Thedinghauser Strasse
Thedinghauser Strasse | |
---|---|
Street in Bremen | |
Basic data | |
city | Bremen |
district | Neustadt |
Cross streets | Friedrich-Ebert-Str. , Hegelstr., Schopenhauerstr., Kantstr., Ottostr., Nietzschestr., Raisingstr., Meyerstr., Gottfried-Keller-Weg, Waterloostr., Gustav-Freytag-Str., Lobsienstr., Karl-Lerbs-Str., Gottfried- Menken- Str., Friedrich-Wagenfeld-Str., August-Hinrichs-Str. (1876)., Kirchweg |
use | |
User groups | Cars, bikes and pedestrians |
Road design | two lane road |
Technical specifications | |
Street length | 1200 meters |
The Thedinghauser street is a historical street in Bremen district Neustadt , districts Süder suburbs and Garden City South . It leads from Erlenstrasse / Friedrich-Ebert-Strasse to Kirchweg .
The cross streets and connecting streets were often named after philosophers ( Philosophenviertel ), writers or generals and battlegrounds, etc. a. as Erlenstraße after the tree, Friedrich-Ebert-Straße (from 1914) after the politician (SPD) and first Reich President, Hegelstraße after Hegel , Schopenhauerstraße after Arthur Schopenhauer , Kantstraße after Immanuel Kant , Ottostraße (1873) after the property owner Otto Meyer, Nietzschetraße after Friedrich Nietzsche , Raisingstraße (1873) after the property owner Hermann Raising, Meyerstraße after the building contractor, Gottfried-Keller -Weg after the Swiss poet, Waterloostraße after the Battle of Waterloo , Gustav-Freytag-Straße, Lobsienstraße after the writer Wilhelm Lobsien , Karl -Lerbs -Straße 1956 after the Bremen writer, Gottfried-Menken -Straße after a theologian, Friedrich-Wagenfeld -Straße after the writer, August-Hinrichs -Straße (1876) after the writer and Kirchweg from 1865 after the church there.
history
Surname
The street is named in 1905 after the village of Thedinghausen in the Verden district . It is the administrative seat of the Thedinghausen community and has around 8100 inhabitants.
development
In the district of Südervorstadt there are mostly residential / row houses. They were built between 1900 and 1930. Some buildings were destroyed by air raids in 1944/45.
The adjoining garden city south was considerably enlarged by the Gewoba between 1957 and 1960 by a large new building area. The urban planning was carried out by the architects Max Säum and Günther Hafemann . This settlement received residential buildings in a functional design language with high-rise skyscrapers and mostly four and eight-story row buildings.
Buildings and facilities
On the street are u. a. two- to eight-story buildings.
- No. 1 at the corner of Friedrich-Ebert-Straße: 4-storey. Plastered residential and commercial building in the modern style from 1930/31 of the trade union housing association
- No. 2 to 34: 2-sch. plastered houses
- No. 3 to 17: 3 closed, plastered houses from after 1960
- No. 21 to 65: 3 closed, plastered houses
- No. 67/69: 2-cut. brick-built houses from the 1920s with bay windows
- Nos. 40 to 58: 3 closed, plastered residential and commercial buildings
- Corner of Meyerstraße 198: 3-storey. Residential and commercial building with a restaurant from the 1900 / 1910s with classicist facade elements
- Nt. 74: 1-cut Children's and family center in the city with hipped roofs and red stone facade
- Nos. 77 to 85: 4 closed, plastered houses from around 1960
- No. 93/95: 3-sch. Residential and commercial building from around 1960/70 and beyond
- Wilhelm-Raabe-Strasse 1 at the corner of Gustav-Freytag-Strasse: part of the United Evangelical Congregation Bremen-Neustadt with the Matthias Claudius Church from 1966 with a clinker brick facade and free-standing tower based on plans by Jan Noltenius
- from No. 76 or No. 97 to Kirchweg: Buildings of the garden city south from 1957 to 1960 as
- No. 99 to 107 as 4-fold plastered houses with pitched roofs
- than seven 4-tier plastered houses with flat roofs and
- than six 8-sch. plastered residential high-rises
- No. 115: A: Rosencafé, B: Neustadt youth hostel
- No. 111: Gewoba's Neustadt service office
Memorial plaques
-
Stumbling blocks for the victims of National Socialism according to the list of stumbling blocks in Bremen :
- No. 46 for Ernestine Rosenblum (1896–1942), Irmgard Rosenblum (1928–1942), Toni Rosenblum (1937–1942), all murdered in Minsk; Heinrich Rosenblum (1892–1938) murdered in Bremen as a pogrom victim
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 .
Coordinates: 53 ° 3 ′ 38 " N , 8 ° 47 ′ 55" E