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Photo Credit: Humboldt Forum, Sönke Schneidewind

Germany’s capital has always been renowned for its rich cultural life. Its centrepiece of the historical Mitte district is home to many outstanding sights – not just the Museum Island, but no less than two opera houses and six major theatres as well as innumerable galleries and arts venues. Now, a series of new cultural projects are being developed, often just a few minutes’ walks apart, lending a new quality to this fascinating district.

The stage was set in 2017 with the Staatsoper Unter den Linden reopening after a programme of full refurbishment lasting seven years. This landmark site has now been joined by the Palais Populaire, the James Simon Gallery, and the Futurium as well as a truly outstanding milestone – the Humboldt Forum, which opened in late 2020. Here, we offer an overview of major recent and planned cultural projects in the heart of Berlin.

NEWLY OPENED IN 2021

Humboldt Forum

In December 2020, Berlin’s new forum for culture, art and science opened in the heart of Germany’s capital city. Due to the Covid-19 pandemic, this exciting new venue could at first only be experienced online. Recently, the Schlüterhof, the Passage and the Spreeterrassen became freely accessible. From 20 July, visitors can enter the Humboldt Forum, when the first floor and the second-floor open.

The Humboldt Forum is a vibrant centre for inquiry and encounters, a place of global learning and experience. In cutting edge interactive exhibitions, visitors can explore continents, regions, lifeworlds and ideas – on around 30,000 square metres across five floors. The Humboldt Forum’s architecture is informed by the rich contrasts created by connecting highly modern elements with the reconstructed sculptural baroque façades of the former Berlin City Palace.

On the first floor, the permanent BERLIN GLOBAL exhibition looks at how the city and its people are connected with the world. The same floor is also home to the Humboldt Lab. Under the Humboldt Universität Berlin, the Lab is a research and ideas centre with workshops, discussions and new formats as well as an extensive programme of educational activities and events. Along the Palace Basement’s winding corridors, the traces of former foundations offer a fascinating insight into the site’s 800 years of history. In the following months, the second and third floors will be home to the world-renowned Ethnological Museum and Asian Art Museum collections, presenting historical objects and artefacts from diverse regions of Africa, Asia, Oceania and the American continent.

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Photo Credit: Humboldt Forum, Sönke Schneidewind

ANOHA – The Children’s World of the Jewish Museum Berlin

On 27 June, the ANOHA Children’s World is opening directly across from the Jewish Museum Berlin. It invites children of preschool and grade-school age to play, discover and think about life and the respectful coexistence of people, animals and nature.

A gigantic circular wooden Noah’s Ark stands at the centre of the museum. Both the ark and museum have been designed by the American-based Olson Kundig Architecture office using high-quality sustainable raw materials. Around 150 animal sculptures fly, stand or crawl in and around the ark, all created by selected artists using recycled materials and found objects. The children can play with and take care of a zebra, fox or orangutan, while animals such as polar bears heighten awareness of the many endangered species, environmental issues, and the action needed to create a diverse and better world. Various workshop rooms and studios provide space for children to become creative themselves, making music and putting on plays.

In a new and surprising approach, ANOHA has also set up a Children’s Advisory Council. In regular meetings, the Council members put forward ideas and suggestions for interior designs and educational programmes, playing an active role in shaping the ANOHA’s present and future development.

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Photo Credit: Jüdisches Museum Berlin, Yves Sucksdorff

Reopening in summer: New National Gallery

A further highlight in summer is the reopening of the New National Gallery (Neue Nationalgalerie) at the Kulturforum on 22 August. After extensive modernisation, Mies van der Rohe’s renowned steel-and-glass construction will again be showing twentieth-century masterpieces. The first exhibition after reopening is dedicated to the American modernist Alexander Calder, whose mobiles, stabiles and standing mobiles gained him an international reputation. The size, scale and motion of Calder’s monumental sculptures, miniature objects and kinetic constructions play with the large glass hall’s linear spaces, turning proportion and movement into a poetic dialogue.

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Photo Credit: visitBerlin, Wolfgang Scholvien

Berlin State Library. The Museum.

The historic house of the Berlin State Library (Staatsbibliothek Berlin) Unter den Linden has also been extensively modernized in recent years and is now open to the public again. The Berlin State Library is one of the most important libraries in the world, and among other things, the original scores of Ludwig van Beethoven’s famous 9th Symphony are kept there.

In the coming months, a new museum will be built on around 1,000 square meters in the building on Unter den Linden. The museum will feature both permanent and temporary exhibitions. The opening is planned for 1 December 2021.

FUTURE DEVELOPMENTS

Around the Humboldt Forum

Monument to Freedom and Unity

The Monument to Freedom and Unity is due to be inaugurated in spring 2022. Set opposite the Humboldt Forum’s west portal, the 50-metre-long kinetic memorial is dedicated to the Peaceful Revolution and the fall of the Wall in 1989. In 2020, work started on the broad base to hold a gigantic bowl constructed of steel components. This walk-on ‘see-saw’ social sculpture is to be open to the public. When one half of the bowl has twenty people more on it than the other, the bowl will start to move, slowly and gently. The inauguration ceremony is scheduled for spring 2022.

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Photo Credit: Milla und Partner

The Schlossfreiheit staircase

Since summer 2020, the Spree Canal’s waterside promenade in front of the Humboldt Forum’s west portal is being renatured. From January 2022, this site will be used for the Schlossfreiheit, a vast 38-metre-wide open-air staircase leading down to the water. The staircase, which doubles as seating, is the first building phase of the Fluss Bad Berlin future project and scheduled to be completed in 2024. In a final stage, the area between Fischer Island and the tip of the Bode Museum on the Museum Island will be turned into a river pool for swimming. The Fluss Bad project is supported by the Federal Government and the State of Berlin. Building work is scheduled to start in January 2022 with completion in 2024.

Berlin’s Cathedral Church: Renovating the Hohenzollern Crypt

With ninety internments, the Hohenzollern Crypt in Berlin’s Cathedral Church(Berliner Dom) is the most important dynastic sepulchre in Germany. Reflecting stylistic eras in art history across several centuries, the richly decorated coffins and ornate sarcophagi are the last resting places of princes and kings from the Hohenzollern dynasty. The extensive refurbishment and conversion work includes a new information centre and making the crypt fully wheelchair accessible. A stronger focus will also be put on the historical links between the Hohenzollern crypt and the former Hohenzollern City Palace once standing on the nearby Humboldt Forum site. The Hohenzollern Crypt is scheduled to reopen in autumn 2023.

German Historical Museum (DHM): Refurbishment of the Zeughaus

The baroque Zeughaus, originally an arsenal and now home to the German Historical Museum, is among the most impressive buildings on Berlin’s famous Unter den Linden boulevard. Today, the Zeughaus presents around 2000 years of German history. From mid-2021, the Zeughaus will be closed for around four years for a major renovation. The façade of the 300-year-old baroque building will be restored, and the interior given a modern air conditioning system. After completion of the work, the Zeughaus is set to reopen in late 2025. During the refurbishment, the Pei Building, the museum’s modern exhibition hall supplementing the historic Zeughaus, will remain open to the public.

The Pergamon Museum: Refurbishment of the Pergamon Altar Hall and the North Wing

Berlin’s Pergamon Museum (Pergamonmuseum)attracts more visitors than any other museum in the city. Under the Museum Island Master Plan, it is now being refurbished in a series of stages. The Roman monumental altar, nearly 2000 years old, is the heart of the museum. At present, the Pergamon Altar Hall and the North Wing, with other exhibits from the Collection of Classical Antiquities, are both closed. The original Pergamon Altar covered an area of around 1200 square metres. The sculpted pedestal frieze panels on show, each two-and-a-half-metres high, depict the spectacular battle between the Olympian gods and the Giants. In 2025, the refurbished and modernised Altar Hall and North Wing will be reopened. Until then, the Pergamon Museum. The Panorama, a 360-degree exhibition directly opposite the Museum Island, offers a fascinating taste of the Pergamon Altar experience.

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Photo Credit: visitBerlin, Nele Niederstadt

Expanding the Cultural Forum (Kulturforum)

The Museum of the Twentieth Century

Over the coming years, the Museum of the Twentieth Century is to be constructed close to Potsdamer Platz in the heart of Berlin. Located between the New National Gallery (Neue Nationalgalerie) and Berlin’s renowned Philharmonic Hall, the new museum represents a major step towards completing the Kulturforum. After opening, the museum will have around 9000 square metres of exhibition space to show major works from the second half of the twentieth century. The museum has been designed by the Swiss architectural office Herzog & de Meuron. The striking interior design includes two intersecting boulevards inviting visitors to explore the museum. On two different levels, the boulevards run north-south and east-west, opening up diverse views of the exhibition rooms and the artworks. The museum is scheduled to be completed in 2026.

Developments in Berlin’s historical core

The House of One

A new and unique multifaith centre, the House of One will be constructed on the old St. Peter’s Church site going back around 800 years to when Berlin was founded. Perfectly capturing the project’s vision, the new building by the Kuehn Malvezzi architectural office has a large central domed hall linking the prayer rooms of the three major monotheistic religions – a mosque, a synagogue, and a church. The House of One is a house of worship and interfaith dialogue between religious communities, a place of peaceful coexistence, tolerance, and mutual understanding. The festive groundbreaking ceremony is scheduled for 27 May 2021, and the building is expected to be completed in three to four years. The building is planned to start in 2021 with the opening in 2024/2025.

Archaeological House on Petriplatz square

With excavations on Petriplatz uncovering traces of the city’s history as a medieval settlement, the square is ideal for Berlin’s new visitors centre for archaeological sites. The interactive displays in the multi-storey modern building take real-life examples to explain archaeological processes, from excavating an object to restoration and archiving. Uniquely, with the Archaeological House also an archaeological site under excavation, the archaeologists’ tasks can be presented in showcase workshops. The Archaeological House will not only also exhibit archaeological finds but offer events and seminars in a vibrant forum of exchange between experts and the general public. The groundbreaking ceremony is scheduled for 2023 with the opening at the end of that same year.

Find out more about events taking place in Berlin at https://about.visitberlin.de/en

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