Messe Berlin

[1] The premises, built in 1936–37, comprise twenty-six halls covering 160,000 square metres (1,700,000 sq ft) including Funkturm Berlin.

To the south is the CityCube Berlin, an exhibition and conference hall that opened in 2014, built on the lands of the former Deutschlandhalle arena, which has replaced the functions of the ICC.

From the end of the 19th century, the route of the Hamburg Stadtbahn connection ran in the area of today's site until it was relocated to the south when the exhibition center was expanded in the 1920s.

Another exhibition hall was built in 1924 according to plans by Jean Krämer and Johann Emil Schaudtbuilt on the site of the bus station.

The basic structure of today's exhibition center, designed by architect Richard Ermisch, was built in 1937 along Masurenallee and Messedamm with the striking entrance building on Hammarskjöldplatz.

Main building with entry hall at Masurenallee, built by Richard Ermisch
Southern gate during IFA 2003