Ringelnatz settlement

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ringelnatz settlement

The Ringelnatz settlement (also: Joachim-Ringelnatz-settlement ) is a residential complex of Degewo in Berlin district Biesdorf of Marzahn-Hellersdorf .

location

The Ringelnatz settlement is located between Hans-Fallada-Strasse and Joachim-Ringelnatz-Strasse north of Ceciliensiedlung and is bordered to the south by Cecilienstraße.

history

In Biesdorf Nord, after the political change, two- and three-storey town houses and town villas in the 1920s style were built according to the plans of the architects Frank Dörken and Volker Heise. The 396 apartments with one and a half to five rooms were built between 1993 and 1995 with funds from the State of Berlin in the first and second funding path for around 160 million German marks north of the Cecilienstraße residential area on a 7.5 hectare field  . Planning began in 1992, the foundation stone was laid on August 23, 1993 and the topping-out ceremony took place a year later on September 29, 1994 . After months of delay, at the end of 1995 only 396 families out of 2000 applicants were able to move into their new apartments.

The facility consists of eight opposing four-storey U-shaped building complexes, the two legs of which are equipped with idiosyncratic barrel roofs and are connected to one another by a three-storey wing with green roofs . Corresponding to the trapezoidal plot, the four north building complexes are narrower and one storey less. To the west of Hans-Fallada-Straße there are 14 town villas that take up the design of the other houses and are also provided with a barrel roof. They are aligned with the thigh buildings of the houses opposite.

New block of the Ringelnatz settlement

All residential buildings are designed in great detail, especially the distinctive entrance areas. The landscape architects from the “Extern” office developed a garden landscape with courtyards, playgrounds and a branched network of paths that is connected to the Wuhletal . The inner courtyards of the apartment blocks were arranged geometrically and the tenants' gardens near the house are shared. There are also many trees in the settlement such as birch , maple , chestnut and ash on the streets . In the north of the settlement is a playground and football field . A small watercourse begins at the football field and runs through the settlement in a north-south direction. The sculptor Karl Biedermann won the art competition for the residential complex and created an artist standing upside down on a twelve-meter-high flagpole that protrudes over the settlement.

To the south of the settlement on Cecilienstraße, the Ringelnatz settlement was expanded between November 2016 and December 2018 to an area of ​​18,200 m². The foundation stone was laid on January 11, 2017. 299 apartments were created in seven apartment buildings with 1- to 4-room apartments and a size of between 34 and 97 m². In addition, all apartments have balconies and are largely barrier-free . There are 108 parking spaces for cars and more than 520 bicycle parking spaces . The first tenants moved into the new apartments at the end of 2018 / beginning of 2019.

literature

  • Günter Peters: huts, slabs, living quarters; Berlin-Marzahn A young district with an old name . 1st edition. MAZZ Verlagsgesellschaft, Berlin 1998, OCLC 845724240 , p. 160-162 .

Web links

Commons : Ringelnatz-Siedlung  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ↑ Laying of the foundation stone for the expansion of the Joachim-Ringelnatz-Siedlung: degewo builds 299 apartments in Biesdorf. Degewo press release of January 11, 2017, accessed on March 7, 2017.
  2. Quite angular. September 20, 2018, accessed February 16, 2019 .

Coordinates: 52 ° 31 ′ 45.6 "  N , 13 ° 34 ′ 33.6"  E