Killesbergpark
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The Killesbergpark (Höhenpark Killesberg) is an urban public park of half a square kilometre (123 acres) in Stuttgart, Germany. It is just north of the state capital, and borders the city's fairgrounds. The park dates back to the horticultural show of 1939. Before the show, a large area of the park had been a quarry. It was transformed into a park with exhibition sites for the show, and has remained, hosting horticultural events on a regular basis, including the Bundesgartenschau and the IGA.
Every July the park hosts the popular Licherfest Stuttgart. Thousands of latterns are placed around the park, decorating the park for a variety of family activities throughout. After dark, there is a fireworks show accompanied by music. Visitors often bring blankets to sit on for the show.
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[edit] Killesberg railway
Since its opening, the park has been home to the 381-millimetre (15-inch) narrow-gauge Killesberg railway. In the summer months, visitors can see two diesel and two steam locomotives, which have been fixtures in the park since 1950. The horticultural show of 1939 saw the opening of the railway, when two borrowed steam engines from Leipzig traversed a short stretch of track. During World War II, the steam engines were returned to Leipzig for use there. New locomotives were purchased, and today there are two diesel and two steam engines in use.
[edit] Other features
From the 1950s until the 1980s there was a chair lift for visitors to enjoy views of the fairgrounds and parklands. On the area's highest point stands an observation tower built by civil engineer Joerg Schlaich in 2000. It does not have a lift; visitors reach the top by way of platforms suspended by cables.
The twenty-metre high Bismarck tower stands one kilometre south-west of the exhibition halls. It was built on the Gaehkopf, the highest point in northern Stuttgart, giving good views of Stuttgart itself and in all directions. It was one of many towers built to commemorate Otto von Bismarck. The building of over 410 Bismarck towers world-wide was planned, and 238 were actually built. The building of the tower was begun in 1902 by the students of the technical university in Stuttgart. The Stuttgart Bismarck tower was opened on 16 July 1904. In 2004, for its 100th anniversary, it was comprehensively renovated.
[edit] Surroundings
- Near the Bismarck tower is the Theodor Heuss house, the house of the first German Federal President, which has been converted into a museum.
- An open-air swimming pool borders the fairground buildings to the north.
- To the southwest lies the Weissenhof Settlement of 1927, a protected monument, exhibiting "the dwelling" as initiated by the German work federation.
[edit] External links
- Killesberg
- Killesberg.de
- Killesberg as part of Stuttgart's Green U
- Stuttgart.de
- Die Parkeisenbahn von 1939
- Killesberg Tower
- Aussichtsturm Killesberg: Technische Daten
- Bismarck Tower Stuttgart
- Licherfest-Stuttgart