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Index
Architectural
Centre
Babylon
Cinema
Anatomical
Theatre
The
Deserted Room
Luisenst.
Canal Gardens
Franciscan
Monastery
Künstlerheim
Luise
Lunch
Lecture Guggenh.
Ackerstr. Market Hall
Room
of Silence
Tajikistan
Tearoom
St.
Michael's Church
Nicolai
House
Mori-Ogai Memorial
Honigmond Hotels
Orphtheatre
Berlin
Teahouse
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Friedrich
Nicolai, a publisher after whom
13 Brüderstrasse is named, first acquired the house in 1787 when it was about a hundred years old. Around the turn of the century he had it altered to its present
state. For several decades Nicolaihaus, later belonging to his son-in-law and his son in turn, was the cultural hub of the city with which famous contemporaries like Gotthold Ephraim
Lessing, Moses Mendelssohn, Daniel Chodowiecki and Karl Friedrich Schinkel were
associated. The building’s real treasure is its generous proportions. It has over 30
rooms, two ancient staircases and an inner courtyard straight out of a fairy-tale which is cobbled and covered with a
vine. It has a gallery running around it and a small walnut tree in the
centre. In the summer months, the courtyard is open to the public for
refreshments. It is a timeless place of unique intimacy. Since February 2000 and until its well-deserved renovation at some uncertain time in the
future, the charm and exclusiveness of the house can be experienced again at various special
exhibitions. On Wednesdays, entrance is free as it is in all the houses belonging to the Stiftung Stadtmuseum Berlin (Berlin City Museum
Foundation). |
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