Bostalsee
Construction
This major tourist project was initiated in the early 1970s by the head of the county council of St. Wendel, Werner Zeyer, who later became the minister president of the Saarland. The long term aim was to strengthen the tourist infrastructure in the county of St. Wendel in order to raise the number of tourists. In addition, the new waterbody was intended to extend the local recreation facilities and improve the ecology.
Basic data
The lake has a surface area of 120 ha (1.2 km), a volume of 8 million m and maximum depth of 18 metres. It lies at a height of about 400 m above sea level (NN) within the Saar-Hunsrück Nature Park near 49°34′6″N 7°4′19″E / 49.56833°N 7.07194°E. It is thus the largest artificial body of water used for recreation in southwest Germany. The lakeside villages are Bosen, Eckelhausen, Gonnesweiler and Neunkirchen/Nahe, and the Bostalsee Leisure Centre is run by the county. The dam impounds the waters of the Bos and the Dämelbach.
Gallery
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Leo Kornbrust: Liebesthron on the circular walk
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Stone sculpture on the circular walk Requiem für die Juden by Shlomo Selinger
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Former solar-powered catamaran (meanwhile there is a smaller passenger boat on the Bostalsee)
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Beach on the Bostalsee
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Dusk at the Bostalsee, 2008
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The Bostalsee seen from the north
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Northwestern shore and sailing boat base
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House in the holiday park
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View of the lake
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View of the nature reserve
See also
Literature
Annotations
- ^ "Wasserkraft am Bostalsee". Archived from the original on 2015-07-17. Retrieved 2015-11-17.
- ^ Regulation dated 1985/1996
External links
- Freizeitzentrum Bostalsee und Tourist-Information Sankt Wendeler Land
- Luftbild und Lageskizze, Segelclub Bosen
- Talsperre Bosen, Saarland
- Dokumentation von Zustand und Entwicklung der wichtigsten Seen Deutschlands der TU Cottbus, Teil 9: Nordrhein-Westfalen, Rheinland-Pfalz und Saarland (PDF-Datei; 562 kB)