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Things to do in Potsdam

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The Alte Nationalgalerie is an art gallery located in Berlin, Germany. It can be found in the UNESCO recognized Museum Island complex, and showcases a beautiful collection of Neoclassical, Romantic, and Impressionist artwork.
4.7 (420)
From $12.81
Ascend Berlin's skyline for unmatched city views from the iconic tower
4.6 (2,619)
From $10.14
The Neues Museum reopened in 2009, after extensive renovations. Since then, it has attracted more than a million visitors per year. It houses two major collections.
4.7 (1,245)
From $10.68
Cruise through Berlin and see a new side of the German capital
4.4 (91)
From $21.25
The Berlin chapter of the international science exhibition sensation BODY WORLDS takes you on a voyage of discovery beneath the surface of the skin. The aim of the exhibition is to give visitors an understanding of what the human body's inner workings can tell us about ourselves and our lives, and how under the skin, people of all cultures and ethnicities are fundamentally the same.
4.6 (202)
From $20.29
This highly interactive museum lets visitors feel what it was like to live behind the wall - in the DDR (Deutsche Demokratische Republik). It chronicles, via video and film, daily life as it was under Communism. The museum also includes hundreds of ways to help you experience life behind the iron curtain, including watching East German TV shows, being 'bugged', voting in a (rigged) election and taking a (simulated) car ride in an iconic Trabi.
4.5 (213)
From $14.41
The Reichstag is one of Germany's most important historical monuments: a symbol of democracy, and reminder of the country's turbulent past. Show your Reichstag tickets and explore this internationally recognized building, where Germany's politicians debate decisions that have an effect at home and around the world.
4.6 (164)
From $10.68
The popular Pergamon Museum in Berlin is a great solution to a first world problem; it was built because there wasn't enough room in the nearby Bode Museum for all its artistic and archaeological relics. Construction carried on even through WWI and the great inflation of the 1920s. The then completed Pergamon was also badly damaged at the end of WWII (though fortunately its contents escaped damage). NOTE: The Pergamon Museum will be closed until 2027.
4.7 (394)
From $14.95
Located in an 1840’s neo-renaissance building that was once a rail terminus, Hamburger Bahnhof is, by all accounts, an impressive venue. It's the perfect place for an art-lover to while away an afternoon.
4.5 (124)
From $14.95
GRID
Blur the boundaries between real and virtual
4.4 (62)
From $24.02
Panorama The View brings you back to the late Cold War era of 1980s Berlin, and presents you with a life-size photographic recreation of the Berlin Wall featuring 270° views. You’ll find yourself peering over the Wall and into East Berlin, and you’ll begin to understand the reality that ordinary Berliners experienced in that era.
4.5 (96)
From $11.74
up to —5%
Illuseum Berlin is a family-friendly museum of beguiling optical illusions, sense-defying physics exhibits, and interactive trickery all rooted in science. It is located in the center of Berlin – or is it?
4.5 (156)
From $16.23
Delve into the past and appreciate the present with a city tour of Berlin
4.4 (200)
From $10.68
Panoramapunkt, on Potsdamer Platz in Berlin, allows visitors to get up to the 24th and 25th floors for amazing views of the city. There's also an exhibition on the history of the square.
4.6 (116)
From $9.61
Gripping storytelling, thrilling rides and some of the best actors and special effects make a trip to the Berlin Dungeon a memorable activity. The Berlin Dungeon is located between Hackescher Markt and Alexanderplatz, close to lots of public transport.
4.4 (45)
From $25.62
The Neue Nationalgalerie at the Berlin Kulturforum is a world-class architectural icon from the mind of Ludwig Mies van der Rohe (1886–1969), built to house 20th-century art. A major refurbishment was carried out during the late 2010s to bring the ‘60s-era building up to modern standards. The column-free “universal space” is a classic of modernism and serves as the perfect location for works from European and North American masters like Edvard Munch, Pablo Picasso, Max Ernst, Salvador Dalí, Francis Bacon, and Andy Warhol, amongst many others. Some of the museum’s most famous works are Potsdamer Platz by Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, The Skat Players by Otto Dix, and Who’s Afraid of Red, Yellow and Blue IV by Barnett Newman. A rotating calendar of special exhibitions also takes place in the Neue Nationalgalerie, so keep an eye out for their latest offerings.
4.6 (411)
From $14.95

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