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How does a public entertainment “mile” evolve?
Badstraße
Nowhere else in Wedding, the change of the city is as palpable as it is along Badstraße. Once built as an access road to the spa for the royal court, the street started to attract more people from the middle of the 19th century. Banquet halls, beer gardens and summer theatres started to move in. In the 1920s, the cinema Lichtburg with its more than 2,000 seats was one of the largest cinemas in Berlin. The constantly growing city created new functional spaces in its suburbs. And on Badstraße, the emphasis was on public entertainment.
View of Badstraße from the bridge of the outbound urban railway: As advertising slogans from breweries demonstrate, quite a few different public entertainment venues set up along the street.
Published by S. and G. Saulsohn, Berlin, in circulation in 1900 (Reproduction)
Ballschmieders Etablissement, Badstraße 15a
Picture postcards of cafés, bars and other venues on Badstraße, distributed by the Berlin publishing houses Alfred Cohn, Hartwig & Vogel’s Automaten A.G., Gustav Roggenbau, O. Wandl and the publisher Stengel & Co. in Dresden, in circulation from 1900 to 1931
Donations: Anton Schnellbacher 1991, Klaus Lange 1993 and Hans Graefer 1995
Konzertgarten Kastanienwäldchen (outdoor concert venue), Badstraße 16
Rose-Theater, Badstraße 22 (theatre)
Marienbad, Badstraße 35/36 (banquet hall)
Niekes Sommer-Theater, Badstraße 35 (theatre)
Zum Schultheiss, Badstraße 66 (pub)
Voigt-Theater, Badstraße 58 (theatre)
The cinema Lichtburg that opened its doors in 1929 epitomizes Berlin as the Elektropolis of that time. Rudolf Fränkel designed it as a body of light that illuminated the urban space at night. It immediately caught everybody’s eye when leaving the railway station Gesundbrunnen.
Lichtburg, new underground railway station, Apollo-Verlag 1933
Acquired 1990 (Reproduction)