• Bronze
  • Jenny Day

Berlin

Visiting Berlin as our first stop on a Europe vacation with Dylan and Polly Les mer
  • Reishtag Dinner

    21. desember 2019, Tyskland ⋅ ⛅ 4 °C

    The term Reichstag, when used to connote a diet, dates back to the Holy Roman Empire. The building was built for the Diet of the German Empire, which was succeeded by the Reichstag of the Weimar Republic. The latter would become the Reichstag of Nazi Germany, which left the building (and ceased to act as a parliament) after the 1933 fire and never returned, using the Kroll Opera House instead; the term Reichstag has not been used by German parliaments since World War II. In today's usage, the word Reichstag (Imperial Diet Building) refers mainly to the building, while Bundestag (Federal Diet) refers to the institution.

    The ruined building was made safe against the elements and partially refurbished in the 1960s, but no attempt at full restoration was made until after German reunification on 3 October 1990, when it underwent a reconstruction led by architect Norman Foster.

    After its completion in 1999, it once again became the meeting place of the German parliament: the modern Bundestag.
    Les mer

  • Topographie des Terrors

    22. desember 2019, Tyskland ⋅ ☁️ 4 °C

    This was one of the more confronting tours as it was a museum dedicated to the horrors of the Gestapo and the increasingly fascist police state that existed from 1933-1945.
    The buildings that housed the Gestapo and SS headquarters were largely destroyed by Allied bombing during early 1945 and the ruins demolished after the war. The boundary between the American and Soviet zones of occupation in Berlin ran along the Prinz-Albrecht-Strasse, so the street soon became a fortified boundary, and the Berlin Wall ran along the south side of the street, renamed Niederkirchnerstrasse, from 1961 to 1989. The wall here was never demolished. Indeed, the section adjacent to the Topography of Terror site is the longest extant segment of the outer wall (the longer East Side Gallery section in Friedrichshain being actually part of the inner wall not visible from West Berlin).

    The first exhibitions of the site took place in 1987, as part of Berlin's 750th anniversary. The cellar of the Gestapo headquarters, where many political prisoners were tortured and executed, was found and excavated. The site was then turned into a memorial and museum, in the open air but protected from the elements by a canopy, detailing the history of repression under the Nazis. The excavation took place in cooperation with East German researchers, and a joint exhibition was shown both at the site and in East Germany in 1989.

    In 1992, two years after German reunification, a foundation was established to take care of the site, and the following year, it initiated an architectural competition to design a permanent museum. A design by architect Peter Zumthor was chosen. However, construction was stopped due to funding problems after the concrete core of the structure had been built. This stood on the site for nearly a decade until it was finally demolished in 2004 and a new building begun.
    Les mer

  • Travelling to Bristol

    23. desember 2019, England ⋅ ⛅ 4 °C

    Well here we are waiting for a delayed flight to Bristol after convincing Jen that we really should take a taxi instead of running all over Germany trying to work out the train routes with our cases in tow...wtf!
    I look like a beetle in this shot...cross eyed at that.
    Les mer

    Reisens slutt
    22. desember 2019