Now spring is coming! Overnight 20° C, and we can sit outside a café at
the Viktoria-Luise-Platz, drink cappuccino and watch people.
The cranes flew over our house – and I am reassured. They do that every
year, in Hildesheim, in Hamburg, and now in Berlin: always directly over our
house, and when I hear their strange cries early in the morning I run outside
or on the balcony and try to take a picture of them – mostly a row of tiny dots
on their way north.
A further indicator for spring: the gardeners at the
Viktoria-Luise-Platz, which is just around the corner, plant the curved beds
with pansies – no ‘love-in-the-idleness’
but a lot of hard work, because the ‘Ornamental Square’, as they were called
then, is huge.
Georg Haberland, who planned the Bavarian Quarter (where we live) in one
draft, put out for tender a competition for the design of the square, which the
Royal Horticultaral Director, Fritz Encke (1861 – 1931) won.
The square – rather uncommon – is an elongated hexagonal, where six
small streets flow in, but by the planting you get the impression that it is
oval. In the middle a big fountain, at the west side arcade-like colonnades
(nowadays they put a large sandbox in the middle of it)
and on the other side
the entry of the U4. This underground was hotly discussed even at its opening in
1910: it serves only four stations from Innsbrucker Platz to Nollendorf Platz –
a subway only for the Rich?
At least the square offered a compensation: different from others at
that time it was not only for representation, but had many benches for recreation
– and today even the lawns are well used. Yesterday at lunchtime a lot of young
people lay on the grass (and in the back of my head my mother started to warn
that one should never lay on grass in
months with an “R” inside – not MaRch, not ApRil – earliest: May :-).
The initiation of the Viktoria Luise Platz in 1900 was a big social
event and Haverland splurged several thousand electric bulbs (in the rest of
Berlin they still sat in dim gaslight), and in the evening the fountain shone
in splendour as “fountaine lumineuse.”
Haberland wrote:
“Till this day I see old Mr. Ludwig Pietsch before my inner eye, on each knee a laughing young girl. Half an hour after
midnight I ordered to shut off the lights so that the atmosphere wouldn’t
become too jolly.”
But that is what I wish for us all: a very jolly spring!
24 comments:
Incredible place, seeing cranes flying over your house must be amazing. I just get some manky looking starlings.
You got a great spring indicators. I like hearing birds cry around, it's always kinda bring "hope"...I'm not sure for what but that's how I associate it.
Landscape is beautiful. I wonder how the "subway for rich" look like :)))
Thanks for visiting my blog. Have a good Day!
Lovely to see something of your part of the world Britta, as your days get longer and ours shorter.
Penny x
What a gift to the generations that followed - so often great architecture and city planning are not appreciated by those who live through the process of change and creation. It's for those of us who come after to enjoy the gift.
Britta, I wish you a (very) jolly spring, too!
The image of the Ornamental Square is quite the pick-me-up.
Btw, I removed word verification. I'll let you know if I run into trouble ...
Spring is so exciting, love seeing the birds migrating. Did I tell you that we bought one of our antique clocks at Nollendorf Platz? There used to be a shop in old subway cars that had some wonderful goodies. Also got my opera glasses there!
I am going for the record on most comments on a single post! ;)
I just wanted to let you know that I'd tagged you in a blogging game.
Ah, what a glorious garden and a marvelous story to accompany it! You know, just today, a beautiful spring day here, we took a very pleasant walk, a rail bed converted to a walking and biking path. We turned to one another and said, wouldn't it be wonderful if Innisfree were open? (It doesn't open until May.) While the rail trail has its own appeal, it's left in its wild state (a bit of a tangle of brown vines and such as yet). To see the flower buds coming on, the first flowering trees, ah, how we are longing for that. So, thank you, especially, for giving us a glimpse of this lovely garden.
Dear Tony,
I do love starlings too! The have so beautiful feathers in spring.
Dear Psychelin,
maybe 'hope' because they sing (though some croak, as the magpies do). In Berlin I was so suprised about the varieties of subways, that I started a photo-collection - I will publish a few of them soon here.
Dear Penny,
as a woman who never can believe that it rains in Hamburg when we have sunshine in Berlin, I have even more difficulties to imagine autumn now (though today a cold wind helps)
Dear Pondside,
it is wonderful that so many old buildings survived the war or were rebuilt. The Viktoria-Luise-Platz remained almost intact till 1957, then they 'modernized' it (I saw horrible photographs - almost nothing else but lawn and a few shrubs)- and from 1979 - 1980 it was rebuilt after historical models. Lucky that we came here end of 2010!
Dear Suze,
please write me a mail how you did it - hope to do the same, as word verification is almost unreadable.
Dear Suze,
and especially the coffee in the two restaurants 'Montevideo' and 'Potemkin' picks one up - a lot of artists, theatre people and ordinary mortals as I sit there.
Dear Janet,
I will walk to the Nollendorf Platz to see whether the shop is still there - but I doubt it, I didn't see those subway cars.
Dear Suze,
I'll send you a 'commentor's badge' :-)
Thank you for tagging me - I will reply on your blog.
Dear Susan,
I am looking forward to further pictures from Innisfree garden - you know that I am crazy enough to visit a city out of a whim (e.g. Edinburgh because of the novels of Alexander McCall Smith - wanted to see it )for myself. And Oxford on behalf of Inspector Morse AND Lord Peter Wimsey - as an ardent admirer of both).
Flower buds look so tempting, as fresh green does.
I love the old fashioned formal 'bedding' planting schemes, they are becoming a rarity. I remember as a child that the local parks would be filled with the largest and most complicated designs. They were serious business and if 'Parky' caught you walking through his display or setting one foot onto the soil you would be chased out of the park.
Paul
Dear Paul,
I'm happy to see you here! Yes, bedding plants can look lovely, a bit Victorian and as charming and disciplined as that epoch was. One of the most interesting characters in Tove Jansson's Moomin tales is Mumrik - a highly independent individual - one of his character traits: he is absolutely allergic to "Parkies".
We don't see nearly as many interesting birds here as we did at the lake, but I'm glad we're back home. How lucky that you get to hear the cranes whilst living in the city. Your remembering mom's "R" admonitions for grass lounging is funny. It's just the opposite for warnings about oyster consumption here. Any month with an R is recommended for it. It's not anything my mother would have warned about, though. She detests them!
Dear Walk2write,
how good to hear that your move back home is done well! In Germany we would bring you "Bread and salt" as a welcome - here you get it symbolically.
We have the oyster rule too - there might be some truth in it.
Beautiful images (beautiful place!), Britta. I'd never heard about the R months. You know I'm going to want to use that one on my kids, eh? Of course, I doubt it will work! ;)
Happy spring, Britta!
Dear Jayne,
thank you! From experience I know that your doubts are justified - and your kids may argue that through global warming old rules don't woRk anymore :-) But though here in March the sun shines sometimes, the ground is still very cold.
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