according to the planning (development plan 7011) they are in level II and are only partially secured.
  • KGA 'Erntesegen' (Ringstrasse 9/10, 7017, Lage ) is located in the southwest of the district between the Teltow Canal, Ringstrasse and the S-Bahn line. The 21 plots are located on 8208 m² of state-owned leased land and are secured in level Vb by a zoning plan as a permanent allotment garden.
  • KGA 'Eschenallee' owns 57 parcels on Paul-Schmidt-Straße / Marienhöher Weg and adjoins Marienhöhe in the northeast (7018, location ). However, the 18,738 m² facility is only partially secured for the fictitious permanent allotment gardens.
  • The KGA 'Feldblume' (Tempelhofer Damm 163–165, Lage ) is laid out on state-owned leased land in the Germania- / Albrecht- / Komturstraße area. The more important part (7021a) with 99 parcels on 33,085 m² area near Francke Park is recorded as a permanently secured allotment garden. Four plots are only partially secured, as the garden colony with 1,500 m² (7021b) protrudes into another area of ​​use on the zoning plan.
  • The KGA 'Feldschlößchen' (RBS: 6316) is addressed with Eresburgstraße 7-11 / Arenholzsteig ( location ) and is located on the western edge of the district south of the city ​​motorway . Due to the location in the zoning plan, the 2,747 m² with eleven parcels are only partially secured permanent allotment gardens.
  • KGA 'Friede und Arbeit' is one of the seven parcels between Germania- / Albrecht- / Komturstraße ( Lage ) with fictitious allotment gardens that are only partially secured according to level II at Götzstraße 20. Its lease area comprises 2,282 m² of urban land.
  • KGA 'Frieden I' is a permanently secured one in the southeast of the district at the Gradestrasse junction of the city ​​motorway (7024, location ). The 202 permanent allotment gardens at Gottlieb-Dunkel-Straße 30-42 are located on a state-owned area of ​​90,313 m². On the allotment garden area, the development plan 17a was drawn up in 1976 for the Gradestrasse junction (as A 102) southeast of Gottlieb-Dunkel-Strasse towards the Teltow Canal freight station.
  • KGA 'Geiserich' takes its name from the location on Geiserichstrasse ( location ) on a state-owned lease area of ​​1,243 m², 30 parcels are located on the Teltow Canal northeast of Gersdorfstrasse opposite the KGA 'Marienhöhe'. With their entry in the FNP, they are permanently secured (fictitious) allotment gardens.
  • The KGA 'Germania' (Götzstraße 36, Lage ) is one of the only partially secured permanent allotments in the area of ​​Germania- / Albrecht- / Komturstraße with ten parcels on 3,228 m² of state-owned lease area.
  • KGA "Hansakorso" at Werner-Voss-Damm 45 ( location ) is located in the south-west of Tempelhof in the area of ​​the ring railway and city ring. Of the state's own permanent allotment gardens, 51 on 16,784 m² are already permanently secured, a further 17 on 5,906 m² due to their location.
  • KGA ‚Lebensfreude 'with 101 parcels on Komturstrasse north of Germaniastrasse ( location ) is 54,131 m² of private land and is permanently secured by development and land use plans.
  • KGA 'Marienhöhe' (Ingostraße, Lage ) is located on the Teltow Canal southwest of Gersdorfstraße across from KGA 'Geiserich'. 54 parcels on 20,147 m² of state-owned lease area are permanently secured as fictitious allotment gardens. The name refers to the adjacent Marienhöhe park .
  • KGA 'Morgenrot' ( location ) is located in the south of the district as a long green strip between the southern edge of the Gottlieb-Dunkelstrasse cemetery and Ullsteinstrasse opposite the KGA Abendrot in Mariendorf. The 42 permanent allotment gardens on 11,479 m² of land owned by the state are permanently secured by the development plan.
  • The KGA 'Papestrasse' extends with the common address General-Pape-Strasse 42 ( Lage ) in three blocks east along Papestrasse and is thus in the northwest of the district. 139 parcels (7043a) on 38,682 m² of private leased land and 23 parcels on 6,948 m² of land (7043b) are permanently secured allotment gardens by the development plan. Additional gardens on 18,288 m² of private leased land with 54 tenants can, however, be terminated at any time due to the different intended use according to the land use plan.
  • BLW sub-district Steglitz 'Röblingstraße-Nord group' (Röblingstraße 68/72 and 84/88, location ) is a railway farm on the railway line to Röblingstraße between the commercial area of ​​the former Mariendorf freight station with 15 parcels on 6,026 m² of leased land for the railway. The 'Röblingstrasse-Süd group' ( location ) is not listed in the allotment garden development plan or in the RBS database.
  • KGA 'Steingrube' (Loewenhardtdamm 22, location ) is located with 27 parcels in the west of the district (near the north-south railway) in the northern corner between General-Pape-Straße and Loewenhardtdamm. The 8,597 m² of the state's own lease area are entered in the development plan as permanent allotment gardens.
  • The KGA 'Südring' is one of the facilities in the Germania- / Albrecht- / Komturstrasse area (Komturstrasse 71-73, Lage ) The 30 fictitious permanent allotment gardens on 15,600 m² of land are only partially secured because they are assigned to the property fund. However, these areas can only be terminated under certain conditions.
  • KGA 'Wittelsbacher Korso' (Wolffring 76-84 / Badener Ring 31, Lage , 7058) consists of 20 fictitious allotment gardens on 5,403 m² of land and are permanently secured according to the plan.
  • KGA 'Zähringer Korso' (Hessenring 27–45, location ) is located in the Rumeyplan / Hessenring / Werner-Voß-Damm area in the south of the district with 96 parcels on 15,642 m² of state-owned lease area. In 1958, a development plan was drawn up for the (currently) eastern section of the Hessenring on the Rumeyplan, Boelckestrasse, Hessenring, Werner-Voß-Damm area in order to provide space; today daycare centers, youth clubs and the KGA 'Zähringer Korso' are located here.
  • BLW sub-district Neukölln 'Gruppe Neuköllner Berg', in the allotment garden development plan as KGA 'Neuköllner Berg' (7215, Oderstrasse / Tempelhof Airport, location ) with 23 plots on 7,430 m² railway site is west of the district border to Neukölln directly on the S-Bahn route south of the Tempelhofer Feld .
  • FOAG sub-district Tempelhof 'Tempelhofer Berg Group'. This railway farm (07214, KGA Tempelhofer Berg, Lage ) has 33 railway parcels with the address Tempelhofer Damm 103 on 12,820 m² edge of the railway east of Tempelhofer Damm along the north side of the S-Bahn route and city ​​motorway . The 'Tempelhofer Berg' garden colony consists of 31 plots with a beekeeper. As the Tempelhof sub-district, it was spun off as an independent facility from the Neukölln sub-district at the end of 2004. It is located directly at the Tempelhof S-Bahn and U-Bahn station between the site of the former airport and the S-Bahn (ring line).

The KGA 'Columbia' (with street number RBS 6239) and the KGA 'Attilastraße' (on Atillastraße between Teja- / Röblingstraße behind the DEKRA Academy) are listed in current maps of Berlin, but are no longer included in the allotment garden development plan, but rather already rededicated and built over with their area.

Housing estates

Parks and green spaces

Surname
Length / dimensions
(in meters)

Origin of name

 designation 

Remarks


image

Old park

( Location )

0400 × 220 (irregular shape) The park is located between Parkstrasse and Tempelhofer Damm . It is separated from the Lehnepark by a small path , which is adjacent to the Tempelhof village church . During the Second World War , the last remains of the Templar settlement located there were destroyed, including the original Tempelhof village church. However, the cemetery is still preserved. There is a memorial stone for the 47 Berlin and Brandenburg victims of the tsunami of December 26, 2004 in the Pacific. Old park
Bose Park

( Location )

0230 × 110 after General Friedrich Julius Wilhelm Graf von Bose (1809-1894) 1955 The park is located between Bosestrasse, Manteuffelstrasse, Richnowstrasse and Schöneberger Strasse. Until 1955 it was called Neuer Park . Bose Park
Franckepark with Krummem Pfuhl

( Location )

0270 × 170 to the adjacent Theodor-Francke-Straße around 1875 The park is located between Albrechtstrasse and Theodor-Francke-Strasse. There the merchant Theodor Francke (1830-1896) owned a bleach for ivory . The park was originally a storage area for this material. Today there is a rose garden there . A fallow deer enclosure was abandoned in 2019. The Krumme Pfuhl , which once served as a bathing lake, lies in a depression . Franckepark
Lehnepark

( Location )

0140 × 100 after the landowner Wilhelm Lehne (1836–1910), who died in Tempelhof The park borders on Schönburgstrasse and the Tempelhof village church, which is followed by the Alte Park . Lehnepark
Marienhöhe

( Location )

0320 × 200 after the nearby Marienhöher Weg 1951 It is an artificial elevation with a height of 73 meters. After the Second World War, around 190,000 m³ of rubble from destroyed and demolished houses was brought into the former gravel pit. There is a toboggan run and an open-air stage in the park . A memorial was erected on the summit in 1985 to commemorate the Rauenberg trigonometric point , which was destroyed in the course of gravel mining. Monument for the trigonometric point Rauenberg on the summit of the Marienhöhe
Oberlandpark

( Location )

0120 × 60 after the nearby Oberlandstrasse The park lies between Holzmannstrasse and Nackenheimer Weg. The hilly structure of the park is intended to be reminiscent of the Tempelhofer Oberland . This is part of the Tempelhofer Feldmark, which is located on the Teltow plateau . Oberlandpark
Tempelhof Park

( Location )

2200 × 2000 (irregular shape) the park is located on the Tempelhofer Feld of the Teltow plateau . 0May 8, 2010 With an area of ​​over 300 hectares , the park is  Berlin's largest park even before the Großer Tiergarten and a popular local recreation area. It connects the Berlin districts of Neukölln and Tempelhof . Berlin-Tempelhof Airport was once here . Tempelhofer Park (former Northern Railway)

See also

literature

  • District Office Tempelhof-Schöneberg City Development Office (Ed.): Tempelhof-Schöneberg Streets - Squares - Bridges . Their origin, meaning and renaming. First edition 2012. Berlin 2012.
  • Martin Donath, Gabriele Schulz, Michael Hofmann: Monuments in Berlin's Tempelhof-Schöneberg district . Districts Tempelhof, Mariendorf, Marienfelde and Lichtenrade. Ed .: Landesdenkmalamt Berlin. First edition 2007. Michael Imhof Verlag, Petersberg 2007, ISBN 978-3-86568-189-8 .

Web links

Commons : Streets in Berlin-Tempelhof  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files
Commons : Places in Berlin-Tempelhof  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b c development plan xiii 21 abz.pdf ( Memento from May 9, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  2. For example: Development plan XIII-66 ( Memento of May 8, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) and Development Plan XIII-66/1 ( Memento of May 9, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  3. a b c Development plan XIII-138 ( Memento from May 9, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  4. ^ The Governing Mayor press release of August 12, 2014
  5. Storchenbrunnen on the square
  6. Adolf Scheidt Square
  7. ^ Paul Klee Elementary School
  8. Alboinstraße - kauperts.de accessed on January 21, 2014
  9. a b c d development plan xiii 32 abz.pdf ( Memento from May 8, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  10. a b residential building Albrechtstrasse 57
  11. a b Haunted Villa Albrechtstrasse 110
  12. berliner-stadtplan.com: Arenholzsteig-Berlin-Tempelhof
  13. ^ Aerial photo from 1928 Senate Department for Urban Development and the Environment, Berlin
  14. a b c d e Development plan XIII 28 ( Memento from May 8, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  15. ^ Berliner-stadtplan.com: Badener-Ring
  16. a b c d e Zoning plan XIII-26 ( Memento from May 8, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  17. Residential complex Badener Ring / Bayernring / Boelckestrasse / Loewenhardtdamm
  18. ^ Landesdenkmalamt Berlin: Monuments in Berlin - Tempelhof, Mariendorf, Marienfelde and Lichtenrade. Michael Imhoff Verlag 2007, p. 40
  19. a b Development plan 7-6 ( Memento from May 8, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  20. a b c d development plan xiii 63 abz.pdf ( Memento from May 8, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  21. Parkring Neu-Tempelhof
  22. a b c development plan xiii 33 abz.pdf ( Memento from May 8, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  23. a b Berlin address book from 1913
  24. a b c d e Isabel Jürgens: A wide field. The development of the Tempelhof field . In: Berliner Morgenpost , May 22, 2014, p. 3
  25. Dreibundstrasse on luise-berlin.de
  26. ^ Berlin address book 1937 : Immelmannstrasse
  27. a b c d Development plan XIII-53 ( Memento from May 8, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  28. Berlin address book 1909 map
  29. Berlin address book 1931
  30. ^ Berlin address book 1933 Felixstrasse
  31. a b c d development plan xiii 9 abz.pdf ( Memento from May 8, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  32. a b c development plan 19 abz.pdf ( Memento from May 8, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  33. Spukvilla in Tempelhof
  34. ^ Maria Montessori Primary School
  35. Pharus-Plan Berlin: Tempelhof around 1943 ( Memento of January 24, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  36. a b development plan xiii 57 abz.pdf ( Memento from May 8, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  37. a b Manteuffelstrasse residential complex
  38. a b History Parcours Papestrasse (PDF; 5.2 MB), Tempelhof-Schöneberg District Office (2006)
  39. Berliner-stadtplan.com: General-Pape-Straße and Schwerbelestungskoerper
  40. a b Barracks of the Railway Regiment
  41. Berliner-stadtplan.com: Gerdsmeyerweg
  42. development plan xiii 79 abz.pdf ( Memento from May 8, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  43. a b c development plan xiii 17a abz.pdf ( Memento from May 8, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  44. a b c development plan xiii 51 abz.pdf ( Memento from May 9, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  45. Senate Department for Urban Development and the Environment of November 8, 2012 ( Memento of November 8, 2012 in the Internet Archive )
  46. ^ Berliner-stadtplan.com: Hoeppnerstrasse
  47. Marianne Cohn School ( Memento from August 30, 2013 in the Internet Archive )
  48. a b c development plan xiii 73 abz.pdf ( Memento from May 8, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  49. ArcelorMittal Stahlhandel GmbH ( Memento from August 4, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  50. St. Judas Thaddaeus Catholic Church
  51. a b Mariendorfer Damm / Ullsteinstrasse: the Ullsteinhaus
  52. development plan xiii 1 abz.pdf ( Memento from May 9, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  53. Berlin address book 1926
  54. Berlin address book 1911
  55. Development plan 7-20ve (pdf) ( Memento from May 8, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  56. Air Bridge Monument
  57. ^ Berlin address book 1925 Podewilsstrasse
  58. ^ Berlin address book 1919 overview map of Tempelhof
  59. ^ Berlin address book from 1904 Reinhardplatz
  60. Berlin Address Book 1909 Richnowstraße
  61. Warehouse of the Guard Train Battalion and Reichspostzentralamt
  62. ^ Reichsmonopoly-administration-for-brandy
  63. Imperial monopoly administration for spirits
  64. ^ Factory Carl Lerm & Gebrüder Ludewig
  65. Factory Carl Lerm & Gebrüder Ludewig
  66. ^ Berlin address book from 1911
  67. Reich Post Central Office
  68. Press release of the Governing Mayor of April 29, 2015
  69. POI: Stolbergstrasse in Tempelhof and Alter-Tempelhofer-Friedhof
  70. fbinter.stadt-berlin.de Strasse 20 A
  71. Attilahöhe settlement
  72. Gantry crane parts road
  73. Sarotti AG
  74. Rathaus-Tempelhof
  75. Port of Tempelhof
  76. development plan xiii 49 2 abz.pdf ( Memento from May 8, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  77. development plan xiii 49 3 abz.pdf ( Memento from May 8, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  78. development plan xiii 49 4 abz.pdf ( Memento from May 8, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  79. ^ Kauperts: Tempelhofer Weg
  80. Post office
  81. ^ Post office-Tempelhofer-Damm
  82. Kiezspaziergang from January 18, 2014 ( Memento from February 23, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) BA Tempelhof-Schöneberg
  83. 2. Garrison hospital
  84. ^ Berlin address book from 1889: Werderstrasse
  85. ^ Church-on-the-Tempelhofer field
  86. Development plan XIII 15 from 1957 ( Memento from May 8, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  87. ^ Berliner-stadtplan.com: Wolffring in Berlin-Tempelhof
  88. ^ Jobcenter Berlin Tempelhof-Schöneberg ( Memento from February 17, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) berlin.de
  89. ^ Supplement to the Berlin address book 1893, Julius Straube: Tempelhof around 1893 ( Memento from May 5, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  90. Map of the Tempelhof suburb in the 1912 address book
  91. a b c d e f g h i j address book 1913: Map of Tempelhofer Feld, garden city and southern area
  92. ^ Berlingeschichte.de: Old and today's Tempelhofer streets
  93. Tempelhof
  94. Development plan XIII-80 ( Memento from May 8, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  95. Development plan XIII-140 ( Memento from May 8, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  96. ^ Address book 1912
  97. ^ Address book 1913
  98. Albionstraße . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1914, part V., p. Page 441. “← Schöneberger Straße → (undeveloped)”.
  99. ^ Map in the address book 1913 . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1913, Part V .. "The Albionstraße is on the map between the transition Sachsendamm / Schönberger Straße to the south and Eresburgstraße with the marking of the suburb border" (east of the "Kgl. Eisenbahn Repat Werkst." In Schönebger).
  100. On the person of Alvensleben
  101. Schöneberg . In: Berlin Address Book , 1880, Annex, p page 100. "No entry between A kazienstraße and B ahnhof the circle line".
  102. Tempelhof address book . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1880, K. Tempelhof, p. Page 106. "No further entry between Albrechtstrasse and the station building of the Ringbahn (official building)".
  103. Street on the Ringbahn . In: Address book for Berlin and its suburbs , 1898. "← Berlinerstraße → / Stätteplatz, railway factory building = Fiscus ( Orenstein & Koppel ), construction sites / ← Schöneberger Weg →".
  104. On the person of Commander Burchard von Arenholz
  105. Arenholzstrasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1914, part V., p. Page 451. “Under Ordensmeisterstraße, Arenholzstraße is indicated west of Ordensmeisterplatz between Burchardstraße and Colditzstraße ”.
  106. a b c d e f Comp. plus the above map from 1925 with today's city map
  107. ^ Berliner Strasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1929, IV. Teil, S. S. 1742. "Representation of the Berliner Straße with the branching and cross streets 1929 between Schwiebuser / Dreibundstraße and the Mariendorf district (there: Ullsteinstraße)".
  108. Street 16 . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1920. “The street 16 goes from the Berliner Straße to the west between Hohenzollernkorso and Ringbahn, it is registered with construction sites, pumping station and“ Grundst. d. Tempelhofer Feld Akt.Ges. "Just crosses the street 6 and ends at the property Berliner Strasse 40, the Vossschen house."
  109. Braunschweiger Ring . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1929, IV. Part, p. P. 1747. “The Braunschweiger Ring is 1929 between Berliner Straße (with the properties of the“ Gemeinn. Heimstättenbau = Ges. D. Berl. Straßeb. GmbH ”houses 2–7), Sachsenring , Wiesenerstraße, Wittelsbacherkorso , houses 47–66 (ongoing), (again) Wittelsbacher Korso , properties 67a – 83, substation and Berliner Straße ”.
  110. ^ Columbiastrasse . In: Berlin address book , 1938. “Post office Berlin SW 29 / military cemetery, shooting ranges, health resort, Turk. Cemetery: Verw. Bez. Neukölln (1, 3, 5), Verw. Bez. Kreuzberg / ← Friesenstr. → / airport grounds, 2–4 does not exist, 6 court inspectors I and Tempelhofer Feld prison / ← Neukölln district → “.
  111. Pharus-Plan Berlin: Tempelhof around 1943 ( Memento of January 24, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  112. Dreibundstrasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1937, Part IV. "The entry is: Dreibundstrasse → see Immelmannstrasse".
  113. Unit Street . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1920, V. Suburbs of Berlin> Berlin = Tempelhof. " Einheitsstraße : ← Mussehlstraße → (undeveloped)" (according to the map, the west end is on the western parallel street, which is unnamed to the Wittelsbach Corso).
  114. Einheitstrasse . In: Berlin address book , 1928, Tempelhof administrative district> Tempelhof. "The unit road is listed in 1928 by the outgoing and Mussehlstraße as undeveloped.".
  115. a b c d e f g h i Tempelhof map 1919 . In: Berlin address book , 1919, part V. Suburbs of Berlin> Berlin = Tempelhof. "Map of the Tempelhof suburb around 1919".
  116. a b c d e f Map of Tempelhof in the 1912 address book
  117. ^ Map of Berlin and the surrounding area (1922) in 12 sheets VI Berlin
  118. Green way . In: Berlin address book , 1930, part IV. Streets and houses of Berlin> Tempelhof administrative district> Tempelhof. "Green way: ← Germaniastraße → (undeveloped)".
  119. Hansa parade . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1930. “The street layout is indicated starting from the Preußenring, the street is undeveloped. He crosses the Braunschweiger Ring between the undeveloped (construction site) lots 105 and 107 ”.
  120. Heerbannstrasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1930. “It goes from Dudenstrasse and in 1930 is listed as“ undeveloped ”. For the Dreibundstraße it is quoted between 40 and 41 between Achenbachpromenade and Mussehlstraße. "
  121. Hermine Path . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1940. “The Herminpfad is listed between the two cross streets Atillastrasse and Wulfila-Ufer, the status is planned. Geiserichstrasse and Ingostrasse are named as parallel streets from Atillastrasse. The Gersdorfstrasse is missing as a cross street in 1940. ”.
  122. Address search Rohrbeckstraße (FIS broker map display map of Berlin 1: 5000)
  123. Immelmannstrasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1936. “No entry on Immelmannstrasse in Tempelhof”.
  124. Immelmannstrasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1937, part IV.> Administrative district Tempelhof> Tempelhof> H- Z. "Left page: ← Manfred-von-Richthofen-Strasse → / 1–7 does not exist, 9–13 / ← Burgherrenstrasse → / 15– 17 / ← Mussehlstrasse → / 19, 21 (–63 construction sites) ← Boelckestrasse → / 65–81 (community Tempelhoferreldheimstätt. GmbH) / ← Hoehndorffstrasse → / 83–91 (community Heimstättenbau = Gesellschaft d. BVG GmbH) / ← Loewenhardtdamm → / ← General-Pape-Straße → // Right side (2–100) s. u. Berlin “(in brackets building site sites).
  125. ^ Kaiser-Wilhelm-Strasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1890, V. Surroundings of Berlin> M. Tempelhof. “Berliner Strasse cross between 34/35 and 79/80 Kaiserin Augustastrasse, 39/40 and 75/76 Friedrich Wilhelmstrasse, go westward at 49/50 Lankwitzer Weg, 75/76 Friedrich Karlstrasse. Lankwitzer Weg is listed with houses 1 and 2. ”.
  126. ^ Kaiser Wilhelmstrasse . In: Address book for Berlin and its suburbs , 1899, part V. Suburbs> 24. Tempelhof. “The Kaiser Wilhelmstrasse on the route of the Lankwitzer Weg is named between Berliner and Werderstrasse. Where 1 belongs to Berliner Straße 45 and 13-16 (consecutive) to Berliner Straße 46/48. 3–5 belongs to the Berlin suburbs = Elektricitäts = Werke GmbH, the other eight plots named as construction site. ”(Construction site refers only to undeveloped plots assigned to owners).
  127. ^ Lankwitzer Weg . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1882. “a. d. Berliner Str. / No. 1: Owner Fuhrherr Fiedler, No. 2: Owner Fuhrherr Hennig (address book 1890 Rentier) with two residents ”.
  128. Linzer Strasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1940. “← Germaniastraße → / Grundst. go z. Germaniastraße 57,58 / ← Teilestraße → / community cemetery go z. Germaniastraße59–65 / ← Germaniastraße → “.
  129. Moltkestrasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1890, V. Surroundings of Berlin. "Moltkestrasse: 1 a. d. Albrechtstr., 1–3 building sites, 5 E. dairy owner, 7 E. Public servant Boddin, garrison = military hospital E. Military treasury with 18 residents (military doctor, nurse, housekeeper) ”(building site: vacant, allocated property, E for owner).
  130. square or street . In: Berlin address book , 1935. "Ordensmeisterplatz: ← Ordensmeisterstraße → (undeveloped)".
  131. Ordensmeisterplatz . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1943. "Ordensmeisterplatz is only named in the address book as the end of Albrechtstrasse 1–14 to Teilestrasse, but remains (due to the lack of land) without its own entry."
  132. Pharus-Plan Berlin: Tempelhof around 1943 ( Memento of January 24, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  133. Paradeplatz . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1919. “In 1919, however, Paradestrasse from Berliner Strasse is undeveloped and listed without further information”.
  134. Paradeplatz . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1925. “In 1925 only the Paradestrasse is built on: ← Berliner Strasse → / 1–17 / ← Schulenburgring → / 18–27 / ← Bundesring → / 28–31 / ← Kanzlerweg → / 48–57 / ← Schulenburgring → / 58–66 / ← Chancellor's parade → / 67–72 / ← Berliner Strasse → “.
  135. Paradeplatz . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1936. "Paradeplatz is listed as lying at the west end of Paradestrasse between its plots 35 and 40 (36-39 does not exist), the east end of the street on plot 2 bears the (neutral) designation Schmuckplatz".
  136. Prussia Ring . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1913. "← Tempelhofer Chaussee → (undeveloped)".
  137. Prussia Ring . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1935. "← Berliner Straße → / ← Kaiserkorso → / & 1–3 do not exist, 4–12 (consecutive) / ← Schulenburgring → / 13–16c / ← Bundesring → / 17–21c / ← Hohenzollernkorso → / 22–24 / ← Wittelsbacherkorso → / ← 25–28 → / ← Zähringer Korso → / ← 29-32a → / ← Wintgenstrasse → / ← Deutscher Ring → / ← 33–37 → / ← Zähringer Korso → / ← Construction sites → / ← Wittelsbacherkorso → / ← 39-40f → / ← Hohenzollernkorso → / ← 41-48 → / ← Schulenburgring → / ← 49–57 → / ← Kaiserkorso → / ← Schmuckplatz → / ← Berliner Straße → “.
  138. Pharus-Plan Berlin: Tempelhof around 1943 ( Memento of January 24, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  139. Prinz-August-von-Württemberg-Strasse . In: Berlin address book , 1913, part III. Streets and houses of Berlin. "Berlin Sw 29, District Court Berlin-Tempelhof LG II. / South side (Tempelhof zu): Number 1: Kgl. Court of the Guard = Cavalry = Division and II. Guard = Division / Number 2: Südl. Military. Detention center / 3: civil servants' residence. Exercise area. Military. Churchyard. / Turkish cemetery / pioneer training area // opposite the barracks d. Guard cuirass. Rgts. ".
  140. private road . In: Berlin address book , 1925, part III. Streets and houses of Berlin. "← Schöneberger Strasse → / ← Güterbahnhof → / Lagerplatz 15, 23, 26, 19, 5, 25, 21, 17, Proviantamt / ← Schöneberger Strasse →".
  141. ^ Sachsenhausener Strasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1912. “← Germaniastraße → (undeveloped)”.
  142. ^ Sachsenhauser Strasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1932. "← Germaniastraße → (undeveloped)".
  143. ^ Sachsenhauser Strasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1933. "← Germaniastraße → / building sites, Wieland's house, building sites, Eichelmann's house / ← Teilestrasse →".
  144. Schöneberger Weg . In: Address book for Berlin and its suburbs , 1898. "← Dorfstrasse → / 1, 2 (Wagenhaus d. Guard Train Bat.) / ← Ringbahnstrasse → / 3 (Royal Provision Office) / ← Ringbahn → / 4, 5, construction sites , 6 / ← Ringbahnstrasse → / Construction sites / ← Manteuffelstrasse → / Platz / ← Dorfstrasse → “.
  145. Schöneberger Strasse (Tempelhof) . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1933. "← Dorfstraße → / 1–4 (ongoing, construction sites) / ← Manteuffelstraße → / 5, 6 / ← Borussiastraße → / ← Taxistraße → / 7-10 / ← Ringbahnstraße → / ← district Schöneberg → / ← Sachsendamm → / ← Alboinstrasse → / 20–27, 28 does not exist / ← Arenholzsteig → / 29–33 / ← Eresburgstrasse → / construction sites / ← Manteuffelstrasse → / ← Berlinickeplatz → ← Dorfstrasse → “.
  146. Pharus-Plan Berlin: Tempelhof around 1943 ( Memento of January 24, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  147. Taxisstrasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1935. “← Ringbahnstraße → / Property go. zRingbahnstr., property go. Schöneberger Str. 7,8 / ← Schöneberger Strasse → / ← Borussiastraße → / storage areas, construction sites / ← Ringbahnstraße → “.
  148. Templersteig . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1935. "Right page: ← Eresburgstraße → / construction sites / ← Burchardstraße → / 12 (12-party house of the city of Berlin, see Burchardstraße 29) / construction sites / left side: construction sites / ← Feldmark → // Von der Eresburgstraße (on Page 1682) the course of the Templersteig begins between construction sites west of the Gäßnerweg ”.
  149. Wulfilaufer . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1929. “← Feldmark → / 1–3 / ← Chlodwigstrasse → / construction sites / ← Geiserichstrasse. → / ← Teltow Canal → “.
  150. Weilburgstrasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1913. "← Hattenheimer Str. → (undeveloped)".
  151. Wettin parade . In: Berlin address book , 1913.
  152. ^ Wittelsbach parade . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1919. "← Dreibundstrasse → (undeveloped)".
  153. ^ Wittelsbach parade . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1936. “Left page: ← Dreibundstrasse → / Construction sites / ← Einheitstrasse rarr; / Construction sites / ← Bayernring → / Construction sites ← Badener Ring → / Church / ← Deutscher Ring → / 23–39 (odd) / ← Wettin Corso → / 41–51 (53–63 do not exist) / ← Passage to Paradeplatz → / 65 –75 / ← Zähringerkorso → / 77–91 / ← Preußenring → / 93–99 / ← Thüringer Ring → / 101–129 / ← Braunschweiger Ring → / 131 // Right page: ← Dreibundstraße → / 2–22 (straight) / ← Badener Ring → / Construction sites / ← Deutscher Ring → / ← Wettiner Korso → / 40–46 (48–56 does not exist) / ← Wüthoffstrasse → / ← Paradeplatz → / 58 (elementary school), 60 (Askanisches Gymnasium) / ← Wintgenstrasse → / 62–72 does not exist, 74–80 / ← Zähringerkorso → / construction site / ← Preußenring → / 82–88 / ← Hessenring → / 108–126 / ← Braunschweiger Ring → / 128–130 does not exist, 132 / ← Ringbahn → " .
  154. ^ Württemberger Ring . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1920. "← Wettin Corso → / Construction sites, barracks hospital / ← Wettin Corso → / Construction sites ← Wettin Corso →".
  155. ^ Zähringer parade . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1919. “Zähringerkorso: ← Hessenring & rearr; (Undeveloped) ".
  156. ^ Zähringer parade . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1936. "Left page: Hohenzollernkorso / 1–7 (odd) / Wittelsbacherkorso / 9 + 11 / Preußenring / Braunschweiger Ring / 47 + 49 // Right page: Hohenzollernkorso / 2–6 (even) / Wittelsbacherkorso / 8–12 / Preußenring / 14–18 / Hessenring / 20–40 / Hansakorso / Braunschweiger Ring / 44–50 / Feldmark ”.
  157. ↑ Allotment gardens in the Tempelhof-Schöneberg district ( Memento from September 29, 2013 in the Internet Archive )
  158. ↑ Allotment garden development plan Berlin, page 8: Allotment garden law principles ( Memento from September 24, 2015 in the Internet Archive )
  159. a b c d e f g h i j Level Vb: Fictitious permanent allotment gardens in accordance with §§ 16 and 20a of the Federal Allotment Garden Act are additionally protected by being shown in the land use plan as green areas - allotments.
  160. Fictitious permanent allotment gardens which, according to the FNP, are to be used for another purpose. If stipulated accordingly in the binding development plan, they would be classified as permanent allotment gardens in security level Va.
  161. Level Ia: Allotment gardens on private areas which, according to the FNP, are intended for another use. A termination is possible at any time in compliance with the allotment garden regulations.
  162. a b c d Stadtentwicklung.Berlin.de: Kleingartenentwicklungsplan
  163. Level II: Fictitious permanent allotment gardens, the areas of which are intended for transport, social or technical projects that are implemented at short notice. Furthermore, the systems that are to be converted into residential areas at your own request are recorded here.
  164. a b c d e f Level III a: Fictional permanent allotment gardens which, according to the FNP, are to be used for another purpose. Or the development plans are not yet binding; once they have been established, allotments are permanent allotment gardens of security level V a - permanent allotment gardens.
  165. a b c d Level Va: Allotment garden areas that are defined as permanent allotment gardens by the B-Plan.
  166. Development plan XIII-240 ( Memento from May 8, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  167. Unsecured allotment gardens level Ia: Allotment gardens on private areas which, according to the FNP, are intended for another use. A termination is possible at any time in compliance with the allotment garden regulations.
  168. a b c Level I b: Allotment gardens on land owned by Deutsche Bahn AG that is leased to the railroad farm. These are smaller groups of gardens that are close to railway tracks.
  169. The protection period for allotment garden areas that have been transferred to the property fund for short to medium-term use cannot be extended. Even after the protection period has expired, the leases can only be terminated under the conditions of the BKleingG, since these are fictitious permanent allotment gardens.
  170. ^ Railway agriculture sub-district Tempelhof