Berlin - AFP
Voters in the German capital on Sunday rejected plans for a large-scale
property development on their former Tempelhof Airport, which has in recent years
become a popular inner-city park.
As Berlin citizens cast their ballots for the European parliamentary election, they
also voted in a referendum aimed at preserving the green space, which is roughly
the size of New York's Central Park.
According to early results, almost 65 percent voted against the development plans
proposed by the city-state of Berlin, the local statistics office said.
Tempelhof, measuring 300 hectares (750 acres), sits right in the middle of the
German capital of 3.4 million.
The site echoes Berlin's turbulent and troubled history. On its northwestern edge
looms the huge semi-circular former airport terminal, typical of the Nazis'
architectural gigantism, built between 1936 and 1941.
Early in the Cold War, Tempelhof became the hub for the Berlin Airlift, when Allied
planes made some 277,000 landings here to supply the western part of the war-
ravaged city with food and fuel during the 1948-49 Soviet blockade.
Opened as a park in 2010, Tempelhof became a temple of outdoor recreation. In
summer the open sky is filled with kites, and people run, skate and cycle on the old
runways, or simply sunbathe or enjoy a barbecue in the grass.
The city had proposed building some 4,700 apartments, homes and commercial
spaces, as well as a large public library, sports fields and a lake, that between them
would cover about 20 percent of the field.
A citizens' initiative called "100 percent Tempelhofer Feld" sprang up in nearby
neighbourhoods. They collected more than 185,000 signatures, about 10,000 more
than required, to launch Sunday's referendum.