Schwachhausen
District of Bremen Schwachhausen |
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Basic data | rank | |
Surface: | 8.764 km² | 17/23 |
Residents : | 38,778 | 3/23 |
Population density : | 4,425 inhabitants per km² | 5/23 |
Proportion of foreigners: | 9.4% | 19/23 |
Unemployment rate: | 4.6% | 20/23 |
Coordinates : | 53 ° 5 ' N , 8 ° 51' E | |
Districts: |
Neu-Schwachhausen Bürgerpark Barkhof Riensberg Radio Bremen Schwachhausen Gete |
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Postcodes : | 28209, 28211, 28213, 28215 | |
District : | east | |
Local office : | Schwachhausen / Vahr | |
Website: | Schwachhausen local office | |
All area information as of December 31, 2014. All demographic information as of December 31, 2016. |
Schwachhausen ( Swachhusen in Low German ) is a district of Bremen and belongs to the Bremen district east.
Geography and districts
Schwachhausen connects to the north of Bremen city center. The development consists mainly of single villas and so-called Bremen houses , many of them in Art Nouveau style .
The current district also includes areas that did not belong to the village of the same name. In particular, these are the Bürgerpark and the Stadtwald , which were laid out on parts of the Bürgerweide in the 19th century , as well as the so-called 'front Schwachhausen', historically part of the Pagenthorner Feldmark.
The New Peat Canal forms the western border of the district and the Bürgerpark . In the east the district extends over the Bürgermeister-Spitta-Allee , in the south as far as the railway lines to Hanover and Osnabrück.
The St. Joseph-Stift Hospital and the Focke Museum are located in Schwachhausen . Until the move to the Faulenquartier, Schwachhausen also housed the studio and operations building of the radio department of Radio Bremen .
Neu-Schwachhausen
Area: 2.92 km², 5723 inhabitants
Neu-Schwachhausen is the district between the Schwachhauser Ring in the south and the Bremen – Hamburg line in the north. In the east it extends to H.-H.-Meier- Allee, in the west to the peat canal, so it also includes the city forest and the northern half of the Bürgerpark. In the southwest, there is loose development with single-family houses. In the north-western part, the civil service building company BBG built mostly four to five-story blocks with rental apartments in the 1950s. In the north up to the railway line there are allotment areas. The halls and courts of the Bremen 1860 sports club are located on Baumschulenweg . Tram line 6 runs along H.-H.-Meier-Allee and line 8 on Crüsemann allee.
The residential buildings Sparer-Dank Kulenkampffallee on Kulenkampffallee from 1961 to 1966 based on plans by Gerhard Müller-Menckens , Friedrich Heuer and Gunter Müller are among the most important buildings in Bremen .
Bürgerpark
Area: 1.36 km², 4611 inhabitants
The southern half of the Bürgerpark with Hollersee, Parkhotel and Marcusbrunnen belongs to the district .
Apart from a small triangle in the northeast, the residential development in the Bürgerpark district is in the Pagenthorn Feldmark area.
Barkhof
Area: 0.37 km², 2860 inhabitants
The name Barkhof comes from the Low German word for birch. He was first mentioned as Archbishop Berchowe in the pasture letter of 1159. In later documents he was called Berchhof in 1313 and Berckhof in 1412 .
Apart from the Barkhof property located between today's Franz-Liszt-Straße, Stern and Parkallee , the area of today's district to the east of Parkallee belonged to Pagenthorner Feld, to the west of Parkallee to Bürgerweide . The Nelson-Mandela-Park belongs to the district of the current area . There you will find the imperial colonial memorial built in 1931/32 based on a design by the Munich sculptor Fritz Behn in the form of a brick elephant , which was rededicated as an anti-colonial monument by resolution of the Bremen citizenship on September 19, 1989 .
The grammar school at Barkhof was closed in 1989. The premises were then used by the University of Bremen and also temporarily by the Hermann-Böse-Gymnasium . The secondary school at the Barkhof has been located there since 2012 .
The Kreuzkirche of the Evangelical Free Church Community is located on Hohenlohestrasse and the corner of Hermann-Böse-Strasse . The Hohenlohestraße at the other end, corner of Park Avenue, Diakoniewerk the municipality operates the St. Catharinenstift that on a medieval Beguine - pin back.
The equestrian statue of Emperor Friedrich III, erected in 1905, is located on the corner of Hermann-Böse-Strasse / Parkstrasse / Slevogtstrasse . by the sculptor Louis Tuaillon . The monument is surrounded by the listed ensemble Kaiser-Friedrich-Platz of residential buildings from 1902 to 1905. The Delbrückstrasse residential group is also located in the district.
Riensberg
Area: 1.14 km², 6203 inhabitants
The manor district of Riensberg was a separate area between the villages of Schwachhausen and Horn . The former Gut Riensberg has housed the Bremen State Museum for Art and Cultural History ( Focke Museum ) since 1953 . The Rien Berger cemetery is next to the cemeteries Walle and Osterholz one of three major cemeteries in the city, which from 1875 following the transfer of the cemetery from Herdentorsteinweg arose. The graves of many Bremen personalities are located here.
Radio Bremen
Area: 1.32 km², 7177 inhabitants
Until 2007, this district was home to the Schwachhausen- Vahr local authority and the radio department of the public broadcasting corporation Radio Bremen , which gave this district its name. Radio Bremen left the district in September 2007 and moved to the Faulenquartier on the Weser. The Radio Bremen broadcasting hall , built in 1952, is considered to be outstanding. Due to its special design, it has acoustics that are unique in Europe and was listed as a historical monument in 2009. It is still used today for concerts and other events.
Schwachhausen
Area: 0.54 km², 3583 inhabitants
Today's district Schwachhausen is about 60% in the area of the Pagenthorner Feldmark and only 40% in the old district of the village Schwachhausen. He has no part in the old location of the village.
The Kippenberg-Gymnasium, originally founded as a girls ' grammar school, and the St. Joseph-Stift Catholic hospital are located in the district .
Gete
Area: 1.21 km², 7692 inhabitants
The district is named after the Gete stream . It flowed through the Getekuhlen, which were once the subject of controversy between fishermen and residents. A small pond in the parcel area “Stiller Frieden e. V. “stayed.
The office building at Schwachhauser Heerstraße 41 was built for the Deutsche Apotheker- und Ärztebank (Düsseldorf) in 1971/72, awarded in 1974 by the BDA-Bremen and has been an office building used by service companies since 2010.
The terrace house from 1971, Obernkirchner Straße 16, was built for 65 apartments according to plans by Kurt Schmidt and Karl-Heinz Stelling.
Politics, administration
Advisory Board
The Schwachhausen Advisory Board meets regularly and usually in public in the local office or in other institutions such as B. Schools. The advisory board is composed of the representatives of the political parties or individual candidates elected at the district level. The advisory board elections take place every four years, at the same time as the elections for the Bremen citizenship . The advisory board discusses all issues of the district that are of public interest and makes decisions on this, which are passed on to the administration, the state government and the townspeople. He forms specialist committees for his work. The advisory board has its own budget for district-related measures.
The spokesperson for the advisory board is Barbara Schneider (Bündnis 90 / Die Grünen). Your deputy is Stefan Pastoor (SPD).
Local office
A local office has been set up as a joint local administrative authority for the districts of Schwachhausen and Vahr . It supports the advisory board in its political work. It is intended to participate in all local tasks that are of public interest. It is led by a local office manager proposed by the advisory board and confirmed by the Senate. Karin Mathes is the local office manager.
history
Surname
The name Schwachhausen is not clearly understood. It could have been derived from the Schwachhausen-based farmer Sivico or from the Low German word sweeg , which means moist.
Middle Ages until 1803
Historically, the area of today's Schwachhausen district consists of five parts, the village of Schwachhausen, the Riensberg estate district , the Pagenthorner Feldmark, the Barkhof and part of the cattle pasture.
The Bürgerweide was mentioned as early as 1070 by Adam von Bremen , in his portrayal of Countess Emma von Lesum , who gave this pasture to the citizens of Bremen in 1032. In the Bremen pasture letter of 1159, in which Archbishop Hartwig I confirmed the ownership of the Bürgerweide, the area of the village of Schwachhausen was given as the eastern border instead of a border line. At that time it was a rural marshland village without a town center or village church. In 1212/13 the Stedinger destroyed the Riensberg estate.
The border between the imperial town of Pagenthorner Feldmark and the archbishopric , from 1648 Swedish and from 1719 Hanoverian Schwachhausen, followed between today's Kirchbachstrasse and the Bürgerpark (today mostly Bürgerpark ) about a line from Kurfürstenallee , Waldorf School, Carl-Schurz-Strasse and the westernmost part the park avenue. The Barkhof belonged as an exclave to the ore monastery and finally to Hanover. Riensberg, in turn, between Friedhofstrasse, Schwachhauser Heerstrasse and Kleiner Wümme, belonged to the Free Imperial City of Bremen like the Hollerland bordering to the north .
In the 18th century, the Schwachhausen houses stood in loose succession along the Gete and the path from Herdentor to Horn (today part of Schwachhauser Heerstraße) between Kirchbachstraße and Friedhofstraße, and a group also on the Gete between Kirchbachstraße and today's Orleansstrasse. The village was on the border of today's districts of Riensberg and Radio Bremen. The only house in this village development is the former miller's house, Schwachhauser Heerstraße 253.
From 1803
By the Reichsdeputationshauptschluss in 1803 Schwachhausen was attached to the Bremen rural area. It had 206 inhabitants. Bremen merchants built their country houses and villas in Schwachhausen. The agricultural farms were displaced. Garden bars and dance salons emerged.
In 1849 Pagenthorn (apart from Feldmark also Ostertor-, Steintor- and Rembertivorstadt) and Bürgerweide were incorporated into the city of Bremen. In 1865 the Second German Federal Shooting took place on the Bürgerweide. After that, large parts of the Bürgerweide were converted into the Bürgerpark as a general recreational area. The urban forest behind it was also reforested.
In 1875 the Riensberg cemetery was laid out. Bremen's first horse-drawn tram has run from Herdentor to Schwachhausen since 1876 . The first electric tram went to Schwachhausen in 1892. From September 1910 to December 1911 Schwachhausen was also connected to Bremen city center by the Parkbahn (a trolleybus operation).
The St. Joseph Catholic Hospital was built in 1878-1880.
The Schwachhauser Ring was laid out in the 19th century as part of the ring road ( Schröderring after Alexander Schröder ), which was generously designed around the Bremen city center with Kirchbachstraße, Utbremer Ring and Osterfeuerberger Ring . It is one of the few avenues where the separation of the paved path for the winter - today street - and the sandy summer path for the carriages can still be seen.
The Kuhgraben was filled in from the Dobben to the Kleine Wümme in 1889-90 and the park avenue was laid out for subsequent residential development.
The village of Schwachhausen was incorporated into the city of Bremen in 1902.
Population development
Town / district | 1812 | 1885 | 1905 | 1975 | 1995 | 2007 |
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Neu-Schwachhausen | 98% / 50% | 6,621 | 5,707 | 5,634 | ||
Bürgerpark | 5% / 2% | 4,918 | 4,653 | 4,611 | ||
Barkhof | 0% | 2,884 | 2,770 | 2,876 | ||
Riensberg | 80% / 60% | 7,396 | 6,039 | 6,120 | ||
Radio Bremen | 95% | 6,455 | 6,851 | 7.094 | ||
Schwachhausen district | 40% | 3,879 | 3,729 | 3,583 | ||
Gete | 10-15% | 8,095 | 7,704 | 7,757 | ||
district | 206 | 1,223 | 3,646 | 40,247 | 37,453 | 37,675 |
From 1975 average annual population as data from the State Statistical Office of Bremen
1812 and 1885 Share of the Schwachhausen district (until 1902) in the built-up area / total area of the current district
Culture and sights
Buildings
- The grammar school on Hermann-Böse-Straße was built in 1905/06.
- Gymnasium am Barkhof from 1910, Parkallee 39, today Oberschule Am Barkhof.
- The equestrian statue of Emperor Friedrich III. was made in 1905 by Louis Tuaillon .
- The Villa stick , Blumenthalstraße 17 in 1926 according to plans by Carl Eeg built as a classic urban villa.
- The group of houses Hollerallee No. 73–79 from 1900 to 1903 with
- the Villa Lüdemann, No. 73 based on plans by Eduard Gildemeister and Wilhelm Sunkel,
- Villa Hoffmann, No. 79 based on plans by Friedrich Wellermann and Paul Frölich , today Bremen-Mitte registry office.
- The villa colony (Großbeerenstraße, Großgörschenstraße, Bordenauer Straße) was built in 1908 according to plans by Heinz Stoffregen and has been preserved in its overall appearance. The owners made changes to individual buildings.
- The Villa Korff , Park Avenue 79/81, was built in 1903 and houses a long time, the Regional Labor Court of Bremen . Today it is inhabited by a Buddhist community.
- The Villa Dunkel , Parkallee 101, was built in 1897 according to plans by Albert Dunkel .
- The Villa Ahlers , Parkallee 117, was built in 1904 according to plans by Eduard Gildemeister and Wilhelm Sunkel.
- The House Paula Becker at the weak Heerstraße 23 was home of artist Paula Modersohn-Becker .
- The Bremen Logenhaus , a former villa at Kurfürstenallee 15.
- The Protestant St. Remberti Church, Friedhofstrasse 10, was built in 1951 according to plans by Eberhard Gildemeister .
- The old broadcasting hall of Radio Bremen from 1952, Bürgermeister-Spitta-Allee 45, was designed by Hans Storm.
- The Parkhotel in the Bürgerpark was built after a competition in 1956 based on designs by Herbert Anker and Theodor Rosenbusch. The central part with the domed roof from 1913 was designed by Rudolf Jacobs . The 2004 extension was designed by architect Gert Schulze.
- The cafe on Emmasee in public park from 1964 planned Hans Budde and Carsten Schrock . It was awarded in 1974 by the BDA-Bremen.
- The office building at Schwachhauser Heerstraße 41 for the Deutsche Apotheker- und Ärztebank was built in 1971/72 according to plans by the architect Otto Lindner (Düsseldorf) and was awarded in 1974 by the BDA-Bremen.
- The residential building at Schwachhauser Heerstraße 361 based on plans by Gerd Krüger for the construction company Hübotter was awarded in 1974 by the BDA-Bremen.
- The residential buildings Lortzingstrasse 1 C and D were built in 1905.
Monuments, art
- The bronze sculpture cornucopia (1985) by the sculptor Paul Halbhuber stands in front of the Focke Museum .
- The bronze sculpture Great Hephaestus II (1991) in memory of Hephaestus , god of fire, made of bronze by Waldemar Otto stands in the park of Gut Riensberg .
museum
- The Focke Museum in Riensberg, Schwachhauser Heerstraße 240, started as Haus Riensberg in 1768 . The house was rebuilt around 1780. The French Gate from 1758 was planned by Heinrich Rabba. The Mittelbüren house dates from the 17th century. The new building, based on plans by Heinrich Bartmann and Reinhold Kargel, was built until 1964.
Parks, green areas
- The Bürgerpark Bremen is the city park of Bremen. It was created from 1866/1870. Wilhelm Benque was responsible for the planning from 1877 to 1884 and Carl Orth (1984) from 1884 to 1886.
- In the north, the city forest and the city forest lake adjoin the Bürgerpark .
- The Riensberger Friedhof is a park-like resting place with many artistically designed tombs, mausoleums and crypts. It was opened on May 1, 1875 and is still in operation today.
Public facilities
General
- The local office Schwachhausen / Vahr, Wilhelm-Leuschner-Straße 27
- The Schwachhausen police station, Parkallee 160
- The registry office in Bremen-Mitte, Hollerallee 79
schools
- The Georg Droste School is a support center for the blind and visually impaired. It is located on An der Gete 103. The school, which was originally founded in 1955 for the visually impaired, has also been teaching the blind since the mid-1990s. The name of the school changed several times, now it bears the name of the blind Bremen author Georg Droste .
- The An der Gete elementary school is located on the same property as the Georg Droste School , but both schools are independent. It has existed since 1957, has a musical focus and is now run as an all-day school.
- The school at the Fritz-Goose mountain road in Riensberg is a support center for the area of social-emotional development, was prepared by the education reformers Fritz Gans mountain named
- The school on Carl-Schurz-Straße is a primary school. In 1912/13 the pedagogue Anna Vietor had the school building for the private secondary school for girls (Lyzeum Anna Vietor) built by the architect August Abbehusen . Since 1945 it was used as a primary school.
- The school on Baumschulenweg is an all-day primary school.
- The school on Freiligrathstrasse is a primary school.
- The Hermann-Böse-Gymnasium , Hermann-Böse-Straße 1–9, was named after the music teacher Hermann Böse .
- The Kippenberg-Gymnasium , Schwachhauser Heerstraße 62, was named after the school founder August Kippenberg .
Private schools
- The nursing school at St. Joseph-Stift, Schwachhauser Heerstraße 54, is a vocational and technical school
- The art school Wandsbek since 2010 in Bremen, except the grinding mill 4
- The Free Waldorf School at Touler Strasse 3
Social
- Around 30 kindergartens, day-care centers and children's groups
- The facilities of youth homes, youth education centers, youth housing communities and youth counseling
- The Foundation Residence villa Horn of Bremer Home Foundation , Schwachhauser highway 264, was built in 1959 to plans by judges and Kläner.
- The Hanseaten-Burg nursing home , Straßburger Strasse 20
- The old people's home and nursing home Sparer Dank , Kulenkampffallee 142 A
- The day care center Parkstraße der Diakonie (also for people with multiple disabilities), Parkstraße 115
- The service center of the joint society for social services , Kulenkampffallee 65 a
- The Schwachhausen-Nord service center of the Joint Society for Social Services , Biermannstr. 17th
- The Schwachhausen service center , Wachmannstr. 9
- As well as facilities for health counseling, women’s help, men’s groups, neighborhood help, homeless help, self-help groups, etc.
Churches, religious buildings
- The Protestant St. Ansgarii Church
- The Evangelical Free Church (Baptist) Kreuzkirche
- The Protestant St. Rembertikirche
- The Catholic St. Ursula Church ; Architect Bruns
- The Evangelical Methodist Church of the Redeemer
- The Schwachhauser Heerstraße synagogue , burned down during the November pogrom in 1938 , rebuilt as a community center in 1961; Memorial stone from 1988.
Sports
- The TuS Schwachhausen 1883 , Konrad-Adenauer-Allee 86/88
- The General Gymnastics and Sports Club Bremen from 1860 , Baumschulenweg 8/10
- The Marienbrücke boat club , Ahornweg 3 (at Hotel Zur Munte )
- The Bremen Tennis Club , Scharnhorststrasse 75
- The Bremen Tennis Club , Biermannstrasse 3
- The Bremen Women's Run Initiative (FLIB), Uhlandstrasse 2
- The shooting group north , Schaffenrathstr. 23
- The sports community for the disabled , Heinstrasse 25/27
- The TV Werder Bremen , Biermannstrasse 1
Economy and Transport
economy
Schwachhausen is a residential area of high demand with a number of local shopping areas on Schwachhauser Heerstraße, Wachmannstraße , HH-Meierallee / Kulenkampffallee .
The largest employer is the St. Joseph-Stift hospital with around 1,000 employees. The medical association, the state insurance company, Deutsche Post and many smaller service companies and freelancers are also located in the district.
traffic
Public transport
The following tram and bus routes operated by Bremer Straßenbahn AG (BSAG) cross Schwachhausen:
- Tram line 1: Huchting - center - Osterholz - Tenever - Weserpark - Mahndorf station
- Tram line 4: Obervieland - Zentrum - Horn-Lehe - Borgfeld
- Tram line 6: Bremen Airport - Center - Riensberg - University
- Tram line 8: Huchting - Zentrum - Neu Schwachhausen / Kulenkampffallee
- Bus route 21: Sebaldsbrück (Mercedes-Benz) - Vahr - University
- Bus route 22: Obervieland (Kattenturm) - Kirchbachstrasse - University
- Bus route 24: Rablinghausen - center - Neue Vahr-Nord
Streets
Schwachhausen can be reached
- on the A27 , runs HB-Vahr and HB-Horn-Lehe ,
- from Bremen-Mitte via Dobbenweg and Schwachhauser Heerstraße ,
- from the eastern suburb via Stader Strasse / Georg-Bitter-Str. - Kirchbachstrasse,
- from Hemelingen via Vahrer Straße or Ludwig-Roselius-Allee .
The main inner-city access roads are Parkallee , Schwachhauser Heerstraße , Kurfürstenallee , Kirchbachstraße and Hollerallee as well as Hartwigstraße - Crüsemannallee and Wachmannstraße - H.-H.-Meier-Allee for the Stadtbahn .
Personalities
- Hermann Buse , until 1824 under steward for the Schwachhausen court (Vogthof an der Geete)
- Otto Gildemeister (1823–1902), journalist , writer , translator , senator and mayor of Bremen
- August Kippenberg (1830–1889), teacher, founder of the Kippenberg high school
- Johann Depken (1837–1909), farmer, community leader, member of the Reichstag and the citizenry
- Dora Garbade (1893–1981), pioneer of the rural women movement, born in Schwachhausen
- Johanne Kippenberg (1842–1925), teacher and headmistress
- Paula Modersohn-Becker (1876–1907), painter, lived in Schwachhauser Heerstraße (Becker House) from 1888
- Theodor Spitta (1873–1969), politician ( DDP , FDP / BDV), senator and mayor
- Karl Carstens (1914–1992), German Federal President from 1979 to 1984, born in Schwachhauser Fitgerstrasse
- Jurica Vranješ (* 1980), former football player from Werder Bremen
- Per Mertesacker (* 1984), Werder Bremen football player living in Schwachhausen (since 2011 Arsenal London)
- Clemens Fritz (* 1980), Werder Bremen football player who lives in Schwachhausen
- Juan María Solare (* 1966), composer and pianist living in Schwachhausen (until 2012)
literature
- Dietrich Schomburg : Historical directory of the state of Bremen , Hildesheim 1964
- Herbert Black Forest : The Great Bremen Lexicon . 2nd, updated, revised and expanded edition. Edition Temmen, Bremen 2003, ISBN 3-86108-693-X .
Web links
- University Library Bremen: DR Ehmck et al. (Ed.) 1873 ff .: Bremisches Urkundenbuch (1st volume. Before 1300 … 6th volume (II) 1437–1441 ), 7 PDF files
- Schwachhausen at www.bremen.de
- GeoInformation Bremen: official city map with district boundaries
Individual evidence
- ↑ Bremen small-scale information system at www.statistik-bremen.de - Table 449-01: Floor area according to type of actual use
- ↑ Bremen small-scale information system at www.statistik-bremen.de - Table 173-01: Population by gender
- ↑ Bremen small-scale information system at www.statistik-bremen.de - Table 173-61: Foreign population by nationality group and gender
- ↑ Bremen small-scale information system at www.statistik-bremen.de - Table 255-60: Unemployed according to selected groups of people and unemployment rate
- ↑ a b c d e f g Statistical Yearbook 2009. (PDF; 4.0 MB) State Statistical Office Bremen, pp. 9–11 , accessed on June 15, 2010 .
- ↑ Architecture Guide Bremen: b.zb: 172
- ↑ Clara Noltenius: From the history of the St. Catharinen-Stift, a beguinage , Bremen 1960
- ↑ http://www.sendesaal-bremen.de/ Website of the broadcasting hall
- ↑ a b Architecture Guide Bremen: b.zb: 385
- ↑ Architecture Guide Bremen: b.zb: 347
- ^ Nils Aschenbeck : Heinz Stoffregen 1879–1929. Architecture between tradition and avant-garde. Friedr. Vieweg & Sohn, Braunschweig / Wiesbaden 1990, ISBN 3-528-08746-3 , p. 19
- ↑ Architecture Guide Bremen: b.zb: 350
- ↑ Architecture Guide Bremen: b.zb: 322
- ↑ Architecture Guide Bremen: b.zb: 361
- ↑ Architecture Guide Bremen: b.zb: 20
- ↑ Architecture Guide Bremen: b.zb: 22
- ^ Georg Droste School, School for Vision and Visual Perception (homepage).
- ↑ Primary school An der Gete (homepage).
- ↑ Freiligrathstraße primary school ( page no longer available , search in web archives ) Info: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. on Bremen Online
- ↑ Architecture Guide Bremen: b.zb: 354
- ↑ Memorial sites for the victims of National Socialism. A documentation, volume 1. Federal Agency for Civic Education, Bonn 1995, ISBN 3-89331-208-0 , pp. 209f.