Streets and squares in Ludwigshafen am Rhein / W
Wachenheimer Strasse
67067 Ludwigshafen, Germany
Wachenheim an der Weinstrasse is a small town on the Middle Haardt in the Bad Dürkheim district.
Walter-Gropius-Strasse
67069 Ludwigshafen, Germany
Walter Gropius was an architect and founder of the Bauhaus. Alongside Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and Le Corbusier, he is one of the founders of modern architecture.
Waltharistraße
67065 Ludwigshafen, Germany
Walthari was king of the Lombards on the central Danube around 540-545.
Walther-Rathenau-Strasse
67071 Ludwigshafen-Oggersheim
Walther Rathenau was a German industrialist, writer and liberal politician of the German Democratic Party . As Reich Foreign Minister, he was the victim of a politically motivated attack.
Walther-Rathenau-Strasse runs north of Dürkheimer Strasse and Gustav-Stresemann-Strasse in the Oggersheim district .
Walzmühlstrasse
67061 Ludwigshafen-Süd
The Ludwigshafener Walzmühle is a former industrial building that was converted into a shopping center in 1998.
The Walzmühlstrasse was a short connecting road between Rheinuferstrasse and Halbergstrasse. It was created in 1885 in connection with the construction of the roller mill and was originally called Mühlstrasse. It received its later name in 1960.
Wasgaustraße
67065 Ludwigshafen-Mundenheim
Wasgau is the name of a low mountain range in Rhineland-Palatinate. It describes the southern part of the Palatinate Forest on the border with Alsace in France. There the Wasgau continues in the Vosges .
Wegelnburgstrasse
67065 Ludwigshafen-Mundenheim
The Wegelnburg is a ruined castle between Schönau and Nothweiler and the highest castle in the Palatinate .
Wegelnburgstrasse is a north-south connection between Rheingönheimer Strasse and Kaiserwörthdamm.
Weinbietstrasse
67065 Ludwigshafen, Germany
The Weinbiet is one of the highest mountains on the eastern edge of the Palatinate Forest towards the Upper Rhine Plain.
Weinbrennerstrasse
67069 Ludwigshafen-Oppau
Friedrich Weinbrenner was an architect, town planner and builder of classicism.
Weinbrennerstraße is a street on the western outskirts of Oppau, which continues from Breitscheidstraße from Ludwig-Wolker-Straße.
Weisenheimer Strasse
67067 Ludwigshafen, Germany
Weisenheim am Sand is a municipality in the Bad Dürkheim district. Weisenheim am Berg is a municipality in the Bad Dürkheim district.
Hawthorn hag
67067 Ludwigshafen, Germany
The hawthorns (Crataegus) are a genus of shrubs or small trees of the pome fruit family (Pyrinae) within the rose family (Rosaceae).
Weissenburger Strasse
67065 Ludwigshafen-Mundenheim
Weißenburg (French: Wissembourg) is a city in Alsace . After the Peace of Westphalia in 1648, Weißenburg became part of France with large parts of Alsace.
Weißenburger Strasse leads from Rheingönheimer Strasse in the direction of Mundenheim station.
Welschstrasse
67069 Ludwigshafen-Oppau
Johann Maximilian von Welsch was a Baroque architect.
Welschstrasse leads from Bürgermeister-Trupp-Strasse to Rheinstrasse.
Welserstrasse
67063 Ludwigshafen
The Welser are an Augsburg and Nuremberg patrician family of large merchants.
The Welserstraße runs in a straight line from the Gräfenaustraße opposite the confluence with the Von-der-Tann-Straße to the Bürgermeister-Grünzweig-Straße.
In 1901 it was named after the Welser trading house.
Werner Forßmann Ring
67071 Ludwigshafen-Oggersheim
Werner Forßmann was a doctor who can be considered the inventor of the cardiac catheter .
The Werner-Forßmann-Ring is located in the immediate vicinity of the professional association accident clinic in Ludwigshafen .
Westendstrasse
67059 Ludwigshafen-Mitte
The Westend settlement was built in 1929 and 1930 by the non-profit public limited company for housing, according to the needs of the working population with low incomes.
The uniformly planned and mirror-symmetrical building complex consists of five-storey brick blocks with a flat roof. Their functionally shaped forms are influenced by the architecture of the Bauhaus .
Wielandstrasse
67065 Ludwigshafen, Germany
Alongside Gotthold Ephraim Lessing, Georg Christoph Lichtenberg and Immanuel Kant, Christoph Martin Wieland was the most important and most reflective Enlightenment writer in the German-speaking area.
Wiener Straße
67065 Ludwigshafen-Gartenstadt
Vienna is the federal capital and at the same time one of the nine federal states of Austria.
Wiener Straße is one of numerous streets in the Ernst-Reuter-Siedlung that are named after places in Austria.
Wildermuthstrasse
67065 Ludwigshafen, Germany
Eberhard Wildermuth was a German politician (FDP / DVP). From 1949 until his death he was Federal Minister for Housing.
Wilhelm-Busch-Strasse
67071 Ludwigshafen-Oggersheim
Wilhelm Busch is considered one of the pioneers of modern comics because of his satirical picture stories in verse.
Wilhelm-Busch-Straße is a parallel street to Wormser Straße and runs along the railway line to Frankenthal and Worms.
Wilhelmstrasse
67069 Ludwigshafen-Oppau
Wilhelmstrasse is a cross street between Kirchenstrasse and Friedrichstrasse.
Wilhelm-Tell-Strasse
67071 Ludwigshafen-Oggersheim
Wilhelm Tell is a legendary Swiss freedom fighter and tyrant murderer who is said to have lived in central Switzerland at the turn of the 13th to the 14th century. The poet Friedrich Schiller wrote the famous theatrical work of the same name in his late creative phase.
Wilhelm-Tell-Strasse is just one of many streets in Oggersheim that are reminiscent of Friedrich Schiller and his works. It leads from Raiffeisenstrasse to Dürkheimer Strasse.
Wilhelm-Vorholz-Strasse
67071 Ludwigshafen-Notwende
Wilhelm Vorholz was a artist from Rhineland-Palatinate.
Wilhelm-Vorholz-Straße is a street in the Melm development area .
Willersinnweiher
67063 Ludwigshafen
The Willersinn Brothers is a sand-lime brick factory in Oggersheim. An approx. 150,000 year old skull of a Neanderthal man was recovered from the Willersinnweiher in what is now the Friesenheim district. The Willersinnweiher is now used as a swimming lake.
Will-Sohl-Strasse
67071 Ludwigshafen-Notwende
Will-Sohl-Straße is a central street in the Notwende development area that begins at Am Weidenschlag and ends at Faselwiese.
Windthorststrasse
67069 Ludwigshafen, Germany
Ludwig Windthorst was a Catholic politician in the second half of the 19th century.
Wingertstrasse
A vineyard or wingert is an agriculturally used area for viticulture on a slope or flat.
Wislicenusstrasse
67063 Ludwigshafen
Johannes Wislicenus was a chemist to whom the first synthesis of lactic acid and acetoacetic ester go back.
Wittelsbachstrasse
67061 South
Wittelsbachstrasse was named in 1898 after the Bavarian ruling house of the Wittelsbach family. It was laid out as a broad avenue at the end of the 19th century. It begins in Luitpoldhafen on Lagerhausstrasse and crosses Mundenheimer Strasse at Bürgermeister-Krafft-Platz.
Wöhlerstrasse
67063 Ludwigshafen
Wöhlerstraße is a short spur road from Carl-Bosch-Straße. It was named after the chemist Friedrich Wöhler in 1885 .
The street, flanked by rows of trees, was part of the area of the BASF housing estate reserved for officials and directors . At the center is the BASF Society House, which is surrounded by a park.
Wollstrasse
67065 Ludwigshafen, Germany
The Wollstraße is a longer connecting road between two districts, which leads past the Große Blies to the west. It begins on Bruchwiesenstrasse in Mundenheim and ends on Mannheimer Strasse in Oggersheim.
Wormser Strasse
67071 Ludwigshafen-Oggersheim
Worms is an independent city north of Ludwigshafen and is located directly on the western bank of the Rhine.
Wormser Strasse was laid out in 1754 under Elector Karl Theodor as a connection route from Oggersheim to Frankenthal.
It was originally called Frankenthaler Straße and was renamed Wormser Straße in the 1960s. It starts at Hans-Warsch-Platz as an extension of Mannheimer Straße, runs straight out of town, where it joins Bundesstraße 9 to Worms.
Woerthstrasse
67059 center
Wörthstraße is a street in the city center that crosses Berliner Straße and leads past the Moschhochhaus.
Wredestrasse
67059 Ludwigshafen-Mitte
The Wredestrasse was laid out around the middle of the 19th century starting from the upper bank of the Rhine and continuously developed in a south-westerly direction. Today it begins on Lichtenbergerstrasse and leads to Bürgermeister-Kutterer-Strasse.
It has been named after Prince Eugen von Wrede, President of the Palatinate government, since 1885 .
The Catholic rectory next to the Ludwigskirche is one of the oldest preserved buildings in the city center.