Stader Landstrasse (Bremen)

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Stader Landstrasse
coat of arms
Street in Bremen
Stader Landstrasse
Burgdamm: on the left the Stader Landstrasse with the bridge over the autobahn, in the foreground the Marßeler Feld housing estate with the residential high- rise on the corner of Stockholmer Strasse
Basic data
city Bremen
district Burglesum
Created middle Ages
Newly designed 1839
Cross streets Bremerhavener Heerstraße , Neustettiner Str., Neuer Steindamm, Burgdammer Postweg, Burgdammer Mühlenberg, Marßel, Burgdammer Str., Burgdammer Ring, Rügenwalder Str., Olof-Palme- Str., Stockholmer Str., Helsinkistraße , two unnamed paths, Osloer Str., Hammerfester Str., Helsingborger Str., Stavangerstr .
use
User groups Cars, bikes and pedestrians
Road design two lane road
Technical specifications
Street length 2400 meters

The Stader road is a development road in Bremen , district Burglesum , district Burgdamm . It leads in a south-west-north-east direction from Hindenburgstrasse to Bremer Landstrasse in Ritterhude .

It is divided into the sub-areas

  • Hindenburgstrasse to Autobahn and
  • Autobahn to Bremer Strasse in Ritterhude.

The cross streets and connecting streets were often named after Scandinavian cities and u. a. as Hindenburgstraße after Field Marshal and Reich President Paul von Hindenburg (1847-1934), Bremerhavener Heerstraße , Neustettiner Straße to the city in West Pomerania, Neuer Steindamm that leads to Steindamm, Burgdammer Postweg after the old postal route to Stade, Burgdammer Mühlenberg after the mill mentioned in 1277 von Marßel, Marßel ​​after the ancestral seat of the Knights of Mercele mentioned in 1243 , who had their estates in Lesum, Burgdammer Straße 1936 after the district, Burgdammer Ring, which connects the Bremerhaven Heerstraße and Stader Landstraße, Rügenwalder Straße after the town in West Pomerania, Autobahn A. 27 , Olof-Palme -Straße after the Swedish statesman, unnamed way, Stockholmer Straße, Helsinkistraße , two unnamed ways, Osloer Straße, unnamed way, Hammerfester Straße, Helsingborger Straße, Stavangerstraße , unnamed way and Bremer Landstraße; otherwise see the link to the streets.

history

Surname

Stader Landstrasse was named after the district town of Stade , which was the seat of government of the Swedish duchy of Bremen and the duchy of Verden from 1715 onwards. In 1823 the territory was in the Landdrostei Stade . In 1885 it became the Prussian administrative district of Stade. Until 1939, Stade was the capital of the municipality (s). In Middle High German, Stade denoted a natural landing site for smaller ships, while Gestade is the bank of a river or sea.

development

Burgdamm was created in 1860 from the communities of Marßel, Burgdamm and Vorburgdamm. In 1860 the historic building (No. 46) of today's district house Cigarrenmanufactur was erected, where production continued until the 1930s. In 1939 Burgdamm was incorporated into Bremen. To the east of the A27 is the Marßeler Feld . After 1945 the Lloyd coffee roasting company moved from the Bremer Viertel to Stader Landstrasse and closed operations in 2001. In the 1960s, the Marßel settlement with 2,300 apartments and 300 single-family row houses was built by Gewoba and Brebau for around 6,000 residents today (2018).

traffic

The Stader Landstrasse leads via Ritterhude, then on the federal road 74 via Osterholz-Scharmbeck and Bremervörde to Stade. The road was already used as a military road by the warring parties during the Thirty Years' War. From 1665 the regular mail traffic between Bremen and Hamburg took place. The road between Bremen and Bremervörde was paved in 1839. In 1932 the designations Fernverkehrsstrasse 74 , 1937 Reichsstrasse 74 and after 1949 Bundesstrasse 74 were introduced. In 2008 the housekeeping museum Köksch un Qualm opened .

Note: In the neighboring towns of Ritterhude and Osterholz-Scharmbeck there is also a Stader Landstrasse.

In local transport in Bremen, the bus routes 93 (Gröpelingen ↔ Marßel) and 94 (Marßel ​​↔ Bf Burg ↔ Schwanewede) run partly through the street as well as the regional bus 680 (Bremen - Burg - Ritterhude - Wallhöfen).

Buildings and facilities

There are predominantly one to four storey houses on the street.

Notable buildings and facilities

  • Bremer Heerstraße No. 51a at the corner of Stader Landstraße: 2-storey. Residential and guest house
  • No. 6: 1-sch. Shopping market
  • No. 16: 1-sch. House from around 1900 with gable and 3-storied. The gable is designed as a storage facility with a cantilevered external elevator and gates
  • No. 17: 1-sch. Residential house with central projection
  • No. 19 and 21: two 2-tier Residential houses with hipped roofs, probably from the 1920s / 30s
  • No. 34: 2-sch. House from around 1900 with a central projectile
  • No. 35: 1- and 2-layered House with ornate clinker brick facade and 3-storey. Central Risalit
  • Corner of Burgdammer Postweg: small green area
  • No. 46: 2-sch. Clinkered, modernized building from 1860 of the old Wilckens cigar factory. Since 2008 after renovation, the "Mitmach" housekeeping museum Köksch un Qualm of the employer bras has been here , since 2016 also the district house Cigarrenmanufactur of the Bremer Heimstiftung with supervised multi-generation apartments in the old and in a new building from 2017/18 as well as communal and event rooms.
  • No. 53: 1-sch. House from around 1900 with a gable
  • No. 57: 1-sch. Residential and commercial building from around 1900 with 2-storey. Gable risalit
  • No. 59: 2-sch. House from around 1910 with gable element
  • No. 72: 1-sch. Hardware store with green center
  • No. 84: 3-sch. newer building with commercial vehicle trade
  • Bridge over the federal highway 27
  • Corner of Stockholmer Strasse: 8-storey. Residential high-rise
  • From Stockholmer- and Helsinkistraße: Marßeler Feld settlement with 3-4-Gesch. Residential houses as well as 1-storey, later 2-storey. Terraced houses
  • No. 100: 1-sch. Building of the sports club SG Marßel Bremen with a hall and sports fields

See also

literature

Coordinates: 53 ° 10 ′ 20.5 ″  N , 8 ° 42 ′ 58 ″  E