Former Courthouse Lehrter Straße
Exhibition venue of the 13th Berlin Biennale for Contemporary Art
Tickets for the 13th Berlin Biennale are available online in our webshop.
You can also buy tickets at our ticket counters at KW Institute for Contemporary Art, the former Courthouse Lehrter Straße, and at the ticket counter at Hamburger Bahnhof during our opening hours.
Admission to all venues: 16.00€
Groups of 10 or more, per person: 14.00€
Reduced* admission: 8.00€
Groups, reduced* price: 6.00€
Free admission to Sophiensæle.
Free admission for those 18 and under, ICOM and CIMAM members, recipients of Bürgergeld, Grundsicherung or Sozialhilfe and those receiving benefits under the Asylbewerberleistungsgesetz upon presentation of relevant proof and members of KW Friends.
Tickets provide single admission to each venue of the 13th Berlin Biennale for the entire running time from June 14 JUN—14 SEP 2025. The ticket is also valid for all other exhibitions at Hamburger Bahnhof during this period. Respective in-house visitor regulations apply at all venues.
*Reduced admission applies to apprentices, those in federal voluntary service, recipients of Arbeitslosengeld, holders of the Berlin-Brandenburg volunteer card, disabled persons (50% and more) including one accompanying person, members of the bbk, pupils, and students upon the presentation of relevant identification.
Tickets for the events of the 13th Berlin Biennale are available via the event pages.
The former Courthouse Lehrter Straße has been vacant since 2012 and is being made accessible for the first time as a site for contemporary art in Berlin in the context of the 13th Berlin Biennale.
The brick building was completed in 1902 as an extension to the Northern Military Prison on Lehrter Straße and is connected to the prison building at Lehrter Straße 61 by a bridge, which was referred to by prisoners as the ›bridge of sighs‹, inspired by the Venetian bridge of the same name.
One of the most famous trials held here was the 1916 trial against Karl Liebknecht. Liebknecht was arrested for taking part in an anti-war demonstration, initially transferred to the adjacent prison, and sentenced to several years of imprisonment. After his release, Liebknecht gave one of his first speeches at Sophiensæle.
Later, the building complex served as a military training center and, with the reintroduction of military courts by the NSDAP, as a Wehrmacht investigative prison. Bullet holes in the facade suggest that fierce battles between the German Wehrmacht and the Red Army must have taken place here. After the war, the complex was located in West German territory. In 1950, the prison administration moved into the courthouse building, and the adjacent prison was used as a women’s prison until the mid-1980s. Renowned inmates included members of the Red Army Faction. Poor prison conditions, among other factors, resulted in protests, escape attempts, and breakouts, with employees resigning in solidarity.
The building was last used as a branch of the Tiergarten District Court. In preparation for the 13th Berlin Biennale, the structure of the offices will not be changed. They continue to bear witness of the conditions of justice.
The Senate Department for Culture and Social Cohesion plans to subsequently develop the building into an artistic production venue for Berlin’s independent art scene.