Things to do in Ber...
 

  You don't need to be an 'investor' to invest in Singletrack: 6 days left: 95% of target - Find out more

[Closed] Things to do in Berlin

59 Posts
47 Users
0 Reactions
1,497 Views
Posts: 9136
Full Member
Topic starter
 

Hello friends, we're off to Berlin for a long weekend in April so we're starting to think about an itinerary - what simply must we do while we're there? We've got breakfast at the Reichstag booked, plus vague plans about Checkpoint Charlie, the Brandenberg Gate, see if we can catch a walking tour - what else should we book in? TIA. 🙂


 
Posted : 29/03/2022 9:38 pm
Posts: 4397
Full Member
 

The walking tour I did was fantastic, so definitely do that - maybe do it first because it will give you an idea of what you want to go back and look at in detail. I wouldn't bother with Checkpoint Charlie - there's nothing original there and it's just a tourist trap. It's not a bundle of laughs, but something I'm really glad I did was the tour of Sachsenhausen, the first concentration camp. Sobering. The graffitied section of the wall is interesting.


 
Posted : 29/03/2022 9:46 pm
Posts: 1706
Full Member
 

Yeah, we did one of those pay-what-you-want walking tours, the guide was excellent and it was 3 hours or so. Good to get your bearings and an overview of the history, which is just amazing/boarderline ridiculous.

Not that you were thinking it, but avoid the Zoo. Lots of sad animals there.

I just loved wandering around, trying to take it in. The whole place is pretty sobering when confronted with the context, and there's plenty of information panels.

We ended up at a techno club in an old slaughterhouse at 4am, which I think is the 2nd most obvious thing to do in Berlin.


 
Posted : 29/03/2022 9:56 pm
Posts: 7932
Free Member
 

The Holocaust memorial is worth including on your itinerary.


 
Posted : 29/03/2022 9:59 pm
Posts: 695
Free Member
 

I loved the Stasimuseum, an absolutely fascinating place where I spent half a day for about €8


 
Posted : 29/03/2022 10:17 pm
Posts: 4607
Free Member
 

All I can say is: great city! It is probably my favourite city in the world, and I would move there in a heart beat if I could.

As for specifics I would advise, there are so many; it really depends on what interests you.

Whatever you do, have a fantastic time!


 
Posted : 29/03/2022 10:34 pm
Posts: 784
Free Member
 

It's a great city to wander around, its been pretty much completely renovated but you can still see the bullet holes in some of the stone buildings.

Checkpoint Charlie is a tourist trap, its not even the original or right location now but you'll go there anyway (I did, tutted loudly at the cheesiness of it all and then naturally took photos)

The holocaust memorials are rightly sobering, the tour of the Reichstag Building is also well worth a look. There is a display of the history of the building in the dome, lots of fascinating photos including the weird one where you see everyone dressing in the same gear from about 1936 onwards...

I'd recommend wandering around the eastern part of the city and marvel at some of the East German architecture and then realise that a lot of brutalist concrete shopping centres in the UK feel the same albeit without the statues of Marx and Engels.

Oh and don't forget: Pretzels, Beer, Currywurst mit Pommes, Kaffe und Kuchen etc. 🙂


 
Posted : 29/03/2022 11:02 pm
Posts: 1103
Free Member
 

Museum Island and the modern art museum which I can't remember the name of.
Topography of Terror.
The long bit of the wall with the famous artwork next to the river.
TV tower.

Edit: second some Kaffe und Kuchen!! 😋


 
Posted : 29/03/2022 11:06 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Ritter Sport Bunte Schokowelt Berlin!

Ritter sport

Ritetr sport 2

This was good also:

Berlin Underground Tour


 
Posted : 29/03/2022 11:10 pm
Posts: 2874
Free Member
 

Get your photo taken outside David Bowie's old gaff at Hauptstrasse 155 then have a beer at his former local the Cafe Neues Ufer.


 
Posted : 29/03/2022 11:41 pm
 Creg
Posts: 1364
Free Member
 

Topography of Terror and Holocaust memorial are very sobering. There’s also a bunker museum a few minutes walk from Topography of Terror that is also worth a look. Tranenpalast (Palace of Tears) is an amazing little museum and the DDR museum is also a brilliant insight into life in Eastern Germany.

Away from museums there’s a great bar called “Communist” in Mitte, good atmosphere and plays loads of classic hip hop. This was the first stop on a hip hop based bar crawl and a load of us ended up back there as we liked it that much. There’s also a really good food market at Markthalle Neun in Kreuzberg on a Thursday night and then it’s worth exploring some of the bars around Kreuzberg afterwards.

I spent 4 days in Berlin right before the pandemic and feel like I barely scratched the surface. Such an amazing city with great people and I can’t wait to go back.


 
Posted : 29/03/2022 11:47 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Ahh I love Berlin. One random thing I did was go up the Victory Monument which is in the middle of a roundabout if you walk out west through the Tiergarten. It was only a few euros and some great views from the top.


 
Posted : 30/03/2022 12:55 am
Posts: 2020
Free Member
 

2nd the Stasi museum. Fascinating.

Great city - enjoy!


 
Posted : 30/03/2022 5:29 am
Posts: 26725
Full Member
 

Bear Pit Karaoke at Mauerpark and the open air market next to it.


 
Posted : 30/03/2022 6:23 am
Posts: 6686
Free Member
 

Its a great city and I was fortunate to spend three days when Mrs RM was on a course.... I'd love to go back.

Reichstag, get an application in early. You have to register to go, you cant just rock up.

Base of the TV tower: https://www.fattiretours.com/berlin were great. Local guides, great info and interesting areas. Did three of their tours and the bike and food one was a highlight. Cycling down Templehof runway was another...as was a tour of eastern Berlin.

Bernauerstrasse and the old area of the wall marked with iron bars and info on tunnels

Klo if you want a bizarre evening in a goth pub eating out of surgical equipment

Museums as mentioned above are all great.


 
Posted : 30/03/2022 7:25 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I love Berlin. Fabulous city. Another vote for the Stasi museum. The bus tours are good value because you can get off in anything peaks your interest, go and take a look around, and then hop back on again when you're done and rejoin the tour. They cover a lot of ground.


 
Posted : 30/03/2022 7:31 am
Posts: 8819
Full Member
 

Berlin is awesome! Possibly my favourite city in the world so far.

The only problem is the scope of the place (with so many things to do and see) and the short time that I spent there. I felt that, after only a week, I had barely seen the place.

Checkpoint Carlie - for sure visit. The museum there is a good visit. You can also pick up curry-wurst from Snackpoint Charlie across the road.

The Bauhaus Archive - If you are into design and graphics.

Just walk. I saw so much awesome stuff just walking around the city, from architecture to places to eat and drink.

Oh yes, try the beers. Berliner Weisse is light and refreshing, but Germany's beers are awesome.


 
Posted : 30/03/2022 8:06 am
Posts: 12993
Free Member
 

and I would move there in a heart beat if I could.

It's flat AF and surrounded by AfD supporters. Not a place I would choose to spend much of my time.

Go there often for work, have friends there, but I'm always happy when I leave, so the A9 Autobahn to Munich gets my vote.

Fortunately a lot of kiosks have Augustiner from Munich. Local Berlin beers are a bit naff, hence why everyone is drinking Straopramen or some other Czech beer.

Weather dependant a boat tour along the canals is a nice way to while away the hours.
As mentioned above the Stasi museum.
Berghain if you fancy your chances and are mentally prepared for what you'll see inside.
Holocaust thing with all the blocks was a bit meh, imo.
Friedrichshain where my friends live is meant to be a good place for bars, but I'm not a fan of having to play dodge the dogshit whilst walking along the pavement.

Just remember that Berlin is in no way representative of the rest of Germany.


 
Posted : 30/03/2022 8:15 am
Posts: 11884
Full Member
 

I think most of the good stuff has been mentioned. I really liked the Berlin wall museum at Bernauerstrasse too. The bombed out cathedral which is fairly close to the zoo is also good.


 
Posted : 30/03/2022 8:38 am
 ji
Posts: 1415
Free Member
 

AS well as all the good ideas above take a shortish trip out to the CHarlottenburg Palace - amazing architectural details with gold ceilings etc.

And if you are having a beer, make sure to have a red and a green one (for the pics rather than the taste tbh).


 
Posted : 30/03/2022 9:15 am
Posts: 20561
Free Member
 

I wish someone had told me about the Topography of Terror museum! When I went in 2018 we did the Berlin wall, Holocaust Memorial and Checkpoint Charlie but had no idea about ToT (a colleague was in charge of organising the trip).

I have to go back now...


 
Posted : 30/03/2022 9:27 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

To add to some of the above suggestions the museum of technology is quite spectacular. For somewhere a bit different for dinner then the clarchens ball room is a good visit. And if you are walking by pop into the Radisson blu hotel for a gander at the fish tank. There are a good few flea markets too which are worth a browse, there was one near the Berlin wall memorial and there were loads of nice brunch and lunch places around there too.

I'll second the walking tour also, a must do.


 
Posted : 30/03/2022 9:52 am
Posts: 4643
Full Member
 

@rickmeister Klo is truly bizarre.


 
Posted : 30/03/2022 10:04 am
Posts: 191
Full Member
 

Yet another vote for the walking tour.
Some other possibilities that I dont think have been mentioned: The soviet War memorial Treptow Park. And also the Olympic stadium. The old Tempelhof airport possibly. Looks from their website as if there is a Bike expo there 9th April.
Trying to work out if your in the old East or West based on the pedestrian crossing walk / dont walk (amplem)men.


 
Posted : 30/03/2022 10:30 am
Posts: 0
Full Member
 

Technology museum is very good too, although it is undergoing some works at the moment so some exhibits closed/moved.
DDR museum is good but can be busy and tight to navigate during busy times.
Berliner Dom ( cathedral ) is also very good. I am not religious in any way but it is beautiful and serene inside. You can climb up and walk around the outside of the dome itself and with good weather, the views are excellent.
TV tower is good for views too.
It is a very good city for walking as it’s flat ( my wife and I typically walk everywhere and cover many miles when we go), there is lots to see when walking around. Lots of areas of significant historical history.
When walking also look down, there are ‘Stolperstien) or stumbling stone/block 10x10 brass blocks in the pavement inscribed with names of victims of Nazi extermination or persecution, more than 70000 across 1200 cities worldwide.
Plenty of different food/drink choices too so the only issue it what to have!.
As it is a safe city at night and in the evening there are many good photos to be taken.
My wife and I are going back at the end of April and moving there in end of May beginning June.
Public transport is excellent if needed. Underground/metro U Bahn is €8 for all day two zones (most of Berlin).
We catch the train from Brandenburg airport to Berlin centre (35min and €11 each), a taxi is about €40-60 depending on traffic and destination.

Hope this helps
And enjoy


 
Posted : 30/03/2022 11:07 am
Posts: 4420
Free Member
 

Friedrichshain where my friends live is meant to be a good place for bars, but I’m not a fan of having to play dodge the dogshit whilst walking along the pavement.

I love Friedrichshain and really enjoy just mooching around there, seeing what's about. It's probably gentrified a bit since I was last there but the area around Boxhagener Platz is great for cafes, bars, culture, little shops and interesting stuff going on. Also Kreuzberg (Markthalle 9 is a nice market hall to go and get lunch or something) and parts of Neukoln. These places still bear the marks of the 20th C, as they were the places in West Berlin full of hippies and peaceniks trying to avoid National Service in the 70s and 80s. So have a slightly bohemian, political, multicultural atmosphere.


 
Posted : 30/03/2022 12:13 pm
Posts: 18073
Free Member
 

Have a wander along Karl Marx Strasse, preferably feeling hungry.

Have a swim in the 1938 olympic pool. Visit Templehof, for a run and to walk through the photo gallery.

Have a swim in the Wansee, get tangled in weed and think this would be a really silly way to die.


 
Posted : 30/03/2022 12:34 pm
Posts: 2314
Full Member
 

When I go to a new city I always like to get high...

I remember Berliner Fernsehturm (Berlin Television Tower) having good views.


 
Posted : 30/03/2022 12:39 pm
Posts: 739
Free Member
 

It's a great city for walking as it's very flat! Most of the suggestions have been excellent, but I'd also add the miniature city museum by Alexandraplatz. Take the U-bahn everywhere for a good feel for the place, and a Trabi Safari is also well worth doing. Got great pics of 'our' Trabis by the graffitid remains of the wall!


 
Posted : 30/03/2022 1:22 pm
Posts: 2628
Free Member
 

When I'm visiting cities I rarely go to museums but prefer to just hang out in neighbourhoods (like Kreuzberg, Friedrichshain etc), meeting people, and seeing what happens. In Berlin that meant finding myself in a random street protest, a giant squat rave, the front room of a celebrity dominatrix and a park meadow full of naked Germans. I think that's fairly standard for Berlin.


 
Posted : 30/03/2022 1:37 pm
Posts: 8835
Free Member
 

I'd like to visit Teufelsberg listening station for the graffiti.


 
Posted : 30/03/2022 2:07 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

One thing that I really liked about Berlin, and I know this sounds weird because I don't smoke. But people smoking in the odd bar or club. A healthy disdain for authority. Can you imagine if someone sparked up in a bar in the UK? The police would be there in seconds, the bar heavily fined and people attempting to make a citizen's arrest. Or at least tutting forcibly before taking their children to another bar.

It reminded me of London in the 90's when it was still cool and not everything had to be 'family friendly'.


 
Posted : 30/03/2022 2:12 pm
Posts: 4420
Free Member
 

One thing that I really liked about Berlin, and I know this sounds weird because I don’t smoke. But people smoking in the odd bar or club. A healthy disdain for authority. Can you imagine if someone sparked up in a bar in the UK?

Ha, same. We were in a bar in Mitte, probably 2016ish, and some time around 11pm the waitress comes round asking all the tables if they minded if people smoked in the bar. We said no, so she brought a load of ashtrays round. Only a couple of people actually did light up, but it felt like a 'proper' pub, like a lock-in or something!


 
Posted : 30/03/2022 4:08 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

The Spy Museum opposite The Mall of Berlin (near Potsdamer Platz) is worth a few minutes of your time.

https://www.deutsches-spionagemuseum.de/en/?gclid=Cj0KCQjw_4-SBhCgARIsAAlegrUUCsryzLL-40LF2IAy6_JmDn6NPjo7rbpy4K6JZ93SffEfv9BvN2EaAgptEALw_wcB


 
Posted : 30/03/2022 4:55 pm
Posts: 1513
Free Member
 

I like the DDR museum by the river - reminds me of the UK in the 70s!


 
Posted : 30/03/2022 5:54 pm
Posts: 357
Free Member
 

One thing that I really liked about Berlin, and I know this sounds weird because I don’t smoke. But people smoking in the odd bar or club. A healthy disdain for authority. Can you imagine if someone sparked up in a bar in the UK?

There are all kinds of exceptions to the smoking ban. It's fairly typical of the modern Germany.
You can rent e.scooters everywhere. Just need to download the app and you can pay with Paypal. Great way to get around Berlin Mitte.

If you want something a bit more off the beaten track try Teufelsberg. It was the listening post used by the US to spy on the USSR. Now it has an alternative art exhibition and cafe. The hill also has alot of downhill trails running off it and it's a short walk through the Grunewald to the River Havel where it looks more like a huge lake.
https://www.teufelsberg-berlin.de/


 
Posted : 30/03/2022 6:52 pm
Posts: 239
Free Member
 

Hohenschönhausen prison was an eye opener not a nice place but worth visiting. Tram ride from Alexanderplatz.
DDR museum was good also reminded me of the 70’s early 80’s.


 
Posted : 30/03/2022 8:21 pm
Posts: 9136
Full Member
Topic starter
 

Crikey, tons to unpack there! Thanks all, that's brilliant - what makes me laugh is that Mrs Pondo went years ago, way before we met, she loved the walking tour and said we have to do one, I was, like, "no WAY will they still be doing them after all this time", but sounds like they do! 🙂 She's also mentioned Potsdam, worth a look?


 
Posted : 30/03/2022 10:13 pm
Posts: 1891
Free Member
 

If you like palaces then Potsdam is well worth a look


 
Posted : 30/03/2022 10:15 pm
Posts: 1219
Full Member
 

Huge +1 for the Stasi Remand prison museum at Hoheschonhausen. They do English tours so check and book ahead.

It is (was) the most memorable museum I’ve ever visited.

Fascinating to think Putin was working in Dresden during the prison’s ‘heyday’. So much context comes from that place so I can’t recommend enough.

Depending when you visit, a trip to a proper beer garden is fun. Later in April and some good ones may be open: Prater Garten

Loads of other great stuff above, so just enjoy.

I’d avoid Checkpoint Charlie though.

If you’re into high ropes, there are two contrasting experiences to try:

City Centre MountMitte

And

Jungfernheide parkland high ropes

Both great fun and they’re hands off compared to the UK.


 
Posted : 30/03/2022 11:03 pm
Posts: 785
Free Member
 

Charlottenburg is worth a visit
Wandering around on foot and on the trains
Museum Island
The jewish museum - incredibly sad but the building itself is interesting
Gemäldegalerie - simply great
Burgermeister - so good ive been twice
Zimt & Zucker - Schiffbauerdamm 12, 10117 Berlin, Germany - enjoyed this little cafe by the reiver spree

I've been 4 times for other reasons but I make sure I travel into town for a quick wander


 
Posted : 01/04/2022 11:13 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Timely thread as my girlfriend and I will be going in a few days time.

Do we have any more recommendations for food and drink please?


 
Posted : 03/04/2022 6:18 pm
Posts: 4607
Free Member
 

Charlottenburg is worth a visit

My surname is very German and quite famous (German was my father's first language), but I don't speak the language. In any case, I went to Schloss Charlottenburg a few years back and took a German-language tour, following which I picked up a few items in the gift shop. The woman at the till rang up my purchases, told me the total, and I handed her my credit car (which has my title, my first initial, and my surname). She took note of this, then started to talk to me about it, except that I couldn't respond to her beyond explaining that I couldn't really speak German. So she looked at my card again, looked at me with deep disappointment, packed up my purchases, then handed them to me with my card, and said, 'don't come back until you speak the language.' 🙂

I know it sounds mean, but I was pleased that she cared.

Anyway, it's how I remember Charlottenburg.


 
Posted : 03/04/2022 7:28 pm
Posts: 4420
Free Member
 

Do we have any more recommendations for food and drink please?

Only other places I can remember off the top of my head are SchneeWeiss (alpine cuisine, bit pricey but very nice) and Simon Dach strasse generally, which has 10000 cafes and bars on it. Both in Friedrichshein, which a short walk around will turn up plenty of great options.


 
Posted : 03/04/2022 10:52 pm
Posts: 1911
Full Member
 

I lived in West Germany for a couple of years and myself and then partner used to get the organsied hitched lifts (Mifahrgelegenheit, don't imagine they exist any more!) through the DDR to west Berlin where my brother lived; getting through the security was pretty mental. When my brother married a Berlinerin in 1984, we went across to East Berlin to visit a relative (my mother was german) who lived there. You had to change 25DMs a day for East German marks at 1:1, nowhere near the real rate, you couldn't change it back when you left and there was nothing to buy except books about Marx and Engels. Our relative took us to a posh restaurant on the Alexander Platz...foreigners were only allowed in the Intourist ones. To this day I wonder if my elderly female relative was in the Stasi or something.
Rather than the holocaust memorial, visit the station called Gruenewald which is also a poignant memorial but without the touroids.


 
Posted : 03/04/2022 11:55 pm
Posts: 4726
Full Member
 

Bookmarked for later 👍


 
Posted : 04/04/2022 11:05 pm
Posts: 13594
Free Member
 

I’d avoid Checkpoint Charlie though.

+1

It's hillarious. The origial was demolished as the whole area was redeveloped. Then they thought 'Hey we need a tourist attraction' so sent Fritz to B&Q who came back with a shed and some sand bags and they stuck it in the middle of a busy road!

[url= https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/51984499716_291dc90f42.jp g" target="_blank">https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/51984499716_291dc90f42.jp g"/> [/img][/url][url= https://flic.kr/p/2ncG9DS ]Checkpoint Charlie[/url] by [url= https://www.flickr.com/photos/brf/ ]Ben Freeman[/url], on Flickr


 
Posted : 05/04/2022 6:03 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I’d avoid Checkpoint Charlie though.

+2

When I was there I was just wandering about when I stumbled upon Checkpoint Charlie. It was a real is that it? moment!

Not sure if anyone ever went to the fake Checkpoint Charlie at Granada Studios in Manchester as a kid? Well, that was a million times better.


 
Posted : 05/04/2022 6:08 pm
Posts: 2628
Free Member
 

I went to the Checkpoint Charlie techno night in Reading a few times. It sounds a lot better than the real thing. Talking of techno, if anybody has a guaranteed way of getting into Berghain, let me know. It’s high up on the bucket list but I’m not getting any younger or hotter.


 
Posted : 05/04/2022 8:12 pm
Posts: 18073
Free Member
 

Berghain? You need to know people who are regulars, junior got in that way, but has also failed on other occasions. Try at 8/9 a.m. Sunday. Wear black and look the part. See if Blame the Mono (junior and mate) are playing anywhere, they're sometimes in Anomolie.

Eating: Imren grill, Boppstrasse 10, 10967, Berlin.


 
Posted : 05/04/2022 8:29 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

It’s a shame that the Ramones Museum is currently closed and looking for (yet another) new location. One man’s hoarding obsession turned into a shrine / café / bar.

But there are hundreds (literally) of museums and galleries.

Barberini (in Potsdam) -- currently impressionism, including about 30 Monets;

The Neue Nationalgalerie, designed by Mies van der Rohe of the Bauhaus and very recently re-opened (currently showing a Gerhard Richter retrospective).

Museum Berggruen in Charlottenburg has a permanent exhibition including about 30 Picassos. And much less packed than more central museums.

All of Museum Island is worth a visit. But buy tickets online to avoid queuing.

Eating:
Avoid Simon-Dach Strasse like the plague; it’s a hideous tourist hell-hole with zero restaurants worth visiting.

Saturday:
Farmers’ market at Boxhagener Platz: Handmade black tahini, Turkish pida, random cheeses, organic veggies, exotic teas and juices, and the demographic that goes with all that.

Sunday: Flea markets at:
Boxhagener Platz (hipster artworks, old vinyl, house-clearance garbage targeted at hipsters, plus overpriced East German tat – mostly in orange plastic);

Museum Island (east side), across the river from Museum Island: Books, some vinyl, genuine Soviet / East German pin badges, etc., and random homemade artisan guff. Go right to the back before buying, to check out all of the stalls.

R.A.W. in Friedrichshain (south of Boxi), close to Warschauerstrasse station: More of the above. It’s the site of a former railway yard, and has food stalls, market, brew pub, gig venue, climbing wall, beer garden, public pump track, and fantastic indoor skatepark.

Also on or near Boxi:
Nyom: pan-Asian cuisine with a tendency towards Vietnamese (common in East Berlin, due to past exchanges of guest-workers between communist countries).

Iro Izakaya: Japanese (no sushi!). Be aware of the “special” waiter, who will decline dish choices that he regards as poor combinations.

Yogi Ashram Indian on Gabriel-Max Strasse. Best yellow dahl outside of Nepal.

Il Ritrovo on Gabriel-Max / Wühlischstraße: Punk rock anarchist pizza restaurant, with graffiti, tour posters, and lefty flyers everywhere. The Buffalina can be slightly too soggy for the super-thin crust, but all other options are great. Don’t order any specials or pasta – everyone goes there (and to the two other branches in Kreuzberg and Prenzlauerberg) for the pizza.

Miss Saigon: Vietnamese (no surprise) on Skalitzerstrasse in Kreuzberg. Very close to Görlitzer Bahnhof stop on the U1 line. Small and busy.

Hasir (Turkish) on Adalbertstrasse in the full-on “postcode 36” (former squatter / alternative paradise) area of Kreuzberg. Few non-meat options, but the lentil soup is worth a visit at any time of the day or night.

Hopfenreich brew pub in Kreuzberg.

Wen Cheng (hand-pulled noodles) on Schönhauser Allee in Prenzlauerberg.

[edit] Also Cafe Mugrabi (Israeli) on Görlitzer Str. (post code 10997).[/edit].

All of the above are popular and might well require an online reservation (the more popular ones don't do that, and instead make you queue like the fools trying to get into Berghain).

There are literally thousands of bars and restaurants. Each district (in the east, at least) was designed to have everything one might need within close proximity. So it’s more like a collection of small villages (Londoners say that, but they have no idea).

So wherever you stay, you’ll randomly encounter comedy clubs, bars, music venues, galleries, pop-up stores, and all kinds of memorable and unexpected weirdness (unless you’re in Mitte or the posher parts of the former West, where it’s just cars, noisy streets, expensive apartments, and blandness – just like any other capital city).

And if you find yourself leaving a bar or club early (for Berlin), then there are numerous nice European and Turkish bakeries that open around 5:30 am and often have seating inside/outside.

As mentioned, there are no "tied houses" like in the UK. So bars are run by the people who work there. In many cases, they would like a smoke (of whatever) and so you might too.

Also: A surprising number of restaurants are cash-only. Take note of any signs to that effect (they'll also be in English). But tourists are commonly caught out by that. So they will always know how to direct you to the closest cash machine.

Also, if arriving from the airport directly into an area that's popular with tourists / creatives / gap-year kids / moths to the Berlin flame, then try seeing how long it takes you to hear anyone speaking German. In some areas, English, Spanish, Italian, Polish, Russian, etc. are very common on the streets.


 
Posted : 05/04/2022 9:14 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

On the grimmer (but necessary) theme of Berlin’s history:

The Soviet war memorial (walk from Treptower Park station) is predictably impressive. But pushes the line (justifiably or not) that the Soviet Union alone liberated Europe from the horrors of Nazism. A condition of the Russian Federation pulling its last military personnel out of Germany after the fall of the Berlin Wall was the perpetual upkeep of this site (and others) at German expense. Ignoring current events in Ukraine (which has its own thread), there are 24-hour police patrols of the site, because otherwise Berliners (remembering their still-recent history) would probably dismantle it overnight – right or wrong.

The Stasi Museum.

The Holocaust Memorial (next to the U.S. Embassy and the Brandenburg Gate; also the nearby much smaller memorial to other groups (Roma, etc.) that were persecuted by the Nazis.

The main Humboldt University building on Unter den Linden, notable for Max Planck, Albert Einstein, Werner Heisenberg, Max Born, Erwin Schrödinger, et al.

Babelplatz (opposite Humboldt), the site of an infamous Nazi book-burning escapade.

Tränenpalast (The Palace of Tears) outside Friedrichstrasse station. Exhibition in a preserved entry point between former east and west.

At the back of Friedrichstrasse station, the small bronze sculpture, showing two pairs of kids: The Aryan ones being sent to safety, versus those being deported from that station to death camps. I always seems to have a lot of dust in my eyes whenever I’ve stood there.
And (as above) the Jewish Museum. Interesting if you’re a fan of Daniel Libeskind’s architecture. But otherwise, an unremittingly grim reminder of millennia of persecution.

And maybe look out for Stolpersteine: Small brass cobblestones installed in the pavement outside many buildings, which are intended not so much to trip you up but (metaphorically) to trigger one’s conscience. Each one commemorating a former resident who was killed by the Nazis. Examples include one house where one couple were deported a few days apart from each other (the Gestapo literally took one, then returned later for their partner); and a house in (comparatively wealthy) Charlottenburg with 20 outside. Truly grim. But worth being aware of.


 
Posted : 05/04/2022 9:54 pm
Posts: 1419
Free Member
 

Fat tire bike tour was absolutely awesome.


 
Posted : 05/04/2022 10:08 pm
Posts: 3026
Free Member
 

Berlin is a fascinating city , with loads to do.

There are several alternative walking tours - art, graffiti , underground Berlin.
If you want a life changing experience - go to Saschenhausen - which is train ride to Oranienberg.
Potsdam is also worth a visit.

There used to be David Bowie/ Iggy Pop based tours as well.
Kruezberg os the Turkish area - so great food , a bit edgy - and. really great pizza place.
Some of the old gun emplacement are still around Berlin - and just worthwhile looking at because of their huge size ( and the fact that the have been demolished just built on / around).
And then there is the car park that used to be Hitler's Bunker.
Most of Berlin still bears the scars of the Battle for Berlin - if you look up, esp on the old East, lots of bullet and shell holes are still evident.
Research the history well, and then decide what you want to see. It is one of Germany's most multicultural cities, and often very left field.

Templehof airport was a eerie place - but the airfield is now a park full of German hippies sunbathing naked.

It is important , when in Berlin, to go to Konnopkes to eat currywurst - but it was invents as post war food in Charlottenberg - Heinz Ketchup mixed with Sharwoods curry powder allegedly. Now a German staple


 
Posted : 05/04/2022 10:12 pm
Posts: 3026
Free Member
 

^ sorry for the typos above!

Stolperstein started in Cologne by an artist, who felt it was a very small, but poignant way of remembering those who where murdered by the Nazis. They are quite humbling to stand and read. They are now found throughout most of the territory that Nazi Germany occupied. So don't just look at stuff around you, or up, also look down.

( and carrying on re the comments above - for many years the far right and far left lived very close to each other in Berlin. For a lot of Berliners, the Soviets coming in , and communist rule was not a bad thing. The great irony is that the museum re the Battle for Berlin has accounts from German one talking about the wholesale rape and murdering by Russian soldiers - as they came from the East. Supposedly done in response to the Nazi's behaviour going into Russia. Very sad that nothing has changed)

Are any of the ghost stations accessible?


 
Posted : 05/04/2022 10:42 pm
Posts: 3351
Full Member
 

Underworld Tour. I think we did Tour 3

https://www.berliner-unterwelten.de/en/index.html

EDIT: Also be warned, the sausages in Berlin are the wurst.


 
Posted : 05/04/2022 11:56 pm
Posts: 1103
Free Member
 

@dmorts
No one likes a schnitzel

IGMC


 
Posted : 06/04/2022 7:27 am
Posts: 12993
Free Member
 

eat currywurst – but it was invents as post war food in Charlottenberg – Heinz Ketchup mixed with Sharwoods curry powder allegedly. Now a German staple

And then annoy the locals by telling them its essentially a British invention. British soldiers based in Berlin after the war gave some curry powder to the wurst woman to make the sausages more interesting.


 
Posted : 06/04/2022 7:52 am
Posts: 9136
Full Member
Topic starter
 

Well, goodness - what a fantastic place. Thanks so much for all the suggestions, we took in as many as we could - and the ones we missed are just a reason to go back... 🙂 Some notes from our visit.

We stayed at the Intercitie near Hauptbanhof, probably the most central hotel we've ever stayed - not so great for interesting places right on the doorstep, but free train/underground ticket and having the station right to hand were fantastic. The Reichstsag is less than ten minutes, and Spreeboganpark was awesome on a sunny afternoon.

We booked a breakfast at the Reichstag, an expensive treat (we had the Dome breakfast at 26 painful euros a head) but a very nice, very filling breakfast - don't have to breakfast to take a tour of the dome itself, but it's fantastic to wander about and the audio tour was great for identifying landmarks.

We did pop to Markethalle Neun on Thursday, but it was the wrong end of a long day, would have enjoyed it if we'd been less footsore - went for a meal at the Panther instead, quickest service all week and great food. Food was outstanding the whole time - we didn't have a bad meal all week. We aimed for the Boxenhager Platz market on Saturdaytoo, but got there as everyone was packing up - dinner on the nearby Simon Dach Strasse was just fine.

The walking tour was brilliant, just randomly signed up with some dudes at Brandenburg Tor and it was great, a really enjoyable and informative way to find the key city centre landmarks.

They do not shy away from their history, do they? The Trains For the Living, Trains For The Dead statue was one of our first stops, and it was indeed dusty when we saw it - Topography Of Terror was grimly fascinating, standing where Gestapo HQ used to be, with a stretch of Berlin wall outside and the exposed Prince Albrechstrasse 8 cellers underneath. The Stasi museum, in contrast, did nothing for me - was very warm though, which didn't encourage lingering!

Did an evening at a Munich beer hall style place, really enjoyed what I remember of that but poor Mrs Pondo had to see me home.

Potsdam was just beautiful - we just wandered through town and the palace grounds, was proper idyllic, like a Disney German theme park. Went and paid respects to Bernd Rosemeyer and Ellie Bienhorn on the way back, nice to have that chance.

The memorials to the Jewish and Gypsy dead were sobering - not all observed with the gravity you'd hope for, but but the Jewish memorial in particular was striking. Got the chance to spit on the ground where Hitler killed himself.

The trains and underground we didn't find particularly intuitive, but once we sussed out how they work, travel became really easy, trains and underground pleasant and regular, and good for sightseeing from (even the u derhround, quite often!). The open plan and multi-layered Hauptbanhof was amazing, like something designed by Dali! Border control in Germany was significantly less painful than the UK, both inbound and outbound.

I'm sure I'll add more over time, but hearty thanks once more for all suggestions! 🙂


 
Posted : 18/04/2022 11:05 pm
Posts: 9069
Free Member
 

Has anyone suggested hiit training yet, where you struggle for air? 😉


 
Posted : 18/04/2022 11:20 pm

6 DAYS LEFT
We are currently at 95% of our target!