Städel Museum
Seven hundred years of European art from the early 14th century to the present, especially Renaissance, Baroque & early modern art.
Seven hundred years of European art from the early 14th century to the present, especially Renaissance, Baroque & early modern art.
Postal & telecom museum.
In 2018, 74 years after Frankfurt was destroyed in World War II, its historical city centre was restored to its old beauty.
Museum by architect Richard Meier.
Book art, typography & calligraphy of the 20th & 21st centuries.
Concert hall.
Breakfast all day!
Modern café serving regional products.
Traditional Chinese garden with various pavilions.
Chocolate shop & café.
Experience being blind.
Sightseeing tramline.
Social housing by architect Ernst May featuring a Frankfurt Kitchen.
Science museum for kids.
Photographic art gallery.
Museum dedicated to the evolution of mass transit in Frankfurt.
Museum dedicated to all things leather but Lederhosen.
German Exile Archive 1933–45.
Picture gallery dedicated to the Goethezeit, the Age of Goethe.
43-m-high observation tower.
Reconstructed renaissance house (2018).
The only house that survived the 1944 bombing of Frankfurt.
Museum dedicated to Christian Orthodox icons.
Medieval cathedral.
Municipal archive.
Traditional Korean scholars’ garden with two pavilions.
Sculpture museum.
Frankfurt’s highest vantage point.
Contemporary art museum by architect Hans Hollein.
The Deutsche Bundesbank’s museum.
Europe’s oldest Jewish ghetto.
Ethnographic museum.
Holocaust memorial.
Medieval church.
Botanical garden.
Contemporary art gallery.
Museum dedicated to porcelain from the Höchster Porzellan-Manufaktur.
Bürgerliche Küche.
Frankfurter Grüne Soße available here.
Restaurant serving culinary specialities from Frankfurt.
Square with reconstructed half-timbered houses (1986).
Medieval town hall.
Art gallery.
Botanical garden of the Goethe University.
Natural history museum.
Museum dedicated to poet Friedrich Stoltze, who was a democrat & republican.
Seat of the first German national assembly (1848).