Giesebrechtstraße, or Giesebrechtstrasse (see ß[2]), is a residential street that runs between Wilmersdorfer Straße and Kurfürstendamm, roughly a 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) north of Preußenpark, in the western Berlin district of Charlottenburg.
From the 1950s until the 1990s, Giesebrechtstraße 3 was home to the Wiener Stüber'l, a wine tavern with impressive interior design that was popular with celebrities and was forced to close with the death of its owner Friedrich Müller.
Maulana Sadr-ud-Din from Lahore, a missionary imam of the Ahmadijja-Andschuman-Ischat-i-Islam-Lahore movement, is considered the founder.
[10] From the early 1930s, Giesebrechtstraße 11 was home to Salon Kitty, a high-class brothel run by Kitty Schmidt, which was allegedly used for espionage purposes from 1939 by Walter Schellenberg, assigned to the task by Reinhard Heydrich's Reich Security Main Office (RHSA).
[13] In the traditional Café Richter directly on Hindemithplatz, various furnishings are reminiscent of the old days of coffee houses when the street was considered a meeting place of the Charlottenburg scene.
Well-known residents were or are: To this day, the street has remained an upmarket residential area, due in no small part to the size of the flats.
Numerous doctors, psychotherapists, lawyers and financial service providers have their business premises here, as do the Winter bookshop at No.