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Brandenburg Gate
The impressive and symbolic Brandenburg Gate that lay forlorn
for so long in the no man’s land behind the Berlin Wall, is
now once again renovated and accessible, along with the newly
reconstructed Pariser Platz that links the gate to the beautiful
Unter den Linden Boulevard. The gate is Berlin’s only
remaining city gate, built of sandstone between 1788 and 1791 with
12 Doric columns according to a design by C.G. Langhans. Six
columns support an 36ft (11m) transverse beam, similar to the
propylaeum of the Acropolis in Athens. The massive gate is topped
with a stunning statue of the Goddess of Victory facing east
towards the city centre (this was added in 1794). The gate is
closed to traffic, as is the adjacent Pariser Platz, a gracious
square that was once surrounded with beautiful buildings
sadly destroyed in the Second World War. Since the fall of the
Berlin Wall new buildings have been built, however, to designs
closely following those of the originals.
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