After years of decline, the Kurfürstendamm, or Ku’damm for short, has once again become a fashionable hot spot. Breathtaking architecture, elegant boutiques and a lively street artist scene around Breitscheidplatz have made this shopping boulevard one of Berlin’s most attractive and – at 3.8 km (2.5 miles) – also its longest avenue for strolling.
Europa-Center: Tauentzienstr. 9; (030) 348 00 80; open 24 hours (shops and Berlin Tourist Info: 10am–8pm Mon–Sat); www.24EC.de
Bikini Berlin: Budapester Str. 38–50; open 10am–8pm Mon–Sat, noon–6pm Sun; www.bikiniberlin.de
Here, in the heart of the western city, artists, Berliners and visitors swarm around J Schmettan’s globe fountain, known by locals as “Wasserklops” (water meatball).
While the church itself was destroyed during World War II, the church tower (see Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gedächtnis-Kirche) stands in the centre of the square, serving as both memorial and stark reminder of the terrors of war.
The oldest shopping centre in West Berlin, opened in 1962, is still worth a visit. Here you will find fashion boutiques, a comedy theatre and an official Berlin Tourist Info centre.
This glass and steel skyscraper was built in 2000 by architect Helmut Jahn. The legendary Café Kranzler was retained as a bar in front of the office block. There is an official Berlin Tourist Info centre here.
The Bikini-Haus building, built in 1956, was renovated to house the splendid Bikini Berlin, an ultra-hip boutique mall that also offers great views of the nearby zoo.
The turreted building at No. 59 at the Leibnitzstraße corner is one of the few surviving bourgeois houses from the late 19th century. The ornamented Jugendstil (Art Nouveau) façade has been lavishly restored. The building is home to a number of banks.
The square is home to the Schaubühne theatre, built as Universum cinema in 1928 by Erich Mendelsohn and converted in 1978.
A small street (see Fasanenstraße) off Ku’damm, Fasanenstraße, with its galleries, expensive shops and restaurants, is one of Charlottenburg’s most elegant areas.
On the corner of Joachimstaler Straße stands an old-fashioned traffic turret or Verkehrskanzel, the last one in the city and now a heritage monument. A policeman sat in the raised glass cabin to control traffic lights manually from 1955 to 1962, when the signals went automatic.
The Neo-Classical building housing this art gallery gives visitors a glimpse of Ku’damm’s erstwhile splendour.
In 1542, today’s magnificent boulevard was just a humble “Knüppeldamm”, or log road. It served the Electors as a bridle path, linking their town residence (Stadtschloss) and their hunting lodge (Jagdschloss). It was not until 1871 that the area around the Ku’damm developed into a fashionable “new west end”. Chancellor Otto von Bismarck had the boulevard modelled on the Champs Elysées in Paris, lined with houses, shops, hotels and restaurants.
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