Grimmaische Strasse
Grimmaische Strasse, eastern area, 2015
Former name(s)Grimmaische Gasse
Length333 m (1,093 ft)
LocationLeipzig-Mitte, Leipzig, Germany
Postal code04109
Nearest metro stationLeipzig Markt station of S-Bahn Mitteldeutschland and tram interchange station at Augustusplatz
West endMarkt
East endGoethestrasse / Augustusplatz
Construction
Completioncreated in the middle ages, newly designed 2010

Grimmaische Strasse is a street in Leipzig, borough Leipzig-Mitte, and connects the marketplace with Augustusplatz. It was named in 1839 after the Grimmaischer Tor, the gateway to Grimma, which was first mentioned in 1421.[1][2] Before that it was called Grimmaische Gasse and was the main street of the Grimma quarter (German: Grimmaisches Viertel).[3] Today it is a heavily frequented pedestrian zone in a prime location with department stores, shops, restaurants, hotels, a museum and the university as residents.[4]

Location and description

Location in the urban area

Location of Grimmaische Strasse as a central east-west connection within the inner city ring

Grimmaische Strasse (official street code 01017)[2] is located within the inner city ring and leads from the market, which is seen as the center of the city, in an easterly direction, not completely straight, but slightly curved to the southeast. Seen from the market, it initially runs along the Naschmarkt, which is adjacent to the north. Opposite this on the southern side of the street is a building complex with a system of arcade galleries, including the Mädler Arcade Gallery with Auerbach's cellar. Continuing east, Grimmaische Strasse first crosses an intersection with a street called Neumarkt to the south and Reichsstrasse to the north and then an intersection with Universitätstrasse to the south and Nikolaistrasse to the north. The adjoining eastern part of Grimmaische Strasse is dominated on the south side by the university campus, which was newly built in the mid-2000s. The development is now back on the old building line, which means that the street widening of the 1970s has been reduced by up to 25 m (82.0 ft).[5] In keeping with the character of a commercial street and the development on the north side, there are also shops on the ground floor of the university buildings on the south side. Before reaching Augustusplatz, Ritterstrasse flows in from the north. The junction with Augustusplatz is spatially framed by a new building to replace Café Felsche on the area where the Grimmaische Tor formerly stood. Beyond Augustusplatz, Grimmaische Strasse continues in Grimmaischer Steinweg.

Design of the street space

The road surface was renovated and redesigned in two construction phases from 2007 to 2010, the second construction phase in the east immediately following the university's building construction work.[6] The area in front of the institute building of the Faculty of Economics, which was completed in 2009, was provided with a “stone landscape” with two integrated water features. The design by the treibhaus landschaftsarchitektur office was selected and implemented as part of an expert review process with the participation of a children's jury.[5] There are no other installations in the street, which is designed as a pedestrian zone, apart from the two objects of public art "The Step of the Century" by Wolfgang Mattheuer (1927–2004) in front of the Zeitgeschichtliches Forum Leipzig and "Untimely Contemporaries" by Bernd Göbel (* 1942) near the eastern end of the street.

Public transport

Grimmaische Strasse can be reached by public transport via the tram stops at Augustusplatz in the east and the underground S-Bahn station Markt in the west. There has been no tram running directly on Grimmaische Strasse since 1951.[2]

Development on the north side

Odd house numbers starting from the market

Grimmaische Strasse 1 to 7, Handelshof

The massive structure of the Handelshof was built between 1908 and 1909 as a trade fair palace, extends over an entire street block and, after its renovation in the early 2000s, houses shops and restaurants and, in the part of Salzgäßchen facing away from Grimmaische Strasse, a Steigenberger Grand Hotel.

Reichsstrasse 2 / Grimmaische Strasse, Reichshof

Also completed in 1898 as a trade fair palace, the Reichshof with neo-baroque decor has its address on Reichsstrasse, but was expanded in 1904 to include the property at Grimmaische Strasse 9 to 11 with an Art Nouveau building. Today it is a commercial building with an imposing corner with a lantern structure.

Grimmaische Strasse 13 / 15, Hansa House

Today's Hansa House with its arcade gallery to Specks Hof was also a trade fair palace since the beginning of the 20th century, which was hit by bombs in 1943 and rebuilt in 1958/59 and then again in 1997. It is now a commercial and office building.

Grimmaische Strasse 17, Oriel window of the Fürstenhaus

The oriel window of the old Fürstenhaus (Princely House) from the Saxon Renaissance period was attached as a copy to the new apartment building at Grimmaische Strasse 17 in 1986. The Fürstenhaus, which was destroyed in World War II, was located diagonally opposite on the corner of Grimmaische Strasse and Universitätsstrasse from 1558 to 1943.

Goethestrasse 1 / Grimmaische Strasse, Königsbau

The Königsbau (Royal Building) from the 1910s on the corner of Augustusplatz has the address Goethestrasse 1, but one side is on Grimmaische Strasse. It housed a department store that was set on fire during Kristallnacht in 1938. Today (2023) there is a Targobank branch, shops and offices there.

Development on the south side

Straight house numbers starting from the market

Grimmaische Strasse 2 / 4, Mädler Arcade Gallery

The entrance to the Mädler Arcade Gallery (Mädlerpassage) (1912 to 1914) on Grimmaische Strasse is formed by a round arched portal that extends to the first floor. The building complex was associated with the trade fair in the 20th century before it was extensively renovated from 1995 to 1997 and continued to be used by shops and restaurants, including Auerbachs Keller.

Grimmaische Strasse 6–12, Zentralmessepalast

This building complex between Grimmaischer Strasse and Neumarkt includes not only the building with the high stepped gable in the Renaissance tradition (trade fair palace built from 1912 to 1914, rebuilt from 1996 to 1998), but also house number 6 with the Museum Zeitgeschichtliches Forum, a branch of the Haus der Geschichte (House of the History of the Federal Republic of Germany), which opened in 1999, as well as house number 8 with a sports department store.

Neumarkt 1 / Grimmaische Strasse, Galeria Kaufhof

The department store Galeria Kaufhof, which was newly built on a war-used waste site between 1999 and 2001, has the address Neumarkt 1, but its north side is on Grimmaische Strasse. After the company announced its closure at the beginning of 2023, it remained intact.[7]

Grimmaische Strasse, institute building

For the 600th anniversary of the University of Leipzig in 2009, its inner city campus on Augustusplatz was redesigned. The new institute building of the Faculty of Economics was also rebuilt with a long facade and shops on Grimmaische Strasse.

Augustusplatz 11 / Grimmaische Straße, successor building to Café Felsche

For the Café Felsche (named Café français until 1914), which was destroyed in 1943, a successor building was built from 2008 to 2009, with a café run by the restauranteur Vapiano on the two lower floors[8]

Other

Grimmaische Strasse is part of the annual Leipzig Christmas Market.[9]

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Gina Klank, Gernot Griebsch: Lexikon Leipziger Straßennamen. Verlag im Wissenschaftszentrum, Leipzig 1995, ISBN 3-930433-09-5, p. 89
  2. ^ a b c "Straßenverzeichnis der Stadt Leipzig" (PDF). static.leipzig.de (in German). Retrieved 2023-10-07. "Grimmaische Straße" is at page 1078
  3. ^ Leonhardi, Friedrich Gottlob (2010). Klaus Sohl (ed.). Leipzig um 1800 (in German). Leipzig: Lehmstedt. pp. 40–67. ISBN 978-3-942473-03-3.
  4. ^ City report of the Immobilien-Zeitung without date
  5. ^ a b Petersstraße, in: Stadt Leipzig, Dezernat Stadtentwicklung und Bau (Hrsg.): Leipzig-Innenstadt. Städtebaulicher Denkmalschutz 1994–2017, Beiträge zur Stadtentwicklung (Blaue Reihe), issue 61, no year, p. 50–51 (in German)
  6. ^ "Grimmaische Straße: zweiter Bauabschnitt soll Mitte Oktober fertig sein" (in German). 2008-01-22.
  7. ^ "Schließung abgewendet: Galeria Karstadt Kaufhof bleibt in Leipzig". mdr.de (in German). 2023-03-16. Retrieved 2023-10-14.
  8. ^ "Café Felsche Leipzig. Traditionsstandort". page of the developper MIB AG (in German). Retrieved 2023-10-15.
  9. ^ "Überblick Weihnachtsmarkt". leipzig.de (in German). Retrieved 2023-10-14.

51°20′23″N 12°22′36″E / 51.33982°N 12.37666°E / 51.33982; 12.37666