Ziegert Immobilien – Competence in all matters relating to freehold apartments in Berlin-Tiergarten
Tiergarten was for decades an independent district of Berlin. Since the local government reorganisation of 2001 it is part of the Mitte district, to which the areas Mitte, Moabit, Hansaviertel, Wedding and Gesundbrunnen also belong.
As Tiergarten lies in the centre of Berlin, the sub district has a number of neighbours. In the north it borders onto the River Spree, in the east to Mitte, in the southeast to Kreuzberg, in the south to Schöneberg and in the west to Charlottenburg.
The Grosser Tiergarten park – green oasis in the centre of the capital
Berlin-Tiergarten got its name from the eponymous Tiergarten park. With an area of more than 200 football pitches, this is the third largest inner urban park in Germany. The east – west road axis “Strasse des 17. Juni” runs right through the park, laid out so as to enable the Prussian kings to travel from their Berliner Stadtschloss to Schloss Charlottenburg. Relatively new by comparison is the Tiergarten tunnel, which crosses under the park in a north – south direction.
Your freehold apartment right next to the Chancellery!
Despite its relatively small area of only around 5 sq km, there are many attractions in the Tiergarten sub district. In the Spreebogen river meander are the Reichstag parliament building, the Chancellery and the Swiss Embassy. On the opposite bank of the Spree, the cityscape is dominated by the new central railway station. Within a short walk in the shadow of the Siegessäule column is Schloss Bellevue, official residence of the German President.
A short distance away at Potsdamer Platz, a number of large modern buildings have been constructed since reunification; there include the Sony Center, the Bahn-Tower and the Potsdamer Platz Arkaden. Directly nearby at the Kulturforum (Cultural Forum) are the Philharmonic Hall, the state library and the New National Gallery. Almost 30 countries have their embassies in the Tiergarten sub district.
Tiergarten is ideally connected to Berlin’s public transport network. Three commuter lines run at minute intervals to the east and west. Also the underground line U9 connects in a north – south direction. The mainline railway station mentioned above offers connections to the rest of Germany and Europe.