“Some kind of strange magic happens
when the city turns on her lights”
— David Berman
Welcome to Neon Deutschland. Join us on our tour of fine neon signs from throughout Germany.
“Some kind of strange magic happens
when the city turns on her lights”
— David Berman
Welcome to Neon Deutschland. Join us on our tour of fine neon signs from throughout Germany.
Hello … and welcome to Berlin Modern.
We're here to preserve the legacy of post-war modern architecture in the rapidly-changing city of Berlin.
Celebrating the only time the U-Bahn has been early for anything…
U5 — Weberwiese.
Matching clocks.
U5 — Weberwiese.
Yellow overload.
U5 — Weberwiese.
Welcome to yellow.
U5 — Frankfurter Tor.
A brief trip above ground.
U5 — Frankfurter Tor.
This is one of the very few stations – perhaps the only one – that features a sign at the end of the platform, perpendicular to the tracks.
U5 — Samariterstraße.
The structure with the rounded corners.
U5 — Samariterstraße.
Two halves make one sign.
U5 — Frankfurter Allee.
The opposite of calm.
U5 — Magdalenenstraße.
Vanishing point.
U5 — Magdalenenstraße.
Platform symmetry.
U5 — Magdalenenstraße.
Minimalism.
U5 — Lichtenberg.
Platform sign close-up.
U5 — Lichtenberg.
Two levels.
U5 — Lichtenberg.
Yellows and ochres.
U5 — Lichtenberg.
Lemon and Lime.
U5 — Friedrichsfelde.
The lighter blues.
U5 — Friedrichsfelde.
One minute off.
U5 — Friedrichsfelde.
Blue on blue.
U5 — Tierpark.
Tile textures.
U5 — Tierpark.
Concourse lights.
U5 — Tierpark.
Surveillance.
U5 — Tierpark.
Turquoise letters on the platform sign.
U5 — Tierpark.
Bright Phoebus (has been a stranger to Berlin of late).
U5 — Tierpark.
The big white U.
U5 — Biesdorf-Süd.
Onwards and downwards.
U5 — Biesdorf-Süd.
Tile arrangement.