Residential building group I – IV, Anton-Schumacher-Straße

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Residential building group I – IV, Anton-Schumacher-Str.

The residential building group I – IV, Anton-Schumacher-Straße in Bremerhaven - Mitte , Anton-Schumacher-Straße 4–38, Friesenstraße 25–30, Gildemeisterstraße and Pestalozzistraße , was built from 1921 to 1925 according to plans by Julius Hagedorn , architect Fr. Stindt and Hunter.
The buildings have been under Bremen monument protection since 2009 .

history

At the end of the 19th century, Bremerhaven grew northwards to the border of the neighboring independent Prussian municipality of Lehe . Bremerhaven acquired considerable new areas in this area by 1905. After the First World War , the rapidly growing city had an increased need for apartments that could be built on the new areas.

The three-storey, plastered, larger residential complex was built from 1921 in closed development on Anton-Schumacher-Strasse (then Deutsche Strasse ) between Gildemeisterstrasse and Pestalozzistrasse through the city. Gabled houses and houses standing on the eaves structure the street space. City planning officer Julius Hagedorn convinced the magistrate to have ten residential complexes built by the city planning department (planning, construction management). The first construction phases I – IV with 160 apartments on 35 hectares were built between 1921 and 1925 and delimited a southern area for single and two-family houses. All houses were built by the company H. F. Kistner.

  • Building block I: Anton-Schumacher Strasse 14/16, Friesenstrasse 26/30, design by Hagedorn
  • Building block II: Anton-Schumacher-Str. No. 4/12 / Gildemeister 23/25, design by the architect Stindt
  • Building block III: Anton-Schumacher Strasse 20/22, Friesenstrasse 25/29, design by Hagedorn
  • Building block IV: Anton-Schumacher Straße 24/38, Pestalozzistraße 25/27

The State Office for Monument Preservation in Bremen found: “Despite all the simplicity, the façades on Anton-Schumacher-Strasse are well proportioned and diversely structured with projections and recesses. The many gables in particular give the street a certain dignity. "

literature

  • Harry Gabcke , Renate Gabcke, Herbert Körtge, Manfred Ernst: Bremerhaven in two centuries; Volumes I to III from 1827 to 1991 . Nordwestdeutsche Verlagsgesellschaft, Bremerhaven 1989/1991, ISBN 3-927857-00-9 , ISBN 3-927857-37-8 , ISBN 3-927857-22-X .
    • Vol. II, p. 35: Exemplary residential buildings in Bremerhaven-Nord .
  • Hagedorn: Housing construction in Bremerhaven after the war . In: Tjaden (Ed.): Housing construction after the war in the cities on the Lower Weser: Bremen, Wesermünde, Bremerhaven , Düsseldorf 1929.
  • Hugo Turek: Municipal housing in Bremerhaven 1921–1961 , Städt. Housing company, Bremerhaven 1961.
  • Kai Kähler: Julius Hagedorn. Bremerhaven city architect between historicism and functionalism . In: Hartmut Bickelmann : Bremerhaven Contributions to City History Vol. I, Bremerhaven 1994.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Monument database of the LfD

Coordinates: 53 ° 33 ′ 17.1 "  N , 8 ° 34 ′ 23.7"  E