Oslebshauser Landstrasse

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Oslebshauser Landstrasse
coat of arms
Street in Bremen
Basic data
city Bremen
district Groepelingen
Cross streets Oslebshauser Heerstraße , Hinter dem Moor, Am Fockenberg, Im Weinberge, Am alten Sportplatz, Finkenbergstraße, Menkenkamp, ​​Alter Heerweg, Oslebshauser Wurth, Wohlers Eichen, An der Finkenau, At the industrial port
use
User groups Cars, bikes and pedestrians
Road design two lane road
Technical specifications
Street length 750 meters
cath. St. Joseph Church

The Oslebshauser Landstraße is a central access road in Bremen , Gröpelingen district, Oslebshausen district . It leads in a north-south direction from Oslebshauser Heerstraße to Südweststraße on the edge of the industrial port.

The cross streets and connecting streets were named u. a. as Ritterhuder Heerstraße, which leads to Ritterhude , Oslebshauser Heerstraße after the district, Hinter dem Moor after the moor as a field name , Am Fockenberg after a hallway, Im Weinberge (unclear), Am alten Sportplatz 1993 after the former place of SG Oslebshausen , Finkenbergstraße ( unclear), Menkenkamp after the field of the farmer Menke, Alter Heerweg (unclear), Oslebshauser Wurth (= terp ) after the raised area, Wohlers oak after the seat of the Wohlers family, An der Finkenau from 1855 after the estate of the broker Heinrich Cornelius Finke, At the industrial port in 1911 after the port and Südweststrasse; otherwise see the link to the streets.

history

Surname

The Oslebshauser Landstrasse was named in 1927 after the village and later district Oslebshausen (also Osleveshusen ; 1218), Oslingshusen (1370), Ochselshausen (1580), Osshusen (1650).

development

Oslebshausen was a small village with 199 inhabitants around 1812, which changed completely after the construction of the neighboring ports and industrial plants. The old road connection from the Oslebshauser Heerstraße through the old Oslebshausen to the harbor became an important cross-connection in the district. The estate park of the petroleum merchant Wilhelm August Korff (1845-1914) is in the neighborhood and from 1931 it became Oslebshauser Park .

After the Second World War , intensive residential development took place in the district badly affected by the war. The largest project from 1971 to 1973 was the Wohlers Eichen block building . 2007 Oslebshausen had 8,585 inhabitants.

traffic

In local transport in Bremen, the bus routes 80 and 81 (Gröpelingen ↔ industrial ports), 90 (Gröpelingen ↔ Neuenkirchen), 93 (Gröpelingen ↔ Marßel), 95 (Gröpelingen ↔ Bockhorn) as well as 660 (Bremen Hbf - Hagen) and 680 touch the Oslebshauser Heerstraße (Gröpelingen - Wallhöfen) the street. .

Buildings and facilities

There are mostly one- and two-story houses on the street.

Notable buildings and facilities

  • Oslebshauser Heerstraße 128 corner Oslebshauser Landstraße: 2-storey. Residential and commercial building from around 1900 with a distinctive four-storey building. Corner turret and mansard roof
  • No. 20: 2- and 3-layered modern home at Oslebshauser Park from the social welfare agency Bremen
  • in front of it the Regine-Hildebrandt- Platz, named after the politician close to the people (SPD), Minister for Labor, Social Affairs, Health and Women in the first Brandenburg state government; redesigned in 2005, weekly market
  • behind the 10-hectare Oslebshauser Park from 1931/32 according to plans by horticultural director Paul Freye ; in the park is the former Villa Korff from 1891 for the petroleum merchant Wilhelm August Korff (1845–1914)
  • Alter Heerweg 37 / Oslebshauser Landstrasse: newer Catholic Church of St. Josef from 1960 based on plans by Karl-Heinz Bruns, Bremen; Filial church of St. Marien (Walle)
  • Am Oslebshauser Park 1–3: 2-storey. modern high school in the park for 250 students from grades five to ten
  • No. 52a to 66: 1-cut. clinkered terraced houses
  • Tunnel under the railway track for industrial port with
  • Wohlers Eichen is the location of a newer (1971–1973) 8 to 9 storey. Over 300 meter long residential complex with 16 house sections and over 250 apartments, which is to seal off the industrial port from the residential development; Client: Bremer Treuhand, Architects Team 4, G. Müller, W. Stadtlander, K.-A. Welp and F. Wolff

See also

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Anne Gerling: The summer residence of the petroleum king . In: Weser-Kurier from August 28, 2014.
  2. architecture guide bremen: Wohlers Eichen residential complex

Coordinates: 53 ° 7 '52.7 "  N , 8 ° 43' 57.4"  E