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Berlin · Friedrichshain

Treptower Park

Home to the colossal Soviet War Memorial, one of Europe's largest World War II monuments, featuring a 12-meter bronze soldier statue atop a hill surrounded by mass graves.

Treptower Park, Berlin · Friedrichshain
Category
Park & Garden
Duration
1h 45m
Best Time
Any time
Entry
Rating
4.6 (25,861)
The place

About Treptower Park

Home to the colossal Soviet War Memorial, one of Europe's largest World War II monuments, featuring a 12-meter bronze soldier statue atop a hill surrounded by mass graves. The riverside park along the Spree offers peaceful waterfront walks and beer garden vibes. The memorial's socialist realist architecture and sheer scale make it unforgettable.

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The place

Getting there

Address
Puschkinallee, Elsenstraße, 12435 Berlin, Germany
Neighborhood
Friedrichshain
Nearest Metro
U5 to Frankfurter TorS-Bahn to Warschauer StrasseU1 to Warschauer Strasse
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Good to know

Tips, answered

Walk through the memorial's colonnade alley -each sarcophagus has Stalin quotes in Russian and German, offering a haunting glimpse into Cold War ideology.

Plan for about 1h 45m.

Treptower Park is in the Friedrichshain neighborhood of Berlin. The address is Puschkinallee, Elsenstraße, 12435 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.

Around the corner

Nearby in Friedrichshain

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East Side Gallery
Landmark

East Side Gallery

The longest remaining stretch of the Berlin Wall: 1.3 km of concrete covered in over 100 murals painted in 1990 by artists from 21 countries. Dmitri Vrubel's "My God, Help Me Survive This Deadly Love" (the Brezhnev-Honecker kiss) is the most photographed, a socialist-realist embrace between the Soviet and East German leaders that manages to be both satirical and sincere. Birgit Kinder's Trabant crashing through the Wall captures the euphoria of November 1989 in a single image. The murals were painted on the east-facing side of the Wall, the side that East Berliners could not see during the division. That detail matters. The entire gallery is a statement about freedom of expression on a surface that once represented its absence. The works have been restored multiple times (controversially, not always with the original artists' involvement), and some are fading or tagged over. Walk the full 1.3 km from Ostbahnhof to Warschauer Strasse. The Spree river runs along the other side of the Wall, and the contrast between the bright murals and the grey concrete is striking. The gallery is free, always open, and best visited in the early morning before the selfie crowds build from the Warschauer Strasse end. Weekend mornings before 10 AM give you space to actually look at the art rather than navigating around phone screens. Some of the most powerful panels are not the famous ones. Look for Kani Alavi's "It Happened in November," showing faces pressing through a crack in the Wall, and Thierry Noir's bold, cartoonish heads that were among the first paintings on the Wall, applied illegally while it was still standing.

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