Arboretum Main-Taunus
The Arboretum Main-Taunus is an arboretum on an area of located southwest of Eschborn, Hesse, Germany. The arboretum lies close to Frankfurt am Main.
History
The location of the arboretum was an airfield from 1937 to 1945 of the Luftwaffe. After World War II, it was used by the Americans, until Frankfurt Airport was reopened. The property was then owned by the Bundesrepublik Deutschland, und was used by Deutsche Bundespost and the Technisches Hilfswerk. In 1981, the state of Hesse acquired the land to use it for Ersatzaufforstung for the enlargement of the airport.The arboretum was planned to represent four different regions of the world in the temperate zone of the Northern Hemisphere:
- Western part of North America
- Eastern part of North America
- Asia
- Europe, Caucasus and Asia Minor
Special trees are the North American redwoods, the trees with the largest mass, and the tree with the longest life expectancy, the bristlecone pine as well as the Chilean pine. The latter is the sole tree present in the arboretum originating from the Southern Hemisphere.