Berlin: Audio Guided Walking Tour (2:40 - 30 audio comments)

$7
Duration
2 hours 40 minutes
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Experience Berlin in a different way thanks to our unique audio guided tour. At your own pace, without time constraints, explore the German capital via a route designed to reveal the tensions of the past and contemporary vitality. Guided by an interactive 3D map and immersive audio commentaries, you perceive not only the must-see monuments, but also the discreet traces of history and urban changes.

From the Brandenburg Gate, the emblem of reunification, to the banks of the Spree, the circuit takes you through historic Berlin, Cold War Berlin, and changing neighborhoods. You will pass by the Reichstag, the Holocaust Memorial, Checkpoint Charlie, Checkpoint Charlie, the Topography of Terrors, the East Side Gallery, the symbolic plazas, and the memory sites. Each stage reveals to you the resilience, the ruptures and the recompositions of the city.

The app works offline once downloaded. Real-time geolocation ensures precise guidance. Audio commentary is available in French, English, and Spanish, and the content can be listened to on five devices simultaneously.

The tour is a loop: you can start wherever you want, or from our recommended starting point: the Brandenburg Gate. Smart navigation ensures a smooth visit, even if you choose to stop to view a work, visit a museum, or take a stroll along a memorial. Your access is unlimited: start the visit today or in several months.

You will discover: the Brandenburg Gate, the Reichstag, the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, Checkpoint Charlie, the Topography of Terror, the East Side Gallery, the Palace of Tears, the State Library, Museum Island, the banks of the Spree, the Mitte and Friedrichshain districts, and many other major sites.

Inclusions

    Immediate access to the audio-guided tour, no tickets or equipment to collect

    No deadline or expiration

    30 immersive audio comments along the way (historical comments, monuments, anecdotes, mysteries...)

    Text transcripts of all audio content

    Admire hidden gems that lie off the beaten path

    3 languages available: French, English, Spanish

    Interactive navigation with real-time geolocation and 3D map to discover the most beautiful streets, squares and neighborhoods

    Recommendations for the best photo opportunities

    Offline mode (no data consumption during the visit)

Exclusions

    Admission fees to fee-paying establishments along the route if you want to make visits

    Headphones or earbuds (optional)

Tour Plan

Itinerary

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German Historical Museum

The monumental buildings in this district follow one another and are similar. Here you have the entrance to the German Historical Museum, known as Zeughaus which means Arsenal.

Kronprinz Palace

In front of you are a set of royal residences dating from the 18th century: the Kronprintz Palace and the Princesses' Palace, now the Opera Café.

Berlin National Opera

The famous Unter den Linden Avenue, literally meaning “under the linden trees,” extends from the Brandenburg Gate to the castle bridge behind you.

Bebelplatz

Here you are in one of the most beautiful squares in the capital, renamed in 1947, in honor of one of the founders of the German Socialist Democratic Workers' Party: August Bebel.

St. Edwige's Cathedral

This is a magnificent symbol of religious tolerance. St. Edwig's Cathedral, which you have in front of you, is the episcopal seat of the archdiocese of Berlin and one of the most important Catholic places of worship in Germany.

Gendarmenmarkt

Here you are on the Gendarmenmarkt, the police market square in French. Grandiose and harmonious, it is described as the most beautiful in the capital. Some even say that it is the most beautiful place north of the Alps!

French and German domes

As you have noticed, one of the major interests of this place lies in the resemblance between the two churches that balance it. However, they were not built at the same time.

Charlottenstrasse

Since you are going down Charlotte Street for several hundred meters, I would like to take this opportunity to tell you a bit about the queen hidden behind this name.

Michaelsen Palace

Here, at the corner of the street, you can see the beautiful Art Nouveau facade of the Michaelsen Palace.

Neighborhood: Schützenstrasse

This ultra-colorful block, which contrasts sharply with the rest of the neighborhood, is the work of the Italian architect Aldo Rossi: the Schützenstraße neighborhood.

Peter Fechter Memorial

You would pass by without seeing it, as the Peter Fechter memorial is sober. And yet, he is one of the most famous victims of the Wall, if not the most symbolic.

Checkpoint Charlie

There it is, the famous Checkpoint Charlie. It is one of those images that you probably already had in mind before arriving in Berlin.

Trabi Museum

On your right, you have the project The Wall, Asisi Panorama Berlin which invites you to relive, thanks to hundreds of retouched and scaled photographs, the daily life of Berliners in the 1980s.

Topography of Terrors

You arrive at the site of the former headquarters of the Gestapo and the SS, whose ruins were razed after the war.

To Potsdamer Platz

You've certainly heard of Potsdamer Platz in Berlin, considered, at least at one time, to be the German version of Times Square.

Hitler's bunker

Before I learn a bit more about the memorial to the murdered Jews of Europe, which you see in front of you, I wanted to tell you a word about Hitler.

Memorial to the murdered Jews of Europe

Be mentally prepared because the memorial to the murdered Jews of Europe is emotional.

Pariser Platz

You are on the huge Alexander Square, one of the most iconic places in Berlin. It was named so in 1805, for the visit of Tsar Alexander I of Russia, during his visit to the King of Prussia.

Brandenburg Gate

Like most other visitors, if you have come this far it is above all to see the magnificent Brandenburg Gate, symbol of German reunification and the last historic gate still there today!

Memorial to the Sinti and the murdered Roma of Europe

During your visit to Berlin, be prepared to encounter numerous memorials dedicated to the various communities persecuted by the Nazi regime.

Reichstag Palace

So here is a building steeped in history. The Reichstag Palace has played an important role in the history of Berlin.

White Crosses Memorial

The white crosses that you discover on the railings are there in memory of the people who lost their lives trying to cross the wall.

Marie-Elisabeth-Lüders-Haus

The beautiful building with ultra-modern architecture that you see on the other bank is part of the parliamentary complex of the German federal government.

The Spree

The Spree, which separates the German capital in two, alone embodies the tumultuous history of the city it passes through. It was on its banks that the first city was created in the 13th century, and it later served as a natural border between East and West Berlin.

The Palace of Tears

You arrive at the Tränenpalast, the Palace of Tears in French, a highly symbolic place of the German division. After the construction of the Berlin Wall, Friedrichstrasse station found itself entirely in the Soviet sector.

Admiral Palace

The beautiful building you see across the street with its large Ionic columns and countless moldings is one of the few large entertainment halls from the beginning of the 20th century that are still present in Berlin.

Berlin State Library

The imposing building that you walk along on the left side and that seems to take up the entire block is the Berlin State Library.

Friedrich II statue

If you were wondering, know that the statue of the rider you see in the center of the street is that of King Frederick II of Prussia, aka Frederick the Great.

Humboldt University

You are now surrounded by beautiful period buildings, normal, you arrive in the district of Humboldt University, surrounded by the State Library and the Institute of Science.

Memorial to the victims of wars

Walk up to this colonnaded temple and look inside. It is a moving commemorative monument in memory of war victims.

Meeting / Pickup

Meet on location: This experience has no pick-up service, customers have to make their way to our meeting point.

Please Note

An internet connection is required to download the itinerary before the visit, organize yourself accordingly

Always check local conditions before you leave

Make sure your smartphone is sufficiently charged or carry an external battery.

After booking, you will receive an email with instructions for installing the application (available for iPhone and Android) as well as the procedure for activating the circuit code

The circuit is not suitable for people with reduced mobility (presence of stairs).

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