Berlin has no definite centre, and attractions are disseminated all over the city.
Berlin is varied and diverse. Monuments of Prussian grandeur rub shoulders with buildings that are reminders of a divided country and with impressive new architectural developments.
Most sights are east of the Brandenburg Gate, on either side of Unter den Linden. In West Berlin's centre, where there is less to see, take a look at the exception of the broken shard of a church, the Kaiser Wilhelm Gedächtniskirche, a reminder of World War II.
Top attractions are Alexanderplatz, the Sony Center, Berlin Cathedral, Bode Museum, Brandenburg Gate, Charlottenburg Palace, Dorotheenstadt Cemetery, East-Side-Gallery, Federal Chancellery, Gendarmenmarkt, Hackesche Höfe, KaDeWe, New Synagogue, Olympic Grounds, Radio Tower, Television Tower.
Mitte, Prenzlauer Berg & Friedrichshain
Most sights are in and around Mitte (which in German means centre). The east–west axis of Unter den Linden is a good place to start. Frequent buses (number 100 and 200) run the length of the tree-lined boulevard, linking it with Bahnhof Zoo in the west. The western end is marked by the Brandenburg Gate, the symbol of Berlin, which leads to the enormous Tiergarten Park. Since 1961, the Wall blocked access to the Brandenburg Gate, and by closing the Gate it divided East and West Berlin. North-west of the Gate is the new government quarter and the refurbished Reichstag, topped by Norman Foster’s stunning glass cupola (Platz der Republik, 2273 2152). Trips to the top are free, and the view is something to write home about, but expect to queue.
South of Unter den Linden is the attractive Gendarmenmarkt square, topped and tailed by the German Cathedral (Deutscher Dom, 2273 0431) and the French Cathedral (Französischer Dom, 229 1760). At the eastern end of Unter den Linden is Museum Island (Museuminsel), a UNESCO World Heritage Site whose clutch of superb collections includes the Pergamonmuseum.
Berlin has over 170 museums and collections, making the city one of the world's prime locations for high-calibre historical collections of art, culture and technology, along with scientific collections.
They offer everything from the ancient to the ultra-modern, such as the Egyptian Nefertiti, the Greek Pergamon Altar, the painters of the "Brücke" and the "Bauhaus" and works by Baselitz and Beuys. The works found in the city's museums and collections and private galleries are interesting and diverse.
The most visited is the Pergamon Museum, housing 3 collections: the Antiquity Collection, the Museum of the Near East and the Museum of Islamic Art.
Charlottenburg Palace was a summer residence built in 1695-1699 by the Elector of Brandenburg, Frederick III, who in 1701 became the first Prussian King, and dedicated to his wife, Sophie Charlotte.
Eastwards is Alexanderplatz, built in the communist era, and the TV Tower (Fernsehturm, 242 3333), a Berlin landmark, with a revolving observation deck; south are the reconstructed medieval Nikolaiviertel, and remnants of the original medieval wall.
North of Alexanderplatz, the Scheunenviertel (‘Barn Quarter’) is full of galleries, bars and shops. Its focus is the Hackesche Höfe, a maze of Jugendstil (art nouveau) courtyards of boutiques and cafés. Nearby Auguststrasse is the art scene’s main centre, and the Jewish Quarter revolves around the Neue Synagoge (New Synagogue).
Prenzlauer Berg is a gentrified area with relatively few sights, more a place to go for a relaxed meal or drink. Friedrichshain, on the other hand, has a communist, post-industrial atmosphere.