Agra (site) explained

The Agra site south of Leipzig in Germany includes an exhibition center as well as a green space with a total surface area of 190ha. The combination of a natural area and an event complex originated from the concomitance of a horticultural exhibition and an agricultural fair in the early years of the German Democratic Republic.[1] The GDR agricultural fair named Agra gave its name to the site.

With a covered exhibition area of 13000m2, a car park with 250 spaces and an annual attendance of 750,000 visitors, it is the second largest event complex in Leipzig after the Leipzig fairgrounds of the Leipzig Trade Fair in the north of the city. The landscaped park includes a number of monuments distributed between meadows, gardens, bodies of water and groves. The park includes museums, for example, the Deutsches Fotomuseum (German Photo Museum), the Dölitz gatehouse and the watermill on the Mühlpleiße river.

The site is intended for different types of fairs, exhibitions as well as festivals. It notably hosts the Wave-Gotik-Treffen, one of the largest Gothic festivals in the world, the medieval festival named Mittelalterlich Phantasie Spectaculum, the Tattoo & Lifestyle exhibition as well as the Fest der 25.000 Lichter (Festival of 25,000 lights), where the public comes equipped with lanterns, candles or any other sources of light. Every year in October, a historical reenactment of the battle of Leipzig takes place.

Overview

The agra is located in the Leipzig borough of Dölitz and in its western and southern parts in Markkleeberg. The exhibition center is accessed from the east side, via Bornaische Straße. The Bundesstraße 2 traverses the agra as an elevated roadway. There are discussions to build a tunnel instead of that.[2] To the west of the park is the city of Markkleeberg and to the south is Markkleeberg Lake.

The 190ha of land are divided into two zones:

History

The origin of the current site, shared and co-managed between Leipzig and Markkleeberg, dates back to the 19th century. In 1889, Paul Herfurth (1855–1937), a liberal publisher and politician, acquired a meadow between Städtelner Strasse (today Raschwitzer Strasse) and the Pleiße and settled there with his family. His family remained there after his death but the land was expropriated from them in 1945.

The first horticultural exhibition of local horticulturists was organized in 1948 on the site, which expanded significantly in the years that followed. Under the leadership of the agronomist Oskar Baumgarten (1907–2008), the first agricultural exhibition in the GDR was opened on site in 1952. Building on its success, the exhibition under the name of agra Markkleeberg will be repeated every year. The exhibition center was then developed.

After the horticultural exhibition moved to Erfurt in 1960, its site was transformed into a public park, which represents the center of today's park. Various fairs and exhibitions multiplied there and success was assured: the Agra events welcomed up to half a million people, including more than 10,000 foreigners from around a hundred different countries. In 1969 alone, the Agra received 750,000 visitors.[4] Dozens of mobile halls and pavilions were erected each year.

After German reunification, the site lost some of its importance. Several fairs and exhibitions have moved to the newly built Leipzig exhibition grounds (opened 1996), including the agricultural fair. Since 2005, the green spaces and the exhibition park have been managed separately. It is planned that the natural space will be expanded to accommodate events that are more integrated into nature.

Footnotes

  1. Book: Kirchner, Matthias . Connewitz Lössnig Dölitz. Im Leipziger Pleisseland . Passage Verlag . 1996 . 3-9804313-4-7 . Leipzig . 196–110 . de . Connewitz Lössnig Dölitz. Pleisse boroughs of Leipzig . Pro Leipzig . Zur Geschichte der Agra und des Agra-Parks . On the history of the Agra and the Agra-Park.
  2. Web site: Lösung für B 2 im agra-Park ist beschlossen . 2020-07-06 . 2024-04-09 . welt.de . de . The remedy for B 2 in the agra park is decided.
  3. Web site: de. agra-Hallen. agra-veranstaltungsgelaende-leipzig.de.
  4. Articles in the newspapers Berliner Zeitung and Neue Zeit of the years 1969 and 1989.

External links

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