Kleiner Tiergarten

Kleiner Tiergarten
Type Urban park
Location Moabit, Berlin
Coordinates 52°31′32″N 13°20′46″E / 52.52556°N 13.34611°E / 52.52556; 13.34611Coordinates: 52°31′32″N 13°20′46″E / 52.52556°N 13.34611°E / 52.52556; 13.34611
Area 7 hectares (17 acres)
Created 1655
Open Open year-round

Kleiner Tiergarten ("Small Tiergarten") is a park in Moabit, Berlin, Germany.

Location

The park is located in Moabit, a division of Mitte, the central borough of Berlin. It is bounded to the north by Turmstraße, Alt-Moabit to the south, Ottostraße to the west, and Wilsnacker Straße to the east. Stromstraße and Thusnelda-Allee pass through the park from north to south, as does line U9 of the Berlin U-Bahn; the subway station Turmstraße is also located adjacent from the park.

History

The park was once part of a much larger communally-administered forest area Jungfernheide. Frederick William, Elector of Brandenburg annexed it as a counterpart to the much larger Großer Tiergarten as the city of Berlin grew and usurped the former hunting grounds. Since 1655, the park has been referred to as the Kleiner Tiergarten. In the year 1790, the park was replanted; further redesign took place in 1835 in connection with the newly-built St. John's Church (Berlin) designed by Karl Friedrich Schinkel. After the city of Berlin took over the administration of the area in 1876, landscape architect and horticultural director Johann Heinrich Gustav Meyer redesigned the park to contain benches, lanterns, and a spring. The Heilandskirche was constructed from 1892-1894, designed by Friedrich Schulze facing Thusnelda-Allee.

Kleiner Tiergarten as seen from above at dusk

The park was heavily damaged during World War 2 and was redesigned in 1960 by landscape architect Wilhelm Alverdes. Alverdes included the adjacent Ottopark in the plans and included a playground for children.

Further reading

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kleiner Tiergarten.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/13/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.