Ski jumping facility in Kanzlersgrund
Ski jumping facility in Kanzlersgrund | |||||||||
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Hans-Renner-Schanze (right) and |
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Location | |||||||||
city | Oberhof , Steinbach-Hallenberg | ||||||||
country | Germany | ||||||||
society | WSV Oberhof 05 | ||||||||
Spectator seats | about 40,000 | ||||||||
Construction year | 1959 to 1961 (K 120) 1983 to 1987 (K 90) |
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Rebuilt | 1979, 1994/95, 2000 , 2013-2015 | ||||||||
Hill record | 147.0 m Anssi Koivuranta 106.0 m Wolfgang Bösl
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Coordinates: 50 ° 41 ′ 48 ″ N , 10 ° 40 ′ 49 ″ E
The ski jumping facility in Kanzlersgrund is a ski jumping facility in a valley called Kanzlersgrund west of Oberhof in Thuringia . It consists of a large ( Hans-Renner -schanze ) and a normal hill ( Rennsteigschanze ). The large hill (built between 1959 and 1961) has a hill size of 140 meters and the normal hill (built between 1983 and 1987) is 100 meters. The Hans-Renner-Schanze was the largest ski jump in the GDRand is one of the largest ski jumps in the world. Both ski jumps can be covered with mats and can therefore also be used in summer, which is used by jumpers from other national teams for training in addition to German ski jumpers .
location
The ski jumps are located about three kilometers southwest of Oberhof on the northwest slope of the 903.8 meter high Schützenberg in the Kanzlersgrund and on the state road 1128 from Oberhof to Steinbach-Hallenberg . The jumps are about 800 meters above sea level, which means that they are relatively snow-reliable in central Germany. Due to their central location in the Thuringian Forest and in the deeply indented Kanzlersgrund, they are relatively prone to fog in winter.
description
The ski jumping facility is a sports facility of the Oberhof performance center of the Olympic Training Center Thuringia , the center of winter sports promotion in Thuringia and is available to top and young athletes from the Bundeswehr sports promotion group stationed in Oberhof and the sports gymnasium . Jump training takes place on it regularly, since the German reunification not only for athletes from the countries of the former Eastern Bloc . Ski jumping World Cups were held regularly on the ski jumping facility until 1998 . In 2006 and 2007 there was still the FIS Grand Prix jumping in the summer . In addition, a Nordic Combined World Cup was held annually until 2010 , with the running competitions being held in the Lotto Thuringia Arena on Rennsteig , about a kilometer away .
Both ski jumps have a hill certificate (hill profile confirmation) that is valid according to the International Ski Competition Rules (§ 414) of the Fédération Internationale de Ski (FIS), which allows competitions with international participation. They are listed at the FIS with the certificate number 52 / GER and 247 / GER . The ski jumping facility consists of two separate ski jumping hills with adjoining landing slopes and a run. They are parallel to each other with a common viewing area. The K-120 large hill has been called Hans-Renner-Schanze since 1998 , named after the former GDR national trainer for ski jumpers and the inventor of plastic mats for ski jumps, Hans Renner (1919-1970). Until then it was only called Schanze am Rennsteig . Another ski jumping facility in Zella-Mehlis, which consists of three smaller jumps, was named after Hans Renner. The K-90 normal hill is called Rennsteigschanze .
The jumps can be used both in winter when there is sufficient snow and in summer with mats. The jumps have three different inrun tracks made of matting, ceramic and ice and separate judges' towers. The landing area of both hills is covered with plastic mats. These are moistened before jumping and therefore have a sliding property similar to that of snow. The starting area made of ceramic or mats is also watered. In winter, when the snow conditions are poor, if it is cold enough, the ski jumps can be covered with snow with snow cannons . The spectator area consists of standing trusses on both sides of the run except for the opposite slope and the street. There is another spectator area on the other side of the street. The standing area is provided with breakwaters . The entire facility offers space for around 40,000 spectators.
The total height difference of the system is 150 meters. The inrun tower of the K 120 is 27 meters high, that of the K 90 is ten meters. A staircase next to the landing slope of the large hill has 632 steps from the run-out area to the inrun tower. 152 steps lead up the inrun tower of the K 120. A single chairlift with 17 chairs from 1960 and 1961 originally served as an ascent aid for ski jumpers . The valley station is located a few meters downhill from the ski jumping facility at 721, the mountain station right at the foot of the inrun tower of the large hill at 849 meters above sea level. The chairlift is 320 meters long, with a difference in altitude of 128 meters. The hourly capacity was 153 people.
history
The first ski jump in Oberhof was built in 1906 and was located on Tambacher Straße. The first ski jump was built on Wadeberg in 1908 with today's youth jump (HS 69). It was completely rebuilt in 1951/52 and covered with matting in 1954. The world's first mat jumping took place on it. In 1928, the Hindenburgschanze (called Thüringenschanze from 1945), a large, competition-compatible ski jump was built on which the Nordic World Ski Championships in 1931 took place. The aging ski jump allowed widths of 70 meters at the end of the 1950s.
Hill construction
The sporting successes of the Army Sports Club (ASK) Vorwärts Oberhof (after the reunification WSV Oberhof 05) prompted the GDR leadership to improve the conditions for competitions and training in Oberhof through various measures. It was to be developed into the leading winter sports center in the GDR. There were the Nordic World Ski Championships in 1962 and the Olympic Winter Games in 1964 , at which medals were to be awarded for the first time in jumping on a large hill. Walter Ulbricht initiated a decision on December 23, 1959 by the Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED) to build a large ski jump. The Kanzlersgrund was chosen as the location after a selection process, taking into account the hillside, snow reliability and susceptibility to wind. At first a flying hill was planned there, but the FIS forbade that.
The ski jump was built from 1959 to 1961. The construction managers were the engineers Dieter Schmidt and Walter Wolf. The entire construction area was largely declared a restricted area. It reached to the Grenzadler and the Falkengraben. The adaptation of the landing area to the given hill profile made extensive earthmoving and blasting work necessary. The earthworks were carried out by forced laborers (prisoners from the Untermaßfeld prison) who were housed in a camp at the exit of the Falkengraben, about one kilometer down from the ski jump construction site. The prisoners worked in a demarcated area and were guarded by armed law enforcement officers with dogs. The camp later became a recreational property, which fell into disrepair in the 1990s. The inrun tower with two lounges for the athletes and the seven-storey referee tower were built using reinforced concrete . This made it possible to reduce the cross-section of the towers towards the base, creating a curved, elegant construction. The judges' tower rises to 28 meters, with the top two floors being designed as glazed pulpits. The foundation is nine meters deep in the ground.
On January 9, 1962, the P-90 system, which complies with the FIS standards, was inaugurated by Alfred Brettschneider from Zella-Mehlis . The start of the landing zone, the P point, is 90 meters. The K point was also 90 meters and referred to the steepest area of the landing slope with a slope of more than 39 degrees. From this point on, the run flattened until it merged into the opposite slope. In contrast to today's jumps, P-point and K-point were identical. The long run-out zone allowed widths of over 110 meters. This made the large ski jump in Kanzlersgrund the fourth largest ski jump in the world after the flying hills in Planica , Oberstdorf and Bad Mitterndorf . The largest ski jump in the GDR up until then, the Aschbergschanze , inaugurated in 1959 , allowed widths of up to 100 meters. Walter Ulbricht ordered that only jumpers from the GDR were allowed to jump on the new large hill in Oberhof until the Olympic Winter Games in 1964 . In January 1964, the Freie Wort with the headline "Well a Hundred - Backen" wrote, among other things, in detail about the technical data:
“A large jumping hill was built in the Kanzlersgrund near Oberhof, which is currently unparalleled anywhere in the world. The construction time was three years. [...] The critical point is 90 m. Jumps of around 115 m are possible. The run-up track is 117.4 m long, with the first part being exceptionally steep - 38 degrees. (With conventional jumps, the inrun slope is 30 to 35 degrees). This relatively steep approach made it possible to keep the approach route as short as possible for the intended widths and to keep the approach tower low, "only" 28 m high. When jumping, the jumper reaches a speed of approx. 100 km / h. The ratio of the height (where the jumper releases from the take-off table) to the level (where he jumps up) is extremely favorable: 0.55. This low ratio enables a trajectory close to the profile, so that it is extremely safe to jump on this hill despite the large distances. After all, the landing slope has a slope of 39.5 degrees. […] The population actively helped with the construction of the ski jump. A total of 54 824 NAW hours were worked.
On February 23, 1964 the time has come: On the occasion of the German championships in the Nordic disciplines, the ski jumping hill will be ceremoniously consecrated and officially handed over with the 2nd competition in the special jumping event. "
inauguration
The first official records were set at the 15th GDR ski championships in the Nordic ski disciplines in February 1964, in which Dieter Neuendorf and Dieter Bokeloh , both from Brotterode, each jumped 111.5 meters. The ski championships began on February 21st in front of around 30,000 spectators with the first competition. GDR champion of the special jumpers was on February 23, 1964 in front of over 40,000 spectators Veit Keuert from Zella-Mehlis. Manfred Ewald , President of the German Gymnastics and Sports Federation (DTSB) ceremoniously named the ski jump Schanze am Rennsteig before the second round .
The first international Oberhof ski games took place in 1965 , with the jumping competitions being held on the hill at Rennsteig. From then on, the ski games were held every two years, the last time in 1989. The double world champions Bjørn Wirkola and Lars Grini from Norway took part in the second International Oberhof Ski Games in 1967 . Dieter Scharf from Oberwiesenthal set a new hill record at the GDR Ski Championships in 1968 with 114.5 meters. Around a year later, Jürgen Dommerich from Zella-Mehlis improved the record by 1.5 meters to 116.0 meters in the final test competition for the upcoming World Cup in the High Tatras .
In 1979, the ski jump in Oberhof was the first large hill in the world to be covered with plastic mattings. This was intended to improve preparation for the 1980 Winter Olympics . Holger Greiner-Petter from Neuhaus bei Suhl completed the first jump on August 6, 1979 in front of 2000 spectators. He came to a distance of 97 meters. A day later, the top jumpers of the GDR, who had previously trained in Oberwiesenthal, came to Oberhof for a test jumping. Jochen Danneberg from Brotterode came the furthest with 110 meters. In the 1980s there was an annual international mat jumping event on the hill . In 1984 Klaus Ostwald from Klingenthal set a hill record with 127 meters, which was set in the following years by Dieter Thoma from Hinterzarten , Andreas Felder from Austria and Ralph Gebstedt from Oberhof, before Jaroslav Sakala from the Czech Republic beat him with 130.5 meters in 1995.
Second hill
On November 3, 1980, Rudolf Hellmann , head of the sports department at the Central Committee of the SED, presented Secretary General Erich Honecker with a list of the most important sports buildings for 1980 to 1985. This envisaged the construction of a 70-meter hill with measuring and objectification devices for Oberhof. This should also be suitable for international competitions. The 70-meter specification also refers to the beginning of the landing area. The later K point is 90 meters. In addition to the large hill, another normal hill was built between 1984 and 1987 with great effort. Due to the favorable natural terrain profile, this does not have a towering inrun tower with a tower shaft. The approach structure was placed directly on the site as a building, with level access from behind. From this level a staircase leads to the individual starting hatches of the approach area. One floor below the entrance there is a heated lounge for about twenty people and two toilets.
Considerations to build the hill on the other side of the large hill, where the natural terrain had been considered more favorable, had to be discarded because otherwise the judges' tower of the large hill would have had to give way. With the presence of a normal and a large hill at one location, the training conditions should be optimized. The normal hill serves mainly as a training hill and replaced the Thuringian hill (K 82), which was demolished after nobody saw themselves in a position to maintain the complex structure that was no longer needed for jumping. With its equipment, the 70 meter hill was one of the most modern facilities in the world. The ceramic elements for the inrun track were developed in 1987 in Sonneberg and used for the first time on the normal hill. A few years later the K 120 also got a ceramic inrun track. The normal hill was also provided with an icy inrun track. The same company that produced the cooling system for the Oberhof luge track built the icing system with the pump house behind the ski jump.
In 1986 the K-point of the large hill was changed to 116 meters after a new measurement of the profile. Previously, the K point was 115 meters. A World Cup planned on the large hill in January 1989 had to be held on the normal hill due to bad weather conditions. For this purpose, the city used rented trucks to bring 250 loads of snow from the 982.9 meter high Beerberg 15 kilometers away . Thanks to these snow reserves, jumping runs could be carried out in front of around 35,000 spectators over two days. The winners were Ole Gunnar Fidjestøl from Norway and Jens Weißflog from Oberwiesenthal. In 1990, the profile of the large hill was changed, with the K point increasing to 120 meters. In 1991 and 1995 , two more World Cup competitions took place on the large hill, each in front of around 40,000 spectators. Dieter Thoma won in 1991 and Mika Laitinen from Finland in 1995. Until 1994, when the Mühlenkopfschanze near Willingen was enlarged to K 120 for the 1995 Ski Jumping World Cup, it was the only K-120 hill in Germany. In 1993, 1995 and 1996 B-World Cups of the Nordic Combined took place on the normal hill.
Conversions
When the large hill was rebuilt in 1994 and 1995, the upper part of the landing slope was adapted to the natural slope profile by means of a wooden construction with an insulating layer, the ski jumping hill was covered with new mats and the landing area in the K-point area from 18.5 to 22, 8 meters wider. The adaptation and widening of the slope profile was necessary due to the V-style and the resulting changing trajectories and greater achievable distances. The landing area changed, which allowed greater distances, but the K-point remained unchanged. As a result of the renovation, the height of the take-off was reduced from 5.2 to 3.3 meters, which meant a lower flight path over the slope. The start-up area has also been changed. The total inrun length was reduced by more than ten meters while the lowest starting position was lowered by around three meters. This changed the average projected jump speed by about five to 92 kilometers per hour . In September 1995 the large hill was reopened as the most modern plastic covered hill in the world. In 1996 an FIS Grand Prix competition took place there. Until 1996 it was the largest plastic covered hill in the world. The Rukatunturi ski jump in Kuusamo , Finland , which was enlarged in 1996, is now larger with a hill size (called jury width until 2004) of 142 meters. A planned World Cup competition on the large hill in December 1997 was canceled due to a temperature increase of ten degrees Celsius and the snow that slipped off the landing slope at night. In December 1998 the last World Cup competition for special jumpers took place in front of around 40,000 spectators, which again had to struggle with difficult weather conditions. There was heavy fog, wind and rain, so that only one passage could take place. The winner was Andreas Widhölzl from Austria ahead of Martin Schmitt . The top jumpers at the time criticized the organizers for poor preparation. This criticism damaged the image of the hill.
In May 1999 the FIS withdrew its certificate from the ski jump because the landing slope was too steep at 39.2 degrees (35 to 38 degrees were allowed). As a result, the jumpers landed from a great height and the pressure was too high. The cost of converting the ski jump was estimated at one million German marks. Discussions about a possible closure of the Olympic base in Oberhof arose, and no large hill would have been required. The hill record at that time was 134.5 meters, held by Noriaki Kasai from Japan . On October 22, 1999, a change was finally included in the 2000 budget of the federal government, the state of Thuringia, the district of Schmalkalden-Meiningen and the municipality of Oberhof. In the meantime, the German Ski Association (DSV) had given top priority to the renovation of the hill, as it was the only large hill in Germany with plastic mattings. Due to the lack of an FIS certificate, the German ski jumpers could only do their summer jumping training on a large hill this year abroad. At a local meeting with representatives of the Federal Ministry of the Interior and the DSV as well as regional and local politicians, the renovation costs were estimated at 1.3 million euros. No earthworks were necessary to adjust the slope to the FIS standards, only a change in the wooden structure. The work was carried out in 2000 and the hill was reopened in summer 2000. The flatter and longer landing profile allowed jumps of over 140 meters. The construction point (K-point) of the jump remained the same at 120 meters, but the jury's distance, the size of a jump and the predecessor of the hill size (HS) increased from 133 to 138 meters.
As the facility became increasingly dilapidated, there was no more Nordic Combined World Cup in Oberhof after the 2009/2010 season . In November 2011 it was therefore decided to convert the plant over the next two years. In the years 2013–2015 the normal hill was replaced by a new building and the hill size increased from 96 to 100. In addition, the large hill was renovated and the landing hill was merged. The construction project was implemented from 2013 to 2015 with 7 million euros in funding. The building has a basement made of reinforced concrete on which there is a three-storey, tower-like wooden structure.
Between 2015 and 2016, a new double chair lift followed for around two million euros to replace the single chair lift. In 2017, the Thuringian Winter Sports Center Association had the trainer and judge tower of the normal hill, which can be used for both hills, rebuilt.
Competitions
In 2000 and 2002, the Nordic Combined Summer Grand Prix took place. In 2001 a ski jumping Continental Cup was held on mats on the large hill . The event was hosted by the Dutch Ski Association , which organized an international ski jumping competition for the first time in its 74-year history. A Nordic Combined World Cup has been held on the hill at the end of December since 2002 . Around 10,000 spectators are regularly present at this competition, the highest number of spectators in the World Cup. The winners so far have been Felix Gottwald from Austria ( 2002 ), Ronny Ackermann from Dermbach ( 2003 ), Hannu Manninen from Finland ( 2004 and 2005 ), Magnus Moan from Norway ( 2007 and 2008 ) and Anssi Koivuranta from Finland (also 2008). Hannu Manninen from Finland and Johnny Spillane from the United States won in 2010 . From 2002 to 2005 the competition took place as part of the Warsteiner Grand Prix Germany (WGP).
In 2007 Oberhof jumped into the Ski Jumping Continental Cup for Brotterode. Two jumping competitions took place on the normal hill which could not be held on the Inselbergschanze due to lack of snow. David Kreiner from Austria won a summer Grand Prix of the Nordic Combined in August 2007 . In 2006 and 2007 FIS Grand Prix jumping took place with the Polish winners Adam Małysz and Kamil Stoch .
The hill record on the K 120 is held by the Finnish Nordic combined athlete Anssi Koivuranta at 147 meters, set up at the World Cup on December 30, 2005. The video distance measurement was not sufficient for this jump, so that the distance judges had to be involved in the landing slope. The hill record on the K 90 is 106 meters, held by the German Wolfgang Bösl , from 2014. The hill records on mats are 143 meters, held by Tobias Bogner from 2006 and 101 meters and by Philipp Blaurock from 2014 .
Hill data
Hill profile
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Hill records
Hill records on the Hans-Renner-Schanze since the reopening in 1964 (selection).
- 111.5 meters - Dieter Neuendorf (February 1964)
- 111.5 meters - Dieter Bokeloh (February 1964)
- 114.0 meters - Peter Lesser (February 1968)
- 114.5 meters - Dieter Scharf (March 3, 1968)
- 116.0 meters - Jürgen Dommerich (December 21, 1969)
- 119.0 meters - Jochen Danneberg (January 25, 1976)
- 121.0 meters - Klaus Ostwald (January 15, 1978)
- 121.0 meters - Holger Freitag (February 8, 1981)
- 124.0 meters - Axel Zitzmann (February 22, 1981)
- 127.0 meters - Klaus Ostwald (1984)
- 127.0 meters - Andreas Felder (January 12, 1991)
- 127.0 meters - Ralph Gebstedt
- 130.5 meters - Jaroslav Sakala (December 27, 1995)
- 130.5 meters - Christof Duffner (December 27, 1995)
- 137.0 meters - Ronny Ackermann (December 29, 2003)
- 138.5 meters - Christoph Bieler (2005)
- 138.5 meters - Anssi Koivuranta (December 30, 2005)
- 139.5 meters - Christoph Bieler (December 30, 2005)
- 147.0 meters - Anssi Koivuranta (December 30, 2005)
Hill records on the Rennsteigschanze (selection).
- Klaus Ostwald (March 2, 1984) 96.0 meters -
- Jens Weißflog (1993) 97.5 meters -
- Hansjörg Jäkle (1996) 98.0 meters -
- Nick Callmann 98.5 meters -
- 100.0 meters - Jens Deimel (2004)
- 106.0 meters - Wolfgang Bösl (2014)
FIS competitions
All jumping competitions organized by the FIS are named.
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b Homologated ski jumps. (PDF file: 0.2 MB) (No longer available online.) International Ski Association, December 8, 2008, formerly in the original ; Retrieved December 22, 2008 . ( Page no longer available , search in web archives ) Info: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ a b c Thuringian Land Surveying Office (ed.): Oberhof and surroundings. 1: 25,000. Erfurt 2002. ISBN 3-86140-183-5 .
- ↑ Sports promotion group Oberhof: Medal forge with tradition. Federal Ministry of Defense, July 10, 2008, accessed on December 22, 2008 .
- ↑ Oberhof sports high school. (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on January 7, 2012 ; Retrieved December 22, 2008 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ Volume III - Common Provisions Ski Jumping - Ski Flying. (PDF file: 0.4 MB) (No longer available online.) In: Internationale Skiwettkampfordnung. International Ski Federation, 2004, archived from the original on September 29, 2007 ; Retrieved December 22, 2008 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ Downloads: hill profile. (No longer available online.) Thuringian Winter Sports Center Oberhof, 2004, archived from the original on January 1, 2009 ; Retrieved February 25, 2009 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ^ Christoph Strutz: Ski jumping facilities in Thuringia. (PDF file: 0.1 MB) (No longer available online.) Thuringian Ski Association, March 22, 2007, archived from the original on October 29, 2007 ; Retrieved December 25, 2008 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ Schanze on Rennsteig / Schanze in Kanzlersgrund. (No longer available online.) Oberhof, formerly in the original ; Retrieved December 22, 2008 . ( Page no longer available , search in web archives ) Info: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ Oberhof / Kanzlersgrund. Lift-World.info, accessed on December 22, 2008 .
- ^ Jan Knapp et al: 100 years of winter sports in Oberhof.
- ↑ Gerd Falkner : Chronicle of skiing in the German Democratic Republic. P. 59.
- ↑ a b c d Rolf Hackel: Oberhof - From the Johanniter hospice to the city on the Rennsteig. P. 151.
- ^ Roland Singer: Chronicle of Thuringian Ski Sports. P. 139.
- ↑ Jenaer Zeitschrift re-examines forced labor in the GDR , Ostthüringer Zeitung , January 27, 2015
- ^ Preservation of monuments in Westphalia-Lippe. (PDF file: 3.5 MB) Westphalian Monument Preservation Office, 2006, p. 42 , accessed on December 22, 2008 .
- ↑ Gerd Falkner: Chronicle of skiing in the German Democratic Republic. P. 67.
- ↑ 100 years of the Thuringian Winter Sports Association 1905–2005. (PDF file: 3.2 MB) Thuringian Ski Association, p. 14 , accessed on December 22, 2008 .
- ↑ Mirko Schult: The "Asch" - Large Aschbergschanze. (No longer available online.) February 2006, p. 14 , archived from the original on May 3, 2005 ; Retrieved December 26, 2008 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ Gerd Falkner: Chronicle of skiing in the German Democratic Republic. P. 70.
- ^ Roland Singer: Chronicle of Thuringian Ski Sports. P. 137.
- ↑ a b Roland Singer: Chronicle of Thuringian Ski Sports. P. 61.
- ↑ Neues Deutschland , edition of December 22, 1969, p. 7
- ↑ a b c 100 years of the Thuringian Winter Sports Association 1905–2005. (PDF file: 3.2 MB) Thuringian Ski Association, p. 22 , accessed on December 22, 2008 .
- ↑ a b Gerd Falkner: Chronicle of skiing in the German Democratic Republic. P. 113.
- ↑ a b c Rolf Hackel: Oberhof - From the hospice of the Johanniter to the city on the Rennsteig. P. 193.
- ^ Rolf Hackel: Oberhof - From the hospice of the Johanniter to the city on the Rennsteig. P. 198.
- ^ Rolf Hackel: Oberhof - From the hospice of the Johanniter to the city on the Rennsteig. P. 199.
- ↑ Schanze on Rennsteig / Schanze in Kanzlersgrund. (No longer available online.) Oberhof, archived from the original on December 17, 2006 ; Retrieved December 22, 2008 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ The normal and large hill in Oberhof will be modernized
- ↑ A shot in the millions for Oberhofer Schanzen Thüringer Allgemeine, December 27, 2012, accessed on February 18, 2014.
- ↑ 5th sports report of the Thuringian state government for the reporting period 2014 to 2018, p. 130
- ↑ Premiere in Oberhof. Skispringen.com, accessed December 23, 2008 .
- ↑ Internationaler Ski Association (publisher): Oberhof - Schanze am Rennsteig K 120. In: Schanzenprofil confirmation number 52 / GER 41. 2006.
- ↑ Internationaler Skiverband (Ed.): Oberhof - Rennsteigschanze K 90. In: Schanzenprofil confirmation number 49 / GER 247. 2006.
- ↑ Neues Deutschland , edition of March 4, 1968, p. 7
- ↑ Neues Deutschland , edition of January 26, 1976, p. 7
- ↑ Neues Deutschland , edition of January 16, 1978, p. 7
- ↑ Neues Deutschland , edition of February 9, 1981, p. 7
- ↑ Neues Deutschland , edition of February 23, 1981, p. 7
- ↑ Neues Deutschland , edition from 3./4. March 1984, p. 15
- ↑ Oberhof - Ski Jumping. International Ski Federation, accessed on August 27, 2012 (English).
- ^ Oberhof - Nordic Combined. International Ski Federation, accessed December 24, 2008 .
literature
- Wolfgang Fritzsche: Oberhof: History - Landscape - Tips - Hikes . 2nd Edition. Verlag Grünes Herz, Ilmenau 2005, ISBN 3-935621-29-9 .
- Dr. Gerd Falkner: Chronicle of skiing in the German Democratic Republic . Ed .: German Ski Association. Self-published, 2000.
- Roland Singer: Chronicle of Thuringian Ski Sports . Ed .: Thuringian Wintersport Association and Suhler Verlagsgesellschaft mbH. Suhl-Druck GmbH, Suhl 1995.
- Rolf Hackel: Oberhof: From the Johanniter hospice to the city on Rennsteig; History and landscape Oberhof - a center of winter sports, hiking in the heart of the Thuringian Forest . In: Cities and municipalities in Thuringia . Heinrich-Jung-Verlagsgesellschaft mbH ( i.G. ), Ilmenau 1993, ISBN 3-929164-12-4 .
- Jan Knapp among others: 100 years of winter sports in Oberhof . Ed .: Wintersportverein Oberhof 05. Bauer and Malsch GmbH.
- WinterSportVerein Oberhof 05 e. V. (Hrsg.): Oberhof magazine - winter sports has a name . Suhl print.
See also
Web links
- Ski jumping facility in Kanzlersgrund on Skisprungschanzen.com
- Results on the FIS website (English)
- Ski jumping facility in Kanzlersgrund. In: Structurae
- Winter sports center Oberhof
- Oberhof
- Sports facilities of the city of Oberhof