Spadener Strasse

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Spadener Strasse
coat of arms
Street in Bremerhaven
Basic data
city Bremerhaven
district Lehe
Created Middle Ages and 19th century
Cross streets Nordstrasse , Lange Strasse , Pieperstrasse, Stresemannstrasse , Blumenstrasse, Schierholzweg, Dwarsweg, Lotjeweg, Brieger Strasse, Rybniker Strasse, Königshütter Strasse, Kattowitzer Strasse, Muskauer Strasse, Striegauer Strasse, Myslowitzer Strasse, Grottkauer Strasse, Ratiborer Strasse, Hultschiner Strasse, Gleiwitzer Strasse, In Wulfshören, Holzackerweg
use
User groups Cars, bikes and pedestrians
Road design two lane road
Technical specifications
Street length 1800 meters

The Spadener road is a central indexing and thoroughfare in Bremerhaven , district of Lehe , districts and Klushof Schierholz. It leads in a west-east direction from Karlsbader Strasse, Torgauer Strasse and Nordstrasse to Leher Strasse in Spaden.

The cross roads and the connecting roads were often named after cities in Silesia a . a. as Karlsbader Straße after the city in Bohemia , Torgauer Straße after the city in Saxony , Nordstraße , Lange Straße after the long way for Lehe at that time, Pieperstraße (?), Stresemannstraße after the statesman Gustav Stresemann (1878-1929), unnamed street, Blumenstraße , Schierholzweg after the district and the prefix Schier for Scheiden (separating) i.e. border, Dwarsweg after the Germanic thvert for twisted or transverse to the direction of the keel of ships, Lotjeweg (?), Brieger Straße, Rybniker Straße, Königshütter Straße, Kattowitzer Straße, Muskauer Straße , Striegauer Straße, Myslowitzer Straße, Grottkauer Straße, Ratiborer Straße, Hultschiner Straße, unnamed way, Gleiwitzer Straße, Im Wulfshören (?), Holzackerweg as the field name , Bundesautobahn 27 , unnamed way and Leher Straße after the district; otherwise see the link to the streets.

history

Surname

Spadener Strasse was named after the neighboring town of Spaden , which has been part of the municipality of Schiffdorf in the Cuxhaven district since 1974 . Spaden was mentioned for the first time in 1267 and is derived from the Old English word spot , spoot or spood , which means something like spot, place or height. The place had around 1,000 inhabitants in 1913 and around 4,000 in 2019.

development

The Leh districts of Klushof and Schierholz developed to the west and east of Alt-Lehe from the late 19th century when, after Bremerhaven was founded, Lehes began to rise from a patch to a town (1920). The village of Spaden also took part in this development. The old road connection became a road that was cut in the late 1950s when the breakthrough of Bundesstraße 6 with Stresemannstraße as a bypass road came.

traffic

In 1931 Spaden was connected to this road with a bus line and from 1984 to 1995 with bus line 8, which led to Bremerhaven city center.

In the BremerhavenBus local traffic , the road is traversed by lines 507 and partially 508 (to Lotjeweg).

Buildings and facilities

The street has mostly one to four storey very different buildings.

Notable buildings and facilities

  • Lange Strasse No. 25 at the corner of Spadener Strasse: 4-storey. Baroque-style house from the 1910s with side gable risalit and round corner formation
  • Lange Strasse No. 26 and 28 at the corner of Spadener Strasse: two 2-storey. Gabled houses from around 1900
  • No. 34: 3-sch. House from around 1920 with a gable bay window
  • No. 37 to 41: Three 3-tiered Houses from around 1910
  • No. 46 and 48: two 3-tiered Houses from around 1910
  • Underpass of the Bremerhaven – Cuxhaven railway line
  • No. 50: 3-sch. preserved house from the 1910s
  • No. 45 and 60: Two 1-sided older gabled houses from around 1900 (?)
  • No. 74g: 1-gesch. House with a large gable
  • No. 94: 2-sch. House from around 1910 with a mansard roof
  • No. 128: 1-sch. Building complex with cemetery administration, mourning hall, café and flower shop
  • No. 130: 14.3 ha municipal cemetery Spadener Höhe from 1964 with crematorium from 1990 and the Jewish cemetery Spadener Höhe from 2014
  • Tunnel under the federal highway 27
  • Border and bridge over the Mark Fleet, the south of Geeste leads

Art objects, memorial plaques

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Paul Homann: Bremerhaven route networks (public transport) since 1881 . In: BremerhavenBus website.

Coordinates: 53 ° 34 ′ 14.5 "  N , 8 ° 36 ′ 28.6"  E