Tour Details
Duration
3 hours
Product Type
Tour
Venues
Berlin Wall Memorial
Select a date
Tour Description
More than 30 years after its fall, the Berlin Wall still looms large. Led by an expert in 20th-century history, this 3-hour Berlin Wall walking tour traces the footprint of the wall through the city’s center, unraveling the complex forces that shaped Berlin's history. We will investigate the meaning behind the Wall's construction, the realities of life in a divided city, and the dramatic events of its fall. We will also visit the Berlin Wall Memorial.
Berlin Wall Tour
For over a quarter century, the imposing concrete barrier of the Berlin Wall with its notorious “death strip” stood as an ominous reminder of the divide between Western Europe and the Eastern Bloc. Beginning at the Berlin Wall Memorial, the site of some of the most astonishing escape attempts from the communist East, we will explore numerous exhibitions, memorials, artworks, and historical locations. We will see how the Wall was constructed and expanded, how it operated as a symbol of the Cold War, and how and why it ultimately fell. Finally, we will discuss the irony that Berlin is now deeply associated with a structure that no longer exists.
A New Germany
After the momentous dismantling of the Wall began in 1989, larger issues of national identity in newly unified Germany immediately arose. As we continue our walk and pass the many memorial sites along our route—including the “ghost stations” exhibit at Nordbahnhof—we will consider vital questions about the tension in Germany’s difficult history. On one hand is the desire to move on and leave these troubles in the past; on the other, the need to preserve what remains of this history.
Depending on the day and the guide, our walk often ends at the Brandenburg Gate or Potsdamer Platz. Even as our time together comes to a close, we'll still have big questions to mull over. Should the divisions of the city be erased completely? Or, etched forever into its memory? The physical barriers of the Berlin Wall have mostly vanished, but the shockwaves caused by its rise and fall carry on today.
Addenda
If you'd like to learn more about the Cold War through the lens of architecture, check out our Berlin Cold War tour. Also, our Berlin Wall Tour for Kids offers a counterpart to this walk, specially designed for groups with young children.
FAQ
Where does the walk end?
This walk usually ends around the Brandenburg Gate/Potsdamer Platz area.
This walk usually ends around the Brandenburg Gate/Potsdamer Platz area.
Why doesn't this walk visit the East Side Gallery or Checkpoint Charlie?
We think that these sites are not the strongest places to dig into the history of the Berlin Wall. We do include the East Side Gallery on our Berlin Wall for kids tour because we think it's a great place to visit with children. But we find that the Berlin Wall Memorial and the other locations that we visit on this tour offer far more authentic experiences and deeper insights into Cold War history for adults ready to learn. Plus, the sites are geographically spread out, so we've chosen to leave them out in the interest of time.
We think that these sites are not the strongest places to dig into the history of the Berlin Wall. We do include the East Side Gallery on our Berlin Wall for kids tour because we think it's a great place to visit with children. But we find that the Berlin Wall Memorial and the other locations that we visit on this tour offer far more authentic experiences and deeper insights into Cold War history for adults ready to learn. Plus, the sites are geographically spread out, so we've chosen to leave them out in the interest of time.
Experts
Where You'll Start
–
191 Reviews
Reviews can only be left by Context customers after they have completed a tour. For more information about our reviews, please see our FAQ.
See above. EVERYTHING worked.
Robbie
Reviewed on:
Sep 26, 2014
Everything worked. I appreciated the way my guide incorporated his personal experiences into the narrative and was so very patient with all my questions. The way he began the tour, with his maps of the division of not only Berlin, but of Germany, was most illuminating.
Barbara ann
Reviewed on:
Sep 23, 2014
This was really a model tour. Chris (i have forgotten her last name) is a natural communicator and listener and was also, I suspect, well trained. She started off with a clear orientation to both herself and the three hours using the useful map at the visitor center and illustrating historical points throughout with large format photographs she brought with her. There were only four of us, all friends, which was a treat of course and made it perhaps easier to segue into discussions of how the GDR has been portrayed by the current government. Chris's personal experience growing up in the eastern half of the city added another and very rich layer of information and perspective. Important history, learned at the time but mostly forgotten came back to life under her skilled and friendly tutelage and I am very grateful. I should note that throughout she tied the points to actual artifacts, places, photos; this could not have been taught in a classroom. Great work.
Leslie
Reviewed on:
Aug 12, 2014