Sievekingsallee

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The Sievekingdamm flows into the Sievekingsallee
Orthodox Church of St. Nicholas (formerly Simeon Church ), Sievekingsallee 12
Former Kapernaum Church in Horn, Sievekingsallee 191
Former telecommunications office Carl-Petersen-Straße, view from Sievekingsallee

The Sievekingsallee is an approximately 3.1-kilometer city road in the east of Hamburg . Your official key number is S442. As the main feeder to the Horn junction ("Horner Kreisel") of the federal highway 24 , it is part of the main road network of Hamburg . It is a main access road from the eastern environs to Hamburg city center and, with around 51,000 vehicles per day, is one of the busiest roads in Hamburg. It is named - like the neighboring Sievekingdamm - after the Hamburg councilor Karl Sieveking .

location

Stumbling blocks in front of the house at Sievekingsallee 39

Sievekingsallee runs roughly in a west-east direction through the districts of Hamm and Horn . It begins as an extension of the Bürgerweide at the intersection with the Landwehr and Burgstrasse streets (both B 5 , Lage ), first crosses Hammer Steindamm and Caspar-Voght-Strasse , then crosses the freight bypass , is interrupted at the Horner roundabout ( Lage ) and from there continues to Rennbahnstraße ( Ring 2 , Lage ). Sievekingsallee has at least two lanes continuously in both directions, and even three lanes west of the Hammer Steindamm and has a green, partly tree-lined median.

history

The oldest section (between Saling and the freight bypass railway ) was laid out in the years after the First World War , when this part of the Hammer Feldmark was first developed and built on. The Sieveking family owned large estates here, including today's Hammer Park . When it became foreseeable that the area would be populated by the city, the family sold the land to the city of Hamburg in March 1914 after years of negotiations. A first development plan from the same year was revised in 1928, and in 1930/31 the avenue was extended eastward to the Horner Rennbahn .

Then the slightly bent western end of the avenue made today Sandriesser street. On the square-like extension between Wolfshagen and Stoeckhardtstrasse, the construction of a daughter church of the Hammer Dreifaltigkeits-Gemeinde had been planned since 1912 , but this could only be realized after the Second World War in the form of the Simeon Church further west (1965/66). This is located on the western extension of Sievekingsallee in the direction of Landwehr / Bürgerweide, which was defeated after the end of the war by the district that was largely destroyed in the air raids on Hamburg in 1943 . Several old residential streets were divided into two parts, turned into dead ends and partially renamed (Jordanstrasse → Hirschgraben , Ritterstrasse → Palmerstrasse, Stoeckhardtstrasse → Peterskampweg).

Until 1976, the Hamburg tram ran on the eastern section of Sievekingsallee to the Horner Rennbahn. Today it has been replaced by bus route 261.

Buildings, sights

Sievekingsallee is predominantly built with multi-storey residential buildings from the 1920s to 1950s. Only between Hammer Steindamm and Caspar-Voght-Straße have a few detached houses and town villas on both sides been preserved. There are also a few public representative buildings:

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Statistics Office North: Street and area index of the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg
  2. Map of the average daily vehicle traffic volume on working days (Monday – Friday), Hamburg 2013 (PDF file; 5.3 MB)
  3. Horst Beckershaus: The Hamburg street names. Where do they come from and what they mean. European Publishing House, Hamburg 2011, ISBN 978-3-86393-009-7 , p. 337 .
  4. City map section 1928. In: www.archiv-hhnv.de. Retrieved December 7, 2016 .
  5. a b G. Herman Sieveking : The history of the Hammerhof . III. Part. Hamburg 1933, p. 26th f .
  6. ^ City map section 1938. In: www.archiv-hhnv.de. Retrieved December 7, 2016 .
  7. Adolf Diersen: From the history of the hammer Dreifaltigkeitskirche. Holzminden 1957, p. 53.
  8. ^ Goodbye tram. (No longer available online.) In: hamburger-wochenblatt.de. Archived from the original on December 7, 2016 ; Retrieved December 7, 2016 . 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.hamburger-wochenblatt.de

Web links

Commons : Sievekingsallee  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files