Tetrahedron in Bottrop

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Alternative namesHaldenereignis Emscherblick
LocationBeckstraße 57a, Bottrop, Germany
Construction started1994
Tetrahedron in Bottrop
Bottrop Tetraeder
Tetrahedron from south
Interactive map of the Tetrahedron in Bottrop area
Alternative namesHaldenereignis Emscherblick
General information
TypeHalden sculpture
LocationBeckstraße 57a, Bottrop, Germany
Construction started1994
Opened3 October 1995
Cost€1.2 million
Height
Height50 metres (160 ft)
Observatory38 metres (125 ft)
Dimensions
Weight210 tonnes (230 tons)
Other dimensions60 metres (200 ft) side length
Technical details
MaterialSteel tubing, concrete columns
Floor count3
Design and construction
ArchitectWolfgang Christ
Structural engineerKlaus Bollinger
Other designersJürgen LIT Fischer (light sculpture)
Main contractorRüter GmbH
Website
tetraeder-bottrop.de

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.

"Aliens" stone arrangements

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI