We arrived by train in the evening, took a local S-Bahn train (surface commuter) toward our hotel near Alexanderplatz (showplace for communists when this was East Berlin), a big transit hub. Alexanderplatz has the highest “building” in continental Europe, although it is mostly a communication tower built during the time of the Soviet occupation. The tower makes a great landmark when we were running around Berlin. It is on every map, too.

Going from all the “Old Town” parts of cities for the past few days to modern Berlin was a bit shocking. Perhaps that is the reason the first place we visited was the Charlottenburg Palace, a short S-Bahn away. The trains are in 3-D. Two underground layers of the S-Bahn go N-S and E-W. Beneath those is the U-Bahn, slower trains with more frequent stops.

The royalty responsible for this palace (we saw two generations of art and buildings) loved porcelain, both Chinese and Japanese.

And inlaid wood floors:

And large chambers with astonishing chandeliers (they were different all over the palace):

And tapestries:

Is it strange that so many of these Royal people are now remembered more for what they collected than what they did? (At least remembered by US tourists.😉)
We also visited the palace garden. It must look interesting from a higher viewpoint.

Later, we walked through Tiergarten Park, with statues and interesting plants:


In the Tiergarten, we stumbled upon a creation called the Global Stone Project, which has big rocks representing: peace, love, awakening, hope and forgiveness from four continents: Africa, Asia, Europe and America, arranged artistically. The sign said something about the summer solstice and alignment, but we did not figure that part out.

I couldn’t resist a close up picture of crystals in this igneous rock showing a chemical reaction frozen in time.

In the evening, we had reservations for the dome at the Reichstag (Parliament building), to walk around and around, high above Berlin, listening to descriptions on Bluetooth devices as we went along.

The dome is open at that top to let the hot air out (from all those politicians!), with an ingenious system for collecting precipitation.

The mirrors that reflect light into the parliament chamber allowed for a special multiple selfie!
