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Essential
Architecture- Berlin
The Berlin Wall |
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architect
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location
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dividing east and west Berlin |
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date
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1962 |
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style
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industrial |
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construction
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concrete, etc |
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dividing wall
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Potsdamer Platz and Niederkirchnerstrasse |
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President John F. Kennedy visiting the
Berlin Wall on June 26, 1963 and East German construction workers building
the Berlin Wall, 20 November 1961. |
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In the last phase of the wall´s development, the "death strip"
between fence and concrete wall gave guards a clear shot at hundreds of
would-be escapees from the East.
Remnant of the Berlin Wall near Potsdamer Platz, June 2003.The
Berlin Wall (German: Berliner Mauer or Antifaschistischer Schutzwall in
the former German Democratic Republic), an iconic symbol of the Cold
War, was initially constructed starting on August 13, 1961 and
dismantled in the weeks following November 9, 1989. Part of the Iron
Curtain, the Berlin Wall was the most prominent part of the GDR border
system.
Conceived by the East German administration of Walter Ulbricht
and approved by Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev, the wall was a long
separation barrier between West Berlin and East Germany (the German
Democratic Republic), which closed the border between East and West
Berlin for a period of 28 years. It was built during the post-World War
II period of divided Germany, in an effort to stop the drain of labour
and economic output associated with the daily migration of huge numbers
of professionals and skilled workers from East to West Berlin, and the
attendant defections, which had political and economic consequences for
the Communist bloc. It effectively decreased emigration (escapes - "Republikflucht"
in German) from 2.5 million between 1949 and 1962 to 5,000 between 1962
and 1989.[1]
However, the creation of the Wall was a propaganda disaster for
East Germany and for the communist bloc as a whole. It became a key
symbol of what Western powers regarded as Communist tyranny,
particularly after the high-profile shootings of would-be defectors.
Political liberalization in the late 1980s, associated with the decline
of the Soviet Union, led to relaxed border restrictions in East Germany,
culminating in mass demonstrations and the fall of the East German
government. When a government statement that crossing of the border
would be permitted was broadcast on November 9, 1989, masses of East
Germans approached and then crossed the wall, and were joined by crowds
of West Germans in a celebratory atmosphere. The Wall was subsequently
destroyed by a euphoric public over a period of several weeks, and its
fall was the first step toward German reunification, which was formally
concluded on October 3, 1990.
Background
Occupied Germany in 1945After the end of World War II in Europe,
what territorially remained of pre-1945 Germany had been divided into
four occupation zones, each one controlled by one of the four occupying
Allied powers: the Americans, British, French and Russians. The old
capital of Berlin, as the seat of the Allied Control Council, was itself
similarly subdivided into four zones. Although the intent was for the
occupying powers to govern Germany together inside the 1947 borders, the
advent of Cold War tension caused the French, British and American zones
to be formed into the Federal Republic of Germany (and West Berlin) in
1949, excluding the Soviet zone which then formed the German Democratic
Republic (including East Berlin) the same year.
Divergence of German states
From 1948 onwards, West Germany developed into a western
capitalist country with a social market economy ("Soziale
Marktwirtschaft" in German) and a democratic parliamentary government.
Prolonged economic growth starting in the 1950s fuelled a 30-year
"economic miracle". Across the inner-German border, East Germany
established an authoritarian government with a Soviet-style command
economy. While East Germany became one of the richest, most advanced
countries in the Eastern bloc, many of its citizens still looked to the
West for political freedoms and economic prosperity. The flight of
growing numbers of East Germans to non-communist countries via West
Berlin led to East Germany erecting the GDR border system (of which the
Berlin Wall was a part) in 1961 to prevent any further exodus.
Massive emigration
From 1949 to 1961 huge numbers of professionals and
skilled workers migrated daily from East to West Berlin - earning the
name "Grenzgänger" - frequently because of lucrative opportunities
connected with rebuilding western Europe funded by the Marshall Plan
(one day the entire Mathematics Department of the University of Leipzig
defected). Furthermore, many West Berliners travelled into East Berlin
to do their shopping at state-subsidized stores, where prices were much
lower than in West Berlin. This drain of labour and economic output
threatened East Germany with economic collapse. This had ramifications
for the whole Communist bloc and particularly the Soviet Union, because
East Germany's economy was being subsidised by the Soviet government,
and simultaneously, the now-threatened East German production was
responsible for all war reparations to Poland and the Soviet Union.
Proposed barrier
The impetus for the creation of the Berlin Wall came
from East German leader Walter Ulbricht, approved by Soviet leader
Nikita Khrushchev but with conditions imposed. Ulbricht's proposal for a
second air blockade was refused, and the construction of a barrier was
permitted provided that it was composed at first of barbed wire. If the
Allies challenged the barrier, the East Germans were to fall back and
were not to fire first under any circumstances.
Construction begins, 1961
Construction of 45 km (28 miles) around the three
western sectors began early on Sunday 13 August 1961 in East Berlin.
That morning the zonal boundary had been sealed by East German troops.
The barrier was built by East German troops and workers, not directly
involving the Soviets. It was built slightly inside East German
territory to ensure that it did not encroach on West Berlin at any
point; if one stood next to the West Berlin side of the barrier (and
later the Wall), one was actually standing on East Berlin soil. Some
streets running alongside the barrier were torn up to make them
impassable to most vehicles, and a barbed-wire fence was erected, which
was later built up into the full-scale Wall. It physically divided the
city and completely surrounded West Berlin. During the construction of
the Wall, NVA and KdA soldiers stood in front of it with orders to shoot
anyone who attempted to defect. Additionally, the whole length of the
border between East and West Germany was closed with chain-fences,
walls, minefields, and other installations (see GDR border system).
Immediate effects
Many families were split. Many East Berliners were cut
off from their jobs and from chances for financial improvement; West
Berlin became an isolated enclave in a hostile land. West Berliners
demonstrated against the wall, led by their mayor Willy Brandt, who
strongly criticised the United States for failing to respond. Allied
intelligence agencies had hypothesized about a wall to stop the flood of
refugees but the main candidate for its location was around the
perimeter of the city.
John F. Kennedy had accepted in a speech on 25 July 1961 that the
United States could only really hope to defend West Berliners and West
Germans; to attempt to stand up for East Germans would only result in an
embarrassing climbdown. Accordingly, the administration made polite
protests at length via the usual channels, but without fervour, even
though it was a violation of the postwar Four Powers Agreements, which
gave the United Kingdom, France and the United States a say over the
administration of the whole of Berlin. Indeed, a few months after the
barbed wire went up, the U.S. government would inform the Soviet
government that it accepted the Wall as "a fact of international life"
and would not challenge it by force.
The East German government claimed that the Wall was an
"anti-fascist protection barrier" ("antifaschistischer Schutzwall"),
intended to dissuade aggression from the West, a ridiculous assertion
when compared with the fact that all of the wall's defenses pointed
inward to East German territory.
Thus, this position was viewed with skepticism even in East
Germany; its construction had caused considerable hardship to families
divided by the Wall, and the Western view that the Wall was a means of
preventing the citizens of East Germany from entering West Berlin was
widely seen as being the truth.
Secondary response
It was clear both that West German morale needed more and that
there was a serious potential threat to the viability of West Berlin. If
West Berlin fell after all the efforts of the Berlin Airlift, how could
any of America's allies rely on her? On the other hand, in the face of
any serious Soviet threat, an enclave like West Berlin could not be
defended except with nuclear weapons. As such, it was vitally important
for the Americans to show the Soviets that they could push their luck no
further.
Accordingly, General Lucius D. Clay, who was deeply respected by
Berliners after commanding the American effort during the Berlin Airlift
(1948–49), and was known to have a firm attitude towards the Soviets,
was sent to Berlin with ambassadorial rank as Kennedy's special advisor.
He and Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson arrived at Tempelhof Airport on
the afternoon of Saturday 19 August.
They arrived in a city defended by what would soon be known as
the "Berlin Brigade", which then consisted of the 2nd and 3rd Battle
Groups of the 6th Infantry, with Company F, 40th Armor. The battle
groups were pentatomic, with 1362 officers and men each. On 16 August,
Kennedy had given the order for them to be reinforced. Early on 19
August, the 1st Battle Group, 18th Infantry (commanded by Col. Glover S.
Johns Jr.) was alerted.
On Sunday morning, lead elements in a column of 491 vehicles and
trailers carrying 1500 men divided into five march units and left the
Helmstedt-Marienborn checkpoint at 06:34. At Marienborn, the Soviet
checkpoint next to Helmstedt on the West German/East German border, U.S.
personnel were counted by guards. The column was 160 km (~100 miles)
long, and covered 177 km (~110 miles) from Marienborn to Berlin in full
battle gear, with VoPos (East German police) watching from beside trees
next to the autobahn all the way along. The front of the convoy arrived
at the outskirts of Berlin just before noon, to be met by Clay and
Johnson, before parading through the streets of Berlin to an adoring
crowd. At 0400 on Monday, 21 August, Lyndon Johnson left a visibly
reassured West Berlin in the hands of Gen. Frederick O. Hartel and his
brigade, now of 4224 officers and men. Every three months for the next
three and a half years, a new American battalion was rotated into West
Berlin by autobahn to demonstrate Allied rights.
The creation of the Wall had important implications for both
Germanies. By stemming the exodus of people from East Germany, the East
German government was able to reassert its control over the country.
However, the Wall was a propaganda disaster for East Germany and for the
communist bloc as a whole. It became a key symbol of what Western powers
regarded as Communist tyranny, particularly after the high-profile
shootings of would-be defectors (which were later treated as acts of
murder by the reunified Germany). In 1987, Ronald Reagan gave a famous
speech at the Brandenburg Gate, at which he challenged Mikhail Gorbachev
to "tear down this wall". In West Germany, dismay that the Western
powers had done nothing to prevent the Wall's creation led directly to
the policy of Ostpolitik or rapprochement with the east, in an effort to
stabilize the relationship of the two Germanies.
Layout and modifications
Position and course of the Berlin Wall and its border
control checkpoints (1989)The Wall was over 155 km (96 miles) long. In
June 1962, work started on a second parallel fence up to 91 meters (100
yards) further in, with houses in between the fences torn down and their
inhabitants relocated. A no man's land was created between the two
barriers, which became widely known as the "death strip". It was paved
with raked gravel, making it easy to spot footprints left by escapees;
it offered no cover; it was mined and booby-trapped with tripwires; and,
most importantly, it offered a clear field of fire to the watching
guards.
Over the years, the Wall went through four distinct phases:
Basic wire fence (1961)
Improved wire fence (1962-1965)
Concrete wall (1965-1975)
Grenzmauer 75 (Border Wall 75) (1975-1989)
Satellite image of Berlin, with the wall's location marked in
yellow.The "fourth generation wall", known officially as "Stützwandelement
UL 12.11"(Retaining wall element UL 12.11), was the final and most
sophisticated version of the Wall. Begun in 1975[2] and completed about
1980,[3] it was constructed from 45,000 separate sections of reinforced
concrete, each 3.6 m (12 ft) high and 1.2 m (4 ft) wide, and cost
16,155,000 East German Marks.[4] The top of the wall was lined with a
smooth pipe, intended to make it more difficult for escapers to scale
it. It was reinforced by mesh fencing, signal fencing, anti-vehicle
trenches, barbed wire, over 116 watchtowers,[5] and twenty bunkers. This
version of the Wall is the one most commonly seen in photographs, and
surviving fragments of Wall in Berlin and elsewhere around the world are
generally pieces of the fourth-generation Wall.
Official crossings and usage
There were eight border crossings between East and West Berlin,
allowing visits by West Berliners, West Germans, western foreigners and
Allied personnel into East Berlin, as well as visits of East German
citizens into West Berlin, provided they held the necessary permit.
Those crossings were restricted according to which nationality was
allowed to use it (East Germans, West Germans, West Berliners, other
countries). The most famous was Friedrichstraße (Checkpoint Charlie),
which was restricted to Allied personnel and non-German citizens.
Several other border crossings existed between West Berlin and
surrounding East Germany. These could be used for transit between West
Germany and West Berlin, for visits by West Berliners into East Germany,
for transit into countries neighbouring East Germany (Poland,
Czechoslovakia, Denmark), and for visits by East Germans into West
Berlin carrying a permit. After the 1972 agreements, new crossings were
opened to allow West Berlin waste be transported into East German dumps,
as well as some crossings for access to West Berlin's exclaves (see
Steinstücken).
The famous you are leaving and...
...you are entering at Glienicker Brücke 1985
During most of the history of the Wall, Allied military personnel,
officials, and diplomats were able to pass into East Berlin without
passport check; likewise Soviet patrols could pass into West Berlin.
This was a requirement of the post-war Four Powers Agreements. West
Berliners were initially subject to very severe restrictions; all
crossing points were closed to West Berliners between August 26, 1961
and December 17, 1963, and it was not until September 1971 that travel
restrictions were eased following a Four Powers Agreement on transit
issues. Passage in and out of West Berlin was limited to twelve crossing
points on the Wall, though all but two of these were reserved for
Germans.
Four motorways usable by West Germans connected West Berlin to
West Germany, the most famous being Berlin-Helmstedt autobahn, which
entered East German territory at the town of Helmstedt (Checkpoint
Alpha) and connected to Berlin at Dreilinden (Checkpoint Bravo) in
south-western Berlin. Access to West Berlin was also possible by railway
(four routes) and by boat using canals and rivers.
Foreigners frequently and legally crossed the Wall, and the East
Germans welcomed their hard currency. They were of course always subject
to careful checks both entering and leaving. When exiting, the police
would typically run a mirror under each vehicle to look for persons
clinging to the undercarriage. East Germans were occasionally given
permission to cross, particularly when they were too old to work. At the
border section in Potsdam the captured U-2 pilot Gary Powers was traded
for Russian spy Rudolf Abel.
One location where Westerners could cross the border was
Friedrichstraße station in East Berlin. When the Wall was erected,
Berlin's complex public transit networks, the S-Bahn and U-Bahn, were
divided with it.[6] Some lines were cut in half; many stations were shut
down. Three Western lines traveled through brief sections of East Berlin
territory, passing through eastern stations (called Geisterbahnhöfe, or
ghost stations) without stopping.
Peter Fechter lies dying after being shot by East German border
guards. This photo achieved international notoriety, 1962.Both the
eastern and western networks converged at Friedrichstrasse, which became
a major crossing point for those (mostly Westerners) with permission to
cross.
Escape attempts
During the Wall's existence there were around 5,000
successful escapes (a form of illegal emigration) into West Berlin.
Varying reports claim either 192 or 239 people were killed trying to
cross[7][8] and many more injured.
Early successful escapes involved people jumping the initial
barbed wire or leaping out of apartment windows along the line but these
ended as the wall improved. Later successful escape attempts included
long tunnels, sliding along aerial wires, flying ultralights, and even
one man who drove a very low sports car underneath a barricade at
Checkpoint Charlie.
Another airborne escape was by Thomas Kruger, who landed a Zlin
Z-42M light aircraft of the Gesellschaft für Sport und Technik, an East
German youth military training organization, at RAF Gatow. His aircraft,
registration DDR-WOH, was dismantled and returned to the East Germans by
road, complete with humorous slogans painted on by RAF Airmen such as
"Wish you were here" and "Come back soon". DDR-WOH is still flying
today, but under a different registration.
The most notorious failed attempt was that of Peter Fechter who
was shot and left to bleed to death in full view of the western media,
on August 17, 1962. The last person to be shot dead while trying to
cross the border was Chris Gueffroy on February 6, 1989.
The fall, 1989
On August 23, 1989, the communist Hungary removed its border
restrictions with Austria, and in September more than 13,000 East German
tourists in Hungary escaped to Austria. Mass demonstrations against the
government in East Germany began in the autumn of 1989. The long-time
leader of East Germany, Erich Honecker, resigned on October 18, 1989 and
was replaced by Egon Krenz a few days later. Honecker had predicted in
January of that year that the wall would stand for a "hundred more
years" if the conditions which had caused its construction did not
change.
The new Krenz government decided to allow East Berliners to apply
for visas to travel to West Germany. Günter Schabowski, the East German
Minister of Propaganda, had the task of announcing this; however he had
been on vacation prior to this decision and had not been fully updated.
Shortly before a press conference on November 9, 1989, he was handed a
note that said that East Berliners would be allowed to cross the border
with proper permission, but gave no further instructions on how to
handle the information. These regulations had only been completed a few
hours earlier, and were to take effect the following day, so as to allow
time to inform the border guards. However, nobody had informed
Schabowski. He read the note out loud at the end of the conference and
when asked when the regulations would come into effect, he assumed it
would be the same day based on the wording of the note and replied "As
far as I know effective immediately, right now".
Tens of thousands of East Berliners heard Schabowski's statement
live on East German television and flooded the checkpoints in the Wall
demanding entry into West Berlin. The surprised and overwhelmed border
guards made many hectic telephone calls with their superiors, but it
became clear that there was no way to hold back the huge crowd of East
German citizens short of dispatching the army with lethal force, as the
vastly outnumbered border guards had only been equipped for regular
duty. The guards and the East Berlin government were not willing to use
lethal force, so in face of the escalating crowd safety issues the
guards finally yielded, opening the checkpoints and allowing people
through with little or no identity checks. The ecstatic East Berliners
were soon greeted by West Berliners on the other side in a celebratory
atmosphere. November 9 is thus considered the date the Wall fell. In the
days and weeks that followed people came to the wall with sledgehammers
in order to chip off souvenirs, demolishing lengthy parts of it in the
process. These people were nicknamed "Mauerspechte" (wall woodpeckers).
The East German regime announced the opening of ten new border
crossings the following weekend, including some in symbolic locations (Potsdamer
Platz, Glienicker Brücke, Bernauer Straße). Crowds on both sides waited
there for hours, cheering at the bulldozers who took the Wall elements
away to make way for new (old) roads. Photos and television footage of
these events is sometimes mislabelled "dismantling of the Wall", even
though it was "merely" the construction of new crossings. New border
crossings continued to be opened through summer 1990, including the most
famous one at the Brandenburg Gate on December 22, 1989.
West Germans and West Berliners were allowed visa free travel
starting December 23, 1989. Until then they could visit East Germany and
East Berlin at the restrictive conditions prevalent before, which
involved application for a visa several days or weeks in advance, and
obligatory exchange of at least 25 DM per day of their planned stay, all
of which hindered spontaneous visits. Thus, in the weeks between
November 9 and December 23, East Germans could travel "more freely" than
Westerners.
Technically the Wall remained guarded for some time after
November 9, even though at an ever decreasing intensity. In the first
months, the East German military even tried to repair some of the
damages done by the "wall peckers". Gradually these attempts ceased, and
guards became more and more lax, tolerating the increasing demolitions
and "unauthorised" border crossing through the holes. On June 13, 1990,
the official dismantling of the Wall by the East German military began
in Bernauer Straße. On July 1, the day East Germany adopted the West
German currency, all border controls ceased, although the inter-German
border had become meaningless for some time before that. The dismantling
continued to be carried out by military units (after unification under
the Bundeswehr) and took until November 1991. Only a few short sections
and watchtowers were left standing as memorials.
The fall of the Wall was the first step toward German
reunification, which was formally concluded on October 3, 1990.
Celebrations
"Irgendwann fällt jede Mauer"
- "Eventually every wall falls"On December 25, 1989 Leonard
Bernstein gave a concert in Berlin celebrating the end of the Wall,
including Beethoven's 9th symphony (Ode to Joy) with the chorus' word
"Joy" (Freude) changed to "Freedom" (Freiheit). Roger Waters performed
the Pink Floyd album The Wall in Potsdamer Platz on 21 July 1990, with
guests including the Scorpions, Bryan Adams, and Van Morrison. David
Hasselhoff performed his song "Looking for Freedom", which was very
popular in Germany at that time, standing on the Berlin wall.
Some believe November 9 would have made a suitable German
National Holiday, since it both marks the emotional apogee of East
Germany's peaceful revolution and is also the date of the declaration of
the first German republic, the Weimar Republic, in 1918. However,
November 9 is also the anniversary of the infamous Kristallnacht pogroms
of 1938 and, therefore, October 3 was chosen instead. Part of this
decision was that the East German government wanted to conclude
reunification before East Germany could celebrate a 41st anniversary on
October 7, 1990.
Aftermath and implications
Almost all of the remaining sections of Berlin Wall were rapidly
chipped away. Photo December 1990.
A temporary memorial of over 1,000 crosses and a segment of the
wall for those who died attempting to cross.The fall of the Wall
considerably changed traffic patterns in the city and the M-Bahn. An
experimental magnetic levitation train system around 1.6 km (1 mile) in
length was demolished just months after its official opening in July
1991 as it used part of the track bed of an underground line previously
severed by the wall.
Legacy
Little is left of the Wall in Berlin, which was
destroyed almost everywhere, except for three locations: an 80 meter
(300 ft) section near Potsdamer Platz, a longer section along the Spree
River near the Oberbaumbrücke nicknamed East Side Gallery, and a third
section in the north at Bernauer Straße, which was turned into a
memorial in 1999. Even the parts that are left standing no longer
accurately represent the Wall's original appearance: they are badly
damaged (since so many people attempted to pick up "original Berlin
Wall" pieces), and today graffiti is prevalent on the eastern side of
the Wall, which obviously would not have been possible while the Wall
was actually guarded by the armed soldiers of East Germany. Previously,
graffiti was exclusively on the western side. Fragments of the Wall both
with and without certificates of authenticity are a staple on the online
auction service eBay as well as German souvenir shops and are found on
mantlepieces and desktops throughout the world. Even people in the US
and China wanted a fragment of this time period.
Museum
Fifteen years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, a
private museum rebuilt a 200 metre (656 ft) section close to Checkpoint
Charlie, although not in the location of the original wall. They also
erected over 1,000 crosses in memory of those who had died attempting to
flee to the West. The memorial was installed in October 2004 and
demolished in July 2005.[10][11]
Cultural differences
Even now, some years after reunification, there is still
talk in Germany of continuing cultural differences between East and West
Germans (colloquially Ossis and Wessis), sometimes described as "Mauer
im Kopf" ("The wall in the head"). A September 2004 poll found that 25%
of West Germans and 12% of East Germans wished that East Germany and
West Germany were again cut off by the Berlin Wall.[12] Many German
public figures have called these numbers "alarming".
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links
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http://berlin-wall.org/b_muren.html |
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www.essential-architecture.com
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