
Berlin’s Jewish Museum is unique for its architectural structure, which, over and above being a container for the museum collection, is a symbol for Jewish history itself.
For this reason the museum was inaugurated even before the collections were in place.
Inside the museum, on the top floor, there are collections that bear witness to the history of the Jews in Germany. Access to the exhibition area is along three pathways symbolizing Hope and the Diaspora.
The museum building has no direct link with the outside; to get to it you have to pass through the adjacent building, the old History of Berlin Museum, that currently only acts as an antechamber to the Jewish Museum.
Jewish Museum Berlin
Lindenstraße 9-14, 10969 Berlin
Info: +49 (0)30 259 93 300
Fax: +49 (0)30 259 93 409
General: info@jmberlin.de
Tours: fuehrungen@jmberlin.de
Hours
Monday from 10am until 10pm (last entrance 9pm)
From Tuesday until Sunday from 10am until 8pm (last entrance 7pm)
Closed:
13th and 14th of September 2007 (Rosh ha-Shanah);
22nd of September 2007 (Yom Kippur)
25th of September 2007 (closed at 3pm)
17th November 2007
24th December
Tickets
Full: 5.00 €
Reduction (students and seniors): 2.50 €
Free: children under 6 years
Family Ticket (2 adults and max 4 children): 10.00 €
Public Transport:
U1, U6 Hallesches Tor; U6 Kochstraße; Bus M29, M41, 248
Payment parking.

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