Dancing the night away

There are few places in the world where you can party next to huge steel excavators on top of an old coal-pit. But for the past decade or so in the iron city of Ferropolis, near Dessau in eastern Germany, festival-goers have been doing just that. The pit opens to dancers for Germany’s largest hip hop festival Splash! and the electronic and indie festial Melt!


Brown coal boom

But Ferropolis wasn’t always the festival haven it is now. For decades, Gräfenhainichen in the German state of Saxon-Anhalt was a brown coal mining region. In the 1960s, the site became the center of the brown coal open pit mine Golpa-Nord.


Environmental destruction

Golpa-Nord was a location synonymous with industrial power and environmental disaster. At its peak, there were 20 open mines with 60,000 workers extracting at least 100 million tons of coal every year. The site remained open until 1990.


Living museum

By the beginning of the 1990s, all of the brown coal was gone and the massive equipment was headed for the scrapyard. But former mine workers decided to save five of the steel giants as a reminder of the area’s industrial history. Their vision became what is now the iron city of Ferropolis.


Splash! a little and then Melt!

Just picture yourself in front of these steel behemoths, which tower over the festival stages like dinosaurs from a past era. Each of the five disused bucket wheel excavators is 130 meters long and 30 meters high. Taken together, they weigh 7,000 tons.


Green stage, green festival

When the main act, German rapper Marsimoto, started playing on Friday night at Splash! 2015, the entire stage was lit up green – a fitting tribute to this environmentally friendly festival. Around 70 percent of the festival’s energy comes directly from solar – and with its elaborate sound and light systems, that’s pretty impressive!


Green festival-goers

Not just the festival itself is green; so are its visitors. The 25,000 festival guests are encouraged to arrive by train, not by car. A “green campsite” plus vegan and regional food are helping pave the way to an even greener festival future.


Fossil past, positive future

Ferropolis CEO Thies Schröder describes turning a former coal mining area into a modern, creative and green festival venue as one way of dealing with Germany’s industrial past in a positive way. “It proves that we have moved on from a fossil past and are more environmentally aware now.”

Publisher: Lebanese Company for Information & Studies

Editor in chief: Hassan Moukalled


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