
Location of Wedding in Berlin
'Wedding' is a district in the
borough of
Mitte,
Berlin,
Germany and was a separate borough in north-western Berlin until it was fused with
Tiergarten and Mitte in 2001. The former borough of Wedding included the district of
Gesundbrunnen.
History
In the
12th century, the
manor of the nobleman Rudolf de Weddinge was located on the small
Panke River in the immediate vicinity of today's
Nettelbeckplatz. The farmstead, which burned down more than once, remained abandoned in the forest until the
18th century.
In the mid-18th century, while Gesundbrunnen was being built up as a health resort and spa town, gambling and prostitution moved into Wedding, transforming it into a pleasure district.
The constant migration of country-dwellers into the city at the end of the
19th century converted Wedding into a
working-class district. The labourers lived in cramped
tenement blocks. After
World War I Wedding was known as "Red Wedding" as it was renowned for its militant, largely
communist working class; it was the scene of violent protests on
May 1,
1929. Because of the politics of the workers in Wedding, it was a target of attacks by the
Nazi government in the
1930s.
After
World War II, Wedding and
Reinickendorf together made up the
French sector of Berlin. The north side of Wedding's Bernauer Straße and both northern and southern sidewalks were in the French sector while the buildings along the southern side were in Soviet territory. When the
Berlin Wall was being built in August
1961, many who lived in apartments in these buildings frantically jumped from their windows to the sidewalk below, before the buildings could be evacuated and their windows bricked up.
Wedding was the western terminus of one of the first refugee tunnels dug underneath the Berlin Wall. It extended from the basement of an abandoned factory on Schönholzer Straße in the
Soviet sector underneath Bernauer Straße to another building in the west. Though marvellously well constructed and its secrecy maintained, the tunnel was plagued by water from leaking pipes, and had to be shut down after only a few days of operation.
A section of the Berlin Wall has been reconstructed near the spot on Bernauer Straße where the tunnel ended. Two sections of wall run parallel to one another down the street with a strip of
no man's land in the middle. A nearby museum documents the history of the Wall.
Wedding today
Today, Wedding is one of the
poorest areas of Berlin, with a high
unemployment rate of almost 26%. Almost 17% of the population live on
social welfare; 27% live below the poverty line.
[1] Foreigners make up almost 30% of the population.
[2] Low rents accompany the poverty in Wedding so, like many inexpensive areas in large cities, it is home to a vibrant
artists' community. Many
galleries have been founded by artists to provide a space for themselves and their peers to show their work.
More than other 19th century working class districts, the original character of Wedding has been preserved. It is said to be a place to find the ''Schnauze mit Herz'' (big mouth and big heart) of the working class. However, the spirit is not exclusively German. The
multicultural atmosphere is visible in the bilingual shop signs (German and
Turkish, or German and
Arabic). The buildings of Wedding are relics of European post-war
Modernism. Many are monolithic housing blocks. Some old buildings survived the war and urban renewal and still have
coal fired heating. Wedding did not experience the boom and gentrification of the '90s in Berlin.
Two green oases mark the borders of the old "red" district. The first is the vast
Humboldthain park in the East and the idyllic
Plötzensee lake in the Southwest. Volkspark Humboldthain has a rise in the south and one in the north with a sort of valley in between. The main activity is walking. There are
picnic grounds and a big outdoor public
swimming pool. There are also the remains of a large World War II bunker on the northern edge. After unsuccessful attempts to demolish the behemoth structure, the city decided to turn it into a lookout point. It provides an impressive view, especially to the north. Local technical mountain climbers have converted the northern face of the bunker to a practice climbing wall. Plötzensee is a popular summer hang-out offering lovely sandy beaches and long lawns to relax on. A section of the beach is reserved for
nudists.