Hammerbrook () is a quarter ( Stadtteil) in the Hamburg-Mitte borough of the Hamburg in Germany. In 2020, the population was 5,069.
In 1840 the British engineer William Lindley proposed fully draining the area and using it for housing. After the Great Fire of Hamburg destroyed a third of the city in 1842, his plan was adopted: a grid of canals were dug, providing agricultural irrigation and also connecting the two rivers, and streets were then laid out, also on a grid pattern. Debris from the fire was used to raise the land. The district was rapidly populated as more people were displaced by slum clearance and the building of new public buildings in the decades after the fire; the new Hamburg-Bergedorf railway connected the area to the city. The population continued to grow as further slum clearance took place in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. , elected from the district in 1901, was the first Socialist member of the Hamburg Parliament. In 1910 there were 60,000 inhabitants in Hammerbrook and surrounding areas, 40,000 within the borders of the modern quarter, they had themselves become overcrowded and unsanitary, and Hammerbrook was nicknamed Jammerbrook (Wailing Brook). In 1939 there were more than 27,000 inhabitants.
In the Operation Gomorrah air raids Hammerbrook was the most completely destroyed section of Hamburg.Brunswig, p. 423. The epicentre of the firestorm of 27–28 July 1943 was on Ausschläger Weg.Jefferies, p. 117. 36% of the residents of the district were killed, and the part west of Heidenkampsweg, which had been more than 90% destroyed, was initially closed off as a 'no-go zone' to prevent further injuries from falling masonry. After the raids a survey found fewer than 100 people still living in the area. See also photographs, pp. xxiv–xxv. A memorial to the Operation Gomorrah victims in Hammerbrook was erected in 1993.
After the war Hammerbrook's population remained small. The Hamburg U-Bahn line to Rothenburgsort, which had been destroyed, was not rebuilt. The city set aside the now largely open area for commercial uses, but businesses built office blocks. In the 1980s one section was successfully advertised as an area for offices under the name City Süd (South City).
In 1999 there were 410 households, out of which 10.5% had children under the age of 18 living with them and 63.4% of all households were made up of individuals. The average household size was 1.62.Source: Statistical office of Hamburg and Schleswig-Holstein (1999)
Geography
Demographics
Politics
2020 34,0 % 23,5 % 16,1 % 6,9 % 5,2 % 3,0 % 11,4 % 2015 22,2 % 26,3 % 21,3 % 7,3 % 3,4 % 4,2 % 15,3 % 2011 22,5 % 35,4 % 27,6 % 9,3 % 4,4 % – 15,4 % 2008 21,1 % 36,3 % 10,6 % 20,3 % 5,4 % – 5,7 % 2004 35,1 % 25,5 % – 26,9 % 3,8 % – 8,7 %
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