Berlin: Gothic Revival Architecture
Places and attractions in the Gothic Revival 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
Gethsemanekirche
Gethsemane Church is one of four church buildings of the Lutheran Northern Prenzlauer Berg Evangelical Congregation, within the Evangelical Church of Berlin-Brandenburg-Silesian Upper Lusatia, an umbrella organisation which includes Lutheran, Reformed, and United Protestant Calvinist congregations.
St. Marien am Behnitz
St. Marien am Behnitz is the second-oldest Catholic church in the area of Berlin, Germany, after St. Hedwig's Cathedral. It was built in Spandau on a design by August Soller, and consecrated in 1848.
Reformation Church
The Reformation Church is a Lutheran church that was constructed in Moabit, a neighborhood of Berlin, Germany, between 1905 and 1907.
Jewel Palace
The Jewel Palace is a Neo-Gothic-style building in Berlin-Mitte. Designed by the architects Max Jacob and Georg Roensch, the palace was completed in 1898. The name of the building derives from its former function as a trading house, specialized in gold.
Matthew Church
The Protestant Matthew Church in Steglitz, Berlin, was built from 1876 to 1880 to replace the undersized and dilapidated Steglitzer village church. In 1880 three inaugurated naves was designed by the architect Emil Gette. The church, parish hall, rectory and cemetery are now listed.
House of One
The House of One is a religious structure being built in Berlin. It will be the world's first house of prayer for three religions, containing a church, a mosque, and a synagogue. It is to be built in Fischerinsel, on the site where the first church in Berlin, St Peter's, once stood.