The three floors of this collection (housed above a flagship Beate-Uhse retail outlet offering the usual videos and sex toys) contain oriental prints; some daft showroom-dummy...
Joachimstaler Strasse 4This brick church, designed by Karl Friedrich Schinkel, was completed in 1831. Its war wounds were repaired in the 1980s and it reopened in 1987 as a homage to its architect....
Werderscher MarktThe world's largest hemp museum aims to teach the visitor about the uses of the plant throughout history, as well as touching on the controversy surrounding it. The café...
Mühlendamm 5You probably need to be a bit of a plane nut to make the journey here. The museum is on the far western fringes of the city at what was formerly the RAF base in divided Berlin;...
Gross-Glienicker WegOn the top floor of a typical Kreuzberg apartment block, the 'Museum of Things' contains every kind of small object you could imagine in modern design from the 19th century...
Oranienstrasse 25A direct descendant of the world's first postal museum (founded in 1872), this collection covers a bit more than mere stamps. It traces the development of telecommunications up...
Leipziger Strasse 16At this 14th-century village, reconstructed around archaeological excavations, workers demonstrate handicrafts, medieval technology and farming techniques. Ox-cart rides for...
Clauertstrasse 11The Gay Museum, opened in 1985, is still the only one in the world dedicated to homosexual life in all its forms. The museum, its library and archives are staffed by volunteers...
Mehringdamm 61A museum that is devoted to the chemistry, history and politics of sugar may not sound like the most entertaining of places to spend an afternoon, but this place, originally...
Amrumer Strasse 32