Bombenfund an der Historischen Stadthalle Wuppertal | 17.07.2019
Bei Bauarbeiten auf dem Gelände des Wilhelm-Dörpfeld-Gymnasiums in der Elberfelder Südstadt sind am Mittwochnachmittag (17. Juli 2019) Kampfmittel entdeckt worden. Das Gelände wurde weiträumig abgesperrt.
Nach ersten Informationen wurde der Kampfmittelfund durch die Baggerschaufel beschädigt. Es kam zu einer Entzündung des Explosivstoffes. Die Feuerwehr brachte den Brand mit Sand unter Kontrolle.
Der Kampfmittelräumdienst rückte an und nahm das Areal unter die Lupe nehmen. Die Polizei hatte sämtliche Zugänge ab Stadthalle und Schwimmoper mit der Südstraße sowie dem Johannisberg gesperrt. Betroffen waren auch die Verlags- und Redaktionsräume der Rundschau.
Quelle: Wuppertaler Rundschau
Bericht:
Florian Petersen
Nico Otte
© 2019 WupperVideo
Tags:
Nachrichten, News, Bericht, Beitrag, Reportage, Video, Film, Nachricht im Film, Fernsehen, TV, Broadcasting, Panasonic, DVX200, 4K, UHD, WupperVideo, NonstopNews, Berichterstattung, Polizei, Feuerwehr, freiwillige Feuerwehr, Köln, NRW, Deutschland, Germany, Wuppertal, Bergisches Land, Rhein-Sieg-Kreis, Bonn, Professional, Canon, Manfrotto, RODE, Sennheiser
Germany Tour 2019-Most dangerous train in the World, Flying Carpet Ups Train, Wuppertal sightseengs
Wuppertal sightseengs, Botanical Garden Beauties, Attractive places, friendly people, Dangerous Train, Monuments and all that one can admire....
Schwebebahn or floating tram. One of the city’s greatest attractions is the globally unique suspended monorail Wuppertaler Schwebebahn, which was established in 1901. The tracks are 8 m (26.25 ft) above the streets and 12 m (39.37 ft) above the Wupper. In 1950, a young elephant named Tuffi was forced to ride the Wuppertal Schwebebahn (monorail), as a promotion for the Althoff Circus. The swinging tram upset the elephant, and she trumpeted, charged, and plummeted 40 feet into the river below. Tuffi suffered minor injuries; she lived until 1989. In 1999, the Schwebebahn had its thus far only fatal accident.
Friedrich Bayer, (1825–1880), founder of the Friedrich Bayer paint factory, later Bayer AG.
Greta Bösel (1908–1947), German concentration camp guard executed for war crimes
Arno Breker, (1900–1991), German sculptor.
Peter Brötzmann, (born 1941), free jazz musician.
Rudolf Carnap, (1891–1970), philosopher of science.
Udo Dirkschneider, singer of heavy-metal band Accept and U.D.O.
George Dreyfus, bassoonist, composer.
Hermann Ebbinghaus, psychologist who studied memory.
Friedrich Engels, (1820–1895), philosopher, historian, coauthor of The Communist Manifesto (with Karl Marx).
Kurt Franz (1914–1998), German Nazi SS commandant of Treblinka extermination camp
Christoph Maria Herbst, (born 1966), German actor and comedian.
Carolina Hermann, (born 1988), figure skater
Felix Hoffmann, (1868–1946), German scientist born in Ludwigsburg, inventor of Aspirin while working in Wuppertal at Bayer.
Werner Hoyer, (born 1951), politician (FDP), President of the European Investment Bank.
Linda Kisabaka, (born 1969), middle distance runner.
Hans Knappertsbusch, (1888–1965), orchestra conductor.
Peter Kowald, (1944–2002), free jazz musician.
Hans Peter Luhn, (1896–1964), computer scientist.
Else Lasker-Schüler, (1869–1945), expressionist poet.
Harald Leipnitz, (1926-2000), actor.
Kurt Franz, (1914–1998), former SS Officer, major perpetrator of genocide during the Holocaust. Born in Düsseldorf, died in Wuppertal.
Ulrich Leyendecker, composer.
Reimar Lüst, astrophysicist.
Steffen Möller, satirist, and actor in Poland.
Sylkie Monoff, international singer-songwriter.
Tyron Montgomery, Oscar-winning movie director.
Simone Osygus, swimmer.
Siegfried Palm, cellist, director of Hochschule für Musik Köln, Intendant of Deutsche Oper Berlin.
Julius Plücker, physicist.
Kolja Pusch, (born 1993), football player
Johannes Rau, (1931–2006), German politician (SPD), former Federal President of Germany.
Hans Reichel, (1949–2011), German composer, recording artist, and inventor of the Daxophone.
Emil Rittershaus (1834 – 1897), German poet.
Alice Schwarzer, (born 1942), one of the leaders of the German second wave feminism.
Hans Singer, economist.
Ilse Steppat, actress.
Rita Süssmuth, former President of the German Parliament.
Horst Tappert, (1923–2008), German actor.
Helmut Thielicke, theologian.
Udo Dirkschneider, musician Accept.
Bettina Tietjen, (born 1960), television presenter.
Tom Tykwer, (born 1965), movie director (Run Lola, Run, The Princess and the Warrior), cofounder of syndicate X-Filme.
Günter Wand, (1912–2002), composer and orchestra conductor.
Henrik Freischlader, (born 1982), blues guitarist, singer, songwriter, producer.
Wolf Hoffmann, (born 1959), metal guitarist, initiator of the musical band Accept.
Armin T. Wegner (1886-1978), soldier, medic, human rights activist
Typical steep street in Wuppertal
Sculpturepark Waldfrieden - Tony Cragg Points of View
View of Burgholz woods with typical Bergisches farmerhouse
Panoramic view of the Ölberg quarter in Wuppertal
City Hall Wuppertal-Barmen
The theatre - Das Wuppertaler Schauspielhaus
The swimming arena Schwimmoper
Elisenturm
Zoo Wuppertal
Special tours with the historical 'Kaiserwagen'
World's largest 'one day flea market'
Botanic garden and view over the city
The public park 'Hardt' in the center
The Schwebebahn near the Friedrich-Ebert-Straße
The river Wupper in the woods of Wuppertal
View from the Kiesberg woods