Wiesbaden-Rheingauviertel

Rheingauviertel, Holler Born is a local district of the Hessian capital Wiesbaden.

As a residential neighborhood in the southwest of the state capital, it was largely between 1902 and 1908 in the style of historicism.

As Wiesbaden at the time of the Empire, and especially around the turn of the century in 1900 its heyday as a world spa, the emperor every year in May was at the spa and the city had the most millionaires in Germany, there was rapid population growth (of approximately 33,000 inhabitants in 1870 to approximately 109,000 inhabitants in 1910 ). This made extensive urban expansion necessary. In addition to the eastern and northern extensive villa areas are mainly a mostly four-story gated residential development around the ring road (Kaiser - Friedrich-Ring and Bismarckring ), which called in a quarter circle from the south railway station to north-west Sedanplatz around the historic center of the city, was Historical pentagon led. In the south, here was the poet district, in the northwest, the commander district and between the Rheingau district.

Relevant proportion of its design had the city architect Felix Genzmer, who worked in Wiesbaden from 1881 to 1903. The richly decorated town houses have arisen mainly in the style of historicism and housed for the most part citizens stately homes with 3,50 m high ceilings, moldings and double doors and often had large proportions of up to 200 m². In later years, these homes were often divided for the sake of better rentability into smaller units.

Today live in the Rheingau district mainly students and young families with superior educational level and middle income countries.

The core area of the Rheingau district is bounded on the north by the Dotzheimer street, on the east by the Kaiser- Friedrich-Ring, which is part of the ring road, in the south of the Schiersteiner road and to the west by Lorelei and Konrad- Adenauer-Ring, with the administrative Rheingauviertel also extends west of it, but here has more modern buildings. Southwest of the Niederwald Road ( between Carlsbad and place Schiersteiner road ) there is also more modern buildings from the 1960s. Most roads are constructed as avenues and usually have small front gardens facing the street.

A landmark on the edge of the core area is the construction worker monument.

The cath. church " St. Andreas " in the Rheingau district

The Lutheran Church ring forms the northeastern conclusion of the Rheingau district

Owes its name to the quarter of the naming of its streets. These are all named after places in the Rheingau:

In the core area of the district are:

  • Eltviller road
  • Erbacher Straße
  • Hallgarter road
  • Johannisberger road
  • Kiedricher road
  • Loreleiring
  • Marco Brunner Road
  • Niederwald Road
  • Oestricher road, lower part
  • Rauenthaler road
  • Rüdesheim road
  • Wall Street banks and Wall -side pitches
  • Winkel road

Outside the core area are:

  • Assmann Straße
  • Eibinger road
  • Geisenheim road
  • Hattenheimer road
  • Kaub road
  • Lorch street
  • Marienthal street
  • Mittelheimer road
  • Oestricher street, upper part

Holler Born is an old field name and is composed of the terms Holler for elder and born for source together.

Town council election results Wiesbaden-Rheingauviertel/Hollerborn

Since 1972 is at the same time, but regardless of chosen with the elections to the Wiesbaden city council of town council Wiesbaden-Rheingauviertel/Hollerborn ( indicated in the table in percent).

The distribution of seats in the town council Wiesbaden-Rheingauviertel/Hollerborn looks then as follows ( until 1997 the five-percent hurdle):

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