Rakotzbrücke Kromlau
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The Kromlau Azalea and Rhododendron Park is an landscaped park in Gablenz, Germany, built during the nineteenth century, reportedly on the grounds of a former feudal estate by Friedrich Herrmann Rötschke. Following World War II, the park was nationalized by the government, and has no admission fee (though there is a nominal parking fee). The park is an example of an English landscape garden, and it contains many small ponds and lakes. It is known for the ''Rakotzbrücke'', a bridge especially built to create a circle when it is reflected in the water beneath it.


''Rakotzbrücke''

The ''Rakotzbrücke'' (also known as ''Teufelsbrücke'', meaning "the Devil's Bridge") is 7.8 metres long, 6.5 metres wide and spans Rakotz lake. The radius of the inner arch is 2.2 metres, and the outer radius is 3.4 metres long. The abutments measure 3.6 metres and the side weights measure 2.0 meters The bridge features artificially-formed basalt columns selected and shipped from distant quarries. It was commissioned in 1860 "by the knight of the local town", Friedrich Herrmann Rötschke (1805-1893). The bridge was renovated in 2018 and 2019, though it remains forbidden to cross the bridge, for the safety of the public and the bridge.


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Protected areas of Saxony Parks in Germany Görlitz (district) {{Görlitz-geo-stub