Berlin: Canal
Places and attractions in the Canal category
Categories
- Museum
- Park
- Neighbourhood
- Art museum
- Monuments and statues
- History museum
- Church
- Specialty museum
- Square
- Shopping
- Street
- Nightlife
- Natural attraction
- Nature
- Theater
- Bridge
- Memorial
- Baroque architecture
- Lake
- Historical place
- Shopping centre
- Concerts and shows
- Cemetery
- Dancing
- Tower
- Amusement park
- Art gallery
- Palace
- Architecture
- Forts and castles
- Amusement
- Library
- View point
- Karl Friedrich Schinkel
- Canal
- Concert hall
- Modern art museum
- Sport
- Sport venue
- Water park
- Swimming
- Nazi architecture
- City hall
- Performing arts
- Arenas and stadiums
- Neo-renaissance architecture
- Archaeological museum
- Science museum
- Music venue
- Cinema
- Memorial site
- Sculpture
- Shopping district
- Vernacular architecture
- Gothic Revival architecture
- Area
- Unesco
- Art Nouveau architecture
- Zoo
- New objectivity architecture
- Frederick the Great
- Synagogue
- Sacred and religious sites
- Hill
- Island
- Mosque
- Fountain
- Universities and schools
- City
- Event space
- Skyscraper
- Beach
- Climbing
Kupfergraben
Kupfergraben is the name given to the 400-metre-long northern part of the canal-like left arm of the Spree, the Spreekanal, along the Museum Island from the Eiserne Bridge to the Spree at kilometre 16.31 in Berlin's Mitte district.
Landwehr Canal
The Landwehr Canal, or Landwehrkanal in German, is a 10.7-kilometre long canal parallel to the Spree river in Berlin, Germany, built between 1845 and 1850 according to plans by Peter Joseph Lenné.
Engelbecken
The Luisenstadt Canal, or Luisenstädtischer Kanal, is a 2.3-kilometre-long former canal in Berlin, Germany. It is named after the Luisenstadt district and ran through today's districts of Kreuzberg and Mitte, linking the Landwehr Canal with the Spree River, and serving a central canal basin known as the Engelbecken or Angel's Pool.
Westhafen Canal
The Westhafen Canal, or Westhafenkanal in German, is a canal in Berlin, Germany. The 3.1-kilometre long canal connects with the Westhafen inland port and the Berlin-Spandau Ship Canal at its eastern end, and with the River Spree in Charlottenburg at its western end.
Britz Canal
The Britz Canal, or Britzer Verbindungskanal in German, is a 3.4-kilometre long canal in Berlin, Germany. The canal was built between 1900 and 1906, and was previously known as the Britz Branch Canal or Britzer Zweigkanal.
Charlottenburg Canal
The Charlottenburg Canal, or Charlottenburger Verbindungskanal in German, is a canal in Berlin, Germany. With a former length of 3.2 kilometres, the canal was built between 1848 and 1859, and originally connected the River Spree, in Charlottenburg, with the Berlin-Spandau Ship Canal.
Griebnitz Canal
The Griebnitz Canal, formerly known as the Prinz-Friedrich-Leopold-Kanal, is a canal in the western suburbs of Berlin, the capital city of Germany.
Gosen Canal
The Gosen Canal is a canal in the eastern suburbs of Berlin, the capital city of Germany. It takes its name from the village Gosen, at the southern end of the canal. It is 4 kilometres in length and links the Dämeritzsee and Seddinsee lakes.
Neukölln Ship Canal
The Neukölln Ship Canal, or Neuköllner Schiffahrtskanal, is a 4.1-kilometre long canal in Berlin, Germany. It connects with the Landwehr Canal at its northern end, and with the Teltow Canal and the Britz Canal at its southern end.
Berlin-Spandau Ship Canal
The Berlin-Spandau Ship Canal, or Berlin-Spandauer Schifffahrtskanal in German, is a canal in Berlin, Germany. It was built between 1848 and 1859 to a plan created by Peter Joseph Lenné, and was formerly known as the Hohenzollern Canal or Hohenzollernkanal.
Teltow Canal
The Teltow Canal, also known as the Teltowkanal in German, is a canal to the south of Berlin, the capital city of Germany. The canal lies in both the states of Berlin and Brandenburg, and at points forms the boundary between the two.