Rheinturm

Telecommunications tower in Germany
51°13′04″N 6°45′42″E / 51.21778°N 6.76167°E / 51.21778; 6.76167Elevation36.6 metres NHNConstruction started20 January 1979Completed1 December 1981[citation needed]Inaugurated1 March 1982[citation needed]Height240.5 metres (789 ft)Technical detailsStructural systemReinforced concreteDesign and constructionArchitect(s)Harald Deilmann

The Rheinturm (pronounced [ˈʁaɪntʊʁm]; 'Rhine Tower') is a 240.5-metre-high (789 ft) concrete telecommunications tower in Düsseldorf, capital of the federal state (Bundesland) of North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. Construction commenced in 1979 and finished in 1981. The Rheinturm carries aerials for directional radio, FM and TV transmitters. It stands 172.5 metres high and houses a revolving restaurant and an observation deck at a height of 168 metres. It is the tallest building in Düsseldorf.[1]

The Rheinturm was inaugurated on 1 December 1981.[2] It contains 7,500 cubic metres of concrete and weighs 22,500 tons. Before October 15, 2004, when an aerial antenna for DVB-T was mounted, it was 234.2 metres high. The observation deck is open to public daily from 10:00 to 23:30.

As a special attraction, a light sculpture on its shaft works as a clock. This sculpture was designed by Horst H. Baumann and is called Lichtzeitpegel (light time level). The light sculpture on the Rheinturm is the largest digital clock in the world[citation needed]. The clock is a 24-hour clock with six sets of lights, two each for the Hour (00 to 24), Minutes (00 to 60), and Seconds (00 to 60), to be read from top to bottom.

Gallery

  • Rheinturm at blue hour
    Rheinturm at blue hour
  • View from the Rheinturm looking down onto Stadtmitte
    View from the Rheinturm looking down onto Stadtmitte
  • Rheinturm Düsseldorf 70th Anniversary of the state NRW Illumination with Rhine Comet
    Rheinturm Düsseldorf 70th Anniversary of the state NRW Illumination with Rhine Comet
  • The Rheinturm displaying the time. The number of dots represents the Hour, Minutes, and Seconds as shown in the image above
    The Rheinturm displaying the time. The number of dots represents the Hour, Minutes, and Seconds as shown in the image above
  • View from the Rheinturm looking down onto Bürger Park
    View from the Rheinturm looking down onto Bürger Park

See also

References

  1. ^ "All brewing up nicely: jet off to Germany for a guaranteed weekend of good cheer", The Times, 2003-08-09
  2. ^ Müller, Wegener, Wöstemeyer: Rheinturm Düsseldorf, p. 18

External links

Media related to Rheinturm in Düsseldorf at Wikimedia Commons Media related to Views from Rheinturm at Wikimedia Commons

  • 360° interactive panorama
  • Rheinturm Restaurants QOMO and M 168, Centro Hotels Group (in German and English)
  • Rhine Tower at Structurae
  • time lapse of tower and clock at new years fire work

Literature

  • Klaus Müller, Hermann Wegener, Heinz-Gerd Wöstemeyer: Rheinturm Düsseldorf: Daten und Fakten Triltsch Verlag, Düsseldorf 1990, ISBN 3-7998-0060-3.
  • Roland Kanz: Architekturführer Düsseldorf. Dietrich Riemer Verlag, Berlin 2001, ISBN 3-496-01232-3, S. 81.
  • Klaus Englert: … in die Jahre gekommen. Der Rheinturm in Düsseldorf. In db Deutsche Bauzeitung 141, 2007, Nr.6, S. 85–88, ISSN 0721-1902.
  • Erwin Heinle, Fritz Leonhardt: Türme aller Zeiten, aller Kulturen. Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt, Stuttgart 1997, ISBN 3-421-02931-8, S. 235.51°13′04″N 6°45′42″E / 51.21778°N 6.76167°E / 51.21778; 6.76167
Authority control databases Edit this at Wikidata
International
  • VIAF
  • WorldCat
National
  • Germany
Geographic
  • Structurae