The Most Unusual Museums In Berlin

Design Panoptikum
Design Panoptikum | © Anagoria/WikiCommons
Lily Cichanowicz

With its distinctly grim history and its multifaceted underground culture, there is no place else like Berlin, making it much like the lovably quirky aunt in the family of Europe’s capital cities. With all their spellbinding oddities, these unusual museums capture the essence of this truly unique city.

1. DDR Museum

Museum

DDR Museum
© User:FA2010/WikiCommons
There is no denying that Berlin has had its share of tumultuousness over the past century, moving from the grips of one totalitarian regime to another. Today, we have to hand it to the city for its phenomenal job of commemorating these ugly and uncomfortable times in its history. There are many monuments and museums dedicated to various facets of Nazism and the Holocaust as well as those that explore what life was like behind the Iron Curtain in East Berlin. Berlin’s DDR Museum, for example, features several interactive exhibits and installations that capture the everyday lives of people living under strict surveillance in isolation from the rest of the free world. At this museum, visitors are invited to rummage through cupboards in a reproduction block housing estate and drive a Trabi simulator.

2. Puppentheater-Museum Berlin

Museum

Many cities have museums dedicated to understanding the histories of various artistic movements, but few can boast an entire museum dedicated to the history of puppet theatre. The Puppentheater-Museum Berlin offers a compelling look at how relevant and pervasive this art form is in influencing theatre and modern media. Established in 1986, the Puppentheater-Museum sheds light on the astounding craftsmanship behind puppet making. The collection itself features puppets of all kinds from throughout Asia, Africa, and Europe. The museum also offers changing exhibitions and puppet theatre performances, making it appealing to both youth and adult audiences.

3. Deutsches Currywurst Museum

Restaurant, German

3. Deutsches Currywurst Museum
© Assenmacher / WikiCommons
People are unlikely to find another culture that honors and celebrates sausages the way Germany does. Amongst many other tasty treats like Berliners, schnitzels, and döner kebabs, the currywurst is probably one of the city’s most iconic dishes. The zany Deutsches Currywurst Museum chronicles just about everything a person might want to know about the origins, history, and cultural significance of the currywurst. The museum is particularly fun because most exhibits are entirely interactive. Oh, and there is an enormous sausage sofa for lounging. Finish a trip to the Deutsches Currywurst Museum by sampling the many varieties of currywurst sold at the snack bar.

5. Monster Kabinett

Amusement Park, Museum

Monster Kabinett is a bar and museum with a steam-punk vibe. It is covered in graffiti and filled with mechanical monstrosities and contraptions of all kinds. The man behind the monsters is Hannes Heiner, and he creates the monsters from scrap metal and other recycled materials. Heiner explains that each monster has a name and a backstory, too. Monster Kabinett is the perfect spot to get a taste of Berlin’s true underground culture with all its idiosyncrasies. Pass under the arched gateway, cross the enormous courtyard and enjoy a drink at the bar before embarking on this eerie, atmospheric experience.

6. Design Panoptikum

Museum

Design Panoptikum
© Anagoria/WikiCommons
Design Panoptikum is a museum of surrealist industrial objects. On the historical side, the museum contains a collection of tools used in the realms of medicine, industry, sports, construction, and medicine. The museum, however, does little to describe these items’ significance in the conventional sense. Instead, they are arranged together on antique furniture and illuminated under the dim glow of an equally odd collection of lamps to form a series of installations. The museum also contains a myriad of human-machine hybrids where metal pieces are attached to replicas of human body parts. These are meant to serve as an exploration of the relationship between man and machine throughout the industrial era.

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