By: Eran Fulson | Last Updated: September 8, 2025
Germany has castles, beer halls, and Christmas markets (a greatest hits of cultural stereotypes). But if you want stories your friends haven’t already heard, you’ll need to wander a little off-script. From a cuckoo clock the size of a house in the Black Forest to a suspended monorail in Wuppertal, the country is full of bizarre, brilliant experiences you won’t find in a standard guidebook.
Here are 9 unique things to do across Germany that are weird, wonderful, and absolutely worth your time.
If Germany is famous for anything besides beer, it’s cuckoo clocks. And in the Black Forest town of Schonach, you can see the world’s largest one that's big enough to walk inside.
The 15-foot-tall clockwork weighs in at a hefty 6 tons, while the cuckoo itself ambles along at 330lbs.
Built in the 1980s by local clockmakers, the mechanism alone is the size of a small house. When the cuckoo pops out, it feels less like a bird and more like a mascot.
Tip: Combine it with a visit to Triberg Falls (Germany’s highest waterfall), just a few minutes away.
How to get there: Triberg or Hornberg are the nearest train stops. From there, it’s a short drive or bus ride to Schonach.
The Danube flows through ten countries, but it all begins in the Black Forest town of Donaueschingen. The Donauquelle is a spring monument surrounded by statues and history. Hydrologists argue about where the river really starts, but tourists stick with this spot.
Tip: Stop by Fürstenberg Castle next door. The fountain and palace grounds are surprisingly photogenic.
How to get there: Train from Stuttgart or Freiburg to Donaueschingen. The spring is in town.
Perhaps it's no wonder this one doesn't really measure up against Berlin’s other architectural heavy-hitters, like the Brandenburg Gate. But it's no less... something... special. Off in the Steglitz district stands the Bierpinsel, a 1970s brutalist tower that looks like someone glued a disco ball to a tree trunk.
Originally built as a restaurant complex, today it’s more of a giant conversation starter.
Tip: Visit during the night or golden hour, it looks even more surreal against the dark sky.
How to get there: Take the U9 to Schloßstraße. You’ll see it towering over the street.
Forget fancy dining. One of Berlin’s most iconic food stops is Burgermeister, a burger stand wedged under the U1 tracks in Kreuzberg inside a former public toilet. Trains rumble overhead while you demolish a double cheeseburger. It shouldn’t work. It does.
Tip: Order the chili cheese fries. And don’t get clever with the menu, the classic burger is what people line up for.
How to get there: U1 to Schlesisches Tor, look for the crowd.
Designed by Austrian artist Friedensreich Hundertwasser, the Green Citadel is a pink architectural fever dream in Magdeburg. With curvy walls, golden domes, and not a straight line in sight, it feels like stepping into a Dr. Seuss illustration.
If you're into bold design, you'll want to check out other examples (though a little less pink) of famous German architecture.
Tip: Head up to the rooftop garden for views over Magdeburg. Few visitors bother, which makes it even better.
How to get there: 10 minutes on foot from Magdeburg’s main station.
For all of Dresden’s attractions, Kunsthofpassage is not what you'd expect to find in the city. Instead of grand Baroque architecture, you'll find a set of colorfully artistic courtyards, each with its own theme. The star is the turquoise building covered in drainpipes that turn rainfall into music. It’s part art, part plumbing experiment, and completely worth the detour.
Tip: Go on a rainy day if you can. That’s when the drainpipes actually “play.”
How to get there: Tram 13 to Alaunplatz, then head into Neustadt.
East of Dessau is Ferropolis an open-air museum where massive coal mining machines stand abandoned like steel dinosaurs. In summer, electronic music festivals fill the grounds. The rest of the year, you can wander beneath machines taller than most apartment blocks.
Tip: Climb up on the walkways (open to visitors) for the full scale. It’s dizzying.
How to get there: Train to Gräfenhainichen, then a short taxi. Or if driving yourself, it's about one hour away from Leipzig, or two hours from Berlin.
Leave it to a German street artist to make a railway bridge look like Lego bricks. Painted in 2011, the Wuppertal Lego Bridge is so realistic you’ll swear it came straight from a toy box.
Tip: Get your photo from the angle where the bricks align, it’s the perfect forced perspective shot.
How to get there: A few minutes’ walk from Wuppertal-Vohwinkel station.
The Wuppertal Schwebebahn is the world’s oldest suspended monorail, running since 1901. It glides above streets and the River Wupper like a mechanical caterpillar. Locals commute on it daily, but for travelers it’s part transit, part thrill ride.
Tip: Sit at the very front of the train for low-key rollercoaster vibes and the best photos of the track ahead.
How to get there: Start at Vohwinkel and ride to Oberbarmen for the full 8.3 miles (13.3 km).
What’s the weirdest thing to do in Berlin?
Eating at Burgermeister, a burger joint under the U-Bahn in a converted public toilet. Sounds questionable, tastes incredible.
Where does the Danube start?
The official source is the Donauquelle spring in Donaueschingen, Germany.
Is the Wuppertal Schwebebahn worth it?
Yes. It’s over 120 years old and still the only suspended monorail of its kind in the world.
Eran is a first-generation Canadian with German roots now living in Wales. For over 15 years, he’s traveled across North America and Europe, road-tripping through cities, coastlines, and mountain landscapes. He combines his multicultural background with a keen attention to detail to bring Germany to life for curious travelers. Eran’s writing is rooted in firsthand experience helping you uncover Germany's hidden gems, local traditions, and meaningful cultural experiences beyond the typical tourist trail.