
20-inch flat-screen televisions come with satellite channels. Each accommodation is individually decorated. Hotel Brandenburger Tor Potsdam offers 41 air-conditioned accommodations with tablet computers and safes. Hotel Brandenburger Tor Potsdam is a smoke-free property. Onsite parking is available (surcharge), along with a car charging station. This business-friendly hotel also offers a terrace, tour/ticket assistance, and multilingual staff. Public areas are equipped with complimentary wireless Internet access. A bar/lounge is on site where guests can unwind with a drink. Record of TBS: Top 12 – via Archiv Gay Museum Berlin.The hotel offers a restaurant. ^ TBS-Monatsinfo (Treff Berliner Schwulengruppen) (10 February 1984).^ Berlin Life: 'The Death of Dance?' A history of the Berlin Love Parade,, 2007, retrieved 21 July 2020.^ Nachrichten,, 2012, archived from the original on 15 August 2009, retrieved 26 July 2008.

Archived from the original on 18 June 2015.

The relief decoration was removed in 1945. On top of the fourth sandstone column resides the 8.52 meter tall gilded bronze victory. Four sandstone columns rise above this hall, the first three containing 20 gilded gun barrels each, 12 pounders from the Danish victory, 8 pounders from the Austrian victory, and 4 pounders from the French victory. Along the hall's circumference is a glass mosaic designed by Anton von Werner. Upon the base is a round hall with 16 granite columns measuring 4.7 meters high.

Measuring 12 meters wide and 2 meters high, they were designed by Moritz Schulz, Karl Keil, Alexander Calandrelli, and Albert Wolff. The base contains four bronze reliefs depicting scenes from the three victories. The base consists of polished red Swedish granite, measuring 18.8 meters square and 7.2 meters high. Its viewing platform, for which a ticket is required, offers a view over Berlin. The Victory Column is a major tourist attraction in the city of Berlin. īerliners have given the statue the nickname Goldelse, meaning something like "Golden Lizzy". Different from the original plans, these later victories in the unification wars inspired the addition of the bronze sculpture of Victoria, the Roman goddess of victory, 8.3 metres (27 ft) high, designed by Friedrich Drake. Designed by Heinrich Strack after 1864 to commemorate the Prussian victory in the Second Schleswig War, by the time it was inaugurated on 2 September 1873, Prussia had also defeated Austria and its German allies in the Austro-Prussian War (1866) and France in the Franco-Prussian War (1870–71), giving the statue a new purpose.
