Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Paradestraße (Berlin U-Bahn)

Coordinates:52°28′41″N13°23′10″E / 52.47806°N 13.38611°E /52.47806; 13.38611
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Station of the Berlin U-Bahn
The platform at Paradestraße station; the coloured tiles are in the colours of the lines of the Berlin U-Bahn system

Paradestraße is aBerlin U-Bahnstation on theU6 line. It was opened in 1927 asFlughafen (airport) and was the world's first metro station designed to serve an airport (Tempelhof Airport).

History

[edit]

The station opened on 10 September 1927, taking over as the southern terminus of the north-south line fromKreuzberg, nowPlatz der Luftbrücke. It remained the terminus until 1929, when the extension reachedTempelhof.[1] As indicated by its original name, Flughafen, it was intended to provide access toTempelhof Airport. The platform is broad and four of the stairs from it led to a large mezzanine from which two exits led towards the airport, for the use of both passengers andflight show spectators.[2] A pedestrian tunnel connecting directly to the airport terminal building, which at the time lay roughly one kilometer to the east, was planned but never built.[3]

However, the airport was rebuilt in the 1930s, both because it proved too small[4] and because part of Hitler's plan for converting Berlin intoWelthauptstadt Germania was for the main entrance to the airport to be aligned with the triumphal arch on theNorth-South Axis.[5][6] The station was no longer in the correct position and in January 1937 was renamed Paradestraße; the Kreuzberg station became the new connection between the U-Bahn and the airport and was renamed Flughafen.[7][8] The eastern exits at Paradestraße were sealed and the mezzanine reduced in size. TheBerliner Verkehrsbetriebe (Berlin Transport) used the closed-off portion as a shooting gallery.[2][9]

On 28/29 January 1944, there was a direct hit in the ceiling of the platform hall. The ceiling collapses on 29 April 1944, this is the second ceiling opening in this station. The damage to the track and station facilities is now so sustainable that an orderly underground operation is no longer possible even in the longer term. At some stations, the subway can no longer hold or some routes are so destructive that the operation had to be completely shut down.

In 1946 the city planned to rename the station again, to Franz-Werfel-Straße, and even made the change on street maps, but it was never actually changed.[10]

In the early 1990s, one of the two remaining stairways from the street to the station was replaced with a lift, leaving only one exit in case of fire.[2] The station now again has 2 stairways in addition to a lift.[11]

The extension of the line south to Kreuzberg and Flughafen, and later beyond, was originally known as CII. In 1966 it became known as Line 6 and in 1986 asU6.[2]

Design

[edit]

The station was designed byAlfred Grenander and was originally sandy-coloured.[12] Around 1992, it was retiled in small white tiles with multicoloured accents representing the colours of all the Berlin U-Bahn lines, making it one of the most colourful stations in the system.[2]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Die Bahnhöfe der U6Archived 2011-07-19 at theWayback Machine, Untergrundbahn.de(in German)
  2. ^abcdeDer Tempelhofer Abzweig der Nord-Süd-BahnArchived 2011-01-07 at theWayback Machine, Berliner Untergrundbahn.de(in German)
  3. ^Christine Heeb,"A multifaceted monument - the complex heritage of Tempelhof Central Airport", Master of Arts thesis in World Heritage Studies,Brandenburg University of Technology Cottbus, 2007 (pdf), p. 18 states that the planned passenger access tunnel was not built.
  4. ^Heeb, p. 20.
  5. ^Lars Olof Larsson,Die Neugestaltung der Reichshauptstadt: Albert Speers Generalbebauungsplan für Berlin, Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell, 1978,ISBN 91-22-00131-X,p. 24(in German)
  6. ^Heeb, p. 21, "on the north-west edge of the existing site".
  7. ^Frank Schmitz,Flughafen Tempelhof: Berlins Tor zur Welt, Berlin: be.bra, 1997,ISBN 3-930863-32-4,p. 84(in German).
  8. ^Petra Domke and Markus Hoeft,Tunnel, Gräben, Viadukte: 100 Jahre Baugeschichte der Berliner U-Bahn, Berlin: Kulturbild, 1998,ISBN 3-933300-00-2,p. 95(in German)
  9. ^However, according to Heeb, p. 68 and note 37, theNazi regime did not make the new terminal available to the public or include it on maps; throughout World War II the old terminal remained in use as the Berlin central airport and the new buildings were used for exclusively military purposes. The old terminal was destroyed by wartime bombs and the entire airfield was used by the U.S. military after the war, asTempelhof Central Airport.
  10. ^Paradestraße,Die Bahnhöfe der U6Archived 2011-07-19 at theWayback Machine, Untergrundbahn.de
  11. ^Map of station and surroundings,Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe, 14 December 2008(in German) (pdf)
  12. ^Robert Schwandl,Berlin U-Bahn-Album: alle 192 Untergrund- und Hochbahnhöfe in Farbe, Berlin: MetroPlanet, 2002,ISBN 3-936573-01-8,[1](in German)

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toU-Bahnhof Paradestraße (Berlin).

52°28′41″N13°23′10″E / 52.47806°N 13.38611°E /52.47806; 13.38611

Preceding stationBerlin U-BahnFollowing station
Platz der Luftbrücke
towardsAlt-Tegel
U6Tempelhof
U1
U2
U3
U4
U5
U6
U7
U8
U9
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Paradestraße_(Berlin_U-Bahn)&oldid=1296502452"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp