Going Different Ways in Berlin

At a Berlin beer hall…  Actually, I’m drinking an apple juice with soda…

After two days spent uncovering the history of Berlin, more or less in a pack, our group began to fall apart, for various reasons, some connected with external temptations, others with inner compulsions.

Shannon was enticed by the prospect of hanging out with two young friends, who coincidentally had also arrived in Berlin. She set off to meet them for lunch and this rapidly extended into dinner. In the end, she stayed up till five in the morning and returned to our hotel the following day, having sampled Berlin night life and passively inhaled a dangerous amount of smoke. It was up to her to explore Berlin’s potential for partying and she did her duty with aplomb.

Courtney was seized by the necessity of completing homework. She needed hours rather than minutes to prepare for her Global Politics SAC and she therefore settled down in the hotel to read her beautifully ordered and colour-coordinated notes. In the evening, she realized to her horror that the practice exam for this subject is taking place the day after our midnight return. That’s simply brutal.

In my case, the temptation to experience yet another Hugendubel drew me to the three-storey bookshop (almost a department store) in Wilmersdorfer Straße. I find this chain of bookshops irresistible. We all have our idiosyncrasies, after all: Linda is fixated on Australian Rules Football, Courtney is devoted to Lady Gaga, and Davey is obsessed with maps. My visit to Hugendubel was both satisfying and relaxing: I sat on the red leather couches, read two or three first chapters, and ended up buying a children’s novel called Mein Zuhause für immer (My Home For Ever). That’s going to be for the long plane flight.

A decorative Trabi

During our morning team meeting, Davey and Dwayne  mentioned that they would like to go to the Stasi-Museum. I felt a pang of guilt for absenting myself from this excursion, since it involved a history that I felt I ought to explore more thoroughly; but it is also an unremittingly grim and unsettling story, like many aspects of Berlin’s past. As it turned out, the men found the museum riveting. The malicious methods to which the Stasi operatives stooped to spy on people and wreck human lives were almost beyond belief. One woman, even seventeen years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, discovered a former Stasi bug, still embedded in her front door. Twelve years of Nazi Germany, followed by decades of East German dictatorship, must have warped and twisted thousands of lives.

Linda wanted to do something cheerful for her last evening in Berlin, so she took her family to the “Monkey Bar”, where you can sit high above the city… …and look down on the monkeys and the greenery of the zoo. It was a funky and welcoming place. 

Perhaps it was a mistake to come here directly from Barcelona, for after the architectural cohesion of that city, the hotchpotch of Berlin was particularly striking. It was too foggy to climb up the television tower, but we could see well enough to notice that some witless entrepreneur had built a Park Inn Hotel right next door, a box-like, foully ugly building based seemingly on the design principles of a Trabi. There are eyesores blighting the whole Berlin skyline; it is difficult to ascertain how many of them are simply hideous old buildings from East German times and how many can be attributed to unregulated and unbridled capitalism since then. There seem to be cranes on every corner. I could not perceive any sign of concern for maintaining what is old and beautiful and ensuring that new buildings are appropriate, coherent with the rest of the city and appealing to the eye.

Of course, I could make exactly the same complaint about some of the latest additions to the Melbourne skyline, especially those in Box Hill. 

In any case, Berlin served us up many temptations, catered to several of our whims, and provided, above all, an education in human cruelty, frailty and resilience.

Dwayne indulging one of his deepest desires: to eat a pork knuckle roast as only the Germans know how to serve it up…
Davey’s desires run more to wine, but he can also drink a beer with the best of them.

Final Notes

Hotel: Hotel-Pension Bregenz, Bregenzer-Straße 8 – a relatively small family concern

Restaurants: Our hotel was surrounded by restaurants worth visiting, especially the Vietnamese Restaurant, Pho 56.

Dazzled by Barcelona

Barcelona’s dreamy architecture

Barcelona is a feast for the eyes. As we finally emerged from the Metro on the way from the airport to our apartment, we all drew a breath, partially to gain some much-needed oxygen, but mainly in admiration of the scene before us. It was part magical, part medieval, if there is such an architectural style in existence.

La Pedrera

Upon our arrival at our apartment, we discovered that we could actually have come overground in one train, rather than catching three metros. Damn. All the same, that first unexpected, breathtaking view of Barcelona was worth the pain. The buildings seemed to have grown out of the earth, yet somehow they looked just right for a modern city as well – like Bilbo’s hobbit hole with a contemporary, urban flavour, including bright colours, well proportioned curves, narrow shutters and wrought iron balconies. 

There are  pockets of Barcelona that were designed entirely by Gaudi, but the other architecture is also eye-catching and cohesive. I imagine a group of architects who agreed on a design brief before they began their work: “Let’s make something that’s not just functional but heart-rendingly beautiful. People should catch their breath when they see it. They should experience a sense of wonder – or at the very least some moments of pure joy.”

Dazzled by both the sunshine and the architecture in Barcelona

If these were indeed their aims, then they have achieved them. 

We were enchanted as we walked through Barcelona in the crisp early morning sunlight. It was hard not to take photos every few metres. 

Shannon and Courtney had arrived in the dead of night, drained and weary from that foul plane flight. After a single night’s sleep, however, they seemed to have completely recovered. Their eyes were bright in the morning sunshine and their conversation animated. It was a sheer pleasure to listen to their young voices, to hear snatches of Courtney’s music and to observe their enthusiasm for the adventure that lay ahead. They are the perfect addition to our party, for Barcelona, in contrast to Dresden, is teeming with young people – beautiful, active, chic and smart. Just like our two young companions, who, like Barcelona, are a joy to behold.

 

Linda and Shannon at the beach Boats, blue skies and the sea
Is it a home or a castle? Courtney looks forward to seeing her goddess

Final Notes

Details of our Trip from Germany to Spain: No identity check at any stage – we never showed our passports. Davey had to have an interview at the Post Office and show both his passport and his licence to get a SIM card, but he could get on an aeroplane with no proof of identity. Gut-wrenching rush to make our connecting flight. Reached the gate with a minute to spare.

Apartment: Spacious and bright, red accents, not far from La Pedrera. Davey’s find.

Steps Today: 18,864 

Obvious Differences from Germany: More children, especially toddlers, in every public place we visited; more public displays of affection; more trees; better pillows; fewer bakeries, fewer vegetable and salad offerings

One Similarity with Germany: In Courtney’s words: “The shops aren’t open on Sunday? What? Are you serious? You’re kidding, right?”