Schlossbrücke

Schlossbrücke is a bridge in the central Mitte district of Berlin, Germany. Built between 1821 and 1824 according to plans designed by Karl Friedrich Schinkel, it was named after the nearby City Palace (Stadtschloss). The bridge marks the eastern end of the Unter den Linden boulevard.[1]

Schlossbrücke
Schlossbrücke
Coordinates52.5176°N 13.3986°E / 52.5176; 13.3986
CarriesUnter den Linden
LocaleMitte, Berlin
Named forCity Palace
Characteristics
MaterialSandstone
History
DesignerKarl Friedrich Schinkel
Opened1824

History

A bridge at the site, leading across the Spree canal, already existed in the 15th century, when Berlin emerged as the residence of the Brandenburg margraves. The Hohenzollern rulers passed it, when they left their Stadtschloss residence for hunting in the Tiergarten grounds. Then called Hundebrücke, after the accompanying packs of dogs, the pile bridge was rebuilt in 1738 and later served Napoleon's troops as a direct route into the city centre.

Schlossbrücke and City Palace, about 1900

In the early 19th century, the wooden bridge was considered inadequate by King Frederick William III of Prussia, who ordered a new prestigious construction and commissioned his court architect Karl Friedrich Schinkel. First studies and drafts date from 1819; construction started two years later, then part of a general project to refurbish the whole area on Unter den Linden between Spree and present-day Bebelplatz. From the new arch bridge built of sandstone, the broad Unter den Linden boulevard ran in a direct line to the western city limits at Brandenburg Gate. Schinkel also had the adjacent Lustgarten premises in the east restored and designed the nearby Neue Wache to commemorate the veterans of the Napoleonic Wars. On 29 November 1823, during the marriage of Crown Prince Frederick William IV with Princess Elisabeth Ludovika of Bavaria, large crowds thronged across the yet uncompleted construction and 22 people drowned falling into the river. The bridge was opened to the traffic in Summer 1824.

Again enlarged in 1912 and equipped with a reinforced concrete structure in the 1920s, the bridge suffered only minor damage in World War II. In 1951 the East German authorities renamed it Marx-Engels-Brücke, along with the adjacent Marx-Engels-Platz (present-day Schloßplatz). Its original name was restored on 3 October 1991, one year after German reunification.

Statues

Statues erected on the bridge include:

gollark: ... because if people don't have intuition for the thing, they may just do badly at it and complain?
gollark: Initially.
gollark: They presumably want to teach things which people have more intuition for.
gollark: It's not just that.
gollark: See, as optical systems are invertible, instead of having the orbital mind control laser transfer control instructions from a GTech™ control cuboid to someone's brain, they can equivalently just transfer control instructions from someone's brain to a temporarily created simulated mind, which can have its instructions read out and then be destroyed.

References

  1. "Schlossbrücke / State of Berlin". Stadtentwicklung.berlin.de. Retrieved 2 August 2017.
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