North of medieval Leipzig there was the Pfaffendorf
folwark and in front of the
Halle Gate there was a craftsmen's settlement that had been built for the
tanners since the 12th century and used the water of the Parthe, from which the tanners' quarter developed from 1540 onwards, through which the trader's route
Via Imperii ran. In 1797, the place was called
Hallesche Vorstadt (after the city of
Halle (Saale)) and the number of inhabitants was 1.114. From 1886 onwards, development began with the parcelling out of the Löhr's, now Keil's, garden, and thus much later than in the other vorstadts. Until about 1900, it reached as far as Nordplatz, After the
Royal Saxon Army had given up its parade ground south of Gohlis, further building land was available up to the northern boundary of the field, on which mainly villas were built. In the southern part of the Nordvorstadt, on the Tröndlinring and its surroundings, numerous representative buildings were erected from the mid-1880s onwards, such as the Neue Börse (1887, destroyed in the war in 1943), the Hotel Fürstenhof (1890), the Reformed Church (1899) through the conversion of the Löhr House, the
Congress Hall (1900), the Municipal Pawnshop (1913, today the tax office), the Hotel Astoria (1914) and the Stadtbad (1916). The Nordvorstadt, together with the
Waldstraßenviertel, was a focus of the Jewish population in Leipzig. The area around Nordplatz was popularly known as
"Jüdische Schweiz" (lit.: Jewish Switzerland). The poorest of them even lived above the horse stables in Gerberstrasse. Opposite, the Japanese
Kajima Corporation built the 27-storey
Interhotel Merkur (now
The Westin Leipzig) between 1979 and 1981. with the
Sparkasse Leipzig headquarters and, until 2008, the Landesbank Sachsen (subsequently a branch of the
Landesbank Baden-Württemberg). In 1996, the
combined cycle power plant Kraftwerk Nord went into operation on the former gasworks site, where Leipzig's first power plant had also been built in 1893. In the adjacent industrial park, a mosque association operated the al-Rahman mosque in a prefabricated building from 1998 to 2025 before it moved to Rackwitzer Strasse. On the former Robotron site with its square plot between Gerberstraßss and Nordstrasse, the new headquarters of the state-owned
Development Bank of Saxony was completed in 2021. The five-storey building has an L-shaped floor plan. In the south and east of the property, tall columns made of exposed concrete form a forest of columns. The property is open and can be traversed. LE Fuerstenhof.jpg|Hotel Fürstenhof (2008) Michaeliskirche Leipzig cropped.jpg|Michaeliskirche (St. Michael's Church) (2010) Kongresshalle Zoo Leipzig.jpg|
Kongreßhalle Leipzig (2009) Leipzig Westin.jpg|
The Westin Leipzig (2010) Lzg. Löhrs Carré 1.jpg|Löhrs Carré (2020) Waermekraftwerk nord.jpg|Kraftwerk Nord (2008) Sächsische Aufbaubank Säulengarten.jpg|
Sächsische Aufbaubank, forest of columns (2021) == New urban quarters on former railway sites ==