Tucked between the Spree and the Tiergarten in the centre of Berlin, Hansaviertel is famous for its showcase of modernist buildings constructed after WWII. A product of Cold War rivalry, Hansaviertel reflects how the big ideas of the time impacted life in Step away from Berlin’s better-known landmarks and into one of its most surprising and visionary neighbourhoods: the Hansaviertel. This guided walking tour explores how a leafy corner between the Tiergarten and the Spree became a stage for competing visions of urban life, architectural style, and modern identity.
You begin in the late 19th century, when Berlin was growing at a breakneck pace. As the city’s population boomed, the Hansaviertel was developed as a middle- and upper-class enclave — a place of villas, manicured gardens, and elegant façades. We explore the district’s early character and learn about some of its most famous residents, including Rosa Luxemburg, Nelly Sachs, and Käthe Kollwitz.
The walk also leads to a quiet but powerful memorial at the site of one of Berlin’s most significant Jewish communities — a neighbourhood that was destroyed both socially and physically by the Nazi regime and the Allied bombing raids that followed.
From here, the tour takes a dramatic turn: in 1957, West Berlin hosted the Interbau — an international architecture exhibition that aimed to redefine how a city could look and function in the postwar world. On land cleared by war, the Hansaviertel was redesigned by some of the most influential architects of the 20th century: Walter Gropius, Oscar Niemeyer, Alvar Aalto, and many more.
We walk among their creations — elegant, experimental, sometimes provocative — and explore the philosophies behind the buildings. What did this architecture promise? What kind of life did it hope to shape? Does it still feel modern?
Throughout the tour, you’ll hear stories not just of architects, but of residents, resistance, and reinvention. By the end, you’ll have walked through more than a century of Berlin’s social, political, and architectural history — all within one remarkable neighbourhood.