School on Langemarckstrasse
The former school on Langemarckstraße in Bremen , Neustadt district, Alte Neustadt district , Langemarckstraße 113 / Neustadtswall, was built in 1894 according to plans by Heinrich Flügel . The building has been a listed building in Bremen since 2012 .
history
State elementary schools have been established in Bremen since 1862. Between 1892 and 1916 there were 25 new schools in Bremen, some of which were strictly separated from girls. The former three-storey, 21-axis, historicizing school on Kleine Allee (until 1938) was built from 1892 to 1894 with a brick facade with many shaped stones according to plans by Flügel by the Building Inspectorate in Bremen (later the Building Department ). There were 16 classes in the elementary school, eight each for boys and girls. The separation of boys and girls was achieved through the former gymnasium (18 x 9 m) in between. The classrooms were 6.5 x 8.5 m, an ideal room format at the time. The building is located in the park of the Neustadtswallanlagen opposite today's Bremen University of Applied Sciences with the M-wing from 1906. In 1894 the technical center was set up in the south-west wing of the school, which in 1906 moved to the M-wing.
After the school was closed, it was the seat of the Neustadt / Woltmershausen local authority from around 1988 to 2010 . Today (2017) are here u. a. The Hohentor Children's and Family Center houses a day-care center and continues to house the patent and standards center of the Bremen University of Applied Sciences and facilities of the Bremen Student Union .
The State Office for Monument Preservation in Bremen writes: "As a representative of the so-called Hanover School, Heinrich Flügel built all of his schoolhouses, including the school on Langemarckstrasse, as brick shells in the neo-Gothic style ."
literature
- Rolf Gramatzk: Heinrich wing and the state building construction in Bremen in the last quarter of the 19th century . In: Bremisches Jahrbuch 85, Staatsarchiv Bremen , Bremen 2006.
Individual evidence
- ^ Monument database of the LfD
- ↑ Bremen and its buildings 1900 , pp. 258–260.
Coordinates: 53 ° 4 '22.8 " N , 8 ° 47' 28.9" E