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Berlin changes, February to June 1990: The restoration of Brandenburg Gate [7/7]

OBJECT INFORMATION

Info

June 1990
Berlin, Straße des 17. Juni
Created By: Dagmar Lipper

License: Creative Commons License

The Quadriga atop Brandenburg Gate suffered severe damage during festivities on New Year's Eve 1989/90 and underwent restoration in 1990/1991, when the Iron Cross and Eagle were reinstalled. During the GDR era, the statue of Victoria, the winged godess of victory, held a staff with an oak leaf wreath in her hand.

Depicts

advertising poster, crane, fence, group of people, town square, urban renewal

Context

Berlin Wall, cleared border strip, deconstruction of the Wall, deterioration, remains of the Wall

Places

Brandenburg Gate

Other items in this set

Memory

"During the course of the first six months of 1990, it was possible to see how the old city had gradually started to re-emerge again. The city's wounds were slowly beginning to heal. As of a certain point, the Wall (this previously awe-inspiring construction) started looking somewhat strange in its half-demolished state and people were no longer scared of it. Access was barred because it had fallen into disrepair and become dangerous.

At the beginning of May, the section of the Wall that ran between Potsdamer Platz and the Brandenburg Gate had to a large extent disappeared and the entire breadth of the street was uncovered once again. At the time it was still possible to follow the former course of the Wall – there were the odd fragments of the Wall here and there until they too finally completely disappeared in June and were replaced by a hoarding. A handful of curious onlookers still hung around, although not as many as before.

Back then I found it remarkable that one of the first things to be done was to restore the Brandenburg Gate – a telling sign of both its significance in German history and for German unification."

Dagmar Lipper (West Berlin)