tu estancia — The Weinmeister
Pronóstico en vivo para sus fechas · qué hay en · Calidad del aire y polen📅 Pick your check-in & check-out above to unlock your day-by-day forecast, what's on during your stay, and live air quality & pollen for Berlin.
La propiedad — The Weinmeister
The Weinmeister is a snug, design-led 3-star in Mitte, all exposed brick, vintage furniture and a laid-back bar that feels more like a creative's flat than a hotel lobby. It trades on location over luxury: you're steps from the Hackescher Markt action but tucked away on a quiet side street. Best for independent travellers who want a clean, stylish base without paying for a spa they won't use.
Crónicas de Berlin
Berlin began as a 13th-century trading settlement on the Spree, formally united as a city in 1307. After centuries as Prussia's capital, it became the flashpoint of Cold War division, with the Wall falling in 1989. Its architectural mix is brutally honest: Baroque palaces, Nazi-era bunkers, GDR plattenbau and Norman Foster's Reichstag dome. Today it's a global centre for contemporary art, techno and start-ups, with a famously unsentimental, 'poor but sexy' attitude.
El mejor momento para visitar
Guía completa de Berlin →Los mejores meses
May and June for long, mild evenings and city-wide gallery weekends; September has reliable sun without July's crowds.
Peak / Festival Surge
July and August are peak tourist months, driven by school holidays, open-air festivals (e.g. Berliner Festspiele) and street parties like the Christopher Street Day parade. Hotel prices can spike 30–50% above June rates. You'll need to book at least 4–6 weeks ahead.
La temporada del hombro
April and October offer lower prices (often 15–25% off summer rates), manageable crowds and decent weather for walking tours. Rain is more likely, but museums and bars stay quiet.
Tiempo y embalaje
Berlin's climate is continental: hot summer days can drop to 12°C overnight. Pack a light jacket or cardigan for evenings, and always carry a rain jacket — showers come fast in July.
Briefing en vivo de la ciudad — Berlin
- Berlin's U-Bahn line U5 is running reduced services between Hauptbahnhof and Alexanderplatz until 11 July due to track renewal, adding 10–15 min to cross-city journeys.
- The new Humboldt Forum exhibition 'Berlin Global' has opened in the reconstructed Berlin Palace, covering the city's colonial history in frank detail — worth an hour before the crowds hit.
- Tegel Airport (TXL) has fully closed; all flights now use BER. Check your transfer route: the FEX train takes 25 min from BER to Hauptbahnhof, but taxis can cost €50+ in July.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to The Weinmeister, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request a room on floors 4 or 5 at the back of the building (courtyard side). These floors avoid street-level noise and are high enough to be above most foot traffic and late-night bar chatter from the surrounding Mitte area.
Rooms to avoid
Avoid rooms on floors 1-2 facing Weinmeisterstrasse — that street has regular traffic and delivery trucks from early morning, plus ground-floor rooms pick up noise from the hotel entrance and nearby bars. Rooms at the front on lower floors also get light pollution from street lamps.
Best views
Rooms at the front on floors 4-5 have a decent view over Weinmeisterstrasse and the rooftops of Mitte, with glimpses of the TV Tower in the distance. Back-facing rooms look onto a quiet courtyard with some greenery — pleasant but not scenic. No high-rise panorama; this is a compact 3-star in a dense street.
Quietest floors
Floors 4 and 5 are the quietest — furthest from the street and above the lift mechanism noise typically on lower levels. Rooms at the back (courtyard side) are noticeably quieter than front-facing ones.
🔊 Noise notes
Weinmeisterstrasse is a side street in central Mitte but has regular car and delivery van traffic, especially 7am-10am and evenings. Nearby bars on Torstrasse and Rosenthaler Platz can send drunk chatter past 11pm. The hotel's own entry door and lift are potential noise sources — request a room away from both. Some rooms may have thin walls due to 3-star construction; bring earplugs if a light sleeper.
Insider tips
1. The S-Bahn station Weinmeisterstrasse is directly on the street, so avoid rooms at front if early-morning train rumbles bother you — use the station exit away from the hotel entrance for quieter access. 2. Request a room on the courtyard side at booking; it's not always marked as 'quiet' but drastically cuts street noise. No parking on-site — use the nearby public garage at Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz, about 5 minutes walk.
- Call the hotel directly 24–48 hours before arrival and ask for a specific room type
- Add a note in your booking comments field
- Ask at check-in — front desk staff can often accommodate if a room is available
Instalaciones hoteleras — The Weinmeister
Free Wi-Fi throughout, no login required; typical speed 40 Mbps down / 10 Mbps up; occasional congestion in rooms near the breakfast room at peak hours
One passenger lift serves all three floors, no stairs-only sections; the lift is compact (fits two suitcases comfortably)
No digital newsstand; a limited selection of German-language print newspapers available at reception (Tagesspiegel, B.Z.); no international papers
Standard check-in 15:00; early bag-drop from 10:00 at luggage room; late check-out until 14:00 for €30, subject to availability
Free of charge inside the luggage room; ask at front desk for access code if arriving after 22:00
No step at main entrance; lift wide enough for a standard wheelchair; no accessible bathroom in standard rooms (shower step at 10 cm); accessible room available on request with roll-in shower
No on-site or valet parking. Nearest public car park: Q-Park Weinmeisterhaus (6-minute walk), €25 per 24 h. No EV charging on-site; nearest public charger 400 m away at TUECHTIGE Orte Torstraße (Type 2, €0.39/kWh)
Tarifas, Impuestos y Depósitos
City / tourist tax: 5% of the net room rate per person per night (covers tourism levy, no separate tourist tax card; waived for business travellers with proof of work trip)
Deposit & card hold: Pre-authorisation of the full stay amount on check-in; €50 incidental hold per night on credit or debit card
Faith & Dietary cerca de
- Church: Studienkreis Allan Kardec (649 m · ~8 min walk)
- Church: ChristusKirche Berlin-Mitte (893 m · ~11 min walk)
- Church: Kapelle (1.5 km · ~19 min walk)
- Church: Kapelle (1.5 km · ~19 min walk)
Estilo de vida y recreación local
David Hasselhoff Museum — 78 m · ~1 min walk
Acker Stadt Palast - Freie Bühne Mitte .eV — 412 m · ~5 min walk
5 minutos de radio esenciales
Euronet — 32 m · ~1 min walk
Apotheke Rosenthaler Platz — 71 m · ~1 min walk
Rosenback 23h Markt — 30 m · ~1 min walk
Rosenthaler Platz — 52 m · ~1 min walk
Dinero y moneda
Get a travel card →Euro, EUR
Use ATMs at banks or supermarkets for best rates; avoid airport/tourist exchange bureaux which charge poor rates. Most banks don't charge excessive fees for EU visitors.
Card and contactless payment widely accepted in shops, restaurants, and transport; some smaller venues and markets still prefer cash.
Round up to nearest €5–10 in restaurants (10% optional); €1–2 for taxis; hotel staff tips not expected but appreciated.
Comer, comprar y viajar en un presupuesto
Cheap car hire →Day pass (Tageskarte) zones A–B ~€9; S-Bahn or regional trains from airport cheaper than taxis/shuttles.
Buy a 7-day pass (Wochenkarte, ~€32) if staying longer than 3 days; visit free museums on Thursday evenings; shop at discount supermarkets and eat lunch specials (Mittagsmenü) for better value than dinner.
bueno saber — Berlin
Type C/F · 230V
safe
$1 ≈ €0.87 · EUR
Emergency Contacts
BerlinBoth ambulance and fire services use the same number (112). Police use 110. All calls are free. English speakers are often available. For non-emergencies, use local police stations or call 030 (Berlin area code).
💡 Save these numbers in your phone. In life-threatening emergencies, call immediately.
Where to Eat
Book a table →💡 Booking tip: For popular restaurants in Berlin, book at least a week ahead — especially for weekend evenings and during festival season.
Your arrival at The Weinmeister
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🧭 First things nearby: cash · Euronet — 32 m · ~1 min walk — pharmacy · Apotheke Rosenthaler Platz — 71 m · ~1 min walk
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →En torno a
Find train tickets →Berlin Brandenburg Airport (BER) → Sly Berlin Hotel (Friedrichshain)
💡 Most budget-friendly option; buy Berlin WelcomeCard for unlimited metro/bus/tram access for 48-72 hours; FEX arrives at Ostbahnhof station near hotel
Friedrichshain District → Sly Berlin Hotel area
💡 U5 runs directly through Friedrichshain; buy 7-day pass (€36.50) for unlimited local travel; nighttime network robust on weekends
Berlin Brandenburg Airport (BER) → Sly Berlin Hotel (Friedrichshain)
💡 Book in advance via hotel concierge for guaranteed rates; avoid peak hours (7-9am, 5-7pm) for faster journeys
Berlin Brandenburg Airport (BER) → Sly Berlin Hotel (Friedrichshain)
💡 Cheapest option; X7 connects to local tram lines; scenic route through Berlin; best for travelers without luggage
Preguntas frecuentes
What are the best rooms at The Weinmeister?
Request a room on floors 4 or 5 at the back of the building (courtyard side). These floors avoid street-level noise and are high enough to be above most foot traffic and late-night bar chatter from the surrounding Mitte area.
Which rooms should I avoid at The Weinmeister?
Avoid rooms on floors 1-2 facing Weinmeisterstrasse — that street has regular traffic and delivery trucks from early morning, plus ground-floor rooms pick up noise from the hotel entrance and nearby bars. Rooms at the front on lower floors also get light pollution from street lamps.
Is The Weinmeister noisy?
Weinmeisterstrasse is a side street in central Mitte but has regular car and delivery van traffic, especially 7am-10am and evenings. Nearby bars on Torstrasse and Rosenthaler Platz can send drunk chatter past 11pm. The hotel's own entry door and lift are potential noise sources — request a room away from both. Some rooms may have thin walls due to 3-star construction; bring earplugs if a light sleeper.
Which rooms have the best views at The Weinmeister?
Rooms at the front on floors 4-5 have a decent view over Weinmeisterstrasse and the rooftops of Mitte, with glimpses of the TV Tower in the distance. Back-facing rooms look onto a quiet courtyard with some greenery — pleasant but not scenic. No high-rise panorama; this is a compact 3-star in a dense street.
What are insider tips for staying at The Weinmeister?
1. The S-Bahn station Weinmeisterstrasse is directly on the street, so avoid rooms at front if early-morning train rumbles bother you — use the station exit away from the hotel entrance for quieter access. 2. Request a room on the courtyard side at booking; it's not always marked as 'quiet' but drastically cuts street noise. No parking on-site — use the nearby public garage at Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz, about 5 minutes walk.
What time is check-in at The Weinmeister?
Check-in at The Weinmeister is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does The Weinmeister have Wi-Fi?
Free Wi-Fi throughout, no login required; typical speed 40 Mbps down / 10 Mbps up; occasional congestion in rooms near the breakfast room at peak hours
Is there a city or tourist tax at The Weinmeister?
5% of the net room rate per person per night (covers tourism levy, no separate tourist tax card; waived for business travellers with proof of work trip)
What is the cheapest way to get around from The Weinmeister?
Day pass (Tageskarte) zones A–B ~€9; S-Bahn or regional trains from airport cheaper than taxis/shuttles.
When is the best time to visit Berlin?
May and June for long, mild evenings and city-wide gallery weekends; September has reliable sun without July's crowds.
Principales atracciones en Berlin
💡 Register online at least 2 days in advance; same-day slots are rare. The dome is closed for cleaning 3 days a year, so check the website.
💡 Visit early in the morning (before 9am) to avoid crowds and grab coffee at one of the nearby cafés along the Spree. The wall is exposed to weather, so touch gently.
💡 Go on a Sunday for free guided tours in English at 3pm, but arrive early as groups are limited to 25.
💡 Bring a picnic and rent a bike from the station at the north entrance (€5/hour). The south end is quieter for sunbathing.
💡 Entry is €12, but free on the first Sunday of every month. Aim for 10am on weekdays to skip queues; skip the audio guide and use the free app.