- Ebertstraße
Ebertstraße is a street in
Berlin , the capital ofGermany . It runs on a roughly north-south line from theBrandenburg Gate toPotsdamer Platz in the centre of the city.As one heads south down Ebertstraße, the
Tiergarten , a large forested park, is to one's right, and the newUnited States Embassy is being built to the left. Across the corner ofBehrenstraße on the left is theMemorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe . Beyond that is theMinistergarten , which was once the gardens at the rear of the old Foreign Office building inWilhelmstraße , and now the location of numerous modern office buildings. At the southern end of the street, past the corner ofLennéstraße on the right, is the new entertainment precinct around the rebuilt Potsdamer Platz.The street follows the line of the walls of the mediaeval
Prussia n fortress town of Berlin, linking the Brandenburg Gate with the Potsdam Gate, which stood where Potsdamer Platz now is. After the demolition of the walls it was laid out as a street. Following theAustro-Prussian War in 1866, it was named Königgrätzer Straße in honour of the Prussian victory overAustria at theBattle of Königgrätz . AfterWorld War I , this name was considered unsuitably militaristic, and the street was renamed "Budapester Straße" (the street south of the Tiergarten now called Budapester Straße was at that time an eastwards continuation of theKurfürstendamm ). After the death of the first President of theWeimar Republic ,Friedrich Ebert , in 1925, it was renamed Ebertstraße in 1930, but in 1935, under theNazi regime, it was called Hermann-Göring-Straße, after ReichsmarschallHermann Göring , whose official residence was close by.In the mid 1930s almost the entire street was dug up for the building of the S-Bahn "north-south link" line from
Unter den Linden toYorckstraße , via Potsdamer Platz andAnhalter Bahnhof . The idea for such a link had first been mooted in 1914, but detailed plans were not drawn up until 1928, and then approval had to wait until 1933. Construction began in 1934, but determination to have it finished in time for theBerlin Olympic Games in 1936 meant safety measures were ignored: on20 August 1935 a tunnel collapse just south of the Brandenburg Gate buried twenty-three workmen of whom only four survived; then on28 December 1936 a fire near Potsdamer Platz station destroyed vital equipment. The section did not finally open until15 April 1939 .On
31 July 1947 , afterWorld War II , the street was renamed back to Ebertstraße. From 1961 to 1989 theBerlin Wall ran along most of its length.External links
* [http://www.bundesrat.de/schaufenster/en/ebertstrasse.html Photos of prewar Ebertstraße]
* [http://www.stadtplandienst.de//map.asp?sid=bd22204fca05718847ecc23b2f0a4668&grid=dedatlas10&Map1059_1250.x=13&Map1059_1250.y=156 road map]
* [http://www.stadtplandienst.de//map.asp?sid=bd22204fca05718847ecc23b2f0a4668&grid=aero1m&linkauswahl=0&printauswahl=0&onlineauswahl=0&sonderauswahl=0 aerial photo]
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