Germany
Potsdamer Platz

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    • Day 2

      Porta di Brandeburgo

      November 4, 2023 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 11 °C

      La Porta di Brandeburgo (in tedesco Brandenburger Tor) è una porta in stile neoclassico di Berlino. Si trova sul lato occidentale del Pariser Platz, nel quartiere di Mitte al confine con il quartiere del Tiergarten. È il monumento più famoso di Berlino ed è conosciuto in tutto il mondo come simbolo della città stessa e dell’intera Germania. La Porta di Brandeburgo è uno dei punti di riferimento più importanti della metropoli. L'unica porta della città di Berlino conservata, che rappresentava soprattutto la divisione della città in Est e Ovest, è il simbolo dell'unità della Germania dopo la caduta del muro.Read more

    • Day 48

      Berlin

      November 15, 2023 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 9 °C

      Seeing more of the city:
      Visited the Brandenburg Gate, Berliner Dom, Granitschale im, the DDR museum about life in East Germany, Checkpoint Charlie and the Holocaust memorial.

      Fun fact of the day: Granitschale im, the largest bowl carved from a singular stone, has a large crack down one of its sides, from when Hitler tried to move it so it doesn't take attention away from him when he used the square for events.Read more

    • Day 32

      Potsdamer Platz

      September 13, 2019 in Germany ⋅ ⛅ 18 °C

      I didn't want to leave Berlin without a visit to Potsdamer Platz. Today it's just another huge city intersection-- but the history!

      By the 1920's and 30's Potsdamer Platz was the busiest traffic center in all of Europe. The first electric street lights in Germany had been installed here in 1882, and in 1924 came Germany's first traffic lights.

      Imagine a complex with the world's largest restaurant – the 2,500-seat Café Piccadilly – plus a 1,200-seat theatre, and eight themed restaurants with cuisine from around the world. All were served from a central kitchen containing the largest gas-fueled cooking plant in Europe

      How about a store with a granite and plate glass facade longer than a football field-- with 83 elevators and 1,000 telephones, a summer, winter, and roof garden, an enormous restaurant, its own laundry, theatre and concert booking office, a bank, and a large fleet of private delivery vehicles.

      You'd have found those, along with huge hotels, and dozens of nightclubs (hello Sally Bowles) right here.

      The square was mostly destroyed in WWII, and after it straddled Western and Soviet controlled Berlin. Eventually, in 1961, the Berlin Wall was built right through it-- and you can see a bit of what remains in the photo.

      If you're interested, there's a ton more info online. Just the little bit I read makes me wish I had a time machine, so I could see it at it's peak.
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    • Day 2

      Dag 2, fietsen door Berlijn

      May 3, 2022 in Germany ⋅ ⛅ 15 °C

      Na een niet zo lekkere nacht om 8 uur ontbeten. Om 10 uur fietsen gehuurd en op pad. Via de Reichstag naar het Holocaust monument. Door naar house of terror (oa voormalige hoofdkwartier van de Gestapo) waar nog een deel van de voormalige muur staat. Al fietsend ontdekken we een groot deel van voormalig Oost Berlijn en daarbij mag natuurlijk checkpoint Charlie niet ontbreken. Een bezoek aan het Joods museum en een late lunch, tapas en sangria en door....
      Hoe leuk was het dat wij vlakbij Arnica, Mieke en Gea blijken te zijn. Gezellig samen wat gedronken en toen terug naar het hotel. Geen zin meer in diner, maar lekker aan de knabbels! Het was een mooie, leerzame en gezellige dag. Alles bij elkaar zo'n 15 km weggetrapt!
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    • Day 2

      Berlin Wall

      December 18, 2019 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 8 °C

      The Berlin Wall was a guarded concrete barrier that physically and ideologically divided Berlin from 1961 to 1989. Construction of the Wall was commenced by the German Democratic Republic (GDR, East Germany) on 13 August 1961. The Wall cut off West Berlin from surrounding East Germany, including East Berlin.
      The barrier included guard towers placed along large concrete walls, accompanied by a wide area (later known as the "death strip") that contained anti-vehicle trenches, "fakir beds", and other defenses.

      The Eastern Bloc portrayed the Wall as protecting its population from fascist elements conspiring to prevent the "will of the people" in building a socialist state in East Germany.
      Throughout Berlin the old wall can be traced by a line of cobblestones that outline the exact presence of the wall before it was demolished.
      There are many fascinating stories of people who escaped from the East to the West including tunnels, zip lines from the adjacent building seen in one of the photos and hot air balloons.
      A personal regret was being unable to visit the East whilst the wall was still standing as it was possible to take a day visa and visit although our guide also informed us that many West Germans had businesses in the East and would travel there each day to work.
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    • Day 4

      Topografía del terror

      September 17, 2023 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 20 °C

      En las instalaciones de "Topografía del terror" (Topographie des Terrors) situadas al lado de Gropius Bau y cerca de Potsdamer Platz, se encontraban las centrales del terror nacionalsocialista entre 193 y 1945; la policía secreta del estado (con cárcel propia), la dirección de las SS, el servicio de seguridad de las SS (SD) y la oficina central de la seguridad del imperio. Desde este lugar se articulaba la persecución y exterminio de los opositores políticos del nacionalsocialismo en el interior y en el extranjero, y se organizaba el genocidio de los judíos europeos, gitanos y romanos.
      La exposición del centro de documentación abierto en 2010 narra la historia del lugar, la cercanía próxima de las instituciones del terror establecidas en la zona de gobierno del NS y de los crímenes perpetrados en toda Europa.
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    • Day 49

      Berlin

      November 16, 2023 in Germany ⋅ ⛅ 8 °C

      Museum day in Berlin:
      Spent the day at the Topography of Terror museum, which details the rise to power and horrors of the nazi regime. It was very interesting, though was mostly reading, so don't have many pictures. Went out with some of the friends I have made in Berlin that evening.Read more

    • Day 4

      Berlin History

      December 12, 2023 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 7 °C

      After dinner at Faelt things turned south for the Sadovyis, with a case of food poisoning. We suspect Christmas market oysters are to blame. Hence our lack of posts the past few days.

      That said, we're on the mend now! So a quick recap of our last 2 days in Berlin. We spent Monday walking around the city and went to see Checkpoint Charlie. On the way we walked through a museum along some remaining part of the Berlin wall. A somber place and a sad history but important to remember.

      We wrapped up our last night in Berlin with a lager before the food poisoning set in good for the night. And after a less than idea sleep, a struggle of a train ride and many waters and tea later, we made it to Cologne!
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    • Day 2

      Hitler’s Bunker

      December 18, 2019 in Germany ⋅ ⛅ 8 °C

      Due to the shocking impact Hitler had on the German psyche very little is mentioned of him at all throughout Germany except in the context of learning from the atrocities perpetrated in the name of Nazism.

      As a consequence of this, his last refuge in Berlin was his bunker where he committed suicide as the Russians stormed into Berlin. The site of his death is a non descript parking lot that has permanently been unkept and is only marked with a blue sign signifying the location such is the contempt that the German race now have for him.
      His ashes were scattered into the Elbe river so that Hitler was never able to have any lasting burial place within Germany such was the attitude toward his crimes.

      On another note the surrounding architecture of the area is similar to the glum and basic government housing of the East German regime. Interestingly we were also able to understand that these high rise apartments were sought out by the Stasi and high ranking East German officials at the time so that they could have some enjoyment in their lives by looking over the wall into the West German side and being able to see the freedom and prosperity on display. Hardly a gratifying experience for the people caught on the wrong side.
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    • Day 2

      Jewish Holocaust Memorial

      December 18, 2019 in Germany ⋅ ⛅ 8 °C

      The second most visited tourist destination is the memorial built to commemorate the nearly 9 million Jews that were systematically murdered by the Nazis’s conceived and manipulated by Hitler and Goebbels to create a common enemy to the fatherland.

      The structure is very big and is designed to inspire and educate fellow tourists to the pure evil of the National Socialist Agenda circa 1939 onwards as it began to implement what has come be known as the “final solution”.
      The sculpture park is designed for ordinary tourists and Berliners alike to remind them of what happened during the holocaust and as a stark reminder that this must never happen again.
      It is a fascinating memorial and is open to interpretation around its meaning and how it represents the lessons learned from this horrible chapter in history. There are arranged in rows solid blocks of stone that are in varying shapes and sizes and that cover a vast area all arranged in rows and on an uneven surface.

      It consists of a 19,000-square-metre (200,000 sq ft) site covered with 2,711 concrete slabs or "stelae", arranged in a grid pattern on a sloping field. The stelae are 2.38 metres (7 ft 10 in) long, 0.95 metres (3 ft 1 in) wide and vary in height from 0.2 to 4.7 metres (7.9 in to 15 ft 5.0 in). They are organized in rows, 54 of them going north–south, and 87 heading east–west at right angles but set slightly askew.

      The artist wanted people to read into the sculpture what they would and now that I reflect on it some more when you are walking in the middle of it, it becomes quite oppressive as well as being disorienting for the person in the maze. Many visitors and Berliners have also interpreted the contrast between the grey flat stones and the blue sky as a recognition of the "dismal times" of the Holocaust. As one slopes downwards into the memorial entrance, the grey pillars begin to grow taller until they completely consume the visitor. Eventually the grey pillars become smaller again as visitors ascend towards the exit. Some have interpreted this as the rise and fall of the Third Reich or the Regime's gradual momentum of power that allowed them to perpetrate such atrocities on the Jewish community.

      The space in between the concrete pillars offers a brief encounter with the sunlight. As visitors wander through the slabs the sun disappears and reappears. One is constantly tormented with the possibility of a warmer, brighter life. Some have interpreted this use of space as a symbolic remembrance of the volatile history of European Jews whose political and social rights constantly shifted. Many visitors have claimed walking through the memorial makes one feel trapped without any option other than to move forward. Some claim the downward slope that directs you away from the outside symbolically depicts the gradual escalation of the Third Reich's persecution of the European Jewish community. First, they were forced into ghettos and removed from society and eventually they were removed from existence. The more a visitor descends into the memorial, he or she is without any visible contact of the outside world. He or she is completely ostracized and hidden from the world. It is common for groups of visitors to lose each other as they wander deeper into the memorial. This often reminds one of the separation and loss of family among the Jewish community during the Holocaust.
      Some have interpreted the shape and color of the grey slabs to represent the loss of identity during the Nazi regime.
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