Mengenlehreuhr


The Mengenlehreuhr or Berlin-Uhr is the first public clock in the world that tells the time by means of illuminated, coloured fields, for which it entered the Guinness Book of Records upon its installation on 17 June 1975. Commissioned by the Senate of Berlin and designed by Dieter Binninger, the original full-sized Mengenlehreuhr was originally located at the Kurfürstendamm on the corner with Uhlandstraße. After the Senate decommissioned it in 1995, the clock was relocated to a site in Budapester Straße in front of Europa-Center, where it stands today.

Telling the time

The Mengenlehreuhr consists of 24 lights which are divided into one circular blinking yellow light on top to denote the seconds, two top rows denoting the hours and two bottom rows denoting the minutes.
The clock is read from the top row to the bottom. The top row of four red fields denote five full hours each, alongside the second row, also of four red fields, which denote one full hour each, displaying the hour value in 24-hour format. The third row consists of eleven yellow-and-red fields, which denote five full minutes each, and the bottom row has another four yellow fields, which mark one full minute each. The round yellow light on top blinks to denote odd- or even-numbered seconds.
Given the photo of the clock at the top of the article as an example, two fields are lit in the first row, but no fields are lit in the second row; therefore the hour value is 10. Six fields are lit in the third row, while the bottom row has one field on. Hence, the lights of the clock altogether tell the time as 10:31.

''Kryptos''

This clock may be the key to the unsolved section of Kryptos, a sculpture at the CIA headquarters. After revealing that part of the deciphered text of the sculpture, in positions 64-69, reads "BERLIN", the sculptor, Jim Sanborn, gave The New York Times another clue in November 2014, that letters 70–74 in part 4 of the sculpture's code, which read "MZFPK", will become "CLOCK" when decoded, a direct reference to the Berlin Clock. Sanborn further stated that in order to solve section 4, "You'd better delve into that particular clock".
However, Sanborn also said that, "There are several really interesting clocks in Berlin."
Neil Hurrell recently theorized that Sanborn is hinting that we are focused on the wrong clock, and that the Clock of Flowing Time would be the most probable, as it is a water clock - so would be in-keeping with the Egyptian theme from the previous section.