Tetrahedron in Bottrop
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| Tetrahedron in Bottrop | |
|---|---|
Bottrop Tetraeder | |
Tetrahedron from south | |
![]() Interactive map of the Tetrahedron in Bottrop area | |
| Alternative names | Haldenereignis Emscherblick |
| General information | |
| Type | Halden sculpture |
| Location | Beckstraße 57a, Bottrop, Germany |
| Construction started | 1994 |
| Opened | 3 October 1995 |
| Cost | €1.2 million |
| Height | |
| Height | 50 metres (160 ft) |
| Observatory | 38 metres (125 ft) |
| Dimensions | |
| Weight | 210 tonnes (230 tons) |
| Other dimensions | 60 metres (200 ft) side length |
| Technical details | |
| Material | Steel tubing, concrete columns |
| Floor count | 3 |
| Design and construction | |
| Architect | Wolfgang Christ |
| Structural engineer | Klaus Bollinger |
| Other designers | Jürgen LIT Fischer (light sculpture) |
| Main contractor | Rüter GmbH |
| Website | |
| tetraeder-bottrop | |
The Tetrahedron in Bottrop (German: Bottrop Tetraeder, or, officially, Haldenereignis Emscherblick) is a walkable steel structure in the form of a tetrahedron with a side length of sixty metres, resting on four nine-metre-tall concrete pillars. It is located in Bottrop, Germany, on top of the mine dump Halde Beckstraße and serves as the town's landmark. It was opened on German Unity Day 3 October 1995. The Tetrahedron is one of several Halden sculptures in the Ruhrgebiet region located atop slag piles, remnants of the region's industrial era.[1]
The design is reminiscent of the Sierpinski tetrix: placing four half-size tetrahedra corner to corner and adding an octahedron in the middle, a full-size tetrahedron is formed; this process can be repeated recursively to form larger and larger tetrahedra.



