Basic Facts (at the time of July 31, 1989)
Total border length around West Berlin: 96 mi / 155 km
Border between East and West Berlin: 27 mi / 43.1 km
Border between West Berlin and East Germany: 69 mi / 111.9 km
Border through residential areas in Berlin: 23 mi / 37 km
Concrete segment wall: 3.6m (11.81 ft.) high, 66 mi / 106 km
Wire mesh Fencing: 41 mi / 66.5 km
Anti-vehicle trenches: 65 mi / 105.5 km
Contact or signal fence: 79 mi / 127.5 km
Column track: 6-7 m (7.33 yd) wide, 77 mi / 124.3 km
Number of watch towers: 302
Number of bunkers: 20
Persons killed on the Berlin Wall: 192
Persons injured by shooting: ca. 200
source: http://dailysoft.com/berlinwall/history/facts_01.htm
Basic Facts (at the time of July 31, 1989)
Total border length around West Berlin: 96 mi / 155 km
Border between East and West Berlin: 27 mi / 43.1 km
Border between West Berlin and East Germany: 69 mi / 111.9 km
Border through residential areas in Berlin: 23 mi / 37 km
Concrete segment wall: 3.6m (11.81 ft.) high, 66 mi / 106 km
Wire mesh Fencing: 41 mi / 66.5 km
Anti-vehicle trenches: 65 mi / 105.5 km
Contact or signal fence: 79 mi / 127.5 km
Column track: 6-7 m (7.33 yd) wide, 77 mi / 124.3 km
Number of watch towers: 302
Number of bunkers: 20
Persons killed on the Berlin Wall: 192
Persons injured by shooting: ca. 200
source: http://dailysoft.com/berlinwall/history/facts_01.htm
The Berlin Wall was 154.5 kilometres long, or 96 miles. On 13 August 1961, the Eastern and Western halves of Berlin, Germany, were separated by barbed wire fences up to 1.83 metres high. Over the next few days, troops began to replace the barbed wire with permanent concrete blocks, reaching up to 3.6m high. The 154 kilometre-long wall included 302 watchtowers and 20 bunkers, and 106km of concrete wall which was 4 metres high, with the remainder being wire fencing completely surrounding West Berlin and preventing any access from East Germany. The wall remained as a barrier between East and West until 1989, when the collapse of communism led to it being dismantled. Yes, I thought the distance was too great.... 27 miles separated East & West Berlin. (42 Km) The remainder is between West Berlin & East Germany, as it was. Oh yes..... WAS !!
120cm or 3.937 feet
berlin wall
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The width would be the height.
Multiply the height by the width Area = length x width or (height x width in this case)
Volume = length times width times height = length x width x height In our case the volume = 20 x 14 x 8 = 2240 cubic feet
The height of and interior wall (the ceiling) is 8ft. The width is up to you. There is no standard...
It is mainly the orientation of the object. If I have a fancy bedspread I would measure its width and length. But, if I chose to hang it on a wall, those same measures would be referred to as length and height!
The Berlin wall was constructed after the end of World War 2 to separate the East from the West. The maximum height of the wall is 3.6m (11.6 feet). Cool.
If you're trying to find the total area of 4 walls:(Length of wall 1 x width of wall 1) + (Length of wall 2 x width of wall 2) + (Length of wall 3 x width of wall 3) + (Length of wall 4 x width of wall 4) = total areaThe area enclosed by four walls if they form a rectangle or square is length x width.The area of a rectangular wall is hw where h is the height and w is the width. In an ordinary rectangular room, there are 4 walls and opposite walls are equal, and the heights are all equal, formula is A = hw1 + hw2 + hw1 + hw2 = 2hw1 + 2hw2 = 2h ( w1 + w2) , where the floor is w1 by w2.If the floor is square, w1 = w2 and the formula simplifies to A = 4hw1.
Width = 22m Height = 3.5m --- Convert both of these into cm to convert into same units Width = 22 x 100 = 2200cm Height = 3.5 x 100 = 350cm Next find the area of the wall ---Area of rectangle = height x width Area of the wall = 2200 x 350 = 770,000 sq. cm Now for the bricks Length = 22cm Width = 7cm Area = 22 x 7 = 154 sq.cm To find the number of bricks needed we have to divide the area of the wall with the area of one brick 770,000 / 154 =5000 Therefore 5000 bricks are needed to make a single wall
In order to calculate the volume of a rectangular wet wall, one would first measure the wall's length, width, and depth. Then, one would plug the measurements into this formula: length x width x height.
That depends on the width and length. A 4'7" stone pole about the width of a baseball bat weighs significantly less that a 4'7" stone wall.
Square footage is length times height. In this case measure the entire length around the room and multiply it by the height of the wall. (15 + 18 + 15 + 18) x 15 = You do the math.