Residential building group Goebenstrasse

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Parkallee 32 / Goebenstrasse

The Goebenstrasse residential group in Bremen , Schwachhausen district, Barkhof district , Goebenstrasse 1–32 / Parkallee 30/32, was built in 1902 based on plans by Wilhelm Blanke . This group of buildings has been a listed building in Bremen since 1973 .

The short Goebenstrasse leads from Parkallee to Hermann-Böse-Strasse . It was built in 1899 as the first street in the Parkviertel and named after the Prussian general August Karl von Goeben (1816–1880).

history

The plastered, two-storey houses with pitched roofs were built in the neoclassic style for a bourgeois upper class at the turn of the century . The often chosen house type Bremer Haus was built in Bremen between the mid-19th century and the 1930s. The basement as a basement , the deep building shape and the side entrance are typical .

The ensemble includes the houses Wuppesahl, (No. 1), Heine, (No. 2), Plump (No. 3), Fröhlke (No. 4), Meyer (No. 6), Atermann (No. 7), Schulze (No. 8), Vogler (No. 9), Pappier (No. 10), Caesar (No. 11), Herlyn (No. 11A), Bergmann (No. 12), Stumpe, (No. 14), Stivarius , (No. 15), Wilkens (No. 16), Taaks (No. 17), Nieland (No. 18), Freudenberg (No. 22), Fitger (No. 24, also an individual monument), Meyer-Lahusen (No. . 26), Koch (No. 28), Siebers (No. 30) and Nielsen, (No. 32) as well as in Parkallee Villa Sowerbutts (No. 30, also a single monument) and Villa Kulenkamp (No. 32, also a single monument) . The houses at Goebenstrasse 5 and 20 are parts of no monument value of their own.

The two-storey house Wuppesahl , Goebenstrasse 1, with a three-storey tower tower, was built in 1901 for the businessman Carl Wuppesahl according to plans by Wilhelm Blanke ; the family only owned the house until 1912. After that, the house was owned by the Merkel family, who expanded it in 1925. The mezzanine floor of the house, which was damaged in 1945, was rented to Louis Delius & Co. until 1958 . In 1987 the house was rebuilt by the architect Hans Budde and divided into three separate units. It housed u. a. the Consulate of Colombia.

Currently (2017) the houses are still largely used for residential purposes as well as practices and office purposes.

See also

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Monument database of the LfD
  2. ^ Monument database of the LfD
  3. Bettina E. Schütte: Wuppesahl House 1900–1912 ... In: Bremen houses tell history . Bremen 1998.

Coordinates: 53 ° 5 ′ 0.4 ″  N , 8 ° 49 ′ 16.9 ″  E