As far as physical destruction from bombing/shelling/etc., there are a few areas that weren't heavily damaged. One of the best examples is the city of Bamberg in Northern Bavaria. Very little to none of the city was bombed or shelled, and the entire old city is still standing. The whole town is now a [UNESCO World Heritage Site] (http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/624) due to its abundance of Middle Age and Renaissance era structures still standing, a rarity in the region.
Ideologically, it was heavily affected by the war. It was the site of the Bamberg Conference, a meeting of the Nazi Party in 1926 designed to rid the part of some internal squabbling at the time. (Source: Charisma and Factionalism in the Nazi Party, Joseph Nyomarkay)
After the war, the US Army took over a former Wehrmacht and before then, Royal Bavarian Army base known as "Lagarde Kaserne" and turned into the present-day Warner Barracks. The base is open as of today, but is slated to close in 2015, per the Garrison's website articles.
I'm new posting here, but I've been a longtime lurker. I study history at Clemson University in the United States, and am currently doing an exchange program in history at Otto-Friedrich University Bamberg. I live in the old city here for the time being.
Please specify your question. If you're asking for physical destruction due to WW2, certain parts of Germany survived unscathed.
However, in terms of effects on the German people, everybody was affected of course. A lot of families lost relatives and the economic effects of the war and subsequent defeat were severe.