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Attractions in Berlin
Deutsche Guggenheim Berlin Unter den Linden 13-15 daily 11am-8pm Free admission on Mondays take U-Bahn Französische St. Located just to the east of Friedrichstrasse, the Guggenheim contains an extensive collection of contemporary art and hosts three to four major exhibitions per year. Lining the wide promenade beyond are a host of historic buildings restored from the rubble of the war.
Neoclassical Humboldt University Alte Bibliothek, Deutsche Staatsoper St Hedwig's Cathedral, built for the city's Catholics in 1747.
Bebelplatz U-Bahn Französische St. Faces the Cathedral and is the site of the infamous Nazi bookburning of May 10, 1933; an underground room visible through a glass panel set in the center of the square.
Neue Wache, a former royal guardhouse resembling a Roman temple and now a memorial to victims of war and tyranny. Next door, is one of Berlin's finest Baroque buildings, the old Prussian Arsenal, which is home to the Museum of German History.
Museum of German History 10am-6pm; closed Wed free U-Bahn Friedrichstr. currently closed for renovations until the end of 2001; until then, temporary exhibitions on historical themes are being held in the Kronprinzenpalais across the road.
Französische Kirche on the northern side of the square. Built as a church for Berlin's influential Huguenot community at the beginning of the eighteenth century, it also now houses the Hugenottenmuseum.
Hugenottenmuseum Tues-Sat noon-5pm, Sun 11am-5pm Contains exhibits documenting the way of life of the Huggenotts.
Deutsche Kirche Tues-Sun 10am-6pm free admission The church was built in the 18th century for the city's Reformed community. It houses an historical exhibition, "Questions of German History"
Friedrichstrasse an upscale shopping district with an eclectic mix of modernist architecture, lies a block west of the Deutsche Kirche.
Schlossplatz U-Bahn Alexanderplatz At the eastern end of Unter den Linden lies the former site of the imperial palace and the current home of the abandoned Palast der Republik, the former GDR parliament building. It stands at the midpoint of a city-centre island whose northwestern part, Museumsinsel, is the location of some of the best of Berlin's museums. Reopening following an extensive reconstruction program:
The Alte Nationalgalerie (U-Bahn Friedrichstr.), houses the city's collection of nineteenth-century European art has been extensively renovated and restored.
Altes Museum Tues-Sun 10am-6pm free first Sun on month U-Bahn Friedrichstr.) Perhaps Schinkel's most impressive surviving work is displayed in the Alte Nationalgalerie's collection. In addition, it devotes a floor to the city's excellent collection of Greek and Roman antiquities.
Alexanderplatz, The commercial hub of eastern Berlin.
Marienkirche, The church is open Mon. to Thurs. 10am to noon and 1 to 4pm, Fri. to Sun. noon to 4pm. Free tours are offered Mon. to Thurs. at 1pm and Sun. at 11:45am. This is Berlin's second opldest parish church, dating from the 15th century. Inside is the 1475 wall painting Der Totentanz (The Dance of Death), discovered in 1860 beneath a layer of whitewash in the church's entrance hall. Also worth seeing is the marble baroque pulpit carved by Andreas Schlüter (1703). The cross on the top of the church annoyed the Communist rulers of the former East Germany--its golden form was always reflected in the windows of the Fernsehturm.
Fernsehturm or TV tower March-Oct daily 9am-1am;Nov--Feb 10am-midnight; U-Bahn Alexanderplatz The observation platform offers unbeatable views of the whole city on rare clear days.
Nikolaiviertel Take U-Bahn Klosterstr. A modern development that attempts to recreate the winding streets and small houses of this part of old prewar Berlin, which was razed overnight on June 16, 1944.
Nikolaikirche Tues-Sun 10am-6pm; Free Take U-Bahn Klosterstr., a rebuilt thirteenth-century structure that is Berlin's oldest parish church. Not far away on Mühlendamm is the rebuilt Rococo.
Ephraim-Palais Tues-Sun. 10-6. U-Bahn Klosterstr. housing a collection of Berlin art from the reign of Frederick the Great to 1945.
Western Berlin Altes Museum Bodestrasse 1-3, Museumsinsel 030/20-99-55-55 Tues-Sun 10am-6pm U-Bahn/S-Bahn: Friedrichstrasse. Bus 100 to Lustgarten Admission charged. Karl Friedrich Schinkel, the city's greatest architect, designed this structure, which resembles a Greek Corinthian temple, in 1822. On its main floor is the This is a large collection of world-famous antique decorative art. Some of the finest Greek vases of the black-and-red-figures style, from the 6th to the 4th century B.C., are here. The best-known vase is a large Athenian amphora (wine jar) found in Vulci, Etruria.
Pergamon Museum Kupfergraben, Museumsinsel 030/20-90-5555 Tues-Sun 10am-6pm U-Bahn/S-Bahn: Friedrichstrasse. Tram: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 13, 15, or 53 Admission charged. The Pergamon Museum houses several departments, but if you have time for only one exhibit, go to the Department of Greek and Roman Antiquities, housed in the north and east wings of the museum, and enter the central hall to see the Pergamon Altar, (180-160 B.C.), so large that it has a huge room all to itself. The Near East Museum, in the south wing, contains one of the largest collections anywhere of antiquities from ancient Babylonia, Persia, and Assyria.
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