Sanssouci Park Berlin
Germany - Cologne - Dusseldorf - Frankfurt - Munich - Stuttgart - Hamburg - Berlin
Sanssouci Park is one of Berlin's largest parks, which is contiguous to Sanssouci Palace in Potsdam. It is a famously a baroque flower garden which is filled with turf, flowerbeds, hedges and trees. About 3,000 fruit trees have been cultivated in this beautiful garden. Sanssouci Park in Berlin is known for its greenhouse, which displays a nursery of oranges, Melons, peaches and bananas. The beauty of Sanssouci Park in Berlin is that it is adorned with many structural designs like goddesses Flora and Pomona along the park's entrance while obelisk highlight the exit gate which relates the association of flower, fruit and vegetable in the garden. According to the history of the park, Frederick laid the foundation of Sanssouci Park in Berlin when he was the Crown Prince in Neuruppin. While being a commander during the year 1732 to 1735, he planned for laying foundation for his house with a garden containing each of flower, fruit and vegetable. The garden carries an illustration by Versailles, which is featured with the aspects of beautiful and the useful. Along with the building the Sanssouci Park is adorned with a 2.5 km long main avenue, which stretched to near about the New Palace in Berlin. A picture gallery is even constructed along the park. During the Frederician era, a swampy grounds was slowly converted into a lush landscape park, which options for visual avenues which includes the Charlottenhof, the Roman Baths, the New Palace along with the Temple of Friendship. Several bushes and trees are planted along the beautiful pond of the park that further beautifies the Sanssouci Park in Berlin. Some of the architectural buildings that are cozily placed in this region are The Neptune Grotto, The Antique Temple, Belvedere on the Klausberg, The Church of Peace, The Orangery Palace and many others.