Loading AI tools
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
List of parks and gardens in the German city of Hamburg.
Hamburg is one of Europe's greenest metropolises, with parks and gardens alone making up eight percent of the city's land area,[1][2] in addition to even larger percentages for nature reserves and agricultural land areas. In 2011, the city was voted "European Green Capital", in 2013 Hamburg hosted the International Garden Show (IGS) on the island of Wilhelmsburg.
List of public urban parks in Hamburg. The list does not include protected areas such as forests or nature reserves, nor Hamburg's many park-like cemeteries.
Name | Area[1][2] | Est.[Note 1] | Location[Note 2] | notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Alster Park[Note 3] | 169.0 ha | 1680 (1952) | several districts | |
Alter Elbpark | 4.2 ha | 1869 | Neustadt | |
Altona Balkon ("Balcony") | 5.4 ha | 1638 (1952) | Altona-Altstadt | |
Altona Volkspark | 205.0 ha | 1918 | Bahrenfeld | |
Amsinckpark | 5.7 ha | 1868 (1956) | Lokstedt | |
Antonipark (Park Fiction) | 0.8 ha | 2002 | St. Pauli | |
Astronomiepark | 1912 | Bergedorf | ||
BallinPark | 3.1 ha | 2007 | Veddel | |
Baur's Park | 8.7 ha | 1810 (1927) | Blankenese | designed by French landscape architect Joseph-Jacques Ramée |
Bergedorf Rathauspark | 1.5 ha | Bergedorf | ||
Bergedorf Schlosspark | 5.0 ha | 1805 (1896) | Bergedorf | |
Berner Gutspark | 7.2 ha | 1880 | Farmsen-Berne | |
Blohm's Park | 4.0 ha | 1875 (1934) | Horn | |
Bolívarpark | 1.1 ha | Harvestehude | ||
City-Nord-Park | 13.8 ha | 1965 | Winterhude | |
Donner's Park | 4.3 ha | 1676 (1984) | Ottensen | |
Domplatz | 0.5 ha | 2009 | Altstadt | |
Eichtalpark | 8.5 ha | 1830 (1926) | Wandsbek | |
Eimsbüttel Park | 1.9 ha | 1875 | Eimsbüttel | |
Eppendorfer Park | 8.0 ha | 1890 | Eppendorf | |
Gorch-Fock-Park | 2.6 ha | Finkenwerder | ||
Große Wallanlagen | 1869 | Neustadt | ||
Gustav-Mahler-Park | 1869 | Rotherbaum | ||
Goßler's Park | 8.4 ha | 1795 (1924) | Blankenese | |
Hamburg Stadtpark | 148.0 ha | 1914 | Winterhude | |
Hammer Park | 15.9 ha | 1773 (1914) | Hamm | |
Harburg Schlosspark | 1.5 ha | 2013 | Harburg | |
Harburg Stadtpark | 90.0 ha | 1913 (1926) | Harburg | |
Hans-Christian-Andersen-Park | 14.7 ha | 2009 | Osdorf | |
Hayn's Park | 4.8 ha | 1873 (1931) | Eppendorf | |
Heine Park | 3.4 ha | 1790 (1984) | Ottensen | |
Henneberg Park | 3.2 ha | 1855 (1930) | Poppenbüttel | |
Hesse Park | 3.8 ha | 1799 (1926) | Blankenese | |
Hindenburg-Park | 1827 (1927) | Othmarschen | ||
Hirschpark | 24.5 ha | 1620 (1927) | Blankenese | |
Horner Park | 6.0 ha | 1909 | Horn | |
Innocentiapark | 4.5 ha | 1884 | Harvestehude | |
Jacobi Park | 6.0 ha | 1954 | Eilbek | |
Jenfeld Moorpark | 5.0 ha | 2003 | Jenfeld | |
Jenisch Park | 42.0 ha | 1785 (1927) | Othmarschen | |
Kellinghusenpark | 2.3 ha | 1842 (1929) | Eppendorf | |
Kleine Wallanlagen | 1869 | Neustadt | ||
Lindenpark | 2.0 ha | 2003 | Eimsbüttel | |
Lise-Meitner-Park | 14.3 ha | 1975 | Bahrenfeld | |
Lohbekpark | Lokstedt | |||
Lohsepark | 4.2 ha | 2018 | HafenCity | |
Luna Park | Altona-Nord | |||
Lutherpark | 8.4 ha | 2003 | Bahrenfeld | |
Moorweide | 4.3 ha | Rotherbaum | ||
Neuer Elbpark Entenwerder | 16.0 ha | 1997 | Rothenburgsort | |
Ohlendorff's Park | 1.7 ha | 1878 (1928) | Volksdorf | |
Öjendorfer Park | 140.0 ha | 1968 | Billstedt | |
Planten un Blomen | 47.0 ha | 1821 | Neustadt | |
Rüschpark | 21.0 ha | 1996 | Finkenwerder | |
Saseler Park | 2.1 ha | 1830 (1962) | Sasel | |
Schinckel's Park | 7.0 ha | 1850 (1937) | Blankenese | |
Schleidenpark | 1.3 ha | 1904 | Barmbek-Süd | |
Schwarzenbergpark | 16.0 ha | 1904 | Heimfeld | |
Seelemannpark | 0.7 ha | Eppendorf | ||
Sternschanzenpark | 12.0 ha | 1866 | Sternschanze | |
Sven-Simon-Park | 5.4 ha | 1952 (1980) | Blankenese | |
Thörl's Park | 5.0 ha | Hamm | ||
Von-Eicken-Park | 2.3 ha | 1819 (1899) | Lokstedt | |
Wacholderpark | 1.0 ha | 1910 | Fuhlsbüttel | |
Wehber's Park | 2.0 ha | 1852 (1926) | Eimsbüttel | |
Wilhelmsburg Inselpark | 100.0 ha | 2013 | Wilhelmsburg |
Photo impressions of Hamburg parks:
List of public gardens in Hamburg. In some cases, a strict distinction between park or garden may be difficult.
name | area[1][2] | est.[Note 1] | location[Note 2] | notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Altona Dahliengarten | 1.5 ha | 1920 | Bahrenfeld | Europe's oldest dahlia garden, features ca. 850 dahlia species |
Altona Rosengarten | 4.5 ha | 1793 (1890) | Ottensen | |
Apothekergarten | Neustadt | |||
Arboretum Lohbrügge | 10.0 ha | 1965 | Lohbrügge | |
Botanical Garden (Old) | 1821 | Neustadt | ||
Botanical Garden (New) | 24.0 ha | 1979 | Osdorf | Loki-Schmidt-Garten since 2012 |
Botanischer Sondergarten | 5.5 ha | 1926 (1956) | Wandsbek | |
Garten de l'Aigle | 0.8 ha | 1888 | Eppendorf | |
Hamm Kräutergarten | 1986 | Hamm | ||
Hamm Rosengarten | 1957 | Hamm | ||
Harburg Schulgarten | 8.5 ha | 1931 | Harburg | |
Japanischer Garten | 1988 | Neustadt | Europe's largest garden of its kind, designed by Japanese landscape architect Yoshikuni Araki | |
Planten un Blomen[Note 4] | 47.0 ha | 1821 | Neustadt | |
Römischer Garten | 0.7 ha | 1890 (1951) | Blankenese | |
Rosa-Luxemburg-Garten | 1926 | Eimsbüttel | ||
Rosengarten | 0.5 ha | 1993 | Neustadt | features ca. 300 rose species |
Volksdorf Bauerngarten | 1969 | Volksdorf | part of Volksdorf open-air museum | |
Wilhelmsburg Rosenboulevard | 0.3 ha | 2013 | Wilhelmsburg |
Photo impressions of Hamburg gardens:
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.