In 1905 Hans
Kampfmeyer in association with likeminded individuals founds the Karlruhe
chapter of the German Garden City Society (Deutschen
Gartenstadtgesellschaft). Their aim is to envelop the existing city with a
necklace of new garden city inspired suburbs. Together with the more famous
Gartenstadt Hellerau near Dresden, Gartenstadt Rüppurr is one of the oldest
examples of a garden village in Germany based on the core principles of
communal ownership of land, buildings and society. In 1910 12 hectares of land,
east of the village of Rüppurr near the railway line linking Karlsruhe with Bad
Herrenalb, are acquired by the society. With the purchase an option to buy an
additional 64 hectares is also agreed.
Building work commences immediately and in 1911 42
buildings with almost 100 dwellings are completed. The garden village is added
on to in later years in several building phases. The layout of the streets
incorporates older routes and thus ties in the new garden village with the
neighbouring historic village of Rüppurr on the westside of the railway. The
development of the garden village also leads to an expansion of the historic
village first towards the garden village and later further south near a railway
station. The site for the new garden village was carefully selected to be near
an important thoroughfare and near the Albtalbahn
which already had a station Klein-Rüppurr
further north near the site of the former castle on the Alb river. In 1924 a
new halt was opened called Gartenstadt
(Garden City) halfway between the two older halts. All the streets are named
after flowers, with the exception of the oldest streets (Blütenweg, Heckenweg and Im Grün).
The garden village was built in small building
campaigns of a few streets at a time between 1910 and 1965. Although in name a
garden city (the literal translation of Gartenstadt) the plan was always to
develop a garden village on the site. The plans included allotment gardens (A),
a school (S) and a community hall (C), but both were never built. Their
respective reservation were developed with low blocks of flats from the late
1950s. Next to the garden village a hospital (H) was built during the 1930s.The
houses destroyed by bombs in 1944 were replaced with blocks of flats.
Originally the garden village was planned with
detached and semidetached houses with some short terraces of three to six houses,
all according to Unwinesque principles. After 1912 the focus shifts towards
providing more housing units per hectare. So at the end of phase one and
especially in phase two longer terraces are introduced. In the third phase of
development blocks of flats are introduced next to long terraces. The 1930s
addition are a return to semidetached housing and short rows fitting in with
the ideology of the National Socialists at the time. After WW2 gaps are filled
with more blocks of flats. In 1990 meadows to the north are developed. This
development phase is the only one that doesn't fit in with the rest of the
buildings in the garden village. It is remarkable how every phase has delivered
buildings with their own characteristics that in all make for a coherent urban
landscape, setting Gartenstadt Rüppurr apart from other suburban developments
around it.
The historic situation forms the basis for the layout
of the garden village. In 1900 the small village of Rüppurr sits on the higher
banks of the river Alb with the railway running directly east of the village.
In 1920 the garden village starts to take shape on the other side of the
railway. The close on the old lane follows the underlying parcelling of the
fields. In 12912 an extra street has been laid out following older dirt roads.
In 1915 work starts on expanding the garden village with new curved streets and
the central square that links it to the neighbouring old village. The
Waldstraße (Woodland Road) forms the southern limit of the development. In 1927
permission is granted to expand the garden village beyond the Waldstraße and
north of the Holderweg towards the allotments. The Waldstraße is renamed
Hedwigstraße and changed into a walkway linking the back passages and providing
a separate route towards where the community hall was planned. In 1938 a new
square forms the endpoint of the central street. The Dahlienweg (Dahlia Road)
that was planned to run parallel to the other streets was bayoneted in a rather
odd way to go around the reservation for a school. The layout of streets is
basically a repeated reworking of the underlying pattern.
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