The Schwules Museum in Berlin, Germany, is a museum and research centre with collections focusing on LGBTQ+ history and culture. It opened in 1985 and it was the first museum in the world dedicated to gay history.
Schwules Museum, 2016
Museums shop in the Schwules Museum, 2015
Café in the Schwules Museum, 2015
The Mehringdamm is a street in southern Kreuzberg, Berlin. In the north it starts at Mehringbrücke and ends - with its southernmost houses already belonging to Tempelhof locality - on Platz der Luftbrücke. It is the historical southbound Berlin-Halle highway, now forming the federal route 96. The main junction of Mehringdamm is with the 19th-century ring road around Berlin's inner city, named Yorckstraße west, and Gneisenaustraße east of Mehringdamm.
Block of flats, built in 1868, on Mehringdamm 40 at the corner of Yorckstraße
View in 1829 from the Kreuzberg northwards downhill over what is today's Tempelhofer Vorstadt with the then Berlin-Halle highway, today's Mehringdamm.
Former H. Berthold Type Foundry, built in 1859, Mehringdamm 43
Industriehaus Becker & Kries, built in 1913–1914, Mehringdamm 34 next to the underground, also housing the BKA-Theater