The Elevator inside the Aquarium was called "AquaDom" and had a volume of about 1 million Liters. The outer shell bursted in dec 2022, flooded the building and the street in front of it.
1300 out of 1500 fish died; 264k gallons of water; built in 2003; 4 hypotheses are thought to be the cause; none confirmed yet. Investigation was closed without final verdict from what I could find.
Also the Aquadome was built by an american company, since no german or european company had the tech to built such a tank without visible connectoin of all the single parts that have been glued together, while still giving people a clear vision through the "glass" (i know its not glas)
Addition to the "Women only Parking Spots" they are not only reserved for Women in random places in Parking Garages. The Special Thing about them is that they are always located near Exits or are placed in well lit places with Video Surveillance.
@@viktorgabriel2554 In what way is it discrimination? Its the sad truth that as of now women are more for example sexually herassed than men (ofc men also get sexually herassed dont get me wrong but its "more common" for that to happen to women). For that reason i think its good to have parking spaces to make women (especially those who might have prior traumas relating to that) feel more safe. By no means is it sexually descriminating they can use all normal parking spaces as well.
@@viktorgabriel2554oh no... what happend that you think like that? I am from germany and its a Safty thing. And ontop of that everybody can Park anywhere those spaces are just better located and a little bigger
The best about Spaghetti ice is: because the strings could melt really fast, they put a layer of whipped cream underneath. And because the ice cream is very cold, it freezes the whipped cream. Frozen whipped cream... best thing ever. 🤤😊
Not to forget that you can order every available flavor, not only mint. And the sauce can be choosen, too. Caramel with rasberry sauce, why not. You can mix and match as you like.
As a German I always enjoy people from different countries reacting to things in Germany. We German love to complain about our country, so it's nice to see, what is actually good about it. Especially since the really cool, easily implemented hings, like e.g. women's only parking, are so normal to me, that I don't notice them as special at all. What I also like, is that I could as easily make a video like that about things I found to be clever solutions that I experienced in other countries, like e.g. public water fountains in the US, demand driven traffic lights in the Netherlands or a big turntable in the middle of the dining table in China. Maybe there should be a regular world conference of idea sharing??? And of course a big public push to also implement the best solutions... One last comment about the watering cans on the cemetery. On quite a few cemeteries in Germany I've seen public water cans that can be borrowed by putting a coin in the lock, just like it is common with shopping carts in Germany. I think that system is even cooler, since not everyone has to bring there own watering can, and even people that just visit can water plants if need be.
I'm also from Germany and I thought about how good it is that we also have parking spaces for mothers. Like our Kaufland has them for Mothers that bring their kids to shopping and the parking spaces are, bigger so that the kids can't really damage other cars when they swing the doors wide open and don't look. The spaces are also the closed to the door for when they have to do the shopping when it's dark out to make them feel safer. I also would like your idea of the conference, maybe the countries can adapt some idea and make living a bit better for everyone yk
I'm old enough to remember when women's parking spaces were new and sooo many men were angry about them and mocking them and even deliberate parking on them sometimes even in a way that they'd block two at once. It actually took quite a couple of years for the hatred to die down. I'm glad that it's now just a thing.
Public water fountains are slowly becoming a thing here in Cologne as well. Hallelujah. They're privately sponsored by a local electricity provider though, not payed for by the city. I've been complaining about the lack of freely available drinking water and often public toilets in and around parks especially for decades. Almost all parks here have literal 'toilet spots', where people just go in a cluster of bushes or such and that is not a pleasant experience, especially as a woman. And I don't even want to imagine, how annoying that is if you have small kids or are elderly. It makes me so angry. We're one of the wealthiest countries in the world and can't afford public toilets in our major cities? Not even ones where you have to pay 50 cents, so they're basically self financing? It's a disgrace.
@@IWrocker ...and it's getting even more interesting: in 1950 the local zoo advertised its attractions by shoving a female elephant into this train. During the ride the poor elephant paniced and managed to flee through the doors and fell off several meters into a swamp of the river "Wupper" (Wuppertal means Wupper Valley). Glad to know, the elephant named "Tuffi" (spoken with an "u" like in "to", but short vocal) survived that.
@@Robin.S_1980 As a Wuppertaler (citizen from Wuppertal) I cannot confirm this. Wikipedia, but translated: "Tuffi was an Asian elephant cow from the Franz Althoff circus who, on July 21, 1950, at the age of four, jumped from a moving train on the Wuppertal suspension railway into the Wupper in Wuppertal." But yes, she survived. And is still known to every Wuppertaler today. By the way, the suspension railway has been completely overhauled in recent years, i.e. parts of the sections and pillars have been renewed and old wagons (orange/dark blue/mostly covered in advertising) have been replaced with the new ones (ONLY light blue, almost advertising-free, with new equipment and large windows.) The old ones are in Wuppertal scattered around and are used for other purposes, e.g. Caffee's.
About the graveyard watecan rack: In germany graves are predominatly styled like small gardens (a bit larger then the coffins footprint) and relatives maintain them. So they need that can to water them. (usually water is provided by the graveyard for free). That rack there allows them to lock their can so they can store it on site.
@@sgxbot that's the norm where I live, too. Wherever that picture was taken, they must have had issues with the cans not being returned. I've never really thought about it, are graveyards in the US really just grass and plates/headstones like you see in movies?
im from berlin and we have it like that on most graveyards and i think the most german thing about that people are afraid and assuming that these 1-2 € products get stolen
20:00 Unlike in the USA, Graves in Germany are not just a Headstone and Grass around it, but feature a Mini-Garden in front/around the Headstone. You may plant Flowers or other things on it, and the watering cans are needed to maintain it.
very regional. At our cemetery you can borrow them. You need a Euro coin and you get it back when clipping it again in the system. But I know a lot of people who are simply put their stuff behind the stone out of sight.
I live in the Neustadt (a part of Dresden which translated means "new-city") and that arrangement of tubes makes no sound at all when it rains. You can even find at least one video debunking that. (BTW: "Kunsthofpassage" means "art-backyard-passage" and there is more art than just that to see there...)
As far as I know that was just an idea. Greetings to the blonde guy. His Name is Sandro and I party few times with him. He is the developer of that. But sadly I think it never came to production 😢
@@piiinkDeluxe I remember in Hildesheim they used 2012 the Trafficlight from the Street Main Trainstation to city center. So it was over the street "B1" connecting Bernwardstrasse and Almstrasse. I'll be there beginning May. I'll let you know 😉
The "women only parking" (near the wherlchair parking) spots are typically in Shopping Centers underground and are near an entrance/doors/lift to the Center itself. So the "dangerous" way is short.
The slides in the TU Munich are actually parabolic tubes, starting at a 45° angle, it's the building for the math and IT faculty... You slide using a sliding rug, and you absolutely need it to not shred your clothes or burn your backside. It's somewhat intimidating the first time, and it makes an eerie sound... absolutely go for it if you can!
I "heard from a friend" that you can use a tray from the cantina as sled instead for an extra speed (and range) boost... or at least that used to be a thing. Rather dangerous, OFC.
most of what you see is not everywhere in germany (cat shaped kindergardens, playing pong at traffic lights) its more of a special thing so just dont estimate its so cool everywhere ;)
About the electric trucks: they aren't connected with the wire above the Autobahn, the frame just touches the wire so that there is a connection for the electrical current to flow. The frames are also retractable so when the trucks leave the highway, they run on storage battery (or in some cases petrol).
Fun fact: Russia and former USSR countries been using this kind of system for buses in cities for decades (or even for more than half a century). It's called "Троллейбус" (literally: Trolleybus; or in German: Oberleitungsbus). The longest Trolleybus-line is in Crimea - it's more than 85km long.
@@IsleNaK The Difference is that the Power Lines should used for reload the Batteries of the Truck. It isn´t planned to electrifi the complete Autobahn System in Germany. Only some Areas where the Trucks can laod there Batterie during driving insteed of make a Brake and reload on a Station.
The watering cans are in a cemetary, brought in by people who attend the graves of relatives there. Often people plant flowers ect on graves here. To avoid having to walk carrying the can every time, they leave it there. And to stop it from being stolen they lock it to this rail with a bicycle lock. Yes, this aquarium had a lift inside, not the other way around. It was in the lobby of a big hotel in Berlin. Unfortunatly the aquarium burst last year and thousands of tons of water devastated the entire hall. It could have easily killed a lot of people, but luckily it burst at 4 am or so, when nobody was in the room. But thousands of exotic fish died.
i only know cemetaries where there are cans on a rack everyone can use. probably ppl brought it and left it for public using. the one in my home town had 15-20 watering cans no1 claimed them its own.
@@somersaultcurse The same here where i live. Our cans are public property and i never heard about someone stealing one of them. Maybe it`s because i live in the country side. Might be different in bigger cities.
@@Pfopferer01 Same here. We don't even have racks, there's a couple of water basins all over the cemetery and just some cans sitting next to them. Although I've seen cemeteries where they were locked to a rack like shopping carts, and you had to insert 1€ to unlock them. Probably because before people left them scattered all over the place.
The actual 'German' thing about that is that everyone uses their own can, instead of just having like 5 there that anyone can use. And even more German is the fear that someone might steal your precious watering can, which is why you have to lock it there, so that no one else can use it. Absolutely ridiculous if you ask me, and I'm German myself.
The Wuppertal suspension railway is an elevated railway in Wuppertal that opened on March 1, 1901. It remains the backbone of the city's local public transport to this day. Initially with less modern trains but on the same structure
In a publicity stunt in 1950, they put an elephant in the Wuppertal hanging railway. Unfortunately, it fell out into the Wupper river below, but, luckily, survived the fall.
The playing pong with the other side of the street at a crossing was an isolated and time limited art/engineering installation. The electic highway was/is just a trial running over a small stretch of an Autobahn section. I don't think anything ever came off of it so far. The shopping cart cleaning machine is more of a disinfectant machine that a few stores installed during Covid19. Spaghetti icecream is great!
so the pong game at traffic lights was was a social experiment of the university hildesheim in lower saxony and was put up for several month. but it got deinstalled afterwards
Otto (a comedian well known to Germans) also has his own pedestrian lights in Emden, where he is from. Lights like this pop up here and there, I am pretty sure that more of them will arrive.
The Circus with this Hologramshow is the very old "Circus Roncalli". The Lego Bridge in Wuppertal is part of an repurposed old railway. They got rid of the rails and now you can ride your bike or go walking joggin skating etc. on the "Nordbahntrasse" for about 22km. Along the way are some nice little attractions like the "Parcour Park", little restaurants, the "Wuppertaler Zoo" and so on. And all through a beautiful scenerie. They have another one called "Sambatrasse". From the Nordbahntrasse you can change to the "Korkenziehertrasse" through the neighbortown Solingen. Those biking / hiking Trassen are part of the "Bergischer Panorama-Radweg" which is approx 130 km long through the "Bergisches Land" in North Rhine Westfalia
There are also the skytrain weich connects just the different parts of the airport Düsseldorf with a subteranian train stop and its parent, the prototype of the skytrain, which connects the south campus, the north campus of the technical university of Dortmund and the technology park with each other.
@@markschattefor6997 And don`t forget that a company named a milk drink Tuffi because of the accident with that elephant. In the region arround wuppertal you can buy this milk in nearly every supermarket.
12:34 that might be an art project. Normally, the buttons are pretty standard, with the exception that under the casing, there's a hidden magnetic button for blind people, wich tells them through different vibration patterns, of the light is green or red. Comes in handy during loud traffic or near constrution sites when you can't hear the signal.
The cherry blossom in Bonn is realy beautiful to see and you are right, the first foto is the same street from below. Every year thousands of visitors come to Bonn to see it, even from Japan.
Yup, I can confirm that. I work very close to this avenue and we have so many visitors every year. Not really even from Japan, but especially from Japan.
5:00 I had this video running in the background and was genuenly surprised how well you pronounced that. To be honest first I understood "Nussstadt Kunststoffpassage" (en.: Nut-town Plasticpassage) but the second try, very good.
when you live in Cologne, you see the Dome (the big cathedral) from nearly everywhere in the City- except when you are next to it. Many people don't even look up any more. The place in front of it is calles "Domplatte" and damn windy at almost all times. If you go around the side, you will find a piece of old roman road that has been there even longer than the cathedral, layed bare right where it was build when the city was called Colonia Claudia Ara Agrippinensis
I live around 50km away from Cologne and there's a elevated point in my village where you can see the Dom on sunny cloud-free days. It's called "Domblick"
Also, near the far end of the Domplatte, you‘ll find a giant monument called the Kreuzblume. It’s always a joy to me to ask people what they think this monument is, only to reveal to them that it is in fact one of the tips of the Dom‘s towers, which look tiny from below, but are actually huge.
@@ViolosD2I .. nah, not really. There is too many ....sweethearts.... throwing firework at people. And there is that thing that happened a few years back.
Yes, Afghan trains are probably more reliable... which is no rocket science if you have only one single railway line in the whole country, i. e. Hairatan - Mazar-e Sharif...
Some years back they used the sloagan: "150 years ago, travelling by train was quite an adventure", to show how reliable it was in the present (about 42 years back) - now you can't read THAT anymore because it became worse - a nuisance: strikes, repairwork, snow or leafes in the cold months, fire in the hot season, trees after a stormy night, all blocking the tracks. Not enough people to drive the trains, too many people in the carriages if a special event makes them travel all at once. And the timing is so tight, that the trains are almost always late (it does not count as late, if it does NOT come at all - pimp your statistics)...
@@LisaBeta-42 (it is called late, when the train is more than 10minutes behind schedule - if it 1-10 minutes behind schedule it does count as in time - pimp your stats 2.0)...
On the Country Side the Village provides these Watering Cans and they are also not locked (people still have honor not to steal especially in such a place). The Water is free and before Cremation became big in Germany, almost everybody had traditional graves with a wooden coffin. These Graves have a stone or cement frame with the tombstone at the end and garden soil inside, where people plant flowers and small bushes. That's why these watering Cans are needed.
Awww...i live 2mins away from the cherry blossom road(s 2). It is so beautiful except in the day time because its packed with tourists/people. But at night and when the petals fall its amazing. When the petals fall the street looks like its pink and fluffy. Its incredible
I believe that 'free/open lane for emergency vehicles' is a rule even in other EU countries - at least here in Czech Rep. it is. Locals call it 'záchranářská ulička' - translated like 'Rescue alley'
Croatia too. Every screen above highway has it on repeat with temp and road conditions, and where there is no screen there's vinyl banner across the bridges
In Germany we have a lot of lokalised walking signals in pedestartian lights. They are regional, like using different ones in east or mining themed ones in old mining areas, lokal ones that reference local legends or industries or even temporary ones that reference current occurences.
Ivy is an evergreen plant. That building at the Botanische Garten was ranked over by a species of wild wine vine that is endemic to southern Germany. It's an entirely different species that drops its leaves in autumn. We had it at my parent's house. In summer, the entire wall it ranked on was buzzing with bees, In autumn, the colours the leaves went through before dropping were wild! The very dense cover with leaves on the southern walls made summers much more pleasant inside. The traffic lights with the pong game probably is a one of its kind, I have seen nothing like it anywhere here. The aquarium you saw at 12:55 collapsed a few years ago.
The vines might be endemic, but they are not native. The parthenocissus species is native to North America and is considered an invasive species here in Europe. I agree however that it looks lovely...
I actually was at the two slides one time. They are formed like parabolas because they are located at the Maths center of the Technical University in Munich (TUM).
The hangbridge has been the highest in Europe for years. I've been there once in an attempt to overcome my fear of heights (failed miserably). It's just over 100 meters high and about 600 meters long. It's seriously terrifying but gorgeous scenery
16:48 this seems to be the Geierlay suspended rope Bridge near Hunsrück in Germany. It was only opened in 2015 so relatively new! As it is a tourist attraction, the website for the bridge also hosts a live webcam with a view over the valley and the bridge itself. They also track how many visitors the bridge has and the data is public on their website as well!
Sadly the Black House was demolished some time ago for another modern bulding (the black house was kinda a art project by some people) The spaghetti ice is some special in germany, it was "invented" some decades ago by someone who put vanilla ice cream through a pasta maker, added strawberry sauce for the "tomato sauce" and them some vanilla crisp for the "chess". You can buy it in some super markets too as little portions. The ping pong on the traffic lights are only on a handful of some. Before i forget it, we dont make jokes and are bad at humor, so pls go back to work ;)
That’s really interesting. We visited Acchen maybe 10 years ago and don’t recall seeing them, but we are coming back in a couple of weeks so would be really interested in finding out what areas these are in, and what else there is as well as pong etc? Thanks!
Ian, you really have to take a closer look at the Tropical Island Resort and the building it's in. There was a very prestigious project called the "Cargolifter" where they wanted to build superlarge airships to transport cargo containers. The company went bankrupt just after this hanger and a small scale prototype were built. Since the building existed they sold it and it was repurposed for this indoor tropical resort with beaches, pools, waves, bars, waterfalls,... The scale of this ex-hangar is crazy! You can rent a bungalow for your stay...
... and the bankruptcy trustee and his networks took 70+ percent off the insolvency value. Even the government realized profit within the insolvency though 40 millions subsidies. D'you know who didn't get one thin dime? You're right, the mainly small investors who poured 320 millions into it. There was a coverage by German tv broadcaster BRalpha in 2019 iirc. Edit: zukunft-in-brand·de | verein | insolvenz-news·html
@@masterjubei1986 ich hätte mir aber gewünscht, dass dort wieder Luftschiffe gebaut werden! Wir haben auch Hallen für den neuen Zeppelin in Friedrichshafen gebaut, aber der ist ja eher ein "Schiffchen"
@@alphonsbretagne8468 dein Kommentar ist offenbar so gefährlich, es erscheint nur in meinen "Benachrichtigung", nicht aber als Kommentar unter dem Video!“ Jeder Deutsche hat das Recht, seine Meinung in Wort, Schrift und Bild frei... " gilt für dich offenbar nicht...
THe elctric Track for the Trucks is one of some testracks where they are testing elektrik trucks, that can just dock on it liek trains and besides that have normal elektromotors etc. to find out if its a concept for the future for more range and mobility with elektrick trucks.
AquaDom - it was a tourist attraction in Berlin. The aquarium was put into operation in December 2003. The cost of its construction is estimated by German media at EUR 12.8 million. It was 16 meters high and 11.5 meters in diameter. It was the largest free-standing cylindrical saltwater aquarium in the world. Visitors could admire 1,500 fish of nearly 100 different species swimming in the aquarium from a special elevator (for 19 euros). Unfortunately, this aquarium was destroyed due to material fatigue in December 2022. The aquarium was made of acrylic glass. One million liters of water spilled out, and with it 1,500 fish. The explosion was so powerful that it was recorded by Berlin seismographs.
Am I wrong or was the aquarium made in the USA and then shipped to Germany because many German engineers knew that it could not be stable enough and therefore would not last long?
@@mathildewesendonck7225 There´s even a documentation about the building process here somewhere on YT. As far as I remember it was delivered in parts and then assembled here by American specialists.
The slide in the Munich Technical Umversity is fun. It is a Parabelrutsche (parabellus slide?) And on the bottom is a scale how far you slided. 1, 2, e, 3, Pi, 4, 5
I guess this is the parking lot of a car manufacturer, or kind of a collecting point, because the alley is pretty tight. This is extremly place efficient and it would be very unpractical for public use, like shopping - imagine pulling shopping carts and then a car approaches you - almost nowhere to go.
@@Z0RDR4CK I've seen this kind of parking lot at bowling centers, indoor playground places, golf clubs etc. It's definitely not limited to car manufacturing companies. And there's also enough room for a shopping cart and a car to pass each other.
The standing surf wave at 18:08 is in a big sport store called L+T in my hometown Osnabrück in Lower Saxony. It's called "Hasewelle" what's a pun of the word 'Welle' (wave) and 'Hase' (the animal hare, but here the name of a river next to the building. Osnabrück itself is also often called the 'Hasestadt', what means town at the (river) Hase 😊). You can book tickets or even courses to really surf there among the customers since 2018.🎉
vienna has pairs of persons in the pedestrian traffic lights. they are either male + female, female + female or male + male. and the walking symbol has a heart too.
There are some other towns in Germany with similar unique pedestrian traffic lights. In Quedlinburg, a small town in the Harz region there are witches and I think devils as a cultural reference to the region on there. In Mainz there are some traffic lights with the famous Mainzelmännchen a cartoon figure from the ZDF the 2nd German public TV station that shows in between commercials mainly during the evening hours. I don’t know of any other examples but I guess there are some more even if only some on certain crossings. One thing though, the normal symbols on pedestrian traffic lights in western part of Germany and the eastern part are different and after reunification there were serious efforts made to keep the traditional symbols a.k.a. „Rettet das Ampelmännchen“
There were only a few of them, though. They got put up after queer artist Conchita Wurst won the Eurovision song contest for Austria. These traffic lights were basically only up for the time during the following year when we, as the winners, were hosting the song contest in Vienna. I think there's a couple of them left but you'd really have to go looking for them. They were only ever around the area of Stadthalle (the big event building where the song contest show was hosted) and maybe a few other tourist spots.
@@TheFeldhamster they are still in many places in the inner city. the issue is, that these are not oddly shaped lamps but blinds installed inside the traffic lights. they stay even when the lamp gets swapped (and LEDs hardly die). for example, they are still in mariahilf and innere stadt.
19:30 watering can explanation. Never thought about it (like most things you see on a weekly basis probably), but simple: Rather than bringing the watering can each week (or month) you visit, it's just there. Might be a walk to the gy. or you coming from somewhere else, better than carrying the watering can with you the whole day. Mind you: Coming by bike, bus+ or just for a walk is pretty popular in Ger. Having your own can makes sure they are available(?) and having the locks makes sure they aren't taken away from this public place. (no surveillance for graveyards) I was never aware they had locks though - this differs from region to region. It might be this is in a big city. Certainly a few "free" cans there would be gone soon, and then you would stand there without a way to water your beloved one's flowers. In general hard to imagine otherwise, so: In the video it would be interesting, how do you handle watering cans on your country's graveyards?
The "McBoat" is the only one of its kind in the world so far. Built by the local branch during COVID restrictions when drive through and take out was booming. People order at the small dock you see in the picture and then someone from the McDonalds up the stairs comes down and delivers your order.
The electric Truck wire a test part, but more like recharge the batteries without stopping also, sure overtaking is possible, get off grid, change lane, and after back rise contact up again so those would save time for recharge stopping and on the other side maybe less capacity needed so far I remember
The electrical motorway are test routes on a normal highway motorway, the trucks have 2 engines of the first a diesel engine, the second is the electric motor with additional batteries. If the truck leaves the route, it drives with diesel. The future should reach the following: to drive on long routes with electricity to save fuel. However, the system has been in many cities for almost a hundred years, it was the overhead line buses, the flexible in road traffic. The counterpart was the tram, but needed a railroad. In our area there is such a test track.
The general idea is not new, no, but it's far more challenging to electrify a huge portion of the highway network for this to work than it is to run some lines between city buildings that are already electrified. In that sense, it is "new".
@@drsnova7313 It has nothing to do with electrified buildings, because DC traction lines are always completely separate from building grid. But yes, electrification of highways + changing thousands trucks to plug-in hybrids with current collectors is a big and ambitious investment.
it's very cool and very stupid at the same time... I think the cool bit is obvious. but... the stupid bit it... trucks are bing turned into a sort of train and bits of motorways are turned into rails for those "trains" when we already have rails and trains that can transport cargo perfectly fine..... if they were properly maintained... so... if money was spent on them.
@@karowolkenschaufler7659 You can just answer yourself two more questions. 1.How long does it take to collect full train of goods and how long will it take to bring it off rails. Therefore, how much longer will it take to transport your cargo, even if it was between two points that are only 5 km away from rails? 2. How many spare slots do you have on rail? Will it allow you to move 5% shipping from trucks to rails? Maybe 10%? I doubt that it will be 20%, what will be your plan for electrifying rest of it?
@@karfrancouzsky9725 from the length and "one Punch knock out" tone (if I read it correctly) of your answer, this is a sore spot for you... Interesting. I can't answer any of these questions. But I also can't imagine that absolutely everything that is on a truck instead of on a train really couldn't be on a train. Do you know the time differece between unloading trains and unloading trucks. And is that a problem that can really absolutely not be helped by improving infrastructure? And do all the goods on trucks really need to be transported as fast as they can be transported with a truck? All of them? Electrification is a matter of investment. It's just about actually starting to do it. As with any big task. The sooner you (in this case the government in charge) stop procastinating the sooner it's done. Anyway. I really didn't expect to anger anyone like that with my comment. Do you like trucks a lot?
4:20 There are a few bridges of similar construction to be found in different German landscape parks designed in the 18th or 19th century. Often they are called a "devil's bridge" (including some local legend explaining the name); the official name of this bridge in Kromlau Azalea and Rhododendron Park is "Rakotz bridge". Similiar half-cycle constructions from medieval times can be found in different regions in southern Europe (southern France, Spain, Italy, Bulgaria), and they have often names meaning "devil's bridge". 5:15 "Kunsthof" means "Art courtyard". The Kunsthof-Passage in the Äußere Neustadt ("outer new town", built mostly during the 19th century) district of Dresden consists of 5 courtyards, each with a different theme. 9:53 The blimp hangar is actually not so old. It was constructed in 2000 as part of the Cargolifter project (the Cargolifter CL 160 was planned as a cargo airship able to lift and transport up to 160 tons, e.g. hydropower turbines for big hydroelectric plants in remote areas or complete bodywork presses for the automotive industry, but the project failed due management problems and went into insolvency in 2002). Video about the waterpark: ruclips.net/video/vQrJY1SKIaY/видео.html 11:30 in Frankfurt/Main: The tower in the foreground was part of the medieval walls, the glass tower in the background is the Nextower (constructed in 2011) and the Jumeirah Hotel (constructed in 2009). 12:53 That aquarium did burst in the night of 16 December 2022, killing nearly all of the 1,500 fish inside and flooding the hotel lobby surrounding it.
the black house was a project by an artist from Pfortzheim, but it was banned because the house is a listed building and had to be restored to its original state some things in the video are not the rule but rather the exception, such as the pong game at the traffic lights or the car wash for shopping trolleys there was a small mistake in the lift story the lift is/was in the aquarium which unfortunately broke overnight one day there are also lots of cherry blossoms in the neighbourhood where I live and it looks fantastic when they start to bloom
the elevator with the aquarium inside... the aquarium bursted a while back, flooding the shopping mall. thankfully this happened during the night when noone could be injured. playing pong on pedestrian traffic lights must be a one-town-thing. i have never seen or even heard of those and i am a german who never left the country. the swing for wheelchairs is rare. only ever seen one of those myself.
the usual gymnasts wear is basically a bathing suit, legs are completely naked. German graves have a human size rectangle area in front of the headstone where people grow flowers etc. probably to prevent people from walking over the buried dead bodies
19:31 the "graveyard rack" is like a bike rack for watering cans, installed on graveyards. Not every graveyard has them, but I've seen them before. It's so you don't have to bring your watering can every time you go to water the plants on the graves. And everyone labels their with their name so you don't get confused which one belongs to you, because as you've seen, the green is very prevalent.
I live in Friedberg, those are not the traffic lights we have here. We do have some Elvis motiv, but different. And they were only put in like maybe 10 years ago, i chuckled heartily at your "they're still functional". They have not been in place since he served at the Ray Barracks.
2:55: That’s in Bonn in the city centre. I live there and see it every year in April/May. Lots of visitors come to take photos. But after 3 weeks it’s over.
5:32 I don't speak German but I know a few words (like Banhof, Kunst, etc.), so, cutting and pasting here and there, I would say that translates to something like "Newtown Art Place Passage" (Passage meaning an alley or smaller street connecting two more important streets, I would guess.) It seems the rain water is collected by those funnels, making music while it flows down through the pipes.
9:07 the statistic is misleading. Women are not more likely to be victims of violent crimes in parking garages than anywhere else in public (my source: Polizeistatistiken aus Deutschland). And architects that build parking garages know this fact. So this picture becomes even more amazing, because the only reason parking garages have this is to make women feel more secure and comfortable.
17:39 this slide is in Winterberg and it is part of an "adventure bridge" with multiple obstacles for kids to climb through, but you have to pay to enter the bridge so it is not a regular playground
Dude, as a half german living in Germany, I have to say first of I really like your pronunciation especially the „Neustadt kunsthofpassage“ (which you almost said correctly btw) the „eu“ is pronounced like „oi“ and „Stadt“ is pronounced „shtat“ (I hope this makes sense). And second of, some of the things like the hologram circus and the tampon book I didn’t even know existed but I really like the fact that they are trying to find ways around the 19% vat because that’s just bs in my opinion because basic foods, books, magazines and even going to the movies has a 7% vat but female hygiene products dont
I did not know about these books too. Never saw them at a bookshop or on advertisments but it is amazing. But the system on what is getting a vat of 7 % and what goes with 19% will always be a mystery. I mean you get the 7% for animal food but the food for babys are at 19%. Thats just strange.
@@kleenesr6840 Since 2020 there has been only 7 percent VAT on tampons. But the industry just took that gift and refused to lower the prices. Also, I was shocked if we (I work in a supermarket) took the wrong prices. No, Babyfood has like all food a VAT of 7%. Generally, food is 7% and Beverages 19% (Only food you buy in grocery stores) The food you buy in a restaurant is 19% because the service to cook is the "Added Value" (Mehrwert) OK there is a weird exception though If you buy from a food stand _AND_ they don't provide a seat for you to sit down and consume the food :-) Yes, sometimes taxes are "funny" ;-) Milch (Kuhmilch) gilt als Nahrungsmittel (7%) Aus Hafer order Soja gilt als Getränk (19%) Möglichweise kommt dieses Märchen daher? de.statista.com/statistik/daten/studie/1268483/umfrage/laender-in-europa-mit-reduziertem-steuersatz-fuer-periodenprodukte/ www.direktzu.de/kanzlerin/messages/warum-wird-babynahrung-hoeher-besteuert-als-hundefutter-15842
@@kleenesr6840 It is because woman needs are luxus. Compare shaving equipment man vs woman.Btw that is luxus compared to tampons which is definitly not,you can´t live without stuff like this.
That cherry blossom pic is from the city I live in. It's basically only one street, but it got so famous that we even get tourists only for that during blooming season. During lockdowm they even had to close up the wole street, because too many people gathered there to take pictures
because it's semi outside, and that was a tropical aquarium with warm water, while the night it broke it had -20 °C outside, the ~50 °C difference was too much.
@@Bioshyn The description is wrong. The aquarium was inside the hotel. The elevator was going up and down inside the round aquarium, which was round and built around the elevator. I am sure the difference in temperature had nothing to do with the bursting. It was built inside the hotel lobby. I stayed there in 2017. It contained 1 million liters of salt water (roughly 250,000 gallons) and cost 16 million Euros to build. Scuba divers worked inside to tend to animals and plants. The accident was attributed to material fatigue in the acrylic wall.
@@Bioshyn highly unlikley. the aquarium has lived trough many winters before. more likley explaination is a failure of the clue over time and or pre existing damage might occured due a repair.
The shopping car cleaning machines appeared during the pandemic when some people were afraid of germs and would spray everything around them. So in some supermarkets they offered these machines which were outside the store.
1:34 this was invented in Austria and its called: Rettungsgasse (Rescuepath) and mostly it doesnt work ^^ because Germany and Austria are the only two Countrys where u MUST do it by the Law ^^ so most people who are just passing thru wont even know they have to do this. And if just 1 car dont follow the lead of the others and stands in the middle its completely useless (or some motorbikes are rushing thru)
1:18 yes i could be great but its rarely done. Im on the road realy often and out of 10 times this lane only works (is made) 2 times i guess. Most people dont care and fines are way to small. Even if you move to the side some people honk at you and getting mad
@@OmegamonUICorrect. That's the difference between for example Fuß and Fluss. ss and ß are NOT the same. That's why in earlier times in capitals ß was written SZ and not SS which changed later. And nowadays, they invented a capital ß (which is bullshit in my opinion).
Not entirely true. There are two occasions for ß, don’t mix them up. 1) making the vowel before it pronounced short. Most of these were actually changed by the spelling reform 20 years ago to “ss”. (Fluß->Fluss, daß->dass, Faß->Fass, …) 2) a sharp “s”-sound. These words are still written with ß. This is closer to the historic use. It is actually a ligature of an old “s” and “z”, hence it is called “ess-zet” or “sz”. (Gießen, fließen, reißen, büßen, Buße, Straße,…)
The "Electric Highway" was a test run on a part of a Autobahn. But no Truck uses it because its too expensive to build the top needed to connect to it.
Hi. The watercan at the graveyard thing is just to give graveflowers water. People let the cans there, that they don't have to carry them the next time. But i did not know that they lock them. In the really small village where i grew up, it was normal that some people let a can there and everybody can use it.
14:05 Electric Highway and the SCANIA trucks: This trucks do have some detection system, that detects the section of this highway where the electric wires are at and where they aren't. the trucks are just kind of regular battery electric trucks with the special equipment for recharging their batteries from that high voltage wires from overheads. For regular recharging they can also use standard EV charging plugs and they will be able to recharge as well from the mega chargers, which are planned in various locations.
There is at least one swimming pool... area that has different watery slides - even some you slide while standing, and another that starts with the floor moving away under your feet and you begin the journey with a drop until it bends into a slide...
8:50 This letter *ß* although it looks like some sort of funky B is actually an "Eszett" (sz) and makes a double s sound so in this case it would be _Giessen..._
The AquaDom at Karl-Liebknecht-Straße 3 in Berlin was the largest cylindrical aquarium in the world. The seawater aquarium was freestanding in the hall of the Radisson Collection Hotel in the DomAquarée CityQuartier from December 2003. On December 16, 2022, the outer acrylic glass cylinder shattered.
6:56 The Wuppertal suspension railway is an elevated railway in Wuppertal that opened in 1901 and is the city's landmark and most important tourist attraction. It has been a listed building since May 26, 1997.
5:07 I have been there, really interesting to look at, it's a tiny place in Dresden, with many strange buildings. 12:47 nop, no more. It got shattered completely and they won't rebuilt. It was called Aquadome in Berlin and it was inside a hotel lobby.
The Elevator inside the Aquarium was called "AquaDom" and had a volume of about 1 million Liters.
The outer shell bursted in dec 2022, flooded the building and the street in front of it.
1300 out of 1500 fish died;
264k gallons of water;
built in 2003;
4 hypotheses are thought to be the cause; none confirmed yet.
Investigation was closed without final verdict from what I could find.
The Aqua Dome was in the Radisson Blue Hotel on Alexanderplatz in Berlin.
Also the Aquadome was built by an american company, since no german or european company had the tech to built such a tank without visible connectoin of all the single parts that have been glued together, while still giving people a clear vision through the "glass" (i know its not glas)
@@manuelvo1798maybe thats why it blows up last year 😂! BTW...Because of the erruption of the Aquarium blow uo the earthquake alarms gets aktivatet.
@@Haelda Honestly, the fact that they managed to save 200 fish during that is pretty amazing.
Addition to the "Women only Parking Spots" they are not only reserved for Women in random places in Parking Garages. The Special Thing about them is that they are always located near Exits or are placed in well lit places with Video Surveillance.
Witch by all accounts is sexual discrimination
@@viktorgabriel2554 In what way is it discrimination? Its the sad truth that as of now women are more for example sexually herassed than men (ofc men also get sexually herassed dont get me wrong but its "more common" for that to happen to women). For that reason i think its good to have parking spaces to make women (especially those who might have prior traumas relating to that) feel more safe. By no means is it sexually descriminating they can use all normal parking spaces as well.
@@viktorgabriel2554The issue is not that there are these parking spots but that there is a need for them.
@@viktorgabriel2554oh no... what happend that you think like that? I am from germany and its a Safty thing. And ontop of that everybody can Park anywhere those spaces are just better located and a little bigger
@@AaaAaa-mh6zv That's trug. But that is not an issue women can resolve. It's some crazy men who are responsible.
The best about Spaghetti ice is: because the strings could melt really fast, they put a layer of whipped cream underneath. And because the ice cream is very cold, it freezes the whipped cream. Frozen whipped cream... best thing ever. 🤤😊
Wow that sounds spectacular 😎
I love frozen whipped cream 😅 Guter Scheiss
Yes, the frozen whipped cream underneath the ice ist the best of that ice cream 😊
👌
Not to forget that you can order every available flavor, not only mint. And the sauce can be choosen, too. Caramel with rasberry sauce, why not. You can mix and match as you like.
As a German I always enjoy people from different countries reacting to things in Germany. We German love to complain about our country, so it's nice to see, what is actually good about it. Especially since the really cool, easily implemented hings, like e.g. women's only parking, are so normal to me, that I don't notice them as special at all.
What I also like, is that I could as easily make a video like that about things I found to be clever solutions that I experienced in other countries, like e.g. public water fountains in the US, demand driven traffic lights in the Netherlands or a big turntable in the middle of the dining table in China. Maybe there should be a regular world conference of idea sharing??? And of course a big public push to also implement the best solutions...
One last comment about the watering cans on the cemetery. On quite a few cemeteries in Germany I've seen public water cans that can be borrowed by putting a coin in the lock, just like it is common with shopping carts in Germany. I think that system is even cooler, since not everyone has to bring there own watering can, and even people that just visit can water plants if need be.
I'm also from Germany and I thought about how good it is that we also have parking spaces for mothers. Like our Kaufland has them for Mothers that bring their kids to shopping and the parking spaces are, bigger so that the kids can't really damage other cars when they swing the doors wide open and don't look. The spaces are also the closed to the door for when they have to do the shopping when it's dark out to make them feel safer.
I also would like your idea of the conference, maybe the countries can adapt some idea and make living a bit better for everyone yk
I'm old enough to remember when women's parking spaces were new and sooo many men were angry about them and mocking them and even deliberate parking on them sometimes even in a way that they'd block two at once.
It actually took quite a couple of years for the hatred to die down. I'm glad that it's now just a thing.
Public water fountains are slowly becoming a thing here in Cologne as well. Hallelujah. They're privately sponsored by a local electricity provider though, not payed for by the city.
I've been complaining about the lack of freely available drinking water and often public toilets in and around parks especially for decades. Almost all parks here have literal 'toilet spots', where people just go in a cluster of bushes or such and that is not a pleasant experience, especially as a woman. And I don't even want to imagine, how annoying that is if you have small kids or are elderly.
It makes me so angry. We're one of the wealthiest countries in the world and can't afford public toilets in our major cities? Not even ones where you have to pay 50 cents, so they're basically self financing?
It's a disgrace.
@@TheFeldhamster Das waren noch Zeiten ....
The futuristic suspension train is like 120 years old 😂😂
Oh my 🤣🤣🤣
The tracks, but not the trains.
Well the "Kaiserwagen" is the tracks aren't - they get renewed every once in a while ;) @@aurigo_tech
@@IWrocker ...and it's getting even more interesting: in 1950 the local zoo advertised its attractions by shoving a female elephant into this train. During the ride the poor elephant paniced and managed to flee through the doors and fell off several meters into a swamp of the river "Wupper" (Wuppertal means Wupper Valley). Glad to know, the elephant named "Tuffi" (spoken with an "u" like in "to", but short vocal) survived that.
@@Robin.S_1980 As a Wuppertaler (citizen from Wuppertal) I cannot confirm this. Wikipedia, but translated: "Tuffi was an Asian elephant cow from the Franz Althoff circus who, on July 21, 1950, at the age of four, jumped from a moving train on the Wuppertal suspension railway into the Wupper in Wuppertal."
But yes, she survived. And is still known to every Wuppertaler today.
By the way, the suspension railway has been completely overhauled in recent years, i.e. parts of the sections and pillars have been renewed and old wagons (orange/dark blue/mostly covered in advertising) have been replaced with the new ones (ONLY light blue, almost advertising-free, with new equipment and large windows.) The old ones are in Wuppertal scattered around and are used for other purposes, e.g. Caffee's.
About the graveyard watecan rack: In germany graves are predominatly styled like small gardens (a bit larger then the coffins footprint) and relatives maintain them. So they need that can to water them. (usually water is provided by the graveyard for free). That rack there allows them to lock their can so they can store it on site.
where i have been there were no locks. just cans for everyone to use and everyone knowing to just put them back.
@@sgxbot that's the norm where I live, too. Wherever that picture was taken, they must have had issues with the cans not being returned. I've never really thought about it, are graveyards in the US really just grass and plates/headstones like you see in movies?
im from berlin and we have it like that on most graveyards and i think the most german thing about that people are afraid and assuming that these 1-2 € products get stolen
@@hobobobohoboboboThey would, not because of their value, but because of convenience not o have to bring your own.
@@sgxbot it's a thing you only see on graveyards in the bigger cities. not a common thing, but a nice fitting meme.
20:00 Unlike in the USA, Graves in Germany are not just a Headstone and Grass around it, but feature a Mini-Garden in front/around the Headstone. You may plant Flowers or other things on it, and the watering cans are needed to maintain it.
Exactly. Although I have never seen private, locked watering cans… Must be a rough city ;)
@@JAloja-um8nn This! Plus, the Graveyards I have been to, provide Watercans, everyone can use.
@@JAloja-um8nnsome places have common watering cans or big graveyards have their own gardeners that keep the plants happy.
@@JAloja-um8nn Gotta be a regional thing.
very regional. At our cemetery you can borrow them. You need a Euro coin and you get it back when clipping it again in the system. But I know a lot of people who are simply put their stuff behind the stone out of sight.
I live in the Neustadt (a part of Dresden which translated means "new-city") and that arrangement of tubes makes no sound at all when it rains. You can even find at least one video debunking that.
(BTW: "Kunsthofpassage" means "art-backyard-passage" and there is more art than just that to see there...)
The Pong thing is not common. I am German and have travelled to many German cities in all states and have never seen that.
It‘s only in Hildesheim, as far as I know, and even there it‘s only one pair of traffic lights.
Still cool!
As far as I know that was just an idea. Greetings to the blonde guy. His Name is Sandro and I party few times with him. He is the developer of that. But sadly I think it never came to production 😢
AT least 2 Pairs of traffic lights in Oberhausen, NRW have these too! I played it a few times and it's always fun!
Thank you for the infos, guys. I will look out for these if I'll visit Hildesheim and Oberhausen. 😃
@@piiinkDeluxe I remember in Hildesheim they used 2012 the Trafficlight from the Street Main Trainstation to city center. So it was over the street "B1" connecting Bernwardstrasse and Almstrasse. I'll be there beginning May. I'll let you know 😉
The "women only parking" (near the wherlchair parking) spots are typically in Shopping Centers underground and are near an entrance/doors/lift to the Center itself. So the "dangerous" way is short.
The slides in the TU Munich are actually parabolic tubes, starting at a 45° angle, it's the building for the math and IT faculty... You slide using a sliding rug, and you absolutely need it to not shred your clothes or burn your backside. It's somewhat intimidating the first time, and it makes an eerie sound... absolutely go for it if you can!
I "heard from a friend" that you can use a tray from the cantina as sled instead for an extra speed (and range) boost... or at least that used to be a thing. Rather dangerous, OFC.
@@mariusmorawski5595😂🤙
most of what you see is not everywhere in germany (cat shaped kindergardens, playing pong at traffic lights) its more of a special thing so just dont estimate its so cool everywhere ;)
yes the Kunsthofpassage is in Dresden neustadt.
yeah most of this stuff is just one of a kind in some random location in germany.
True, and all European countries have similarly cool stuff. Welcome on earth, Americans :P
In den USA steht ja auch nicht in jeder Straße ein Hot Dog Wagen ^^
@@iatz626 ja aber es gibt in jeder us stadt mehrere von. die Kunsthofpassage in Dresden gibts in der form nur 1 mal.
About the electric trucks: they aren't connected with the wire above the Autobahn, the frame just touches the wire so that there is a connection for the electrical current to flow. The frames are also retractable so when the trucks leave the highway, they run on storage battery (or in some cases petrol).
Just like our railway system
But there are only a few of these hybrid trucks. I drove along the autobahn with the test lane many times and i have only seen one of the trucks.
Fun fact: Russia and former USSR countries been using this kind of system for buses in cities for decades (or even for more than half a century). It's called "Троллейбус" (literally: Trolleybus; or in German: Oberleitungsbus). The longest Trolleybus-line is in Crimea - it's more than 85km long.
@@IsleNaK The Difference is that the Power Lines should used for reload the Batteries of the Truck. It isn´t planned to electrifi the complete Autobahn System in Germany. Only some Areas where the Trucks can laod there Batterie during driving insteed of make a Brake and reload on a Station.
The watering cans are in a cemetary, brought in by people who attend the graves of relatives there. Often people plant flowers ect on graves here. To avoid having to walk carrying the can every time, they leave it there. And to stop it from being stolen they lock it to this rail with a bicycle lock.
Yes, this aquarium had a lift inside, not the other way around. It was in the lobby of a big hotel in Berlin. Unfortunatly the aquarium burst last year and thousands of tons of water devastated the entire hall. It could have easily killed a lot of people, but luckily it burst at 4 am or so, when nobody was in the room. But thousands of exotic fish died.
i only know cemetaries where there are cans on a rack everyone can use. probably ppl brought it and left it for public using. the one in my home town had 15-20 watering cans no1 claimed them its own.
@@somersaultcurse The same here where i live. Our cans are public property and i never heard about someone stealing one of them.
Maybe it`s because i live in the country side. Might be different in bigger cities.
@@Pfopferer01 Same here. We don't even have racks, there's a couple of water basins all over the cemetery and just some cans sitting next to them.
Although I've seen cemeteries where they were locked to a rack like shopping carts, and you had to insert 1€ to unlock them. Probably because before people left them scattered all over the place.
The actual 'German' thing about that is that everyone uses their own can, instead of just having like 5 there that anyone can use. And even more German is the fear that someone might steal your precious watering can, which is why you have to lock it there, so that no one else can use it. Absolutely ridiculous if you ask me, and I'm German myself.
There once was a time when people could be trusted to not steal as generic items as watering cans.
The manhole, works like when you open it, you got a fence around the opening 😊
The Wuppertal suspension railway is an elevated railway in Wuppertal that opened on March 1, 1901. It remains the backbone of the city's local public transport to this day. Initially with less modern trains but on the same structure
A great pice of technology that we just abandoned
There also is a museum called the "schwebodrom", where you can do a virtual "Schwebebahn" tour of 1920...
Suspension railways are only good in a REALLY REALLY small niche. But for Wuppertal they are perfect
In a publicity stunt in 1950, they put an elephant in the Wuppertal hanging railway. Unfortunately, it fell out into the Wupper river below, but, luckily, survived the fall.
@@mikc666I even know a version, where the elephant just jumped out of the car because of some kind like a claustrophobic attac.
19:05 Actually we have these kits for almost everything in the supermarket 😂 Often you also find one for a soup base
The playing pong with the other side of the street at a crossing was an isolated and time limited art/engineering installation.
The electic highway was/is just a trial running over a small stretch of an Autobahn section. I don't think anything ever came off of it so far.
The shopping cart cleaning machine is more of a disinfectant machine that a few stores installed during Covid19.
Spaghetti icecream is great!
so the pong game at traffic lights was was a social experiment of the university hildesheim in lower saxony and was put up for several month. but it got deinstalled afterwards
Otto (a comedian well known to Germans) also has his own pedestrian lights in Emden, where he is from. Lights like this pop up here and there, I am pretty sure that more of them will arrive.
Der gute alte Otto! Ich wusste das nichtmal, wow.
@@astrophynix179Hehe, Otto ist selbst als Ampelmännchen witzig. 😄
In Duisburg we have coal miners 😊
@@SookieStackhouse2301@herb6677 Thanks for the info, will check them out when I'm there (just writing in English because of the channel)
In Leverkusen they have "Funken", they call it Funkenampelmännchen. (Funken -> Karneval)
The Circus with this Hologramshow is the very old "Circus Roncalli". The Lego Bridge in Wuppertal is part of an repurposed old railway. They got rid of the rails and now you can ride your bike or go walking joggin skating etc. on the "Nordbahntrasse" for about 22km. Along the way are some nice little attractions like the "Parcour Park", little restaurants, the "Wuppertaler Zoo" and so on. And all through a beautiful scenerie. They have another one called "Sambatrasse". From the Nordbahntrasse you can change to the "Korkenziehertrasse" through the neighbortown Solingen. Those biking / hiking Trassen are part of the "Bergischer Panorama-Radweg" which is approx 130 km long through the "Bergisches Land" in North Rhine Westfalia
Wuppertal railway is 122 years old. It began operating in 1901
Here's side by side view 1902 and 2015:
ruclips.net/video/7TqqdOcX4dc/видео.html
It reallly amused me when he said "look how futuristic that looks" :D But yeah it's a cool train.
In 1950 elephant "Tuffi" fell out of the Schwebebahn.
It was unharmed.
There are also the skytrain weich connects just the different parts of the airport Düsseldorf with a subteranian train stop and its parent, the prototype of the skytrain, which connects the south campus, the north campus of the technical university of Dortmund and the technology park with each other.
@@markschattefor6997 And don`t forget that a company named a milk drink Tuffi because of the accident with that elephant. In the region arround wuppertal you can buy this milk in nearly every supermarket.
@@911archiv Ein 9 11 Archiv bringt mich dazu Sabaton zu hören wollen; ruclips.net/video/CxlRJsQ7p2k/видео.html
12:34 that might be an art project. Normally, the buttons are pretty standard, with the exception that under the casing, there's a hidden magnetic button for blind people, wich tells them through different vibration patterns, of the light is green or red. Comes in handy during loud traffic or near constrution sites when you can't hear the signal.
The cherry blossom in Bonn is realy beautiful to see and you are right, the first foto is the same street from below. Every year thousands of visitors come to Bonn to see it, even from Japan.
Yup, I can confirm that. I work very close to this avenue and we have so many visitors every year. Not really even from Japan, but especially from Japan.
My sisters partner lives nearby. It's every year a must-to-see 😍
5:00 I had this video running in the background and was genuenly surprised how well you pronounced that. To be honest first I understood "Nussstadt Kunststoffpassage" (en.: Nut-town Plasticpassage) but the second try, very good.
when you live in Cologne, you see the Dome (the big cathedral) from nearly everywhere in the City- except when you are next to it. Many people don't even look up any more. The place in front of it is calles "Domplatte" and damn windy at almost all times. If you go around the side, you will find a piece of old roman road that has been there even longer than the cathedral, layed bare right where it was build when the city was called Colonia Claudia Ara Agrippinensis
I live around 50km away from Cologne and there's a elevated point in my village where you can see the Dom on sunny cloud-free days. It's called "Domblick"
Also, near the far end of the Domplatte, you‘ll find a giant monument called the Kreuzblume. It’s always a joy to me to ask people what they think this monument is, only to reveal to them that it is in fact one of the tips of the Dom‘s towers, which look tiny from below, but are actually huge.
Also the local population has fun new year's parties there.
@@ViolosD2I .. nah, not really. There is too many ....sweethearts.... throwing firework at people. And there is that thing that happened a few years back.
@@Sanouscha I think that is what he was talking about
12:42 By the way, this aquarium exploded.
The Deutsche Bahn is also very interesting: you never know when and if it will run.
Yes, Afghan trains are probably more reliable... which is no rocket science if you have only one single railway line in the whole country, i. e. Hairatan - Mazar-e Sharif...
Some years back they used the sloagan: "150 years ago, travelling by train was quite an adventure", to show how reliable it was in the present (about 42 years back) - now you can't read THAT anymore because it became worse - a nuisance: strikes, repairwork, snow or leafes in the cold months, fire in the hot season, trees after a stormy night, all blocking the tracks. Not enough people to drive the trains, too many people in the carriages if a special event makes them travel all at once. And the timing is so tight, that the trains are almost always late (it does not count as late, if it does NOT come at all - pimp your statistics)...
@@LisaBeta-42 (it is called late, when the train is more than 10minutes behind schedule - if it 1-10 minutes behind schedule it does count as in time - pimp your stats 2.0)...
Reminds me of the saying "Germans are always on time. And then God laughed and created Deutsche Bahn."
On the Country Side the Village provides these Watering Cans and they are also not locked (people still have honor not to steal especially in such a place). The Water is free and before Cremation became big in Germany, almost everybody had traditional graves with a wooden coffin. These Graves have a stone or cement frame with the tombstone at the end and garden soil inside, where people plant flowers and small bushes. That's why these watering Cans are needed.
Awww...i live 2mins away from the cherry blossom road(s 2). It is so beautiful except in the day time because its packed with tourists/people. But at night and when the petals fall its amazing. When the petals fall the street looks like its pink and fluffy. Its incredible
I believe that 'free/open lane for emergency vehicles' is a rule even in other EU countries - at least here in Czech Rep. it is. Locals call it 'záchranářská ulička' - translated like 'Rescue alley'
Croatia too. Every screen above highway has it on repeat with temp and road conditions, and where there is no screen there's vinyl banner across the bridges
@@ChR0nos_7734 @jekyll_cz Austria has it too, and being German, I have to admit, that I'm pretty sure it existed there before it did here in Germany.
It's also the law in the Netherlands.
In Poland too
Same in Belgium
In Germany we have a lot of lokalised walking signals in pedestartian lights. They are regional, like using different ones in east or mining themed ones in old mining areas, lokal ones that reference local legends or industries or even temporary ones that reference current occurences.
Ivy is an evergreen plant. That building at the Botanische Garten was ranked over by a species of wild wine vine that is endemic to southern Germany. It's an entirely different species that drops its leaves in autumn.
We had it at my parent's house. In summer, the entire wall it ranked on was buzzing with bees, In autumn, the colours the leaves went through before dropping were wild! The very dense cover with leaves on the southern walls made summers much more pleasant inside.
The traffic lights with the pong game probably is a one of its kind, I have seen nothing like it anywhere here.
The aquarium you saw at 12:55 collapsed a few years ago.
The vines might be endemic, but they are not native. The parthenocissus species is native to North America and is considered an invasive species here in Europe. I agree however that it looks lovely...
Repeat "wild wine vine" fast. It's like a little tongue twister 😂
I actually was at the two slides one time. They are formed like parabolas because they are located at the Maths center of the Technical University in Munich (TUM).
The hangbridge has been the highest in Europe for years. I've been there once in an attempt to overcome my fear of heights (failed miserably). It's just over 100 meters high and about 600 meters long. It's seriously terrifying but gorgeous scenery
where do I find it?
Willingen, I think @@losturiah8057
@@losturiah8057 After just a really short google search… it's the "Skywalk" in Willingen (Thuringia).
@@losturiah8057 Hängebrücke „Skywalk“ in Willingen. It was opened in 2022.
@@losturiah8057 I think it's the Hängebrücke Geierlay.
16:48 this seems to be the Geierlay suspended rope Bridge near Hunsrück in Germany. It was only opened in 2015 so relatively new! As it is a tourist attraction, the website for the bridge also hosts a live webcam with a view over the valley and the bridge itself. They also track how many visitors the bridge has and the data is public on their website as well!
Sadly the Black House was demolished some time ago for another modern bulding (the black house was kinda a art project by some people)
The spaghetti ice is some special in germany, it was "invented" some decades ago by someone who put vanilla ice cream through a pasta maker, added strawberry sauce for the "tomato sauce" and them some vanilla crisp for the "chess". You can buy it in some super markets too as little portions.
The ping pong on the traffic lights are only on a handful of some.
Before i forget it, we dont make jokes and are bad at humor, so pls go back to work ;)
But its much bette, if you are sitting in the sun in front of your favourie italial ice-cafee
I prefer cheese instead of chess on top of my spaghetti 😉
The thing with the traffic lights is here in Aachen really common fr every light is something else
That’s really interesting. We visited Acchen maybe 10 years ago and don’t recall seeing them, but we are coming back in a couple of weeks so would be really interested in finding out what areas these are in, and what else there is as well as pong etc? Thanks!
I love the cat in the beginning in the background 😊 🐈
@IWrocker The aquarium shown @12:49 did explode by the end of 2022, flooding the hotel it was built into.
Ian, you really have to take a closer look at the Tropical Island Resort and the building it's in.
There was a very prestigious project called the "Cargolifter" where they wanted to build superlarge airships to transport cargo containers. The company went bankrupt just after this hanger and a small scale prototype were built. Since the building existed they sold it and it was repurposed for this indoor tropical resort with beaches, pools, waves, bars, waterfalls,... The scale of this ex-hangar is crazy! You can rent a bungalow for your stay...
The whole building was produced by "Biedenkapp Stahlbau" from Wangen im Allgäu, and I was one of the guys who built that thing...
@@etee08 meinen Respekt. Ich arbeite selbst in dem Gewerbe und bin ein wenig neidisch, dass du an dem Bau teil haben dürftest und ich nicht 😂
... and the bankruptcy trustee and his networks took 70+ percent off the insolvency value. Even the government realized profit within the insolvency though 40 millions subsidies. D'you know who didn't get one thin dime? You're right, the mainly small investors who poured 320 millions into it.
There was a coverage by German tv broadcaster BRalpha in 2019 iirc.
Edit: zukunft-in-brand·de | verein | insolvenz-news·html
@@masterjubei1986 ich hätte mir aber gewünscht, dass dort wieder Luftschiffe gebaut werden! Wir haben auch Hallen für den neuen Zeppelin in Friedrichshafen gebaut, aber der ist ja eher ein "Schiffchen"
@@alphonsbretagne8468 dein Kommentar ist offenbar so gefährlich, es erscheint nur in meinen "Benachrichtigung", nicht aber als Kommentar unter dem Video!“ Jeder Deutsche hat das Recht, seine Meinung in Wort, Schrift und Bild frei... " gilt für dich offenbar nicht...
THe elctric Track for the Trucks is one of some testracks where they are testing elektrik trucks, that can just dock on it liek trains and besides that have normal elektromotors etc. to find out if its a concept for the future for more range and mobility with elektrick trucks.
AquaDom - it was a tourist attraction in Berlin.
The aquarium was put into operation in December 2003. The cost of its construction is estimated by German media at EUR 12.8 million. It was 16 meters high and 11.5 meters in diameter. It was the largest free-standing cylindrical saltwater aquarium in the world.
Visitors could admire 1,500 fish of nearly 100 different species swimming in the aquarium from a special elevator (for 19 euros).
Unfortunately, this aquarium was destroyed due to material fatigue in December 2022. The aquarium was made of acrylic glass. One million liters of water spilled out, and with it 1,500 fish.
The explosion was so powerful that it was recorded by Berlin seismographs.
Am I wrong or was the aquarium made in the USA and then shipped to Germany because many German engineers knew that it could not be stable enough and therefore would not last long?
@@simongruber5661I have heard this too, don’t know if it’s true though
You have to insert the dimensions in freedom units too. 52.5 foot high and 37.73 foot in diameter. 😂
@@mathildewesendonck7225 There´s even a documentation about the building process here somewhere on YT. As far as I remember it was delivered in parts and then assembled here by American specialists.
The slide in the Munich Technical Umversity is fun. It is a Parabelrutsche (parabellus slide?) And on the bottom is a scale how far you slided. 1, 2, e, 3, Pi, 4, 5
11:00 it's also one way only. So you safe even more space since the driving lane between the parking spaces only needs to be wide enough for 1 car.
I guess this is the parking lot of a car manufacturer, or kind of a collecting point, because the alley is pretty tight.
This is extremly place efficient and it would be very unpractical for public use, like shopping - imagine pulling shopping carts and then a car approaches you - almost nowhere to go.
@@Z0RDR4CK I've seen this kind of parking lot at bowling centers, indoor playground places, golf clubs etc. It's definitely not limited to car manufacturing companies. And there's also enough room for a shopping cart and a car to pass each other.
The standing surf wave at 18:08 is in a big sport store called L+T in my hometown Osnabrück in Lower Saxony. It's called "Hasewelle" what's a pun of the word 'Welle' (wave) and 'Hase' (the animal hare, but here the name of a river next to the building. Osnabrück itself is also often called the 'Hasestadt', what means town at the (river) Hase 😊). You can book tickets or even courses to really surf there among the customers since 2018.🎉
👍Schöne Grüße aus dem LK Osnabrück
vienna has pairs of persons in the pedestrian traffic lights. they are either male + female, female + female or male + male. and the walking symbol has a heart too.
gYA
There are some other towns in Germany with similar unique pedestrian traffic lights. In Quedlinburg, a small town in the Harz region there are witches and I think devils as a cultural reference to the region on there. In Mainz there are some traffic lights with the famous Mainzelmännchen a cartoon figure from the ZDF the 2nd German public TV station that shows in between commercials mainly during the evening hours. I don’t know of any other examples but I guess there are some more even if only some on certain crossings. One thing though, the normal symbols on pedestrian traffic lights in western part of Germany and the eastern part are different and after reunification there were serious efforts made to keep the traditional symbols a.k.a. „Rettet das Ampelmännchen“
Marburg, too
There were only a few of them, though. They got put up after queer artist Conchita Wurst won the Eurovision song contest for Austria. These traffic lights were basically only up for the time during the following year when we, as the winners, were hosting the song contest in Vienna. I think there's a couple of them left but you'd really have to go looking for them. They were only ever around the area of Stadthalle (the big event building where the song contest show was hosted) and maybe a few other tourist spots.
@@TheFeldhamster they are still in many places in the inner city. the issue is, that these are not oddly shaped lamps but blinds installed inside the traffic lights. they stay even when the lamp gets swapped (and LEDs hardly die). for example, they are still in mariahilf and innere stadt.
19:30 watering can explanation. Never thought about it (like most things you see on a weekly basis probably), but simple: Rather than bringing the watering can each week (or month) you visit, it's just there. Might be a walk to the gy. or you coming from somewhere else, better than carrying the watering can with you the whole day. Mind you: Coming by bike, bus+ or just for a walk is pretty popular in Ger. Having your own can makes sure they are available(?) and having the locks makes sure they aren't taken away from this public place. (no surveillance for graveyards) I was never aware they had locks though - this differs from region to region. It might be this is in a big city. Certainly a few "free" cans there would be gone soon, and then you would stand there without a way to water your beloved one's flowers.
In general hard to imagine otherwise, so:
In the video it would be interesting, how do you handle watering cans on your country's graveyards?
The "McBoat" is the only one of its kind in the world so far. Built by the local branch during COVID restrictions when drive through and take out was booming.
People order at the small dock you see in the picture and then someone from the McDonalds up the stairs comes down and delivers your order.
The electric Truck wire
a test part, but more like recharge the batteries without stopping also,
sure overtaking is possible, get off grid, change lane, and after back rise contact up again
so those would save time for recharge stopping and on the other side maybe less capacity needed
so far I remember
The electrical motorway are test routes on a normal highway motorway, the trucks have 2 engines of the first a diesel engine, the second is the electric motor with additional batteries. If the truck leaves the route, it drives with diesel. The future should reach the following: to drive on long routes with electricity to save fuel. However, the system has been in many cities for almost a hundred years, it was the overhead line buses, the flexible in road traffic. The counterpart was the tram, but needed a railroad. In our area there is such a test track.
The general idea is not new, no, but it's far more challenging to electrify a huge portion of the highway network for this to work than it is to run some lines between city buildings that are already electrified. In that sense, it is "new".
@@drsnova7313 It has nothing to do with electrified buildings, because DC traction lines are always completely separate from building grid. But yes, electrification of highways + changing thousands trucks to plug-in hybrids with current collectors is a big and ambitious investment.
it's very cool and very stupid at the same time... I think the cool bit is obvious. but... the stupid bit it... trucks are bing turned into a sort of train and bits of motorways are turned into rails for those "trains" when we already have rails and trains that can transport cargo perfectly fine..... if they were properly maintained... so... if money was spent on them.
@@karowolkenschaufler7659 You can just answer yourself two more questions.
1.How long does it take to collect full train of goods and how long will it take to bring it off rails. Therefore, how much longer will it take to transport your cargo, even if it was between two points that are only 5 km away from rails?
2. How many spare slots do you have on rail? Will it allow you to move 5% shipping from trucks to rails? Maybe 10%? I doubt that it will be 20%, what will be your plan for electrifying rest of it?
@@karfrancouzsky9725 from the length and "one Punch knock out" tone (if I read it correctly) of your answer, this is a sore spot for you... Interesting. I can't answer any of these questions. But I also can't imagine that absolutely everything that is on a truck instead of on a train really couldn't be on a train. Do you know the time differece between unloading trains and unloading trucks. And is that a problem that can really absolutely not be helped by improving infrastructure? And do all the goods on trucks really need to be transported as fast as they can be transported with a truck? All of them? Electrification is a matter of investment. It's just about actually starting to do it. As with any big task. The sooner you (in this case the government in charge) stop procastinating the sooner it's done. Anyway. I really didn't expect to anger anyone like that with my comment. Do you like trucks a lot?
4:20 There are a few bridges of similar construction to be found in different German landscape parks designed in the 18th or 19th century. Often they are called a "devil's bridge" (including some local legend explaining the name); the official name of this bridge in Kromlau Azalea and Rhododendron Park is "Rakotz bridge". Similiar half-cycle constructions from medieval times can be found in different regions in southern Europe (southern France, Spain, Italy, Bulgaria), and they have often names meaning "devil's bridge".
5:15 "Kunsthof" means "Art courtyard". The Kunsthof-Passage in the Äußere Neustadt ("outer new town", built mostly during the 19th century) district of Dresden consists of 5 courtyards, each with a different theme.
9:53 The blimp hangar is actually not so old. It was constructed in 2000 as part of the Cargolifter project (the Cargolifter CL 160 was planned as a cargo airship able to lift and transport up to 160 tons, e.g. hydropower turbines for big hydroelectric plants in remote areas or complete bodywork presses for the automotive industry, but the project failed due management problems and went into insolvency in 2002). Video about the waterpark: ruclips.net/video/vQrJY1SKIaY/видео.html
11:30 in Frankfurt/Main: The tower in the foreground was part of the medieval walls, the glass tower in the background is the Nextower (constructed in 2011) and the Jumeirah Hotel (constructed in 2009).
12:53 That aquarium did burst in the night of 16 December 2022, killing nearly all of the 1,500 fish inside and flooding the hotel lobby surrounding it.
the black house was a project by an artist from Pfortzheim, but it was banned because the house is a listed building and had to be restored to its original state
some things in the video are not the rule but rather the exception, such as the pong game at the traffic lights or the car wash for shopping trolleys
there was a small mistake in the lift story the lift is/was in the aquarium which unfortunately broke overnight one day
there are also lots of cherry blossoms in the neighbourhood where I live and it looks fantastic when they start to bloom
THe Lego Bridge is in Wuppertal. There are actually several of it. The Outdoor Store with the pool is the Globetrotter Store in Cologne.
the elevator with the aquarium inside... the aquarium bursted a while back, flooding the shopping mall. thankfully this happened during the night when noone could be injured.
playing pong on pedestrian traffic lights must be a one-town-thing. i have never seen or even heard of those and i am a german who never left the country.
the swing for wheelchairs is rare. only ever seen one of those myself.
the usual gymnasts wear is basically a bathing suit, legs are completely naked.
German graves have a human size rectangle area in front of the headstone where people grow flowers etc. probably to prevent people from walking over the buried dead bodies
Good old times...
And to give the victim the last honor
19:31 the "graveyard rack" is like a bike rack for watering cans, installed on graveyards. Not every graveyard has them, but I've seen them before. It's so you don't have to bring your watering can every time you go to water the plants on the graves. And everyone labels their with their name so you don't get confused which one belongs to you, because as you've seen, the green is very prevalent.
We have already 2 Lego bridges in Wuppertal. Same city with the Schwebebahn / Suspencion Railway :D
5:30 the rain going down the pipes is what creates the music
The rain is going down the pipes, but there is no music. No different sounds or tones, just the noise of water going through pipes.
Hi Ian, love your interest on photos from Germany and love your cat too - greetings from mine
I love the outdoor store with the Pool. 😅 Sometimes I stay on the floors above, just looking down, cause the water ist so calm. 🙈🙃
I live in Friedberg, those are not the traffic lights we have here. We do have some Elvis motiv, but different.
And they were only put in like maybe 10 years ago, i chuckled heartily at your "they're still functional". They have not been in place since he served at the Ray Barracks.
maybe it is in Bad Nauheim? They do have quite the Elvis culture there as well.
@@Lylantares Elvis lived there near the old Kurpark when he was GI in Friedberg. There is a bronze Statue in live size and a 50s event in summer.
@@Lylantares Yes, the traffic lights are located in Bad Nauheim
12:50 that aquarium exploded last year though. It's in berlin and "flooded" the news pretty quickly, maybe you've heard of it
my local irish pub in germany has a puke sink. I have seen it in use several times.
oh shit, i might used that sink not the way it was intended for...
my bad!
- atleast i was the only person in the room, i guess...
haha!
2:55: That’s in Bonn in the city centre. I live there and see it every year in April/May. Lots of visitors come to take photos. But after 3 weeks it’s over.
Recognise most although I’m from the Netherlands, the watering cans are for watering the plants/ flowers around your loved ones grave
5:32 I don't speak German but I know a few words (like Banhof, Kunst, etc.), so, cutting and pasting here and there, I would say that translates to something like "Newtown Art Place Passage" (Passage meaning an alley or smaller street connecting two more important streets, I would guess.)
It seems the rain water is collected by those funnels, making music while it flows down through the pipes.
The roulette wheel advertising my home bad homburg. The casino 😂
But it also depicts the "roulette game" of/if actually getting your luggage back... ;-)
The picture with The handicap swing is only about 20 kilometers (12,427miles) away from me.
As a German, I can tell that you did really well with the pronunciation of the German words. Side note: The Aquarium bust around two years ago
Traffic light pong - never seen that in my whole life. And the aquarium with the elevator inside actually just burst last year!
2:55 This has actually another effect of blocking the sun in the sommer time making it cooler to walk and stay outside.
@@RoonMian No, that's in Bonn right in front of my Apartment.
@@RoonMian
It's Immermannstraße, not Immelmann-Allee!
@@yadgar1969 Oh, you're right. I thought it was named after the pilot. And I have no idea where I got the Allee from. My bad. I deleted my comment.
The Music house is in Dresden. Its an art installation. the musik it plays are the Droplets on the metall
I am from Germany and I didn't know like 40 out of 50. I am really positively shook by the tampon idea 😂
9:07 the statistic is misleading. Women are not more likely to be victims of violent crimes in parking garages than anywhere else in public (my source: Polizeistatistiken aus Deutschland). And architects that build parking garages know this fact. So this picture becomes even more amazing, because the only reason parking garages have this is to make women feel more secure and comfortable.
there was a Aqarium with a Lift in it it blow up few years back
17:39 this slide is in Winterberg and it is part of an "adventure bridge" with multiple obstacles for kids to climb through, but you have to pay to enter the bridge so it is not a regular playground
Dude, as a half german living in Germany, I have to say first of I really like your pronunciation especially the „Neustadt kunsthofpassage“ (which you almost said correctly btw) the „eu“ is pronounced like „oi“ and „Stadt“ is pronounced „shtat“ (I hope this makes sense). And second of, some of the things like the hologram circus and the tampon book I didn’t even know existed but I really like the fact that they are trying to find ways around the 19% vat because that’s just bs in my opinion because basic foods, books, magazines and even going to the movies has a 7% vat but female hygiene products dont
I did not know about these books too. Never saw them at a bookshop or on advertisments but it is amazing. But the system on what is getting a vat of 7 % and what goes with 19% will always be a mystery. I mean you get the 7% for animal food but the food for babys are at 19%. Thats just strange.
@@kleenesr6840 Since 2020 there has been only 7 percent VAT on tampons. But the industry just took that gift and refused to lower the prices. Also, I was shocked if we (I work in a supermarket) took the wrong prices. No, Babyfood has like all food a VAT of 7%. Generally, food is 7% and Beverages 19% (Only food you buy in grocery stores) The food you buy in a restaurant is 19% because the service to cook is the "Added Value" (Mehrwert) OK there is a weird exception though If you buy from a food stand _AND_ they don't provide a seat for you to sit down and consume the food :-) Yes, sometimes taxes are "funny" ;-)
Milch (Kuhmilch) gilt als Nahrungsmittel (7%)
Aus Hafer order Soja gilt als Getränk (19%)
Möglichweise kommt dieses Märchen daher?
de.statista.com/statistik/daten/studie/1268483/umfrage/laender-in-europa-mit-reduziertem-steuersatz-fuer-periodenprodukte/
www.direktzu.de/kanzlerin/messages/warum-wird-babynahrung-hoeher-besteuert-als-hundefutter-15842
@@kleenesr6840 It is because woman needs are luxus.
Compare shaving equipment man vs woman.Btw that is luxus compared to tampons which is definitly not,you can´t live without stuff like this.
That cherry blossom pic is from the city I live in. It's basically only one street, but it got so famous that we even get tourists only for that during blooming season. During lockdowm they even had to close up the wole street, because too many people gathered there to take pictures
The Aquarium Elevator doesn't exist anymore. Bursted one morning last year .
because it's semi outside, and that was a tropical aquarium with warm water, while the night it broke it had -20 °C outside, the ~50 °C difference was too much.
@@Bioshyn The description is wrong. The aquarium was inside the hotel. The elevator was going up and down inside the round aquarium, which was round and built around the elevator.
I am sure the difference in temperature had nothing to do with the bursting. It was built inside the hotel lobby. I stayed there in 2017.
It contained 1 million liters of salt water (roughly 250,000 gallons) and cost 16 million Euros to build. Scuba divers worked inside to tend to animals and plants. The accident was attributed to material fatigue in the acrylic wall.
@@mick-berry5331 the aquarium was in the hotel, right but in the atrium which didn't have a roof
@@Bioshyn nope, the aquarium was in the Hotel Lobby. mick-berry5331 is right.
@@Bioshyn highly unlikley. the aquarium has lived trough many winters before. more likley explaination is a failure of the clue over time and or pre existing damage might occured due a repair.
The shopping car cleaning machines appeared during the pandemic when some people were afraid of germs and would spray everything around them. So in some supermarkets they offered these machines which were outside the store.
1:34 this was invented in Austria and its called: Rettungsgasse (Rescuepath) and mostly it doesnt work ^^ because Germany and Austria are the only two Countrys where u MUST do it by the Law ^^ so most people who are just passing thru wont even know they have to do this. And if just 1 car dont follow the lead of the others and stands in the middle its completely useless (or some motorbikes are rushing thru)
The Rettungsgasse was invented by a police officer named Karl-Heinz Kalow, who worked for the motorway police in Münster in the 1960s
1:18 yes i could be great but its rarely done. Im on the road realy often and out of 10 times this lane only works (is made) 2 times i guess. Most people dont care and fines are way to small. Even if you move to the side some people honk at you and getting mad
8:50 The german letter ß is actually pronouced as an s. So it's pronounces Giesen
actually it's pronounced like a double s-sound / "ss"
therefore... Giessen
@@danielw.2442no not correct what you write. for a double ss in german you speak a short vovel. ß sounds like a snake is a hard s
@@OmegamonUICorrect. That's the difference between for example Fuß and Fluss. ss and ß are NOT the same. That's why in earlier times in capitals ß was written SZ and not SS which changed later. And nowadays, they invented a capital ß (which is bullshit in my opinion).
Not entirely true.
There are two occasions for ß, don’t mix them up.
1) making the vowel before it pronounced short. Most of these were actually changed by the spelling reform 20 years ago to “ss”. (Fluß->Fluss, daß->dass, Faß->Fass, …)
2) a sharp “s”-sound. These words are still written with ß. This is closer to the historic use. It is actually a ligature of an old “s” and “z”, hence it is called “ess-zet” or “sz”. (Gießen, fließen, reißen, büßen, Buße, Straße,…)
The "Electric Highway" was a test run on a part of a Autobahn.
But no Truck uses it because its too expensive to build the top needed to connect to it.
8:59 Giessen not Gieben, the more you know
Brooo! That blooming Cherry Blossom pic pretty much looks like it was taken in my old hood in Bonn. Impressive indeed 🎉
5:40 every German: THAT‘S THE THIRD FLOOR!!!
Hi. The watercan at the graveyard thing is just to give graveflowers water. People let the cans there, that they don't have to carry them the next time. But i did not know that they lock them. In the really small village where i grew up, it was normal that some people let a can there and everybody can use it.
The largest water park in Europe with thousands of natural palm trees is in Poland and is called Park of Poland - Suntago Water World
14:05 Electric Highway and the SCANIA trucks: This trucks do have some detection system, that detects the section of this highway where the electric wires are at and where they aren't. the trucks are just kind of regular battery electric trucks with the special equipment for recharging their batteries from that high voltage wires from overheads. For regular recharging they can also use standard EV charging plugs and they will be able to recharge as well from the mega chargers, which are planned in various locations.
13:11 sadly this aquarium has collapsed 2022/2023
There is at least one swimming pool... area that has different watery slides - even some you slide while standing, and another that starts with the floor moving away under your feet and you begin the journey with a drop until it bends into a slide...
Aquarium broke 😢
8:50 This letter *ß* although it looks like some sort of funky B is actually an "Eszett" (sz) and makes a double s sound so in this case it would be _Giessen..._
13:10 the aquarium actually broke last year. There are tons of videos of it
The AquaDom at Karl-Liebknecht-Straße 3 in Berlin was the largest cylindrical aquarium in the world. The seawater aquarium was freestanding in the hall of the Radisson Collection Hotel in the DomAquarée CityQuartier from December 2003. On December 16, 2022, the outer acrylic glass cylinder shattered.
4:58 Neustadt Kunsthofpassage = (means something like) New-City Art-court-passage (for better understanding)
6:56 The Wuppertal suspension railway is an elevated railway in Wuppertal that opened in 1901 and is the city's landmark and most important tourist attraction. It has been a listed building since May 26, 1997.
12:52 the aquarium „exploded“ I think a few years ago.
5:07 I have been there, really interesting to look at, it's a tiny place in Dresden, with many strange buildings.
12:47 nop, no more. It got shattered completely and they won't rebuilt. It was called Aquadome in Berlin and it was inside a hotel lobby.