Skip to main content

Berlin from a Balloon

 

It's become a habit for me to find opportunities to view cities from above, even though sometimes the experience gives me momentary 'jelly-legs.' But up to now, it's always been an observation platform on a tall building or tower, or a hill above a city.

20240815_145919

But in Paris this summer I discovered that for a relatively modest fee I could go up in an observation platform suspended from a captive hot-air (well, not really hot-air—they're actually filled with helium) balloon—except that when the day came, my last day in Paris, the balloon was earth-bound because of wind. Oh, well, I thought; maybe another year.

20240820_115636

And then I arrived in Berlin, only to look up and see, in different colors and with a different advertising sponsor, a near-twin of my lost opportunity.

20240820_12492320240820_12501620240820_123224

The Berlin balloon takes off from an open field almost dead-center in the city, a walkable distance from many landmarks, which also means they're close by when you're up and looking down.

20240820_12333920240820_12472920240820_12310720240820_12462920240820_123148

A very thick (and hopefully very strong) steel cable visible in the first picture of this group is wound around a powerful winch installed in the ground. It's connected by the couplings above to the balloon's harness. Unwind it from the winch and the balloon goes up; after fifteen minutes, the cable is wound down again, and the balloon lands. It sounds simple and reassuring, but my 'jelly-legs' kicked in when we abruptly started up.

20240820_12381520240820_12463420240820_124004

The observation platform is actually a ring, carefully protected with mesh screens, but wide enough to walk around to look in all directions. On board, just above, was our pilot; I'm not sure just what his role is other than to be a calm presence, because the controls for the winch are operated from below.

20240820_123506TV Tower at center, just behind Humboldt Forum; to its left the Berliner Dom.

20240820_123613Berliner Dom and Humboldt again, with matching towers of French and German churches at Gendarmenmarkt in foreground

20240820_123524(0)Reichstag building with dome in foreground; main railroad station behind it

20240820_123752The Tempodrom, an event venue on the site of the old Anhalter station

20240820_12435720240820_12393620240820_12371520240820_123842

Some of the more unusual views from the balloon were practically under it. The field it 'flies' from was right at the Berlin Wall, and several exhibits and pieces of the wall are nearby, as is the Topography of Terror museum about the Nazi era. In the 30-some years since the wall, it has somehow escaped development.

20240820_12320820240820_12402220240820_123327

A large part of the immediate vicinity is taken up with a large and colorfully-painted collection of Trabants—the loved and hated East German car popularly called the Trabi.

20240820_123304

Just to complete the sort of offbeat tackiness of the whole thing, the corner is home not only to a yellow Trabi on a pillar, but to a currywurst stand with an enormous sausage on the roof. Which reminded me it was time for lunch...

20240820_130734

Attachments

Images (33)
  • 20240815_145919
  • 20240820_115636
  • 20240820_115955
  • 20240820_123107
  • 20240820_123148
  • 20240820_123208
  • 20240820_123224
  • 20240820_123232
  • 20240820_123249
  • 20240820_123304
  • 20240820_123327
  • 20240820_123339
  • 20240820_123404
  • 20240820_123506
  • 20240820_123513
  • 20240820_123524(0)
  • 20240820_123613
  • 20240820_123715
  • 20240820_123752
  • 20240820_123815
  • 20240820_123842
  • 20240820_123936
  • 20240820_124004
  • 20240820_124022
  • 20240820_124357
  • 20240820_124556
  • 20240820_124629
  • 20240820_124634
  • 20240820_124659
  • 20240820_124729
  • 20240820_124923
  • 20240820_125016
  • 20240820_130734

The best part of every trip is realizing that it has upset your expectations

Add Comment

Comments (4)

Newest · Oldest · Popular
Quite similar in concept. The Olympic one was moored in the Tuileries Garden, which has other interesting balloon connections. It was the site of the Montgolfier brothers’ first passenger balloon ascension in 1783, and in the 1790s the French military based a group of observation balloons there, possibly the world’s first air force.
Post
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×