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Berlin TV Tower turns 55 years old

Berlin TV Tower turns 55 years old

The Berlin TV Tower (Fernsehturm) turns 55 years old on October 3, 2024. Here’s what celebrations are in store above the chaos of the capital.

Berliner Fernsehturm turns 55 years old on German Unity Day 2024

With its 368,03 metre construction completed on October 3, 1969, the Berliner Fernsehturm turns 55 today!

The work of Hermann Henselmann, a German architect also known for his numerous socialist classicist works found surrounding the Fernsehturm, on Alexanderplatz and Karl-Marx-Allee, the Fernsehturm was designed to broadcast GDR television and radio programmes.

To the dismay of those inhabiting houses, offices and shops which were demolished to make way for the Turm, construction began in 1965, and by 1967, the tower’s stem had been completed. August 1968 saw construction workers scaffold and panel the Turmkugel (tower ball) a now iconic feature on the capital’s skyline and in the autumn that year, the red and white striped antenna was mounted.

On October 3, 1969, the GDR’s first leader Walter Ulbricht opened the tower and the Fernsehturm began broadcasting colour TV across the GDR for the first time with the Deutsche Fernsehfunk 2 channel. “Das zweite Fernsehprogramm ist eröffnet” (“The second television is programme is initiated”), Ulbricht said as the first words broadcast.

Today, the tower serves numerous local radio and television broadcasters but is best known as a symbol of Berlin and Germany. Its viewing platform attracts no fewer than one million visitors per year, 25 percent of whom are Berliners, 25 percent Germans from other federal states and 50 percent international tourists.

Visitors can get a sneak peek of new Fernsehturm menu

After closing for renovations in autumn 2023, the Fernsehturm's famously rotating Sphere restaurant is set to open again in 2025.

But to celebrate the Turm’s 55th birthday, visitors have been invited to sample the new restaurant menu, put together by chef Tim Raue of Michelin star acclaim.

A three-course “Damals, Heute und Zukünftig” (“Then, Today and In Future”) menu attempts to reflect Berlin cuisine throughout the Fernsehturm’s history. Think the Spreewälder Gurken so beloved in the GDR and… the beef cheek goulash of the future, 207 metres above the chaos for 124 euros per head.

Grounded and echte Berliner*innen can opt for a Currywurst and a nice view of the Turm in celebration.

Thumb image credit: Ayman Noureldin / Shutterstock.com

Olivia Logan

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Olivia Logan

Editor for Germany at IamExpat Media. Olivia first came to Germany in 2013 to work as an Au Pair. Since studying English Literature and German in Scotland, Freiburg and Berlin...

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