The Nikolaikirche is Berlin's oldest church, located at the heart of the original trading settlement on the banks of the River Spree. Much battered during its 800 year history, it is now part of the Berlin City Museum. The rebuilt old quarter around it is a charming enclave of restaurants and small shops.
The only remaining part of the original church is the stone base of its striking brick towers. This dates from around 1230. Most of the current building was erected around 1300, but work continued until the 1450s, leaving the current elegant brick hall church, with an ambulatory behind the altar and rows of low chapels along the aisles.
A restoration in 1877 removed later baroque decoration and erected the twin towers (18th Century paintings show just one). The church was destroyed in 1945, and rebuilt in 1987, along with the Nikolaiviertel around it.
Although a museum, it still feels like a church, as all the exhibits relate to the building, including a good selection of funeral monuments from the 1500s onwards.
The Nikolaiviertel area is nice for a wander on a sunny day, although it is rather cut off from the city by big roads and the mass of the 19th Century City Hall. The best spec is taken by a row of riverside restaurants with terraces. read more