The description of this exhibit from the 1964 Official Guide Book

Cover- 1964 Guidebook

The description of this exhibit from the 1965 Official Guide Book

Cover - 1965 Guidebook

The location of this exhibit on the 1964 Official Souvenir Map

Cover - 1964 Official Souvenir Map

BERLIN 

The industry, cultural heritage and future of German's free world outpost are the themes of this privately sponsored pavilion. The round building is surrounded by a free-flowing blue awning and has a tentlike roof of flexible plastic. Showcases inside display samples of products made in West Berlin, and a short newsreel shows cultural, social and technological events in the city. There are portraits of Berliners who have won renown in many fields, and the work of current artists and sculptors is on display. A cartoon film shows West Berliners going about their daily chores. A map with special lighting effects shows the Berlin of the future.
* Admission: free.

BERLIN

A film and color transparencies depict day-to-day life in this outpost of freedom.

Privately sponsored by the Berlin Marketing Council, this pavilion is a tribute to a city whose people have built a vital cultural and industrial life in the shadow of Communism. There are displays picturing the Berlin Wall, and exhibits of the city's expanding intellectual and economic horizons.

Admission: free.


Pavilion of the City of Berlin

SOURCE: Commercial Transparency by Photo Lab, Inc., Washington, DC

Berlin Pavilion


The Berlin Pavilion at New York Fair features [a] spherical projection system ...
Berlin Pavilion

SOURCE: Business Screen Magazine World's Fair Report

Spherical View of Berlin

WEST BERLINERS going about their daily chores are pictured in the cartoon film projected on a novel, spherical globe in the City's Pavilion at the Fair. Another short film takes up technological productivity; maps with special lighting effects portray the Berlin of the future.
Left: this translucent sphere carries a cartoon film about life in West Berlin. It has an approximate four-ft. diameter. Above: our own sketch shows how images are reflected upwards through Plexiglas tube from 35mm (German-made) repeater projector down below floor. A Zeiss lens; 45-degree mirror are used.
Technical Drawing of Film Projection
Spherical Project in Berlin Pavilion