Goethe Tower

The Goethe Tower (German: Goetheturm) is a 43-metre high tower built entirely out of wood on the northern edge of the woods of Sachsenhausen near Frankfurt am Main. After the Jahrtausendturm, the two towers of the Brück aerial testing facility, the Blumenthal Observation Tower, and the Linsen Tower. It is the fifth tallest wooden construction in Germany, due to the addition of two antenna measuring stations.

In 1867, a wooden tower was first built on the site, at that time 22 metres tall. It was built in honour of a poem by the local poet Karl Heinrich Ehrt, who described how Goethe enjoyed taking walks in the area and looking down upon the town. In a poem of 1860, he gave the spot the name "Goethe's Repose"(Goethes Ruh). After the First World War, this first tower had become so rickety that it had to be pulled down.

In 1931, the Goethe Tower was rebuilt with money donated by the Jewish businessman Gustav Gerst. The opening ceremony took place in November 1931, shortly before the 1932 commemorations of Goethe's death one hundred years before. The city of Frankfurt provided the wood for the tower - altogether more than 340m³ of pine, beech, and oak timber.

Today, the Goethe Tower is still a popular place for day-trippers, especially families, as a large playground and a café have been built at the foot of the tower.

Source of description: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goethe_Tower wikipedia

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Category definition of category tower
Material definition of material
wood
Price definition of price
Geographical coordinates 50.0888890, 8.7111110
Address Frankfurt Am Main, Spielpark
Opening date 1931
Height 43.00

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