Skip to main content
Jewish Museum
Museum

Jewish Museum

📍 Lindenstraße 9-14, Berlin, 10969🏗 2001-01-01🖊 Q154538

The Jewish Museum Berlin, or *Jüdisches Museum Berlin*, opened in 2001 and is Europe’s largest Jewish museum. It spans 3,500 square metres of floor space and traces Jewish history in Germany from the Middle Ages to the present, using new focuses and new scenography rather than a single, fixed narrative. The complex is made of three buildings—two of them were built especially for the museum by architect Daniel Libeskind, tying its physical design to its historical mission. Just across the ensemble stands the W. Michael Blumenthal Academy, built in 2011–2012 in the former flower market hall, also designed by Libeskind. The academy houses the archives, library, museum education, a lecture hall, and the Diaspora Garden, extending the museum’s work beyond exhibitions into scholarship and teaching. …

— WayWhisper audio guide

AI-generated from open data and cross-checked, with review where noted. How we write narrations

🎧 Listen in WayWhisperOfficial website ↗
Listen on the go

Hear the full story — and hundreds more — while walking through Berlin.

Open WayWhisper

More in Berlin