main content start,
Drei Wandvitrinen zeigen viele verschiedene Objekte: Bücher, Werkzeuge und Matrizen.
SDTB / C. Kirchner
Three wall display cases exhibit many different objects, including books, tools, and matrices.
In “Picture and Photograph Printing” exhibit, the complete workshop of lithographer Dietmar Liebsch is on display. Regular demonstrations of the lithograph are given. It was made by the Erasmus Sutter company in Berlin (1875).
SDTB / C. Kirchner
A brightly polished stone printing plate lies in a large, iron lithograph. The brown lid is open, with a piece of white paper mounted in it. The paper has already been printed with the stone’s image.
Demonstrations of the Linotype show how automatic typesetting works. In German, the Linotype is also known as the “iron colleague” (eiserne Kollege).
SDTB / C. Kirchner
A man works at a large, black typesetting machine.

The permanent exhibition Printing Technology is a lively place of learning with hands-on exhibits, multimedia offerings and demonstrations. Covering 200 square metres, it illustrates the development of printing techniques since the innovations of Johannes Gutenberg in the mid-15th century.

The exhibition focuses on hand and machine typesetting and its various printing processes and presents the five main themes of type production and typesetting as well as printing fonts, images and characters. Large-format showcases with a variety of exhibits such as type specimens, printing forms and tools demonstrate the complexity and versatility of printing techniques. The four main printing processes - relief, intaglio, planographic and through-printing - are presented using examples.

The history of printing technology also includes printing processes for typefaces and illustrations that people can read by touch. The exhibition takes up these innovations and offers many tactile graphics, exhibits and specially made objects. In addition, there are unabridged Braille inscriptions in German and audio stations. The exhibition thus opens up a diverse experience for sighted, blind and visually impaired visitors.

Opening hours,

  • Monday closed
  • Tuesday-Friday 09:00 - 17:30
  • Saturday-Sunday 10:00 - 18:00
Last entry

17:00

  • 3. October 2025 10:00 - 18:00
  • 24. December 2025 closed
  • 25. December 2025 closed
  • 26. December 2025 10:00 - 18:00
  • 31. December 2025 closed
  • 1. January 2026 13:00 - 18:00

Location,

German Museum of Technology
Trebbiner Straße 9, 10963 Berlin

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Telephone,

+49 (30) 43 97 34 0

Fax,

+49 (30) 43 97 34 0

Website,

technikmuseum.berlin/aus…

Prices,

Admission price 12,00 €

At the till/ without online ticket € 13 (including 1 € service fee)

Don't fancy queuing? We generally recommend booking an online ticket, especially during the vacation season!

Reduced price 6,00 €

At the till/ without online ticket € 7 (including 1 € service fee)

Admission is free for those under 18 and up to the completion of regular schooling.

Discounts are available to the following, with appropriate proof:

Students

Unemployed persons

Severely disabled persons (from 50%)

Recipients of social welfare

Recipients of benefits under the Asylum Seekers' Benefits Act (Asylbewerberleistungsgesetz)

Federal volunteers and those doing voluntary military service

Berliners with the berlinpass and berlinpass-BuT

Groups from institutions for the disabled

Related Events

Tickets

Admission price

12,00 €

At the till/ without online ticket € 13 (including 1 € service fee)

Don't fancy queuing? We generally recommend booking an online ticket, especially during the vacation season!

Reduced price

6,00 €

At the till/ without online ticket € 7 (including 1 € service fee)

Admission is free for those under 18 and up to the completion of regular schooling.

Discounts are available to the following, with appropriate proof:

Students

Unemployed persons

Severely disabled persons (from 50%)

Recipients of social welfare

Recipients of benefits under the Asylum Seekers' Benefits Act (Asylbewerberleistungsgesetz)

Federal volunteers and those doing voluntary military service

Berliners with the berlinpass and berlinpass-BuT

Groups from institutions for the disabled

Group ticket

From 10 persons per person, regular: 7,00 €, reduced: 2,00 €.

Yearly ticket

Click here for information about Yearly ticket.

Member of Museumspass Berlin

Booking Telephone

+49 (30) 247 49-888

Catalog

Services

Organizer

Links

Accessibility

More Exhibitions

The “Elektropolis Berlin” exhibition focuses on the transition to the Communication Age.
SDTB / C. Kirchner
A view of the Telecommunications exhibition. There are several glass display cases containing radios. In the middle there is a model of the “Vox Haus” building.

Communications Engineering

At the age of 26, engineer Konrad Zuse developed the world’s first computer in his parents’ living room, in Berlin’s Kreuzberg district. His aim was to automate tedious statics calculations.
SDTB / N. Michalke
Two women and a man bend over a large glass display case in which the Z1’s mechanical arithmetic unit can be seen.

Computer Science

When a mutoscope (ca. 1900) is turned rapidly, it gives the viewer the impression of seeing a moving picture.
SDTB / U. Steinert
A girl looks into an illuminated case and turns a crank. Display cases with exhibits are in the background.

Film Technology

Unfortunately, the exhibition is currently closed. We ask for your understanding!

The heart of the brewery is the brewhouse, featuring a brewing kettle and lauter tun.
SDTB / C. Kirchner
At the heart of the Historical Brewery is a large copper kettle with a massive pipe rising from the top.

Historic brewery

The Historic Brewery is only open for guided tours.

At the jewelry table, individual jewelry parts are worked by hand. The steps include sawing, carving, drilling, filing, and soldering.
SDTB / C. Kirchner
Between two yellow display cases containing a variety of objects, a table with numerous jewelry tools can be seen. There is a woman sitting at the table, working.

Jewellery production

The Historical Machine Shop displays typical metalworking equipment from around 1900.
SDTB / C. Kirchner
A view of the Historical Machine Shop, featuring several metalworking machines. Mounted to the ceiling are the line shaft and the various wheels and belts that transmit power from the steam engine to the machines.

Machine Tools

The paper testing machine does not make individual pieces of paper but rather one long continuous sheet.
SDTB / C. Musiol
A view of the Papermaking exhibition. There is a machine several meters long in the foreground. Sheets of paper hang from the ceiling. Images and texts can be seen on the wall.

Paper Technology

The first handheld cameras. The exhibition “The Fascination of the Moment” focuses on the development of photography.
SDTB / C. Kirchner
A large display case made of dark wood shows various historical cameras with wooden bodies. A few black-and-white photographs hang in the background.

Photo technology

What kind of work is done in a chemistry lab? The instruments on display illustrate various procedures such as the distillation, filtration, and extraction of chemical substances.
SDTB / C. Kirchner
There are several display cases on a table. They contain various instruments from a chemistry laboratory, including pipettes, a Liebig condenser (used for distillation), a centrifuge, and a microscope.

Pills and pipettes

Unfortunately, the exhibition is currently closed. We ask for your understanding!

This 1928 Würker embroidery machine with three heads is controlled by a punch card. All three of its heads embroider the same pattern.
SDTB / C. Kirchner
Overhead view of a large, historical embroidery machine. It has a punch card wound on a spool and three heads, each with thread of various colors and an embroidery frame.

Textile Technology

Holländermühle im Museumspark im Herbst. Die umliegenden Bäume sind leicht gelb und braun gefärbt.
SDTB / C. Kirchner
The smock mill in the Museum Park in the autumn. The leaves of the surrounding trees are light yellow and brown.

Wind energy in the museum park

The Bücker Bü 131 was one of the first aerobatic planes. It is still one of the best-known.
SDTB / H. Hattendorf
A large yellow airplane hangs nose-up in the atrium of the New Building. There are other airplanes and gliders hanging in the background.

Aerospace

Railroad vehicles are put on the right track by a turntable and brought into the Engine Shed, also called a roundhouse, through large gates.
SDTB / C. Kirchner
The gate to the Engine Shed, or roundhouse, is open, and a red compartment car is half inside. In the background, the Shed’s curved wall, a chimney, and a water tower can be seen.

Railway

The splendid wood carving on the Swedish VASA, from 1628, shows that ships were also intended to be monumental objects and expressions of power.
SDTB / C. Kirchner
There are three children standing on a platform behind a display case, looking at a large, detailed model ship. A woman stands behind them.

Shipping

The motto of the Road Transport exhibition is “On the Move.” Its diverse exhibits illustrate the cultural history of mobility.
SDTB / C. Kirchner
View of the Road Transport exhibition, featuring a historical white convertible, a horse and buggy, and a ceiling installation made of various wooden wheels.

Road traffic

This image shows the great diversity of historical and modern communication devices, from a 19th-century pointer telegraph to a smartwatch of today.
SDTB / C. Kirchner
A wall-size display case composed of rectangular sections, some large and some small. Each section features communication devices from various ages. The back of the display case is bright blue.

The network

People, cables, data streams

Sugars are everywhere! Trees and other plants are made of the polysaccharide cellulose.
SDTB / H. Hattendorf
A young woman walks through the “Sugars and Beyond” exhibition. On the ceiling there is a large, backlit photograph showing the green canopy of a forest. On the floor there is a section of a poplar tree trunk.

All sugar!

Food - Material - Energy

Rückenwind. Mehr Stadt fürs Rad.
© SDTB

Gearing Up

Toward the Bike-Friendly City

Photo of the Exhibition “The City Alive”, from the Series “Communicate”.
© Andreas Tobias

The City Alive

A Photographic Game of Encounters

View of the temporary exhibition "Ts'uu - Cedar. Of Trees and People" at the Humboldt Forum
Stiftung Humboldt Forum im Berliner Schloss, Foto: Alexander Schippel
View of the temporary exhibition "Ts'uu - Cedar. Of Trees and People" at the Humboldt Forum

Special exhibition

Humboldt Forum

Ts'uu - Cedar Of Trees and People

“Playful GDR - toy classics from the East”
© DDR Museum
Two children with toys

Special exhibition

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Playful GDR - toy classics from the East

A look at our collection

Siegerentwurf "Südpfeil" (Rendering) des Architekten und Künstlers Jürgen Mayer H an der Nordostfassade des Humboldt Forums, innerhalb des offenen, einphasigen Kunst-am-Bau Wettbewerbs 2025
Jürgen Mayer H, Südpfeil, 2025 / Stiftung Humboldt Forum im Berliner Schloss, Foto: Andreas König
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Special exhibition

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Art-in-architecture competition

Near by

© Hanns Tschira, Martha Maria Schmackeit

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The Treck

Special Exhibition

Yoko Ono with Glass Hammer, 1967, installation view, HALF-A-WIND SHOW, Lisson Gallery, London, 1967
Foto © Clay Perry / Kunstwerk © Yoko Ono
Yoko Ono with Glass Hammer, 1967, installation view, HALF-A-WIND SHOW, Lisson Gallery, London, 1967, photo © Clay Perry / artwork © Yoko Ono

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Christian Marclay, The Clock, 2010, Single-channel video installation, duration: 24 hours
© Christian Marclay. Photo © White Cube (Ben Westoby)

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Library of the Schocken Verlag, Berlin, 1933–1939; Jewish Museum Berlin, photo: Monika Sommerer
Foto: Monika Sommerer
Library of the Schocken Verlag, Berlin, 1933–1939; Jewish Museum Berlin, photo: Monika Sommerer

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Modegraphik aus STYL 1922, „In der Lennéstraße“, Detail, Mantelkleider vom Modehaus Hammer, Lennéstraße 2. Zeichnung R.L. Leonard
© Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Kunstbibliothek

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Walter Dahn, Ohne Titel, Detail, 1987
© Bildnachweis: Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Kupferstichkabinett, Graphische Gesellschaft zu Berlin / Dietmar Katz © Walter Dahn, Courtesy the artist and Sprüth Magers

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YES TO ALL

The Gifts of Paul Maenz Gerd de Vries to the Kupferstichkabinett

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Privacy | Imprint