Almost none of the following buildings planned for Berlin were ever built:
Avenue of Splendors Berlin was to be reorganised along a central boulevard known as the
Prachtallee ("Avenue/
Boulevard of Splendor(s)"). This would run south from a crossroads with the
East-West Axis close to the
Brandenburg Gate, following the course of the old
Siegesallee through the
Tiergarten before continuing down to an area just west of
Tempelhof Airport. This new North-South Axis would have served as a parade ground, and have been closed off to traffic. Vehicles would have instead been diverted into an underground highway running directly underneath the parade route; sections of this highway's tunnel structure were built, and still exist today. No work was ever begun above ground although Speer did relocate the Siegesallee to another part of the Tiergarten in 1938 in preparation for the avenue's construction. The plan also called for the building of two new large railway stations as the planned North-South Axis would have severed the tracks leading to the old
Anhalter and
Potsdamer stations, forcing their closure. These new stations would be built on the city's main
Hundekopf (dog's head) geography
S-Bahn ring with the
Nordbahnhof in
Wedding and the larger
Südbahnhof in
Tempelhof-Schöneberg at the southern end of the avenue. The
Anhalter Bahnhof, no longer used as a railway station, would have been turned into a swimming pool.
Großer Platz At the northern end of the avenue on the site of the
Königsplatz (now the
Platz der Republik) there was to be a large open forum known as
Großer Platz ("Grand Plaza") with an area of around . This square was to be surrounded by the grandest buildings of all, with the
Führer's palace on the west side on the site of the former
Kroll Opera House, the 1894 Reichstag building on the east side, and the third Reich Chancellery and high command of the German Army on the south side (on either side of the square's entrance from the
Avenue of Splendours). On the north side of the plaza, straddling the
River Spree, Speer planned to build the centrepiece of the new Berlin, an enormous
domed building, the
Volkshalle (''people's hall
), designed by Hitler himself. Had it been built, the Volkshalle'' would have still been the largest enclosed space in the world today. Although war came before work could begin, all the necessary land was acquired and the engineering plans were worked out. The building would have been over high and in diameter, sixteen times larger than the dome of
St. Peter's Basilica.
Triumphal Arch Towards the southern end of the avenue would be a
triumphal arch based on the
Arc de Triomphe in
Paris, but again, much larger; it would be almost high, and the Arc de Triomphe (at the time the largest triumphal arch in existence) could have fit inside its opening, evidently with the intention of replacing the rather long history associated with this Arch and in particular the unique ceremonies, with reference to the history of France, connected with it. As a result of the occupation of Berlin by Soviet troops in 1945, a
memorial was constructed with two thousand of the Soviet dead buried there in line with this proposed 'Triumphal Arch'. It had been intended that inside this generously proportioned structure the names of the 1,800,000 German
dead of the
First World War should be carved. ==See also==