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Berlin · Prenzlauer Berg

Kollwitzplatz

This leafy Prenzlauer Berg square honors artist Käthe Kollwitz who lived nearby with a bronze sculpture at its center.

Kollwitzplatz, Berlin · Prenzlauer Berg
Category
Park & Garden
Duration
45 minutes
Best Time
Any time
Entry
Rating
4.4 (3,368)
The place

About Kollwitzplatz

This leafy Prenzlauer Berg square honors artist Käthe Kollwitz who lived nearby with a bronze sculpture at its center. The surrounding streets contain independent boutiques, cafés, and the popular Thursday and Saturday organic market. The square serves as the neighborhood's living room where locals gather year-round.

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The details

Practical bits

WalkingModerate walking
The place

Getting there

Address
Kollwitzplatz, 10405 Berlin, Germany
Neighborhood
Prenzlauer Berg
Nearest Metro
U2 to Eberswalder StrasseU2 to SenefelderplatzM10 tram to Mauerpark
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Good to know

Tips, answered

The Thursday organic market (12-7pm) is less crowded than Saturday's and has better prepared food stalls -ideal for assembling a picnic in the square.

Plan for about 45 minutes.

Kollwitzplatz is in the Prenzlauer Berg neighborhood of Berlin. The address is Kollwitzplatz, 10405 Berlin, Germany. The area is well-served by metro.

This works well at any time of day, though mornings tend to be quieter. Weekdays are less crowded than weekends.

Comfortable shoes are recommended. Check the weather forecast and dress in layers, especially in shoulder seasons.

Closed on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday. Check the official website for holiday closures and special hours.

Around the corner

Nearby in Prenzlauer Berg

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Berlin Wall Memorial (Gedenkstatte Berliner Mauer)
Park & Garden

Berlin Wall Memorial (Gedenkstatte Berliner Mauer)

The most comprehensive and emotionally powerful Wall site in Berlin. Stretching 1.4 km along Bernauer Strasse in Wedding and Prenzlauer Berg, the memorial preserves the full depth of the border installation: the inner wall, the death strip, watchtowers, anti-vehicle barriers, and the outer wall. This is not the colorful, muraled East Side Gallery. This is about the human cost of division. The Documentation Centre has a viewing platform that looks down on the former death strip from above, giving you the guard's perspective. The open-air exhibition tells stories of individual escape attempts, marked with steel posts along the route. The escape tunnel exhibition documents the tunnels dug beneath the Wall by desperate families and organized groups, some successful, some not. The Chapel of Reconciliation, built on the former death strip using rammed earth walls that incorporate rubble from the demolished Church of Reconciliation (which the East German government blew up in 1985 to clear sightlines), is a quiet space for reflection. Bernauer Strasse was where some of the Wall's most dramatic early moments occurred. When the border was sealed on August 13, 1961, residents of buildings along the street found their front doors suddenly in East Berlin while their back windows faced West. People jumped from upper floors into nets held by West Berlin firefighters. The window-jumping photographs from Bernauer Strasse became defining images of the division. The memorial is free, open daily, and deserves 90 minutes minimum. Start at the Visitor Center (Bernauer Strasse 119) and pick up the free map. Walk the outdoor exhibition from south to north, stopping at the Documentation Centre along the way.

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Mauerpark
Park & Garden

Mauerpark

A park built on the former death strip of the Berlin Wall, now famous for its Sunday flea market and open-air karaoke. The name means "Wall Park," and a small remaining section of the Wall runs along the western edge, tagged and painted over so many times that the concrete is now a palimpsest of 30 years of street art. The Sunday flea market (9 AM to 6 PM) is a sprawling affair of vintage clothes, vinyl records, GDR memorabilia, handmade jewelry, and questionable antiques. The quality varies wildly, which is part of the appeal. Haggling is expected. The food stalls at the edges do good business in bratwurst, crepes, and the occasional excellent burrito. Arrive before 11 AM for the best finds; by noon the paths are shoulder-to-shoulder. The karaoke amphitheater starts around 3 PM and is one of Berlin's great free experiences. The stone terraces fill with 2,000+ spectators who cheer enthusiastically for anyone brave enough to step up to the microphone. The song choices range from Bohemian Rhapsody (always) to obscure German schlager (occasionally). The host keeps things moving. The quality of singing is irrelevant. The crowd makes it work. The rest of the week, Mauerpark is a quiet neighborhood green space popular with joggers, dog walkers, and families using the playground at the northern end. The basketball courts see regular pickup games. The Wall section and the faded graffiti on surrounding buildings are worth photographing even on a Tuesday, but Sunday is the event.

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