Have you ever thought about how much the way a city is designed can affect our everyday life? How it can make us feel welcomed, relaxed, stressed or unsafe. At the same time the city can be experienced in a different way by different people. An area that can feel safe for me could make you feel unsafe. Often this feeling can be traced back to discrimination: classism, sexism, racism, trans and homophobia. So the questions we asked ourselves is: Who is the city designed and shaped by and for whom? We focused on a queer, intersectional perspective and talked to planners, activists, performers and inhabitants in order to find out how we can make Berlin, or city for that matter, queerer.