Advice on Germany (Berlin vs Frankfurt/Rhine)?

Hi!
I want to book a 3-day break in Germany. I can't wish between going to Berlin or going to the Rhine area. Has anyone be to both and can give their inference? Or can you recommend some highlights of either place? I'm worried that Berlin will only be another european city or that the Rhine area may not be interesting ample for 3 days.

Thanks very much!



Answers:    Well, I'd voice that either is a appropriate choice. Depends on what you like.

Berlin is a peerless city in my judgment. If you go near, focus on the stuff that makes it inventive - the history of World War II, division, reunification and the fall of the wall. All exciting. That means visit things like the Reichstag, the Holocaust Memorial, the Jewish Museum, the Checkpoint Charlie Museum, the Wall museum/exhibit, the Topographie of Terrors exhibit, the Kaiser Wilhelm Gedachtniskirche. If you call on things like the Baroque palaces and such it may a short time ago seem resembling any European city, though I don't know how. Berlin is really unique. You are also close the greatest collection of museums I've ever seen. It really is amazing.

The Rhine is equally interesting surrounded by my opinion, if slower pace. The key here is to enjoy a car or to use the train/bus to move up and down the nouns. I'd stay in the Rhine Gorge - if you are backpacking the hostel within Bacharach is ideal - save there are any number of places to stay. I'd recommend something surrounded by the middle between BAcharach, St. Goar/St. Goarshausen, and Boppard.

In addition to spending a daytime on the river, possibly in a KD queue steamship seeing the shore float by and enjoying a cup of Reisling, other things to do range form Bingen, where on earth you can visit the town museum, and swot a little going on for Hildegard, Bacharach, where you can soak up yourself in a medievel walled town beside exquisite half timbered houses surrounded by the central square. St. Goar have a castle, Burg Rheinfels, which is worth a couple hours of wandering. It is a ruin but beautiful. And you can trail up to the Lorley across the rhine (there is a ferry) or walk out to see the statue of her. Boppard have great wines, a beautiful church and a lovely town square. Also a lovely tramp along the water. Up within Koblenz, visit the Deutsches Eck, the corner where on earth the mosel meets the Rhine. They also hold a castle, a fortress, looking out over the Rhine.
Hello,

I am in Germany and own to recommend BERLIN!!

some ideas, to keep hold of you busy:

Most unmissable sights are in and around middle Mitte. The east-west axis of Unter den Linden is a good place to start. Frequent buses run all along the tree-flanked boulevard, linking it with Bahnhof Zoo surrounded by the west.

The western end is distinct by the iconic Brandenburg Gate, once closed off between East and West Berlin, which lead on to the huge Tiergarten park. North- west of the Gate is the government quarter and the revamped Reichstag, crowned by Norman Foster’s great glass cupola (Platz der Republik, 2273 2152, www.bundestag.de). Trips to the top are free, and the viewpoint is magnificent, but expect to queue. To the south side of the Brandenburg Gate is the not long completed Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe (Cora-Berliner-Strasse 1, 2639 4336, www.holocaust-denkmal.de). The controversial design by Peter Eisenmann has 2,700 columns of varying height in an gently sloping space the size of a city block.

South of Unter den Linden is Gendarmenmarkt. Topped and tailed by the German Cathedral (Deutscher Dom, 2273 0431, closed Mon) and the French Cathedral (Franz"osischer Dom, 229 1760, closed Mon), it is one of Berlin’s most beautiful squares. At the eastern come to an end of Unter den Linden is Museum Island (Museumsinsel), a UNESCO World Heritage Site whose clutch of superb collections includes the Pergamonmuseum (Am Kupfergraben, 2090 5577, www.smb.spk-berlin.de, closed Mon), incorporating the Babylonian Gate of Ishtar. The majestically porticoed Altes Museum (Lustgarten, 2090 5577, www.museen-berlin.de) and the 19th-century art at the Alte Nationalgalerie (Bodestrasse 1-3, 2090 5801, www.museen-berlin.de, closed Mon) are also worthwhile. Other attractions are the Berliner Dom (Am Luftgarten, 2026 9128, www.berliner-dom.de) and Deutsches Historisches Museum (Zeughaus, Unter den Linden 2, 203 040, www.dhm.de), which have a swanky new wing by IM Pei.

Eastwards is the communist-era concrete expanse of Alexanderplatz, and the signpost ball-and-spike TV Tower (Fernsehturm, 242 3333, www.berlinerfernsehturm.de), with a revolving supervision deck; south are the reconstructed medieval Nikolaiviertel and remnants of the productive medieval wall.

North of Alexanderplatz, the renovated Scheunenviertel (‘Barn Quarter’) is packed next to galleries, bar and shops. Its focal point is the Hackesche H"ofe, a warren of jugendstil (art nouveau) courtyards full of boutiques and cafés. Nearby Auguststrasse is the art scene’s main drag, while the revived Jewish Quarter centre on the Neue Synagoge (Oranienburger Strasse 28-30, 8802 8451, www.cjudaicum.de, closed Sat).

Prenzlauer Berg has gentrified speedily and, though containing few specific sights, is a relaxed area for a dinnertime or a drink. Friedrichshain has a more communist and post-industrial get the impression. The lively, youthful nightlife around Muhlenstrasse and Simon-Dach-Strasse contrasts near the eerily wide biggest drag, Karl-Mar x-Allee, which is a treat for fans of Stalinist architecture.


Kreuzberg & Sch"oneberg

Once Berlin’s rebel heart, Kreuzberg remains fascinatingly diverse. Its museums include the exhibit just about the Berlin Wall at the Haus am Checkpoint Charlie (Friedrichstrasse 43-45, 2537 250, www.mauer-museum.com), and the Daniel Libeskind-designed Jewish Museum (Lindenstrasse 9-14, 2599 3300, www.jmberlin.de), where the remarkable deconstructivist building almost upstages the already fairly memorable exhibition inside.

Neighbouring Sch"oneberg offers some great bar in its northern reach, and is the hub of Berlin’s thriving gay district.


Tiergarten

Tiergarten is dominated by the park of the same label. At its south-east corner is a clutch of museums, including the Mies Van der Rohe-designed Neue Nationalgalerie (Potsdamer Strasse 50, 266 2651, www.museen-berlin.de, closed Mon) and the Filmmuseum Berlin (Potsdamer Strasse 2, 300 9030, www.filmmuseum-berlin.de, closed Mon). The latter is in the strange complex at Potsdamer Platz, among buildings from famous architects such as Richard Rogers and Renzo Piano. At the south-west corner of Tiergarten is the terrifically landscaped Zoo and Aquarium (Hardenbergplatz 8, 254 010, www.zoo-berlin.de).


Other Districts
To the south-west tell stories the vast Grunewald woods, the runny pleasures of the Wannsee and assorted smaller lakes – Strandbad Wannsee is Europe’s largest inland coast – and the Dahlem museum complex. The extensive and authoritative Ethnologisches Museum (Lansstrasse 8, 830 1438, www.smb.spk-berlin.de, closed Mon) is remarkable in itself, but impossible to tell apart building also houses terrific museums of Indian Art, East Asian Art and European Culture. Heading south-east, you can drink in the villagey charms of K"openick, or example at your leisure the products of the Berliner Burgerbr"au brewery at Friedrichshagen, which throws unseal its gates for an annual summer beer fête. Boat trips can be taken on the nearby Muggelsee.

o Tourist information: Europa-Center, Budapester Strasse, Charlottenburg (250 025, from outside Germany 01805 754 040, www.btm.de)


xx Have a great time, you won't regret Berlin!!
Hello, when do You own 3 days, You must go to BERLIN. It's a exceedingly interessting town and there is entertainment and other inhabitants all around the light of day. The Rhine area is a nice section of Germany, but it is more for "older"people. I one-sidedly likes munich the best, better atmosphere than the other two places, and at hand was closely to do.
Berlin and Rhine are great but would go for Berlin much more to do and Learn and discover. If you are into Shopping and looking at different things Berlin is the bearing to go. But if you are into walking and looking at castle Rhine is the best way too walk. I hope that i have minister to you have a nice trip. I would articulate go to Berlin I thought Berlin would be freshly a nother city in Germany but nearby is so much to see (the Berlin wall) and so many monuments we go for 4 days and it still wasent enough to see everything. I would reccomend a umbrella it rain almost everyday at 6pm for 45 minetes. Its a great city Def. go in attendance
Berlin, Berlin, Berlin!
Frankfurt is the Bank Capital of Germany and also called Mainhatten, because it is at the river Main. No German really go there to embezzle a break.

Berlin has so much to hold out, history, nightlife, museums.

I have see Berlin 1986 and 87 and went vertebrae many times after the wall fell.
Try Berlin.
If you're decide between Berlin and Frankfurt, I'd definitely recommend Berlin. But you should also consider going to a more northern town within the Rhine valley: If you plan your break to give somebody a lift you to Cologne you get a great, vibrant city that also offer a lot of history. Plus, you can jump on a day-trip to the Eifel (there's a recently founded raw preserve there. Or you be in motion to the Ruhrgebiet and see how they have turned lots of industrial buildings and sites into adjectives things cultural.

More Questions & Answers...
  • Can someone Proof Read My German Speech??
  • How far is heidelberg (germany) from munich by motor?
  • If you are staying within Cologne what other primary cities can you call on surrounded by a time?
  • Does anyone on here live within Germany?
  • Does anyone know an executive German/English translator...?
  • About the Kit Kat Club surrounded by Berlin?