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-- Berlin - you have to go visit this city
Berlin - you have to go visit this city
Many of you have hear Graham and I talk about how great Berlin is. After spending just over 2 weeks in Berlin over a 3 month period I can honestly say there isn't a week that goes by that I don't think of going back. It is the first place I have visited that I have ever thought about staying and would consider moving there if I could work.
I came across this show on BBC Radio 1 that did a good job describing the city and the party scene. Listen to it.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio1/documen...iinberlin.shtml
Download it here
http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/podcasts...81125-1502a.mp3
berlin's s/u-bahn system.
What is the 'business language' in Berlin? is it english? if so I would definitely consider working there for a while
After visiting Berlin for 10 days, I didn't want to leave. I wanted to stay there indefinitely. Within the next 5 years, I'd like to live there for at least a month. Although it may not be the same place it is right now when I finally get the chance, I'd still like to make it happen.
If I like it enough, I may just stay there. Thank you EU citizenship. 
Been there many a time. A fantastic city. I can't wait to be back this upcomming summer.
I loved Berlin too. The nightlife was impressive, but not as much as the history and the architecture that personifies the entire city.
I was born about 2 hours away from Berlin so when I go back to visit family it's always the first stop. I looove Berlin. ![]()
| quote: |
| Originally posted by The Highroller Thank you EU citizenship. |
i have been obsessed with berlin for probably 20 years of my life, but i've still not been boo hoo.
from everything i've seen, read and heard it seems like my kinda place especially for the art and design scene.
if you don't have EU citizenship, you could always get a one year working holiday visa until the age of 35. could be an option.
http://www.swap.ca/out_eng/destinations/germany.aspx
i always have it in the back of my mind to go for a year, but i've lost most of my german language skills through lack of practise. and last i heard, the unemployment rate in germany is quite high.
love this city over and over.. would highly recommend a visit and possible emigration there as well ..
Chartlottenburg district specifically
last time I was there was during the 2006 World Cup finals.. pure insanity!
Was in Berlin last year for a bit!
Absolutely loved the city 
Definitely a place that you have to visit at least once!
| quote: |
| Originally posted by The Highroller After visiting Berlin for 10 days, I didn't want to leave. I wanted to stay there indefinitely. Within the next 5 years, I'd like to live there for at least a month. Although it may not be the same place it is right now when I finally get the chance, I'd still like to make it happen. If I like it enough, I may just stay there. Thank you EU citizenship. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by nadezhda if you don't have EU citizenship, you could always get a one year working holiday visa until the age of 35. could be an option. |
My favourite Berlin song;
better than take my breath away.
Was there last november. It really is an amazing city. I would love to live there, but I think the unemployment rate is at about 15% in Berlin, so jobs are scarce. Unbelievable city.
Cool little article from Walrus on Tacheles - this great artist commune in Berlin.
http://www.walrusmagazine.com/artic...s-chris-turner/
Twilight in Tacheles
A legendary East Berlin art collective, fifteen years on
by Chris Turner
Published in the December 2008 issue. � BUY ISSUE
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BERLIN � I can�t remember exactly how I discovered Tacheles. I know it was the winter of 1993, just before Christmas, and I was staying with my family in a hotel near Alexanderplatz. The city had only just shed its Cold War prefixes, and neither map nor guidebook was much help in navigating the no-longer-East Berlin. It might have been the hotel concierge or perhaps the friendly Fr�ulein at the old-school Gasthaus � that old eastern dame who couldn�t fathom why anyone from sainted Canada was wasting his time in dumpy old Berlin � who pointed me toward Oranienburger Strasse. The detail, like so much about Tacheles, is hazy.
I remember a broad boulevard lined with decrepit warehouses, each with its own resident community of artists, its own manifestos graffitied across the walls, and a unique brand of humming, conspiratorial excitement circling the tables alongside the freely circulating joints at each ramshackle ground-floor caf�. There seemed to be dozens of them, cramped spaces opening on back alleys that led to side lanes that poured into yet another thrumming caf� or cavernous gallery space. I don�t remember much, really, but I remember the vibe � a discombobulating smoke cloud of embryonic freedom.
One back alley garden stands out in the haze, strewn with couches and metal sculpture, a sort of caf� patio peopled by robots. Fifteen years later, I�ve finally found its creator. Here he is, Martin Reiter, sculptor of Roboexotica and manager of Kunsthaus Tacheles, the only art collective still extant on this storied stretch. He greets me in the antechamber of Tacheles�s first-floor office, settling into a deflated thrift store couch beneath a wall map of pre-reunification East Germany to explain where the collective in my faded memory came from and where it might go next.
Tacheles today is a six-storey warren of ateliers in the half-salvaged ruins of a Weimar-era department store. Aproned by a vacant lot, yoga studios, and cocktail bars with Mo�t & Chandon awnings, it struck me as the last authentic redoubt of Berlin�s idealistic, anarchistic post-reunification renaissance.
This characterization, Reiter informs me in quiet, firm, Austrian-accented English, is a �touristic clich�.� He underscores the point with a wry shake of his shoulder-length mane and a pale blue gaze. �You cannot really say this is the last fortress of the subcultural whatever,� he says. �It�s not. It�s only an art space.� I�m inclined to reply that it�s only an art space like CBGB�s was just a bar. For several years now, Berlin has been quite possibly Europe�s most vibrant artistic and subcultural hub, and that status owes no small debt to this first reborn block of the liberated East.
The easterners came to Tacheles first, mere weeks after the Berlin Wall�s collapse, before the police had even figured out what the new laws were. Veterans of West Berlin�s energetic 1980s squatter movement arrived soon after. In the years since, the epicentre of the scene has shifted, bestowing hipster cred on one old gdr neighbourhood after another (Prenzlauer Berg, then Kreuzberg, now Friedrichshain). But Tacheles has remained as a sort of avant-garde institution. Reiter acquiesces to what he calls �the name-dropping thing�: Nick Cave once used the building�s theatre as a rehearsal space, as did Canadian experimental musician Peaches. Acid house pioneer A Guy Called Gerald still works out of Tacheles from time to time.
The collective has now gone semi-legitimate, funding itself with revenue from its top-floor bar. Its future, however, is as unsure as ever, since its expired lease rests in the hands of a company that seized the assets of an absentee landlord. Reiter is �very optimistic� it will survive this ambiguous moment.
Tacheles, he says, has thrived for nearly two decades in a state of perpetual transition. It has lost none of its vitality and countercultural edge, and it still bestows a singular brand of street cred on an artist�s CV. �We have a concept nobody else does, hmm?�Reiter says.Tacheles�s east-facing exterior wall is covered in a giant hand-painted billboard. how long is now, it reads, black letters a metre high, scrawled above what looks like an X ray of a death mask. There is no question mark, because it is a statement of bald fact, testifying to a moment that has stretched and mutated across eighteen years.
Right now, as Reiter�s colleague Khaled Kenawi leads me up the main staircase, Tacheles still thrums. On the third floor, a new shop sells prints of Dutch artist Tim Roelofs� panoramic collage work, which mixes Communist iconography and Western pop ephemera. In one piece, Karl Marx drives a �50s Chevy down a wide boulevard with Homer Simpson in the passenger seat and Scrooge McDuck hanging out a rear window. Roelofs� art adorned a series of miniskirts in the most recent Versace collection. Two floors up, the Belarusian painter Alexandr Rodin is finishing off a massive four-canvas work that combines Dali�s fish-eye lens, Picasso�s bent angles, and Bosch�s teeming garden into a singular kaleidoscope of twenty-first-century doom.
I return later that evening to find Kenawi behind the bar on the top floor. He joins me at the rail to sip a cup of draft and survey the scene. It�s nearing sunset, and the wide, caf�-covered lot behind Tacheles is beginning to come to life. On the far side, a building facade is covered in a three-storey Nike ad featuring a Brazilian soccer star. Kenawi, born and raised in East Germany in another age entirely, wonders at the point of it. �People will not forget to buy bread or butter,� he says.
�Or cars.�
�Or shoes,� I add.
�Exactly.�
�But it�s those ads that make certain shoes worth $150 a pair.�I say it like I�m tutoring him, because on some fundamental level � one instilled only by a youth spent immersed in jingles and product tie-ins � he doesn�t get it. Kenawi is caught in the continuous now of Tacheles, born in the pallid GDR past and awash in the hip Berlin present. I�m not sure it�s such an easy place to be, but it�s one hell of a point of view.
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