Berga, Linköping
Berga was a country estate the main building of which dates from the 1800s and is known as Berga castle. From its front porch, there is a clear view to Linköping Cathedral. The farm was held by Anton Ridderstad, founder of Östergötland County Museum, who died in 1933 and is one of Linköping major donors. On an adjacent hill Ridderstad created a sculpture park. There, one finds among other things, Alfred Nyström's Moder Svea.
In Berga, or Österberga, school activities at secondary level were conducted until the end of summer vacation 2009. The students had since 2005 gradually been moved to Bäckskolan, Ånestadskolan, Ekholmsskolan, Berzeliusskolan, and Rydskolan depending on where they lived. Bergaskolan's Asperger class moved to Berzeliusskolan.
Berga school has now been demolished and the land has become a flat grassland with occasional traces. The nicely located and area close to nature is now to be developed with houses. Riksbyggen plans to build "BRF Riddarsporren", 46 apartments of 2-6 rooms. It consists partly of an apartment building, which is a building type that has started to appear recently in the otherwise lowly built Berga. In addition, HSB plans to build "Berga Park" with 90 condominiums. Construction was set to start in 2008 but only began in January 2011.
Districts adjoining Berga are Johannelund, Ekholmen, Ramshäll, Vimanshäll, Ekkällan and Vidingsjö.
58°23′16″N 15°38′50″E / 58.38778°N 15.64722°E
References
- ^ "Områdesutveckling: Berga". www.linkoping.se (in Swedish). 15 June 2023. Retrieved 2023-07-24.
- ^ "Stadsdelar arbetslöshet". www.linkoping.se (in Swedish). 15 June 2023. Retrieved 2023-07-24.