On our way to spend a week in Vienna, we stopped a day in Berlin. Because it suffered intense bombing at the end of WWII, many of its ancient buildings were destroyed. Some remain, and like the other European capitols we have seen, it mixes the old with beautiful cutting edge modern structures. We did a day tour, but I can envision going back for the museums.
This is the new Berlin Central Train Station. Like several stations we’ve found, it features lots of shopping and restaurants. See that intricate glass roof? It leaks. The next photo explains why.
Crows! A murder of crows (yes, that’s the term) lives around the station, and they figured out soon after its opening how to pick apart the sealant connecting the panes of the glass roof. Crows are known for their intelligence. A young Spanish student we met works at the square selling tickets to the tourist buses; she says individual birds recognize and remember her, and come to greet her if she’s been away.
Bellevue Palace was designed in 1786 as the summer residence of Prince Augustus Ferdinand of Prussia. Today it’s the official residence of the president of Germany. It’s surrounded by a park.
The Victory Column was erected in 1873 to commemorate Prussian military victories. It sits at the center of a large traffic circle.
A view of the Tiergarten, a beautiful inner-city park. We saw lots of joggers and others enjoying it.
0 Comments