The courtyard of this nazi congress house was supposed to be roofed, but construction work was halted because of the war. |
Goose-stepping to the nazi museum. |
The street measures 60 m by 2 km. Extremely useful for military parades and later for testing sports cars. |
This lake used to be the foundations of a 500,000 people stadium. It's not a swim stadium, though. |
The congress house was only half-finished, measured in height. |
People used to gather to Luitpoldarena to hear mr. Hitler. Nowadays a park. |
Here are the listeners. |
Kaisa, Michael and Tiiti. The basket has some pretzels. |
Timo has some delicious wursts, Tiiti has to do with some salty heart. |
The unbelievable rattle made by this machine can not be conveyed in pictures. |
Action painting washing machine got a lot of attention from the art aficionados. |
It's important to get yourself some degrees. |
Nice light show in the church ruins. |
This happening is called The Blue Night. |
Therefore everything is blue. |
Even the plastic bags. |
We stopped for some non-stop music. |
This place even had a fog screen, possibly of the kind invented in our university. |
This is art: video of a Finnish small town bridge playing on a bridge in Nuremberg. |
Because she did a lot of this, you get to enjoy the story. |
The oldest and the newest. Of course, there was no admission fee to the train museum if you had a valid interrail ticket. |
I wonder if this one is difficult to operate? |
Saloon coach of the bavarian fairy-tale king Ludwig II. |
The enemy can spot your lights! Darken! |
The model railways naturally included the post-war scenario. |
This guy gets his wage for operating half a kilometer of miniature railways. |
Nazis had some pretty big trains. |
Kaisa and Tiiti at the city walls. |