Self-help building association

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Self-help building association eG

logo
legal form Registered cooperative
founding July 21, 1949
Seat Flensburg (Schleswig-Holstein, Germany)
management Jürgen Möller (Chairman of the Board), Michael Ebsen (Board Member), Raimund Dankowski (part-time)
Number of employees more than 100
Branch Housing industry
Website www.sbv-flensburg.de

The Selbsthilfe-Bauverein eG (SBV) is the largest housing association in Flensburg . The SBV has been active in the city since the 1950s. Since then, the company has been building and modernizing apartments and then renting them out. The SBV portfolio includes around 7,000 apartments with a total of 422,146.46 m² of living space, as well as commercial units, garages and parking spaces in the entire Flensburg city area. The SBV also manages around 3,500 properties. The cooperative has around 10,000 members with more than 150,000 shares.

Cooperative structure of the SBV

A person becomes a member by purchasing a business share. Members are thus involved in the SBV's housing stock. Every five years the members of the cooperative elect the representatives for the representative assembly. The assembly of representatives elects, among other things, the supervisory board. He hires the board of directors and is supposed to monitor, support and advise them. The board of directors puts together a team of employees and leads it. The board of directors must report to the board of directors and the meeting of representatives on the activities on a regular basis.

history

The administration building of the SBV, which today is one of the cultural monuments of the Fruerlund district.
Memorial stone to Willi Sander the founder of the self-help building association near the administration building in Fruerlund

The history of the Flensburg building cooperatives began with Peter Christian Hansen , who founded Germany's first workers' building cooperative, the Flensburger Arbeiter-Bauverein (FAB). After the Second World War , many refugees came to Flensburg who needed new apartments. The Lower Silesian Willi Sanders therefore founded the Self-Help Building Association Flensburg (SBV) as a cooperative on July 21, 1949 with another 36 people from New Flensburg. Willi Sander was elected first chairman of the board. In 1950 the cooperative was entered in the cooperative register at the local court in Flensburg. After the approval of funding from the special refugee program for 600 apartments, the construction of social housing began in Fruerlund , where a whole new district was created, which was popularly known as Refugeby. The village name was created as a composition of refugee and -by . The first SBV members moved into their new apartments in the estate in 1951. In 1957, a six-storey, brick residential office building was completed at Mürwiker Straße 26. A bridge connected the building with its neighboring building and at the same time formed a gate that led to the local Nettelbeckplatz after refugeby . The building, which has been at Willi-Sander-Platz 1 since 2012, still serves as the administrative headquarters. In 1963 Refugeby, with around 1150 apartments in several blocks of flats, own homes and small settlement areas, was completed.

For the 25th anniversary of the SBV, in 1974, 600 participants celebrated in the German House . At that time, the SBV had 2,607 members, around 1,900 apartments and around 300 supervised and commercial projects. A year later, Willi Sander, the long-standing SBV chairman, retired. Helmut Schumann took over his office. Willi Sander died two decades later, in 1995. In 1998 the SBV bought the shares in the housing association A in Rendsburg with a housing stock of 299 apartments. In 1999 the SBV was 50 years old. The cooperative now had 3,714 members, had over 2000 apartments and also managed almost 700 third-party apartments.

The former Volkspark site in 2014, which the SBV has been building over since 2014.
The demolition of the chocolate factory in the Bahnhofsviertel, which was objected to by the monument protection (2013)

In 2005 the first SBV service house was built near Sandberg at Schulze-Delitzsch-Straße 21. The house is a joint project of SBV, Arbeiterwohlfahrt (AWO) and FAB. In the years that followed, further service houses were built in Fruerlund and in the Friesischer Berg district . The service houses should offer residents the greatest possible independence, barrier-free apartments, common rooms and leisure activities. In 2006 the SBV bought the municipal housing company with a portfolio of around 4,800 apartments for 115 million euros . The city ​​of Flensburg and the SBV agreed on an unusual step that became known as the "Flensburger Weg".

In 2010 the redesign of the Fruerlund district began. The redesign was largely completed in 2014. In 2012, the SBV bought the former chocolate factory on Munketoft Street from 1895 in order to tear it down. The municipal monument protection submitted the classification of the State Office for the Preservation of Monuments, which stated that the old factory was a cultural monument of special importance, even if the registration was not yet completed. The former chocolate factory was soon demolished. In 2014, student apartments were built on the aforementioned site in the Bahnhofsviertel. On January 1, 2013, the SBV bought hgv-Immobilienmanagement GmbH with a portfolio of 6,250 managed units. The company was founded in 1971 as a subsidiary of the Densch & Schmidt Group. In 2006 the company was expanded to include the Hamburg office . At the beginning of 2014 the new subsidiary was renamed SBV Immobilienmanagement GmbH. Since January 1, 2018, this GmbH has been largely integrated into the Selbsthilfe Bauverein eG.

In 2015, the SBV started building new apartments on an area of ​​over 30,000 m²; it was previously withdrawn from the Volkspark site . The companies Höft, Bauplan Nord and WOGE Kiel are involved in this development. In the same year the new building of the Exe houses began , with the address Schützenkuhle 15 and Zur Exe 1–4. The previous buildings had been badly damaged by arson. In 2016, a large number of new apartments were built on Bahnhofstrasse as part of the renovation of the Bahnhofsviertel in Südstadt . In 2017, a high-rise building with apartments for senior citizens was built in the Wasserloos district on Schottweg . By 2021, 286 new apartments will be built in Tarup and 82 apartments in Travestrasse, which for the first time will offer space for a group of apartments for people suffering from dementia. In addition, a total of 115 new apartments will be built on the Rude by 2022.

Additional activities

SBV messenger
The SBV publishes the SBV-Bote member newspaper three times a year . The first edition appeared in December 1969.
District festivals
The SBV regularly organizes district festivals.
Community house
On June 1, 2012, the SBV opened its 360 ° community center in Fruerlund at the main headquarters. Space was created there where members and non-members can get together for events. Twice a year an event program with around 50 different events is drawn up. In addition, the rooms can also be rented for private celebrations. In other parts of the city, similar offers were gradually created by the SBV.
A “space for ideas”. In September 2015 the SBV opened the new “KommRein” district meeting point on Apenrader Straße. An open meeting place, not just for coffee or tea. Self-organized courses and a used furniture store complete this additional offer.
SBV furniture aid
It handles household resolutions, small removals, furniture transports and clears out basements and attics in the SBV portfolio free of charge. The SBV-Möbelhilfe gives away or sells the items in the shop Apenrader Straße 148 in favor of the SBV-Stiftung Helmut Schumann, through which the SBV supports social projects in Flensburg.

literature

  • Gerhard Kraak (collaboration): Flensburg in the past and present . Information and Materials (=  series of publications by the Society for Flensburg City History . Volume 22 ). Society for Flensburg City History, Flensburg 1972, DNB  730485641 (469 pages).
  • Society for Flensburg City History: Fruerlund. Urban redevelopment in Flensburg. A quarter is reinventing itself , Flensburg 2015

Web links

Commons : Selbsthilfe-Bauverein  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. SBV Annual Report 2018. Accessed June 23, 2016 .
  2. ^ Andreas Oeding, Broder Schwensen, Michael Sturm: Flexikon. 725 aha experiences from Flensburg! , Flensburg 2009, article: SBV (self-help building association)
  3. ↑ In 1939 there were around 70,000 inhabitants in Flensburg. As in all large cities, the population declined due to the air war. Residents left the city and in 1944 the population of Flensburg was around 60,000. Due to the influx of refugees, the population of Flensburg increased to 102,000 by June 1945. Flensburg had become a big city . In the following years the number of inhabitants fell again due to resettlement, but new apartments were needed because the refugees lived in emergency shelters. See population development of Flensburg and Broder Schwensen (ed.): May '45. End of the war in Flensburg , Flensburg 2015, p. 156 f. as well as p. 158 ff. as well as p. 171
  4. The history of the cooperative
  5. ^ Andreas Oeding, Broder Schwensen, Michael Sturm: Flexikon. 725 aha experiences from Flensburg! , Flensburg 2009, article: Refugeby
  6. Flensburger Tageblatt : 60 years of SBV: City history to touch and celebrate , from: July 6, 2009; Retrieved on: October 11, 2015
  7. The history of the cooperative
  8. ^ Lutz Wilde : Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany, cultural monuments in Schleswig-Holstein. Volume 2, Flensburg, page 540
  9. The history of the cooperative
  10. The history of the cooperative
  11. Information on the service houses
  12. SBV Annual Report 2011. (PDF) (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on September 27, 2015 ; accessed on January 8, 2015 (PDF, page 7). Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.sbv-flensburg.de
  13. The history of the cooperative
  14. ^ Die Welt : "Flensburger Weg" to privatization , from: August 8, 2006; Retrieved on: October 11, 2015
  15. The history of the cooperative
  16. Flensburger Tageblatt : 150 years of the Flensburger Tageblatt: Die Schokolade vom Mühlenteich , from: April 4, 2015; Retrieved on: October 10, 2015
  17. Flensburger Tageblatt : The SBV treats itself to something sweet , from: May 25, 2012; Retrieved on: October 10, 2015
  18. In future, people will live on the premises of the chocolate factory , from: March 13, 2014
  19. SBV Annual Report 2012. (PDF) (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on September 27, 2015 ; accessed on January 8, 2015 (PDF, page 15). Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.sbv-flensburg.de
  20. ^ The SBV Immobilienmanagement GmbH
  21. Information on the new construction projects ( Memento from January 8, 2015 in the Internet Archive )
  22. Information on the new construction projects ( Memento from January 8, 2015 in the Internet Archive )
  23. ↑ In addition to the print version, the SBV-Bote is also available as a download: http://www.sbv-flensburg.de/wir-fuer-sie/downloads/ .
  24. District festivals , 360 ° community center and Service Card