Pinnow lock
Pinnow lock | ||
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Pinnow lock |
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location | ||
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Coordinates | 52 ° 43 ′ 0 ″ N , 13 ° 14 ′ 17 ″ E | |
Country: | Germany / Brandenburg | |
Place: | Pinnow | |
Waters: | Oranienburger Kanal OrK | |
Water kilometers : | km 22.60 | |
Data | ||
Owner: | Federation | |
Operator: | Waterways and Shipping Office | |
Responsible WSA : | Eberswalde | |
Construction time: | 1852 to 1857 | |
Start of operation: | 1857 | |
Modification: | 1892 | |
lock | ||
Type: | Chamber lock in block construction | |
Category: | Class I. | |
Usable length: | 42.9 m | |
Usable width: | 9.50 m | |
Average height of fall : |
2.70 m | |
Upper gate: | Miter gate | |
Lower gate: | Miter gate | |
Others | ||
Associated weir: | west of the lock |
The Pinnow lock , also known as the Pinnower lock , is located north of Pinnow in the Oranienburg Canal . Pinnow is a residential area in the Hohen Neuendorf district of Borgsdorf in the Oberhavel district in Brandenburg . It is the second lock on the Oranienburg Canal. The Pinnow lock belongs to the area of responsibility of the outer district of Oranienburg (ABZ) of the Eberswalde Waterways and Shipping Office .
history
The first Pinnow lock was built with the construction of the Oranienburg Canal between Malz and Pinnow between 1832 and 1837 when the western Havel bypass was realized by Oranienburg. It was built from burnt bricks . It was 130 feet (40.30 meters) long. The chamber was 30 feet (about 9.30 meters) wide. The goal width was 17 feet (about 5.26 meters). In the lock chamber there was space for two barges with the then customary Finow size . This first lock west of the new one was later decommissioned and converted into a weir. In 1852 the construction of the second lock in Pinnow began. It was opened to traffic in 1857. Today's Pinnow lock was created through renovation in 1892.
description
Today's Pinnow lock is a chamber lock with a usable length of almost 43 meters and a chamber width of 9.50 meters. The average height of fall at the lock is 2.70 meters. The lock chamber is closed and opened by mortise gates .
Pictures and cards
literature
- Jörn Lehmann: The Obere Havel and the Finow Canal. Publisher: Sutton; Edition: 1 (May 19, 2015), ISBN 3-954-00575-1 .
- H.-J. Uhlemann: Berlin and the Märkische waterways. DSV-Verlag, Hamburg 1994, ISBN 3-344-00115-9 .
- Writings of the Association for European Inland Shipping and Waterways e. V. WESKA (Western European Shipping and Harbor Calendar), Binnenschifffahrts-Verlag, Duisburg-Ruhrort. OCLC 48960431
cards
- Folke Stender: Editing of Sportschifffahrtskarten Binnen 1 + 4. Nautical publication Verlagsgesellschaft, ISBN 3-926376-10-4 .
- W. Ciesla, H. Czesienski, W. Schlomm, K. Senzel, D. Weidner: Shipping maps of the inland waterways of the German Democratic Republic 1: 10,000. Volume 4. Editor: Waterways Authority of the GDR, Berlin 1988, OCLC 830889996 .
Web links
- WSA website, ABZ Oranienburg area of responsibility, accessed on January 28, 2018
Individual evidence