Marine settlement (Flensburg-Mürwik)

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The marine settlement in Flensburg - Mürwik on the streets Kelmstraße / Fördestraße was built in the 1920s on the Flensburg-Mürwik base located there . It is one of the city's cultural monuments .

background

With the construction of the Mürwik Naval School , a strong impetus for the city's growth developed. The city grew. As early as 1908, a private client had high-quality apartment buildings built by the architect Karl Bernt on Flensburger Clädenstrasse , near the Hafermarkt . There the private builder hoped to be able to meet the expected demand for higher marine batches. Since the naval school was finished later when the builder of the Clädenstrasse houses hoped for, the naval officers stayed away as customers and he went bankrupt beforehand. In 1911 the city bought the building 3.5 kilometers from the Naval School. In 1919, the Friedheim settlement was built not far from the Mürwik naval school , where members of the navy could find living space.

In the 1920s, the Gemeinnützige Gesellschaft mbH finally created living space for members of the Navy in Mürwik to create housing for Reich citizens in Berlin . From 1923 to 1927 the naval settlement was built on the streets Kelmstraße and Fördestraße, on the edge of the naval school. It consists of the red brick residential buildings at Kelmstrasse 4, Kelmstrasse 6, Kelmstrasse 8, the visually striking corner building at Fördestrasse 1 and the residential building at Fördestrasse 3. The three residential buildings at Kelmstrasse 4–8 were built in 1923/24 under the supervision of the technical government inspector Klix. The two-story brick buildings with a cantilevered hipped roof were each built for four families. The residential building at Fördestraße 1, which stands out in its formal language, was built in 1926/27 under the construction management of Karl Frehse. In the years 1926/27, under the construction management of Karl Frehse, the residential building at Fördestrasse 3 was built at the same time. The two-storey residential building with a cantilevered roof was equipped with four officers' apartments. After the Second World War , Jürgen Pooch , who later became a Low German actor, lived in the apartment building at Fördestrasse 3 while he was still at school . At the same time, in the years 1925 to 1928, the park courtyard (architect: Karl Bernt) was built, which also accommodated members of the navy. Incidentally, the marine district in Kiel (1926–1933) was built at the same time and has some structural similarities. In 1937 , houses for naval officers were also built in the Falkenberg area of ​​Flensburg , on the west side of the city (in the Westliche Höhe district ). After the Second World War, around the 1950s, more red brick buildings were built for residential purposes on the neighboring Kelmhof . Also in other residential quarters in Mürwik, after the establishment of the Bundeswehr in the 1950s, members of the navy moved in, for example in the neighboring " Heinz-Krey-Viertel ".

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Eiko Wenzel, Henrik Gram: Zeitzeichen, Architektur in Flensburg . 2015, p. 128 f.
  2. ^ Lutz Wilde (arrangement): Flensburg. (= Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, cultural monuments in Schleswig-Holstein , Volume 2.) Wachholtz, Neumünster 2001, ISBN 3-529-02521-6 , page 530 ff. And 524 f.
  3. Cf. Gerret Liebing Schlaber: From the country to the district. Flensburg's Stadtfeld and the incorporated villages in pictures and words approx. 1860–1930. Flensburg 2009, p. 22.
  4. ^ Lutz Wilde (arrangement): Flensburg. (= Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, cultural monuments in Schleswig-Holstein , Volume 2.) Wachholtz, Neumünster 2001, ISBN 3-529-02521-6 , page 496 ff.
  5. City history. The fascination of Clädenstrasse. In: Flensburger Tageblatt of December 4, 2009; accessed on December 29, 2016
  6. a b Lutz Wilde (arrangement): Flensburg. (= Monument topography of the Federal Republic of Germany, cultural monuments in Schleswig-Holstein , Volume 2.) Wachholtz, Neumünster 2001, ISBN 3-529-02521-6 , pages 530 and 524
  7. ^ Eiko Wenzel, Henrik Gram: Zeitzeichen, Architektur in Flensburg . 2015, p. 129 f.
  8. ^ Lutz Wilde (arrangement): Flensburg. (= Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, cultural monuments in Schleswig-Holstein , Volume 2.) Wachholtz, Neumünster 2001, ISBN 3-529-02521-6 , page 530 f.
  9. ^ Lutz Wilde (arrangement): Flensburg. (= Monument topography of the Federal Republic of Germany, cultural monuments in Schleswig-Holstein , volume 2.) Wachholtz, Neumünster 2001, ISBN 3-529-02521-6 , page 524
  10. ^ Lutz Wilde: Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, cultural monuments in Schleswig-Holstein. Volume 2, Flensburg, page 546 ff.
  11. See Flensburg street names . Society for Flensburg City History, Flensburg 2005, ISBN 3-925856-50-1 , article: Kelmhof

Coordinates: 54 ° 48 ′ 44 ″  N , 9 ° 27 ′ 44 ″  E