List of bridges in Berlin / IJ

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Explanation

  • (Sample bridge ) = in brackets : unnamed bridges.
  • Sample bridge = in italics : former bridges. (See in detail: Structure of the lists )


I.

photography Name of the bridge District Remarks location
Ihnestraßenbrücke Berlin.JPG Ihnestrasse Bridge Dahlem The Ihnestraßenbrücke spans the section of the U3 subway line at Harnack House . The crossing of the streets Saargemünder Straße / Brümmerstraße and Ihnestraße / Kehler Weg is on the bridge. Like Ihnestrasse, the bridge is named after the architect and court builder Ernst von Ihne . cards
Inselbruecke Berlin-Mitte 3.JPG Island bridge center The Inselbrücke is a road bridge that has existed since the 17th century in the course of the Inselstrasse over the western Spree arm, which is the first bridge on the Spree Island in the direction of the current. It is located in the catchment area of ​​the historic Berlin harbor. Today's stone vaulted bridge dates from 1912–1913, built according to plans by Ludwig Hoffmann and city planner Friedrich Krause, and is a listed building . On July 19, 1994, the name of the Inselbrücke (number 44670) was changed to "Inselbrücke (Spree Canal)" (17003) in the official register. cards

J

photography Name of the bridge District Remarks location
Jannowitzbruecke Berlin.jpg Jannowitz Bridge center The bridge connects Alexanderstraße over the Spree with Brückenstraße. The first Jannowitz Bridge was built in 1822 with the help of a bridge-building stock company founded by the Berlin cotton manufacturer Christian August Jannowitz as a Jochbrücke . From 1881 to 1883 a new, 17 meter wide and 83 meter long three-arched iron truss bridge was built. From 1927 it was dismantled for the construction of today's underground line 8 and from 1930 to 1932 a new iron girder bridge was built. The new construction was blown up at the end of the Second World War. Today's fourth Jannowitz Bridge was not completed until 1954. It is located directly on the Berlin Stadtbahn and forms the western border of the area of ​​the Mediaspree investor project , which extends in the east to the Elsenbrücke . (Named by announcement of May 8, 1825) cards

Joachim Tiburtius Bridge PA190019.JPG

Joachim Tiburtius Bridge Steglitz The bridge, named after the Berlin politician Joachim Tiburtius , leads the extended former A 104 over the A 103 and Schloßstraße in the Steglitz district . It was built in 1971 and completely renovated in 1992/93 for around DM 9 million. The bridge is now 76.11 m long, 14 m wide and has a bridge area of ​​1065 m². A distinctive feature of the bridge is the directly attached 46-meter-high Bierpinsel tower, which was built according to a design by the architect couple Ralf Schüler and Ursulina Schüler-Witte . The bridge was placed under monument protection as an ensemble together with the former Bierpinsel tower restaurant and the Schloßstraße underground station at the beginning of 2017 . This is justified with the slightly futuristic character that is typical of the time. cards
Juliusturmbrücke.JPG Juliusturmbrücke Spandau The Juliusturmbrücke is a steel girder bridge. It was created between 1937 and 1939, when the wooden Berliner Tor Bridge, built in 1924, was moved north to the former Berliner Chaussee . After the street leading over it was renamed Am Juliusturm , the building was given its current name.

The 104 m long bridge leads the street Am Juliusturm over the Havel south of the Spandau lock .
Technical parameters: The bridge is located at kilometer 0.31 of the Havel-Oder waterway and has an average passage height of 4.45 m.

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Opening of the Berlin Julius-Leber-Brücke station with the first train in the direction of the city center on May 2, 2008

Red Island22.JPG
Julius-Leber-Bridge Schöneberg The road bridge leads the Kolonnenstraße over the cut of the Berlin-Potsdamer-Bahn, in which today only the tracks of the Berlin North-South S-Bahn lie, and forms a west exit of the Red Island, which is surrounded by track systems . Erected in the 1870s as a flyover of Colonnenstrasse over the Berlin-Potsdam-Magdeburg Railway , it was named Sedan Bridge when it was rebuilt in 1892 from welded iron .

In 1937, at the same time as the renovation work for the north-south S-Bahn, the bridge was widened to the south by a new building. This bridge is now the northern carriageway; In 1955 there was another extension to the south. With the new construction of the Julius-Leber-Brücke S-Bahn station , which opened in 2008, the bridge got a walkway on the north side and two access stairs and two barrier-free elevators from the bridge to the two platforms.

Today the bridge bears the name of the Reichstag deputy and resistance fighter Julius Leber , who was executed in 1945 and worked as a coal trader in the resistance on the Red Island during the war years.

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Berlin Jungfernbruecke S.jpg Maiden Bridge center The Jungfernbrücke is the oldest surviving bridge in the city and at the same time the only one of the previous nine identical bascule bridges. It spans the Spreearm Kupfergraben and connects the streets Friedrichsgracht and Unterwasserstraße. cards
Jungfernsteg, 1914 Jungfernsteg Charlottenburg-North The former pedestrian walkway spanned the Berlin-Spandau shipping canal to the northwest of the Westhafen and Seestrasse . It connected Saatwinkler Damm with the north bank at the level of today's Plötzensee correctional facility . The footbridge pictured was from the beginning of the 20th century and replaced a previous wooden footbridge from 1895 soon after its completion. There is no replacement building at this point today. cards


Literature and web links

See list of bridges in Berlin

Individual evidence

  1. Entry in the Berlin State Monument List with further information
  2. ↑ Bridge database Senate Department for Urban Development; Retrieved December 21, 2009
  3. The beer brush becomes a monument. In: Der Tagesspiegel . January 28, 2017, accessed January 31, 2017 .
  4. ^ Announcements from the Berlin History Association , 1979–1983, p. 119.
  5. You can go over 11 bridges in Spandau over the Havel , at www.unterwegs-in-spandau.de; accessed on October 10, 2018.
  6. ↑ Clearance heights and widths on (Berlin) bridges at www.wasserstraßenamt-berlin.de; accessed on October 10, 2018.
  7. Michael Braun: North-South S Bahn - 75 years of underground railways. Berliner S-Bahn-Museum (Ed.), GVE-Verlag, Berlin 2008, ISBN 978-3-89218-112-5 , Chapter: The train stations on Kolonnenstrasse . (PDF; 1.8 MB)