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Sonderzüge by Frédéric Eyl, Gunnar Green and Richard The.
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watch the complete videodocumentation
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Berlin train stations Grunewald and Westhafen used to serve the Nazis-Regime as stations from where jews and others were deported to ghettos and concentration camps. Both now have mermorial sites [Gleis 17/Grunewald 1, Gleis 17/Grunewald 2] [Westhafen], though those don't have the importance in Berlin they should have, since they are located rather far away from the city center. Only interested people will eventually become aware of and will visit those sites. Our aim is to create sensational moments in order to evoke a concioussnes for the history of deportations and for the existant memorial sites.
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Ghosttrain Ghosttrain is an installation that uses an usual lightning setting near traintracks in an urban area. Spotlights illuminate parts of the tracks, but from time to time a silhouette of a train passes on the rails, alluding to the deportation trains of the Nazis.

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Destinations Rooftops of S-Bahn carriages serve as projection-screens. Projecting from well-frequented Warschauer Brücke in Berlin-Friedrichshain, a bridge with trains running underneath it, each carriage's roof seems to have typography attached to it: announcing destinations of the Nazi's deportation trains.

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NextStop S-Bahn trains in Berlin have LED-displays to announce their destination and following stop(s). In a singular moment the displays on those trains either heading to Grunewald or those passing Westhafen would announce names of those ghettos and concentration camps the Nazi's deportation trains were destined to go to. [about concentration camp Theresienstadt]

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