Frankfurt-Praunheim

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Praunheim coat of arms
Coat of arms of Frankfurt am Main
Praunheim
22nd district of Frankfurt am Main
Altstadt Bahnhofsviertel Bergen-Enkheim Berkersheim Bockenheim Bockenheim Bonames Bornheim Dornbusch Eckenheim Eschersheim Fechenheim Flughafen Frankfurter Berg Gallus Ginnheim Griesheim Gutleutviertel Harheim Hausen Heddernheim Höchst Innenstadt Kalbach-Riedberg Nied Nieder-Erlenbach Nieder-Eschbach Niederrad Niederursel Nordend-Ost Nordend-West Oberrad Ostend Praunheim Praunheim Preungesheim Riederwald Rödelheim Sachsenhausen-Nord Sachsenhausen-Süd Schwanheim Schwanheim Seckbach Sindlingen Sossenheim Unterliederbach Westend-Nord Westend-Süd Zeilsheimmap
About this picture
Coordinates 50 ° 8 '59 "  N , 8 ° 37' 16"  E Coordinates: 50 ° 8 '59 "  N , 8 ° 37' 16"  E
surface 5.153 km²
Residents 16,709 (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density 3243 inhabitants / km²
Post Code 60488
prefix 069
Website www.frankfurt.de
structure
District 7 - middle-west
Townships
Transport links
Subway U7
bus 60 72 73 n2
Source: Statistics currently 03/2020. Residents with main residence in Frankfurt am Main. Retrieved April 8, 2020 .
Depiction of the coat of arms of the Reichsministerialien von Praunheim , which had free float in and around the place and u. a. had the Klettenburg and Philippseck Castle built.

Praunheim has been a district of Frankfurt am Main in Hesse since April 1, 1910 . The population is 000000000016709.000000000016,709.

Geographical location

Praunheim is located in the northwest of Frankfurt am Main at about 105  m above sea level. NHN , 6 km northwest of downtown Frankfurt . Its highest point is 128 m high on the Steinbach on the federal highway 5 and the lowest point is 99 m high on the "pipe bridge" over the Nidda . It is located on the north bank of the Nidda on the hiking trail of the Frankfurt Green Belt and at the Niddapark (Volkspark Niddatal) . The church is in the center of the old village. Praunheim borders (from north to south) on Niederursel , Heddernheim , Ginnheim , Hausen , Westhausen and Rödelheim . The straight line between Frankfurt / city center ( Eiserner Steg ) to the Church of the Resurrection (Altpraunheim) is about 6.2 km.

history

Prehistory and early history

The area around Praunheim has been populated since the Neolithic Age (about 6000 years). The basis for this was the loess soil of the Ebelfeld , which is favorable for agricultural yields . Numerous archaeological findings have been secured here.

Between Heddernheim and Praunheim, the remains of at least ten early Roman military camps were found, which formed a strategic focus for the conquest of the Wetterau . A Roman military road led to the Wetterau on the one hand and to Mainz on the other. The Roman city of Nida was on the border of Praunheim. This archaeological site was destroyed on the occasion of the construction of the Roman City (1927-1929) and the Northwest City (1961-1973).

middle Ages

Coat of arms of those of Praunheim on the epitaph of Rudolf von Sachsenhausen

The oldest surviving mention of the place comes from the year 804 under the name Praunheim (Brumheim) as located in Niddagau . In the High Middle Ages , Praunheim was part of the Bornheimerberg court and later office . Praunheim was thus a royal property . In the area of ​​the church, near the Nidda, there was probably a water-defended royal court. The Klettenburg and (since 1676) the Augustusburg were located in the direction of Niederursel in the then swampy Steinbach valley . The local nobility, the lords of Praunheim , were one of the leading families in the Wetterau and provided a number of mayors to the imperial city of Frankfurt am Main in the 12th and 13th centuries .

In 1320 King Ludwig IV pledged the Bornheimerberg to Ulrich II von Hanau , so that half of Praunheim belonged to the Hanau rulership and later to the Hanau-Münzenberg county . The other half belonged to the Counts of Solms . A condominate grew out of this double claim . The Hanau part of Praunheim was initially given as a fief to the Lords of Praunheim . This family played a significant role in the history of Frankfurt. For example, the knight Wolfram I von Praunheim is the first known mayor of the city of Frankfurt am Main.

Another castle, the Old Castle , was in the middle of Praunheim.

In 1132 the Archbishop of Mainz acquired the right to invest in the Praunheim church.

The Praunheim parish originally included Ginnheim , Rödelheim (until 1464), Hausen (until 1772), Heddernheim (until 1821) and Niederursel . The Leonhardstift in Frankfurt had been patronage since 1336 , but the Archbishops of Mainz also claimed it. After the end of the old empire, the city of Frankfurt had the right of patronage until 1906. The middle church authority was the archdeaconate of the provost of St. Peter in Mainz , deanery Eschborn .

Until it was incorporated into the city of Frankfurt, Praunheim owned a community-owned forest on Sandplacken (the area is about 99 hectares with the highest elevation of 684 m above sea level on the Kolbenberg ). The forest is enclosed by the boundary stone trail.

Historical forms of names

  • Brumheim (804)
  • Brunniheim (1063)
  • Prumheim (1132)
  • Phrumheim (1211)
  • Prumheim (1247)
  • Prhumheim (1276)
  • Brumheim (1323)
  • Promheim (1374)
  • Brunheim (1477)

Modern times

Count Friedrich Magnus von Solms and Count Philipp III. von Hanau-Munzenberg introduced the Reformation according to Lutheran teachings in Praunheim in 1545 . The Solms portion of Praunheim belonged to the County of Solms-Rödelheim , Office Rödelheim .

In 1770 a new boundary stone was set after disputes over a boundary had arisen. The Ginnheimers claimed the moat in the Woog for themselves, as it was regularly leased for fish woad.

After the death of the last Hanau count, Johann Reinhard III. inherited his share in Praunheim together with the county of Hanau-Munzenberg the Landgraves of Hessen-Kassel . The Landgraviate of Hesse-Kassel became the Electorate of Hesse in 1803 . The Solms-Rödelheim share of Praunheim fell to the Grand Duchy of Hesse through the Reichsdeputationshauptschluss . Temporarily belonged Praunheim in Napoleonic times , first from 1806 to 1810 to the French Empire , Principality of Hanau , Office Bornheimer mountain , then to the 1810-1813 Grand Duchy of Frankfurt before it was back to a Kondominat between the electorate and the Grand Duchy of Hesse. This mixed situation was cleared up in 1816 when the Grand Duchy ceded its half of Praunheim to the Electorate. After the administrative reform of the Electorate of Hesse in 1821, during which the Electorate of Hesse was divided into four provinces and 22 districts, Praunheim belonged to the Hanau district . As an ally of Austria, the electorate was subject to the Kingdom of Prussia in the Austro-Prussian War in 1866 . This annexed then Kurhessen and thus Praunheim. From 1866 Praunheim belonged to the Prussian province of Hessen-Nassau , the administrative district of Kassel and the district of Hanau, and from 1886 to the district of Frankfurt . For Apr. 1, 1910 Praunheim was in the city of Frankfurt incorporated .

Population development

  • 1609: 00.293 inhabitants, including 127 adults
  • 1612: 00.074 steering ends
  • 1753: 00.113 households
  • 1834: 00.595 inhabitants
  • 1840: 00.629 inhabitants
  • 1895: 01,055 inhabitants
  • 1910: 01,413 inhabitants
  • 1956: 12,456 inhabitants
  • 1985: 15,398 inhabitants
  • 2018: 16,492 inhabitants

politics

Local districts 7 and 8 (district 7 Frankfurt-Mitte-West : Rödelheim, Praunheim, Hausen and district 8 Frankfurt-Nord-West : Niederursel, Heddernheim, Praunheim-Nord) are decisive for the local elections in Praunheim .

Development

Praunheim settlement

To alleviate the dramatic housing shortage after the First World War , the building construction department head Ernst May, appointed by Mayor Ludwig Landmann, had a satellite town built in Praunheim, west of the old town center between Heerstrasse and the Nidda . In the Praunheim housing estate, almost 1,500 Bauhaus-style apartments were built in just a few years (1926–1929) . The Praunheim settlement is considered to be the prototype of social housing in Frankfurt and far beyond, although it is not about rental housing construction by a non-profit housing association, as was common in almost all settlements of the twenties throughout Germany, but a Reichsheimstättensiedlung directly through the city of Frankfurt was built and their residential buildings were sold after completion with the social ties on the homestead. The Frankfurt kitchen , which was first installed in the Praunheim housing estate, was also known , an architectural design that radically differed from the kitchen-living room that was customary up to that time, according to which the kitchen was only a small, purely functional room ( laboratory kitchen ). Instead, the apartment was equipped with a living room as a family meeting point, a space that was previously unfamiliar to workers.

At a first meeting on June 30, 1927, the residents of the Praunheim settlement formed the "Siedlerverein der Siedlung Frankfurt a. M. - Praunheim ”, which represents the interests of the owners who have been exempted from being bound by the Reichsheimstätten since 1993.

Westhausen settlement

Artist colony 1967

In 1964, the Frankfurt planning department head Hans Kampffmeyer made ten plots available in Praunheim for development with modern houses for artists. The houses were built in the street An den Pflanzländer 2-22 in connection with the Federal Garden Show planned for 1969 but not held for financial reasons .

Heinrich-Lübke-Siedlung and construction work on Heerstraße

In the Heinrich-Lübke settlement built in Praunheim in the 1970s, there are around 600 apartments for around 2,000 residents in three- to eight-storey residential buildings. The extensive renovation and new construction measures carried out over several years by the municipal ABG Frankfurt Holding were largely completed in 2016.

In the area of ​​Heerstrasse, the district is constantly being developed and expanded. Both in the form of new construction and renovation measures for residential buildings (partly publicly funded) and as part of the extensive expansion of the Nördliche Heerstraße industrial estate .

Heinrich-Lübke-Siedlung

economy

Praunheim is a partly still agricultural district with a below-average unemployment rate. There are numerous retailers and large corporations.

Important employers in the region include a. the Mercedes-Benz AG and ABB Ltd on the highway or Stierstädter road. The production facilities of the historically largest employer Praunheim, the Hartmann & Braun company, were also located on Heerstraße and were relocated there during the Second World War . Hartmann & Braun was an important war company in 1941 and 1942. The new Praunheim plant had at times employed around 1,000 people. After the company was relocated in 1997, the buildings were demolished and new row houses were built.

Social institutions and clinics

Northwest Hospital

The Northwest Hospital, which was founded in 1960 and later modernized and expanded, is located on a hill in Steinbacher Hohl 2–26, which is frequented nationwide with numerous specialties.

Praunheimer workshops

In Praunheim is a widely known beyond regional boundaries has sheltered workshop established to promote disabled people, under the name Praunheimer workshops gGmbH sells (pw) handmade products. In addition to traditional wooden toys , furniture and services are also offered. The production workshop used to be in Graebestrasse on the Praunheimer Brücke. After the completion of a modern new building on Christa-Maar-Straße, the move took place in 2016. There is also a residential facility for disabled people in the historic buildings of the Praunheimer Mühle. The former workshop buildings of the Praunheimer Werkstätten in Graebestrasse have been used as refugee accommodation for a limited period since 2016.

Elderly care home Graebestrasse

The Praunheim retirement and nursing home of the Frankfurt Association for Aid for the Elderly and the Disabled is located at Graebestrasse 48. V.

Churches

  • Evangelical Church Wicherngemeinde, Pützerstraße 96a, 60488 Frankfurt
  • EKHN Ecumenical Center, Praunheimer Landstrasse 206, 60488 Frankfurt
  • Catholic Christ-König-Kirche , Damaschkeanger 156, 60488 Frankfurt, consecrated in 1930
  • New Apostolic Church Frankfurt (NAK), Praunheimer Hohl 1, 60488 Frankfurt, renovated from 2002–2004

schools

  • The Ebelfeldschule (elementary school), Praunheimer Hohl 4, 60488 Frankfurt. The municipal day-care center 16 is in the immediate vicinity
  • Liebigschule, Kollwitzstraße 3, 60488 Frankfurt - Public high school up to year 13 / G9 / European school (also with a focus on sport)
  • Gymnasium North (Westhausen district), Muckermannstr. 1, 60488 Frankfurt
  • Hermann Luppe School , An der Praunheimer Mühle 7–9, 60488 Frankfurt, special needs school with special emphasis on emotional and social development , five classes
  • State college for the automotive industry, Heerstraße 149, 60488 Frankfurt. In 1963 the city of Frankfurt and the Orphanage Foundation bought the former farm estate , which was expanded into a multi-award-winning vocational training and technology center of the state college.
  • French school Lycee Victor Hugo, Gontardstrasse 11, 60488 Frankfurt

Sights and cultural monuments

The Gothic tithe barn in Graebestrasse probably dates from the 14th century. After the building was no longer used for storing natural goods (the tithe ), it had changing functions as a prison, morgue and fire department garage. The tithe barn has served as an event location since the 1990s and is used for meetings of the local council .

Three stumbling blocks remind of the life of the Jews and those persecuted in Praunheim during National Socialism .

 A Vespa museum was opened in 2017 in a formerly converted bowling alley on Alt-Praunheim 44 .

Sports

Praunheim, sports field

The women's soccer department of SG Praunheim founded in 1908 , which played its games on the Praunheimer Hohl soccer field and was outsourced to 1. FFC Frankfurt in 1998 , played for a long time in the top German division. 1. FFC Frankfurt is now playing in Frankfurt-Rödelheim . One of the two playing fields of the Praunheim soccer field was extensively renovated in 2017 and converted into an artificial turf surface. The inauguration took place on October 30, 2017 by the sports department of the city of Frankfurt.

There are also in Praunheim, among others, the volleyball club TG Roman city , the Skatverein SC Brühl foxes and the sailing club Main Flower .

There is a toboggan slope on the Adlerwiese . The Adlerwiese is a green area near the street Am Ebelfeld and is located between the residential area of ​​the Praunheim settlement and the Frankfurt green belt along the Nidda.

Furthermore, the European long-distance hiking trail E1 leads over the Praunheimer weir.

Clubs and events

There is a lively club life in Praunheim. These include the Praunheim Citizens' Association, the Praunheim Voluntary Fire Brigade and an allotment garden association.

The annual Zehntscheunenfest takes place as a summer festival in Graebestrasse with events for all age groups and numerous music events. An institution in Praunheim is the party band Fullstop , which has been performing in Frankfurt and the surrounding area for over 40 years.

Numerous festivals and events are also held in the parishes, and the Protestant Church of the Resurrection is known beyond the boundaries of the district for its church music.

Personalities

traffic

Road traffic

Praunheim is crossed by two motorways. ( A66 and A5 ). Praunheim also has three major arterial roads ( Praunheimer Landstrasse , Ludwig-Landmann-Strasse and Heerstrasse )

Public transport

Subway line U7, stop Heerstraße (bus connection line 60) and subway line U 6, stop Hausen (bus connection lines 72 and 73).

At night line N2 runs through Praunheim.

Furthermore, the regional tangent west is a planned regional light rail line in the rapid transit network of the Rhine-Main area .

literature

  • Dietwulf Baatz , Fritz-Rudolf Herrmann (ed.): The Romans in Hessen. 3. Edition. Nikol, Hamburg 2002, ISBN 3-933203-58-9 , pp. 275-292.
  • Adolf Bach: The settlement names of the Taunus area in their meaning for the settlement history. (= Rhenish settlement history. 1). 1927, DNB 578788136 , p. 52.
  • Alfred Hansmann: 1200 years of Praunheim - a journey into the past. Frankfurt am Main 2004, ISBN 3-00-013189-2 .
  • Gerhard Kleinfeldt, Hans Weirich: The medieval church organization in the Upper Hesse-Nassau area. (= Writings of the institute for historical regional studies of Hesse and Nassau. 16). 1937, DNB 579512487 . (Reprint: Elwert, Marburg 1984, ISBN 3-942760-01-0 , p. 74.)
  • Rudolf Knappe: Medieval castles in Hesse: 800 castles, castle ruins and castle sites. 3. Edition. Wartberg-Verlag, Gudensberg-Gleichen 2000, ISBN 3-86134-228-6 , p. 402.
  • Ronald Kunze: Tenant participation in social housing. Establishment and development of tenant representatives in the settlements of the non-profit housing industry. Kassel 1992, ISBN 3-89117-071-8 .
  • Siegfried Nassauer: Castles and fortified manors around Frankfurt a. M. History and legend . Goldsteinsche Buchhandlung, Frankfurt am Main 1917. (Reprint: Weidlich, Frankfurt am Main 1979, ISBN 3-8035-1027-9 )
  • Heinrich Reimer: Historical local dictionary for Kurhessen. (= Publications of the Historical Commission for Hesse. 14). 1926, p. 369. (Reprint: Elwert, Marburg 1974, ISBN 3-7708-0509-7 )
  • Helmut Ritzel: Praunheim. Sketches for a story . 1958. (typewritten)
  • Heinz Schomann among others: Monument topography city of Frankfurt am Main . Vieweg, Braunschweig 1986, ISBN 3-528-06238-X , pp. 684-693.
  • May-Siedlung Praunheim - 75 years 1927–2002. Settlers Association Frankfurt am Main - Praunheim e. V., Frankfurt am Main 2002, ISBN 3-00-009893-3 .
  • Walter Wagner: The Rhine-Main area 150 years ago. (= Work of the Historical Commission for the People's State of Hesse, at the same time special print from the archive for Hessian history and antiquity. NF. 20). 1938, DNB 56095235X , pp. 70, 94.
  • Residential buildings in timber frame construction Heerstraße 246-260, Praunheim (Grdrr., View, section, photos). In: Martin Wentz (ed.): New housing, Frankfurt projects. (= The future of the urban. 10). Campus, Frankfurt am Main 1998, ISBN 3-593-35920-0 , p. 80 f.

Web links

Commons : Frankfurt-Praunheim  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Pictures from the Praunheim history in 1988.
  2. ^ Franz Lerner, Frankfurter Sparkasse from 1822 (Polytechnische Gesellschaft) (ed.): Ginnheim. From prehistory to the present , Frankfurt 1983, pp. 75ff.
  3. City of Frankfurt am Main: Current statistics, residents in Frankfurt am Main on June 30, 2018 (PDF) City of Frankfurt am Main, June 30, 2018, accessed on November 17, 2018 .
  4. Astrid Kumpfe: Die Frankfurter Künstlerkolonie: Living in Frankfurt / Main 1967. September 29, 2012 on the website of LISA - The science
    portal of
    the Gerda Henkel Foundation , also Astrid Kumpfe: Living in Frankfurt / Main 1967: Frankfurter Künstlerkolonie e. V. (1959). Henrich Editions, Frankfurt am Main 2012, ISBN 978-3-921606-96-4 .
  5. ^ Heinrich Lübke settlement | free space x. Retrieved November 18, 2018 .
  6. ^ ABG FRANKFURT HOLDING Housing and investment company: ABG FRANKFURT HOLDING GmbH. Retrieved November 18, 2018 .
  7. Commercial and residential area north of Heerstrasse (Praunheim) - German Architecture Forum. Retrieved November 18, 2018 .
  8. COM.POSiTUM GmbH, Fulda: industrial area north of Heerstraße | City Planning Office Frankfurt am Main. Retrieved November 18, 2018 .
  9. Northwest Hospital. Retrieved March 30, 2019 .
  10. Frankfurt-Praunheim: The new Praunheimer Werkstätten are built . In: Frankfurter Rundschau . ( fr.de [accessed on November 17, 2018]).
  11. ^ Frankfurt am Main: Praunheimer Werkstätten non-profit GmbH - residential complex at the Praunheimer Mühle. Retrieved November 17, 2018 .
  12. ^ Praunheim nursing home. Retrieved March 30, 2019 .
  13. Vespa Foundation , accessed on March 12, 2017.
  14. ^ Frankfurt.de: Frankfurt am Main: construction projects of the sports department. November 17, 2018, accessed February 20, 2020 .
  15. ^ Praunheim volunteer fire department. Retrieved March 30, 2019 .
  16. ↑ Tithe Barn Festival. Retrieved March 30, 2019 .
  17. Marcus Reinhardt in Frankfurter Neue Presse from December 29, 2017: From the church gallery to the party world (40 years full stop)