You are now standing at Leipziger Straße 126a, right in the middle of the former border zone between East and West. Here—where the magnificent Wertheim department store once stood—the heart of Berlin’s techno scene pulsed from 1991 onwards: “Tresor.” Deep down in the basement, amidst old safety deposit boxes and a genuine bank vault, people partied to heavy bass beats—raw concrete, dim lighting, thumping music.
The location was unique: just a few steps from Potsdamer Platz, in an area that was—at the time—still empty, wild, and undeveloped. Night owls from all over the world flocked here—DJs from Detroit, London, and Paris; ravers from Japan, Australia, and Brazil; and, of course, Berliners from both East and West who breathed in the city’s new spirit of life. Many were young, eager to experiment, and searching for freedom—and they found it in the sweat, fog, and beat of Tresor.
This state of exception lasted until 2005, when the club gave way to a shopping mall. Yet its soul lives on—in the new Tresor, located within the old heating plant in Berlin-Mitte. There, some of the original safety deposit boxes still serve as reminders of the magical nights spent here, at this historic site situated between East and West.
Image 1: Original work by the author
Image 2: By [Author not specified in machine-readable form; MichaelBrossmann is presumed to be the author based on rights holder information]. Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=893396
Image 3: By Fridolin freudenfett – Original work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=128465779