
Of course, the Brandenburg Gate never closes – so you can visit it any day in the year. Please note that there may be changes due to the COVID pandemic.

By the end of the Second World War, the buildings around this historical square were in ruins. The Brandenburg Gate faces Pariser Platz, regarded as one of the city’s most attractive squares. Today, more than almost any other of the city’s landmark sights, the Brandenburg Gate symbolises a reunited Berlin. When the Wall fell, 100,000 people gathered here for the Brandenburg Gate’s official opening on 22 December 1989 – and soon afterwards, crowds thronged the area to celebrate their first joint New Year’s Eve in this once-divided city. When the Berlin Wall went up in 1961, the Gate stood in an exclusion zone in an arc of the Wall, inaccessible for locals and visitors alike. In 1946, with the post-war division of Germany and Berlin, the Brandenburg Gate was in the Soviet sector. In 1814, after Napoleon’s forced abdication, the Quadriga was returned to Berlin where it once again adorned the Brandenburg Gate, facing towards the east and the city centre.

In 1806, when Napoleon’s army took Berlin, the French Emperor had the Quadriga transported to Paris as war booty and a sign of his victory. This statue also has its own story to tell. In 1793, the gate was crowned by the Quadriga statue, designed by Johann Gottfried Schadow. The Brandenburg Gate is 26 metres high, 65.5 metres long and 11 metres deep, and supported by two rows of six Doric columns. Designed by Carl Gotthard Langhans, architect to the Prussian court, it was inspired by the monumental gateway at the entrance to the Acropolis in Athens. Brandenburg Gate in Spring © gettyimages, Foto: sborisovĬonstructed between 17, the Brandenburg Gate was Berlin’s first Greek revival building.
