Beautiful western district with established treasures such as the Brandenburg Gate, Charlottenburg Palace, Humboldt University,
Staatsoper, Neue Synagogue and impressive museums. Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf is Berlin's prize district with plenty to visit, including
Castle Charlottenburg, a splendid baroque residence with a lovely park or the Brohan Museum with design, fine arts and jewellery from the
turn of the century and the elegant Stuler building, accommodating the Berggren collection with paintings by Picasso, Klee and Van Gogh.
Discover this leafy suburb of the late 19th century filled with Wilhelmina buildings and young well-heeled residents. Undoubtedly one of the most exclusive areas in Berlin.
Located in a central position close to the subway stations "Kaiserdamm" and "Sophie-Charlotte-Platz", as well as the S-Bahn Station "Witzleben". Access to the Autobahn/highway is only a few hundred metres away. The fairground is walking distance. Most places of interest, like the Potsdamer Place, Brandenburg Gate, Charlottenburg Palace, Kurfürstendamm, are reachable within a few minutes by subway.
This rear of this development is on Wundstraße street and the front is on Riehlstrasse street. It looks onto the glorious Lietzensee park and lake Lietzensee. This is a really beautiful park with charming walks and jogging paths, a large children’s play area, a quaint café (which can actually be seen from the development) and lots of other nooks and crannies. Lining its edges and
the streets are a profusion of shops, bars, restaurants, and an awareness that this is the bastion of the city's prosperous bourgeoisie. A perfect location for singles, couples or families.
Berlin has superb public transport. From Zoo station, Berlin's most important rail station, the city-train axis traverses the entire Charlottenburg
district. Berlin property prices are as much as five times lower than equivalent properties in Paris, London and other major European capital cities. In addition, demand for property in Germany will be increased by the growth of the number of households, which is set to rise
to 39.3 million by 2020.