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5 neighborhoods selected in this guide.

Kreuzberg is Berlin's countercultural heartland — a densely packed district of street art, Turkish döner shops, canal-side bars, and independent galleries. Once surrounded on three sides by the Wall, its isolation attracted immigrants, squatters, and artists who defined its defiant character.
Neukölln is Berlin's most rapidly evolving district — a multicultural neighbourhood where Middle Eastern bakeries sit beside minimalist galleries and popup wine bars. Its northern strip around Weserstraße has become the city's most talked-about drinking and gallery-hopping strip.
Friedrichshain is a former East Berlin district that has become ground zero for Berlin's nightlife and alternative culture. Anchored by the East Side Gallery and the RAW Gelände complex, it pulses with energy day and night.

Prenzlauer Berg is a beautifully restored neighbourhood of ornate 19th-century apartment buildings, leafy squares, and a thriving weekend-market culture. Once East Berlin's bohemian quarter, it has gentrified into one of the city's most liveable areas.

The Nikolaiviertel is a small reconstructed medieval quarter around the Nikolaikirche — Berlin's oldest surviving church (1230). Cobblestone lanes, half-timbered facades, and small museums create a pocket of pre-war atmosphere.