List of cinemas in Berlin-Weißensee

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The list of cinemas in Berlin-Weißensee gives an overview of all cinemas that have existed and still exist in today's Berlin district of Weißensee . The list was built according to information from research in the Kino-Wiki and linked to connections with Berlin's cinema history from further historical and current references. It reflects the status of the film screening facilities that have ever existed in Berlin as well as the situation in January 2020. According to this, there are 92 venues in Berlin, which means first place in Germany, followed by Munich (38), Hamburg (28), Dresden (18) as well as Cologne and Stuttgart (17 each). At the same time, this compilation is part of the lists of all Berlin cinemas .

introduction

As Neu-Weißensee an urban suburb established itself from 1880 on sold and speculated estate. With the unification of the "two Weissensee" (Neu-Weißensee and "Dorf" Weißensee) in 1909, efforts were made to obtain the status of "city" before it became an administrative district in Greater Berlin in 1920. This had an impact on local cinema development, which began in 1907 with performances in the courtyard hall at Berliner Allee 13 before the Universum opened as a permanent venue here in 1912. Stimulated by the cinema boom in Berlin, poorly performing shops along the Berliner Allee between Kaiserplatz and Bismarckplatz and on Langhansstraße were furnished with seating and turned into profitable cinematographers' theaters. The castle park with the amusement park located there was already served cinematographic presentations in 1910, followed by the open-air theater in 1921, and the castle park cinema with 1000 seats in 1925. Weißensee's first independent cinema -  the Toni  - was built in 1919 (after the war years ) by the cinema architects Fritz Wilms and Max Bischoff for the cinema entrepreneurs and builders Czutzka & Co., in 1929 Wilms designed the Harmonie . The Delphi was planned as a large cinema as early as 1924, was then completed in 1930 and replaced the “Merckel-Lichtspiele” from 1921 in the house on Gustav-Adolf-Straße.

Weißensee became the location of the film production when the film studios moved from the narrow inner city (also) to the undeveloped northern edge along Franz-Joseph-Straße (since 1951 Liebermannstraße). Favored by favorable property prices and tax policy in the suburb. The "Filmstadt Weißensee" was supported by Vitascope and Continental Films and smaller companies and film artists like Joe May , at the same time it was the core of the industrial and commercial district. The Rio , in the form of a shop cinema with 400 seats, was already a movie theater. The war damage also caused failures at the cinemas in Weißensee, characteristic of the remaining open space in the east of Antonplatz, around which nine cinemas were once located. In addition, venues became substitutes for inner-city facilities, and the Schloßpark cinema became a boxing ring. With the location in East Berlin , the new cinema buildings in the 1950s are in the city center. In 1962 the Delphi fell into disrepair, as did the Harmonie (most recently “Kino Jugend”) and the Rio as the number of visitors fell. In the 2010s, the “Toni” - even used as a festival cinema - and the “Brotfabrik” on Caligariplatz, a new concept in the 1990s, were active in the district.

Cinema list

Name / location address Duration
description
Anton light games

Trianon light games

( Location )

Berliner Allee 32 1910-1928
Square area April 2016

The cinema was located in Berliner Allee 14 (after renumbering 32, previously as Königschaussee 50) on the south side of Antonplatz. The “universe” was located in the neighboring house No. 13. Both buildings were destroyed during World War II. The cinema was opened in 1910 with 175 seats by Erich Griebsch from Parkstrasse 29 as the “First Weißensee cinema”. In the branch section 1912 zu Weißensee, Birke & Radolny are named as operators, for 1908 they work in Königschaussee 8. In 1920 with 190 seats taken over by Therese Fest (from Berlin O 27, Wallnertheaterstraße 23) and run as "Trianon-Theater / Trianon-Lichtspiele". After a change of ownership in 1924 ( inflationary period ), Arnold Thiele took over the 160-seat cinema in 1927 as "Anton-Lichtspiele". For 1927, the cinema address book for owner M. Fiderfisch contains the information "currently closed".

Bread factory

( Location )

Prenzlauer Promenade 3 since 1991
In April 2009
Entrance area / foyer

The bread factory is addressed at Caligariplatz 1. With this address, the reference to the "Filmstadt Weißensee" was created, in which the silent film The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari came into being. Film screenings have already taken place in the FDJ youth club An der Weißenseer Spitze , which was opened there since 1986 under the direction of the Weißensee School of Art . In the year of political change in 1990, the club became the bread factory cultural center . In May 1990, a 55-seat cinema was set up in the former gallery as the first art-house cinema in East Berlin . The cinema was later relocated within the building to the former cake production facility. In addition to the cinema there is a gallery of young Eastern European photo art, a stage and a bar, which have been run by the “Association of Users of the Bread Factory eV Glashaus” since 1997. The cinema hall is specified with 51 to 60 seats, the projection is both digital and analog in 8, 16 and 35 mm technology on a 2.10 m × 4.80 m screen in Dolby Digital 5.1 The equipment is like Deliberately kept sparse throughout the house: black auditorium with wooden chairs and gray felt carpet, a brick wall separating the screen and the exit stairs. The sparse charm focuses the viewer on the film. The bread factory building on the properties Prenzlauer Promenade 3 (and 4) and Heinersdorfer Straße 57 (actually number 58) includes the cinema, a bar with an event room, the gallery and the beer garden in the inner courtyard. A previous extension to the current facade to the top of the street was removed.

Charlotten light plays

( Location )

Charlottenburger Strasse 55 1919-1921 The cinema is only included in the cinema directory for 1920. In addition, the allocation of the entry of the cinema on property 55 is not clear. The house numbers on Charlottenburger Strasse were changed in 1920. The house with the number 55 has since been located east on the north side of the corner house on Gustav-Adolf-Straße, recorded in the address book in 1921 with four tenants, owned by Fuhrherr F. Reich. For 1920 (and before), however, a residential building with 20 tenants is registered under number 55 (after 1920 as number 48) for master butcher L. Greiling from Berlin as the owner (who also owned 56 to 59). This is between Roelcke- and Frieseckestrasse. A possible cinema building in the (new) 55 was in front of the residential building in the depth of the property in the corner between Charlottenburger and Gustav-Adolf-Straße (south-east side).
Delphi-Lichtspiele GmbH

( Location )

Gustav-Adolf-Strasse 2 1929-1959
Street front 2012

The building with a characteristic street front has been preserved (as of 2016). The Delphi cinema was a magnificent open-plan cinema and was closed in 1959 due to construction defects. The building is a historical monument. The cinema was opened with 870 seats in November 1929 and replaced the smaller "Merkel Lichtspiele" that had existed since 1921. When it was built, the hall had already been prepared for sound performances, and from 1930 the silent film cinema showed sound films. During the Second World War the cinema played continuously, in February 1945 the propaganda film Kolberg . With only minor war damage, operations continued in June 1945. In 1946 Astra-Delphi-Lichtspiele GmbH signed a ten-year lease. In 1952, the house in East Berlin came under trust management because the owners lived in West Berlin . In 1955 VEB Berliner Filmtheater took over the management. When stucco fell from the ceiling on February 12, 1959, the cinema was closed. On March 8, 1960, the magistrate bought the building from the West Berlin owner at a foreclosure auction for 120,000  marks . 1961 should be renovated and modernized, but the demolition in August 1961 did not take place either. The former cinema was used as a warehouse, laundry reception and stamp shop. The cinema technology has been expanded, the building, which has been vacant since the fall of the Wall, was foreclosed in 2006 and can be rented for events.

Open-air stage at the Weißensee

( Location )

Grosse Seestrasse 8-10 since 1955
Open-air theater 2012

As 1955 Weissensee Park (Castle Park, Trianonpark before) after the post-war period was a major overhaul, originated in civil work of the " National integration in the capital Berlin " from 1956 to 1957 the newly created open-air stage in the annexed northern part of the park as "open-air movie theater on Weissensee ”. Until 1993 there were open air film screenings as summer film days or temporary performances, as well as other cultural events. In 1994 a new roof was built by the Weißensee district with over half a million DM. However, the masts for the canvas were torn down. A concert stage remained. In 1999, the Weißensee district office invested 30,000 euros in new support masts to secure the screen against wind attack, and the film screenings resumed at the 2000 Flower Festival. In 2004 the system was leased to the “K&K Kino und Konzert”. In 2012 a new operator was sought and in 2014 an association “Friends of the Weißensee Open-Air Theater” (Naugarder Straße 45-I) took over the “Freilichtbühne am Weißensee”, a listed building. The open-air stage includes the large stage with up to 2000 seats (normal number of seats 500 according to the owner's own statement and the small stage with 200 seats. The cinema technology is available digitally as well as for 35 mm and 16 mm screenings.

Youth
----
harmony light plays

( Location )

Langhansstrasse 23 1929-1972 The house at Langhansstraße 23 was built in 1929 according to plans by the architect Fritz Wilms and was named "Harmonie" as a cinema. After the Second World War , a cinema opened again in this building, which since 1951 has been called "Filmtheater Jugend". It was closed in October 1972. The Harmonie-Lichtspiele were entered in the cinema directory for the first time in 1930. The venue with 600 seats, a 9 × 4 m² stage with a daily program and music for silent films is owned by Elysium-Lichtspiele GmbH, which has been running the cinema in Prenzlauer Berg since 1926 . In 1932, the owner moved to Otto Hannemann and Dirk van Erp (Berlin-Steglitz), who also installed cinema sound for sound films. He ran the cinema at least until 1941. The cinema survived the war years and continued to be used in the post-war years. The owner is now Sovexportfilm GmbH (N 58, Milastraße 2), which was incorporated into the VEB Berliner Filmtheater. For 1952 also "Theater der Jugend", 1957 as "Jugend" the cinema was closed in 1972. The venue was then used as a "House of Music" for discos and rock concerts. Reconstruction began in the 1990s, and the "House of Fantasy (HOF23)" has been located since 1994. Since 2015 the house has been run by the Kinderring Berlin e. V. used as "OC 23".
Langhans plays of light

( Location )

Langhansstrasse 143 1910-1921 The cinema was located 200 m from Antonplatz on the corner of Börnestrasse (then Friedrichstrasse ). In the branch section 1912 zu Weißensee, G. Eigner is named as operator of the cinematograph. In 1925 there was a weaving mill at Langhansstraße 143, and in the 1940s a furniture shop. The cinema was probably set up there in a former restaurant.
Parisian theater

( Location )

Sedanstrasse 78
(since 1951 Bizetstrasse 111)
1907-1912 The building is on Bizetstrasse at the back of Berliner Allee. In 1907 Th. Windorf ran his cinematograph in the "Edison Welt-Theater", whose performance ended before 1913. For 1917 the Paris theater still exists. In the 1912 address book, the theater director Th. Windorf is entered as the resident of the nine-part residential building Sedanstrasse 78, there is no reference in the branch section.
RIO light games

Corso light games

( Location )

Prenzlauer Promenade 6–9 1906-1997
Receipt in 1991

The movie theater was probably opened as a shop for silent film screenings. For the first time in the address book in 1911, Backhaus is mentioned in the branch section on Uckermarkstrasse 6/7 under the heading of cinematographs. It operated under different names "Backhaus" (1918), "Promenade-Lichtspiele" (1920/1921), "Alhambra" (1924), "Korso" (1925), "Corso" (1927-1938, in the address book 1941 is both (still) Corso, as well as (already) RIO included.). The cinema had a long, narrow auditorium. The cinema building was on the property complex Heinersderfer Strasse 52, 55 / Prenzlauer Promenade 7/8. Since 1938 as "Rio-Lichtspiele" was shortened in 1957 by the VEB Berliner Filmtheater until it was closed as Rio. With the development of film technology and the decreasing number of visitors in this small, uncomfortable house, it was closed in 1997 after the renovation in 1986. (Prenzlauer Promenade 6–8). In Wedding on Hussitenstrasse (near Bernauer Strasse, since 1961 on the wall) there was a cinema under the same name "Rio" since 1953, which was closed in 1965.

Schloßpark movie theater

( Location )

Berliner Allee 125 1927-1950s
2007: Building with a hall extension

When the Berliner Allee was renamed Klement-Gottwald-Allee , the plots were renumbered, so the cinema had house numbers 205-210. Originally the brewery tavern of the Enders company was located in this building on the edge of the Weißensee "castle", which was given the ballroom in 1892 (left on plot 123). With the end of the brewery, the existing restaurant became a Kindl bar. In 1927 Sedlak & Heymann set up the “Lichtspiele Schloss-Weißensee” with 800 seats in the empty hall extension. In 1928 the expansion to 1200 places and the company name as "Schloßpark Weißensee Film u. Stage “with daily screenings, the founding year is 1926 and the seating capacity was increased to 1550 in 1929 and silent films are explained and accompanied by music. Karl Sedlak's partners change. In 1930 they switched to sound film with a Tobis double apparatus, the stage was 8 × 10 m². For 1935 there are even 1600 seats in the cinema directory. From 1937 Johannes Betzel is the owner, the capacity is given as 1215, around 1941 the cinema exists. The undestroyed building was used in the post-war years as the communally run “People's House” and in 1946/1947 as a restaurant “Москва” and a sales point for Soviet officers. From 1949 “Café Moskau”, from 1952 “HO-Gaststätte Volkshaus Weißensee”. The cinema in the “Volkshaus-Lichtspiele” took place in the hall with 1050 seats until the beginning of the 1950s; it is no longer listed in the 1956 branch telephone directory. In the 1970s it became the "Weißensee District Culture House", after renovation in 1984 the "Peter Edel" District Culture House and from 1990 the Weißensee District Office as the "Weißensee Culture House", the restaurant was retained. From 2007 to 2010 an artists' association followed as operator. Since then, Weißensee has risen in the Pankow district and the building is empty. The name as Schloßpark-Kino goes back to the location at Schloßpark Weißensee (Trianonpark, since 1950 Park am Weißen See ). Weissensee Castle was located here until the fire in 1919 .

Toni & Tonino

Decla-Lichtspiele
UFA-Theater Weißensee

( Location )

Max-Steinke-Strasse 43 since 1920
Toni on Antonplatz

In 1919, a “residential building with a movie theater” ( Fritz Wilms , Max Bischoff) was built on the north side of Antonplatz , previously a two-storey residential building with a restoration was located here . On September 9, 1920, the 700-seat cinema was opened under the name “Decla-Lichtspiele”. It was the largest of the five surrounding film thugs. After the merger of Decla and UFA , it was renamed UFA Theater in 1921. With the expropriation of UFA by SMA in 1945 and the takeover by the Soviet film distributor Soyuzintorgkino, the name became obsolete. After the cold winter of 1945/1946, the seating was looted and the venue was desolate. As a private investor, Herbert Bendel took over the cinema as a tenant and opened it with 629 seats on December 23, 1948 under the name " Toni Film-Bühne ", in keeping with the adjacent Antonplatz. After the renovation, the entrance was on Antonplatz and the exit after the performance was on the side facing Max-Steinke-Straße, so that the flow of spectators for two consecutive performances could be separated due to the relatively cramped foyer. During a renovation in 1996, the cinema was expanded to include the small Tonino hall . It served as the Berlinale venue for the International Film Festival in February 2010.

Eagle owl plays of light

( Location )

Max-Steinke-Strasse 1 1904-1930 The cinema was located on the northeast corner of Antonplatz in the corner house at Gäblerstraße 1 / Berliner Allee 245 and after the renaming this currently corresponds to Max-Steinke-Straße 1 / Berliner Allee 39. The movie theater with 160 to 184 seats was a shop cinema . There have been film screenings since 1904. The owner Hedwig Birke (residing at Sedanstrasse 52) can be found in the cinema address book in 1918 with the entry “Concordia-Lichtspiele”, founded in 1904, 180 seats. In 1912 there is a distillation in the corner house in which the cinematographic performances took place. On the other hand, there was a portal with a side entrance at the entrance to Max-Steinke-Straße 1. CFSemmel, (1920) resident Max-Steinke-Straße 1, is entered in the address book for 1921 as the user of the cinematograph and for 1916 they live at Sedanstraße 54, for 1917 then at Gäblerstraße 1 and in 1918/1919 iats the address of the Birke siblings Berliner Allee 245. That Cinema address book names Schmidt for the Konkordia-Lichtspiele as the owner for 1917. Friedrich Brandes from Tempelhof became the owner in 1924. In 1927 the new owner M. Thiel called the venue "Antonia-Lichtspiele". In 1928 Hermann Marcus took over from Charlottenburg and in the following year Mrs. Hoffmann, managed as "Uhu-Lichtspiele" at the address Max Steinkestrasse 1. The location on the eastern edge of Antonplatz meant that there were more cinemas in the immediate vicinity, but Toni remained . In contrast to the neighboring building, the corner building at Berliner Allee 39 remained almost unaffected by bomb damage. The eye-catching tower was replaced by a simple structure in the course of the 1960s. Cleared ruins were rebuilt into Max-Steinke-Strasse. The rooms on the ground floor of the corner building were used throughout as a restaurant, some of which were shops.
Universe light games

( Location )

Berliner Allee 30 1907-1943
Square area April 2016

In the address book around 1941, the cinema address Berliner Allee No. 13 is still mentioned (since the 1950s this corresponds to the renumbering 30) on the south side of Antonplatz. The “Trianon” was located in the neighboring house No. 14. Both buildings were destroyed during the Second World War and there is now a parking area on the south side of Antonplatz. According to the information in the cinema address book, the founding year is 1905, 1906 or 1907. The "Monopoly Theater" was recorded in 1917. The “UT-Theater-Lichtspiele” with 300 seats are listed for 1918 in the possession of Paul Berger from Charlottenburg, the “Universum-Theater-Lichtspiele” are played every day and the program changes on Tuesday and Friday. From 1924 there are still 236 seats available. The name Universum-Theater-Lichtspiele was used from 1921 until the building was destroyed. Max Sklarek becomes the owner in 1928 (who mentions 1917 as the year of foundation). In 1929 Paul Bröckel from Halensee becomes managing director and there is mechanical music . In 1931 the sound film technology (sound film) was installed and the venue had 270 seats. 1937 was expanded to 377 places. Bröckel leads 1915 as the founding year and from 1937 then 1910. Obviously, with the bomb damage to the house, the venue ends.

literature

  • Sylvaine Hänsel, Angelika Schmitt (eds.): Cinema architecture in Berlin 1895–1995 . Berlin 1995.

Web links

The Kino Wiki is currently hosted on filmtheater.square7.ch . The data was compiled from the special address books Reichskino Adressbuch (Verlag Lichtbühne) and Kinoadressbuch (Verlag Max Mattisson) as well as the cinema list (1907–1910) of the first specialist journal for all of the art of photography, Der Kinematograph . The project of the Berlin cinemas is based on this data and supplements regional references.


Remarks

  1. This operating company also looked after the film art and reprise cinema Babylon in Berlin-Mitte and other open-air stages.
  2. The information in the address book relates to the previous year of the year of publication
  3. Please note that the cinema is usually called Gäblerstraße 1 - therefore Max-Steinke-Straße 1. The restaurant is addressed to Berliner Allee (from 1905).

Individual evidence

  1. Kino-Wiki main page, accessed on January 18, 2020. Kinowiki deals with the history of movie theaters in Germany and tries to collect all information about movie theaters and movie theaters in Germany. It is sorted according to federal states and cities. Everyone is called upon to supplement the data or correct errors.
  2. The breakdown by districts and districts is based on the district reform of 2001.
  3. ^ Stefan Strauss: Film? Running. Publication in the Berliner Zeitung , March 27, 2017, p. 13.
  4. Franz-Joseph-Strasse . In: Street name lexicon of the Luisenstädtischer Bildungsverein
  5. KulTour: Filmstadt Weißensee - From Joe May to Caligari
  6. Lixie film studios
  7. Locations: “The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari "
  8. Hänsel, Schmitt (ed.): Kinoarchitektur in Berlin 1895–1995 . Berlin 1995, pages 228-231.
  9. a b c d e f Berliner Telefonbuch 1941, p. 448 (Letter L: Lichtspieltheater)
  10. a b c cinematograph . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1912, Part 5, p. 753 (There is also no theater category).
  11. filmtheater.square7.ch: Anton Light Games / Trianon Light Games
  12. Weissensee bread factory
  13. Kino in der Brotfabrik at berlin.de
  14. Sylvaine Hänsel, Angelika Schmitt (ed.): Kinoarchitektur in Berlin 1895–1995 . Berlin 1995, page 229
  15. Prenzlauer Chaussee . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1905, V., p. 395. "The property 3/4 belonged to master baker Köhler, on Heinersdorfer Weg: 1: innkeeper Blümchen and six tenants / 2: master plumber Kahl and seven tenants / 5 belongs to Heinersdorfer Weg 56 / on 6/7 the restaurant Theodor Hannemann in the house of the rentier Backhaus: the later cinema Rio. ”.
  16. ^ Plan of Berlin. Sheet 4331 ( Memento of the original dated November 9, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. X = 26787, Y = 25076 or keyword Caligariplatz, also Straubeplan IQ from 1910. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / histomapberlin.de
  17. Prenzlauer Promenade . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1936, IV .. "← Heinersdorfer Straße → 1,2 do not exist, 3/4: The owner is bread factory Martha Kohler, among the eleven tenants is master baker A. Kohler, 5 belongs to Heinersdorfer Straße 56, in 6 / 9 the cinema owner Louise Nickolauer (1936/1897) and the innkeeper Woltersdorf live next to twelve tenants. // Heinersdorfer Strasse 56: Distiller Schmidt with twelve tenants, 57: belongs to Prenzlauer Promenade 4, 58: Martha Kohler baking factory, 59: City of Berlin / Bez.Amt Weißensee with four tenants. "
  18. Charlottenburg . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1921, Part V., p. 455.
  19. ^ Charlottenburger Strasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1920, V. Teil, p. 464 (House 60 was the corner house with Frieseckestrasse 20).
  20. ^ Plan of Berlin . Sheet 4324 from 1928. X = 27300, Y = 25300 ( Memento of the original from November 9th, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / histomapberlin.de
  21. filmtheater.square7.ch: Charlotte-air theater : cinema data for 1920 175 places Holders (Sp daily.): Franz Ilse, Brl.-Treptow, Beermannstr. 9
  22. History of Delphi with picture gallery
  23. filmtheater.square7.ch: Delphi-Lichtspiele
  24. Built 1929-1939, by Julius Meckel (construction business) for Julius Krost & Julius Meckel , entry with picture
  25. ^ Kinokompendium.de: Delphi-Kino
  26. Development of the area on the plan of Berlin, sheet 4323 / 432C ( Memento of the original dated November 16, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link has been inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. Maps from 1928 to 1994, X = 29,000, Y = 25,460 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.histomapberlin.de
  27. filmtheater.square7.ch: open-air theater
  28. Weißensee open-air stage: films, live music and theater in the countryside.
  29. Weißensee open-air theater is looking for a new operator . In: Pankower Allgemeine Zeitung , July 10, 2012
  30. Complete area with open-air stage & pergola & music pavilion & enclosure
  31. ^ Website of the Weißensee open-air theater
  32. Open-air stage at the Weißensee . berlin.de
  33. Harmony plays of light. filmtheater.square7.ch
  34. ^ Business directory for the area of ​​the district directorate for post and telecommunications in Greater Berlin. Edition Published: Berlin: Deutsche Postwerbung, 1961
  35. The carrier from HOF 23 was terminated
  36. District news 2014/09/02 - HOF 23 threatened by unimaginative administration
  37. ^ Website of the Kinderring Berlin
  38. ^ Langhans plays of light . filmtheater.square7.ch
  39. ^ Plan of Berlin . Sheet 4323 e.g. 1928, X = 28860, Y = 24760 ( Memento of the original dated November 9, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / histomapberlin.de
  40. filmtheater.square7.ch: Paris Theater
  41. Sedanstrasse . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1912, Part V., p. 747.
  42. Cinematograph . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1911, Part V., p. 702.
  43. ^ Plan of Berlin . Sheet 4331 from 1928 on X = 26765, Y = 25155 ( Memento of the original from November 9th, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / histomapberlin.de
  44. Rio filmtheater.square7.ch
  45. Kinowiki
  46. König-Chaussee 5 in Neu-Weißensee . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1905, V. Teil, p. 390 (The brewery owner Enders is the owner of house 5 (Weissensee Brewery, Gustav Enders) and the 16-party house 6 in which he lives.).
  47. ^ Plan of Berlin. Sheet 4323 ( Memento of the original dated November 9, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. X = 28885, Y = 24875 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / histomapberlin.de
  48. ^ Antonplatz, new buildings on Michelangelostraße, "Peter Edel" cultural center, outdoor swimming pool - 1974
  49. ^ Plan of Berlin. Sheet 4323 from 1928. ( Memento of the original dated November 9, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / histomapberlin.de
  50. Toni & Tonino at berlin.de
  51. Barbara Kollmann: Berlinale on tour through the districts. In: Berliner Morgenpost , February 15, 2010.
  52. ^ Plan of Berlin. Sheet 4324 ( Memento of the original dated November 9, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , X = 28190, Y = 24635 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / histomapberlin.de
  53. ^ Postcard used 1912: Antonplatz / corner of Gäblerstraße
  54. Innkeepers . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1910, V. Teil, p. 640. "Fritz Skorzewski Königchaussee 33a." (The corner of Antonplatz and Gäblerstraße was addressed as Königschaussee 33a until 1912. P. Ziegler is the innkeeper in the 1905 address book. The widow Ziegler belongs to both houses Königchaussee 33a and Gäblerstraße 1 on the corner.).
  55. Cinematograph . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1921, Part V., p. 473.
  56. Corner house Antonplatz with Klement-Gottwald-Allee in 1955
  57. Antonplatz corner house from the mid-1960s
  58. Kinomatographic Concepts . In: Berliner Adreßbuch , 1921, Part V., p. 473 (P. Berger is entered as the operator of a cinematograph under Berliner Allee13).