List of surveys in Berlin
The list of elevations in Berlin shows a selection of natural elevations and artificial landfills (such as mountains of rubble ) in the German state of Berlin - sorted by height in meters above sea level .
The table below shows the surveys and some information about them. In detail these are:
- Name (with geographic coordinates ): Name of the elevation; Colloquial terms are in italics in the table .
- Height : Height in meters above sea level (unless otherwise stated, according to the itemized evidence given in the column header)
- District : District in which the elevation is located
- District : the corresponding district
- Location : further information on the location of the survey
- Origin / remarks : Information on the origin of the survey and further information.
The table sorted by height in the initial view can be sorted by clicking on the symbols next to the column headings. Sorting in the Origin / Comments column allows a separation according to natural and artificial elevations.
Name ( geographic coordinates ) |
Height (m) | district | District | location | Origin / remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Arkenberge (landfill mountain) ( ⊙ ) |
120.7 | Pankow | Blankenfelde | southeast of the garden settlement Arkenberge | artificial, landfill / rubble mountain |
Teufelsberg ( ⊙ ) |
120.1 | Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf | Grunewald | south of the Heerstraße near the Teufelssees | artificial, rubble mountain was considered 114.7 m high until it was remeasured in 2013 |
Great Müggelberg ( ⊙ ) |
114.7 | Treptow-Koepenick | Koepenick | between the Great Müggelsee and Langem See | Naturally |
Ahrensfeld Mountains ( ⊙ ) |
114.5 | Marzahn-Hellersdorf | Marzahn | Wuhletal green corridor | artificial, rubble |
Schäferberg ( ⊙ ) |
103.2 | Steglitz-Zehlendorf | Wannsee | between the Pfaueninsel and the Griebnitzsee | Naturally |
Kienberg (Hellersdorfer Berg) ( ⊙ ) |
102.2 | Marzahn-Hellersdorf | Marzahn | Wuhletal green corridor | artificially |
Drachenberg ( ⊙ ) |
99 | Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf | Grunewald | between the Heerstrasse and the Teufelsberg | artificial, mountain of rubble |
Havelberg (Panzerberg) ( ⊙ ) |
96.9 | Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf | Grunewald | east of the Havelchaussee , approximately at the level of the island of Lindwerder | Naturally |
Stumbling Mountains ( ⊙ ) |
96.6 | Steglitz-Zehlendorf | Wannsee | Naturally | |
Wannsee landfill ( ⊙ ) |
94.8 | Steglitz-Zehlendorf | Wannsee | artificial, garbage dump (Wannsee landfill) |
|
Oderbruchkippe (poplar plateau) ( ⊙ ) |
90.9 | Pankow | Prenzlauer Berg | Volkspark Prenzlauer Berg | artificial, mountain of rubble |
High plateau ( ⊙ ) |
89 | Pankow | Prenzlauer Berg | Volkspark Prenzlauer Berg | artificial, mountain of rubble |
Little Müggelberg ( ⊙ ) |
88.3 | Treptow-Koepenick | Koepenick | between the Great Müggelsee and the Long Lake | of course, the location of the Müggelturm |
(new) Hahneberg ( ⊙ ) |
87.6 | Spandau | Staaken | south of the Heerstrasse | artificial, rubble mountain; Bruno H. Bürgel Observatory |
Village view ( ⊙ ) |
85.6 | Neukölln | Rudow | between Rudow and the Brandenburg villages of Schönefeld , Waßmannsdorf and Großziethen | artificial, mountain of rubble, then landfill |
Lübarser Höhe ( ⊙ ) |
85.3 | Reinickendorf | Lübars | Lübars amusement park | artificial, garbage heap |
Humboldth height ( ⊙ ) |
84.5 | center | Healthy well | in the north of the Humboldthain | artificial, mountain of rubble |
Stener Berg ( ⊙ ) |
83.2 | Pankow | book | Naturally | |
Karlsberg (Willi) ( ⊙ ) |
82.5 | Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf | Grunewald | at the Havelchaussee | Naturally; with Grunewald Tower ( AT ; approx. 180 m west of the summit at 78.5 m height) |
Biesdorfer Höhe ( ⊙ ) |
82.1 | Marzahn-Hellersdorf | Biesdorf | Wuhletal green corridor | artificial, heaps of rubble, rubbish and rubble |
Finkenberg ( ⊙ ) |
81.0 | Steglitz-Zehlendorf | Wannsee | Naturally | |
Big Bunkerberg ( Mont Klamott Ost) ( ⊙ ) |
78.2 | Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg | Friedrichshain | Park Friedrichshain | artificial, mountain of rubble |
Hirschberg ( ⊙ ) |
77.1 | Steglitz-Zehlendorf | Wannsee | artificial, garbage dump (part of the Wannsee landfill) |
|
Alpine summit ( ⊙ ) |
76.7 | Tempelhof-Schöneberg | Marienfelde amusement park in Marienfelde | artificial, garbage heap | |
Insulaner ( Mont Klamott West) ( ⊙ ) |
74.9 | Tempelhof-Schöneberg | Schöneberg | between the Grazer Damm and the route of the Dresden Railway | artificial, mountain of rubble; with Wilhelm Foerster Observatory |
Helleberge ( ⊙ ) |
74.6 | Spandau | Gatow | Naturally | |
Marienhöhe ( ⊙ ) |
73.0 | Tempelhof-Schöneberg | Tempelhof | between the Lindenhof settlement and the Teltow Canal | artificial, pile of rubble on the area of a largely excavated natural elevation (previously 62 m high) |
Rudower Höhe ( ⊙ ) |
70.4 | Neukölln | Rudow | between Rudow and Altglienicke | artificial, mountain of rubble |
Ehrenpfortenberg ( ⊙ ) |
69.0 | Reinickendorf | Reinickendorf | Forst Tegel | Naturally |
Püttberge ( ⊙ ) |
68.2 | Treptow-Koepenick | Rahnsdorf | in the Wilhelmshagen-Woltersdorfer dune train , between Rahnsdorf and Wilhelmshagen | Naturally |
Fichtenberg ( ⊙ ) |
68 | Steglitz-Zehlendorf | Steglitz | between Schloßstraße and the Botanical Garden | Naturally |
Gustav-Meyer-Höhe | 68 | center | Healthy well | in the south of the Humboldthain | artificial, mountain of rubble |
Rixdorfer Höhe ( ⊙ ) |
67.9 | Neukölln | Neukölln | Volkspark Hasenheide | artificial, mountain of rubble |
(old) Hahneberg; → (new) Hahneberg ( ⊙ ) |
67 | Spandau | Staaken | south of the Heerstrasse | Naturally; Fort Hahneberg |
Little Bunker Mountain ( ⊙ ) |
67.0 | Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg | Friedrichshain | Park Friedrichshain | artificial, mountain of rubble |
Rubble mountain Friedrichsfelde ( ⊙ ) |
67.0 | Lichtenberg | Friedrichsfelde | in the northeast of the Tierpark Berlin | artificial, mountain of rubble |
Böttcherberg ( ⊙ ) |
66.4 | Steglitz-Zehlendorf | Wannsee | Park Klein Glienicke | Naturally |
Kreuzberg ( ⊙ ) |
66.1 | Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg | Kreuzberg | Viktoriapark in Kreuzberg 61 | of course, former vineyard; with a national monument for the wars of liberation |
Apolloberg ( ⊙ ) |
65.2 | Reinickendorf | Reinickendorf | Forst Tegel | Naturally |
Hill in the Arkenberge ( ⊙ ) |
64.8 | Pankow | Blankenfelde | north of the garden settlement Arkenberge | of course, partly excavated |
Eichberg ( ⊙ ) |
64.2 | Treptow-Koepenick | Rahnsdorf | in the Wilhelmshagen-Woltersdorfer dune range , near neighboring Woltersdorf | Naturally |
Schlehenberg (Trümmerberg Marienfelde) ( ⊙ ) |
64 | Tempelhof-Schöneberg | Marienfelde | artificial, rubble mountain, northern part of the former location of the Marienfelde radar system | |
Seddinberg ( ⊙ ) |
63 | Treptow-Koepenick | Müggelheim | Naturally | |
Teichberg (until 1871 Deichberg ) ( ⊙ ) |
62.8 | Pankow | Karow | High field | Naturally |
Hill at the water tower square in Prenzlauer Berg (near the former Windmühlenberg ) ( ⊙ ) |
62.3 | Pankow | Prenzlauer Berg | behind the water tower (between Diedenhofer, Belforter and Kolmarer Straße) | Artificially raised former water reservoir on 54 m high natural ridge |
Murellenberg ( ⊙ ) |
62.0 | Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf | West end | Location of Ruhleben | Naturally; with the Berlin Waldbühne on the eastern slope |
Trümmerberg Lichterfelde ( ⊙ ) |
62 | Steglitz-Zehlendorf | Lichterfelde | Jenbacher Weg east of Osdorfer Straße | artificial, mountain of rubble |
Badger Mountain ( ⊙ ) |
61.3 | Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf | Grunewald | Naturally | |
Herzberg ( ⊙ ) |
60 | Lichtenberg | Lichtenberg | at the Großer Herzbergteich on the grounds of the Herzberge Hospital | Naturally |
Fuchsberge ( ⊙ ) |
60 | Spandau | Kladow | west of the village center | Naturally |
Hill (toboggan hill ) in the Volkspark Mariendorf ( ⊙ ) |
59.7 | Tempelhof-Schöneberg | Tempelhof | Mariendorf | Artificially, created 1927–1929 as a garbage dump, after 1950 increased by about 10 m due to rubble. |
Falkenberg (Buntzelberg) ( ⊙ ) |
59.6 | Treptow-Koepenick | Bohnsdorf | about one kilometer northeast of the village center | of course, partly worn away |
Fliegeberg ( ⊙ ) |
59.4 | Steglitz-Zehlendorf | Lichterfelde | Lichterfelde Süd, Schütte-Lanz- / Scheelestrasse | artificial, created by Otto Lilienthal for flight tests |
Rollberg ( ⊙ ) |
58.2 | Pankow | Rosenthal | In the north end west of Blankenfelder Straße | Naturally |
Dählingsberg ( ⊙ ) |
56.6 | Pankow | book | Naturally | |
Mörderberg (Marderberg) ( ⊙ ) |
56.5 | Pankow | Malchow suburb | between Blankenburg and Malchow | Naturally |
Rough Mountains ( ⊙ ) |
56.2 | Steglitz-Zehlendorf | Steglitz | south of Bergstrasse and Insulaner | of course, partly worn away |
Hill (toboggan hill ) in the Volkspark Schönholzer Heide ( ⊙ ) |
55.9 | Pankow | Niederschönhausen | southwest of the junction of Kuckhoff- from Friesenstrasse | artificial (created in 1927 from material obtained during the construction of the subway) |
Rubble mountain (toboggan hill) in Fritz-Schloß-Park ( ⊙ ) |
53.1 | center | Zoo | artificial, mountain of rubble | |
Windmühlenberg ( ⊙ ) |
52.9 | Spandau | Gatow | between the Havel and Gatow | Naturally |
Hill (toboggan hill ) in Volkspark Rehberge ( ⊙ ) |
51.9 | center | Wedding | artificially |
See also
- Land surveys in Berlin statistics
- List of the highest mountains in Germany
- List of the highest mountains in the German states
- List of mountains and ridges in Germany
Web links
Commons : Hills in Berlin - Collection of images, videos and audio files
- Berlin bookmarks: "Mountains" and elevations (small selection of around 140) - sometimes different heights, archived version
- Ulrike Forßbohm: War-End-Möränen. On the monument value of the Berlin rubble mountains . ( Memento from February 21, 2013 in the Internet Archive ; PDF; 14.2 MB) Gray series of the Institute for Urban and Regional Planning, Technical University Berlin, Issue 34, 2011, ISBN 978-3-7983-2343-8 ; see table: Summary information on the individual mountains of rubble on p. 35
References and comments
- ↑ a b Digital topographic map 1: 10,000 (DTK10) , on stadt-berlin.de
- ↑ On the competition for the highest peak in Berlin , in: Der Tagesspiegel , February 24, 2015, p. 15
- ↑ Berlin has a new highlight ( memento from February 25, 2015 in the web archive archive.today ), accessed on February 25, 2015, from rbb-online
- ↑ Teufelsberg , Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf district, accessed on January 24, 2017, from berlin.de
- ↑ Susanne Messmer: Shards, rubble and hovering flies . In: The daily newspaper . August 28, 2018, ISSN 0931-9085 , p. 23 ( taz.de [accessed on August 28, 2018]).
- ↑ remeasurement. Now the Teufelsberg is the biggest . In: Der Tagesspiegel , April 27, 2013
- ↑ Catrin Gottschalk, Surveying Office Treptow-Köpenick: Johann Jacob Baeyer or How high are the Müggelberge really? ( Memento of February 8, 2011 in the Internet Archive ) In: District Office Treptow-Köpenick of Berlin (Ed.): Rathaus Journal Treptow-Köpenick , 11/2006, p. 5.
- ↑ Birgitt Eltzel: One meter is missing to the summit - measurement showed that the Ahrensfeld mountains still do not tower over the Great Müggelberg , accessed on January 24, 2017, on berliner-zeitung.de
- ↑ A “mountain hike” in Berlin - From the Drachenberg via Teufelsberg to Karlsberg , Senate Department for Urban Development, accessed on July 25, 2010, from stadtentwicklung.berlin.de
- ↑ Wannsee landfill , in Berlins Kunstberge ... , accessed on January 24, 2017, on tagesspiegel.de
- ↑ a b Digital topographic map 1: 5,000 (DTK5) , on stadt-berlin.de
- ↑ Lübarser Höhe - summit stone (photo), height of the elevation according to the inscription on the summit stone, on commons.wikimedia.org
- ↑ a b c d e f Berghöhe - various mountains according to an unknown / not researched source
- ↑ a b c d e f g Map services of the Federal Agency for Nature Conservation ( information )
- ^ Map of the state initially Berlin (M 1: 50,000), Königl. Preuss. Landes -aufnahme , 1869, alt-berlin.info ( Memento of the original from December 18, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) 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.
- ↑ a b c d Ulrike Forßbohm: War-End-Möränen. On the monument value of the Berlin rubble mountains . ( Memento from February 21, 2013 in the Internet Archive ; PDF; 14.2 MB) Gray series of the Institute for Urban and Regional Planning, Technical University Berlin, Issue 34, 2011, ISBN 978-3-7983-2343-8 ; see table: Summary information on the individual mountains of rubble on p. 35
- ↑ Digital topographic map M 1: 10,000. Senate Department for Urban Development, December 31, 2006
- ^ Museum Prenzlauer Berg, exhibition on the waterworks, entrance to the library building from Kolmarer Straße. Note: The elevation called Windmühlenberg was behind the Prenzlauer Tor between the later Saarbrücker and Metzer Strasse on the site of the later Bötzow brewery . Even today there is an elevation that clearly towers above the level of the street.
- ↑ Herbert Schwenk: Rattling mills and foamy beer . In: Berlin monthly magazine ( Luisenstädtischer Bildungsverein ) . Issue 12, 1999, ISSN 0944-5560 , p. 14–21 ( luise-berlin.de ).
- ^ Topographical plan of the Prenzlauer Berg district, M 1: 5000, 1997 edition
- ↑ Uwe Prell, Berlin. Stage of change: a travelogue . Berliner Wissenschafts-Verlag, Berlin 2005, ISBN 978-3-8305-1058-1 , p. 75.