The Tiergarten, formal German name: Großer Tiergarten, is Berlin's most popular inner-city park, located completely in the district of the same name. The park is 210 hectares in size and is among the largest urban gardens of Germany. Only the Tempelhofer Park and Munich's Englischer Garten are larger.
Großer Tiergarten in the centre, with the narrow long Kleiner Tiergarten at the upper edge.
Full aerial view of the Tiergarten
A little bridge in the Tiergarten park, 1866.
Unveiling of the Richard Wagner Monument in the Tiergarten (1908), by Anton von Werner
Tiergarten is a locality within the borough of Mitte, in central Berlin (Germany). Notable for the great and homonymous urban park, before German reunification, it was a part of West Berlin. Until Berlin's 2001 administrative reform, Tiergarten was also the name of a borough (Bezirk), consisting of the current locality (Ortsteil) of Tiergarten plus Hansaviertel and Moabit. A new system of road and rail tunnels runs under the park towards Berlin's main station in nearby Moabit.
Panoramic view of the southern part of Tiergarten
The Rousseau Island in the Großer Tiergarten, early-19th-century engraving
St Matthew Church
Luiseninsel in autumn