Pernerstorfergasse
Pernerstorfergasse | |
---|---|
Street in Vienna | |
Basic data | |
place | Vienna |
District | Favoriten (10th district) |
Created | 1864 |
Hist. Names | Eugengasse |
Connecting roads | Mundygasse |
Cross streets | Gellertgasse, Waldgasse, Herndlgasse , Wielandgasse , Favoritenstraße , Leibnizgasse, Senefeldergasse, Columbusgasse, Laxenburger Straße , Siccardsburggasse, Leebgasse , Van-der-Nüll-Gasse, Alxingergasse , Herzgasse, Eckertgasse, Neilreichgasse , Karmhnarschgasse, Fernleithnarschgasse |
Places | Wielandplatz, Viktor-Adler-Platz |
Buildings | Federal Trade Academy and Federal Trade School Favoriten |
use | |
User groups | Pedestrians , bicycle traffic , car traffic |
Road design | one way street |
Technical specifications | |
Street length | approx. 1488 m |
The Pernerstorfergasse located since 1874 in the 10th Vienna district , Favorites (previously the 4th and 5th district). It was named in 1919 after the social democratic politician Engelbert Pernerstorfer ; previously it had since 1864 by the Prince Eugene of Savoy , the Turks conquerors , Eugen Gasse welcomed, but was also Eugenstraße called.
Location and characteristics
Pernerstorfergasse is a long cross street in the historic Favoriten settlement , one block north of Quellenstrasse , which runs parallel to it , and stretches in a straight line from Gellertgasse (east of Amalienbad ) in the east to Sonnleithnergasse (near the Evangelical Matzleinsdorfer Friedhof ) in the west. It touches the Wielandplatz with its park, crosses the pedestrian zone of the Favoritenstraße , where it is interrupted by the Viktor-Adler-Platz and -markt, and the Laxenburger Straße south of the tram depot.
Pernerstorfergasse is a one-way street , from Gellertgasse to Laxenburger Straße in an east-west direction and from Laxenburger Straße to Sonnleithnergasse in a west-east direction. There is no public transport here. The properties along the alley are densely built up with residential houses, mainly from the end of the 19th century to the beginning of the 20th century, there are also commercial establishments.
building
The lot numbering of the alley begins in the east at Gellertgasse; odd numbers on the south side of the street, even on the north, closer to the city center. Wielandplatz with its park stretches between numbers 18 and 20, and Viktor-Adler-Platz with its market between numbers 30 and 32 . The highest house numbers are 89 and 94 on the corner of Sonnleithnergasse.
No. 17: Mosaics
At the residential building at Pernerstorfergasse 17 there are six mosaic pictures depicting scenes from fables.
No. 21: Relief blacksmith
At house no. 21 there is a relief picture depicting a blacksmith.
No. 57: Former lamp factory
The former lamp factory and the department store were built by Carl Langhammer from 1898 and expanded at the beginning of the 20th century. Together with the adjoining former sewing machine factory in Leebgasse 34, the objects form a uniformly closed factory complex. A block-like four-storey building in exposed brick is grouped around two courtyards, which is defined by continuous cornices. A brick chimney has been preserved in one of the courtyards.
No. 60: mosaic pillar
In front of the U-shaped urban residential complex, which is open to Pernerstorfergasse, there is a four-sided concrete pillar in the courtyard with ceramic mosaics by Karl Hauk from 1953, which is a listed building. The scenes shown on the four pages are titled Playing , Learning , Helping Each Other and Affirming Life . The residential complex itself was built by Rudolf Goder and Rudolf Münch in 1952–1953 and comprises 124 apartments.
No. 79 and 81: Commercial Academy
The school building was built from 1888 to 1889 as a foremen's school and later a trade school for mechanical engineering and electrical engineering and expanded in 1893 and 1906. The building is three-story with exposed bricks and plaster structure in a strictly historical style. The listed old building is part of the Bundeshandelsakademie and Bundeshandelsschule Favoriten .
literature
- Herbert Tschulk: Viennese district culture guide favorites . Jugend & Volk, Vienna 1985, ISBN 3-224-16255-4 .
- Bundesdenkmalamt (Ed.): Dehio-Handbuch Wien. X. to XIX. and XXI. to XXIII. District . Anton Schroll, Vienna 1996
Web links
Individual evidence
Coordinates: 48 ° 10 ′ 36 " N , 16 ° 22 ′ 22.4" E