Stromer Landstrasse
Stromer Landstrasse | |
---|---|
Street in Bremen | |
Basic data | |
city | Bremen |
District | electricity |
Cross streets | Neustädter Hafentor, Senator-Apelt-Str., Merkurstr., Bundesautobahn 281 , Brokhuchtinger Landstr., Meenteweg, Wiedbrokstr., Sandkampsdeich, Am Leckerbeeten, Sandhauser Weg, Stedinger Landstr. |
use | |
User groups | Cars, bikes and pedestrians |
Road design | two lane road |
Technical specifications | |
Street length | 7,900 meters, of which 6,600 m in Bremen |
The Stromer Landstrasse is mostly a central access road in Bremen , districts Strom and Woltmershausen . It leads in alternating directions (mainly east / west) from Stromer Straße in Woltmershausen to Stedinger Landstraße as well as north to Brake and southeast to Delmenhorst .
It is divided into the sub-areas:
- Stromer Strasse to Brokhuchtinger Landstrasse,
- Brokhuchtinger Landstrasse to Wiedbrokstrasse (state border) and
- Wiedbrokstrasse to Stedinger Landstrasse.
The cross streets and connecting streets were u. a. Named as Stromer Straße after the district, Neustädter Hafentor after the customs gate to Neustädter Hafen , Senator-Apelt-Straße 1964 after Senator Hermann Apelt (1876–1960), unnamed street, Merkurstraße 1998 after the Roman messenger of the gods and god of traders, federal highway 281 , unnamed way, Brokhuchtinger Landstrasse after the old settlement Huchtigebroch (1062) or Brokhuchtungen (1290), unnamed ways, Meentheweg after probably a farm owner, unnamed way, Stellfeldsweg after a corridor, unnamed way, Wiedbrokstraße after a willow break (1404 Eydebroke , 1479 Witbrook ) (the road leads to Seehausen ), Sandkampsdeich after a piece of land in a sandy field, unnamed Deichweg, Am Leckerbeeten, Sandhauser Weg after the district of Delmenhorst, Stedinger Landstraße after the population of the Stedingen region and An der Bahn after the local location; otherwise see the link to the streets.
history
Surname
The Stromer Landstrasse was named after the Strom district. The name can be interpreted as a strong current of the Ochtum . The village of Strom was first mentioned in a document at the end of the 16th century.
development
Strom was a village in which in the 11th to 13th centuries the march was cultivated by building dykes and draining. It belonged to the Bremen parish of St. Martini . In 1945, Strom was incorporated into the city of Bremen. The place has 448 inhabitants (2018), almost all of whom live on this street. The one-class school came in 1889 and the new building with two classrooms was built in 1910. The bridges over the Ochtum near Sandhausen and Steding were built in 1924 and 1937/39, respectively.
traffic
The road is an old connection from Woltmershausen / Rablinghausen to Deichhausen and Brake in the Stedinger Land in the Oldenburg Wesermarsch. Around 1937 the road was expanded.
The 281 federal motorway from the A 1 at the Arsten feeder road to the Weser tunnel and the A 27 was built parallel to the road .
The cycle path on Stromer Landstraße leads west to Deichhausen, Sandhausen and Delmenhorst. At the state border, a road leads to Seehausen to the cycle path on the left Weser dike, which leads from the Neustadt outer harbor to the Hasenbürener Landstrasse , the Hasenbüren sports harbor and the Ochtum barrage . Huchting is reached by the Brokhuchtinger Landstrasse through the Ochtum lowlands.
In local transport in Bremen, the road runs through bus lines 61 (Stromer Straße - Sandhausen) and 205 (Bremen - Strom - Delmenhorst), with the stops Rablinghauser Landstraße , Neuer Schutzdeich, Reedeich Nord, Freight station Grolland, Stromer Berg, Köhler Brücke, Auf der Sandhöhe , Electricity / school, Stellfeldsweg, Luley, Stedinger Bridge and Sandhausen
Buildings and facilities
There are mostly one and two two-story buildings on the street.
Notable buildings and facilities
- At the beginning: Commercial buildings on both sides of the Neustadt ports
- Bridge of the railway line for freight traffic
- Bridge and access to federal highway 281
- Farmland and pasture land on both sides up to Brokhuchtinger Landstrasse and up to no. 14 or 15b and 15d and thereafter largely on the north side
- Brokhuchtinger Landstrasse with Koehler Bridge over the Ochtum
- South: Behind the buildings up to the Stedinger Bridge (at No. 53a) the Ochtum
- No. 20: 1-sch. Building from 1964 of the Bremen-Strom volunteer fire brigade from 1948, which was previously a compulsory fire brigade ; opposite Storchenhorst
- No. 26a: 2-sch. clinker brick building of the elementary school Bremen-Strom
- Then: 1-sch. brick-built farmhouse with a half-hip roof and ancillary facilities
- No. 42a: 1-gesch. plastered gable-independent Hotel Luley (closed)
- No. 43: 1-sch. Hof Imhoff with the family business since 1841 and today holiday apartments in a half-timbered farmhouse
- No. 46e: 1-gesch. Residential house with apartment Tidenkieker
- No. 53a: 1-gesch. Hotel and restaurant to Ochtumbrücke , mostly as Spille known
- Stedinger Bridge over the Ochtum
- Farmland and pastureland on both sides to Stedinger Landstrasse and Sandhausen, all in Lower Saxony
See also
literature
- Herbert Black Forest : The Great Bremen Lexicon. 2nd, expanded and updated edition. In two volumes. Edition Temmen , Bremen 2003, ISBN 3-86108-693-X (first edition: 2002, supplementary volume A – Z). 2008, ISBN 978-3-86108-986-5 .
- Monika Porsch: Bremer Straßenlexikon , complete edition. Schünemann, Bremen 2003, ISBN 3-7961-1850-X .
- Hans Imhoff, Jens Schmeyers: Chronicle of Bremen-Strom: A district on the Ochtum and in Niedervieland . Stedinger Verlag, Lemwerder 2012, ISBN 3-927697-64-8 .
Coordinates: 53 ° 5 '3.5 " N , 8 ° 41' 54.3" E