manuel cohen

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Berlin

1063 images Created 10 Sep 2014

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  • The Brandenburg Gate or Brandenburger Tor, 18th century, a neoclassical triumphal arch marking one of the old city gates of Berlin, at the end of Unter den Linden, Berlin, Germany. The gate was commissioned by King Frederick William II of Prussia as a sign of peace and built by Carl Gotthard Langhans 1788-91. It stood inaccessible next to the Berlin Wall during Germany's Partition and was restored 2000-02 by the Stiftung Denkmalschutz Berlin. It consists of 12 Doric columns and is topped by a statue of a quadriga, a chariot pulled by 4 horses. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0385.jpg
  • The Berliner Philharmonie concert hall, home to the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, built 1960-63 by Hans Sharoun, Tiergarten, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0384.jpg
  • The Berliner Philharmonie concert hall, home to the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, built 1960-63 by Hans Sharoun, Tiergarten, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0383.jpg
  • The Otto Bock Science Center, or Muscle House, a museum dedicated to themes of movement funded by the prothesis manufacturer Otto Bock, opened 2010, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0382.jpg
  • Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, or Denkmal fur die ermordeten Juden Europas, a memorial in Berlin to the Jewish victims of the Holocaust, designed by architect Peter Eisenman and engineer Buro Happold, opened in 2005, Friedrichstadt, Berlin, Germany. The monument consists of 2711 concrete stelae of different heights arranged in a grid over a sloping site and the information centre contains a list of the names of all known Jewish holocaust victims. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0381.jpg
  • The Nikolaikirche or St Nicholas Church, built 1220-30, the oldest church in Berlin, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The church was restored in the 1980s by the former East Germany, the German Democratic Republic. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0380.jpg
  • Housing in the Nikolai district, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0379.jpg
  • Alexanderplatz, with the Fernsehturm or TV Tower in the distance, built 1965-69 in the former East Berlin, Germany. The tower is 368m tall and the tallest structure in Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0378.jpg
  • Alexanderplatz seen from Karl Marx Allee, with the Fernsehturm or TV Tower in the distance, built 1965-69 in the former East Berlin, Germany. The tower is 368m tall and the tallest structure in Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0377.jpg
  • Reflection of the Fernsehturm or TV Tower, built 1965-69 in the former East Berlin, Alexanderplatz, Berlin, Germany. The tower is 368m tall and the tallest structure in Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0376.jpg
  • The Berolinahaus, built 1929-32 by Peter Behrens, used for retail and offices, on the Alexanderplatz, Berlin, Germany. This classical modernist building has been protected since 1975 as an example of the Neuen Sachlichkeit or New Objectivity style. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0375.jpg
  • Apartment building with a restaurant on the ground floor and a mural painted on the wall, Kreuzberg, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0374.jpg
  • Reichstag building, opened 1894, seat of the German parliament and meeting place of the Bundestag, refurbished by Norman Foster 1990-99, including the addition of the huge glass dome, Berlin, Germany. The building sits on the river Spree. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0128.jpg
  • Paul-Lobe-Haus at night, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2001, a government building for the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, on the banks of the river Spree on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is connected to the Chancellery and together with the Marie-Elisabeth-Luders House on the opposite side of the Spree it forms a formal and functional whole. The building contains more than 900 offices for the parliamentary deputies. It is named after Paul Lobe, 1875-1967, the last democratic president of the Weimar Republic. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0127.jpg
  • Reichstag building, opened 1894, seat of the German parliament and meeting place of the Bundestag, refurbished by Norman Foster 1990-99, including the addition of the huge glass dome, Berlin, Germany. The building sits on the river Spree. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0126.jpg
  • The Marie-Elisabeth Luders building at night, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2003, the scientific service centre of the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, opened 2003, on the East bank of the river Spree opposite the Reichstag on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is named after Marie-Elisabeth Luders, 1878-1966, German politician and important figure in the German women's rights movement. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0125.jpg
  • The Marie-Elisabeth Luders building at night, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2003, the scientific service centre of the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, opened 2003, on the East bank of the river Spree opposite the Reichstag on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is named after Marie-Elisabeth Luders, 1878-1966, German politician and important figure in the German women's rights movement. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0124.jpg
  • The Marie-Elisabeth Luders building at night, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2003, the scientific service centre of the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, opened 2003, on the East bank of the river Spree opposite the Reichstag on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is named after Marie-Elisabeth Luders, 1878-1966, German politician and important figure in the German women's rights movement. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0123.jpg
  • Paul-Lobe-Haus, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2001, a government building for the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, on the banks of the river Spree on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is connected to the Chancellery and together with the Marie-Elisabeth-Luders House on the opposite side of the Spree it forms a formal and functional whole. The building contains more than 900 offices for the parliamentary deputies. It is named after Paul Lobe, 1875-1967, the last democratic president of the Weimar Republic. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0122.jpg
  • Paul-Lobe-Haus, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2001, a government building for the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, on the banks of the river Spree on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is connected to the Chancellery and together with the Marie-Elisabeth-Luders House on the opposite side of the Spree it forms a formal and functional whole. The building contains more than 900 offices for the parliamentary deputies. It is named after Paul Lobe, 1875-1967, the last democratic president of the Weimar Republic. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0121.jpg
  • Paul-Lobe-Haus, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2001, a government building for the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, on the banks of the river Spree on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is connected to the Chancellery and together with the Marie-Elisabeth-Luders House on the opposite side of the Spree it forms a formal and functional whole. The building contains more than 900 offices for the parliamentary deputies. It is named after Paul Lobe, 1875-1967, the last democratic president of the Weimar Republic. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0120.jpg
  • The Marie-Elisabeth Luders building, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2003, the scientific service centre of the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, opened 2003, on the East bank of the river Spree opposite the Reichstag on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is named after Marie-Elisabeth Luders, 1878-1966, German politician and important figure in the German women's rights movement. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0119.jpg
  • The Marie-Elisabeth Luders building, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2003, the scientific service centre of the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, opened 2003, on the East bank of the river Spree opposite the Reichstag on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is named after Marie-Elisabeth Luders, 1878-1966, German politician and important figure in the German women's rights movement. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0118.jpg
  • Inside the Paul-Lobe-Haus at night, by architect Stephane Braunfels, 2001, a government building for the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, on the banks of the river Spree on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is connected to the Chancellery and together with the Marie-Elisabeth-Luders House on the opposite side of the Spree it forms a formal and functional whole. The building contains more than 900 offices for the parliamentary deputies. It is named after Paul Lobe, 1875-1967, the last democratic president of the Weimar Republic. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0117.jpg
  • Entrance to the Bundestag U-Bahn underground railway station at night, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0116.jpg
  • Paul-Lobe-Haus, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2001, a government building for the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, on the banks of the river Spree on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is connected to the Chancellery and together with the Marie-Elisabeth-Luders House on the opposite side of the Spree it forms a formal and functional whole. The building contains more than 900 offices for the parliamentary deputies. It is named after Paul Lobe, 1875-1967, the last democratic president of the Weimar Republic. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0115.jpg
  • Paul-Lobe-Haus reflecting the German flag, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2001, a government building for the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, on the banks of the river Spree on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is connected to the Chancellery and together with the Marie-Elisabeth-Luders House on the opposite side of the Spree it forms a formal and functional whole. The building contains more than 900 offices for the parliamentary deputies. It is named after Paul Lobe, 1875-1967, the last democratic president of the Weimar Republic. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0114.jpg
  • Paul-Lobe-Haus reflecting the sunset skies, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2001, a government building for the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, on the banks of the river Spree on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is connected to the Chancellery and together with the Marie-Elisabeth-Luders House on the opposite side of the Spree it forms a formal and functional whole. The building contains more than 900 offices for the parliamentary deputies. It is named after Paul Lobe, 1875-1967, the last democratic president of the Weimar Republic. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0113.jpg
  • Paul-Lobe-Haus, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2001, a government building for the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, on the banks of the river Spree on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is connected to the Chancellery and together with the Marie-Elisabeth-Luders House on the opposite side of the Spree it forms a formal and functional whole. The building contains more than 900 offices for the parliamentary deputies. It is named after Paul Lobe, 1875-1967, the last democratic president of the Weimar Republic. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0112.jpg
  • Paul-Lobe-Haus, architect Stephane Braunfels, 2001, a government building for the new parliamentary complex in the new government quarter of Berlin, on the banks of the river Spree on Federal Row, Berlin, Germany. It is connected to the Chancellery and together with the Marie-Elisabeth-Luders House on the opposite side of the Spree it forms a formal and functional whole. The building contains more than 900 offices for the parliamentary deputies. It is named after Paul Lobe, 1875-1967, the last democratic president of the Weimar Republic. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0111.jpg
  • Steel sculpture, 2000, entitled 'Berlin' by Eduardo Chillida, 1924-2002, at the entrance to the German Chancellery or Bundeskanzleramt, a federal agency serving the executive office of the Chancellor, the head of the German federal government, opened 2001, Willy-Brandt-Strasse, Berlin, Germany. The building was designed by Charlotte Frank and Axel Schultes in post-modernist style. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0110.jpg
  • Entrance to the German Chancellery or Bundeskanzleramt, a federal agency serving the executive office of the Chancellor, the head of the German federal government, opened 2001, Willy-Brandt-Strasse, Berlin, Germany. The building was designed by Charlotte Frank and Axel Schultes in post-modernist style. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0109.jpg
  • The German Chancellery or Bundeskanzleramt, post-modernist style building by Charlotte Frank and Axel Schultes, the personal offices of the Chancellor and the Chancellery staff, opened 2001, Willy-Brandt-Strasse, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0108.jpg
  • Inside the German Chancellery or Bundeskanzleramt, post-modernist style building by Charlotte Frank and Axel Schultes, the personal offices of the Chancellor and the Chancellery staff, opened 2001, Willy-Brandt-Strasse, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0107.jpg
  • Inside the German Chancellery or Bundeskanzleramt, post-modernist style building by Charlotte Frank and Axel Schultes, the personal offices of the Chancellor and the Chancellery staff, opened 2001, Willy-Brandt-Strasse, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0106.jpg
  • Reichstag building, opened 1894, seat of the German parliament and meeting place of the Bundestag, refurbished by Norman Foster 1990-99, including the addition of the huge glass dome, Berlin, Germany. A frieze below the pediment reads 'Dem Deutschen Volke' or To The German People. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0105.jpg
  • The Brandenburg Gate or Brandenburger Tor, 18th century, a neoclassical triumphal arch marking one of the old city gates of Berlin, at the end of Unter den Linden, Berlin, Germany. The gate was commissioned by King Frederick William II of Prussia as a sign of peace and built by Carl Gotthard Langhans 1788-91. It stood inaccessible next to the Berlin Wall during Germany's Partition and was restored 2000-02 by the Stiftung Denkmalschutz Berlin. It consists of 12 Doric columns and is topped by a statue of a quadriga, a chariot pulled by 4 horses. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0104.jpg
  • The Brandenburg Gate or Brandenburger Tor, 18th century, a neoclassical triumphal arch marking one of the old city gates of Berlin, at the end of Unter den Linden, Berlin, Germany. The gate was commissioned by King Frederick William II of Prussia as a sign of peace and built by Carl Gotthard Langhans 1788-91. It stood inaccessible next to the Berlin Wall during Germany's Partition and was restored 2000-02 by the Stiftung Denkmalschutz Berlin. It consists of 12 Doric columns and is topped by a statue of a quadriga, a chariot pulled by 4 horses. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0103.jpg
  • Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, or Denkmal fur die ermordeten Juden Europas, a memorial in Berlin to the Jewish victims of the Holocaust, designed by architect Peter Eisenman and engineer Buro Happold, opened in 2005, Friedrichstadt, Berlin, Germany. The monument consists of 2711 concrete stelae of different heights arranged in a grid over a sloping site and the information centre contains a list of the names of all known Jewish holocaust victims. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0101.jpg
  • Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, or Denkmal fur die ermordeten Juden Europas, a memorial in Berlin to the Jewish victims of the Holocaust, designed by architect Peter Eisenman and engineer Buro Happold, opened in 2005, Friedrichstadt, Berlin, Germany. The monument consists of 2711 concrete stelae of different heights arranged in a grid over a sloping site and the information centre contains a list of the names of all known Jewish holocaust victims. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0100.jpg
  • Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, or Denkmal fur die ermordeten Juden Europas, a memorial in Berlin to the Jewish victims of the Holocaust, designed by architect Peter Eisenman and engineer Buro Happold, opened in 2005, Friedrichstadt, Berlin, Germany. The monument consists of 2711 concrete stelae of different heights arranged in a grid over a sloping site and the information centre contains a list of the names of all known Jewish holocaust victims. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0099.jpg
  • Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, or Denkmal fur die ermordeten Juden Europas, a memorial in Berlin to the Jewish victims of the Holocaust, designed by architect Peter Eisenman and engineer Buro Happold, opened in 2005, Friedrichstadt, Berlin, Germany. The monument consists of 2711 concrete stelae of different heights arranged in a grid over a sloping site and the information centre contains a list of the names of all known Jewish holocaust victims. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0098.jpg
  • Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, or Denkmal fur die ermordeten Juden Europas, a memorial in Berlin to the Jewish victims of the Holocaust, designed by architect Peter Eisenman and engineer Buro Happold, opened in 2005, Friedrichstadt, Berlin, Germany. The monument consists of 2711 concrete stelae of different heights arranged in a grid over a sloping site and the information centre contains a list of the names of all known Jewish holocaust victims. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0097.jpg
  • Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, or Denkmal fur die ermordeten Juden Europas, a memorial in Berlin to the Jewish victims of the Holocaust, designed by architect Peter Eisenman and engineer Buro Happold, opened in 2005, Friedrichstadt, Berlin, Germany. The monument consists of 2711 concrete stelae of different heights arranged in a grid over a sloping site and the information centre contains a list of the names of all known Jewish holocaust victims. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0096.JPG
  • Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, or Denkmal fur die ermordeten Juden Europas, a memorial in Berlin to the Jewish victims of the Holocaust, designed by architect Peter Eisenman and engineer Buro Happold, opened in 2005, Friedrichstadt, Berlin, Germany. The monument consists of 2711 concrete stelae of different heights arranged in a grid over a sloping site and the information centre contains a list of the names of all known Jewish holocaust victims. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0095.jpg
  • Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, or Denkmal fur die ermordeten Juden Europas, a memorial in Berlin to the Jewish victims of the Holocaust, designed by architect Peter Eisenman and engineer Buro Happold, opened in 2005, Friedrichstadt, Berlin, Germany. The monument consists of 2711 concrete stelae of different heights arranged in a grid over a sloping site and the information centre contains a list of the names of all known Jewish holocaust victims. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0094.jpg
  • Section of the Berlin Wall covered in graffiti in the Potsdamerplatz, Berlin, Germany. The Berlin Wall was constructed in 1961 by East Germany, the former GDR, to surround West Berlin, and was brought down in 1989. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0093.jpg
  • The Berliner Philharmonie concert hall, home to the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, built 1960-63 by Hans Sharoun, Tiergarten, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0092.jpg
  • Kulturforum, a collection of cultural buildings developed in the 1950s and 1960s in West Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0091.jpg
  • The Berliner Philharmonie concert hall, home to the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, built 1960-63 by Hans Sharoun, seen from the Kulturforum, Tiergarten, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0090.jpg
  • The Kunstgewerbemuseum or Museum of Decorative Arts building, opened 1985, in the Kulturforum, a collection of cultural buildings developed in the 1950s and 1960s in West Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0089.jpg
  • The Berliner Philharmonie concert hall, home to the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, built 1960-63 by Hans Sharoun, seen from the Kulturforum, Tiergarten, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0088.jpg
  • The Kunstgewerbemuseum or Museum of Decorative Arts building, opened 1985, in the Kulturforum, a collection of cultural buildings developed in the 1950s and 1960s in West Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0087.jpg
  • Sculptures in the Kulturforum, a collection of cultural buildings developed in the 1950s and 1960s, and behind, the art library of Berlin State Museums and St Matthaus-Kirche, Matthaikirchplatz 6, West Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0086.jpg
  • The Kulturforum, a collection of cultural buildings developed in the 1950s and 1960s in West Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0085.jpg
  • The Berliner Philharmonie concert hall, home to the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, built 1960-63 by Hans Sharoun, Tiergarten, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0084.jpg
  • The Berliner Philharmonie concert hall, home to the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, built 1960-63 by Hans Sharoun, Tiergarten, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0083.jpg
  • Courtyard of the Sony Center, designed by Helmut Jahn, on Potsdamer Platz, Berlin, Germany. The building complex opened in 2000 and is home to Sony's European headquarters. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0082.jpg
  • Courtyard of the Sony Center, designed by Helmut Jahn, on Potsdamer Platz, Berlin, Germany. The building complex opened in 2000 and is home to Sony's European headquarters. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0081.jpg
  • Courtyard of the Sony Center, designed by Helmut Jahn, on Potsdamer Platz, Berlin, Germany. The building complex opened in 2000 and is home to Sony's European headquarters. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0080.jpg
  • Looking up at the glass roof of the Sony Center, designed by Helmut Jahn, on Potsdamer Platz, Berlin, Germany. The building complex opened in 2000 and is home to Sony's European headquarters. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0079.jpg
  • Woman walking underneath a building supported by giant columns on Potsdamer Platz, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0078.jpg
  • Glass portico over the remains of the breakfast room of Grand Hotel Esplanade in Potsdamerplatz, Berlin, Germany. The Grand Hotel Esplanade was opened in 1908 and then bombed during the WW2. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0077.jpg
  • Potsdamer Platz with entrance to the train station or Bahnhof, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0076.jpg
  • Entrance to the Bahnhof or train station on Potsdamer Platz, with people riding bikes, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0075.jpg
  • Concourse of the train station or Bahnhof at Potsdamer Platz, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0074.jpg
  • Section of the Berlin Wall covered in graffiti in the Potsdamerplatz, Berlin, Germany. The Berlin Wall was constructed in 1961 by East Germany, the former GDR, to surround West Berlin, and was brought down in 1989. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0073.jpg
  • Detail of the Berlin Wall covered in graffiti in the Potsdamerplatz, Berlin, Germany. The Berlin Wall was constructed in 1961 by East Germany, the former GDR, to surround West Berlin, and was brought down in 1989. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0072.jpg
  • Section of the Berlin Wall covered in graffiti in the Potsdamerplatz, Berlin, Germany. The Berlin Wall was constructed in 1961 by East Germany, the former GDR, to surround West Berlin, and was brought down in 1989. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0071.jpg
  • Detail of the Berlin Wall covered in graffiti in the Potsdamerplatz, Berlin, Germany. The Berlin Wall was constructed in 1961 by East Germany, the former GDR, to surround West Berlin, and was brought down in 1989. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0070.jpg
  • Detail of the Berlin Wall covered in graffiti in the Potsdamerplatz, Berlin, Germany. The Berlin Wall was constructed in 1961 by East Germany, the former GDR, to surround West Berlin, and was brought down in 1989. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0069.jpg
  • Detail of the Berlin Wall covered in graffiti and chewing gum in the Potsdamerplatz, Berlin, Germany. The Berlin Wall was constructed in 1961 by East Germany, the former GDR, to surround West Berlin, and was brought down in 1989. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0068.jpg
  • Entrance to the Bahnhof or train station on Potsdamer Platz, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0067.jpg
  • Entrance to the Bahnhof or train station on Potsdamer Platz, with people riding bikes, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0066.jpg
  • Glass portico over the remains of the breakfast room of Grand Hotel Esplanade in Potsdamerplatz, Berlin, Germany. The Grand Hotel Esplanade was opened in 1908 and then bombed during the WW2. Behind the roof of the Sony Center, designed by Helmut Jahn and opened in 2000, is visible. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0065.jpg
  • Corner of Potsdamer Platz with clock tower and Wurttemberg AG Insurance Company offices, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0064.jpg
  • Entrance to the Bahnhof or train station on Potsdamer Platz, with people riding bikes and skyscraper behind, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0063.jpg
  • Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, or Denkmal fur die ermordeten Juden Europas, a memorial in Berlin to the Jewish victims of the Holocaust, designed by architect Peter Eisenman and engineer Buro Happold, opened in 2005, Friedrichstadt, Berlin, Germany. The monument consists of 2711 concrete stelae of different heights arranged in a grid over a sloping site and the information centre contains a list of the names of all known Jewish holocaust victims. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0062.JPG
  • Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, or Denkmal fur die ermordeten Juden Europas, a memorial in Berlin to the Jewish victims of the Holocaust, designed by architect Peter Eisenman and engineer Buro Happold, opened in 2005, Friedrichstadt, Berlin, Germany. The monument consists of 2711 concrete stelae of different heights arranged in a grid over a sloping site and the information centre contains a list of the names of all known Jewish holocaust victims. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0061.jpg
  • Pipes in front of the Bauakademie or Building Academy, originally built 1832-36 by Karl Friedrich Schinkel, home to architectural institutions and universities until it was demolished in 1962 and in 2000 this temporary structure was built resembling the original building, while plans to rebuild it are discussed, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0060.jpg
  • Schinkelplatz, named after Karl Friedrich Schinkel, undergoing restoration works, with the Berliner Dom or Cathedral in the distance, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0059.jpg
  • Building works with several cranes at Kupfergraben and Schlossplatz, with the Fernsehturm or TV Tower and the Berliner Dom or Cathedral in the distance, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0058.jpg
  • Bauakademie or Building Academy, originally built 1832-36 by Karl Friedrich Schinkel, home to architectural institutions and universities until it was demolished in 1962 and in 2000 this temporary structure was built resembling the original building, while plans to rebuild it are discussed, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0057.jpg
  • Bauakademie or Building Academy, originally built 1832-36 by Karl Friedrich Schinkel, home to architectural institutions and universities until it was demolished in 1962 and in 2000 this temporary structure was built resembling the original building, while plans to rebuild it are discussed, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0056.jpg
  • Propstrasse Platz with its cafes, and in the distance, the Nikolaikirche, built 1220-30, the oldest church in Berlin, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0055.jpg
  • The Ephraim Palais, bought in 1762 and remodelled in Rococo style by Veitel Heime Ephraim, an important Jewish merchant and banker, now a museum, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0054.jpg
  • Houses on Propstrasse, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0053.jpg
  • Bronze statue of The Allegory of Science, a man holding an open book and a globe, by Albert Wolff, 1814-97, with the Nikolaikirche behind, Nikolai district, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0052.jpg
  • Facade of a modern building with shops on the ground floor on Grunerstrasse near Alexanderplatz, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0051.jpg
  • The Rotes Rathaus or Red City Hall, seat of the mayor and senate of the state of Berlin, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. The Rathaus was built 1861-69 by Hermann Friedrich Waesemann in Italian Renaissance style. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0050.jpg
  • Sculpture of Christ with his crown of thorns on the cross in front of the ruins of the Franziskaner-Klosterkirche or Franciscan Monastery Church, c. 1250, destroyed during World War Two, on Waisenstrasse, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0049.JPG
  • Ruins of the Franziskaner-Klosterkirche or Franciscan Monastery Church, c. 1250, destroyed during World War Two, on Waisenstrasse, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0048.jpg
  • Sculpture of Christ with his crown of thorns on the cross in front of the ruins of the Franziskaner-Klosterkirche or Franciscan Monastery Church, c. 1250, destroyed during World War Two, on Waisenstrasse, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0047.jpg
  • The Hans Litten Bar Association, Germany's Bar Association was renamed after Hans Litten, 1903-38, a German lawyer who opposed the Nazis in political trials before World War Two, Littenstrasse, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0046.jpg
  • Ruins of the Franziskaner-Klosterkirche or Franciscan Monastery Church, c. 1250, destroyed during World War Two, on Waisenstrasse, Mitte, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0045.JPG
  • Multi-storey car park at Grunerstrasse near Alexanderplatz, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0044.jpg
  • Multi-storey car park at Grunerstrasse near Alexanderplatz, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0043.jpg
  • Alexanderplatz, with the Berolinahaus and U-Bahn station and the Fernsehturm or TV Tower in the distance, built 1965-69 in the former East Berlin, Germany. The tower is 368m tall and the tallest structure in Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0042.jpg
  • Frieze on a building on the junction of Karl Marx Allee and Otto-Brown Strasse, Art Deco style, with shop below, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0041.jpg
  • Haus des Lehrers or House of the Teachers, built 1962-64 in East Germany or the GDR, with a mosaic mural by Walter Womacka entitled Unser Leben or Our Life, depicting various occupations in East Berlin, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0040.jpg
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