Berlin, Germany · Marathon (26.2 mi / 42.2 km)
Berlin Marathon route poster
The flat, fast world-record course that finishes at the Brandenburg Gate.
Upload your own GPX. No account, no sign-up.
The Berlin Marathon course
The Berlin Marathon is famous for being flat, wide, and fast, the course where the men’s world record has fallen repeatedly. It loops through the heart of the city, starting and finishing near the Tiergarten.
The route passes Berlin landmarks throughout, the Reichstag, Potsdamer Platz, Gendarmenmarkt, before the finish that every runner pictures: the final straight through the Brandenburg Gate and down Unter den Linden.
Cairn renders your line over the real Berlin streets, with the gate and the Tiergarten where they belong on the map.
Along the course
- Tiergarten start
- Potsdamer Platz
- Gendarmenmarkt
- Brandenburg Gate finish
- Unter den Linden
From the finish line to your wall, in three moves.
No app to learn, no measuring, no typing your stats. The route does the talking.
- 01
Drop your route
Upload the GPX from your watch or app. We read the line and the numbers in seconds.
- 02
Shape it
Place your route on the map, pick a style, set your labels, choose what the wall remembers. All on your phone.
- 03
We print and ship
Pressed on museum-grade paper with archival inks, framed if you like, sent to your door.

Made to outlast the memory.
We print on heavyweight museum-grade matte paper with archival pigment inks, the kind that hold their depth for decades without fading. Framed editions come in solid wood with an acid-free mat, ready to hang out of the box. Every order is made to order and shipped protected, never rolled loose in a tube.
- Paper
- Heavyweight museum-grade matte
- Inks
- Archival pigment, decades without fading
- Frames
- Solid wood, acid-free mat, ready to hang
- Shipping
- Made to order, protected, never rolled loose
Questions, answered.
Can I frame my Berlin Marathon route?+
Yes. Upload your GPX to the Cairn creator and your route is mapped over real Berlin streets through the Brandenburg Gate, then printed framed and ready to hang.