Berlin: Art Nouveau Architecture
Places and attractions in the Art Nouveau architecture category
Categories
- Museum
- Park
- Neighbourhood
- Art museum
- Monuments and statues
- History museum
- Church
- Specialty museum
- Square
- Shopping
- Street
- Nightlife
- Natural attraction
- Nature
- Theater
- Bridge
- Memorial
- Baroque architecture
- Lake
- Historical place
- Shopping centre
- Concerts and shows
- Cemetery
- Dancing
- Tower
- Amusement park
- Art gallery
- Palace
- Architecture
- Forts and castles
- Amusement
- Library
- View point
- Karl Friedrich Schinkel
- Canal
- Concert hall
- Modern art museum
- Sport
- Sport venue
- Water park
- Swimming
- Nazi architecture
- City hall
- Performing arts
- Arenas and stadiums
- Neo-renaissance architecture
- Archaeological museum
- Science museum
- Music venue
- Cinema
- Memorial site
- Sculpture
- Shopping district
- Vernacular architecture
- Gothic Revival architecture
- Area
- Unesco
- Art Nouveau architecture
- Zoo
- New objectivity architecture
- Frederick the Great
- Synagogue
- Sacred and religious sites
- Hill
- Island
- Mosque
- Fountain
- Universities and schools
- City
- Event space
- Skyscraper
- Beach
- Climbing
Hackesche Höfe
The Hackesche Höfe is a notable courtyard complex situated adjacent to the Hackescher Markt in the centre of Berlin. The complex consists of eight interconnected courtyards, accessed through a main arched entrance at number 40 Rosenthaler Straße.
Altes Stadthaus
Altes Stadthaus is a former administrative building in Berlin, currently used by the Senate. It faces the Molkenmarkt and is bound by four roads; Jüdenstraße, Klosterstraße, Parochialstraße, and Stralauer Straße.
Charlottenburg Town Hall
Charlottenburg Town Hall is an administrative building situated in the Charlottenburg locality of Berlin in Germany. It was built between 1899 and 1905 at the behest of the then independent city of Charlottenburg in the Prussian province of Brandenburg.
Metropol
The Metropol, formerly Neues Schauspielhaus, at 5 Nollendorfplatz in the Schöneberg district of Berlin was built in 1905 as a theatre and concert hall in the then-fashionable Art Nouveau style.
AEG turbine factory
The AEG turbine factory was built in 1909, at Huttenstraße 12–16 in the Berlin district of Moabit. It is the best-known work of architect Peter Behrens. The 100m long steel framed building with 15m tall glass windows on either side is considered the first attempt to introduce restrained modern design to industrial architecture.
Kopenhagener Straße
The Kopenhagener Straße is a street in Berlin's Prenzlauer Berg district, which runs parallel to the Ringbahn tracks between busy Schönhauser Allee in the east all the way to the Mauerpark in the west, where the Berlin Wall separated the Soviet from the French sector.