Thursday, 3 July 2008

German Companies Survive the CC

From Adam at Harrison & Cohn,
harrisonandcohn@googlemail.com
www.harrisonstone.co.uk


German Companies Barely Hit by Financial Market Woes, KfW Says
July 3 (Bloomberg) -- German companies have been barely affected by the financial market crisis that resulted from the collapse of the U.S. subprime mortgage market, KfW Group said, citing a survey it conducted with business lobbies.
Sixty-two percent of companies said the availability of credit hasn't changed, the government-owned development bank said today. The share of companies that reported more difficulty in getting loans rose to 27 percent from 25 percent a year ago, while 12 percent said it's easier to get financing, down from 14 percent. ``Concerns that the financial market crisis has significantly worsened the financing conditions in Germany, and is spilling over into the real economy, so far haven't materialized,'' KfW Chief Economist Norbert Irsch said in a prepared statement. ``The availability of credit hasn't become much worse and so far there are no signs of a credit squeeze.''
German non-financial companies are weathering the fallout from the U.S. subprime mortgage crisis because they rely less than others on external financing. The German economy is in ``robust'' shape, Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck has said, and may expand more than 2 percent this year, according to forecasts by the country's leading economic institutes.
KfW, the BDI federation of German industry, the BGA employers' association, the HDE retailers' lobby and the ZDH association of skilled trades together surveyed around 5,000 companies in the first quarter of this year.
The world's biggest financial companies have posted almost $400 billion in writedowns and credit losses since the start of last year after the collapse of the U.S. market for subprime mortgages, aimed at people with poor credit histories.
KfW Group led bailouts in Dusseldorf-based IKB Deutsche Industriebank AG that cost more than 8 billion euros ($12.4 billion). IKB became the first German casualty of the subprime collapse last year after its finance affiliate couldn't raise funding amid the credit crunch.
Source: Bloomberg (03 July 08)

Monday, 23 June 2008

Flats from £9000

From Adam at Harrison & Cohn,
harrisonandcohn@googlemail.com
www.harrisonstone.co.uk

Flats, Houses & Blocks, below market value. Amazing Prices!

German to English property translation

From Adam at Harrison & Cohn,
harrisonandcohn@googlemail.com
www.harrisonstone.co.uk

Gewerbeimmobilien – Porfolio – Berlin / Commercial Real Estate Portfolio Berlin

Oder

Anderen Title bitte korrigeiere mein Deutsch oder Beschreibung:

Mietshaus – Porfolio – Berlin / Blocks – Portfolio Berlin

Vertrauliche Gesamteckdaten: / Confidential Total basic information


Grundstuck: ca. xyz
Land approx.

Gesamtfläche ca. xyz
Total area approx.

davon
Einzelhandelsfläche (Hauptmieter) ca. xyz
Retail area/anchor tenant approx.

Leerstand: ca. xyz
Vacancy aprox.

JNKM (Ist) EZH (Hauptmieter) ca.: € xyz
Annual net income retail/anchor tenant (actual) approx.

JNKM (Ist) insgesamt ca. : € xyz
Annual net rental income total (actual) approx.

JNKM (Soll) kurzfristig insgesamt ca.: € xyz
Annual net rental income total (target) shorterm approx.

JNKM (Soll) mittelfristig insgesamt ca.: € xyz
Annual net rental income total (target) mediumterm approx.

Kaufpreisvorstellung: € xyz
Purchase Price

Faktor (Ist) ca. xyz
Multiplier (actual) approx.

Faktor (Soll) mittelfristig: ca. xyz
Multiplier (target) mediumterm approx.

Durchschnittsmiete EZH (Ist) ca.: € xyz
Average rent retail/anchor tenant approx.

Durschschnittliche Mietvertragslaufzeit gewichtet
Nach Mieteinnahmen (Ist): ca. xyz
Average contract duration weighted on annual net rental income (actual) approx

Durschschnittliche Mietvertragslaufzeit gewichtet
Nach Mieteinnahmen (Soll) ca. xyz
Average contract duration weighted on annual net rental income (target) approx

Zurzeit werden einige Verträge neu ausgehandelt
Several contract conditions are presently being negotiated

Berlin Investors Press

Irish Invade Berlin for Buy-to-let Flats
One investor group has paid €40m and plans to splash out millions more.
Escaping mass unemployment at home in the Seventies and Eighties the Irish came to pull pints and serve the punters of West Berlin's bars and nightclubs. In the Nineties they flocked to the building sites to help reconstruct a reunified city after the Wall came down. Now in the 21st century they have come back. This time they are taking over Berlin.
At the far western end of the Kurfurstendamm - Berlin's well-heeled shopping district - lies the headquarters of the new Irish property invasion. In the last eight months alone, a group of Co Mayo investors has bought more than €40m worth of flats and apartments. At present they are negotiating a deal for a vast complex of apartments estimated to be worth €35m. Spearheading the big Irish buy-up of Berlin is Mike Morris from the Mayo-based Premier Estates Maloney. 'We started looking at Germany, and in particular Berlin, because it is a stable, conservative and trustworthy society,' he says. 'The company had thought about expanding our property portfolio into eastern Europe, but those countries are potentially unstable, which Germany is not,' he adds, as he surveys three apartment blocks that the company owns close to one of the main motorways looping around western Berlin. 'The €35m deal we are trying to secure now would land us with 900 apartments, 30 per cent of which need renovation. What we are offering in all our properties is a net return per annum of 7 per cent from rental incomes,' he says. Taking a brief stroll later across the Kurfurstendamm with Morris into the affluent Halensee district reveals the depth of the Irish investment invasion. As he passes by a row of businesses below ornate 19th-century Wilhelmine apartments along the Westfaelische Strasse, with shops ranging from health food centres to lingerie stores, Morris points and says: 'That's Irish-owned, that's Irish-owned and that's Irish-owned. In fact most of the buildings on this side of the street have Irish landowners.' Premier Estates Maloney and the other Irish companies following in their wake have not kept their investments solely to western Berlin. Their portfolio includes apartment blocks in the eastern and increasingly fashionable Prenzlauer Berg district. These include six retail units and 15 offices, with a branch of McDonald's as the main tenant. The expansion eastwards of the Irish investor follows a trend across Europe with entrepreneurs who made fortunes from the growth of the Celtic tiger economy buying up airports and shopping malls in England; thousands of apartments on the Spanish Costas and Florida; and hotels and ski chalets in the Balkans. The Irish are estimated to be in the top three foreign investor nations in Berlin. However, in a city of 3.4 million, where only half of its citizens are working, German observers of the Berlin property market are extremely cautious. Ralf Schoenball, a property expert for the Berlin-based daily Der Tagesspiegel, warns that Berlin may not be the best place for Irish investors to buy flats and apartments. 'Don't get me wrong here. I have been here since 1983 and I love Berlin. But the economy of this city has shrunk every year since 1996 with one exception: [growth of] 1 per cent in 2000. 'Because of the shrinking economy there are fewer Berliners working and the incomes of the households are decreasing if you take into account the cost of living. For the housing market this means that, as people have less money, an increase in rents makes it harder for them to pay. There are also 100,000 empty flats in Berlin, so tenants can move around and find the cheapest places to rent.' Morris brushes aside the cautious noises of German observers and says: 'The prospects for Berlin look good in the long run. Many of the Germans in business here are too conservative. 'There are good deals to be had here in Berlin and the long-term returns will be worth it. We might take a look at Dresden too.'
By Guardian Unlimited © Copyright Guardian Newspapers 2006Published: 9/2/2006

Welcome to Germany
Germany is looking likely to turn into one of the hottest property markets in Europe after 10 years of static prices. Germany is a new market for most overseas investors and it will take time for it to develop. Growth is starting in cities such as Berlin now that unemployment is beginning to drop and interest in home ownership is beginning to increase.
Under 40% of Germans own their own homes compared with around 80% in the UK and Ireland. In Berlin this figure is just 14%. When the German market awakens to the opportunity of property investment with low interest rates and their economy starts to recover again we are expecting to see significant price rises over the next 5-7 years from a very low starting point today. For example prices in Berlin, one of Europe's major cities, are at €1,000 - €3,000 per square metre in many excellent areas compared to prices of €10,000+ per square metre in Paris, London and other major capital cities.
The Government has moved from Bonn to Berlin and the quality of the city and its architecture has to be seen to be believed. However, until the residents start to see the value of buying their own homes and rents start to rise through greater professional overseas landlord ownership and management prices will remain static. Fortunately huge multi-billion euro investments have been made by UK and US funds in the last year or so and in 2006 we believe that this change is beginning now and the growth has started.
German Press on Real Estate.
Real Estate

Before the wall came down, Berlin enjoyed a privileged status which attracted numerous subsidies. This affected rents and house prices too - both West and East Berliners were encouraged to stay in the city, and subsidised housing was one of the incentives.Since the fall of the wall there has been something of a building boom. Western companies were again encouraged to build, invest and refurbish in Berlin with a number of government subsidies and tax incentives, which are gradually being phased out.Some construction projects have proven over-ambitious as exclusive office spaces and apartment buildings remain empty. Rents and house prices are still relatively cheap in Berlin, particularly compared to Hamburg, Munich and other cities in the West, where rents can be twice or three times as expensive for equal space. With the mass government relocation from Bonn, rises in real estates prices were predicted, but so far the impact has been minimal.
Germany is looking likely to turn into one of the hottest property markets in Europe after 10 years of static prices. Germany is a new market for most overseas investors and it will take time for it to develop. Growth is starting in cities such as Berlin now that unemployment is beginning to drop and interest in home ownership is beginning to increase.
Under 40% of Germans own their own homes compared with around 80% in the UK and Ireland. In Berlin this figure is just 14%. When the German market awakens to the opportunity of property investment with low interest rates and their economy starts to recover again we are expecting to see significant price rises over the next 5-7 years from a very low starting point today. For example prices in Berlin, one of Europe's major cities, are at €1,000 - €3,000 per square metre in many excellent areas compared to prices of €10,000+ per square metre in Paris, London and other major capital cities.
The Government has moved from Bonn to Berlin and the quality of the city and its architecture has to be seen to be believed. However, until the residents start to see the value of buying their own homes and rents start to rise through greater professional overseas landlord ownership and management prices will remain static. Fortunately huge multi-billion euro investments have been made by UK and US funds in the last year or so and in 2006 we believe that this change is beginning now and the growth has started.

This is still a renters market, and renting is not seen as being socially inferior to buying property - people who can easily afford to buy property do not always do so, as renting is a great value.However, should you wish to buy property, there are several factors to consider which may differ from your home country.1) The size of property is always measured not in bedrooms, but in square metres (m²), which may at first seem baffling if your idea of large is a house with 5 bedrooms.2) The number of rooms quoted generally does not include kitchen and bathroom. Reception rooms and bedrooms are usually all counted as 'rooms'.3) There is less of a variety of housing in Berlin - as with most European cities, the vast majority of dwellings are flats. Detached houses are generally found on the outskirts of the city and tend to be exclusive and pricey.
Brits snap up Berlin homes
Evening Standard16 January 2007
Britons are flocking to Berlin as a resurgent German economy makes Europe's cheapest metropolis attractive to second-home buyers.
Brits, Irish and Americans last year spent £7bn on properties in the German capital.
Much of the spend was by institutional investors but private individuals are buying hundreds of flats. Investors have also come from Spain, Norway, Sweden and France.
Big flats in trendy areas can cost as little as £110,000.
Move slightly out and that can drop to between £70,000 and £90,000. Jurgen Michael Schick, vice president of Germany's IVD Real Estate Association, said more than €10bn(£6.6bn) was spent on Berlin properties in 2006, with 'foreign investors accounting for most of those transactions'.
Philipp Tabert, head of Berlin real estate consultancy Winters & Hirsch, said: 'Values are significantly lower than those in London, New York or even Prague and Moscow.' Almost 95% of Tabert's clients are from Britain, Ireland, America, Spain, Italy and France.
Berlin property prices dropped every year from 1996 to 2004 while in London they climbed 80%.
A renovated flat in a prime Berlin area can today cost €1,500 a square metre while one in London is €15,000.
Gary Savage, a teacher from London, said his 87-square-metre apartment in the heart of the Mitte district, for which he paid €145,000, was a real bargain.
'You couldn't even buy a garage or a shed in London today for that,' he said.
Private equity funds such as New York-based Cerberus Capital Management and Goldman Sachs' Whitehall investment fund have also been targeting Berlin. In 2004, the two together bought 65,700 units of Berlin public housing for €2.1bn.
Should you buy in Germany?
David Allsop, Daily Mail7 July 2006Surprisingly, though, despite its proximity and value for money, it barely features on the wish list of British buyers of holiday homes.
There are a number of reasons for this, but one of the most obvious is that Germany is not a major tourist draw for British holidaymakers or second home owners.
Most of us buy property abroad to let it out to other British holidaymakers or to live in communities of fellow expatriates.
Neither really applies to Germany, but the focus on the country during the World Cup could be about to change all that.
Savvy property investors are talking about Germany being the next big thing on the Continent. But on what grounds?
According to the European Housing Review 2006, it is the only European country where residential property prices dropped last year.
In its recent report, property analyst Merrill Lynch observed that the country 'has conspicuously failed to join in the global housing boom of the past ten years'.
A number of factors have contributed towards this curious anomaly in an otherwise upward Continental trend.
Low levels of home ownership (42% compared with 70% in Britain), a culture of state subsidy for rental accommodation and reluctance by German banks to lend money to buy property have combined to cause house prices to stagnate.
So, yes, Germany could be a good place to invest: you will be buying close to the bottom of a market which is expected to go up.
CELEBRATION TIME: The Brandenburg Gate has been a focal point for World Cup celebrations and Berlin could be a good property investment
'The German property market has underperformed for a long time,' confirms Liam Bailey, head of residential research at Knight Frank. 'But there's been a lot of interest in Germany recently, led by major institutions and banks who can sniff a profit.
'It's one of the few markets where property investors can still pick up big chunks of stock very cheaply. The residential property market does offer value.'
Ilya Spitalnik, of German Property Investors, is more exuberant. 'It's a fantastic place to invest,' he declares. 'Eighteen months ago, the market had bottomed out. But it has now increased by at least 15% - in some areas, far more than that.'
If this rapid recovery suggests that new investors may have missed the boat, Mr Spitalnik thinks otherwise.
'In practice, although German property prices are going up, it is still excellent value compared with other European countries,' he says.

Berlin Regions


The Administrative Regions of Berlin:
1: Reinickendorf 2: Pankow 3: Spandau 4: Charlottenburg 5: Wedding 6: Prenzlauer Berg 7: Weißensee 9: Tiergarten 10: Mitte 11: Friedrichshain 15: Wilmersdorf 16: Schöneberg 18: Zehlendorf 19: Steglitz 20: Tempelhof 21: Neukölln 22: Treptow
Insider guide to the city of Berlin.

Berlin was restored as the German capital in 1990 after what was an often traumatic 45-year break. The optimism of that restoration has by no means led to denial of the trauma. As much as it looks forward, crafting a new face to fit its new direction, it maintains a relationship with its past, acknowledging it in all its glory and misfortune. While untold dedication has been expended on the fastidious restoration of war-damaged monuments, graffiti daubed in the last days of WW2 by triumphant Russian soldiers on the walls of the Reichstag has been preserved 'to remind'. A city like this keeps out a keen eye for what kind of past the future it makes will become.
With more trees than Paris, more bridges than Venice, and an impressive canon of Modernist architecture, the city - over a third of it woodland, parks and waterways - sits on the River Spree in the state of Brandenburg, north-east Germany, near the Polish border. With 3.4 million people, it is Germany’s biggest city - a population that is, however, gradually declining. A truly cosmopolitan place, barely half the citizens of Berlin were born there, one in seven from outside Germany.
During the 1920s Berlin was Europe’s artistic and intellectual pioneering city, attracting the world’s greatest minds and talents. Traditionally anti-authoritarian with a thriving counter-culture, it has remained home to the avant-garde and outrageous, the most exuberant outpouring of it now being the summer Love Parade techno fest in early July with its million-plus partiers. To experience its thriving music and drama scene firsthand, replete with concerts, musicals, raves, cabaret, cinema, and theater proves it has lost nothing of what drove it to the forefront last century.
The closest Berlin gets to having a center is in twin form: to the west where Kurfürstendamm (‘Ku’damm’) meets the Zoologischer Garten (‘Zoo’) railway station; and Mitte further east, between Unter den Linden and Alexanderplatz ('Alex') railway stations. But the museum-rich Charlottenburg, the bustling CBD of Tiergarten, left-wing Kreuzberg, and gay Schöneberg, among others, all vie for equal attention.
Being without a true center, Berlin can be a little daunting. Where do you start?
ZooLet's start at Zoologischer Garten, which has both an S-Bahn (train) and a U-Bahn (subway) station very near each other. Most long-distance trains connect to Zoologischer Garten. However from 2006 it will be superseded by the new Central-Station Lehrter Bahnhof.
The zoo itself, open daily 9am-6pm, is one of the world's largest and also has an aquarium. Just east of the U-Bahn station, dominated by the ruined Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gedächtniskirche church, is the central sleepless Breitscheideplatz Square full of shoppers, skateboarders and soapbox orators. A little rundown, it nevertheless brims with energy. Overlooking it is the Europa Center with a Tourist Info center on street level on the Budapester-strasse side. Ask there about the Berlin Welcome Card, a book of coupons offering 3 days of free travel on the city's bus and train network, as well as between 25% and 50% off the admission fee to many tourist attractions and cultural highlights. (Tourist info details below)
There is a 106m-(353ft) high observation deck at the top of the Europa Center. On the other side of the Center from Tourist Info is Tauentzien-strasse whose most famous premises are the massive Kaufhaus des Westens (KaDeWe - 'kah-day-vay') department store. Check out the 6th floor deli. (Mon - Fri 10.00 am - 8.00 pm; Sat: 9.30 am - 8.00 pm)
KurfurstendammKu'damm runs SW from Breitscheideplatz square. Once described as the 'Europe's biggest coffee house', Ku'damm is a huge thoroughfare that has it all: an exciting architectural free-for-all of shops, restaurants, theaters and nightclubs, as well as being the best place to find a bank (typical business hours: Tue&Thu 9am-6pm; Mon,Wed,Fri 3-6pm). The Story of Berlin Museum (daily 10am-8pm, final admission 6pm; tel. 01805/99-20-10) at the second U-Bahn down, Uhland-strasse, is guaranteed to leave even the non history buff overwhelmed with its multimedia narration (English available) of the city's long and checkered past. From Uhland-strasse head NW up Grolman-strasse to Savignyplatz for a relatively tranquil and trendy area of boutiques, bars, bookshops and junkshops - as well as strip shows and brothels NE of the square. A tip: compare prices carefully on Ku'damm, e.g. film and postcards, or you're likely to be ripped off.
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From Savignyplatz east along Kant-strasse you get to Joachimstaler-strasse bisecting Ku'damm. At number 4 Joachimstaler-strasse, just south of the Zoo U-Bahn station, is the Beate Uhse Erotik Museum (daily 9am-midnight), apparently among the top five most visited museums in the city.
Right down near the end of Ku'damm on Lehniner Platz, three streets west of U-Bahn Adenauerplatz Schaubühne, is the Neue Schaubühne theater. Considered the high point in the career of the architect Erich Mendelsohn, it began life as a cinema in 1928, was saved from developers in the late 1970s and transformed into a theater. Along with the Volksbuhne theater, the Neue Schaubühne leads the way in Berlin's theater scene.
TiergartenAdjoining Zoo to the NE, and right in the middle of the map of Berlin, is the huge Tiergarten. Through it runs the Strasse-des-17 Juni, commemorating the East German workers' revolt of 1953 that, on June 17th, was crushed by the Soviet army. It intersects with the central radial Grosser Stern ('Big Star') plaza dominated by the dramatic 67m(223ft) Siegessaule, or Victory Column. Climb the 285 steps to the top for spectacular views of the city (Mon-Thu 9.30am to 5pm - until 6pm in summer; Fri-Sun 9.30am to 5.30pm - until 6.30pm in summer). If the weather's good, Hofjägerallee boulevard, south off Grosser Stern, offers quiet space for nude sunbathing.
KulturforumOn the SE border of Tiergarten is the Kulturforum, a cluster of high culture, with:-Musikinstrumenten-museum (Musical Instrument Museum) (Tue-Fri 9am-5pm; Sat/Sun 10am-5pm) for a vast array of wind and percussion instruments from past to present. -Philharmonie: home of the Berlin Philharmonic. -Kammermusiksaal (Chamber Music Hall): a newer partner of the Philharmonie, right next door to it. -Kunstgewerbemuseum (Museum of Applied Art) (Tue-Fri 10am-6pm; Sat/Sun 11am-6pm): world arts and crafts from the Middle Ages to the present. -Kunstbibliothek (Art Library) (Tue-Fri 10am-6pm; Sat/Sun 11am-6pm): specializing in European applied arts. -Kupferstichkabinett (Museum of Prints and Drawings) (Tue-Fri 10am-6pm; Thu 10am-10pm; Sat/Sun 11am-6pm): a superlative collection of graphic art with works from all the old and new masters. -Gemaldgalerie (Picture Gallery) (Tue, Wed, Fri 10am-6pm; Sat/Sun 11am-6pm): very highly recommended for lovers of art. Virtually all the great European masters between the 13th and 18th centuries are well represented and superbly displayed. It is particularly well-known for its collection of Rembrandts.
Just south of Kulturforum, across from St Matthaeus Kirche is the Neue Nationalgalerie, (Tue-Fri 10am-6pm; Sat/Sun 11am-6pm) specializing in modern art.
A short walk west along the river in front of the Neue Nationalgalerie will bring you to the Gedenkstätte Deutscher Widerstand (Memorial to German Resistance) (Mon, Wed, Fri 9am-6pm; Sat/Sun/hols 10am-6pm): a permanent exhibition in the old Wehrmacht HQ documenting the activities of anti-Nazi groups and individuals.
Just east of Kulturforum is Potsdamer Platz, once one of Europe's busiest hubs. After an intensive building boom in the 1990s it is now a showcase of glassy corporate glamor. The Sony Center houses the Filmmuseum Berlin (Tue-Sun 10am-6pm, Thu 10am-8pm).
Returning to the Tiergarten...... east along Strasse des 17 Juni and north up Moltken-strasse will bring you to the political heart of the nation, the Reichstag. Entry to its new glass dome is 8am-midnight, final admission 10pm. Symbolizing a new 'brighter' Germany, the dome is the brainchild of British architect Norman Foster and of all the new architectural touches to old buildings in the city is probably the most effective.
Just NW of it is the striking white Bundeskanzleramt (Federal Chancellery), the result of an architectural competition when in 1991 the German people voted to return the nation's capital to Berlin. Berlin architects Axel Schulte and Charlotte Frank produced the beautifully realized winning design.
MitteBack down Moltken-strasse to Strasse des 17 Juni, then about 300m west, and you're under the fabled monument of Enlightenment-era Prussia, the Brandenburg Tor (Gate). Completed in the 1790s it celebrated the power of the Prussian army. Its most famous visitor ever was Napoleon when in 1806 having conquered Prussia he took the Tor's crowning statue back to Paris (later returned). For the 28 years from 1961 to 1989, this was one of the most significant points where East and West failed to meet, and was the center of celebrations when the Berlin Wall was finally breached.
The Brandenburg Tor, along with Pariser Platz that it dominates, forms the climax of Unter den Linden, the boulevard that stretches east on from Strasse des 17 Juli. Unter den Linden is imbued with all the pomp and circumstance of first Prussia’s and then Germany’s past. It is home to the massive Russian embassy, the American embassy still under construction (to be completed in spring 2008), and the fabulously famous Hotel Adlon.
It is worth making a short detour 50m or so south down Ebert-strasse - the street running left and right of the Tor - to see the Holocaust Mahnmal (Holocaust Memorial): an undulating and unforgettable sea of concrete steles.
Also, although it isn't marked, the deserted site of Hitler's bunker can be seen if you take the third street left off Ebert-strasse, In den Ministergärten, down near An der Kolonnade. The bunker is under the unkempt mound nearby, on the site of the dictator's former Chancellory. Not much to look at, but worth it perhaps for the je ne sais quoi.
Unter den Linden is bisected by Friedrich-strasse, a little further along from which is the huge Staatsbibliothek national library. Next door to the library is Humboldt University, alma mater of 29 Nobel prize winners, and of such giants as Bismarck, Hegel, Fichte, Schopenhauer, Einstein, Planck, Marx and Engels.
On the other side of Unter den Linden where it meets Charlotten-strasse, across from the library, is the small but unswervingly cutting-edge Deutsches Guggenheim art gallery (daily 11 am-8 pm, Thu 11am-10 pm).
Next east, directly opposite the university, is the Deutsche Staatsoper (German State Opera), neoclassical home to the Berlin Staatskapelle under Daniel Barenboim, one of among a handful of orchestras in the world dedicated to no less than the three genres of opera, ballet and concerts. Next to it on Behren-strasse is Bebelplatz, scene of the infamous Nazi book burning on May 10, 1933. It is overlooked by the great buxom green-domed library, the Alte Bibliothek. East again back on the Humboldt University side of Unter den Linden is the Zeughaus, or Arsenal, now hosting the Deutsches Historisches Museum (10am-6pm). Across the road from it, the Kronprinzenpalais, the royal residence until the Prussian monarchy collapsed in the aftermath of WWI.
Retracing our steps, let's go back to Friedrich-strasse (heading south) into the Stadtmitte district. Friedrich-strasse was the legendary 'place to be' in the Roaring 20s, but, destroyed by WWII, was neglected throughout the Cold War. Reunification has revived the street, and once again a walk down it imparts the kind of frisson it must have done 80 years ago. Right by the U-Bahn Franzosische-strasse are the district's crowning architectural glories, the Galeries Layfayette shopping center and its neighbor the mini-mall Quartier 206. Equally famous is the massive subterraneanly linked Friedrichstadtpassagen complex, not to mention a host of other overpriced luxury outlets. But whether your wallet's into it or not, the atmosphere is free.
Museumsinsel (Museum Island)Back to where we were on Unter den Linden before we veered south: cross the river and Unter den Linden becomes Karl-Liebknecht-strasse. You are now on the island where the city of Berlin began as two small villages over seven centuries ago, the UN World Heritage Site now called Museumsinsel (Museum Island). The museums are all at the northern end, past the Lustgarden: -Altes Museum (Tue-Sun 10am-6pm, entrance charge): mainly classical treasures. Designed by the great Karl Friedrich Schinkel. -Neues Museum (due to re-open in 2005) -Alte Nationalgalerie (Tue-Sun 9am-5pm, entrance charge): mainly 19th century art treasures. -Pergamon Museum (Tue-Sun 10am-6pm, entrance charge): arguably the most impressive of them all with its classical antiquities, Near-Eastern antiquities, and Islamic art. Pride of place goes to the object it is named after: the spectacular Pergamon Altar, c.180-160BC, dedicated to Zeus and Athena. Allow half a day to do the exhibits justice. Free audio guide supplied. -Bode Museum (due to re-open in 2005)
While you're there, check out the big ugly Palast der Republik: home of East Germany's parliament till 1990, and Berlin Dom (Cathedral), Kaiser Willem II's over-the-top Protestant answer to St. Peter's Basilica in Rome, looking out on Lustgarten and in which deceased of the then-ruling Hohenzollern dynasty are buried.
AlexanderplatzFurther east over the Spree, Karl-Liebknecht-strasse continues on into what was once the heart of East Berlin. The shortcomings of reunification are most apparent here. A great deal of construction is going on, and vagrancy is rife. The main attraction is the 365m(1,168ft) Fernsehnturm, or TV Tower (Mar-Oct 9-1am, Nov-Feb 10am-midnight), with its revolving Tele Cafe. Tourist info cafe at base.
Strictly speaking part of Mitte, but only minutes walk SW of Fernsehnturm, is the very popular tourist area of Nikolaiviertel (Nicholas Quarter), showcasing a meticulously restored section of medieval Berlin - including a piece of its old city wall - pride of place going to the quaint and ancient Nicholaikirche (Church of St Nicholas) (dating from the early 13th century), now a museum (Tue-Sun 10am-6pm).
Between it and the TV tower is the Rotes Rathaus, the seat of the city government since reunification.
From Alexanderplatz it is only two S-Bahn stops east to Ostbahnhof station. Mühlen-strasse running alongside the river is Berlin's traditional 'clubbing mile' - from Ostbahnhof down as far as the picturesque castle-like bridge of Oberbaumbrücke. It is not what it used to be though, and you're better off doing your clubbing homework on the internet before setting off anywhere in particular. During daytime this same stretch of road is worth a stroll along with the camera for its Eastside Gallery: a 1,316m-long preserved section of the Berlin Wall, well and whackily graffitied on the once squeaky-clean eastern side.
One stop NNW from U-Bahn Alexanderplatz is U-Bahn Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz - not even 500m up Rosa-Luxemburg-strasse if you're walking. On the square stands the robustly beautiful Volksbühne theater. It is said that theater in Berlin no longer has much to offer over what, say, Hamburg, Munich or Vienna can. However, the Volksbühner, built in 1914 from workers' contributions, remains uncompromisingly in the vanguard of things modern - not only in theater, but in theory, music, literature and film as well.
ScheunenviertelOne stop west from S-Bahn Alexanderplatz is S-Bahn Hackescher Markt (also accessible from Museum Island by crossing the bridge on Bode-strasse). This is the center of the rejuvenated Jewish quarter of Scheunenviertel. Just north of the station are streets of kosher restaurants, food shops, Jewish cultural centers, mixed with small trendy galleries and cafes. Head NW from the station up Oranienburger-strasse to see the majestic gold-crowned Neue Synagoge built in the 1860s in the Moorish style. (Sun-Thu 10am-5.30pm, Fri 10am-1.30pm). The Centrum Judaicum that forms part of it has an exhibition recounting the multifarious life of what was the 160,000-strong Jewish community in this area.
WeddingKeep walking west away from the Neue Synagoge up Oranienburger-strasse, and you get back to Friedrich-strasse, but now considerably north of Unter den Linden. You are now in the working class district of Wedding. Friedrich-strasse changes to Chaussee-strasse from north of where it bends slightly westwards at Oranienburg Tor intersection. Head a little further north and on the left is Dorotheenstädtischer Friedhof (Cemetery) where a lot of famous Germans, including Berthold Brecht, are buried. The Brecht Haus (Tue, Wed, Fri 10am-noon; Thu 10am-noon then 5-7pm; Sat 9.30am-noon then 12.30-2pm; Sun 11am-6pm) actually overlooks it further north on the same side of the street. Walk further up Chaussee-strasse, turn left at the next big intersection into Invaliden-strasse and on your right is the Museum für Naturkunde (Natural History Museum) (Tue-Fri 9.30am-5pm; Sat/Sun/hols 10am-6pm). Part of Humboldt University, it is one of the best of its kind in the world, full of stuffed animals, reassembled dinosaurs, and ancient fossils.
Back east along Invaliden-strasse, all the way to and left into Garten-strasse, then first right into Bernauer-strasse, and you come to the Dokumentationszentrum zur Geschichte der Berliner Mauer (Berlin Wall Documentation Center) (Wed-Sun 10am-5pm). Nearby is the modern minimalist Kapelle Versohnung (Chapel of Reconciliation) built on the site of the Church of Reconciliation demolished by the East German authorities in 1985 to further enhance the security of the Wall. Next to the chapel is the grim Gedenkstätte Berliner Mauer (Berlin Wall Memorial): a preserved section of the Berlin Wall complete with 'death strip'. Significantly, on June 13, 1990, the official demolition of the Wall began right here on Bernauer-strasse.
CharlottenburgLet's now return to Strasse des 17 Juni running east-west through Tiergarten to explore further west. If you keep walking west along it, out of the park itself and just past Tiergarten S-Bahn you will see Ernst Reuter Haus on your right. This is where the famous weekend flea market starts from, extending all the way up into Tiergarten. Continue on under the Charlottenburg Tor and after 500m you come to another Grosser Stern-type roundabout: the busy Ernst Reuter Platz. You are now in the fascinating NW district of Charlottenburg. Perhaps an even more common route to Ernst Reuter Platz is from Zoo walking NW via Hardenberg-strasse - taking you past Steinplatz, the heart of the student quarter. Ernst Reuter Platz is bordered by the huge Technische Universität and the prestigious Berlin Universität der Kunst (Berlin University of the Arts) where Gunther Grass graduated from.
Strasse des 17 Juni becomes Bismarck-strasse west of the roundabout. Not even a minute's walk along it on the left hand side is the Schiller Theater (Bismarck-strasse 110, tel (030) 308 78 56 85). About another 700m west on the other side of the street, in front of U-Bahn Deutsche Oper, is the Deutsche Oper (Bismarck-strasse 35, tel (030) 341 0249). Another four stations along, at Theodor-Heuss Platz, is the famous Die Wühlmäuse cabaret at Pommernallee 2-4 (south from the west side of the square) tel (030)-30673011
The main historical sight to see in Charlottenburg is the Schloss Charlottenburg (Charlottenburg Palace). It started out as the modest Schloss Lietzenburg in 1695 when the Prince Elector Friedrich Wilhelm III built it as a summer residence for his second wife Sophie Charlotte. In 1701 he was finally permitted by the Holy Roman Emperor Leopold I to crown himself as king of Prussia - thereby becoming Friedrich I - upon which decided to make of it a full royal palace and began a long process of baroque and then rococo addition and elaboration. He renamed it after his wife on her death in 1705.
Its extensive grounds contain not only the magnificent palace buildings but the Museum für Vor-und Frühgeschichte (Museum of Pre- and Early History) (Tue-Fri 10am-6pm, Sat/Sun 11am-6pm) as well as other fine collections. There is even a mausoleum in the palace park. Like Museum Island, this is a place where a whole day can go by very quickly.
You can get to Schloss Charlottenburg by: -taking Otto-Suhr Allee from Ernst-Reuter Platz. This will take you past the distinctive art nouveau Rathaus (Town Hall) with its 88m(294ft) tower (across from U-Bahn Richard Wagner Platz). - approaching it head on up Schloss-strasse (Palace Street) north from U-Bahn Sophie Charlotte Platz. -walking east from S-Bahn Westend about 500m along Spandauer Damm.
Right in front of the palace are more must-sees for the art enthusiast: -Ägyptisches Museum (Egyptian Museum) (Tue-Fri 10am-6pm, Sat/Sun 11am-6pm), with its exquisite limestone bust of Nefertiti. -Sammlung Berggrün (Berggrün Collection) (Tue-Sun 10am-6pm): modern Western art with a lot of very good Picasso. -Brohan Museum (Tue-Sun 10am-6pm): art nouveau and art deco design from Berlin.
From nearby S-Bahn Westend one stop south brings you to S-Bahn Messe Nord/ICC (Witzleben). The area is dominated by the Funkturm radio tower (whose 125m(416ft) you can go up) presiding over the massive Messegeländer (Exhibition Center) which hosts events all year round (including rave parties), and the gargantuan Internationales Congress Centrum (ICC) which hosts shows, concerts and conferences. They are accessible from U-Bahn Kaiserdamm, and from the following S-Bahn stations: Messe Nord/ICC (Witzleben) (closest), Westkreuz (next closest), or Messe Süd.
About 2km west of ICC is the Olympiastadion (Olympic Stadium), home to Hertha BSC, it is possible to visit the stadium on non-match days (2 Euros). Getting to the Olympiastadion.
GrunewaldIf you're longing for a break from the bustle, Berlin's largest woodland, Grunewald, is less than 1.5km south of ICC, accessible via S-Bahn Grunewald (check the plaque on unused platform 17 commemorating the 50,000 Jews sent to their deaths from there), Nikolassee, or Wannsee stations. Superb views of distant Berlin in its wider natural context can be gotten there from the summit of the human-built mountain, Teufelsberg (Devil Mountain), topped with radar towers that eavesdropped on the East during the Cold War - and popular with young kiteflyers in summer. Nearby Teufelssee (Lake Teufel) is a haven for nudist sunbathers.
On the eastern edge of Grunewald, looking roughly SE from Teufelsberg is Gruneewaldsee (Lake Grunewald). On its SE shore is the 16th century hunting lodge of the Brandenburg Electors, Jagdschloss Grunewald (May 15-Oct 15, 10am-5pm except Mon. Closed for lunch 1-1.30pm) containing a small museum of hunting paraphernalia and some German, Dutch and Flemish paintings by the old masters.
DahlemFrom Jagdschloss Grunewald go 2km down the road leading SE to the city and you’re in the Dahlem area. From U-Bahn Dahlem-dorf station go south down Fabeck-strasse. The first on the left is Lans-strasse, the entrance to the Dahlem museum complex (Tue-Fri 10am-6pm, Sat/Sun 11am - 6pm). This four-fold treasure trove is made up of:-Ethnologisches Museum (Museum of Ethnology): one of the world’s biggest and best, with over half a million exhibits from mostly pre-industrial non-European cultures in an array of different media. Includes a junior museum (Tue-Fri 1-6 pm; Sat/Sun 11am-6pm), and a blind persons’ museum.-Museum Europäischer Kulturen (Museum of European Cultures): tells the story of European culture through its vast collection of pictures from the past and how they were used.-Museum für Indische Kunst (Museum of Indian Art): a collection covering over 3,000 years of Indian cultural history with a Central Asian and a SE Asian section as well.-Museum für Ostasiatische Kunst (Museum of East Asian Art): its main strength is painting and calligraphy, but has objects from the Stone Age on. The focus is on Buddhist art (China, Japan, Korea). Tearoom in the Japan gallery. Multimedia resources.
SteglitzOnly 500m east of the Dahlem museum complex, or 250m north of S-Bahn Botanischer Garten: plants that will do it for the daytripper just by looking. Botanischer Garten (Botanical Garden) (daily from 9am. Closing hours change by the season: 4pm Nov/Dec/Jan; 5pm Feb; 6pm in Mar &Oct; 7pm Sep; 8pm Apr & Aug; 9pm May/Jun/July. Free entry.) Towering tropical greenhouses (same hours as above, except weekends from 10am), a sprawling 'plant geography trail' taking you around the globe better than virtually, classical Italian garden, botanical museum (daily 10am-6pm, free entry), and more.
KreuzbergBack east ... and when going through Mitte we ventured down Freidrich-strasse off Unter den Linden as far south as its majestic shopping centers before returning to move on towards Museum Island. Let's now keep going south down Freidrich-strasse to U-Bahn Koch-strasse/Checkpoint Charlie. (Also accessible from Zoo on U-Bahn line 1 bound for Schlesisches Tor.) This is the northern 'border' of the densely populated and culturally diverse Kreuzberg - 'border' not being an entirely inapt word (a) considering the area's long reputation as a free (and concomitantly risky) realm of its own (b) Checkpoint Charlie having been the official gateway between West and East Berlin, where American and Soviet tanks faced each other off in the tense months of the 1948-49 Berlin blockade.
The Checkpoint is commemorated at Mauermuseum Haus am Checkpoint Charlie (daily 9am-10pm) at Friedrich-strasse 44, where are chronicled the methods used to prevent people escaping East Berlin. While a little cramped and often not clearly presented in historical context, it is worth seeing what lengths East Germans went to to try making the break.
From there walk west along either Zimmer-strasse or Koch-strasse to the Martin-Gropius-Bau, (daily 10am-8pm except Tue) a museum of art, photography and architecture. Right next to it is the Topographie des Terrors (Oct-Apr 10am-6pm or until dark; May-Sep 10am-8pm, free entry) - the former HQ of the Gestapo, in the basement of which was an infamous prison.
The former Nazi Aviation Ministry across Niederkirchner-strasse is now the Ministry of Finance. The street these buildings face, Wilhelm-strasse, lies in the middle of the quarter that housed the Nazi ministries and agencies.
For a tackier horror experience than the Topographie... on the southern edge of the block that Topographie des Terrors is on is Anhalter-strasse. Following it cross Askanischer Platz into what becomes Schoneberger-strasse, no.23a on the left hand side is the Gruselkabinett (Sun, Mon, Tue, Thu 10am-7pm; Fri 10am-8pm; Sat noon-8pm) - a traditional horror house with some war gruesomeness thrown in for good measure.
If Brandenburg Tor used to be the western gate to the City, Hallesches Tor in Mehringplatz, right at the end of Friedrich-strasse, was a southern gate in its old defensive wall.
Just east of Mehringplatz on Linden-strasse is one of the area's most spectacular sights, the metal-clad unevenly-shaped Jüdischer Museum (Mon 10am-10pm, Tue-Sun 10am-8pm, entrance charge) built in the form of 'a distressed Star of David', right next to the baroque former Berlin Museum (which now serves as the Jüdischer Museum's entrance).
For a hands-on experience, the Deutsches Technikmuseum Berlin (German Technology Museum of Berlin) (Tue-Fri 9am-5.30pm; Sat/Sun 10am-6pm) near U-Bahn Mockernbrücke is highly recommended. Its huge premises contain almost everything technical and scientific, old and new, on display for both adults and children to freely interact with.
To find out where Kreuzberg gets its name from, follow Wilhelm-strasse south across the river. It changes to Mehringdamm. Almost 1km down (near U-Bahn Platz der Luftbrücke) is Viktoriapark, known locally as 'the Kreuzberg'. Located diagonally across from Tempelhof Airport, it is an island of beauty, complete with waterfall, featuring a hill with a cross-topped column on top (thus Kreuzberg, or 'Cross Mountain') designed by the great Wilhelm Friedrich Schinkel. It is worth a visit just for the fun and the diversity of people there. From April to September it has the Golgatha beer garden and 'discothek' from 10pm-6am every summer night.
East across Mehringdamm is Fidicin-strasse. In a rear courtyard at number 40 is 'Friends of the Italian Opera' The English Theater: which hosts nothing but English language theater (not Italian opera!) and is held in high critical esteem. Box office: (030) 691 12 11. U-Bahn Platz der Luftbrucke.
Two subway stops east of Hallesches Tor at U-Bahn Kottbusser Tor is the 'hardcore' of Kreuzberg known as SO36. The Turkish atmosphere is very tangible, especially on Tuesdays and Fridays which are bazaar day on Maybachufer on the south bank of the Landwehr Kanal. However, the essence of the area is hybrid: punk bars, kebab stalls, trendy cafes, all easy with or oblivious to each other.
SchönebergNext west from Kreuzberg is Schöneberg, our final stop. Until the Wall came down, Schöneberg was most famous as the center of the city's political life, and now, as then, for its gay and lesbian community. It was therefore fitting that the Schöneberg registry office conducted Germany's first gay marriage in 2001 and that - although the city office has moved to Mitte - at the time of writing, Berlin's mayor, Klaus Wowereit, is gay.
Schöneberg's moment of international glory came on June 26, 1963 when JFK made his 'Ich bin ein Berliner' speech at the Rathaus Schöneberg (U-Bahn Rathaus Schöneberg) which served during the years of division as the city hall. The square in front of the building was subsequently renamed in the US President's honor. (Berlin's city hall is now the Rotes Rathaus, just 250m SSW of the Alexanderplatz TV tower.)
Gay and lesbian visitors wanting to explore the area should start at the Mann-o-Meter for information. (Mon-Thu 5-10pm, Fri 5pm-midnight, Sat/Sun 4-10pm) tel (030) 216 80 08: Bülow-strasse 106 at the corner of Else-Lasker-Schüler-Strasse. (U-Bahn Nollendorfplatz). From Viktoriapark it is only15-20 minutes walk NW. Among other things there, you can pick up the free Siegessäule gay/lesbian info magazine.
One of the best areas in Schöneberg after dark for clubbing and drinking is Nollendorfplatz, accessible via the U-Bahn Nollendorfplatz. The area extends through Maassen-strasse down to Winterfeldt Platz and even further south. Check out the huge Connection/Prinzknecht entertainment complex at Fuggestrasse 33.
Berlin Tourist Offices
Berlin Tourist Information•Europa-Center, Budapester-strasse 45, Berlin 10787. (Mon-Sat 10am-7pm, Sun 10am-6pm)Their telephone information service +49-(0)30-25-00-25 runs for longer hours: Mon-Fri 8am-7pm, Sat/Sun 9am-6pm E-mail: mailto:information@btm.de?subject=Request%20for%20information%20via%20Soccerphile.com Website: http://www.berlin-tourist-information.de/
Images of Berlin courtesy of Berlin Tourist information Office
•Brandenburger Tor (south wing) Pariser Platz, Mitte, Berlin 10117. (Daily 10am–6pm)
•Tourist Information Cafe, located at foot of Fernsehturm (TV tower) in Alexanderplatz. (May 1-Sep30, Mon-Sat 9am–8pm, Sun 10am-6pm; Oct 1-Apr 30, daily 10am-6pm)
•Kaufhaus des Westens (KaDeWe Department Store), Tauentzienstrase 21-24, ground floor/travel centre (Mon-Fri 10am-8pm; Sat 9.30am-8pm)
•Schonefeld Airport Travelshop, Terminal A, 1st floor on the right (Daily 9am-7.30pm)
•Tempelhof Airport Information, Main hall (Daily 6am-10pm)
Getting to Berlin
Air
67 airlines service Berlin connecting it to 167 airports in 53 countries. The city's three airports are Tegel (TXL), in the north-east 8km from the city center, Schönefeld (SXF) in the south-east 18km from the city center, and Tempelhof (THF) centrally located 6km to the south of the city center on the southern edge of Kreuzberg. Tegel, by far the busiest, serves western Europe, Schönefeld caters more for no-frills flights, eastern Europe and Asia, and Tempelhof domestic and some European flights.
Airport information (for all Berlin airports): tel.0180 50 00 186
TegelClick here for Tegel flight schedule.X9 Espress Bus (every 10-min) and bus no.109 go to Zoologischer Garten. Bus 128 goes to Kurt Schumacher Platz or bus 109 to Jakob Kaiser Platz where you change to the subway. Bus ticket valid for subway. About 25 min to city center by taxi - longer at rush hour. Click here to see where they leave from.
SchönefeldClick here for Schönefeld flight schedule.Free shuttle bus every 10-15 mins takes you 500m from the terminal to the S-Bahn Flughafen Schoenefeld station (10 min. on foot)At the main entrance, the Airport Express Bus leaves for the city center every 15 mins. Bus 171 (every 20 mins) connects the airport to the nearest subway, U-Bahn Rudow. About 40 min to city center by taxi (around 30 Euros). Click here to see where they leave from.
TempelhofClick here for Tempelhof flight schedule.Bus (no. 119 goes to Ku'damm), train or taxi from Tempelhof Airport. Click here to see where they leave from.Not directly connected to the Berlin subway system, but about 100m south of the main entrance is the U6 line U-Bahn Platz der Luftbrucke.
Train
There are two main stations: Ostbahnhof (East Station) and Zoologischer Garten in the west. Be aware that some trains stop at both stations and that this can cause confusion regarding departure times. Check departure station carefully.
A new central station is being built at Lehrter Bahnhof, north across the river from the Bundeskanzleramt and Reichstag.
Bus/Road
Connections to all parts of Germany via the Autobahn. There are presently 2 buses a day from Victoria Station in London to Berlin.
Getting Around
Berlin is well served by public transport. The U-Bahn (subway) and S-Bahn (suburban rail) runs from 4am to after midnight. On Friday and Saturday nights both U/S-Bahns run throughout the night and on other nights there is a night bus service. Buses are another option and the double-decker number 100 and 200 buses pass many of Berlin's most famous sights. Bus stops are marked with a large 'H' (Haltestelle). There are a variety of day, group and weekly passes available which are valid for the bus and U/S-Bahn networks.