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Why Is Berlin So Popular?

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Plenty of European cities have history, art and nightlife. So why is Berlin so popular? Pull up a seat and let’s talk about what makes Berlin unique.

Top things to do in Berlin tips from locals via @insidetravellab on a wooden currywurst map

Why is Berlin so popular?

Berlin. The world seems to love you but I’m not quite sure why. I went, once, and the two of us had a pretty good time. Your Christmas Markets glittered, your Currywurst tickled me pink and the history from your Wall (and the years that surrounded it) seeped deep into my soul. I was tired, almost broken. Searching for missing pieces and finding them in your winter heavy rain.

But I can’t help but notice that others talk about you in a very different way.

“I love Berlin,” they gush whenever I mention your name. “It’s such an exciting city.”

In Toronto, people told me “We want Toronto to be like Berlin. A place people can’t wait to go to.”

And then I understood. Simply put. Berlin is cool. 

So why is Berlin so popular? Here’s what locals, both German and not, had to say. Their collection of unique things to do in Berlin, reasons why they find Berlin so special. 

What makes Berlin unique?

Freedom

Why is Berlin so popular? For its history and the sense of freedom.

That doesn’t seem quite right, at first, for a city steeped in the history of oppression and ultimate cruelty. Yet that’s what the people who live here say. 

To understand, we need to remember firstly that the World Wars and Cold War are not the only history linked to this land. And second, it’s precisely because that history was so bad that people cherish freedom so much now. 

As Nuremberg has found its soul with a focus on human rights, so Berlin pursues freedom, design and self-expression with the almost tangible knowledge of just how precious it is. 

5 Reasons Berlin is so popular

Traditional Stalinallee stonework pictured on the streets of Berlin in Germany
Stonework from Stalin…

1) History

Berlin has been at the centre of, arguably, the three biggest conflicts of the 20th century and the evidence is everywhere. 

From the fragments of the Berlin Wall to the remnants of Allied Bombs, you can reach out and touch evidence for everything you studied at school.

Plenty of cities have statues of kings on horseback, and Berlin does too, along with beautiful, grand museums. But when it comes to what makes Berlin unique… It’s standing on the ground of where events took place.

Fragments of the Berlin wall and remembrance plaque found on street level in Berlin, Germany
The former Berlin wall…

2) Remembrance

The second thing that makes Berlin so special is the way the city tackles the issue of remembrance. Plenty of countries have atrocities in their past. But they’re often hushed into the sidelines in favour of pomp and glory. 

Not so Berlin. 

Museums that catalogue the rise of the Third Reich in the Gestapo Headquarters, for example, are unflinching and free to enter. 

The Memorial to Jews Murdered in Europe sits within walking distance of the German government headquarters at the Reichstag. 

Heck, even the Reichstag itself has a glass dome to symbolise the transparency required by a government towards its people. 

Museums and memorials are free to enter; there is no profit to be made.

TV Tower against a clear blue sky in Berlin, Germany
Berlin’s TV Tower

3) Reinvention

Why is Berlin so popular? She isn’t stuck in her past.

She remembers and reflects but does not live there forever. In spite of what I’ve written so far, Berlin is not defined by historic monuments and memorials. 

Ambitious art, design and music projects take place all year, with creatives actively welcomed through flexible international visa arrangements. 

There’s a pulse, a vibe, an energy here and all eyes are on the future, without forgetting the past. It’s Berlin cool.

Berlin Cathedral stands against a cloudy sky in Berlin Germany
The famous Berliner Dom and TV Tower. Two reasons to visit Berlin.

4) Some Cosy European Culture

For all that’s already been said, Berlin also has some of the highlights of many a European city. 

You’ll find rich renaissance and baroque architecture brimming with sculptures, paintings and curious ceramic urns. 

Snuggle up with friends at cosy Christmas markets, amid mulled wine, freshly scented wooden ornaments and candy canes. 

And in the summer? Head to an outdoor festival with tankards of beer…

Shop at designer shops, boutique shops, international shops and quirky shops.

And taste food from everywhere in the world. 

Unique restaurant in Berlin Germany - via @insidethetravellab

5) A Space to Be You

Berlin is big enough and varied enough to appeal to almost everyone. I mean, seriously appeal to almost everyone, rather than in that commercial, cheesy advert kind of a way. 

Want to go clubbing all day and night? Done. Want to painstakingly delve into the past? Museums aplenty. Want to wander from gallery to gallery throughout the day or take a street food tour or feast your eyes on street art?

Done, done and done.

Berlin caters for luxury travellers and budget travellers, with easy public transport and a whole lot of people who can make life easy by speaking the English language. 

She packs a serious punch in terms of standing on the world stage in terms of diplomacy and art. And in clubbing all day and all night. 

Art covers the East Side of the Berlin Wall in Berlin Germany

So I’m curious to know. What makes Berlin so special for you?

So, I’m curious to know. What makes Berlin so special for you?

Travel Tips for Germany

32 thoughts on “Why Is Berlin So Popular?”

  1. Berlin. Yes, I am one of those people who loved it. And as a general rule I am not a ‘city’ lover. Went in summer so was outdoor dancing by the river. Music everywhere. For those who didn’t have a ticket, picnics were allowed by the temporary outdoor location of the opera.

    Beer gardens. Not exactly ‘quality food’, but fun and friendly.

    Bikes. Yes, everywhere. Take a tour round the city or out to Potsdam.

    Favourite museum. Topogrphie Des Terrors Inside the exhibition shows and explains the insidious propaganda that led to such fear perpetrating communities where trust was destroyed as neighbours betrayed neighbours and brothers betrayed sisters. While I was listening to one eloquent guide explaining how the propaganda proclaimed that all who did contribute to society were a drain on resources and so their extermination was justified, it struck me that I was standing next to a wheelchair user. This young man would have been first in line for Hitler’s train to extinction. I was deeply disturbed, how must he feel?

    Enjoy!

  2. Ok, I’ll try to make this not too long:D
    I’ve been to Berlin twice: once a week in freezing winter (February, -10°C), once a week in the blistering hot summer (July, 36°C). Both visits were completely different but equally great. OKay, maybe the heat of the summer was a tad bit better than the cold of the winter:)
    On my first trip there (winter) I went with a friend and we tried to do all the must-see stuff: the Jewish museum, the whole of Unter den Linden, Alexanderplats, the Stasi-museum, the Dom, a whole lot of monuments etc. Although I always try to get some culture when abroad, this almost completely cultural trip was the most interesting I’d made so far. You can just feel history still being alive in Berlin. It makes you feel really small and engaged at the same time.

    My summer visit was completely different. We stayed in Kreuzberg, which is still kind of a communist neighborhood and a very lively place with lots of small cafes. We mostly just hanged around and explored the surroundings, walking along the water, swimming in a pool they’d hung in the river, going to Potsdam for a day.

    Options are endless, really.
    I didn’t go partying on my trips, but I’ve heard tons of good things about the Berlin night scene.

    So I think you’ll want to book a much longer trip once you’ve been there:)

  3. I’m more interested in cruises myself, but I would love to travel to Germany. I’ve heard the Berlin marathon is actually a great way to experience the city, here’s hoping I can work up the money for that someday.

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