Nordstrasse (Bremerhaven)

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North street
coat of arms
Street in Bremerhaven
Basic data
city Bremerhaven
district Lehe
Created 1904
Cross streets Krüselstrasse, Brookstrasse, Gaußstrasse, Bernhard-Krause-Strasse, Nonnenstrasse, Karlsbader Strasse, Torgauer Strasse, Spadener Strasse , Wurster Strasse , Lange Strasse , Flötenkiel
use
User groups Cars, bikes and pedestrians
Road design two lane road
Technical specifications
Street length 1100 meters
District Court from 1916

The North Road is a central indexing and thoroughfare in Bremerhaven , district of Lehe , district Klushof. It zigzags in a south-north or west-east direction from Krüselstrasse to Wurster Strasse ; the Lange Straße and the Flötenkiel square.

The cross streets and the connecting streets were named u. a. as Krüselstrasse (?), Brookstrasse, Gaußstrasse after the mathematician, astronomer, geodesist and physicist (1777–1855), Bernhard-Krause-Strasse (?), Nonnenstrasse , Karlsbader Strasse after the city in Bohemia , Torgauer Strasse after the city in Saxony , Spadener Straße to the neighboring town of Spaden , Wurster Straße to the Frisian region of Land Wursten , Lange Straße after the long road connection for the Lehe area at that time and flute keel after the flute shape (mouthpiece: keel = wedge) of the tapering streets; otherwise see the link to the streets.

history

Surname

Nordstrasse from 1904 was named after its location in Lehe. It should relieve the narrow Lange Straße.

development

The Klushof or the Klause (outdated for a restaurant) at the Holy Cross Chapel from 1477 of the Leher Dionysius Church developed as a district west of Alt-Lehe from the late 19th century, when Lehes rose from a town to a town after Bremerhaven was founded (1920) began. The Prussian courthouse, today the Bremerhaven District Court, was built by 1916 . The post office and the savings bank set up branches in the street, which after 2000, like many shops, closed.

traffic

Nordstraße is an important thoroughfare in Lehe.

Since 1908 there was the tram line 2 (formerly red), which led to the Lehe depot at Geestemünde train station . This line was extended to Langen train station in 1919 and to Park Friedrichsruh in Langen in 1927 , then shortened to the city limits of Langen in 1958 and switched to bus operation in 1982. The train drove out of town from Hafenstrasse through the narrow Lange Strasse only on a single track and in town from the flute keel on a single track on Nordstrasse via Leher Markt to Hafenstrasse.

In BremerhavenBus' local transport, lines 502, 505, 506, 507, 508, 509, 511 and ML pass through the street.

Buildings and facilities

Most of the street has three to four storeys.

Notable buildings and facilities

  • No. 1 to 3: Drei 4-gesch. Houses from around 1910
  • No. 10: 3- tier , neo-baroque , three-wing courthouse from 1916 with a splendid middle risalit and No. 12 as a 2-tier. Extension with court prison according to plans by the Prussian government master builder Wilhelm Trautwein; since 1947 Bremerhaven District Court
  • Gaußstrasse No. 1–11a at the corner of Nordstrasse: 4- to 8-storey. Red stone clad houses from the 1980 / 90s
  • No. 27 to 31: 3- and 4-layered preserved houses from the 1910s
  • 33/37: 4-ply Residential houses with pitched roofs from after 1960
  • No. 24 to 36: 4-ply Residential houses. partly from around 1920
  • Bernhard-Krause-Strasse No. 5 at the corner of Nordstrasse: 4-storey. Residential building
  • Nonnenstrasse No. 8 at the corner of Nordstrasse: 2-storey. older residential building with the Bremerhaven youth welfare initiative
  • No. 45: 1-sch. older gabled house from around 1905 (?)
  • No. 67/69: 4th storey house with penthouse from 2018/19 according to plans by Lutz Padberg; former location of a 1-storey Supermarket and the savings bank
  • No. 79 to 85 four 4-sided older residential and commercial buildings from around 1910 with u. a. the pharmacy at Flötenkiel (No. 85)
  • No. 80: 4-sch. Atlantic Hotel am Flötenkiel

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Herbert Körtge: The street names of the seaside town of Bremerhaven .
  2. ^ Paul Homann: Bremerhaven route networks (public transport) since 1881 . In: BremerhavenBus website.
  3. ^ Monument database of the LfD
  4. Hermann Schwiebert: Nordstrasse is changing its face. In: DeichSPIEGEL The online magazine from Bremerhaven. December 28, 2019, accessed December 28, 2019 .

Coordinates: 53 ° 34 ′ 10.1 "  N , 8 ° 35 ′ 34.5"  E