Striesener Strasse

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Striesener Strasse
coat of arms
Street in Dresden
Striesener Strasse
Apartment high-rise Striesener Strasse / corner of Georg-Nerlich-Strasse, Johannstadt with triangular balconies stacked on top of one another
Basic data
place Dresden
District Johannstadt
Connecting roads Pillnitzer Strasse, Borsbergstrasse
Cross streets Güntzstraße,
Marschnerstraße,
Georg-Nerlich-Straße,
Hans-Grundig-Straße,
Permoserstraße,
Pöppelmannstraße,
Stephanienstraße,
Cranachstraße,
Thomaestraße,
Reissigerstraße,
Fetscherstraße
Places Fetscherplatz
use
User groups Pedestrian traffic , bicycle traffic , motor traffic , public transport
Road design Trees

The Striesener street in Dresden is a city road in the district Johannstadt .

description

Striesener Straße is the continuation of Pillnitzer Straße and at its end merges into Borsbergstraße . It crosses Güntzstraße, Marschnerstraße, Georg-Nerlich-Straße / Hans-Grundig-Straße, Permoserstraße, Pöppelmannstraße, Stephanienstraße, Cranachstraße, Thomaestraße, Reissigerstraße and Fetscherstraße . At the intersection with Fetscherstraße is Fetscherplatz, which was originally called Fürstenplatz. In the course of the street there was another square, Striesener Platz , which was built over after the Second World War.

Local public transport

Between 1883 and 1930 several tram lines ran through Striesener Straße (initially as a horse-drawn tram ), which connected Dresden city center with Johannstadt. A section of the street is opened up by the bus route leading over Pirnaischer Platz to Johannstadt / Uniklinikum . Before the crossing of 75 and 82, it came as 75 from Goppeln or from the Leubnitzer Höhe . The line, which has been coming from Löbtau Süd / Dölzschen since then , was renumbered from 82 to 62 as part of the 60s renumbering.

Development

Before it was destroyed in the air raids on Dresden , the Scheidemantel villa stood on Striesener Platz , which was built by Julius Gebler in 1887 and destroyed in the air raids on Dresden in 1945. The buildings Striesener Strasse 44, 47 and 49 that still exist are listed, historical buildings. The destruction of Striesener Strasse was depicted by Wilhelm Rudolph in his woodcut series "Destroyed Dresden" on a sheet engraved in 1945/46.

In the post-war period in 1957 a development plan was issued for the development area in Johannstadt. This resulted in five-story rows along Striesener and four-story residential rows along Dinglinger Straße, which enclose a 350 m long and 45 m wide green area. This facility is delimited in the northwest on Georg-Nerlich-Strasse by an eight-story high-rise building and in the southeast on Stephanienstraße by a shop building. The green space between the buildings was divided into four areas by arranging row sheds for mopeds, laundry drying areas and children's playgrounds.

The four- and five-storey row development was built in large blocks with plastered facades based on designs by the architects Wolfgang Hänsch and Johannes Rascher . With these buildings a mixed construction method was used “for the first time for the GDR”. This emerged as a further development of the previous large block method. The hallmark was a "two-layer system" (two block layers per floor).

The high-rise apartment building at Striesener Strasse at the corner of Georg-Nerlich-Strasse was built based on the model of the skyscraper on Borsbergstrasse . Here, too, the apartment house was built using a block construction, with only the ground floor being a skeleton structure. This should allow free space on the ground floor with a flexible floor plan. The upper floors all had apartments. The facade is structured vertically, the roof slab is cantilevered. The hallmark here, too, are the triangular balconies on top of each other. While the facade is kept in yellow and pigeon blue, the gables were designed in red.

literature

  • Walter May , Werner Pampel and Hans Konrad: Architectural Guide GDR, Dresden District . VEB Verlag für Bauwesen, Berlin 1979.
  • Wolfgang Hänsch (Architect BDA), Johannes Rascher (Akad. Architect BDA) and Herbert Terpitz (Akad. Architect BDA): “Housing special construction program in Dresden-Johannstadt”, in: Deutsche Architektur 3/1957, p. 121f.
  • Wolfgang Hänsch (architect BDA), Johannes Röber (architect), Herbert Löschau (architect), Heinz Wagner (garden architect BDA): “New residential buildings in Dresden-Johannstadt”, in: Deutsche Architektur 3/1959, pp. 262–264.
  • Heinz Wagner (garden architect BDA): "Green areas and outdoor facilities for residential buildings in Dresden-Johannstadt", in: Deutsche Architektur 3/1959, p. 127.
  • Beate Lüsch: Borsbergstrasse residential complex . In: Heidrun Laudel , Ronald Franke (ed.): Building in Dresden in the 19th and 20th centuries . Ronald Franke self-published, Dresden 1991.

Individual evidence

  1. An overview of the new bus routes ( Memento from July 27, 2012 in the web archive archive.today ), Dresdner Verkehrsbetriebe
  2. BeyArs.com: Wilhelm Rudolph “Striesener Straße”. 1945/1946.
  3. cf. Wagner, p. 127
  4. May et al., No. 93 (residential development Johannstadt)
  5. a b Hänsch et al., P. 122
  6. Lüsch, pp. 131-137

Web link

Commons : Striesener Straße, Dresden  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Coordinates: 51 ° 2 ′ 54.5 "  N , 13 ° 45 ′ 53.8"  E