Make a donation
Viktoriapark topographic map
Click on the map to display elevation.
Make a donation
Viktoriapark
On the occasion of the elevation of the monument ideas appeared to lay out a park around it. Two years later the design of a park was put out to tender. Hermann Mächtig (*1837-1909*), since 1877 Berlin's city garden director, handed in a design, already using the name Victoria Park, in honour of Princess Victoria of Great Britain and Ireland, Prussian and German crown princess consort. However, it took the city parliament until 29 March 1886 to decide for laying out a park. On 14 December 1887 Berlin acquired 8.5 ha (21 acres) of unbuilt land from several owners, mostly north and west of the monument. Right adjacent to the south was the Tivoli brewery (est. 1857, merged into Schultheiss as of 1891, closed in 1993), and in the east and northeast villas had developed quite close to the monument. Some built-up parcels on the southern side of Kreuzbergstraße had been bought and the houses there were demolished in order to gain open access.
Make a donation
About this map
Name: Viktoriapark topographic map, elevation, terrain.
Average elevation: 45 m
Minimum elevation: 32 m
Maximum elevation: 61 m
Make a donation
Other topographic maps
Click on a map to view its topography, its elevation and its terrain.
Neukölln
Neukölln is on the North European Plain, which is typically characterized by low-lying marshy woodlands with a mainly flat topography. The quarter lies on the geological border between the shallow Weichselian Warsaw-Berlin Urstromtal glacial valley and the northernmost edge of the Teltow young drift ground…
Average elevation: 43 m
Make a donation
Kreuzberg
In contrast to many other areas of Berlin, which were villages before their integration into Berlin, Kreuzberg has a rather short history. It was formed on 1 October 1920 by the Greater Berlin Act, which provided for the incorporation of suburbs and the reorganisation of Berlin into twenty boroughs. The…
Average elevation: 43 m
Teufelsberg
Teufelsberg was originally thought to be 115 metres (377 ft) high, which placed it at the same elevation as Großer Müggelberg (the summit of Müggelberge), and was the highest point in West Berlin. New measurements show that Teufelsberg is actually 120.1 metres (394 ft) high, making it higher than Großer…
Average elevation: 54 m
Make a donation
Make a donation
Make a donation
Make a donation
Make a donation
Make a donation
Make a donation
Make a donation
Make a donation
Make a donation
Make a donation
