New Town Hall | |
Native Name: | Neues Rathaus |
Native Name Lang: | de |
Mapframe-Marker: | town-hall |
Mapframe-Marker-Colour: |
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Mapframe-Stroke-Colour: |
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Mapframe-Zoom: | 15 |
Address: | Trammplatz 2 |
Location City: | Hanover |
Location Country: | Germany |
Est Completion: | --> |
Destruction Date: | --> |
Management: | or |
Operator: | or |
Governing Body: | --> |
The New Town Hall (German: Neues Rathaus) is a town hall in Hanover, Germany. It opened on 20 June 1913 after construction lasting 12 years. A magnificent, castle-like building of the era of Wilhelm II in eclectic style at the southern edge of the inner city just outside the historic city centre of Hanover, the building is embedded within the 10ha
Costing 10 million marks, the New Town Hall was erected on 6,026 beech piles by architects Hermann Eggert and Gustav Halmhuber. "Ten million marks, Your Majesty – and all paid for in cash", the City Director, is claimed to have announced when the New Town Hall was opened in the presence of Emperor Wilhelm II. In honour of Tramm the square in front of the building is named Trammplatz.
Upon opening, the New Town Hall replaced the Wangenheim Palace as the main seat of administration, which had moved from the Old Town Hall into the Wangenheim Palace in 1863., the New Town Hall is still "the residence of the Mayor and CEO, the head of the municipal administration."
Damaged during bombing raids on the inner city of Hanover in World War II, the German state of Lower Saxony was proclaimed in 1946 in the 38adj=midNaNadj=mid hall of the New Town Hall.
There are four city models of Hanover in the ground floor of the New Town Hall. They vividly portray the development of the city.
The dome of the New Town Hall, with its observation platform, is high. The dome's lift is unique in the world in that its arched course follows the parabolic shape of the dome. It is often incorrectly described as a sloping lift up the dome and compared with the lifts in the Eiffel Tower, which actually travel diagonally only, without changing their angle of inclination. The lift climbs the 50m (160feet) shaft at an angle of up to 17° to the gallery of the dome, where the Harz mountain range can be seen when visibility is good. In the process, the lift moves horizontally. During the trip, the two weight-bearing cables wind up on three double rolls in the wall of the shaft.
The cage of the lift erected in 1913 travelled on steam-bent oak tracks. Because of the weather, this lift was not usable in the colder half of the year. A spiral staircase leads from the lift exit to the observation level. In 2005, over 90,000 people visited the tower of the New Town Hall. A new lift was installed in winter of 2007–08. The last trip of the old lift took place with Lord Mayor Stephan Weil on 4 November 2007. On that weekend, 1200 guests took the last opportunity to ride in the old lift.
de:Wolfgang Steinweg
. Das Rathaus in Hannover: von der Kaiserzeit bis in die Gegenwart . The Town Hall in Hanover: from the Imperial Era to the Present Day . Schlüter . Hanover . 1988 . de . 3-87706-287-3 . 18487850.