The
episcopal ordinariate of the then Roman Catholic Diocese of Berlin commissioned Friedrich Ebert, Hermann Jünemann and Hans Schädel to build the church. In 1960 Cardinal
Julius Döpfner laid the
cornerstone, and in 1963 he – together with
Alfred Bengsch, then Catholic bishop of Berlin, and
Louis-Marie-Fernand de Bazelaire, then
Archbishop of Chambéry in France – consecrated the church. At that time, the church also served as a parochial church for the Catholic St. Joseph parish of Berlin-Spandau. The
campanile of Maria Regina Martyrum is a landmark at the entrance to the ceremonial courtyard, paved with cobblestone and surrounded by walls covered with slabs of black and grey basalt and showing figural
Stations of the Cross. The sober interior of the upper church, covered by an even ceiling, impresses with its indirect illumination. The building is regarded an outstanding example of combining church architecture and sculpture. The crypt, originally a single room, has been divided by a gold-coated wall of concrete. The front part is dedicated solely to the memory of the
martyrs of that time, symbolised by three inscriptions. At the right grave the ashes of
Erich Klausener are reposing, the first martyr of Berlin's Catholic diocese in the Nazi period. The left inscription is dedicated to Blessed
Provost Bernhard Lichtenberg. His
relics are in Maria Regina Martyrum throughout the time of the renovation of
St. Hedwig's Cathedral. The middle, only symbolic, grave commemorates all those martyrs, whom the Nazis denied to have a grave.
Discalced Carmelite nuns who live in the convent Regina Martyrum next to the church since 1984 pray the
Liturgy of the Hours in the rear crypt. Since March 2008 the commemorative church, which does not belong to a parish, is headed by a
rector of the
Jesuits. ==Furnishings==