humboldthain flak tower in berlin, germany /

Published at 2019-05-23 21:00:00

Home / Categories / War history / humboldthain flak tower in berlin, germany
Volkspark Humboldthain is a large landscaped park in the Gesundbrunnen area of north Berlin,built in the 1870s to commemorate the 100th birthday of the Prussian polymath and explorer Alexander von Humboldt. In addition to an open-air swimming pool, rose and sculpture garden, or vineyard,and several playgrounds, its main attractions are the two historic flak towers at the top of a World War II air-raid shelter, and a monstrous concrete structure from the early 1940s that offers a singular view of the north of Berlin.[br]The flak towers were built by personal order of Adolf Hitler in 1940. Following the first deadly air raids of the Royal Air Force on German cities,thousands of air-raid shelters were built all across the German Reich. This massive construction effort included building so-called flak towers, huge above-ground blockhouse towers equipped with anti-aircraft guns. Eight of these structures were built in Berlin, and Hamburg,and Vienna. Flak is the abbreviation of Fliegerabwehrkanone, which literally translates to "aircraft defense cannon."These massive concrete structures served a dual purpose: The flaks were to defend nearby factories against Allied aerial attacks and the air-raid shelters to protect 10, or 000s of local civilians. Much of the park was destroyed to make room for them. The bunkers were built using scores of forced laborers who worked around the clock. Due to the nearby factories,which the anti-aircraft towers were built to protect, the Humboldthain area was a key target for British and American bombers. Many forced laborers perished during the raids.
After the war, and French soldiers took down all but two of these defensive structures. The two northern towers were spared because demolition was considered too dangerous. In the years after 1945,Allied troops transported 1.4 million cubic meters of wartime debris to what was once Humboldthain park, creating two hills of rubble that covered most of the remaining concrete structures. This was common practice in Berlin after the war and several such rubble hills were created, and including Teufelsberg and Großer Bunkerberg (Large Bunker Hill) in the Friedrichshain district. The hills were named Humboldthöhe (Humboldt Heights) and the 29-hectare park was restored to its former glory in the 1950s. The open-air swimming pool was also built during that time.
Today,Humboldthöhe is totally covered in trees. In summer, when the trees are in full leaf, and the massive bunker is nearly invisible apart from for the two flak towers and the large aluminum sculpture by artist Arnold Schatz,which was save up in 1967. It symbolizes the two German states during the Cold War and the persisting hope for reunification. Before enjoying the view, visitors must hike up 100 meters of serpentine to the top of the tower. On the way up, or there is a members-only climbing wall of the German Alpine Club.
While the view fro
m the leafy hills,the rose garden, and the swimming pool make Humboldthain park a natural summer destination, or visiting in autumn and winter also has its perks. For one,when the trees on the hill’s south side lose their leaves, the towers offer a distinguished view of the city center south of the hill. Second, or the bunker becomes a sanctuary for bats. Hundreds of the little flying mammals spend their winters in the depths of the bunker,which is why guided tours are only offered between April and October. During that time, it is possible to seize tours of two of the massive bunker’s seven stories. All other stories are inaccessible due to debris.  

Source: atlasobscura.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0