DÜSSELDORF
Sightseeing
History I
Sightseeing I
Practical I Hotels in Düsseldorf
The
“Königsallee” (or King’s avenue) –
often just simply called “Kö” was laid out at the beginning of the 19th
century along the edge of the old city moat. One of the most elegant
shopping streets in Europe, the Königsallee is lined with expensive
shops and luxurious galleries. In between are numerous bars and
restaurants. Particularly notheworthy is the Art Nouveau department
store Tietz (where now the Kaufhof
department store is situated). The store was built in 1907-1909 to a
design by Joseph Maria Olbrich.
The Schlossturm (Castle tower – now
houses the Navigation Museum) and the Gothic St. Lambert’s church (with
its slightly crooked bell tower) stand on the borders of the mighty
Rhine. The old road between the old town and the river has been buried
under a new walkway right next to the river, the “Uferpromenade”.
The centre of Düsseldorf has so many cafés and bars that it is sometimes
called “the largest bar in the world”.
The Ehrenhof Fine Arts Museum
(Kunstmuseum) has a nice collection of French, Italian and Flemish
masters from the 15th to the 20th century.
The
municipal “Kunsthalle” (Art Hall) at
Grabenplatz frequently organizes contemporary art exhibitions. In front
of the Kunsthalle, behind a marble façade, one can admire the art
collection of North Rhine Westphalia with its 20th century collection
ranking from Pablo Picasso, over Roy Lichtenstein to Paul Klee.
The Heinrich Heine Institute in
Bilkerstrasse houses the largest document collection in Germany about
the life and work of Heinrich Heine, who was born in Düsseldorf in 1797.
Nearby, the Jägerhof Baroque palace in Jacobistrasse is home to a Goethe
Museum.
Düsseldorf certainly is one of the main theatre and opera cities in
Germany. Kay and Lore Lorentz were the people behind the “Kommödchen”, a
political Cabaret act which exists since the aftermath of the Second
World War.