Neustadt, Hamburg


Neustadt is one of the inner-city districts of the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg, Germany.

History

By 1529, Hamburg was firmly anchored in Lutheran Reformation and had successfully managed to divert its trade away from the Baltic to more dynamic markets along the Atlantic. Hamburg's economy boomed, between 1526 and 1551 the state budget tripled, and the Hanseatic city had become a major trade and capital market. Meanwhile, persecution of Protestants in the Low Countries, other parts of Germany, Portugal, Spain and various other parts of Europe caused an immense influx of religious refugees into Hamburg. Between 1500 and 1600, the population of Hamburg tripled to 40,000, surpassing Lübeck as largest German port city.
In advance of the Thirty Years' War, the Hamburg Senate commissioned Dutch military engineer Johan van Valckenburgh to strengthen the city's defenses. The new Hamburg Ramparts were also meant to meet demand for additional space to be within the city. When completed in 1626, the ramparts enclosed all of Altstadt, plus an almost equally large area west of it: the so-called Neustadt.
Neustadt was laid out in a mostly rectangular street grid, though not much of that is recognizable today. Additionally, three principal streets connected the old town east of the Alster River with the two new city-gates out west. Each of these three streets was given a market square at half distance: Gänsemarkt in the northern Neustadt, Schaarmarkt in the southern Neustadt, and Großneumarkt in the very center. The northern Neustadt around Gänsemarkt became a quarter of the wealthy and well-off citizens. Later this area also developed into Hamburg's opera district, the area around Jungfernstieg eventually developed into an elegant shopping district. In contrast, many parts of the southern Neustadt became shady quarters of the port's workers. Up until the late 19th and early 20th century, Neustadt was famous for its many "Gängeviertel": quarters with narrow alleys. In 1893 Neustadt was ravaged by a Cholera epidemic. Due to continuing, unsustainable hygienic conditions, by the 1960s most of the Gängeviertel were demolished.

Geography

Neustadt is bordered by Binnenalster and Alster to the East, Elbe to the South, and the former Wallanlagen to the West and North-west; among those: Planten un Blomen. Except for the blocks around Fleetinsel and the Alster's canals in the eastern part of the district, most of Neustadt lies on a geest slope above the Elbe. Districts bordering Neustadt are : St. Pauli, Rotherbaum, Altstadt and HafenCity.
and Port; visible in the background are construction cranes in HafenCity.

Subdivisions

For statistical and planning purposes, Neustadt has four designated localities and quarters ; however not recognized as administrative subdivisions.
MapLocalityQuarterDescription
104Südliche Neustadt
Southern Neustadt
Residential district, in parts also mixed use centered around St. Michaelis and located between Elbe and Ludwig-Erhard-Straße; includes the Portugiesenviertel
105Nördliche Neustadt
Northern Neustadt
Mixed use district located between Ludwig-Erhard-Straße and Kaiser-Wilhelm-Straße; includes Großneumarkt and the Composers Quarter.
106Nördliche Neustadt
Northern Neustadt
Fleetinsel and adjoining blocks
107Opern-QuartierTheater and shopping district - including Colonnaden street - nestled between Gänsemarkt, the Binnenalster at Neuer Jungfernstieg and Ring 1 along Planten un Blomen near Stephansplatz. Named after the Hamburg State Opera.
107PassagenviertelShopping district stretching from Jungfernstieg and the Binnenalster to Stadthausbrücke, bordered by Alsterfleet and Gänsemarkt. Named after the many shopping passages.

Streets and squares

On its western and north-western borders, Neustadt is encircled by "Ring 1", an 1880s-built ring road continuing into Altstadt. Ludwig-Erhard-Straße is a 1960s-built thoroughfare and part of Bundesstraße 4, crossing Neustadt midway from East to West.
Other notable streets are most of the shopping streets around Jungfernstieg and Gänsemarkt, and a couple of streets between St. Michaelis and the Elbe's embankment at Baumwall and Vorsetzen. Important squares in Neustadt include Johannes-Brahms-Platz, Gänsemarkt, Großneumarkt, Millerntorplatz, Schaarmarkt, Sievekingplatz, Stephansplatz, and Zeughausmarkt.

Culture

Landmarks and cultural heritage

Like neighboring Altstadt, Neustadt is packed with landmarks and cultural heritage.
The single most important landmark in Neustadt is the Church of St. Michaelis, one of Hamburg's five Lutheran main-churches. St. Michaelis became Neustadt's Lutheran parish in 1647, however only granted political rights in 1677, and permitted as college to the city's parliament in 1685. Other notable churches in Neustadt include four Nordic missions to seafarers: the Danish Seamen's Church Abroad, the Finnish Seamen's Mission, the Norwegian Church Abroad, and the Church of Sweden Abroad, and the Anglican Church of England.
Up until the late 19th and early 20th century, Neustadt was famous for its many "Gängeviertel": quarters with narrow alleys. However, due to unsustainable hygienic conditions, by the 1960s most of them were demolished. The Krameramtsstuben are one of a few preserved examples of that time. At Rademachergang stands a fountain, dedicated to Hans Hummel, a former water carrier and one of Hamburg's beloved "Original".
The Alsterarkaden is an open arcade, spanning some 200 m along the entire North-west side of Kleine Alster. Designed by Alexis de Chateauneuf and built in the year after the Great Fire, it was one of the first buildings in the redeveloped urban ensemble between Jungfernstieg and Rathausmarkt. Today they are center of the Passagenviertel.
The Hanseatic Supreme Court was founded in 1879 as the common supreme court of the three Hanseatic and republican city-states of Bremen, Hamburg and Lübeck. The courthouse at Wallanlagen was built between 1907 and 1912.

Museums and cultural institutions