16 Best Sights in Kreuzberg, Berlin

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We've compiled the best of the best in Kreuzberg - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Berlinische Galerie

Kreuzberg Fodor's Choice

Talk about site-specific art: all the modern art, photography, and architecture models and plans here, created between 1870 and the present, were made in Berlin (or in the case of architecture competition models, intended for the city). Russians, secessionists, Dadaists, and expressionists all had their day in Berlin, and individual works by Otto Dix, George Grosz, and Georg Baselitz, as well as artists' archives such as the Dadaist Hannah Höch's, are highlights. Special exhibitions are usually well attended and quite worthwhile.

Gropius Bau

Kreuzberg Fodor's Choice

This magnificent palazzo-like exhibition hall first opened in 1881, and once housed Berlin's Arts and Crafts Museum. Its architect, Martin Gropius, was the great-uncle of Walter Gropius, the Bauhaus architect who also worked in Berlin. The international, changing exhibits on art and culture have included Painting in the US and USSR 1960–1990; a Yayoi Kusama retrospective; Art, Craft, and Concept in Berlin; and fabric-based works from Louise Bourgeois.

Blain|Southern

Schöneberg

The Berlin branch of a swish London gallery, Blain|Southern occupies a breathtaking loft space that once housed the printing presses of Tagesspiegel, the daily Berlin newspaper. Since opening in 2010, the gallery has highlighted star artists like Douglas Gordon, Lawrence Weiner, and Jannis Kounellis.

Potsdamerstr. 77–87, Berlin, 10785, Germany
030-6449–31510
Sight Details
Tues.–Sat. 11–6

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Deutsches Technikmuseum

Kreuzberg

A must if you're traveling with children, this museum will enchant anyone who's interested in technology or fascinated with trains, planes, and automobiles. Set in the remains of Anhalter Bahnhof's industrial yard and enhanced with a glass-enclosed wing, the museum has several floors of machinery, including two airplane rooms on the upper floors crowned with a "Rosinenbomber," one of the beloved airplanes that delivered supplies to Tempelhof Airport during the Berlin Airlift of 1948. Don't miss the train sheds, which are like three-dimensional, walkable timelines of trains throughout history.

Galeria Plan B

Schöneberg

In March 2012, Romanian gallery Plan B moved into an industrial space deep within the Tagesspiegel building complex. This is the place to see offbeat Eastern European art.

Potsdamerstr. 77–87, Berlin, 10785, Germany
030-3980–5236
Sight Details
Tues.–Sat. noon–6

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Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi

Schöneberg

Bortolozzi consistently spots and cultivates the hottest young talent in the city (like Danh Vo), showing their work in a quirky, wood-paneled space.

Schöneberger Ufer 61, Berlin, 10785, Germany
030-2639–7620
Sight Details
Tues.–Sat. noon–6 pm

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Galerie Verein Berliner Künstler

Schöneberg

Founded in 1841, this is the oldest artist association in Germany. Its lavish townhouse gallery spaces often highlight the work of its 120-odd artist members.

Schöneberger Ufer 57, Berlin, 10785, Germany
030-261–2399
Sight Details
Tues.–Fri. 3–7, weekends 2–6

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Liquidrom

Kreuzberg

Germans love their thermal baths and saunas, and this is one of the classiest around. The dramatic main thermal pool lies under a vaulted ceiling, where glowing lights and soothing music that can be heard underwater enhance a feeling of calm. In addition to several saunas and a steam room, take advantage of the outdoor hot tub in the enclosed courtyard, best at night under stars. There's a bar and a healthy snack menu, just in case all that relaxation leaves you hungry. Full nudity is to be expected here, even in coed areas.

Möckernstr. 10, Berlin, 10963, Germany
030-2580–07820
Sight Details
€19.50 for 2 hrs, €24.50 for 4 hrs, €29.50 whole day
Sun.–Thurs. 9 am–midnight, Fri. and Sat. 9 am–1 am

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Museum der Dinge

Kreuzberg

The Museum der Dinge or “Museum of Things” is exactly that—a collection of stuff that represents the best, the worst, and the quirkiest in 20th-century and contemporary design. Although there are a lot of things here, a museum for hoarders this is not. The objects come from the archive of the Deutsches Werkbund (DWB), a hundred-year-old, quasi-utopian consortium that sought perfection in everyday construction and design. The thousands of things are housed in a former factory building on Kreuzberg’s busy Oranienstrasse and arranged beautifully by color, material, or use. Browsing the exhibition, one is hit not only by the sheer volume of what was created in the last century, but also by the impressive range—Soviet kitsch toys stand near mobile phones, delicate dishware next to industrial tools. Don’t miss the so-called Frankfurt Kitchen a space-saving prototype kitchen from the 1920s that was meant to be replicated over 10,000 times in various housing estates.

Oranienstr. 25, Berlin, 10999, Germany
030-9210--6311
Sight Details
€6
Thurs.--Mon. 12--7
Closed Tues. and Wed.

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Park am Gleisdreieck

Kreuzberg

Like the more glamorous Tempelhof Park, Gleisdreieck, one of Berlin's newest green spaces, was until recently neglected space—in this case, abandoned and overgrown WWII railyards. In between the Kreuzberg and Schöneberg neighborhoods, the park includes playgrounds and open meadows, paths for running and biking, pits for skateboarding, and even a community garden. Most interesting, however, are the remnants of the park’s past: train tracks, signs, and switches have been left intact (if a bit rusty), making this park an urban paradise of the sort Berliners love—one with history hiding in the grass.

Planet Modulor

Kreuzberg

Billed as a creative center, this complex of shops, offices, and meeting spaces on Moritzplatz is a step toward revitalizing the once-shabby and still fairly empty square. Its unusual, hulking shape seems designed to attract attention; it may also inspire some local disdain. But one visit is all it takes to appreciate how well the complex represents the Berlin aesthetic: small and mid-size companies share space with craft and designer workshops, an art bookstore, a café, an outpost of the beloved kitchenware company Coledampf’s, and even a kindergarten.

Prinzenstr. 85, Berlin, 10969, Germany
030-690–360
Sight Details
Weekdays 9–8, Sat. 10–6

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Prinzessinnengarten

Kreuzberg

This charming urban garden on the bustling Kreuzberg hub of Moritzplatz perfectly encapsulates the Berlin DIY spirit. Starting with little more than 100 wooden packing crates and an idea, the founders of the Prinzessinnengarten have created an entirely movable source of fruit, vegetables, flowers, and herbs. The café on the premises serves a daily menu of small dishes sourced directly from the garden, while a series of lectures and events facilitate interaction between gardening experts and local enthusiasts. Whether you come just to look, to taste, or to grab a bunch of gardening tools and dig in, the gardens offer a chance to stop, breathe, and enjoy a bit of open space in one of the city’s most densely packed quarters.

Prinzenstr. 35–38/Prinzessinnenstr. 15, Berlin, 20969, Germany
Sight Details
Apr.–Oct., daily

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Sommer & Kohl

Schöneberg

In what was once a mattress factory, Patricia Kohl and Salome Sommer show mostly young, international artists.

Kurfürstenstr. 13/14, Berlin, 10785, Germany
030-2300–5581
Sight Details
Wed.–Sat. 11–6, Sun.–Tues. by appt.

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St. Agnes Kirche und König Galerie

Kreuzberg

Hidden away in a part of Kreuzberg most visitors don’t reach, St. Agnes, a Catholic church turned contemporary art gallery, is hardly a looker—unless you like the bulky, boxy concrete shapes that characterize Brutalist architecture. Gallerist Johann König took over the 1960s building in 2012 and opened it as an exhibition center, which was redesigned again in 2015 by Arno Brandlhuber to include additional gallery space for the König Galerie.

Alexandrinenstr. 118–121, Berlin, 10969, Germany
030-2610–3080
Sight Details
Tues.–Sat. 11–6, Sun. 1–6 during exhibitions

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Supportico Lopez

Schöneberg

Recently joining Sommer + Kohl's courtyard (in the empire owned by Scottish artist Douglas Gordon, whose studio is upstairs), Supportico Lopez is a curator's and art-lover's dream. No wonder: it started as a curatorial project in Naples, and reflects curators Gigiotto Del Vecchio and Stefania Palumbo’s vision.

Kurfürstenstr. 14/b, Berlin, 10785, Germany
030-3198–9387
Sight Details
Tues.–Sat. 11–6

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Viktoriapark

Kreuzberg

A neighborhood favorite, the small Viktoriapark offers one of the highest lookout points in the city center—and definitely the best place to get a free panoramic view. Beginning at the edge of the park, all trails gradually slope upward; at the top stands an elaborate cast-iron monument designed by Karl Friedrich Schinkel in 1821 to commemorate the so-called liberation wars against Napoléon of 1813–15. On the way back down, take the path heading to Kreuzbergstrasse, next to which a lovely little waterfall trips and burbles over rocks and boulders—a favorite splashing spot for local children.

Berlin, 10965, Germany

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