1993 World Horticultural Exposition

(Redirected from IGA 93)

The International Horticultural Exposition 1993 (short: 1993 IGA ) was held in Stuttgart, Germany. Recognised by the Bureau International des Expositions (BIE), the Expo ran from April 23, 1993, to October 17, 1993. Held at Wartenberg and Killesberg parks, the goal was to be visually and functionally integrated with two prominent features of Stuttgart's landscape, the Wartberg and the Leibfriedscher Garten [de]. This was achieved. The long-term goal to create a U-shaped greenbelt around the city (known as the Grünes U [de]) became a reality.[1] The mascot of the horticultural show was "Flori", a bird in a cowboy hat. Overall, 7.3 million people visited the show, exceeding projections of 7 million.[citation needed]

EXPO 1993 Stuttgart
Stamp for Horticultural Exposition 1993
Overview
BIE-classHorticultural exposition
Name1993 World Horticultural Exposition
Visitors7,300,000
Location
CountryGermany
CityStuttgart
VenueWartburg and Killesburg Park
Timeline
OpeningApril 23, 1993 (1993-04-23)
ClosureOctober 17, 1993 (1993-10-17)
Horticultural expositions
PreviousExpo '92 in Zoetermeer
NextExpo '99 in Kunming
Specialized expositions
PreviousExpo '92 in Genoa
NextExpo '98 in Lisbon
Universal expositions
PreviousExpo '92 in Seville
NextExpo 2000 in Hanover
Simultaneous
SpecializedExpo '93

Application and preparation

edit

The event was organized and managed by the Central Association of Horticulture IGA Stuttgart'93 GmbH. The chairman was the then-Mayor Manfred Rommel. As early as 1977 was the preparation of temporary and permanent installations, the Technical Department of the City of Stuttgart, headed by Mayor Hans-Dieter Künne [de], a postdoctoral civil responsibility. In the Parks Department project groups were formed to support sustainable approach.

Horticultural show areas

edit
 
Hans Dieter Bohnet, ball object and water fountains on Egelsee, 1993
 
The Leibfriedsche Garden has benefited greatly from the IGA'93; Today it is a well-kept recreational area
 
Stangenwald the Killesberg park, built in 1993 by Hans Dieter Schaal

At Wartberg there was a landscape of extensive use, with virtually no public access. Hedges, ditches, dry stone walls and orchards dominated the terrain. No less challenging was the terrain of Leibfried's garden, which had a woodland park of trees.

Two main issues dominated the garden show at Wartberg, the preservation of an intact environment and the commitment to the concerns of people with disabilities. The land at Wartberg slopes were re-parceled. 40 permanent allotments resulting from this measure. The 3.5-kilometre-long (2 mi) network of paths had a width of 5.5 m (18 feet). To remain true to the premise of a responsible treatment of nature, the initiators came regarding the path width that only 3.5 m (11 feet) were asphalted. The edges of one meter width were gravelled.[2]

In Killesburg, the lake in the "Valley of Roses" was deepened and new sealed and equipped for the purpose of oxygen supply with a fountain permanently in operation. An open-air stage was created with 4,000 seats. The large flower meadow was lush (begonias, chrysanthemums, geraniums, marigolds, verbena, zinnia, impatiens, snapdragons and carnations planted).

At the Nations Gardens, 22 nations presented their products on an area of 52,000 square meters. The gardens were connected by wooden walkways. The various countries' typical plants were presented, such as apple ( Belgium, Switzerland, Netherlands ), olive (Iran, Sardinia and others), palm (Egypt, Angola, Tunisia, India), cherry ( China ) or grape (Austria, Hungary, Turkey and South Africa). A special garden was the Chinese "Qing Yin Garden", the "garden of beautiful melody". Using wood, brick and sandstone, it was created by the architects and gardeners of the "Middle Kingdom". It is a garden of bamboo and various conifers.[3]

Bridges

edit

Two bridges were built in tubular steel construction. Two other three-arm suspension bridges lead over the Stuttgart North station and the "Heilbronner Straße". The bridge at Löwentor displays the motto "Oben Landschaft, unten Verkehr" ("Landscape above, traffic below"). The planning and construction supervision was Schlaich Bergermann Partner, Stuttgart.[4][5]

  • Brno Steg (1992, in use)
  • Footbridge Heilbronnerstraße (1992, in use)
  • Lodz Steg (1992, in use)
  • Samara web (I) (1992, in use)
  • Samara web (II) (1992)

References

edit
  1. ^ "IGA Stuttgart 1993 (bundesgartenschau.de)". Archived from the original on 2012-07-21. Retrieved 2015-05-19.
  2. ^ Ralf Arbogast, Stuttgart, Das grüne Erlebnis, S. 83-93
  3. ^ Der Chinesische Garten – Qing Yin Yuan (Freundschaftsgarten), Nationengärten der IGA 93 Stuttgart Nationengärten China (Qing Yin Garten)
  4. ^ Die neu geschaffenen Brücken und Stege zur IGA
  5. ^ IGA 1993 Stuttgart Seilnetzsteg
edit