Wiener Riesenrad
The Wiener Riesenrad (German for Vienna Giant Wheel[1]), or Riesenrad, is a 64.75-metre (212 ft) tall Ferris wheel at the entrance of the Prater amusement park in Leopoldstadt, the 2nd district of Austria's capital Vienna. It is one of Vienna's most popular tourist attractions, and symbolises the district as well as the city for many people. Constructed in 1897, it was the world's tallest extant Ferris wheel from 1920 until 1985.
History
The Wiener Riesenrad was constructed in 1897 by the English engineer Lieutenant Walter Bassett Bassett (1864-1907), Royal Navy, son of Charles Bassett (1834-1908), MP, of Watermouth Castle, Devon.[2] Its purpose was to celebrate the Golden Jubilee of Emperor Franz Josef I, and it was one of the earliest Ferris wheels ever built. Bassett's Ferris wheel manufacturing business was not a commercial success, and he died in 1907 almost bankrupt.
A permit for its demolition was issued in 1916, but due to a lack of funds with which to carry out the destruction, it survived.[3]
The Ferris wheel and cafe on the Prater were owned by a Jew, Eduard Steiner, who was murdered at Auschwitz.[4]
It originally had 30 gondolas, but was severely damaged in World War II and when subsequently rebuilt only 15 gondolas were replaced.
The wheel is driven by a circumferential cable which leaves the wheel and passes through the drive mechanism under the base, and its spokes are steel cables, in tension.
Height
When the 64.75-metre (212 ft)[5] tall Wiener Riesenrad was constructed in 1897, both the original 80.4-metre (264 ft) Ferris Wheel in the US (constructed 1893, demolished 1906) and the 94-metre (308 ft) Great Wheel in England (constructed 1895, demolished 1907) were taller. The 100-metre (328 ft) Grande Roue de Paris, constructed in 1900, was taller still. However, when the Grande Roue de Paris was demolished in 1920, the Riesenrad became the world's tallest extant Ferris wheel, and it remained so for the next 65 years, until the construction of the 85-metre (279 ft) Technostar in Japan in 1985.
In popular culture
- The Riesenrad famously appeared in the post-war film noir The Third Man (1949)[6]
- The wheel is featured in the 1973 spy thriller Scorpio (1973), and the 1987 James Bond film, The Living Daylights.
- The wheel appears in The Star of Kazan by Eva Ibbotson, Max Ophüls' Letter from an Unknown Woman (1948) and its Generation X counterpart, Richard Linklater's Before Sunrise, and The Glass Room by Simon Mawer.
- The Riesenrad appears in the film Woman in Gold (2015) about the repatriation of a Klimt portrait stolen by the Nazis from a Jewish Viennese family.
References
- ↑ The Vienna Giant Ferris Wheel | Das Wiener Riesenrad
- ↑ Jahn, Helmut & Petritsch, Peter, The Vienna Giant Ferris Wheel, Dienten am Hochkonig, 1989
- ↑ Wiener Riesenrad - History
- ↑ http://www.nytimes.com/2002/03/07/world/vienna-skewered-as-a-nazi-era-pillager-of-its-jews.html
- ↑ Wiener Riesenrad - Technical data
- ↑ Michael Bywater (October 22, 2011). "Graham Greene's Vienna: The city with a starring role in its own film noir". The Independent.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wiener Riesenrad. |
- Official website
- Vienna's tourist trail of plunder, Guardian (World News), 21 May 2002.
Preceded by Grande Roue de Paris |
World's tallest extant Ferris wheel 1920-1985 |
Succeeded by Technocosmos |
Coordinates: 48°13′00″N 16°23′45″E / 48.2166505°N 16.3959494°E