Free entry only with Berlin WelcomeCard all inclusive! After six years of closure for renovations, the Neue Nationalgalerie (New National Gallery) will once again present major works of Classical Modernism from the National Gallery collection.
The golden dome of this “New Synagogue” dominates the skyline of central Berlin. Built in 1866, this synagogue on Oranienburger Straße was once the largest and most beautiful Jewish worship space in Germany.
The Neues Museum houses three collections: The Egyptian Museum and Papyrus Collection, the Museum of Prehistory and Early History, and the Collection of Classical Antiquities. Open Tue - Sun.
At the Paradox Museum, the world is upside down, and not just in the museum's own Reversed Room. Because all the things that are taken for granted outside the rooms suddenly no longer work here, or work in a completely different way…
The exhibition Pergamon Museum. Das Panorama presents a spectacular multimedia exhibition on the ancient metropolis of Pergamon. In his 360° panorama, Yadegar Asisi reconstructs the state of the city at the height of the Roman Empire. Open Tue - Sun.
Situated in the eastern Stüler building opposite Charlottenburg Palace, the Scharf-Gerstenberg Collection features an exquisite range of fantastical art works
AS MODERN AS THEIR VALUES. The Samurai Museum, unique in Europe, presents over 1000 original objects from the Peter Janssen Collection in the form of interactive media installations.
Berlin's Gay Museum pays homage to publicly gay personalities from throughout history, including Thomas Mann, Oscar Wilde, Marlene Dietrich and Michel Foucault.
Directly at Checkpoint Charlie is Berlin's Trabi Museum, dedicated to the history of the famous car with the two-stroke engine. Serial production of the Trabant started in Zwickau in 1958 and it is definitely the most famous car from East Germany.
The Wall Museum - Museum Haus on Checkpoint Charlie was established and opened as a civil commitment initiative immediately after the wall was built in 1962.