Noblessner | |
---|---|
Location | |
Country | Estonia |
Location | Põhja-Tallinn |
Coordinates | 59°27′18″N24°44′07″E / 59.455°N 24.73533°E |
Statistics | |
Website noblessner |
Noblessner (also known as Peetri sadam) is a harbour and former industrial area in the northern district of Tallinn, Estonia. Since 2013 it has been redeveloped into a cultural and residential area with a museum, art centre, craft brewery, marina, seafront promenade and cafes and restaurants. [1] [2] [3] [4]
Noblessner's history dates back to 1912 when Emanuel Nobel (nephew of Alfred Nobel) and Arthur Lessner founded the Russian Empire's most important submarine factory. The name "Noblessner" is a fusion of the two men's surnames. [3]
The factory built a total of 12 modern submarines in Noblessner between 1913 and 1917. [5] An order for an additional 20 ocean submarines came in 1916, but due to the 1917 October Revolution, they never started making them. After Estonian independence in 1918 the shipyard started manufacturing smaller vessels instead of submarines. In 1925 the shipyard declared bankruptcy due to the lack of orders, and smaller enterprises also involved in shipbuilding divided the buildings among themselves. The various enterprises merged at the beginning of the Soviet occupation. In 1944–1951 the shipyard operated as Tallinn Marine Factory (Tallinna Meretehas) and it repaired the Baltic Fleet’s minesweepers. Over the following decades, the shipyard was renamed Marine Factory No. 7 and Shipyard No. 7. The company built vessels for the Soviet Navy and repaired whaling vessels and fishing trawlers. In 1991, when Estonia restored its independence, the shipyard became the Tallinn Marine Factory again. The last vessels were built in 2018. [1]
Today, many of the historic industrial buildings in Noblessner have found new life through repurposing and rehabilitation. Constructed primarily in the 1910s, the buildings of Noblessner represent typical industrial design from the era.
The two-story building located at Tööstuse 48 served the administrative needs of the Noblessner factories. Designed by architect V. Sakharov and completed in 1914, it features a number of Art Nouveau elements. [6]
Noblessner’s Ship Systems Workshop, a typical industrial building for its era, operates today as the KAI art center. [7] Constructed in 1916, the building has a unique convex roof with a small triangular roof lamp running along the ridge that allows natural light into the building. [8] Windows punctuate the building’s façade, covering about half of the surface. While the building retains a number of features from its original construction, since 2019 it has focused on showcasing contemporary art and providing a cultural center for everyone in Noblessner to enjoy.
Engineering company Christiani & Nielsen helped design the Noblessner foundry. The building also included a one-story boiler house half-buried the ground, covered with sheet metal, and bridged with concrete arches. The boilers were heated in a workshop and steam was supplied to the smithy furnaces. [9]
In October 2019, Proto invention factory opened the foundry doors as a family-friendly center where people can explore unique inventions and technological innovations. [10] In addition to exhibits, the good acoustics of the space make it well-suited for a variety of cultural events. Since 2009 there have been different orchestra concerts, some of them conducted by Tõnu Kaljuste, and all of Arvo Pärt’s and Heino Eller’s symphonies have been played there. [11]
An example of industrial architecture from the beginning of the 20th century, the foundry chimney belongs to the ensemble of factory buildings. The chimney and its plinth are stacked in red bricks and supported by a traction belt and exterior climbing and resting irons. The upper part of the chimney slopes slightly towards the foundry, with an ornamental peak at the top. The chimney was built between 1914 and 1915 along with the foundry building. As with the foundry, engineering company Christiani & Nielsen contributed to the chimney design. [12]
Architect V. Sakharov designed this building, constructed 1914-1915 as part of the Noblessner submarine factory. The historicist style building has limestone exterior walls and metal truss roof structures. A production building has been built on the north-western façade, and there are two silicate brick building volumes on the south-eastern façade. In 1917, the factory was evacuated and the building was leased to port factories. In the early years of the Republic of Estonia, there was a warehouse here. After that, the building expanded. During the Soviet era, the factory continued to operate. It is currently empty, and in 2007 a new roof was laid on the building. [13]
Constructed along with the rest of the Noblessner factory in 1914-15, this building had the same architect as the Shipyard Assembly Plant, V. Sakharov. It features limestone exterior walls, round windows on the façade, and reinforcements on the sides. [14] In 1917, the factory was evacuated and the building was leased to port factories. From the Soviet era it continued to work. In 2018, the Estonian brewery Põhjala opened its doors in the building as a bar, a restaurant, and also a factory.
On the seafront of the former Noblessner and Peetri Tehas shipyard, near a split railway viaduct, is the factory’s materials warehouse. It is part of the complex of other historic buildings from the same factory. The foundation walls and exterior walls of the historicist-style two-story building are made of solid limestone. No original window frames or exterior doors have been preserved. A light lantern with a metal structure runs on the ridge for almost the entire length of the roof. The interior of the building has a reinforced concrete false ceiling, which is largely bridged by metal beams. The ceiling is supported by metal construction posts. The northern façade of the building features a bronze bas-relief of Adam Johann von Krusenstern (1770-1846). In 2014, the warehouse was renovated into an office building.
The railway viaduct is part of the ensemble of the Noblessner shipyard, and a characteristic example of limestone functionalism. The viaduct is on the service route of the port of the Baltic Railway, built in 1870. It is probable that Sakharov, the main architect for Noblessner shipyard, was also involved in the design of the railway viaduct.
Initially, the width of the viaduct was 3.9 m, the width of the opening was 10.2 m, and the height was 5.01 m. Loads receiving the slope were formed by a monolithic concrete cabinet surrounded by limestone masonry. The cement-mortar-based limestone masonry surrounding the sloping columns gave the viaduct an architectural identity. The masonry that has survived to this day is made of limestone, and the cornerstones have a smooth finish. The limestone retaining walls that secured the earthen cones against the sloping masonry have also been preserved.
The Noblessner viaduct, completed in 2015, is built over the slopes of the old viaduct. The new viaduct has a total width of 15 m, it consists of two 3.25 m wide lanes, a 4.5 m wide light traffic road on the south side and a 2 m wide sidewalk on the north side. The earth cones surrounding the old sloping columns have been removed if necessary for the installation of the new structure. The cones have been replaced by convex gradually converging gabions. The rest of the slope surrounding the viaduct is covered with paving stones. At the bottom of the gabions, the old limestone masonry has been preserved.
In 1997, the railway bridge was repaired according to a project prepared in 1994. During this process, the metal structure of the opening building was replaced with a reinforced concrete structure of the same length. At the time of the reconstruction, the railway line was preserved. By 2011, the railway viaduct had been rebuilt into a light traffic bridge as part of the Culture Kilometer. In 2012, the design of Kalaranna Street was started, in 2015, the Noblessner viaduct was completed. [15]
The power plant was built in 1914-1915. It is a historic-style three-story building with limestone exterior walls. The facades have large rectangular windows with reinforced concrete pavements, the southwest facade has the original high arched windows. There is also a silicate brick staircase and a gallery that connects to the outbuilding. Near the northern corner of the building rises a red brick chimney with an ornamented top. The building was designed by architect V. Sakharov. In 1917, the factory was evacuated and the building was leased to port factories. In Soviet times, it was partly made a canteen. [16]
The building consists of a two-story residential building with a gable roof on the street side and an initially three-story water tower with a volume floor added during the Soviet era.
In 1913, when a submarine factory was planned on this plot, administrators envisaged cooperation of the new plant with the older "Volta" plant across the road. The factory buildings were completed in 1914-1915, and the name of the architect or chief engineer is unknown. In 1917, a large portion of the internal equipment was sent to Russia. During the Republic of Estonia era, the “Noblessner” plot was used by small industries. During the Soviet occupation, the factory was the Tallinn Naval Factory of the USSR Navy. In the 1960s and 1970s, a cubic addition was built on the water tower-residential tower. After the independence of Estonia, the plot of the factory was taken over by AS Tallinna Meretehas, which went bankrupt in 2001. A creative city is now planned for the plot, and the water tower-residential building has been restored. [17]
The modern real estate buildings were built in 2017-2018 by PLUSS architects. The project developers were BLRT Grupp in cooperation with Merko Ehitus; some of the projects are still in process, like Vesilennuki. These residential and commercial buildings are the nearest ones to the sea in Estonia. [18]
Aegviidu is a borough in Anija Parish, Harju County, Estonia, most known for its picturesque surroundings and hiking trails.
Otepää is a town in Valga County, southern Estonia. It is the administrative centre of Otepää Parish. Otepää is a popular skiing resort, popularly known as the "winter capital" of Estonia. During the 2005–2006 season it became the site for FIS Cross-Country World Cup events. Otepää is located the highest of the Estonian cities, up to 152 meters above sea level.
Kopli is a subdistrict of the district of Põhja-Tallinn in Tallinn, the capital of Estonia. It is located on the Kopli Peninsula and is bordered by parts of the Tallinn Bay, the Kopli Bay to the southwest and the Paljassaare Bay to the north. Kopli has a population of 7,240. Kopli's former German name until 1918 was Ziegelskoppel.
Baltic Station is the main railway station in Tallinn, Estonia, and the largest railway station in Estonia. All local commuter, long-distance and international trains depart from the station.
Riisipere is a small borough in the Saue Parish, Harju County, Estonia. Prior to the administrative reform of Estonian local governments in March 2017, Riisipere was the administrative center of Nissi Parish. Located on the Ääsmäe-Haapsalu road, its distance from Tallinn is 45 km, from Haapsalu 50 km, Märjamaa 30 km, Rapla 40 km.
Mihkli is a village in Lääneranna Parish, Pärnu County in southwestern Estonia.
University of Tartu Viljandi Culture Academy is an Estonian institution of higher education, situated in the provincial town of Viljandi, central Estonia. The UT Viljandi Culture Academy merged with the University of Tartu in 2005. The UT VCA has been teaching professional higher education and performing applied research within information science, culture education and creative arts since 1952. The academy has about 700 students, half of whom are open university students. The teaching and instruction are based on the continuity and sustainability of Estonian native culture enriched by new impulses which widen the notion of traditional culture.
Suur Tõll is an Estonian steam-powered icebreaker preserved in the Estonian Maritime Museum in Tallinn. She was originally built for the Russian Empire in 1914 by AG Vulcan in Stettin, Germany, as Tsar Mikhail Feodorovich. In 1917, she was taken over by the Bolsheviks and renamed Volynets. However, in 1918 she was captured by Finland and served as Wäinämöinen until 1922, when she was handed over to Estonia according to the Treaty of Tartu and renamed Suur Tõll. When Estonia was occupied by the Soviet Union in 1940, the icebreaker rejoined the Soviet fleet and was again named Volynets. She remained in service until 1985.
The Tallinn Power Plant is a former power plant located in Tallinn, Estonia. Construction of the power plant was initiated by Volta company and it was decided by the Tallinn City Council in 1912 after the work of special committee established in 1909. The plant was located next to the Tallinn Gas Factory at the location of the former Stuart fortress. The plant was designed by Volta and the architect was Hans Schmidt. Originally it used three Laval-type 250 horsepower (0.19 MW) steam turbines and three 250 horsepower (0.19 MW) electric generators—all produced by Volta. Two coal-fired boilers were manufactured by AS Franz Krull. The power plant was opened on 24 March 1913, and originally it was fired by coal. In 1919–1920 the plant was expanded and transferred to peat and wood. In 1924 the power plant was switched to oil shale. It was the first power plant in the world to employ oil shale as its primary fuel. In 1939, the plant achieved capacity of 22 MW.
Events from the year 1677 in Sweden
Villa Jacoby is a 1920s home in Estonian architecture. It is known for baroque-style windows and influences of expressionism and Estonian traditional architecture. The house is located on Wismari street 11, which is the beginning of the Old Town of Tallinn.
Voldemar Lender was an Estonian engineer who was the mayor of Tallinn from 1906 to 1913, notably being the first ethnic Estonian to become the mayor of Tallinn.
Maarjamäe Palace is a building in Maarjamäe, Tallinn. The palace is located on the area of earlier Maarjamäe summer manor, being its main building. Nowadays, the palace is used by Estonian History Museum.
Tallinn Secondary School of Science is a gymnasium in Tallinn, Estonia.
Reopalu Cemetery is a cemetery in Paide, Estonia.
St. Nicholas Orthodox Church, Tallinn is an Orthodox church in Tallinn, Estonia. The church is named after Saint Nicholas. The church is chosen one of the Estonian cultural monuments being both architectural monument and historical monument.
Saint Magdalene Church, Ruhnu, also known as Ruhnu Wooden Church is a wooden church in Ruhnu Island, Estonia. It is the oldest preserved wooden shrine in Estonia. Architecturally, it is unique in Europe.
Church of St. John's almshouse is a wooden church in Tallinn, Estonia. Since 1999 the building is designated as "architectural monument".
Tallinn Cathedral School is a school in Tallinn, Estonia.
Tallinn Cathedral of the Transfiguration of Our Lord is an Eastern Orthodox church in Tallinn, Estonia. The church is dedicated to the transfiguration of Our Lord (Jesus).