project
urban nature
germany
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nature
Natur-Park Südgelände Once opened as part of the Expo 2000 world exhibition, the
park on the site of the former Tempelhof marshalling yard fascinates with its
unique combination of old railway technology, wild nature worthy of protection
and art. From the very beginning, the park has stood for the successful
transformation of a former industrial wasteland into a nature park of a special
kind. Originally planned by artists and landscape architects, visitors to this
unique park, the first of its kind, stroll between the present and the past
through partly untouched nature, which time and again reveals surprising new
relics from days gone by.
Located directly at the Priesterweg S-Bahn station, the 18-hectare green space
extends almost to Südkreuz. After the station was finally shut down in 1952,
nature gradually reclaimed the territory and allowed an impressive diversity of
species to emerge. In 1999, the Natur Park Südgelände was designated as a
landscape conservation area and parts of it as a nature reserve.
Railway history is omnipresent everywhere: in addition to tracks, points and
rail tracks, water cranes, light poles, a steam locomotive and one of the oldest
turntables in Germany have been left in the park. Together with the steel water
tower and the old bridge master's office, the almost 5,000 square metre
locomotive hall is part of a listed overall complex.
In 2022, the jury of the Italian Benetton Study and Research Foundation based in
Treviso (Fondazione Benetton Studi Ricerche, Treviso) honoured Berlin's urban
nature and the Natur Park Südgelände as a "bridge between ecology, art and urban
culture" with the International Carlo Scarpa Prize. The international award,
which has been presented annually since 1990, recognises outstanding places in
landscape architecture that relate nature-related, historical and design values
in a special way and bring them to life. source text Kunst und alte
Industrierelikte im Schatten des Wasserturms: Der Natur-Park Südgelände ist
zugleich wild und schön gestaltet. Foto: Imago/Schöning Photo by Allison Tweedie
Photo by Konstantin Börner