Parkstrasse (Bremerhaven)
Parkstrasse | |
---|---|
Street in Bremerhaven | |
Park gate Speckenbüttel | |
Basic data | |
city | Bremerhaven |
district | Lehe |
Created | 19th century |
Cross streets | Wurster Strasse , Triftstrasse, Von-Glahn-Strasse, Auf den Kämpen, Am Parkbahnhof, Kransburger Strasse, Langener Landstrasse |
use | |
User groups | Cars, bikes and pedestrians |
Road design | two lane road |
Technical specifications | |
Street length | 1000 meters |
The park road is a key access road in Bremerhaven , district of Lehe , districts Speckenbüttel. It leads in a south, north and then west-east direction from Wurster Straße to Langener Landstraße in Leherheide .
The cross streets and the connecting streets were named u. a. as Wurster Straße to the northern country Wursten , Triftstraße (?), Von-Glahn-Straße after the patron Bernhard von Glahn (1825–1899), five unnamed paths, Auf den Kämpen after a field name , Am Parkbahnhof on the Bremerhaven – Cuxhaven railway line , Kransburger Strasse to the municipality in the state of Wursten and Langener Landstrasse to the neighboring town of Langen ; otherwise see the link to the streets.
history
Surname
The Parkstrasse was named after the Speckenbütteler Park , which it touches.
development
The Leh district of Speckenbüttel with today over 3000 inhabitants developed north of Alt-Lehe from the late 19th century, when after Bremerhaven was founded, Lehes began to rise from a patch to a town (1920). Before that, the Schützenhof had been in Speckenbütteler Holz since 1854 . The district is characterized by the Speckenbütteler Park (formerly the Alte Holz ) on the edge of the Leher Feldmark, which has slowly emerged since 1848.
traffic
As early as 1896, the northern end of the Bremerhaven tram was the park gate in Speckenbüttel. At first it ran as a horse-drawn tram and it was electrified in 1908 and replaced by buses as line 2 in 1982.
In the BremerhavenBus local traffic, lines 502 and ML pass through the street.
Buildings and facilities
The Villenstrasse has predominantly one to two-storey buildings.
Notable buildings and facilities
- No. 12: 2-sch. Villa from around 1910 with hipped roof, side 3-storied. Turrets and bay windows
- No. 14: 2- to 3-layered newer residential complex
- No. 15: 1-sch. former parking garage, from 1945 youth recreation facility, operated at times by the US administration; later converted into a parking garage fitness club
- Historicizing Parktor Speckenbüttel from 1896, donated by the German-American Bernhard von Glahn, built according to plans by the Leh city architect Heinrich Lagershausen; Refurbished in 1991.
- 80 hectare Speckenbütteler Park , laid out and expanded in Alten Holz and Speckenbütteler Holz from 1835 and 1848 by means of a fairground and plantings, renamed Speckenbütteleler Park in 1890, supplemented in 1895 by the old car park, in 1896 by the park gate and in 1905 by the coffee house, 1906 converted and expanded (+13 ha) according to plans by Viktor Goebel, expanded again in 1910 with the boat pond and in the 1920s as a park area and from 1908 with the folklore open-air museum
- No. 28: 2-sch. Former villa from around 1910 with a mansard roof , today with the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints ( Mormon denomination group )
- No. 32: 1-sch. House from around 1910
- No. 34: 2-sch. Villa from around 1910 with a health service for the sick and elderly
- No. 42: 1-sch. Gabled house from around 1910 with the Cottage at the Park
- Underpass of the Bremerhaven – Cuxhaven railway line
literature
- Harry Gabcke , Renate Gabcke, Herbert Körtge, Manfred Ernst: Bremerhaven in two centuries; Volumes I to III from 1827 to 1991. Nordwestdeutsche Verlagsgesellschaft, Bremerhaven 1989/1991, ISBN 3-927857-00-9 , ISBN 3-927857-37-8 , ISBN 3-927857-22-X .
Individual evidence
- ^ Paul Homann: Bremerhaven route networks (public transport) since 1881 . In: BremerhavenBus website.
- ↑ Monument database of the LfD Bremen
- ^ Speckenbüttel health and wellness park , booklet accompanying the presentation of the 2001 master plan.
Coordinates: 53 ° 35 ′ 12.5 " N , 8 ° 35 ′ 31.9" E