How to Spend One Day in Berlin

I Love Berlin

Whilst 24 hours isn’t enough time to get fully acquainted with a city, that’s all I the time I had on my recent trip to Germany’s capital city. I arrived in the morning at Circus Hostel and only had one day in Berlin to explore the major sights before getting a bus the following day to Oktoberfest in Munich. As you can imagine, I was keen to cram in as much as possible on my one night stand with Berlin.

I’ve heard a lot of backpackers rave about Berlin- mainly about the nightlife and the amazing kebabs. But aside from its complicated and tumultuous history, I really didn’t know much else about Berlin when I arrived.

The city is edgy and industrial-looking, and whilst I didn’t find it to be the most attractive city, I liked the cool vibe; the vintage clothing shops, the kebab places, the great Asian restaurants, the hostels and the non-stop party scene.

Lots of backpackers seem to stay in Berlin a while, which is understandable with the cheap food, the array of walking tours and the fact that the city never sleeps.

Whilst I preferred Munich to Berlin, I’d like to go back and spend some more time there.

If you want to do Berlin in one day though, here’s what you should go and see:

Sights in Berlin

East Side Gallery– The East side gallery is a 1.3km section of the Berlin wall that is covered in artwork by 106 different artists. This memorial for freedom was painted in 1990 and it’s the largest outdoor gallery in the world.

East Side Gallery in Berlin

Holocaust Memorial- The Holocaust Memorial was built to remember Jewish people who were killed in the Holocaust. It was designed by Peter Eisenman and Buro Happold and was finished in December 2004. It is a grid of 2,711 concrete slabs that vary in height and you can walk through them.

Holocaust Memorial in Berlin

Checkpoint Charlie– “Checkpoint Charlie” was a crossing point at the Berlin Wall, which divided East and West Berlin. Today it is a popular tourist attraction and you can have a picture taken with people dressed up in military gear. Weirdly there is a McDonalds just on the corner!

Checkpoint Charlie in Berlin

Brandenburg Gate– Brandenburg is one of Germany’s most famous landmarks and a former city gate. Commissioned by Friedrich Wilhelm II, it was modelled on the Propylaeum of Athens’ Acropolis and finished in 1791. It was incorporated as part of the Berlin Wall and became a sad symbol of the division of Berlin, as it stood between East and West Germany. However, since the Berlin Wall came down, it has now taken on a different symbol of unity.

Brandenburg Gate, Berlin

Berliner Dom-Berlin’s Cathedral is the largest church in the city and the centre for the Protestant Church of Germany. You can climb the 270 steps up to the outer walkway for fantastic views of the city, or visit the Hohenzollern Crypt where dozens of royals are buried. Browse the Cathedral Museum which contains drawings and models from the planning of the cathedral, and marvel at the large Sauer organ with its 7269 pipes and 113 registers.

Berliner Dom, Berlin Catherdal

Alexanderplatz- Alexanderplatz is a public city square and the main landmark here is the towering Fernsehturm (TV tower). Known as the ‘toothpick’, the TV tower measures 365m to the top of the spire. The sphere contains a revolving restaurant called the Telecafé at 207m.

Fernsehturm TV Tower in Berlin

Getting Around Berlin

You can get some great deals on flights to Berlin flying into Berlin Tegel Airport. To save myself some time I bought a day pass for the U-Bahn and S-Bahn which was well worth it for €6,80. I used it to get from the airport to my hostel in Rosenthalerplatz, and then to get to Warschauer Str. for the East Side Gallery. After I walked along this section of the Berlin Wall, I hopped on at Ostbahnhof and got off at Alexanderplatz. From Alexanderplatz I walked down Karl Liebknecht Str. past the Berliner Dom all the way to the Brandenburg Gate, then turned left to the Holocaust Memorial. From there I walked to Checkpoint Charlie. I got back on the U-Bahn at Kochstr. station to take me back to my hostel.

Great for dinner

I can really recommend Good Morning Vietnam opposite Wombats Hostel if you like Vietnamese food. My friends and I had some delicious cocktails and yummy food there.

Fab Coffee Shop

Sankt Oberholz, which is right by Circus Hostel and Rosenthalerplatz, is an airy cafe serving bagels, quiches, sandwiches, coffees and juices with free Wi-Fi and lots of plug sockets. You’ll find entire rows of people on Mac laptops.

 

7 thoughts on “How to Spend One Day in Berlin”

  1. Good recommendations! I’m currently planning an Eastern Euro trip during Euro 12 and plan on spending a few days in Berlin. If you had 2 or 3 more days there, where else would you recommend going and sightseeing?

  2. There’s so much to see in Berlin – it’s incredible! I’ve been living there for 3.5 years now and there’s still so much I haven’t seen. Do you think you’ll come back and visit? Almost everyone I’ve known who’s visited has come back a second, third, fourth…time 🙂

  3. Hi Victoria!

    I am a Swedish student of urban planning, currently writing an article for a magazine that will be published at my school’s website. I found you’re picture of Checkpoint Chalie, Berlin, and would like to ask you if it is okey if I use it as an image in my article? The rights would be cleared and you would be namned as the owner of the pic. If so, it would be super kind of you! It really portrays what I am trying to get through with in my text.

    All the best
    / Nina

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    I’ve loaded your blog in 3 completely different internet browsers and I must say
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