Stresemannstrasse (Bremen)
Stresemannstrasse | |
---|---|
Street in Bremen | |
Basic data | |
city | Bremen |
district | Hemelingen |
Created | 20th century |
Cross streets | Bennigsenstrasse, Mindener Weg, Steubenstrasse , Ludwig-Quidde- Strasse, Legienstrasse , Sodenstich, Glückstrasse, Thulesiusstrasse, Malerstr. |
use | |
User groups | Cars, bikes and pedestrians |
Road design | four lane road |
Technical specifications | |
Street length | 1250 meters |
The Stresemannstraße is a street in Bremen district of Hemelingen , district Hastedt . It leads in a west-east direction from Bismarckstrasse to Hastedter Heerstrasse . It is a central thoroughfare.
The cross streets and connecting streets were named u. a. as Bismarckstrasse 1872 after the first Chancellor of the German Empire Otto von Bismarck , Bennigsenstrasse after the liberal politician Rudolf von Bennigsen (1824–1902), Mindener Weg, Steubenstrasse after the Prussian officer and US American Major General and Baron Steuben, Ludwig-Quidde- Strasse after historian, politician and Nobel Peace Prize laureate (1927), Legienstrasse after the trade unionist Carl Legien (1861-1920), sod engraving after a hall designation as sod like sod , Glückstrasse as the fulfillment of human wishes, Thulesiusstrasse after the doctor Eberhard Thulesius (1839-1913), Malerstrasse (Meaning unclear) and Hastedter Heerstraße after the district Hastedt, where Heerstraßen were expanded to existing local roads in the 19th century; otherwise see the link to the streets.
history
Surname
Stresemannstrasse was named after the economist , liberal politician ( German People's Party (DVP)) and statesman Gustav Stresemann (1878-1929).
He was Reich Chancellor (1923) and from 1923 to 1929 Reich Minister for Foreign Affairs of the Weimar Republic . He helped improve relations with France. In 1926 he received the Nobel Peace Prize together with his French counterpart Aristide Briand .
development
The village of Herstede was first mentioned in 1226. It belonged to the Archbishopric and Duchy of Bremen , in the 15th century to the Gografschaft Achim and in 1649 to the Duchy of Bremen . Hastedt has been a rural municipality of Bremen since 1803 and was incorporated into the city of Bremen in 1902. Because of the armaments factories, Hastedt was bombed more frequently in 1944/45.
A commercial center with many businesses in the motor vehicle sector was built around the newer Stresemannstrasse. The Bunge vehicle factory had a larger and more modern factory here from 1954 to 1973 in which tank vehicles were produced. Waldemar Koch built a branch of the Schmidt + Koch car dealership here .
traffic
From 1812 to 1814, a new paved military road was laid out under French occupation . It should actually lead in a straight line past the village along today's Stresemannstrasse through the best cornland of the Hastedt farmers, which prevented their protests. Heerstrasse now ran south of Stresemannstrasse.
With the expansion and new construction of Stresemannstrasse and Malerstrasse as well as Pfalzburger Strasse, a connection to the Hemelinger Autobahn feeder to the Autobahn A 1 was achieved in the 1960s and the Hastedter Heerstrasse connected to Hemelingen and Osterholz .
Today the Bremen tram touches the street with line 2 ( Gröpelingen - Sebaldsbrück ) and line 10 (Gröpelingen - Hauptbahnhof - Sebaldsbrück) the street on Hastedter Heerstraße.
In transportation in Bremen the bus line 25 (Weidedamm ↔ Osterholz) in the range Bismarckstrasse to Steubenstraße.
Buildings, plants
On the street there are one to five-story buildings that are used commercially and all of which were built after the Second World War .
Notable buildings and facilities
North side
- No. 4 to 10: 5-st. New building in U-shape with u. a. Headquarters of Telekom Germany in Bremen and with a slightly older 4-protected. building
- No. 14: 1-sch. Bauhaus Bremen specialist center with parking lot in front of it
- No. 48: 5-sch. newer office building with inner courtyard, 3-storey. newer office building on the street and 7 to 8 storeys somewhat older office building behind it: Bremen City Office as the central service authority with Citizens Service Center , Bremen vehicle registration office, immigration office and lost property office
- No. 52: 5-gesch. Business and office building
- No. 54: 5-sch. Office building
- No. 58/60 at the corner of Legienstrasse: 5-storey. Office building
South side
- No. 1–7: 1- and 3-shifted Car dealership with u. a. Schmidt + Koch
- No. 13: 1-sch. Shopping center for bicycles
- No. 13A: 1-gesch. Car wash center
- No. 21: 1-sch. car dealer
- No. 23/25: 1- and 2-layered car dealer
- No. 29: 5-sch. Office building with u. a. Bremen academy for professional development
- No. 31/33: 3-ply Specialist market (Hellweg Center)
- No. 39: 2-sch. Office building with u. a. bfw - training center for the fields of technology, craft, industry, office and IT
- No. 47: 1- and 2-layered car dealer
See also
literature
- Monika Porsch: Bremer Straßenlexikon , complete edition. Schünemann, Bremen 2003, ISBN 3-7961-1850-X .
Coordinates: 53 ° 4 ′ 15 ″ N , 8 ° 51 ′ 54 ″ E