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Berlin Wall: Where It Still Stands
Most visitors to Berlin want to see the Wall. But of the concrete barrier that once divided the German capital, only remnants remain. Where to find pieces of the real thing. more
The massive barriers of the Berlin Wall were the most important symbol of divided Germany for 28 years. Today, the Wall has disappeared from the cityscape, but original parts can still be seen in some places.
Probably the most famous quote by Walter Ulbricht, GDR Council of State Chairman and party leader of the SED, dates from 15 June 1961: "No one intends to build a wall." Less than two months later, construction work began along the Berlin sector and zone border. For 28 years, the massive barriers were to be the most significant symbol of the divided Germany until 1989. Today, the Wall has almost completely disappeared from the Berlin cityscape.
Between July 1990 and November 1991, around 155 kilometres of the Berlin Wall, 43 kilometres of which were the inner-city border between East and West Berlin, 302 observation towers, 20 bunkers and several border crossings were gradually dismantled. Some of the Wall segments can now be found in various places around the world, such as the Imperial War Museum in London.
In Berlin, there are few remains of this "famous structure" that shaped the cityscape for decades. The longest preserved section of the Wall is located on Bernauer Straße and is integrated into the Berlin Wall Memorial. Another segment stands at the exhibition site of the Topography of Terror on Niederkirchnerstraße. This roughly 200-metre-long remnant of the Wall was listed as early as 1990. A third part of the actual border wall still stands in Liesenstrasse in Mitte.
Longer sections of the so-called "Hinterland Wall", i.e. the part of the Wall that closed off the East Berlin side, have survived. The best-known sections are the East Side Gallery in the Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg district and the remains in Mauerpark. Of the 302 watchtowers and observation towers, five still remain today, with only three on Berlin territory: The watchtower at Kieler Eck, the observation tower on Erna-Berger-Strasse and at Schlesischer Busch on Puschkinallee.
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Most visitors to Berlin want to see the Wall. But of the concrete barrier that once divided the German capital, only remnants remain. Where to find pieces of the real thing. more
© dpa
Germany's eventful history is reflected in Berlin's many memorials, monuments and cemeteries. These places in the capital are dedicated to remembrance and commemoration of past events. more