Körnerpark
Neo-baroque park designed in the style of a palace garden, featuring a fountain cascade and a formal flower garden. The grounds include an orangery that houses an art gallery and a café. Read more…
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This 2.4-hectare park is designed in a neo-baroque style intended to resemble a palace garden. The landscape features a cascade with fountains, a formal flower garden, and an orangery. Originally built on the site of a former gravel pit, the grounds are characterized by symmetrical layouts and ornamental water features.
The park was gifted to the city in 1910 and constructed around 1912 under the direction of architects Karl Otto Halbritter, Reinhold Kiehl, and Hans Richard Küllenberg. It has been designated as a listed historic garden monument since 2004. The site is also historically significant as the location where the Rider's Tomb of Neukölln was discovered.
Facilities on the grounds include the Orangerie Neukölln, which houses a café and a gallery for rotating art exhibitions. The park is open to the public and features wheelchair-accessible paths throughout the garden and gallery spaces.
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