Prenzlauer Berg

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pages: 638 words: 156,653

Berlin by Andrea Schulte-Peevers

Albert Einstein, Berlin Wall, biodiversity loss, call centre, car-free, carbon footprint, centre right, Fall of the Berlin Wall, Frank Gehry, gentrification, glass ceiling, Google Earth, indoor plumbing, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Kickstarter, low cost airline, Prenzlauer Berg, retail therapy, Ronald Reagan, Ronald Reagan: Tear down this wall, Skype, starchitect, trade route, upwardly mobile, urban planning, urban renewal

Note Gabriele Mucci’s bizarre mural of men chopping wood past the brass-and-glass door and check out the retro neon lamps in the room on your right. Return to beginning of chapter PRENZLAUER BERG Drinking; Eating; Shopping; Sleeping Aging divas know that a facelift can work miracles for a drooping career, and it seems the same can be done with entire neighbourhoods. No other eastern district besides Mitte rejuvenated faster after reunification than Prenzlauer Berg. Once trapped behind the Berlin Wall, it catapulted from war-scarred backwater to charismatic hipster haven in less than a decade. Berliners may whisper behind raised palms that Prenzlauer Berg has lost its edge, but that isn’t stopping them seeking out its bars, cafés and restaurants.

* * * TRANSPORT: NORTHERN SUBURBS Bus 107 connects Pankow with central Pankow and the palace; 245 connects Zoologischer Garten with Moabit and Hauptbahnhof. S-Bahn S2 connects Pankow with the Scheunen-vierteland Potsdamer Platz; S8 goes from Pankow to Prenzlauer Berg and Friedrichshain. Tram M1 connects Pankow with Hackescher Markt via Prenzlauer Berg; a main line through Wedding is M13 to Friedrichshain. U-Bahn Pankow is the northern terminus of the U2; Wedding is served by the U8 and U9. * * * Wedding is a sprawling former western district that extends east of the Tegel airport, north of Tiergarten and Mitte and west of Prenzlauer Berg. Seestrasse and Osloer Strasse are major east–west arteries, while Beusselstrasse, Chausseestrasse and the continuation of the latter, Müllerstrasse, are important north–south thoroughfares.

With Germany’s newly liberalised shopping hours, there’s bound to be some place open nearby. Of late, Kaiser’s Supermarket (Schöneberg Map; Nollendorfplatz, Schöneberg; Friedrichshain Map; Revaler Strasse 2, Friedrichshain; Prenzlauer Berg Map; Schönhauser Allee 130, Prenzlauer Berg) has been experimenting with keeping some busy branches open until midnight from Monday to Saturday, including those listed here. Prenzlauer Berg also has Fresh ‘N’ Friends (Map; 4171 7250; www.freshnfriends.com, in German; Kastanienallee 26), an organic food store/deli combo that’s open 24/7 but charges premium prices. Also keep an eye out for Spätkauf (Späti in the local vernacular), which are small neighbourhood stores stocked with the basics and open from 8pm to 2am or later; they’re usually found in areas with busy street-life or nightlife.


pages: 370 words: 107,791

Burning Down the Haus: Punk Rock, Revolution, and the Fall of the Berlin Wall by Tim Mohr

anti-communist, Berlin Wall, Black Lives Matter, cuban missile crisis, Edward Snowden, Fall of the Berlin Wall, gentrification, Mikhail Gorbachev, mutually assured destruction, off-the-grid, place-making, Prenzlauer Berg, Ronald Reagan, Ronald Reagan: Tear down this wall, sexual politics, side project

Upon her release, A-Micha and Jana moved into a squat on Schliemannstrasse in Prenzlauer Berg. Mita was living nearby in a place she had squatted on Gleimstrasse. The punk council—originally formed at Pfingst Church, now based at Erlöser—and Open Work had started to facilitate the squatting of apartments, particularly in the crumbling nineteenth-century buildings of Prenzlauer Berg and Friedrichshain. There were nearly-entire buildings squatted on Lychenerstrasse, Schliemannstrasse, and Dunckerstrasse in Prenzlauer Berg, and on Simon-Dach-Strasse in Friedrichshain. The punk network maintained a catalogue of empty apartments various people had spotted, serving as a clearinghouse for would-be squatters and helping them get into the places.

He threw a few things in a bag, slammed the door shut behind him, and never went home again. 5 The first place Pankow fled to was a friend’s apartment on Göhrener Strasse, just down the road in Prenzlauer Berg. The friend lived in the rectory of Elias Church, which was run by an opposition-friendly minister named Georg Katzorke. Things quickly got complicated there when Pankow fell for the minister’s daughter. The next place he landed was an apartment on Wörther Strasse, near the water tower in central Prenzlauer Berg. A friend of Pankow’s had just fled the country, so Pankow squatted the guy’s now-empty place. There were two versions of squatting in East Germany.

Major, shortly after her expatriation Private archive of Major Bergmann Kaiser (left) and Lade (at drums) rehearsing, ca. 1981 Nikolaus Becker/Nikolaus Becker Fotografie East Berlin punks at Plänterwald, ca. 1981 Harald Hauswald / Ostkreuz Agency Punks on Alexanderplatz, ca. 1982 SUBstitut Archive Rosa Extra in Prenzlauer Berg, 1982 Harald Hauswald / Ostkreuz Agency Keule, Colonel, and Esther Friedemann, ca. 1982 Helga Paris Archive Hand-printed poster for the first punk festival at Christus Church in Halle, 1983 SUBstitut Archive Planlos (left to right: Kaiser, Micha Kobs, Lade, Pankow) in Karl-Marx-Stadt, 1983 SUBstitut Archive Mita Schamal and Jana Schlosser in Leipzig, ca. 1983 Christiane Eisler / Transit Agency Mita (middle left) and Jana (middle right) of Namenlos, ca. 1983 Christiane Eisler / Transit Agency Police photo of A-Micha, 1983 SUBstitut Archive A-Micha (at left) and deacon Lorenz Postler (at right, with beard), 1983 SUBstitut Archive Mita (left) and Conny Schleime, ca 1982 SUBstitut Archive Pankow, singer of the band Planlos, ca. 1982 SUBstitut Archive Otze of Schleim-Keim, 1983 SUBstitut Archive L’Attentat, ca. 1984 Christiane Eisler / Transit Agency Poster for the Church from Below, ca. 1988 SUBstitut Archive Stasi surveillance photos of Speiche, undated SUBstitut Archive SUBstitut Archive Feeling B, ca. 1984: Paul Landers (left), Aljoscha Rompe (middle), Flake Lorenz (right) Private archive of Paul Landers Die Anderen (in the second row at left is Toster) Karoline Bofinger Wartburgs für Walter (left to right: Jörn Schulz, Ina Pallas, Bernd Hennig) in Poland, November 1987 Private archive of Jörn Schulz Illegal album by Re-Aktion taped over an official release on the state-owned record label, Amiga Mathias Schwarz Punk festival at Erlöser Church, April 1988 SUBstitut Archive Paul Landers of Feeling B (head of table, at right) and Tatjana Besson of Die Firma (standing behind Landers) at a planning session at the squat Eimer, 1990 Maurice Weiss / Ostkreuz Agency Buildings being razed in Prenzlauer Berg in the late 1980s Harald Hauswald / Ostkreuz Agency Ratte, bassist of HAU and L’Attentat, on a train to Berlin, 1983 Christiane Eisler / Transit Agency IV Rise Above 38 On the last night of 1983, Elias Church in Prenzlauer Berg hosted a punk gathering and somewhat subdued New Year’s party. The event had originally been planned for September, but no church had agreed to let the punks congregate within its walls at the height of the Stasi crackdown.


pages: 277 words: 41,815

Lonely Planet Pocket Berlin by Lonely Planet, Andrea Schulte-Peevers

Albert Einstein, Berlin Wall, call centre, Fall of the Berlin Wall, Frank Gehry, G4S, gentrification, haute cuisine, indoor plumbing, messenger bag, Peter Eisenman, Prenzlauer Berg, retail therapy, Ronald Reagan, Ronald Reagan: Tear down this wall, upwardly mobile, urban planning, urban renewal

It’s fun to have a look even if you didn’t grow up drinking Red October beer, falling asleep to the Sandmännchen (Little Sandman) TV show or listening to rock by the Puhdys. (www.mondosarts.de, in German; Schreinerstrasse 6; noon-7pm Mon-Fri, 6pm Sat; U-Bahn Samariterstrasse) GRAHAM MONRO/GM PHOTOGRAPHICS © Prenzlauer Berg Prenzlauer Berg went from rags to riches after reunification and emerged as one of Berlin’s most desirable residential neighbourhoods. Its ample charms are best experienced on a leisurely meander. Look up at gorgeously restored townhouses, comb side streets for indie boutiques or carve out a spot in a charismatic cafe.

Make your way back to Kastanien­allee and stake out a beer table beneath the towering chestnuts of Prater (Click here), Berlin’s oldest beer garden. For dinner, either walk around the corner to Oderquelle (Click here) or – for an even more local experience – hoof it over to Frau Mittenmang (Click here). For a local’s day in Prenzlauer Berg, Click here. Prenzlauer Berg Sights 1 Kollwitzplatz D6 2 Jüdischer Friedhof Schönhauser Allee D7 3 Gethsemanekirche D2 Eating 4 Frau Mittenmang E1 5 A Magica D2 6 Oderquelle B5 7 Zagreus Projekt A8 8 W – der Imbiss B7 9 Zula D6 10 The Dairy E4 11 Schusterjunge D4 12 Konnopke's Imbiss C4 Drinking 13 Prater C5 14 Anna Blume E6 15 Becketts Kopf D3 16 Kaffee Pakolat D3 17 Deck 5 D1 18 Marietta D2 19 Bassy C8 Entertainment 20 Kulturbrauerei C5 Shopping 21 Erfinderladen Berlin D4 22 Flohmarkt am Arkonaplatz A6 23 Goldhahn & Sampson E4 24 Ta(u)sche D4 25 Awear B6 26 Luxus International C5 27 VEB Orange B5 Local Life Sundays Around the Mauerpark Long-time locals, neo-Berliners and the international tourist brigade – everyone flocks to the Mauerpark on Sundays.

Casa Camper (www.casacamper.com) Plenty of design cachet, day-lit bathrooms and lounge with free breakfast and refreshments in Scheunenviertel. Short-Stay Apartments Brilliant Apartments (www.brilliant-apartments.de) Seven stylish units with full kitchens in Prenzlauer Berg. T&C Apartments (www.tc-apartments-berlin.de) Nicely furnished and well-kept apartments and flats in Prenzlauer Berg, Mitte and Schöneberg. All Berlin Apartments (www.all-berlin-apartments.com) A wide range of good-value, well- appointed apartments in various neighbourhoods. Be My Guest (www.be-my-guest.com) Good selection of handpicked apartments located throughout the city.


pages: 313 words: 100,317

Berlin Now: The City After the Wall by Peter Schneider, Sophie Schlondorff

Berlin Wall, bread and circuses, Dissolution of the Soviet Union, gentrification, Great Leap Forward, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, mass immigration, New Urbanism, Peter Eisenman, Prenzlauer Berg, rent control, Ronald Reagan, Ronald Reagan: Tear down this wall, Silicon Valley, young professional

Under no circumstances had I wanted to act the part of the arrogant “Wessi,” who forces his hosts in East Berlin to see that they live in a condemned state. Any such impulses were reliably held in check by the bottle of whiskey we always immediately broke open. Living in Prenzlauer Berg in the 1980s was a credo of sorts. Prenzlauer Berg was one of the few neighborhoods that had barely been damaged in the war. Eighty percent of its buildings—mostly six-story residential structures with apartments without individual bathrooms and a communal toilet on the landing—had survived largely unscathed. The communist regime had dispossessed the vast majority of private owners.

There they found apartments that, even though they had lower ceilings, featured bathrooms, toilets, central heating, and television outlets. Those who stayed behind in Prenzlauer Berg were people who didn’t particularly care about the living standards in the Plattenbauten—or rather, who didn’t mind the shortcomings of the old apartments: writers, artists, intellectuals, contrarians, adventurers—people leading every kind of precarious existence. And that was how Prenzlauer Berg turned into a sort of habitat for nonconformists, whom Mielke’s “company” suspected of being dissidents. Indeed, almost all protests in East Berlin—against the escalation of the arms race, the militarization of kindergartens, and the East German Communist Party’s election fraud, which finally led to the great rally of November 4, 1989—began at the Gethsemane Church in Prenzlauer Berg.

Indeed, almost all protests in East Berlin—against the escalation of the arms race, the militarization of kindergartens, and the East German Communist Party’s election fraud, which finally led to the great rally of November 4, 1989—began at the Gethsemane Church in Prenzlauer Berg. One of the last holdouts in Prenzlauer Berg today is the literary historian Wolfgang Thierse, a former member of the civil rights movement and of the New Forum. In January 1990, he joined the SPD and became the first chairman of the East SPD. In 1998, he became president of the German Bundestag and, in 2005, its vice president—an office he holds to this day.


pages: 321 words: 90,247

Lights Out in Wonderland by Dbc Pierre

Berlin Wall, carbon footprint, dark matter, haute cuisine, market design, Prenzlauer Berg, stem cell

We hunch smoking, watching shadows play among the trees. “Is this still Prenzlauer Berg?” I eventually ask. “No, Mitte,” says the craggy man. “Though it depends what you’re thinking, because if you mean the Prenzlauer Berg of the famous Berlin Wall, then this is still considered it.” He raises his beer and points across the park: “A couple of blocks down is the wall. Those buildings at the edge were only for Stasi agents and other trusted officials. They could see the West from their apartments.” “But if it’s old Prenzlauer Berg you’re looking for,” says the comrade, “you’re a few years too late.

Frederick was a mouse who saved up colors in summer; then, in winter, when fellow mice only had gray things to think about, he recited back all the colors he’d saved. At the end the mice rejoiced, saying: “Frederick, Du bist ja ein Dichter! You’re a poet!” I knew Frederick was me. I even looked like him. I used to pull up a chair in front of our bullet-holed building in Prenzlauer Berg, climb on top, and tell poems. I never looked at anyone, I hid behind the rhymes. But I always began my readings as Frederick did: “Ihr lieben Mäusegesichter—my lovely mouse-faces.” East Berlin after the collapse of communism was like a kindergarten sandbox. Nobody knew who owned anything, nobody needed money or permission for their projects, all they needed was a beanbag chair, some wistful music, or a watering can with an eyeball painted on it.

The man stays hunched at the door, as if we might best abandon the mission. I’m not too put off by this; he’s from a generation retired from clubbing, and realistically, in a city riddled with venues, I allow for the Pego to have moved since the early nineties, even to have changed its name. For now I direct the driver to my old stomping ground, Prenzlauer Berg, home of the original Pego Club. Once nuzzling the Berlin Wall, this area’s stark decrepitude was a beacon that brought adventurers flocking after the German Democratic Republic collapsed in 1990, around the time I toddled into town. Postapocalyptic grunge became the cradle for a club scene still famous today, and still owing its spirit and style to the no-man’s-land between East and West, between past and future.


pages: 220 words: 88,994

1989 The Berlin Wall: My Part in Its Downfall by Peter Millar

anti-communist, back-to-the-land, Berlin Wall, Fall of the Berlin Wall, Francis Fukuyama: the end of history, glass ceiling, Korean Air Lines Flight 007, kremlinology, Marshall McLuhan, Mikhail Gorbachev, mutually assured destruction, Prenzlauer Berg, pre–internet, QWERTY keyboard, Ronald Reagan, Ronald Reagan: Tear down this wall, Sinatra Doctrine, urban sprawl, working-age population

My flat was on the first floor of a typical block on Schönhauser Allee, a broad thoroughfare that ran north-south, just a few hundred metres east of the Wall, and would have been described as ‘leafy’ were the trees not permanently caked in the dirt of diesel exhaust and the residue from the cheap, environmentally unfriendly but plentiful lignite brown-coal used in the power plants that provided heating. This was the heart of Prenzlauer Berg, a gritty working-class inner-city suburb. Today it is the bustling, Bohemian heart of trendy Berlin, alive with restaurants and nightlife. Not even in my most exotic fantasies could I have imagined that just two decades ago. On the ground floor, just below the flat there was a bar called Wörther Eck (Wörther Corner), because it was on the corner of Wörther Strasse.

He told her to drive to the end of the street and pull in. It was my turn. And I have to admit I am forever grateful to that young Ghanaian woman. I didn’t get stuck in the tram tracks and I didn’t nearly kill any young comrades. After half an hour of blissfully uneventful pootering along the cobbles of Prenzlauer Berg, I pulled up back in front of the School of Motoring building and was told I had passed. The Ghanaian girl shrugged and went off to prepare for a brave seventh attempt. I sometimes wonder if she ever made it. My prize was a little grey plastic-coated booklet embossed with the ‘hammer and compasses’ coat of arms of the German Democratic Republic and the word Führerschein on the front.

It was a reminder to me that hers was a generation of Germans for whom freedom of expression was a luxury to be enjoyed only in private. That was why membership of the Stammtisch inner circle was such a privilege. She and Alex had got together almost by accident. His family had come to Berlin as refugees when Danzig was given to Poland and the German population expelled. His parents found a billet amidst the ruins of the Prenzlauer Berg district for themselves, Alex and his sister Renate. Young Alex, in search of a way to contribute to the stretched family budget, signed up on a course to learn hairdressing. As an older teenager he went to see his older brother Norbert who on his return from the war had settled in one of the Western provinces.


The Ghosts of Berlin: Confronting German History in the Urban Landscape by Brian Ladd

Albert Einstein, Berlin Wall, Frank Gehry, full employment, megaproject, New Urbanism, planned obsolescence, Prenzlauer Berg, rent control, Ronald Reagan, Ronald Reagan: Tear down this wall, urban planning, urban renewal

Its architectural showcase of that decade, the International Building Exhibition (Internationale Bauausstellung, or IBA), both rehabilitated old buildings and designed new ones to complement the attractions of the old tenement blocks. In East Berlin, too, the old tenements became refuges for society's dropouts. Prenzlauer Berg, the most intact tenement district in the East, became the center of the German Democratic Republic's small and harassed alternative scene. The men and women who decided not to play by the rulesa much costlier decision in the Eastfound their niches of freedom and individuality in Prenzlauer Berg's tenements, where apartments were relatively easy to get because many had been abandoned after the decades of utter neglect the buildings had suffered.

Its grandest project was the renovation of both sides of a one-block stretch of Husemannstrasse in the middle of Prenzlauer Berg. It renovated the ornate facades, decorated the street with old-fashioned street lamps and water pumps, and opened cafés with period decor as well as museums catering to tourists, including the popular Museum of Hairdressing. For Berlin's 750th anniversary in 1987, the East Berlin government unveiled this block as the reconstruction of a typical Berlin workers' quarter from the turn of the century. For residents of Prenzlauer Berg, and for visitors who passed through streets lined with crumbling buildings to get there, it was a peculiar if not a galling sight.

For residents of Prenzlauer Berg, and for visitors who passed through streets lined with crumbling buildings to get there, it was a peculiar if not a galling sight. And the East Berlin planners obviously shared the common misconception that the Mietskaserne had been a working-class ghetto. Unlike many parts of Prenzlauer Berg, the grand facades of the Husemannstrasse had been built for bourgeois apartments. This "typical workers' street" only became a workers' street when the East German workers' state decreed its kitschy (and shoddy) renovation. (In the 1990s, however, it became the center of Prenzlauer Berg's hopping night life.) After reunification, it was no surprise that city planners dedicated themselves to reinvigorating the old tenement neighborhoods.


pages: 669 words: 150,886

Behind the Berlin Wall: East Germany and the Frontiers of Power by Patrick Major

anti-communist, Berlin Wall, centre right, disinformation, Easter island, falling living standards, Great Leap Forward, guns versus butter model, land reform, Mikhail Gorbachev, military-industrial complex, mittelstand, open borders, Panopticon Jeremy Bentham, post-materialism, Prenzlauer Berg, refrigerator car, rising living standards, Ronald Reagan, Sinatra Doctrine

The party did not help me to get a trip west, and so I don’t have any time for the party.’⁹¹ The FDGB trade union was generally even more prone to ‘going native’ than the party. On 13 August several union leaders apparently applied for leave or stayed at home.⁹² Although most full-time functionaries remained firm under pressure, part-time officials were less steadfast. In 20 enterprises in Berlin-Prenzlauer Berg, especially semi-state and locally organized plants, the FDGB noted that even shop-floor chairmen disowned the measures.⁹³ IG Printing and Paper came in for particular criticism for ‘opportunism’, as well as local health sector shop stewards.⁹⁴ Among the unions’ voluntary workers the mood was even more despondent.

One liaison officer at the Warnow shipyard complained that ‘the government itself has made a mockery of the trust of the population and can no longer use the excuse—when difficulties arise—that spies are to blame’. Another simply told the government to ‘kiss my . . . ’.⁹⁵ In one branch meeting in Prenzlauer Berg only two members actually stood by the measures, while others muttered that Sunday the thirteenth had revealed ‘a lot of little Ulbrichts among us’.⁹⁶ All of this would suggest that many party members shared a widespread resentment that 13 August had infringed their own private sphere or threatened to undermine the modus vivendi with local clienteles. ⁸⁷ SED-BL Potsdam to Honecker, 19 Aug. 1961, BLHA, Bez.

Relatively speaking, members of the Writers’ Association did indeed enjoy a privileged existence, which militated against dissidence.¹⁴³ The right to travel could be dangled as a carrot before potential malcontents, such as the fictional pseudo-intellectual W. in Hilbig’s ‘I’ , whose Stasi case officers manipulate his desire to see the West: ‘To stay or not to stay, that was the question.’¹⁴⁴ As will become evident below, a significant number of the Prenzlauer Berg set, including Anderson, were spirited out of the country, sometimes by mutual consent. Literature could, on the other hand, provide a coded medium for veiled criticism. By its very nature, the Wall conjured up taboo, ‘the fairy tale mechanism and psychology of the forbidden door or the forbidden box that should not be opened’.¹⁴⁵ The border offered an almost irresistible set of metaphors which the Ministry of Culture had to censor or let pass.


Germany by Andrea Schulte-Peevers

Albert Einstein, bank run, Berlin Wall, Boeing 747, call centre, capitalist realism, car-free, carbon footprint, centre right, company town, computer age, credit crunch, Donald Trump, Fall of the Berlin Wall, Frank Gehry, gentrification, glass ceiling, Google Earth, haute couture, haute cuisine, Honoré de Balzac, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Johannes Kepler, Kickstarter, low cost airline, messenger bag, Mikhail Gorbachev, New Urbanism, Peace of Westphalia, Peter Eisenman, place-making, post-work, Prenzlauer Berg, retail therapy, ride hailing / ride sharing, sensible shoes, Skype, trade route, urban planning, urban renewal, V2 rocket, white picket fence

Return to beginning of chapter Berlin * * * HISTORY ORIENTATION Maps INFORMATION Bookshops Discount Cards Emergency Internet Access Internet Resources Left Luggage Media Medical Services Money Post Tourist Information SIGHTS Mitte Potsdamer Platz & Tiergarten Kreuzberg Friedrichshain Prenzlauer Berg Charlottenburg Southwestern Berlin Eastern Berlin ACTIVITIES Cycling Running Swimming WALKING TOUR BERLIN FOR CHILDREN TOURS Bus Tours Bike Tours Boat Tours Walking Tours Speciality Tours FESTIVALS & EVENTS SLEEPING Mitte Prenzlauer Berg Potsdamer Platz & Tiergarten Kreuzberg Friedrichshain Charlottenburg EATING Mitte Prenzlauer Berg Potsdamer Platz & Tiergarten Kreuzberg Friedrichshain Charlottenburg Schöneberg DRINKING Mitte Prenzlauer Berg Potsdamer Platz & Tiergarten Kreuzberg & Kreuzkölln Friedrichshain Charlottenburg & Schöneberg ENTERTAINMENT Listings Tickets Nightclubs Live Music Cabaret & Varieté Cinemas Theatre Sport SHOPPING Department Stores & Malls Farmers Markets Flea Markets Made in Berlin Music GETTING THERE & AWAY Air Bus Car & Motorcycle Train GETTING AROUND To/From the Airports Car & Motorcycle Public Transport Taxi * * * ‘Berlin is the newest city I have come across’, observed Mark Twain in 1891, and a modern-day visitor to the German capital might well echo the sentiment.

Pockets of open space include the Volkspark Friedrichshain (Map), a wonderland of tamed wilderness filled with trails, playgrounds, tennis courts, a half-pipe, an outdoor cinema and lots of greenery for sunning, grilling and picnicking. Return to beginning of chapter Prenzlauer Berg Ageing divas know that a face-lift can quickly pump up a drooping career, and it seems the same can be done with entire neighbourhoods. It helps that Prenzlauer Berg has always had great bone structure, so to speak. Badly pummelled but not destroyed during WWII, the district was among the first to show up in the crosshairs of developers after the Wall collapsed. Now pretty as a polished penny, its townhouses sparkle in prim pastels, their sleekly renovated apartments and lofts the haunts of urbanites, gays, creative types, families and professionals.

Plenty of options have been popping up lately, but these are our favourites: Brilliant Apartments ( 8061 4796; www.brilliant-apartments.de; apt €80-120; ) The name is the game in these eight stylish and modern units with full kitchens that sleep up to six and are located on Oderberger Strasse and Rykestrasse, both hip drags in Prenzlauer Berg that put you close to everything. Miniloft Berlin (Map; 847 1090; www.miniloft.de; Hessische Strasse 5; apt from €105) Fourteen architect-designed lofts in an energy-efficient building, some with south-facing panorama windows, others with cosy alcoves, all outfitted with modern designer furniture and kitchenettes. T&C Apartments (Map; 405 046 612; www.tc-apartments-berlin.de; Kopenhagener Strasse 72; apt from €50) Huge selection of stylish, hand-picked one- to four-room apartments in Mitte, Prenzlauer Berg, Tiergarten and Schöneberg; headquarters located in Prenzlauer Berg


Germany Travel Guide by Lonely Planet

Airbnb, Albert Einstein, bank run, Berlin Wall, bike sharing, Boeing 747, British Empire, call centre, capitalist realism, car-free, carbon footprint, centre right, company town, double helix, Dr. Strangelove, eurozone crisis, Fall of the Berlin Wall, Frank Gehry, gentrification, glass ceiling, Gregor Mendel, haute couture, haute cuisine, high-speed rail, Honoré de Balzac, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Johannes Kepler, Kickstarter, low cost airline, messenger bag, Mikhail Gorbachev, Neil Armstrong, New Urbanism, off-the-grid, oil shale / tar sands, Peace of Westphalia, Peter Eisenman, post-work, Prenzlauer Berg, retail therapy, ride hailing / ride sharing, Ronald Reagan, Ronald Reagan: Tear down this wall, sensible shoes, Skype, starchitect, three-masted sailing ship, trade route, upwardly mobile, urban planning, urban renewal, V2 rocket, white picket fence

Computerspielemuseum MUSEUM Offline map Google map (6098 8577; www.computerspielemuseum.de; Karl-Marx-Allee 93a; adult/concession €8/5; 10am-8pm Wed-Mon; Weberwiese) No matter if you grew up with PacMan, World of Warcraft or nothing at all in this digital world, this delightful museum takes you on a fascinating trip down computer-game memory lane while putting the industry’s evolution into historical and cultural context. Colourful and engaging, it features lots of interactive stations alongside hundreds of original exhibits, including an ultrarare 1972 Pong arcade machine and its twisted modern cousin, the ‘PainStation’. PRENZLAUER BERG Prenzlauer Berg went from rags to riches after reunification to emerge as one of Berlin’s most desirable residential neighbourhoods. Its ample charms are best experienced on a leisurely meander. Look up at gorgeously restored town houses, comb side streets for indie boutiques or carve out a spot among the yoga mamas and greying hipsters in cafes around Kollwitzplatz or Helmholtzplatz, two squares at the epicente of gentrification.

Zum Schmutzigen Hobby Offline map Google map (www.ninaqueer.com; Revaler Strasse 99, RAW Tempel, gate 2; Warschauer Strasse, Warschauer Strasse) Berlin’s trash-drag deity Nina Queer has flown her long-time Prenzlauer Berg coop and reopened her louche den of kitsch and glam in less hostile environs amid the Friedrichshain kool kids. Wednesday’s Glamour Trivia Quiz is legendary. Marietta Offline map Google map 4372 0646; www.marietta-bar.de; Stargarder Strasse 13; from 10am; Schönhauser Allee, M1, Schönhauser Allee) Retro is now at this Prenzlauer Berg self-service retreat, where you can check out passing eye candy through the big window or lug your beverage to the dimly lit back room for quiet bantering.

RENTAL APARTMENTS For self-caterers, independent types, wallet-watchers, families and anyone in need of plenty of privacy, a short-term furnished-flat rental may well be the cat’s pyjamas. Plenty of options have been popping up lately, but these are our favourites: Brilliant Apartments Offline map Google map (8061 4796; www.brilliant-apartments.de; Prenzlauer Berg; apt from €84; ; Eberswalder Strasse) The name is the game in these 11 stylish and modern units with full kitchens that sleep from one to six people and are located on Oderberger Strasse and Rykestrasse, both hip drags in Prenzlauer Berg that put you close to everything. Miniloft Berlin Offline map Google map (847 1090; www.miniloft.com; Hessische Strasse 5, Scheunenviertel; apt from €138; ; Naturkundemuseum) Architect-designed lofts in an energy-efficient building, some with south-facing panorama windows, others with cosy alcoves, all outfitted with modern designer furniture and kitchenettes.


pages: 306 words: 92,704

After the Berlin Wall by Christopher Hilton

anti-communist, Berlin Wall, Great Leap Forward, land reform, Mikhail Gorbachev, Peter Eisenman, Prenzlauer Berg, Ronald Reagan, Ronald Reagan: Tear down this wall, Silicon Valley, urban planning, urban renewal, women in the workforce

The number of districts is misleading in terms of who really got what, because some were large and others, particularly in the city centre, small. In reality, the Soviet Union was taking slightly less than half of the whole city. For the record, the districts were: Soviet – Pankow, Weissensee, Lichtenberg, Köpenick, Treptow, Prenzlauer Berg, Friedrichshain and Mitte; French – Reinickendorf, Wedding; British – Spandau, Wilmersdorf, Charlottenburg, Tiergarten; American – Zehlendorf, Steglitz, Tempelhof, Schöneberg, Neukölln, Kreuzberg. 4. The Wall’s height meant that you couldn’t really see over it except if you lived in high-rise apartments or, distantly, from certain places on the S-Bahn.

Yes, it was difficult in the GDR but my family is a “minister” family – my father was a minister, my mother taught religion but only within the congregation, not in schools, of course.’ What do you think now, the twentieth anniversary approaching so quickly? ‘My family and I think it was a huge slice of luck that there was the Wende. I was twenty-one when The Wall came down and I took part in the demonstrations at the Gethsemane Church [in Prenzlauer Berg].21 It wasn’t difficult for me to lead a normal life after, although I had never been to Western countries. I’d been to Hungary and so on. I was educated not by school but my family so I knew about places like Hamburg even though I’d never been. Through my parents I also knew the political systems both in the East and the West.

These twenty-two were divided to different extents, as the table shows. P = Protestant, C = Catholic, F = French Reformed, R = Reformed Bohemian. Church / Congregation Place District Heiligensee congregation (P) Heiligensee Martin-Luther congregation (P) Pankow / Wedding St Augustinus (C) Dänenstrasse Prenzlauer Berg / Wedding St Sebastian (C) Gartenplatz Wedding Versöhnungskirche (P) Bernauer Strasse Mitte / Wedding Golgotha congregation Gartenstrasse Gnaden congregation (P) Invalidenpark Dankeskirche congregation (P) West Dreifaltigkeit (P) Mauerstrasse Liusenstadtkirche (F) Kommandantenstr.


Central Europe Travel Guide by Lonely Planet

Albert Einstein, anti-communist, Berlin Wall, call centre, car-free, carbon footprint, centre right, Defenestration of Prague, Fall of the Berlin Wall, flag carrier, Frank Gehry, Gregor Mendel, Guggenheim Bilbao, high-speed rail, illegal immigration, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Kickstarter, low cost airline, messenger bag, Mikhail Gorbachev, Nelson Mandela, offshore financial centre, Peter Eisenman, place-making, Prenzlauer Berg, ride hailing / ride sharing, Ronald Reagan, Ronald Reagan: Tear down this wall, Rubik’s Cube, Skype, trade route, urban renewal, white picket fence, young professional

Fuckparade DANCE EVENT (www.fuckparade.org) Each August this anti-establishment, antigentrification demonstration dances to its own noncommercial techno beat. Sleeping Berlin’s independent hostels are far superior to the standard DJH (www.jugendherberge.de) locations in town. MITTE & PRENZLAUER BERG Lette’m Sleep HOSTEL € ( 4473 3623; www.backpackers.de; Lettestrasse 7; dm from €11, tw without bathroom from €49, apt from €69; ; Eberswalder Strasse) Located within stumbling distance of the Prenzlauer Berg nightlife action, this colourful and convenient party hostel is simply groovy, baby, groovy. Roof APARTMENT €€ ( 6951 8833; www.roof-berlin.com; studio/1-bed apt €85/115, reduced rates after 3 nights; ) Proprietor Ariane has two studios and a one-bedroom apartment – all tastefully decorated in soothing colours with comfy, contemporary touches – peppered around central Prenslauer Berg.

Back on the mainland, Lübeck is a 12th-century, Unesco-recognised townscape of medieval merchants’ houses and towers that is well worth a stopover. Save at least three days – and nights – for the rich history, museums, bars and clubs of Berlin . The Brandenburg Gate, Holocaust Memorial and East Side Gallery at the Berlin Wall are must-sees. In the evening you have your choice of subdued-but-happening nightlife in Prenzlauer Berg, the hipster havens in Friedrichshain or alternative clubs in slightly grungy Kreuzberg. Entering Poland, make the Old Town of Poznań, where the lively university population keeps the ancient centre buzzing, the first overnight stop. Two days in the impressively Gothic, church-filled Toruń has a much slower pace.

Potsdamer Platz and its shiny Sony Center hosts Berlin’s star-studded film festival each year, a stone’s throw from where only 20 years ago you could climb up a viewing platform in the West and peer over the wall to glimpse the alternate reality of the East. Casually strolling along Bernauerstrasse near trendy Prenzlauer Berg, you suddenly place your foot on a brick-marked line in the pavement marking where the wall once stood. Renowned for its diversity and its tolerance, its alternative culture and its night-owl stamina, the best thing about the German capital is the way it reinvents itself and isn’t shackled by its mind-numbing history.


pages: 587 words: 119,432

The Collapse: The Accidental Opening of the Berlin Wall by Mary Elise Sarotte

anti-communist, Berlin Wall, conceptual framework, Deng Xiaoping, facts on the ground, Fall of the Berlin Wall, hindsight bias, Mikhail Gorbachev, open borders, Prenzlauer Berg, Ronald Reagan, Ronald Reagan: Tear down this wall, urban decay, éminence grise

It was near Schönhauser Allee, a major access road to downtown. It could easily be reached with public transport. Bornholmer also stood near the Prenzlauer Berg residential district of East Berlin, where large numbers of “hostile-negative forces”—such as Aram Radomski and Siggi Schefke—lived.18 On the evening of November 9, those two “hostile negatives” were indeed heading to the border crossing. Radomski had watched Schabowski’s press conference live at his girlfriend’s place on Metzer Street in Prenzlauer Berg. After the opening minutes, she had found it so tedious that she had wandered away. Radomski, however, had kept watching.

Instead of searching for her, however, Radomski realized that something had changed. He was now filled with a sense of rage, and what he most wanted was not his “princess,” whom he never saw again, but payback.66 Radomski drifted from location to location over the following years, but his desire for revenge would eventually lead him to the Prenzlauer Berg neighborhood of East Berlin, the only place in the GDR where he figured he had a chance of finding like-minded souls. There, Radomski indeed found a number of them, most important among them Siegbert Schefke, known to all as Siggi. They became friends and even held a joint birthday party one year.

See under Nikolai Church (Leipzig) Peaceful Revolution of 1989, 75, 76, 82, 95, 103, 179 discounting of, by academics, 177 and Leipzig trade fairs, media coverage of, 33–34, 57 media coverage/publicity and, 33–34, 181 motivation for rise of, xxiv–xxv, xxv–xxvi party incompetence and, 160 and Stasi files, destruction of, 172 trust and, 180–181 Penzlauer Berg, 133 People’s Army, 22, 159 People’s Liberation Army (China), 43 People’s Police, 10, 51 People’s Republic of China (PRC) and East Germany, comparison with, 178–179 fortieth anniversary of founding of, 43–44 Tiananmen Square massacre and, 43–44, 46, 47, 53, 54, 88, 178 Poland, 171, 172 and announcement of travel law, reaction to, 122–123 number of secret police in, 9 Solidarity in, xxi, xxiv, 16, 22–23, 39 Solidarity in, and Gorbachev’s reforms, effect of, 22–23 Police, 43 draftees as riot, 54–55 People’s Police, 10, 51 secret police, 9 See also Armed forces Police brutality, stories/written testimonies about, 86 Political opposition, legalization of, instructions to ignore, 19 Political prisoners, 16 “Political undesirables,” Stasi lists of, 51 Pommer, Dietmar, 16 Poppe, Ulrike, 62 Prague, 27–30, 94–95, 99 PRC. See People’s Republic of China Prenzlauer Berg (East Berlin), 60 Press conference (East Berlin, November 9), on travel law, Schabowski’s announcement of, 113 (photo), 114–119, 127–128, 159, 179, 184 reaction to, 119–124 Protestant Reformation, 33 Protests/demonstrations in Dresden, 32 in East Berlin, November 4, 95–96 in Leipzig (see Leipzig protests/demonstrations) See also Dissidents/activists Putin, Vladimir, 10, 30, 176–177 Radomski, Aram, xxiv, 56–57, 59–60, 61, 62–66, 75 at Bornholmer Street border crossing, 133–134, 138, 139, 141–143 at Cuckoo’s Egg (bar in West Berlin) to celebrate Berlin Wall opening, 152–153 fate of, after German reunification, 176 and Leipzig ring road march (October 9), secret filming of, 77–81 “let-off-steam solution” (permanent expulsion from East Germany) and, 141–142, 144 at November 4 demonstration (East Berlin), 96 Schabowski’s press conference and, 133 in West Berlin, 142–143 Rähder, Gisela, 54 Rähder, Wolfgang, 54 Rau, Albrecht, 124 Reagan, Ronald, 121 Gorbachev and, xix, xxii “Mr.


Beyond the Wall: East Germany, 1949-1990 by Katja Hoyer

anti-communist, Berlin Wall, colonial rule, cuban missile crisis, Fall of the Berlin Wall, financial independence, Francis Fukuyama: the end of history, friendly fire, full employment, land reform, mass immigration, mass incarceration, Mikhail Gorbachev, new economy, open borders, Prenzlauer Berg, remote working, restrictive zoning, rising living standards, Ronald Reagan, Ronald Reagan: Tear down this wall, union organizing, work culture

Pressure from the church communities on the regime intensified and so Schmutzler was released from prison early, in 1961, and resumed his activities as a pastor in Dresden before becoming a lecturer at the Theological Seminary in Leipzig. In the 1980s he moved to West Berlin where he died in 2003. Cases like his prove that even the first constitution, which looked democratic, provided only an illusion of civil rights and basic freedoms. Consolidation of Power Berlin-Prenzlauer Berg, 25 July 1950. Walter Ulbricht was letting the thunderous applause of his comrades wash over him. He had celebrated his fifty-seventh birthday a few days earlier and now stood on the stage of the Werner-Seelenbinder-Halle, a venue in the north-east of Berlin. It had only just been converted from its previous function as a cattle market on the grounds of an abattoir.

Mielke’s agents reported after the election that ‘election watch’ had indeed been a widespread undertaking: Members of so-called grassroots church groups and applicants for permanent leave were recognized … in the polling stations. In relation to the capital such persons were noted in Berlin-Prenzlauer Berg in sixty-four polling stations, in Berlin-Friedrichshain in forty-four polling stations, in Berlin-Mitte in twenty-three polling stations. These persons usually made notes about the election results announced by the electoral officials.37 According to these reports from Berlin, 10 to 20 per cent of the votes cast were votes against the list of candidates of the National Front, which meant that voters went into the booth rather than folding their paper and putting it into the ballot box straight away.

48 Andreas was excited about the news, but it was a Thursday and he had to be back at the famous Babylon cinema the next day, where he worked as a technician. He decided to go and investigate the matter at the weekend, taking DM100 and a map of West Berlin from his mother’s flat before he went home to the Prenzlauer Berg area. There, he turned on his TV to see what the West German broadcaster ZDF had to say on the evening’s events but found to his disappointment that they had a football match on. At 10.40 p.m., the news programme finally announced: ‘East Berlin has opened the Wall.’ The accompanying footage showed bustling crowds of Berliners at several border crossing points.


pages: 104 words: 34,784

The Trouble With Brunch: Work, Class and the Pursuit of Leisure by Shawn Micallef

big-box store, call centre, cognitive dissonance, David Brooks, deindustrialization, gentrification, ghettoisation, Jane Jacobs, Joan Didion, knowledge worker, liberation theology, Mason jar, McMansion, new economy, post scarcity, Prenzlauer Berg, public intellectual, Richard Florida, Ronald Reagan, The Theory of the Leisure Class by Thorstein Veblen, Thorstein Veblen, urban sprawl, World Values Survey

With the Wallpaper guide in hand, we left Recoleta, the downtown neighbourhood our hotel was in, and started out on the hour-long walk to the Palermo Soho neighbourhood, touted in the guide and elsewhere as the trendiest, most fashionable and chic part of the city – Buenos Aires’ answer to Williamsburg or Prenzlauer Berg. Buenos Aires likes to take Sunday off, so there wasn’t much happening as we walked the low-rise commercial and residential streets of Palermo, the artisan shops and unique boutiques listed in the guide closed for the day. Though we began to wonder if we were lost, this is what I had hoped for – a city unfolding in front of us as we wandered.


Active Measures by Thomas Rid

1960s counterculture, 4chan, active measures, anti-communist, back-to-the-land, Berlin Wall, Bernie Sanders, bitcoin, Black Lives Matter, call centre, Charlie Hebdo massacre, Chelsea Manning, continuation of politics by other means, cryptocurrency, cuban missile crisis, disinformation, Donald Trump, dual-use technology, East Village, Edward Snowden, en.wikipedia.org, end-to-end encryption, facts on the ground, fake news, Fall of the Berlin Wall, false flag, guest worker program, information security, Internet Archive, Jacob Appelbaum, John Markoff, Julian Assange, kremlinology, Mikhail Gorbachev, military-industrial complex, Norman Mailer, nuclear winter, operational security, peer-to-peer, Prenzlauer Berg, public intellectual, Ronald Reagan, Russian election interference, Silicon Valley, Stewart Brand, technoutopianism, We are Anonymous. We are Legion, Whole Earth Catalog, WikiLeaks, zero day

I knew I was a suspicious West German to Kopp (he would immediately place my accent). Worse, he knew that I was coming in from London, that old den of spy intrigue. I needed to break the ice. He offered me coffee in his modest living room. I told him that I had studied at Humboldt, and that I used to live in Prenzlauer Berg in East Berlin, a neighborhood now known as the Brooklyn of Berlin. He wanted to know what street. Immanuelkirchstraße, I told him, and said I remembered carrying up heavy tin buckets full of coal briquettes to make a fire in the morning, and that we showered in a tiny plastic box in the kitchen, warming our cold hands over the gas stove.

“They confirmed their opinion.”6 Just five months earlier, Michel Foucault delivered his landmark inaugural lecture, “The Order of Discourse,” at the Collège de France. The iconic French philosopher and social critic considered “the opposition between true and false” as a long-established, power-wielding system of exclusion that he now revealed for what it was: historical, arbitrary, modifiable, and violent.7 I had been reading Foucault in Prenzlauer Berg in the mid-1990s, and after my conversation with Kopp in Brandenburg, I recalled some of what I’d read. Foucault was breaking down the barrier between analytical truth and ideological truth; so were Agayants and Wagenbreth. Could this eerie convergence of Eastern spycraft and Western thought really be just a coincidence?


pages: 559 words: 164,795

Berlin: Life and Death in the City at the Center of the World by Sinclair McKay

Albert Einstein, anti-communist, Berlin Wall, Bletchley Park, dark matter, Fall of the Berlin Wall, Fellow of the Royal Society, fixed income, Francis Fukuyama: the end of history, German hyperinflation, haute couture, In Cold Blood by Truman Capote, Isaac Newton, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Mikhail Gorbachev, plutocrats, Prenzlauer Berg, uranium enrichment

Eighteen-year-old Brigitte Eicke had slightly more elevated tastes though: from 1943, when she was taken on an outing with the League of German Girls to a production of Madame Butterfly, she had an ear for opera.17 Frau Eicke lived with her mother in the north-east of the city, in a working-class suburb called Prenzlauer Berg. Her father, who had once been a pig farmer, had died in 1939. Now the teenager, having assiduously studied shorthand, was working in the offices of a firm called Koster.18 Life for the last few months had been filled with fear by the night-time sirens, and with relief by the greetings to surviving neighbours the following day; yet even though the landscape of her childhood city was being violently deconstructed around her, with every possibility that one of those bombs or incendiaries might finish her, Frau Eicke somehow held on to some tokens of quotidian normality.

See also individual publication name Newton, Isaac New York City Ballet Niederwallstrasse Niemöller, Martin ‘Night of the Long Knives’ (1934) NKVD Nobel Institute Nobel Prize Nolde, Emil Nordhafen Norkus, Herbert NSDAP see Nazi Party Nuremberg laws Nuremberg rallies Nuremberg Trials obedience, crime of excessive Oberbaum Bridge Oberstdorf Oder, River Oels estate Office of Strategic Services (OSS) Old Shatterhand Omankowsky, Manfred OPEC oil crisis (1973) openness, Berlin’s reputation for opera Operation Gold (1954) Oranienburg concentration camp Oranienburger Strasse Oranienburger synagogue Orbach, Lothar Orff, Carl: Carmina Burana Organization Consul Organization for Sport and Technics Orgel, Kurt Osram Ostmark Ostpolitik Palestine Pankow Panzerfaust Papen Circle Papen, Franz von Paragraph (German judicial code) Paris Commune (1871) Peek and Cloppenburg Peet, John People’s Court People’s Hall People’s Police Peters, Eva Pfeiffer-Bothner, Dr Hans Günther Pfeiffer, Dieter Pharus Halls physics pink persico Planck, Erwin Planck, Max Poelzig, Hans Poland Potsdam Potsdam Conference (1945) Potsdamer Platz poverty Prenzlauer Berg presidential election, German (1932) Presley, Elvis Prinzenallee Prinz Heinrich Gymnasium Prinzregentenstrasse prisoners-of-war: concentration camps and see concentration camps; forced labour and see forced labour; German; Soviet; Soviet sector and political Professor Mamlock (film) prostitution Protocols of the Elders of Zion, The Prussia Prussian State Library Psychological Strategy Board, US pulp fiction punk rock Purper, Liselotte quantum physics racism radio stations.


pages: 323 words: 95,188

The Year That Changed the World: The Untold Story Behind the Fall of the Berlin Wall by Michael Meyer

"World Economic Forum" Davos, Ayatollah Khomeini, bank run, Berlin Wall, Bonfire of the Vanities, Bretton Woods, BRICs, call centre, disinformation, Dr. Strangelove, Fall of the Berlin Wall, falling living standards, Francis Fukuyama: the end of history, guns versus butter model, haute couture, mass immigration, Mikhail Gorbachev, military-industrial complex, mutually assured destruction, Prenzlauer Berg, public intellectual, Ronald Reagan, Ronald Reagan: Tear down this wall, union organizing

How dare they, on this of all days? “He gave orders to beat them,” Schabowski said. I had arrived from Budapest that afternoon, too late for the official celebrations. The center of Berlin, near Honecker’s ministries, was empty of life. But some blocks to the north, in the gritty working-class neighborhood of Prenzlauer Berg, young people were gathering in the thousands. At Gethsemane Church in Schonhauser Allee, known as the “rebel church” because of its support for the suddenly growing East German protest movement, so many people had come to debate the political situation that I could hardly wedge inside. In the surrounding streets, in windows and along tramlines, people held lit candles.


Stasiland: Stories From Behind the Berlin Wall by Anna Funder

Berlin Wall, centre right, disinformation, Fall of the Berlin Wall, index card, Kickstarter, Mikhail Gorbachev, Prenzlauer Berg, telemarketer, the built environment

The stop itself is half a block away at the corner. Right here, the doors never open for passengers; they just sit, arrested and accepting. It is odd, the sight of a tram with a row of cars behind it stopped here for no pedestrians, no passengers, no reason, while on the other side vehicles continue unimpeded up the hill into Prenzlauer Berg. The lights change and the driver, still looking at the paper, moves a lever and slides the tram into action. I go out for the paper and bread, and walk through the park. In summer this park is festooned with motley groups of drunks and punks. In winter the punks claim the underground stations for warmth, while the drunks install themselves in tram shelters.


pages: 364 words: 104,697

Were You Born on the Wrong Continent? by Thomas Geoghegan

Alan Greenspan, Albert Einstein, American Society of Civil Engineers: Report Card, An Inconvenient Truth, banking crisis, Bear Stearns, Berlin Wall, Bob Geldof, business logic, collective bargaining, corporate governance, cross-subsidies, dark matter, David Brooks, declining real wages, deindustrialization, disinformation, Easter island, ending welfare as we know it, facts on the ground, Gini coefficient, Glass-Steagall Act, haute cuisine, high-speed rail, income inequality, John Maynard Keynes: Economic Possibilities for our Grandchildren, knowledge economy, knowledge worker, laissez-faire capitalism, low skilled workers, Martin Wolf, McJob, military-industrial complex, minimum wage unemployment, mittelstand, offshore financial centre, Paul Samuelson, payday loans, pensions crisis, plutocrats, Prenzlauer Berg, purchasing power parity, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Robert Gordon, Ronald Reagan: Tear down this wall, Saturday Night Live, Silicon Valley, The Theory of the Leisure Class by Thorstein Veblen, The Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith, Thorstein Veblen, union organizing, Wolfgang Streeck, women in the workforce

There isn’t any, not in the German sense. There’s no industry. But the money keeps pouring in. They have political capital here, so it’s like Washington. And the kids are here because it’s so hip, so it’s like Berkeley or Portland, too. As a result, the basis of the entire economy is just hanging out. Prenzlauer Berg and Kreuzberg are packed with kids, kids, kids, spending their parents’ money. Can there be any world capital so completely supported by money from Mom and Dad? I try to think of stodgy German parents, blowing all this money on parties in Berlin. As my American friend Leo says, “Germans take out insurance on everything.


pages: 378 words: 120,490

Roads to Berlin by Cees Nooteboom, Laura Watkinson

Berlin Wall, centre right, Deng Xiaoping, Fall of the Berlin Wall, job satisfaction, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Martin Wolf, means of production, Mikhail Gorbachev, Peace of Westphalia, Plato's cave, Potemkin village, Prenzlauer Berg, rent control

Liebe und Wahrheit sollen siegen über Lüge + Gewalt1 (Václav Havel) is written on the walls, words that were not there back then. Two weeks ago, I went to Falkplatz, a square that had recently been vacated by the D.D.R. border troops. Trees were to be planted in this saddest of all neighborhoods; everyone could bring something to plant, and the Prenzlauer Berg parks division and some other organizations were contributing a hundred trees. To coincide with the event, a demonstration of cyclists was riding to the square from Alexanderplatz, and as a “special treat” (Besonderes Bonbon) they would be allowed to cycle along the former Todesstreifen, or death strip, the empty space between the two lengths of Wall, a flat and bare piece of land, which made anyone running across it an easy target for the guards.


pages: 501 words: 145,943

If Mayors Ruled the World: Dysfunctional Nations, Rising Cities by Benjamin R. Barber

"World Economic Forum" Davos, Aaron Swartz, Affordable Care Act / Obamacare, American Legislative Exchange Council, Berlin Wall, bike sharing, borderless world, Boris Johnson, Bretton Woods, British Empire, car-free, carbon footprint, Cass Sunstein, Celebration, Florida, classic study, clean water, congestion pricing, corporate governance, Crossrail, crowdsourcing, David Brooks, desegregation, Detroit bankruptcy, digital divide, digital Maoism, digital rights, disinformation, disintermediation, edge city, Edward Glaeser, Edward Snowden, Etonian, Evgeny Morozov, failed state, Fall of the Berlin Wall, feminist movement, Filter Bubble, gentrification, George Gilder, ghettoisation, global pandemic, global village, Hernando de Soto, Howard Zinn, illegal immigration, In Cold Blood by Truman Capote, income inequality, informal economy, information retrieval, Jane Jacobs, Jaron Lanier, Jeff Bezos, Lewis Mumford, London Interbank Offered Rate, Mark Zuckerberg, market fundamentalism, Marshall McLuhan, Masdar, megacity, microcredit, Mikhail Gorbachev, mortgage debt, mutually assured destruction, new economy, New Urbanism, Nicholas Carr, Norman Mailer, nuclear winter, obamacare, Occupy movement, off-the-grid, Panopticon Jeremy Bentham, Peace of Westphalia, Pearl River Delta, peer-to-peer, planetary scale, plutocrats, Prenzlauer Berg, profit motive, Ralph Waldo Emerson, RFID, Richard Florida, Ronald Reagan, self-driving car, Silicon Valley, SimCity, Skype, smart cities, smart meter, Steve Jobs, Stewart Brand, technological determinism, technological solutionism, TED Talk, Telecommunications Act of 1996, The Death and Life of Great American Cities, The Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid, The future is already here, The Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith, Tobin tax, Tony Hsieh, trade route, UNCLOS, UNCLOS, unpaid internship, urban sprawl, Virgin Galactic, War on Poverty, zero-sum game

A key asymmetry, which unfortunately has defined the Pentagon’s war against al Qaeda, involves weaponry and personnel: a B-1 bomber is not really a suitable response to a suicide bomber, while drones cannot be used against resident terrorists waiting to strike Boston from across the Charles river in Watertown, or to hit the new American embassy in Berlin from a fourth-floor apartment up the hill on Prenzlauer Berg. There is also a deeper asymmetry between the broad counterterrorist goals of nation-states and the narrower concerns of cities. The United States or France will seek an al Qaeda–free Afghanistan or, perhaps more improbably, a Taliban-free Afghanistan. But that is no guarantee that Mumbai or London or New York is safe from al Qaeda’s marauding offshoots like those operating in Libya or Mali today.


pages: 559 words: 178,279

The Cold War: Stories From the Big Freeze by Bridget Kendall

anti-communist, Berlin Wall, British Empire, collective bargaining, colonial rule, cuban missile crisis, Deng Xiaoping, Dissolution of the Soviet Union, European colonialism, Fall of the Berlin Wall, Great Leap Forward, Howard Zinn, Korean Air Lines Flight 007, land reform, Mikhail Gorbachev, Monroe Doctrine, mutually assured destruction, open borders, Prenzlauer Berg, Ronald Reagan, Suez canal 1869, white flight

And suddenly, it hit me that my birthday was in two days. What was going to happen with my birthday? That was in the morning. We children were not allowed to go to school, and we were not allowed to go on to the streets. Towards midday, we heard other sounds. I lived on Schönhauser Allee in Prenzlauer Berg, and that was the street that led to Berlin Pankow, where the government of the GDR was situated, and on that route were tanks. The sound of the tanks gave me goose pimples; I can remember that very clearly. That was very frightening, seeing the tanks and hearing the terrible sounds that they were making.


In Europe by Geert Mak

Albert Einstein, anti-communist, Berlin Wall, British Empire, classic study, clean water, Dissolution of the Soviet Union, European colonialism, Ford Model T, German hyperinflation, Great Leap Forward, Herbert Marcuse, illegal immigration, Louis Blériot, Mahatma Gandhi, Marshall McLuhan, mass immigration, means of production, Mikhail Gorbachev, military-industrial complex, millennium bug, new economy, New Urbanism, post-war consensus, Prenzlauer Berg, Sinatra Doctrine, Suez canal 1869, the medium is the message, urban renewal

Hobrecht's vision of the integrated city had come to naught: the 1912 edition of the Bärenführer advised ‘adventuresome’ visitors to take a ride on the Ringbahn, to catch a glimpse of ‘that other Berlin’, where ‘hoi polloi’ lived. In my research, I came across a written complaint filed by residents of the Prenzlauer Berg neighbourhood concerning the lack of toilets. The reply from the Prussian civil servant stated that ‘an average bowel movement takes three to four minutes, including the time needed to arrange one's clothing’ and that ‘even if the bowel movement were to take ten minutes, the twelve hours in a day leave sufficient time for seventy-two persons to make use of the toilet.’


pages: 1,123 words: 328,357

Post Wall: Rebuilding the World After 1989 by Kristina Spohr

"World Economic Forum" Davos, Alan Greenspan, American Legislative Exchange Council, Andrei Shleifer, anti-communist, banking crisis, Berlin Wall, Bonfire of the Vanities, bread and circuses, Bretton Woods, central bank independence, colonial exploitation, Deng Xiaoping, Dissolution of the Soviet Union, Donald Trump, Doomsday Clock, facts on the ground, failed state, Fall of the Berlin Wall, foreign exchange controls, Francis Fukuyama: the end of history, G4S, Japanese asset price bubble, Kickstarter, mass immigration, means of production, Mikhail Gorbachev, military-industrial complex, open economy, operational security, Prenzlauer Berg, price stability, public intellectual, rising living standards, Ronald Reagan, Ronald Reagan: Tear down this wall, software patent, South China Sea, special economic zone, Thomas L Friedman, Transnistria, uranium enrichment, zero-coupon bond

At the top, Erich Honecker envisaged a ‘Chinese solution’ to counter the mounting protests over the anniversary weekend (6–9 October),[20] prefigured in East Berlin when Stasi boss Erich Mielke jumped out of his bulletproof limo on the evening of 7 October screaming to police ‘Haut sie doch zusammen, die Schweine!’ (‘Club those pigs into submission!’).[21] That night in and around Prenzlauer Berg near the Gethsemane church, police officers, plain-clothes security forces and volunteer militia attacked some 6,000 demonstrators who shouted ‘Freedom’, ‘No violence’ and ‘We want to stay’, as well as bystanders, with dogs and water cannons – beating and kicking peaceful citizens and throwing hundreds into jail.