Berlin
Berlin is not a city frozen in time. It moves forward deliberately, unafraid to place its complex past alongside contemporary life. Here, Cold War landmarks and Prussian grandeur stand within reach of experimental art spaces, independent galleries and a cultural scene that rarely slows down.
Former industrial sites and once-divided border zones have been reimagined as centres of music, design and multidisciplinary creativity. The result is a landscape that carries visible memory while continually redefining itself.
Walk from the Brandenburg Gate through the expansive Tiergarten, cycle into Friedrichshain or Kreuzberg, where nightlife and creative communities shape the city’s after-dark identity, or explore the quieter residential calm of Prenzlauer Berg before reaching the multicultural layers of Neukölln.
What defines Berlin is this constant tension: a capital that acknowledges the weight of its history while allowing space for reinvention. It rewards those who come to understand its past — and those who stay to experience its restless, forward-looking spirit.