Museums and galleries There are a number of museums that focus on the Jewish history of the neighborhood.
The New Synagogue - Centrum Judaicum, was restored and opened in 1995, is located at Oranienburger Strasse 28–30, a center dedicated to the care and preservation of Jewish culture. The
Anne Frank Center and the
Museum of Otto Weidt's Workshop for the Blind are located near Hackescher Market at Rosenthaler Straße 39. Auguststraße a street that is known beyond the borders of Berlin, for its gallery scene. The best-known gallery is
KW Institute for Contemporary Art (also known as Kunst-Werke), located at Auguststrasse 64. From 2006 until 2012, the
C/O Berlin gallery occupied the historic
Postfuhramt building, and hosting public art. The ruins of the former Passage Department Store on Oranienburger St were occupied by artists in 1992 and made a name for themselves as the
Kunsthaus Tacheles. In 2012 the artists were forced to leave in spite of numerous protests. After the renovation and inclusion in the urban development project between Friedrichstrasse, Johannisstrasse and Oranienburgerstrasse, the Tacheles is to be used again for cultural purposes. In 2023,
Fotografiska Berlin opened a permanent photography museum in the restored Kunsthaus Tacheles complex.
Theater, vaudeville and dance The
Volksbühne or "People's Theater," built between 1913 and 1914 according to plans by
Oskar Kaufmann, is located on Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz, the former Bülowplatz. The
Friedrichstadt-Palast often shortened to Palast Berlin, has the largest theater stage in the world and a long tradition. In 1984, the Friedrichstadtpalast moved to the newly built revue theater at Friedrichstrasse 107. In the
Hackesche Höfe complex, at Rosenthaler Straße 40/41, there is the Theater Chamäleon which was founded in 1991 and shows changing programs. The
Sophiensæle is another location for theater and dance in the Handwerkervereinshaus (Craftsman's Association) building, built in 1904–1905 by the architects Joseph Fraenkel and Theodor Kampfmeyer. The
Clärchens Ballhaus, is a historic ballroom, dancehall, and restaurant which has been operating continuously for over 100 years, located on Auguststrasse. In 2020, the Clärchens Ballhaus closed during
COVID-19 and uncertain times. The
Monbijou Palace last housed the Hohenzollern Museum. The two-story gatehouses on Monbijouplatz shaped the cityscape. The building and gatehouses were badly damaged in World War II and the ruins were torn down in 1959. In 1859, the building of the Cathedral Candidate Foundation (in German, Domkandidatenstift), built according to plans by Stüler, was inaugurated at
Oranienburger Strasse 76a. Various parts of the building were grouped around an inner courtyard and a tower in the street front formed the distinctive highlight. The building complex, which had burned out during the Second World War, was demolished in 1972. In 1909, the Friedrichstrasse Passage was opened at Friedrichstrasse 110–112, which connected Friedrichstrasse with Oranienburger Strasse. The portal buildings on both street fronts and the mighty domed hall inside the block were striking. In 1983 the building, which was last called “House of Technology” and was badly damaged in World War II, was demolished. Only the front building on Oranienburger Strasse remained standing and became known as the Kunsthaus Tacheles.
Registered historic buildings File:Neue Synagoge, Berlin-Mitte, 160328, ako.jpg|
New Synagogue on
Oranienburger Straße File:Berlin 2012 (105).jpg|Court of
Hackeschen Höfe File:Berlin, Mitte, Oranienburger Strasse 35-36, Postfuhramt.jpg|
Postfuhramt, a former government post office building File:Leihamt Berlin Linienstraße.JPG|Royal Loan Office (Königliches Leihamt) File:Germany-00143 - Sermon (30211331672).jpg|
Sophienkirche, a Protestant church
Modern buildings Between 1999 and 2000, twelve individual houses were built on the east side of
Hackescher Markt on the corner of Dircksenstrasse. Shops are located on the ground floors and the upper floors are residential. The architecture firm Bellmann & Böhm developed the master in 1996–1998. After World War II, there were certain areas that needed housing because of the damage of bombs, and as a result many prefabricated buildings were used in the 1960s to fill in these areas. Between 2013 until 2015, some 319 apartments in six prefabricated complexes in the Spandauer Vorstadt district that have been renovated by local
housing association,
WBM Wohnungsbaugesellschaft Berlin-Mitte. == References ==