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Hackescher Markt ("Hacke's Market")

Hackescher Markt is the creative core of the capital near Alexanderplatz and Friedrichstraße. The transformation of the market began directly after the fall of the Berlin Wall, when numerous creative artists and fashion designers shaped the place into a creative center of the city. The Hackesche Höfe were also extensively renovated after the fall of the Wall. To this day, they are home to numerous workshops in the fields of fashion, design, jewelry, art and culture. Numerous gastronomic establishments have also settled here.
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Brandenburg Gate

The Brandenburg Gate is the most important landmark of the city and the symbolic place for the unity of Germany. Built in the years 1788 to 1791 according to the designs of Carl Gotthard Langhans, it is modeled on the Propylaea of the Acropolis. In 1793, the Brandenburg Gate was expanded with the addition of Johann Gottfried Shadow's Quadriga. While today the Brandenburg Gate is a symbol of unity, during the time of the GDR it was one of the symbols of German division.
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Bikini Berlin

Bikini House Berlin was designed and built in the 1950s as an industrial building. Later it was also used as a commercial and office building. The entire building ensemble was realized with funding from the Marshall Plan. Today, the complex is a listed building and home to a variety of original and international stores, boutiques, flagship stores and restaurants.
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German Parliament

The Reichstag building is one of the most prominent landmarks of the capital Berlin and an integral part of a city tour of Berlin. During the construction of the Berlin Reichstag, influences from the Renaissance, Baroque and Classicism were processed, so that a magnificent building was created. This had to be restored by the destruction in the First World War as well as the Second World War. Today, the Berlin Reichstag is the seat of the German Bundestag.
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Das Mauermuseum – Museum Haus am Checkpoint Charlie

Das Mauermuseum – Museum Haus am Checkpoint Charlie wurde kurz nach dem Bau der Berliner Mauer im August 1961 gegründet und im Oktober 1962 eröffnet. Sein Gründer, Dr. Rainer Hildebrandt, setzte sich am Checkpoint Charlie für die Opfer der Mauer ein und half denen, die nach Freiheit suchten. Das Museum beherbergt Zeugnisse erfolgreicher Fluchten und ist ein Museum des internationalen gewaltfreien Kampfes.
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