| Gauss Tower | |
|---|---|
![]() Gauss Tower  | |
| Etymology | Carl Friedrich Gauss | 
| General information | |
| Type | Observation tower | 
| Location | Hoher Hagen | 
| Town or city | Dransfeld | 
| Country | Germany | 
| Elevation | 528 m | 
| Opened | September 1964 | 
| Height | 51 m | 
| Dimensions | |
| Diameter | 5m | 
| Technical details | |
| Material | Reinforced concrete | 
The Gauss Tower is a reinforced concrete observation tower on the summit of the Hoher Hagen in Dransfeld, Germany. The tower can be reached directly by car. A restaurant with a panoramic view is located inside the tower.
The tower is named for Carl Friedrich Gauss, who made the large triangle from the Hohen Hagen break into Inselsberg a basis of his survey of Hanover.
From 1909 to 1963, there had already been a Gaussturm nearby. It broke when a quarry was expanded too far in the 1950s.
Data
- Construction period: 11 months
 - Completion: September 1964
 - Viewing platform: 528 m over NN
 - Tower height: 51 m
 - Foundation: 6 m deep, with a diameter of 13 m.
 - Diameter of tower shaft: 5 m 
- 1st platform: 18 m (at a value of 14,5 m)
 - Top platform: 13 m
 
 - Elevator capacity: Maximum 8 persons
 - Travel time: 55 seconds
 - Emergency stairway: 225 steps, leading from the viewing platform to the entrance and/or the cellar
 
See also
External links
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