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Karl-Liebknecht-Straße

Karl-Liebknecht-Straße is a major street in the central Mitte district of the German capital Berlin. It is named after Karl Liebknecht (1871–1919), one of the founders of the Communist Party of Germany. The street connects the Unter den Linden boulevard with the Prenzlauer Allee arterial road leading to the northern city limits. Although part of the street dates back to medieval times, most of the buildings at its side were built in the 1960s, when East Berlin's centre was redesigned as the capital of East Germany.

Karl-Liebknecht-Straße
Karl-Liebknecht-Straße with Berlin Cathedral and St. Mary's Church
Southern section between Spree and Alexanderplatz
Length1.3 km (0.81 mi)
LocationMitte, Berlin
Southwest endSchloßplatz/Liebknecht Bridge
Northeast endPrenzlauer Allee
Construction
Inauguration1889/1969

History edit

 
Kleine Burgstraße, 1875

The origins of the street lie in the quarter that arose about 1270 around St. Mary's Church, located north of Alt-Berlin's initial settlement. The "New Market" (Neuer Markt) square beneath the church was first mentioned in a 1292 deed; there were three alleys that went southwest from it down to the Spree river. They had had different names over the centuries and were ultimately known as Papenstraße (“Bishops' Street”, named for the Berlin residence of the Havelberg bishops), Brauhausstraße (“Brewery Street”) and Kleine Burgstraße (“Castle Street”, named for the Berlin Palace on the other side of the river).

Since the 17th century, a wooden pedestrian bridge, known as Castle Bridge, later called Cavalier Bridge or Sechserbrücke (“Sixpence Bridge”), would lead from Kleine Burgstraße across the water to the Berlin Palace on Spree Island and the eastern terminus of Unter den Linden. However, traffic from the west crossing Schlossbrücke still had to turn right in front of the Palace and continue its way to Alt-Berlin via the parallel Rathaus Bridge.

In the 1880s, plans for a new traffic routing were developed when it was decided to build a northeastern extension of the Unter den Linden boulevard through the Palace's Lustgarten. In 1884 the German Emperor William I gave his consent to replace the pedestrian bridge with a much larger, richly ornamented stone construction. Beyond the river, after lengthy negotiations with numerous property owners, the three historic alleys were combined to a broad street, built according to plans designed by August Orth, to complete the interconnection from Unter den Linden to the New Market square.

 
Kaiser-Wilhelm-Straße, view to St. Mary's Church, 1899

Opened in 1887, this new street was named Kaiser-Wilhelm-Straße in honour of the emperor. The road then led from Spree Island across the new Kaiser-Wilhelm-Brücke through Alt-Berlin, turning slightly north at St. Mary's Church, pass under the Stadtbahn tracks and ending at Münzstraße in the adjacent Scheunenviertel (“Barns' Quarter”) neighbourhood. In 1892 the street was extended to Hirtenstraße near modern Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz.[1]

During the Nazi era, demolition of the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Brücke began in March 1939 to make room for the Welthauptstadt Germania plans developed by Albert Speer; nevertheless, works ceased shortly after the outbreak of World War II in September. Most of the buildings on Kaiser-Wilhelm-Straße were largely damaged and several lost completely in the British and American air raids on the city between 1943 and 1945. During the final Battle of Berlin in April 1945, German Wehrmacht troops blew up the remnants of the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Brücke in an attempt to hold back the Red Army advance.

After the war, the street became part of the Soviet-occupied sector of Berlin. The Soviet Military Administration had it renamed Liebknechtstraße in 1947 for Karl Liebknecht, co-founder of the German Communist Party. Liebknecht had his lawyer's office nearby and during the German Revolution of 1918–19 had proclaimed a "Free Socialist Republic" at the Berlin Palace on 9 November 1918, shortly before he was murdered by Freikorps paramilitaries. The bridge to Spree Island was rebuilt in a simple form in 1949/50 and equally named Liebknecht Bridge.[2]

 
Karl-Liebknecht-Straße and Palace of the Republic, 1989

However, the lost buildings were only replaced in the 1960s when the East German Socialist Unity Party and the Council of Ministers decided to rebuild the area to fit the government's visions of a modern socialist city. The new broad Karl-Liebknecht-Straße started on Spree Island at the Marx-Engels-Platz, between Berlin Cathedral and the Palace of the Republic inaugurated in 1976. On the other side of the Liebknecht Bridge, large Plattenbau apartment blocks were built along the street, while the right side became a large open green, stretching from the Marx-Engels-Forum to the foot of the Fernsehturm (TV tower). Instead of turning north at St. Mary's Church, the new Karl-Liebknecht-Straße, finished in 1969, now goes straight ahead, bypassing Alexanderplatz to meet the arterial road Prenzlauer Allee at the site of the former city gate (Prenzlauer Tor). The former northeastern section of the street, beyond the church, is today known as Rosa-Luxemburg-Straße - named after Rosa Luxemburg, another co-founder of the Communist Party who was likewise killed in 1919.

Unlike its surroundings, Karl-Liebknecht-Straße has not changed its look too much since the German reunification in 1990. However, the former Palasthotel near the Liebknecht Bridge has been demolished in 2001 and replaced by the large DomAquarée hotel and office building complex, comprising the DDR Museum, the AquaDom aquarium and a Sea Life Centre. The adjacent apartment blocks and the row of shops below have been steadily refurbished. Plans for the reconstruction of the neighbourhood north of Alexanderplatz have been made.

Name changes
16th century Spreegäßlein Zimmermannsgasse Am Kramhause Hinter der Badstube
17th century Wasserstraße Bolingsgasse Papenstraße Heinersdorfer Straße
18th century Kleine Burgstraße Klandersgasse Papenstraße Prenzlauer Straße
19th century Kleine Burgstraße Brauhausstraße Papenstraße Prenzlauer Straße
1887 Kaiser-Wilhelm-Straße Prenzlauer Straße
July 31, 1947 Liebknechtstraße Prenzlauer Straße
September 3, 1969 Karl-Liebknecht-Straße
+ Rosa-Luxemburg-Straße

Route description edit

Karl-Liebknecht-Straße starts at the Schloßbrücke (“palace bridge”) on Spree Island as part of the German federal highways B 2 and B 5. On the left lies the Lustgarten, while on the right is the Schloßplatz, the name of which refers to the old Baroque style Berliner Schloss (English: Berlin Palace). After being demolished by authorities in East Germany following the Second World War, the DDR-era Palast der Republik was built here in 1976, until it was demolished in 2008 following the Bundestag's decision to rebuild the historically renowned palace. The street runs northeast, crosses the Liebknechtbrücke, leaving Spree Island, and meets Spandauer Straße, where the Bundesstraßen turn to the right. Karl-Liebknecht-Straße continues northeast, passing the Fernsehturm and Alexanderplatz through the old Königsstadt quarter to the border of Mitte borough. There, at the place of the old Prenzlauer Tor (“Prenzlau gate”) it crosses Torstraße and Mollstraße and continues as Prenzlauer Allee to the north of the city.

Buildings edit

 
Berlin Palace
 
DomAquarée
 
St. Mary's Church

At its start, Karl-Liebknecht-Straße passes by two of the most prominent sites of Berlin, the evangelical Berlin Cathedral (Am Lustgarten 1) and the Berlin Palace (Schloßplatz 1), which is currently under reconstruction (currently projected to be fully completed in 2020, as the Humboldt Forum).

Numbers 1 to 5 – DomAquarée edit

The numbers 1, 3, and 5 belong to the new DomAquarée building, completed in 2003. It houses several restaurants and shops as well as the Radisson SAS Hotel Berlin, the Sea Life Centre with the AquaDom aquarium and the GDR museum.

Number 8 – St. Mary's Church edit

At no. 8, there is the St. Mary's Church (St. Marienkirche), the second oldest church in the centre of Berlin and the oldest one still in use. It was first mentioned in 1292 as the church of Berlin's “new town”, right in front of the New Marketplace. Nowadays, St. Mary's is one of three churches of the Evangelical St. Mary's & St. Peter's parish, which has around 3,100 members.

Number 13 – Berlin Carré edit

Number 13, the northernmost part of a Plattenbau apartment block, holds the Berlin Carré, a shopping mall of about 7,600 square metres (1.9 acres), which was built in 1969 to replace the Zentralmarkthalle (“central market hall”) at the same place.[3] In 2000, the cabaret theatre Sündikat (“sindicate”) also found a home in this building.

Number 29 – Pressehaus am Alexanderplatz edit

Number 29 is known as Pressehaus am Alexanderplatz, home of the Berliner Verlag, which publishes the popular Berliner Zeitung daily newspaper. The building also houses the Berliner Journalistenschule (“Berlin journalists school”), a college for the further education of journalists, which has its own radio and TV station.[4]

Former buildings edit

World War II and the subsequent reconstruction of East Berlin as the capital of the German Democratic Republic meant the end for several of Berlin's important and well-known buildings. The most prominent of course being the Berliner Schloss (“Berlin Palace”). It was first built as a castle as early as 1443 under Frederick II, Elector of Brandenburg. It was largely rebuilt as a palace a hundred years later and became the family seat of the House of Hohenzollern, rulers of the Kingdom of Prussia and later of the German Empire. The building was demolished in 1950 on the order of the East German government. It was replaced by the Palast der Republik, which was demolished from 2006 until 2008, after the removal of asbestos.

Another well-known building was the elite school Joachimsthalsches Gymnasium, which had moved to the premises of the modern DomAquarée in 1650, after its old building in Joachimsthal had been destroyed in the Thirty Years' War. The school moved out of the building in 1880.

In 1886 the Zentralmarkthalle (“central market hall”) opened in two buildings left and right of the street, right at the railway tracks. It was built to replace the weekly markets at the Neuer Markt (“new marketplace”) at the foot of the St. Mary's Church, which had taken place for several centuries. The market hall survived the war, but was demolished in 1969 to make room for the current buildings.[5]

Another part of East Berlin's reconstruction program was the five-star Palasthotel (“palace hotel”) at Liebknechtbrücke. It was built between 1976 and 1979, based on a design by Ferenc Kiss. The hotel had 600 rooms with 1,000 beds and a conference hall with about 2,000 seats. It was closed for all East German guests, as one had to pay in a hard currency instead of the local East German mark. In 1992, the hotel was taken over by the Radisson group. It was demolished in 2000 to make room for the new DomAquarée, which was opened in 2003.[6]

Public transport edit

Karl-Liebknecht-Straße is serviced by five BVG bus lines with stops at Memhardstraße, Fernsehturm, St. Mary's Church and at Lustgarten. The lines are 100 between Alexanderplatz and Zoologischer Garten, 200 between Michelangelostraße and Zoologischer Garten, 248 between Alexanderplatz and Südkreuz, M48 between Alexanderplatz and Busseallee in Zehlendorf and the express bus TXL to Berlin-Tegel International Airport. The northern part of the street is also serviced by the tram line M2 with stops at Mollstraße and Memhardstraße. M2 connects Alexanderplatz and Heinersdorf (Pankow borough).

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ "Kaiser-Wilhelm-Straße in Mitte" (in German). Edition Luisenstadt. Retrieved 4 April 2014.
  2. ^ "Liebknechtbrücke - Berlin Lexikon" (in German). Edition Luisenstadt. 2002. Retrieved 4 April 2014.
  3. ^ (in German). Archived from the original on 1 July 2008. Retrieved 4 April 2014.
  4. ^ (in German). Berliner Journalisten Schule. Archived from the original on 24 February 2011. Retrieved 4 April 2014.
  5. ^ . Berlin (in German). City of Berlin. Archived from the original on 5 April 2014. Retrieved 4 April 2014.
  6. ^ "Palasthotel, Berlin" (in German). DDR-Lexikon. Retrieved 4 April 2014.

52°31′17″N 13°24′26″E / 52.52139°N 13.40722°E / 52.52139; 13.40722

karl, liebknecht, straße, major, street, central, mitte, district, german, capital, berlin, named, after, karl, liebknecht, 1871, 1919, founders, communist, party, germany, street, connects, unter, linden, boulevard, with, prenzlauer, allee, arterial, road, le. Karl Liebknecht Strasse is a major street in the central Mitte district of the German capital Berlin It is named after Karl Liebknecht 1871 1919 one of the founders of the Communist Party of Germany The street connects the Unter den Linden boulevard with the Prenzlauer Allee arterial road leading to the northern city limits Although part of the street dates back to medieval times most of the buildings at its side were built in the 1960s when East Berlin s centre was redesigned as the capital of East Germany Karl Liebknecht StrasseKarl Liebknecht Strasse with Berlin Cathedral and St Mary s ChurchSouthern section between Spree and AlexanderplatzLength1 3 km 0 81 mi LocationMitte BerlinSouthwest endSchlossplatz Liebknecht BridgeNortheast endPrenzlauer AlleeConstructionInauguration1889 1969 Contents 1 History 2 Route description 3 Buildings 3 1 Numbers 1 to 5 DomAquaree 3 2 Number 8 St Mary s Church 3 3 Number 13 Berlin Carre 3 4 Number 29 Pressehaus am Alexanderplatz 3 5 Former buildings 4 Public transport 5 FootnotesHistory edit nbsp Kleine Burgstrasse 1875The origins of the street lie in the quarter that arose about 1270 around St Mary s Church located north of Alt Berlin s initial settlement The New Market Neuer Markt square beneath the church was first mentioned in a 1292 deed there were three alleys that went southwest from it down to the Spree river They had had different names over the centuries and were ultimately known as Papenstrasse Bishops Street named for the Berlin residence of the Havelberg bishops Brauhausstrasse Brewery Street and Kleine Burgstrasse Castle Street named for the Berlin Palace on the other side of the river Since the 17th century a wooden pedestrian bridge known as Castle Bridge later called Cavalier Bridge or Sechserbrucke Sixpence Bridge would lead from Kleine Burgstrasse across the water to the Berlin Palace on Spree Island and the eastern terminus of Unter den Linden However traffic from the west crossing Schlossbrucke still had to turn right in front of the Palace and continue its way to Alt Berlin via the parallel Rathaus Bridge In the 1880s plans for a new traffic routing were developed when it was decided to build a northeastern extension of the Unter den Linden boulevard through the Palace s Lustgarten In 1884 the German Emperor William I gave his consent to replace the pedestrian bridge with a much larger richly ornamented stone construction Beyond the river after lengthy negotiations with numerous property owners the three historic alleys were combined to a broad street built according to plans designed by August Orth to complete the interconnection from Unter den Linden to the New Market square nbsp Kaiser Wilhelm Strasse view to St Mary s Church 1899Opened in 1887 this new street was named Kaiser Wilhelm Strasse in honour of the emperor The road then led from Spree Island across the new Kaiser Wilhelm Brucke through Alt Berlin turning slightly north at St Mary s Church pass under the Stadtbahn tracks and ending at Munzstrasse in the adjacent Scheunenviertel Barns Quarter neighbourhood In 1892 the street was extended to Hirtenstrasse near modern Rosa Luxemburg Platz 1 During the Nazi era demolition of the Kaiser Wilhelm Brucke began in March 1939 to make room for the Welthauptstadt Germania plans developed by Albert Speer nevertheless works ceased shortly after the outbreak of World War II in September Most of the buildings on Kaiser Wilhelm Strasse were largely damaged and several lost completely in the British and American air raids on the city between 1943 and 1945 During the final Battle of Berlin in April 1945 German Wehrmacht troops blew up the remnants of the Kaiser Wilhelm Brucke in an attempt to hold back the Red Army advance After the war the street became part of the Soviet occupied sector of Berlin The Soviet Military Administration had it renamed Liebknechtstrasse in 1947 for Karl Liebknecht co founder of the German Communist Party Liebknecht had his lawyer s office nearby and during the German Revolution of 1918 19 had proclaimed a Free Socialist Republic at the Berlin Palace on 9 November 1918 shortly before he was murdered by Freikorps paramilitaries The bridge to Spree Island was rebuilt in a simple form in 1949 50 and equally named Liebknecht Bridge 2 nbsp Karl Liebknecht Strasse and Palace of the Republic 1989However the lost buildings were only replaced in the 1960s when the East German Socialist Unity Party and the Council of Ministers decided to rebuild the area to fit the government s visions of a modern socialist city The new broad Karl Liebknecht Strasse started on Spree Island at the Marx Engels Platz between Berlin Cathedral and the Palace of the Republic inaugurated in 1976 On the other side of the Liebknecht Bridge large Plattenbau apartment blocks were built along the street while the right side became a large open green stretching from the Marx Engels Forum to the foot of the Fernsehturm TV tower Instead of turning north at St Mary s Church the new Karl Liebknecht Strasse finished in 1969 now goes straight ahead bypassing Alexanderplatz to meet the arterial road Prenzlauer Allee at the site of the former city gate Prenzlauer Tor The former northeastern section of the street beyond the church is today known as Rosa Luxemburg Strasse named after Rosa Luxemburg another co founder of the Communist Party who was likewise killed in 1919 Unlike its surroundings Karl Liebknecht Strasse has not changed its look too much since the German reunification in 1990 However the former Palasthotel near the Liebknecht Bridge has been demolished in 2001 and replaced by the large DomAquaree hotel and office building complex comprising the DDR Museum the AquaDom aquarium and a Sea Life Centre The adjacent apartment blocks and the row of shops below have been steadily refurbished Plans for the reconstruction of the neighbourhood north of Alexanderplatz have been made Name changes16th century Spreegasslein Zimmermannsgasse Am Kramhause Hinter der Badstube17th century Wasserstrasse Bolingsgasse Papenstrasse Heinersdorfer Strasse18th century Kleine Burgstrasse Klandersgasse Papenstrasse Prenzlauer Strasse19th century Kleine Burgstrasse Brauhausstrasse Papenstrasse Prenzlauer Strasse1887 Kaiser Wilhelm Strasse Prenzlauer StrasseJuly 31 1947 Liebknechtstrasse Prenzlauer StrasseSeptember 3 1969 Karl Liebknecht Strasse Rosa Luxemburg StrasseRoute description editKarl Liebknecht Strasse starts at the Schlossbrucke palace bridge on Spree Island as part of the German federal highways B 2 and B 5 On the left lies the Lustgarten while on the right is the Schlossplatz the name of which refers to the old Baroque style Berliner Schloss English Berlin Palace After being demolished by authorities in East Germany following the Second World War the DDR era Palast der Republik was built here in 1976 until it was demolished in 2008 following the Bundestag s decision to rebuild the historically renowned palace The street runs northeast crosses the Liebknechtbrucke leaving Spree Island and meets Spandauer Strasse where the Bundesstrassen turn to the right Karl Liebknecht Strasse continues northeast passing the Fernsehturm and Alexanderplatz through the old Konigsstadt quarter to the border of Mitte borough There at the place of the old Prenzlauer Tor Prenzlau gate it crosses Torstrasse and Mollstrasse and continues as Prenzlauer Allee to the north of the city Buildings edit nbsp Berlin Palace nbsp DomAquaree nbsp St Mary s ChurchAt its start Karl Liebknecht Strasse passes by two of the most prominent sites of Berlin the evangelical Berlin Cathedral Am Lustgarten 1 and the Berlin Palace Schlossplatz 1 which is currently under reconstruction currently projected to be fully completed in 2020 as the Humboldt Forum Numbers 1 to 5 DomAquaree edit The numbers 1 3 and 5 belong to the new DomAquaree building completed in 2003 It houses several restaurants and shops as well as the Radisson SAS Hotel Berlin the Sea Life Centre with the AquaDom aquarium and the GDR museum Number 8 St Mary s Church edit Main article St Mary s Church Berlin At no 8 there is the St Mary s Church St Marienkirche the second oldest church in the centre of Berlin and the oldest one still in use It was first mentioned in 1292 as the church of Berlin s new town right in front of the New Marketplace Nowadays St Mary s is one of three churches of the Evangelical St Mary s amp St Peter s parish which has around 3 100 members Number 13 Berlin Carre edit Number 13 the northernmost part of a Plattenbau apartment block holds the Berlin Carre a shopping mall of about 7 600 square metres 1 9 acres which was built in 1969 to replace the Zentralmarkthalle central market hall at the same place 3 In 2000 the cabaret theatre Sundikat sindicate also found a home in this building Number 29 Pressehaus am Alexanderplatz edit Number 29 is known as Pressehaus am Alexanderplatz home of the Berliner Verlag which publishes the popular Berliner Zeitung daily newspaper The building also houses the Berliner Journalistenschule Berlin journalists school a college for the further education of journalists which has its own radio and TV station 4 Former buildings edit World War II and the subsequent reconstruction of East Berlin as the capital of the German Democratic Republic meant the end for several of Berlin s important and well known buildings The most prominent of course being the Berliner Schloss Berlin Palace It was first built as a castle as early as 1443 under Frederick II Elector of Brandenburg It was largely rebuilt as a palace a hundred years later and became the family seat of the House of Hohenzollern rulers of the Kingdom of Prussia and later of the German Empire The building was demolished in 1950 on the order of the East German government It was replaced by the Palast der Republik which was demolished from 2006 until 2008 after the removal of asbestos Another well known building was the elite school Joachimsthalsches Gymnasium which had moved to the premises of the modern DomAquaree in 1650 after its old building in Joachimsthal had been destroyed in the Thirty Years War The school moved out of the building in 1880 In 1886 the Zentralmarkthalle central market hall opened in two buildings left and right of the street right at the railway tracks It was built to replace the weekly markets at the Neuer Markt new marketplace at the foot of the St Mary s Church which had taken place for several centuries The market hall survived the war but was demolished in 1969 to make room for the current buildings 5 Another part of East Berlin s reconstruction program was the five star Palasthotel palace hotel at Liebknechtbrucke It was built between 1976 and 1979 based on a design by Ferenc Kiss The hotel had 600 rooms with 1 000 beds and a conference hall with about 2 000 seats It was closed for all East German guests as one had to pay in a hard currency instead of the local East German mark In 1992 the hotel was taken over by the Radisson group It was demolished in 2000 to make room for the new DomAquaree which was opened in 2003 6 Public transport editKarl Liebknecht Strasse is serviced by five BVG bus lines with stops at Memhardstrasse Fernsehturm St Mary s Church and at Lustgarten The lines are 100 between Alexanderplatz and Zoologischer Garten 200 between Michelangelostrasse and Zoologischer Garten 248 between Alexanderplatz and Sudkreuz M48 between Alexanderplatz and Busseallee in Zehlendorf and the express bus TXL to Berlin Tegel International Airport The northern part of the street is also serviced by the tram line M2 with stops at Mollstrasse and Memhardstrasse M2 connects Alexanderplatz and Heinersdorf Pankow borough Footnotes edit Kaiser Wilhelm Strasse in Mitte in German Edition Luisenstadt Retrieved 4 April 2014 Liebknechtbrucke Berlin Lexikon in German Edition Luisenstadt 2002 Retrieved 4 April 2014 Berlin Carre in German Archived from the original on 1 July 2008 Retrieved 4 April 2014 Die Schule Journalistenschule der Hauptstadt in German Berliner Journalisten Schule Archived from the original on 24 February 2011 Retrieved 4 April 2014 Neuer Markt Berlin de Berlin in German City of Berlin Archived from the original on 5 April 2014 Retrieved 4 April 2014 Palasthotel Berlin in German DDR Lexikon Retrieved 4 April 2014 52 31 17 N 13 24 26 E 52 52139 N 13 40722 E 52 52139 13 40722 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Karl Liebknecht Strasse amp oldid 1187468572, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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