Pariser Platz

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Pariser Platz with the Brandenburg Gate
Pariser Platz with the Brandenburg Gate
The Brandenburg Gate in 1871 with decorations and downcasting Prussian troops after the Franco-Prussian War
The Brandenburg Gate in 1871 with decorations and downcasting Prussian troops after the Franco-Prussian War
Pariser Platz in 1982
Pariser Platz in 1982
Pariser Platz with the new Adlon Hotel
Pariser Platz with the new Adlon Hotel
The new French Embassy to Germany
The new French Embassy to Germany

Pariser Platz is a square in the center of Berlin, Germany, situated by the Brandenburg Gate at the end of the Unter den Linden. The square is named after the French capital Paris in honour of the Allied occupation of Paris in 1814, and is one of the main focal points of the city.

Contents

[edit] History

Pariser Platz is the square immediately behind the Brandenburg Gate when approaching the centre of Berlin from the Tiergarten in the west. The neo-classical Brandenburg Gate was completed in the early 1790s by Carl Gotthard Langhans. Until 1814 the square was known simply as Viereck (the Square). In March 1814, when Prussian troops along with the other Allies captured Paris after the overthrow of Napoleon, it was renamed Pariser Platz to mark this triumph.

The Brandenburg Gate was the main gate in the western side of the customs wall that surrounded the city in the eighteenth century, and the Pariser Platz is at the west end of the avenue of Unter den Linden, the ceremonial axis of the city, down which the victorious troops of all regimes from the Hohenzollerns to the German Democratic Republic have marched in triumph.

Before World War II, Pariser Platz was the grandest square in Berlin, flanked by the American and French embassies, the finest hotel (the Adlon Hotel), the Academy of the Arts, and several blocks of apartments and offices.

During the last years of World War II, all of the buildings around the square were turned to rubble by air raids and heavy artillery bombardment. The only structure left standing in the ruins of Pariser Platz was the Brandenburg Gate, which was restored by the East Berlin and West Berlin governments. After the war and especially with the construction of the Berlin Wall, the square was laid waste and became part of the death zone dividing the city.

When the city was reunited in 1990, there was broad consensus that the Pariser Platz should be made into a fine urban space again. The embassies would move back, the hotel and arts academy would be reinstated, and prestigious firms would be encouraged to build round the square. Under the rules of reconstruction, eaves heights had to be 22 meters, and buildings had to have a proper termination against the sky. Stone cladding was to be used as far as possible. Interpretations of these constraints, however, have varied to a great extent.

[edit] Buildings on Pariser Platz

The following is a partial list of buildings and structres on Pariser Platz, working counter clockwise from the Brandenburg Gate:

  • Brandenburg Gate
  • Haus Sommer, used by Commerzbank
  • U.S. Embassy
  • Palais Wrangel, used by DZ Bank
  • Academy of Art Berlin
  • Hotel Adlon
  • French Embassy
  • Eugen-Gutmann-Haus, used by Dresdner Bank
  • Palais am Pariser Platz
  • Haus Liebermann
  • Kennedy-Museum

The new British Embassy is next to the Hotel Adlon, but does not front directly onto Pariser Platz itself.

[edit] Noted residents

[edit] Transport

The square has an U-Bahn station of the same name in planning.

[edit] References

  • In Pariser Platz - design and construction of town square in Berlin, Germany, by Anne Vyne, in The Architectural Review, No. 1, 1999.

[edit] External links

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Coordinates: 52°30′59″N, 13°22′44″E