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BERGAMONT OFFICIAL
Saved routes

BERGAMONT PRIDE RIDE

BERGAMONT OFFICIAL
Saved routes

BERGAMONT PRIDE RIDE

planned a gravel ride

June 22, 2021

BERGAMONT PRIDE RIDE

Moderate

04:37

73.2km

15.9km/h

230m

230m

5 people liked this tour.

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Overview

Moderate gravel ride. Good fitness required. Some segments of this route may be unpaved and difficult to ride.

Cycling is not permitted along parts of this route

After 21.1 km for 102 m

After 36.8 km for 72 m

After 48.3 km for 110 m

Waypoints

A

Start point

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1

4.50 km

Stellinger Water Tower

Highlight • Monument

The Stellinger water tower is located on Högenstraße in the Hamburg district of Stellingen. It is no longer used for water supply, but has been converted into a residential building. With its height of 47.59 m, it is visible from afar and is considered the landmark of the district.

The Stellinger Wasserturm is a 47.59 m high brick building, which was built with Lüneburg hand-drawn bricks. It differs from most comparable water towers by its southwestern front in the form of an elevated townhouse facade. The walls are divided by pilasters, which run through to the step-shaped gable. The roof is copper-covered. The areas between the pilasters were plastered brightly in the area of the water tank. Above the water tank originally a viewing platform was created. The surroundings have also been designed in a representative way: the base of the tower originally surrounded a terraced area with wide staircases and a pergola. There is nothing left since the conversion.

The water tank was an iron ball bottom tank with 600 m³ capacity. The effective height was 32.5 m. The useful height means the level of the highest water level in the container above the terrain.
de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wasserturm_Hamburg-Stellingen

Translated by Google •

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2

8.56 km

A beautiful gravel path leads through the meadows, some of which are narrow like a single trail. It's fun to drive here.

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3

14.1 km

Nice section right in the Holmoor.

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4

18.9 km

full milestone

Highlight • Monument

an old full milestone of the way between Altona and Lübeck, worth seeing

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5

23.5 km

Rothsteinsmoor Nature Reserve

Highlight • Natural Monument

The Rothsteinsmoor nature reserve is located in Langenhorn not far from the airport. It is about nine hectares of residual bog and a valuable refuge for rare and endangered plant and animal species.

The Rothsteinsmoor is the remainder of what used to be a large area of raised moorland and is located north-east of the airport. Large parts of the area are covered by deciduous forest, small heath areas and a sand dune. The small-scale diversity of biotopes worthy of protection offers a large number of plant and animal species suitable habitats.

hamburg.de/rothsteinsmoor

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6

24.1 km

Great view right at the end of the runway. The fliers arrive directly at a landing. For one or the other, it might be a bit loud.

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7

27.7 km

Alsterdorfer Damm Bridge

Highlight • Bridge

The dam bridge was built in 1918 and is now part of the overall Brabandstrasse complex with the transformer house, staircases, platforms, terraces and walls on the list of Hamburg's cultural monuments.

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8

30.4 km

View of St. Johannis Convent

Highlight • Viewpoint

The St. Johannis Monastery in Hamburg is located on the opposite bank of the Alster. From this side you have a good view of the monastery.

Today it is a residential complex at Heilwigstraße 162 in the Eppendorf district as a Protestant women's convent. This was built between 1912 and 1914 by the architects Richard Kahl and Ludwig Endresen and is located in a spacious garden on the Alster.
There are 69 self-contained apartments available for single women over the age of 60. The monastery is managed by an honorary board approved by the Senate. The Great Convention is made up of the two patrons, the respective first and second mayor of the city, the three board members and the dominatrix. This structure has existed since the Reformation.


The monastery emerged from the Herwardeshude Cistercian monastery founded in 1246 by Heilwig von der Lippe, which was initially located on the Pepermölenbek in front of the later Altona and was relocated in 1295 to the area of today's Harvestehude district. After the Reformation, in 1530 the nuns were housed in the buildings of the previously abolished Dominican monastery of St. Johannis in downtown Hamburg, and in 1536 they founded the Evangelical Conventual nuns' monastery for unmarried Hamburg patrician and bourgeois daughters. In 1837 the monastery was relocated to the Schützenwall, which later became Klosterwall, and in 1914 it moved further to its current location on Heilwigstraße. This street was named after the monastery founder in 1870.

de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kloster_St._Johannis_(Hamburg)

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9

32.4 km

View of the Alster

Highlight • Viewpoint

The Alster is an absolute highlight of Hamburg.

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10

39.1 km

Hindenburg Bridge

Highlight • Bridge

The Hindenburg Bridge is a beam bridge that spans the Alster in Hamburg's district Alsterdorf in the course of Hindenburgstraße between the Brabandstraße and Rathenaustraße.
Source: de.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hindenburgbrücke_(Hamburg)

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11

43.0 km

Reiter Bridge

Highlight • Bridge

The rider bridge connects the blackberry trail with the large playground on Wellingsbütteler Landstraße. A list of Alster bridges on Wikipedia shows all bridges that cross the Alster.

wikipedia.org/wiki/Liste_der_Alsterbr%C3%BCcken

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12

44.3 km

Illies Bridge

Highlight • Bridge

With this bridge, the Alster hiking trail crosses the Alster between the Alte Landstrasse and the Wellingsbütteler Landstrasse.
Source: Wikipedia

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13

53.7 km

Berner Gutspark

Highlight • Natural Monument

If you follow the city center from the Wandse to the Berner Au, you will immediately come to an idyllic green area with a wonderfully curved meadow, small lakes and groves as well as a wonderful manor house, the Berner Gutspark.

Between 1919 and 1930, on a large part of the estate's surface, at the urging and initiative of the residents at that time, a settlement was created that was intended to enable near-natural but affordable living outside the cities. The design, designed by the architect Friedrich R. Ostermeyer, for the further development of the settlement, followed the idea of the garden city, which he had already been able to implement at the Steenkamp settlement in Altona.

The manor house has housed a day care center since 1969, and since 1999 it has been empty for three years, until it was bought by the city's “Gartenstadt Hamburg eG” housing association in October 2001. Extensive restoration work followed on the listed building, so that it can be used today for both public and private events, even for wedding receptions.
The Berner Gutspark is an important garden monument.


hamburg.de/parkanlagen/3050512/berner-gutspark

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14

55.8 km

Berner Au in Hanni Park

Highlight • River

The Berner Au and the retention basins extend into the Wandse. This is a great place to cycle along and avoid the main roads.

The retention ponds are great places to take a break.
In some cases, children can also watch the remote-controlled boats here!

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15

58.6 km

View of Ostender Pond

Highlight • Viewpoint

"The Ostend lido was created from a full clay pit, the shore areas of which were parceled out by the owner Mejer and leased to interested parties. The whole thing was called Strandpark Ostende. In 1935, the Wehrmacht intended, in connection with the construction of the barracks in today's Wilsonstrasse to set up a military bathing establishment on this lake. The then city of Wandsbek was sent forward for this purpose. It bought the area in November 1935 from the owner Mejer or his heirs, terminated all lease agreements and handed the area over to the Wehrmacht in 1936. They built the planned military bathing establishment there. After 1945, the military bathing establishment was opened to the public again as the Ostend open-air swimming pool, later the Ostend lido. In popular parlance, the name “Ostende” is often attributed to soldiers who used it to commemorate their stationing in Belgium The North Sea resort of Ostende was intended to be remembered. However, this attribution of the name contradicts the fact that the lake is already referred to as “The Great Sunny Lake” with the addition “Ostende” in the land map on which Mejer sold the site, i.e. the name "Ostend" is older than its use by Wehrmacht soldiers."

(Source: Wikipedia: Hamburg-Tonndorf. As of: March 1, 2021)

In addition to this information, it is very nice to drive around the lake and take the small paths towards Farmsen. There are small ponds inhabited by dragonflies and waterfowl.

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16

59.8 km

Wandse Riverside Path

Highlight • Trail

Here you can drive well without getting in each other's way. The floor is pristine.

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17

63.4 km

Old Jewish Cemetery, Wandsbek

Highlight • Historical Site

The cemetery on the Königszeile has been a listed building since 1960. It is locked, but still visible from the street. In the meantime, around 500 tombstones have survived, the oldest of which dates from 1676. In front of the old Jewish cemetery in Wandsbek there is a memorial stone for Simon S. Bamberger, who was rabbi of the Israelite community of Wandsbek from 1902 to 1938.

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18

64.4 km

Houseboats on the Eilbek Canal

Highlight (Segment) • Structure

Very beautiful landscape and here are also a lot of great houseboats

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19

66.7 km

"Gertrud" is modest. She doesn't let anyone know that she's the center of attention. No sign drawing attention to this, no memorial stone.
And yet: She is always the center of attention. It is the center of Hamburg - the church of St. Gertrud on the Uhlenhorst.
Next to the church, on the southeast side, is the geographic center of Hamburg. At 53 degrees, 34 minutes, 8 seconds north latitude and 10 degrees, 1 minute, 44 seconds east longitude. That's the common opinion.
According to new calculations, the center could also be a little further, at the Lerchenfeld high school, but for the people of Uhlenhorst - and Pastor Heinz-Jochen Blaschke - St. Gertrud remains the center of Hamburg.
The church turned 125 years old on Palm Sunday 2010.


abendblatt.de/hamburg/kommunales/article107664106/Hamburgs-geografier-Mittelpunkt-feiert-Jubilaeum.html

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20

67.5 km

Schwanenwik Bridge

Highlight • Bridge

The Schwanenwik Bridge spans the Wandse River on the eastern shore of the Outer Alster Lake in Hamburg. The bridge is located on the eastern shore of the Outer Alster Lake at the confluence of the Wandse River, on the border between the districts of Hohenfelde and Uhlenhorst. The road "Schwanenwik" crosses the bridge.

The truss arch bridge was built between 1874 and 1878 according to plans by Franz Andreas Meyer. It has a span of 26 meters and a total length of 55 meters. The structure has two granite abutments, each with a vaulted passageway for pedestrians. During the Second World War, the passageways were bricked up and used as air-raid shelters; in the following years, they were almost completely filled in.
Between 1976 and 1980, the structure was renovated and rebuilt. The original exterior appearance was restored. Reinforced concrete arches replaced the central iron truss girders. The walkways in the abutments and the railing decorated with vine leaves were also renewed. In addition, the bridge received eight new lampposts instead of the previous 15, arranged in pairs. The new lamps were modeled after the originals but are not identical.
Since the renovation, the bridge has a load-bearing capacity of 60 tons (previously 30 tons). It is now one of Hamburg's oldest surviving iron structures and is a listed historical monument.


wikipedia.org/wiki/Schwanen

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21

67.6 km

View of the Outer Alster

Highlight (Segment) • Viewpoint

The Outer Alster is the top highlight in Hamburg. Cyclists, runners, walkers, sailors, rowers and everyone who wants to enjoy the day meet here.

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B

73.2 km

End point

Way Types & Surfaces

Way Types

36.3 km

13.7 km

9.19 km

8.59 km

4.98 km

333 m

< 100 m

Surfaces

30.9 km

15.9 km

12.4 km

10.8 km

2.78 km

389 m

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Route Details

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