The old railway station of Stuttgart was built
directly adjacent to the old city on the Schloßstraße in 1846. The first
station building, a terminus station, was built by Karl Etzel for the opening
of the Württemberg Central Railway (Zentralbahn), with its two branches
to Ludwigsburg and Esslingen. The building comprised of a station hall, made of
wood, covering the four tracks. To relieve the main station a second station
was planned further north at the junction of the Gäubahn and Nordbahn railways.
Work on this Nordbahnhof (literally
the northern station) was completed in 1893. The new station was located near
the Pragsattel a high ridge between the Stuttgart-basin and the Neckar river
valley.
Between 1894 and 1912 a neighbourhood for railway personnel
(Bahnarbeiter) was built directly
south of the railway station. On a circa 9,5 hectare plot 890 apartments were
constructed in two building campaigns. This so-called Nordbahnhofdorfl (literally: little village by the northern railway
station) is a high density development consisting of a series of Gartenhöfe
(Garden Courts).
The dwellings, designed by the Königliche Hochbausektion (The Royal High-rise Department) are
arranged in large blocks around communal gardens. Originally none of the
apartments had any private outdoor space. The two building campaigns resulted
in 10 such garden courts. At the heart of the neighbourhood a bathhouse was
built in 1911. The whole was developed on a grid plan, that was skewed near the
railway bend in the southeastern corner. The gridlines run almost perfectly
north-south and east-west.
The seven blocks between the Nordbahnhofstraße and the Krollstraße were built in an eclectic style during the 1890s. The apartment buildings were treated as mansion blocks with very ornate brick architecture. Each building stood separate from the others with an ornate gate in between to give residents access to the communal garden. The buildings built in the early 1910s have a distinctly different architecture. These buildings are rendered and the blocks are longer with fewer openings. Sometimes the openings took the shape of wide passages. As a result of heavy bombardments during WW2 a large part of the original buildings were destroyed. New apartment buildings were erected on the old building lines. These postwar buildings are much less detailed and have fewer openings resulting in long and rather boring street facades. In places the colour of the replacement buildings contrasts sharply with the original buildings.
The so-called railway workers village is an urban
neighbourhood. In the original design dullness is prevented by punctuating the
facades with gates and later passages towards the central courtyards. Of the
eastern 20th century section (within the red outline) only a small portion
still stands in its original form; much was rebuilt (indicated by the
hatching).The original part concentrates around the bathhouse (B). Little
public green space is provided, except for a small playground by the bathhouse,
the public gardens in the Mittnachtstraße (M) and the
now built over allotment gardens (A) along the railway.
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