© Elan Fleisher / Time Out
After many years of controversy, Peter Eisenmann's 'field of stelae' - 2,711 of them, arranged in undulating rows on 19,704sq m (212,000sq ft) of city block - with its attendant information centre to memorialise the Murdered Jews of Europe, was opened in 2005. Each of the concrete slabs has its own foundation, and they tilt at differing angles. The effect is (no doubt deliberately) reminiscent of the packed headstones in Prague's Old Jewish Cemetery. There's no vantage point or overview; to engage with the thing you need to walk into it. It's spooky in places, especially on overcast days and near the middle of the monument, where many feel a sense of confinement. The information centre is at the south-east corner of the site, mostly underground. It's like a secular crypt, containing a sombre presentation of facts and figures about the Holocaust's Jewish victims.
Area Mitte
Transport U2, S1, S2, S26 Potsdamer Platz
Telephone 030 2639 4336
Open Field of stelae 24hrs daily. Information centre 10am-8pm Tue-Sun
Admission free
Absolutely amazing, and very sobering. What you can't see from these pictures-nor, in fact, when you stand in front of it-is that in places, some of the blocks are 5 meters tall. Very dark and claustrophobic in the middle-especially at night, in 2 foot deep snow.
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