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마지막 업데이트: 3월 24, 2026
하이라이트 • 자연
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하이라이트 (구간) • 자전거 도로
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하이라이트 • 역사적 장소
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방앗간에서 나와 이 작은 마을을 우연히 발견했을 때 정말 스릴 넘칩니다. 집들은 여전히 사람이 살고 있으며 현재는 매우 목가적인 거주지입니다. 자갈길 라이딩의 멋진 하이라이트!
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The NABU House in Duvenstedter Brook is also a highlight. There's an interesting exhibition and plenty of additional information about the Brook. When the weather's nice, you can take a short rest outside on the benches. The NABU House welcomes any small financial donation.
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The Duvenstedter Brook is a great area for hikers, cyclists, and sometimes horseback riders—unfortunately, it's been closed to us as dog owners for about 30 years. It's hard to understand why "discrimination" is so prevalent...
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Forced labor camp In September 1942, the K&B company, which was active in landscaping and gardening, applied for a permit for the so-called "Kowahl & Bruns community camp" and built three barracks near the airport to accommodate 144 foreign civilian workers, as well as a combined washing and toilet barracks. Until 1945, the camp was occupied by forced laborers from Poland, Italy, France and the Netherlands. The K&B company was commissioned in Hamburg to camouflage the airport, also produced concrete slabs for temporary buildings and was involved in clearing rubble. Most of the camp's workers were employed by the CHF-Müller/Röntgenmüller company (now Philips Medical Systems), at the time a supplier to the armaments industry. One of the forced laborers, the Dutchman Theo Massuger, later described: "When the Germans realized that their advertising leaflets, with which they wanted to lure workers to Germany, were not working, they thought of something else. Without a leaflet, there was no food for my parents and our ten siblings. So I was forced to go to Germany to work. I arrived in Hamburg in 1943 and ended up in the barracks on Wilhelm-Raabe-Weg a few months later. The beds were full of vermin, the winter was cold and we hardly had any work clothes. Every day except Sundays, I stood at a lathe at Röntgenmüller and all this with meager food, mostly consisting of turnip soup." - Theo Massuger[1] Kowahl & Bruns operated three more camps in Hamburg and developed into a large company for the construction and camouflage of military facilities. The company had three branches in Belgium, France and the General Government and employed over 2,000 people in 1944, mostly forced laborers. The company owner Emil Bruns was sentenced to three years in prison after the war in one of the Curiohaus trials because he had personally mistreated female forced laborers.[2]
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The weir keeps the Ammersbek in check before it meets the Alster
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Very nice nature reserve, well visited on sunny days.
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The Duvenstedter Brook nature reserve is located in the extreme northeast of Hamburg in the Wohldorf-Ohlstedt district and is congruent with the FFH area of the same name and the EU bird sanctuary of the same name. On an area of 785 hectares, the Duvenstedter Brook was placed under protection in 1958, the middle section as early as 1939. Today, together with the nature reserves Wohldorfer Wald, Ammersbek-Niederung and the Hansdorfer Brook in the municipality of Jersbek, district of Stormarn, it forms a complex of Germany-wide importance with the largest deer population in Germany - after the opening of a red deer gate after the Second World War. (Source: Wikipedia)
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