Bendergasse, Altstadt, 2023
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Bendergasse, Altstadt, 2023
City hall of Coburg. Germany
warmth
Rostock City Hall (No. 2)
The town hall comprises three gabled houses topped with an arcaded gallery supporting seven towers (1270-90). In front of this group stands a Baroque façade added in 1727. This splendid pink building is the oldest Brick Gothic town hall in Germany.
Source
Fountain in the Fraumünster cloister adjacent to the Neo-Gothic Stadthaus in Zurich. The cloister and, I believe, this fountain were constructed in 1900 using salvaged elements from the medieval abbey that once stood at this location.
A Female Reportage Photographer Surveys Berlin (c. 1910)
a female photographer surveys metropolitan Berlin from a crane being used in the construction of the Stadthaus [City Hall] on Molkenmarkt. The City Hall was built as an extension of the Rotes Rathaus [Red City Hall], whose large tower can be seen at the right. The Berliner Dom [Berlin Cathedral] can be seen in the background off to the left.
source : German History in Documents and Images (GHDI)
Rostock City Hall (No. 3)
Rostock is an independent city in the North of Germany, by the Baltic Sea. It is located within the Mecklenburg part of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania.
Rostock is a regiopolis and has around 205,000 inhabitants, making it the largest city in the region in terms of population. The city stretches for 20km along the Warnow River up to the Baltic Sea. The most developed part of Rostock lies on the western side of the Warnow. The eastern part of the city is distinguished by its international port, commercial sites and the Rostock Heath forest.
The city has a Baltic Sea port which is important for ferry traffic and cargo handling, and Warnemünde boasts Germany’s largest cruise ship harbour. Rostock-Laage Airport feeds the cruise ships with passengers and is important for holiday and business flights. Rostock is the most culturally and economically important city in the region. It is shaped by its position by the sea, a lively cosmopolitan cultural scene and the University of Rostock, which was founded in 1419 and is therefore the oldest university in the Baltic Sea region.
Rostock’s economy is dominated by cutting edge technologies such as biotechnology and air/space travel technologies as well as shipbuilding and navigation, mechanical engineering, tourism, the service industry and the university, together with the ‘Universitätsmedizin’ hospital and medical research centre, which is Rostock’s largest employer. Innovative start-up businesses and the founding culture of Rostock are the key to the region’s future sustainability.
Source
Schirn / Stadthaus, Neue Altstadt, 2019