Friedehorst Park

The Friedehorst Park (German: Friedehorstpark), also called the Lehnhof Park (Lehnhofpark), is a green space in the Bremen borough of Burglesum on the border of states of Bremen and Lower Saxony. It is about 9 ha in area.[1] It is home to the highest natural point in the state of Bremen reaching a height of 32.5 m above sea level (NHN).[2] The park, which is open to the public, belongs to the Evangelical Church of Bremen.[1][3]

Friedehorst Park
Lehnhof Park
Typepublic recreation park
LocationBremen
Area9 ha[1]
Operated byEvangelical Church of Bremen
Eminence in Friedehorst Park
Highest point
Elevation32.5 m above sea level (NHN) (107 ft) [2]
Coordinates53°10′39″N 8°40′23″E
Geography
Eminence in Friedehorst Park
In Friedehorst Park on the border between Bremen and Lower Saxony (Germany)
Climbing
Normal routePark path

Geography

Location

Friedehorst Park is in St. Magnus, a suburb of the borough of Burglesum. It borders on the Lower Saxon county of Osterholz – in the east on the parish of Platjenwerbe in the municipality of Ritterhude and in the north and west on Löhnhorst, a village in the municipality of Schwanewede.

Bremen's highest point

At 32.5 m,[2] the highest natural point in Bremen is an eminence in Friedehorst Park near the northern border of Bremen with Lower Saxony.

The top of the rubbish tip in the parish of Hohweg in the Bremen borough of Walle, is higher, being variously reported as 42 m[4] and 49 m.[5]

Protected area

Friedehorst Park and the suburb of Lehnhofsiedlung to the west lie within the fragmented, protected area of "Bremen 1968", which was designated in 1968 and covers over 32.81 km² (CDDA-No. 378515).[6]

History

Friedehorst Park was laid out in about 1875 around the rural estate of Lehnhof, which was owned by the consul general, banker and senator, Theodor Lürmann, probably by Wilhelm Benque, creator of Bürgerpark Bremen and Knoops Park, in a rural style. The manor house, originally a building in the Swiss chalet style, was built in 1888 and replaced in 1904 by a new one in the Neo-Baroque style, which in turn was demolished in the 1930s. The park was originally larger that it is today, having an area of 16 ha. The Stiftung Friedehorst (Friedehorst Foundation) with its buildings is located on the eastern side of the park. To the west of the park the suburb of Lehnhofsiedlung was built in 1950/51.[3]

gollark: Or just make a CC Morse program and run it over some other wireless redstone thing?
gollark: Hmm, I could make BundleNet over Wireless Modem and then run Morse over that, could be fun.
gollark: Venus? Nonsense. Nothing comes from Venus except, er, pain.
gollark: F is after E.
gollark: No, no, you said E.

References

  1. "Umwelt: Parks & Grünflächen: Daten & Fakten". Umwelt.bremen.de (in German). BUISY. Retrieved 2016-01-31.
  2. "Statistisches Jahrbuch 2014" (PDF). Statistik.bremen.de (in German). Statistisches Landesamt Bremen. December 2014. p. 25. Retrieved 2015-12-13. 3,5 MB
  3. Julia Ladebeck (2013-06-02). "Geschichte des Friedehorst-Parks erforscht". Weser-kurier.de (in German). Weser Kurier. Retrieved 2015-12-13.
  4. Caroline Süss (2012-05-24). "Panoramablick und Fakten bei der Bergtour". Weser-kurier.de (in German). Weser Kurier. Retrieved 2015-06-04.
  5. Herbert Farr (2009), [, p. 32, at Google Books Deutschlands höchste Gipfel] Check |url= value (help) (in German), Norderstedt: Books on Demand, pp. 32–35, ISBN 978-3-8370-3316-8
  6. "Schutzgebiete in Deutschland". Geodienste.BFN.de (in German). BfN, BKG. 2011. Retrieved 2015-12-12. Karte
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.