Nail wood

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The nail wood in the Jöllenbeck, Lenzinghausen and Häger region. Direction of view: Lenzinghausen

The nail wood is a small-scale geographically distinct landscape ( corridor ) , spread over subareas of the cities Spenge (district Lenzinghausen ), Bielefeld (district Jöllenbeck ) and Werther (district Haeger extends). The name refers to the medieval property and rule rights: According to the records in the Ravensberger Urbar from 1556, the Ravensberg aristocratic family Nagel was the lord of four properties in Jöllenbeck.

The street of the same name Nagelsholz begins on Bargholzstraße in Jöllenbeck and crosses Nagelsholz for 2.8 km in a westerly direction and then branches north towards Lenzinghausen and west towards Häger.

Map landscape Nagelsholz
Spring pond of the Beckendorfer Mühlenbach (nature reserve BI-034)
To the east: Siek and headwaters of the Jöllenbeck Mühlenbach

From the 1960s to the 1980s, efforts were made to build a regional airport for East Westphalia-Lippe here. The planning for the airport began in March 1960 with a conference between the districts of Bielefeld and Detmold , the IHK Bielefeld and the IHK Detmold. A search was made for suitable locations, and the result was the nail wood in the urban area of ​​Bielefeld and the former municipalities of Lenzinghausen, now part of Spenge, and Häger, now part of Werther. In 1970 the approval for the construction and operation of the airport was granted by the responsible state minister. The city of Spenge sued against this. In 1973, partial areas of Spenge and Werther were transferred to the area in the city of Bielefeld, but after the final failure of the plans in the course of 1980 on July 1, 1982 they were returned to the ceding cities. The regional airport was never built.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Gertrud Angermann: On the oldest history of Jöllenbeck . In: [Walter] Kleine-Doepke: Heimatbuch der Evangelischen Kirchengemeinde Jöllenbeck 1954 on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the church. Detmold 1954. p. 10
  2. ^ Horst Ulrich Fuhrmann: Jöllenbeck. Home through the ages. Bielefeld 1991, S: 78 ISBN 3-928232-02-9 .
  3. ^ Pia Schmutzler: The regional airport Bielefeld-Nagelsholz. Large-scale municipal projects and public resistance . Bielefeld 2012 (Master thesis University of Bielefeld)

Coordinates: 52 ° 6 ′  N , 8 ° 29 ′  E

Web links

Commons : Nagelsholz  - Collection of images, videos and audio files