Otto-Brenner-Allee

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Otto-Brenner-Allee
coat of arms
Street in Bremen
Otto-Brenner-Allee
Otto-Brenner-Allee, view of the Pfälzer Weg
Basic data
city Bremen
district Osterholz
Created around 1970
Newly designed 2012
Cross streets Teneverstrasse, Dürkheimer Str., Kreuznacher Str., Koblenzer Str., Ludwigshafener Str., Kaiserslauterner Str., Wormser Str., Pirmasenser Str., Pfälzer Weg, Neuwieder Str., Binger Weg
use
User groups Cars, bikes and pedestrians
Road design two and four lane roads
Technical specifications
Street length 1300 meters

The Otto-Brenner-Allee is a central access road to Bremen , district Osterholz , district Tenever . It mainly leads in a south-north direction from Osterholzer Heerstraße to Sankt-Gotthard-Straße and the Osterholz shopping center.

The cross streets and connecting streets were mostly named after cities in Rhineland-Palatinate a . a. as Osterholzer Heerstraße after the district, Teneverstraße after the district, formerly Tenöver = to the shore, Dürkheimer Straße, Kreuznacher Straße, Koblenzer Straße, Ludwigshafener Straße, Kaiserslauterner Straße, Wormser Straße, Pirmasenser Straße, Pfälzer Weg, Neuwied Straße, Binger Weg and Sankt- Gotthard road after the Gotthard massif and the 2106 m pass; otherwise see the link to the streets.

history

Surname

Rimless

Otto-Brenner-Allee was named after the trade unionist, politician ( SPD ) and chairman of IG Metall Otto Brenner (1907–1972).

He finished second in 1952 and was ultimately first chairman of IG Metall from 1956 to 1972 and president of the International Metalworkers' Union in 1961 .

development

Large housing estate Tenever
Otto-Brenner-Allee and Neuwieder Strasse

After the large housing estate in the Vahr was built for around 30,000 residents , the Blockdiek district for around 8,000 residents followed from 1965 to 1970 , the Ellener Feld with small-scale housing developments, and the Tenever housing estate from 1970 to 1977. An urban planning concept was developed for Tenever by the Nuremberg Urban Development Institute (SIN) under the leadership of Prof. Gerhard G. Dittrich in 1970. 4600 apartments were planned for the "demonstrative building project" and 2500/2600 units were built.
Numerous apartment blocks with up to 21 floors were built. The apartments were later difficult to rent out. After around 1992 there were larger vacancies.
The Hanoverian architect Lothar Krause was the owner of five publicly funded residential complexes in Osterholz-Tenever with 1416 apartments, which had to be administered at the end of 1995. Several foreclosure auction dates were unsuccessful in the bankruptcy proceedings. The Bremer Investitions-Gesellschaft (BIG) developed an overall concept for these 1,416 apartments with approx. 98,000 m² of living space between 1999 and 2001. The Gewoba was a cooperation partner of BIG in this procedure. The city with the BIG and the Gewoba founded the Osterholz-Tenever-Grundstücksgesellschaft (OTG) in 2003, which acquired the properties with 1306 apartments from bankruptcy proceedings in 2003. In 2000/01 an integrated urban redevelopment concept was developed for the area.

From 2004 to 2009 an urban redevelopment took place in this area on the basis of an urban development concept from 2001/02 with funding from the city ; Streets and houses were renovated, floors or apartment blocks with around 1000 apartments demolished (including the Kessler block on the corner of Otto-Brenner-Allee and Neuwieder Straße, several high-rise wings of the formerly Z-shaped block buildings and the bridges on the upper pedestrian level), the residential area improved and new construction measures prepared from the demolition areas. Costs of 90 million euros were determined in 2002, 72 million euros should then flow into the project by around 2008.

In the area of ​​the district with around 6000 inhabitants (2017) people of around 80 different nationalities live.

traffic

The road from around 1970 initially runs parallel to Federal Motorway 27 and then bends to the west.

The new tram line 1 ran from 1967 between Arsterdamm and Blockdiek. It was extended to Osterholz in 1968 and via Tenever to Mahndorf in 2012/13 .
Since then, the Bremen tram has been using line 1 (Huchting - S Mahndorf station).

Buildings and facilities

No. 42: high-rise residential building
Ludwigshafener Str. No. 12
Ludwigshafener Str. No. 14th

There are a few two-story buildings and mostly multi-story houses on the street.

Notable buildings and facilities

  • Teneverstraße No. 3: 1-gesch. smaller mall
  • No. 20 to 32: 3-ply modern office center from after 2000
  • Reversing loop of the tram
  • No. 42: 18-gesch. 55 m high residential high-rise from 1977 as part of a high-rise block. In 2010 the GEWOBA flight of stairs took place in the house for the first time. It led up 290 steps to the top floor.
  • No. 44/46: 3-layered Office and shopping center as OteZentrum with Gewoba Servicebüro OTe , police station, Sparkasse Bremen branch, café, AWO advisory center and pharmacy center; behind
  • Ludwigshafener Straße: high-rise residential buildings from 1977 based on plans by Martin Zill
    • No. 12:15 41 m high residential high-rise and
    • No. 14:17 44 m high residential tower from 1977
  • Koblenzer Straße as a walking and cycling path
    • No. 2a: AWO day care center
    • No. 3: 2-sch. Indoor swimming pool Tenever from 1977, now called OTeBad
    • No. 5: 1-sch. Tenever youth center from 1977
  • Kaiserslauterner Strasse No. 1 to 18: to 17-gesch. right-angled block of flats
  • Wormser Straße No. 1 to 18: up to 16-gesch. right-angled block of flats
  • Pirmasenser Straße No. 1 to 24: up to 16-gesch. Right-angled block of flats and 7-storey. Residential building
  • No. 48: up to 10 st. Residential high-rise
  • Neuwied Street No. 1: up to 16-gesch. High-rise residential building from 1976
  • Corner of Neuwieder Strasse: five 2-storey. newer residential pavilions
  • Between Binger Weg and Pfälzer Weg: Seven 2- to 3-tiered. Residential houses from 2019 with daycare
  • Pedestrian bridge to Binger Weg
  • St. Gotthard Street No. 140: Ev. Tenever church from 1976 in the Evangelical Trinity Congregation Bremen with day care center.

See also

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Report of the Bremer Investitions-Gesellschaft ... on the Krause objects project in Osterholz-Tenever from 2002.
  2. ^ Free Hanseatic City of Bremen: Tenever. From an urban planning sin to a successful model for social urban development .
  3. Federal Ministry of the Interior, for Building and Home Affairs: Bremen Osterholz-Tenever .

Coordinates: 53 ° 3 ′ 42.5 ″  N , 8 ° 57 ′ 50.6 ″  E