Its repertoire—and its use and interpretation of “space”—make the Kammerspiele one of Germany’s most exciting theaters. In addition to the main stage—the hidden Jugendstil theater without a façade—the complex designed by Bert Neumann includes several smaller venues: the experimental stage in the Neues Haus which has been converted into the “Spielhalle,” the “Werkraum,” where actors and the audience meet at eye level like in a walk-in disco ball, and the “Stadtraum.”