place

MS Bleichen

1958 shipsCommons category link is locally definedIMO numbersMMSI NumberMuseum ships in Germany
Ships built in Rendsburg
Bleichen IMO 5046281 G Hamburg 07 09 2020 (1)
Bleichen IMO 5046281 G Hamburg 07 09 2020 (1)

MS Bleichen is a museum ship in the port of Hamburg, which has its berth in the Hansa port on Bremer Kai in front of Shed 50. The ship, built in 1958, is a breakbulk cargo carrier of its time and is located in front of the listed general cargo storage shed used by the port museum.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article MS Bleichen (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

MS Bleichen
Australiastraße, Hamburg Kleiner Grasbrook

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address External links Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: MS BleichenContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.52937 ° E 9.998661 °
placeShow on map

Address

BLEICHEN

Australiastraße
20457 Hamburg, Kleiner Grasbrook
Germany
mapOpen on Google Maps

linkWikiData (Q883560)
linkOpenStreetMap (432980656)

Bleichen IMO 5046281 G Hamburg 07 09 2020 (1)
Bleichen IMO 5046281 G Hamburg 07 09 2020 (1)
Share experience

Nearby Places

HafenCity
HafenCity

HafenCity (German pronunciation: [ˈhaːfn̩ˌsɪtiː] (listen)) is a quarter in the borough of Hamburg-Mitte, Hamburg, Germany, Europe. It is located on the Elbe river island Grasbrook, on the former Port of Hamburg area. It was formally established in 2008 and also includes the historical Speicherstadt area, which since 2015 is an UNESCO World Heritage Site with the adjacent Kontorhausviertel. The main landmark of the HafenCity is the Elbphilharmonie concert hall. In a narrower sense, HafenCity Hamburg is a project of urban regeneration where the "Grosser Grasbrook" area of the former Hamburg free port is being revitalised with new hotels, shops, office buildings, and residential areas. The project is considered the largest urban redevelopment project in Europe by landmass (approximately 2.2 square kilometres (220 ha)). With the decreased economic importance of free ports in an era of European Union free trade, large container ships, and increased border security, the Hamburg free port was reduced in size, relieving the current HafenCity area from its restrictions. The ground-breaking ceremony was held on 20 June 2001, with the first quarter called "Am Dalmannkai/Sandtorkai" -next to the Elbphilharmonie- completed in 2009. When completely developed, the HafenCity area will be home to about 12,000 people and the workplace of 40,000 people. The prospect for completion is not tied down, but will probably be between 2025 and 2030.