Apr 10, 2012

Innenstadt District of Frankfurt


The Innenstadt is central district of Frankfurt am Main city. This is around the altstadt in north and east.  On west of Innenstadt is “Bahnhofsviertel” and on west of Innenstadt is “Westend” and on north is “Nordend” and on the east is “Ostend”. In the south the innenstadt is ended on River. The Zeil is most famous street of Frankfurt. This is also found In innenstadt. Hauptwache and Konstablerwache two main stations are also find in Innenstadt. The Innenstadt has following parts:
Bankenviertel: Bankenviertel is on both side of Taunusanlage and shared in between Innenstadt and Bahnhofsviertel. The main strasse are in Innenstadt are in Neuen Mainzer Straße, Großen Gallusstraße, Junghofstraße. All these streets are locations for skyscrapers. One of the best known hotel of Frankfurt “Frankfurter Hof” is also there in innenstadt.  
Opera Quarter: In this area of Innenstadt a lot of eating places are there. The Goethenstasse which is one of the expensive strasse of Frankfurt is also here. The Frankfurt Stock Exchange lies in the shopping street called schillerstrasse. The one of focus point frankfurts nightlife also here in Innenstadt.
Zeil and Surroundings: The zeil and its ending point’s hauptwache and konstablerwache are also central point for shopping in the city.
Courts Quarter: The north eastern Innenstadt is bordered by the eastern half of the Zeil, Konrad-Adenauer-Straße and the Friedberger Anlage.


Areas and quarter, streets and squares

The Innenstadt is divided, from west to east, in into the following parts:


Financial District

The Bankenviertel lies on both sides of the Taunusanlage and is shared between the boroughs of the Innenstadt, Bahnhofsviertel and the Westend. Most credit institutes in the eastern banking quarter are situated in Neuen Mainzer Straße, Großen Gallusstraße, Junghofstraße and the surrounding streets. All these streets are locations for skyscrapers, whose highest is the 300 metre Commerzbank Tower.


Frankfurt Stock Exchange

The southern part of the quarter shows a greater range of use, especially along Kaiserstraße and at Kaiserplatz. The Frankfurter Hof, one of the best known hotels in the city, is located here. In Großen Hirschgraben, the border with the Altstadt, lies one of the cultural highlights of the city, the Goethe House.


Opera quarter
The main axis of the north western part of the Innenstadt is Große Bockenheimer Straße, running from Rathenauplatz to Opernplatz, as a result of the many places to eat better known as the Fressgass. The southern Goethestraße which runs parallel to the Freßgass is the most expensive shopping street in the city. The Opernplatz which lies within the parks of the old city walls is considered to be one of the most beautiful squares in the city. The Frankfurt Stock Exchange lies in the shopping street called Schillerstraße.
The successive squares Rathenauplatz, Goetheplatz and Roßmarkt form the intersection to the neighbouring quarters around the Zeil. The streets around the Freßgass are one of the focus points of Frankfurt's nightlife. In Kleine Bockenheimer Straße is the Jazzkeller, an important cultural institution.

Zeil and surroundings

The pedestrian zone of the Zeil and its end points of Hauptwache and Konstablerwache are the central point for shopping in the city. Between the large department stores are shopping centres like the Zeilgalerie and FrankfurtHochVier (the latter of which is under construction). Other important streets begin at Hauptwache such as the Roßmarkt, Steinweg, Schillerstraße and Große Eschenheimer Straße. In the latter of these the Palais Thurn und Taxis (which is currently being reconstructed) used to stand, as well as important buildings from the post war years like the Fernmeldehochhaus and the Rundschau-Haus. At its north end stands the Eschenheimer Turm, a relict of the city fortifications of the late Middle Ages. The Katharinenkirche, the main Protestant church of Frankfurt, stands at Hauptwache; on Bleichstraße the Peterskirche, with its preserved cemetery, is the only green space in the district. The area between Konstablerwache and Alter Gasse is the centre of the gay and lesbian community of Frankfurt.

Courts quarter



The north eastern Innenstadt is bordered by the eastern half of the Zeil, Konrad-Adenauer-Straße and the Friedberger Anlage. The law courts and its numerous buildings, including the higher regional court, the regional court, and an institute for remand can be found around this area in Heiligkreuzgasse. Several vocational colleges can be found in a noteworthy 1950s multi-story building on Seilerstraße.
The courts are supposed to be moved to new buildings on Adickesallee in Nordend in the forthcoming years, the character of the courts quarter would therefore completely change and new uses would be found for the area. 
In Heiligkreuzgasse lies Frankfurts well known variety show, the Tigerpalast. The Odeon on the Anlagenring at Seilerstraße is a classic exhibition pavilion which was built for Simon Moritz von Bethmann. Nowadays this is used as a disco.



All Saints quarter



The small quarter between the Zeil and Battonnstraße forms a multicultural island in a city otherwise dedicated to commerce. The Breite Gasse forms a second red light district after that of the Bahnhofsviertel. The city library is located at the Zeil and on Langen Straße there are several city council departments. With the reconstruction of the newly laid Kurt-Schumacher-Straße these council offices overlap the Frankfurter Judengasse, a Jewish Ghetto.



Fischerfeld quarter



The south eastern quarter of the Innenstadt was first built-up in the early 19th century, after the previous boggy area was drained out. The Börneplatz synagogue was located at Börneplatz up until the destruction of the synagogue during the Kristallnacht programme in 1938 and it was a centre of Jewish life in Frankfurt. The Jewish cemetery in Battonnstraße is one of the oldest in Europe. Besides this the central offices for public services and the local labour office can be found in the Fischerfeldviertel.



History



The settlement of the Neustadt


Today's Innenstadt was located outside the town walls until the 14th century. Other than the exposed parks the area was already built-up. Thus a row of houses developed from a cattle market to the north of the walled in town and this market lent its name to the new street: the Zeil. Highways ran to the east and west of that through the town gates into adjacent areas, such as the homes of Bockenheim and the Bockenheimer fort, in which there were already houses and gardens.
The establishment of the Neustadt began in the year 1333, when Emperor Ludwig Der Bayer of the free realm approved of an expansion which would provide three times the previous area to the town. In the time soon after, the town erected new fortifications with five towers: The Gallustor (also Mainzer or Galgentor) on the site of the modern day Willy-Brandt-Platz, the Bockenheimer Tor on the site of the current Opernplatz, the Eschenheimer Tor, the Friedberger Tor and the Allerheiligentor. In the course of the following years the town's new area was filled with streets and buildings, whereby above all rich cloth dealers used the opportunity to establish representative domiciles for themselves outside the narrow old parts of the town. The Eschenheimer Turm, the most glorious tower of the new fortifications, was finished in 1428.

The first churches in Neustadt were two small chapels near Bockenheimer gate: the Heiligkreuz chapel of a poor hospital in 1346 as well as the neighbouring Kloster chapel of the Holy Katharina and Barbara in 1354. From the latter the larger seventeenth century Katharinenkirche developed. In the north of the Neustadt the Peterskirche was constructed in 1381, which has been the parochial church of the Neustadt since 1453. Aside from this a cemetery was laid out in this location in 1452, which became the only cemetery on the right side of the main after the closure of the cathedral in 1508. Until the opening of today's main cemetery in 1828 the Peterskirchhof (which was extended several times in the years between) remained the most important cemetery in the town. In 1453 another church was built in the Neustadt, the Maternkapelle at Roßmarkt.

In the 15th century there were still numerous areas of undeveloped land and many gardens in the Neustadt. The Altstadt was, at to this time, still the preferential quarter of the city, the Neustadt was settled mainly by immigrants flowing from the country into the increasing city. In the 16th century the old city ditch (which was the last deer ditch in 1584) between Altstadt and Neustadt was filled in.

Grand bourgois buildings


In the following era gradually the weight of the city shifted between the old and the new town, the new town houses of rich citizens were now built in the Neustadt. These served as accommodation for the royal delegations of emperors who held their coronations in the city. The best known city palace was the Palais Thurn und Taxis of 1737 in Große Eschenheimer Straße. A few years prior to this in 1730 the still preserved police headquarters were built in the heart of the Neustadt. On the Zeil, in particular, a number of representative community centres and the palace of Barckhausen developed in the 18th century. The palace was used for three years as an imperial residence due to Wittelsbacher Karl VII's war with Austria preventing him from moving back into his Munich residence.
In the active developmental period of the classic era, the best known community centre was the Goethe house in the large deer ditch of the Neustadt. In 1755 an urban horse stable developed at Roßmarkt. In 1782 the Komödienhaus (comedy house), the first definite sign of the future of theatres in Frankfurt, was built on today's Rathenauplatz. Land development of the Fischerfeld in the southeast of the new city began in 1792 from the plans of the architect general, Johann George Christian Hess. The most important of the buildings developed there was municipal library on the bank of the Main, sketched by Hess, which opened in 1825.
In 1804, during continuing occupation by French troops in the coalition wars, the city council decided upon the removal and replacement of the city walls. In the course of the following years a barrier of plants was put in place which is still there as the Anlagen (parks) of today. The plants were placed under the protection of a decree in 1807 which prevented further land development on the now natural barrier.
The Neustadt became the scene of revolutionary events in 1833: particularly the watch towers at Hauptwache and Konstablerwache. The national assembly in Frankfurt met in 1848/9 in the Paulskirche, the largest and most modern hall of the city located in the Altstadt. However, the different political and parliamentary groups met in accommodation and cafés throughout the Neustadt.
A monument to Goethe was erected at Roßmarkt in 1844, which was moved to the Gallusanlage where it has stood since 1952. 1858 saw the erection of a monument for Johannes Gutenberg which was also placed in Roßmarkt, and another for Friedrich Schiller in 1864 which initially stood at Hauptwache but was moved to Goetheplatz in 1878 and then to the Taunusanlage in 1955. It was late in the city's history before it decided on the construction of a monument to Bismarck, which was set up in the Gallusanlage but later melted down in 1940. The citizens of Frankfurt established a venue in Junghofstraße as a festival and concert hall in 1859. The new main synagogue was inaugurated in Börnerstraße in 1860, and in 1882 another synagogue followed at Börneplatz.

The Neustadt as a modern city wide


After the Austro-Prussian War, Frankfurt Quickly Developed into one of the more modern cities of Germany. Until That dot the wide, meshed road system of the Neustadt HAD beens consolidated by tearing down houses and to allow for Other Areas splendorous boulevards. After 1870, Kaiserstraße and Kaiserplatz Became connection Between the hand and the western Hauptwache train stations. In 1876, the hotel opened on Kaiserplatz Frankfurt Hof, Which from the point on it was known as the "First House on the Square." After further Top demolition the new Zeil, Schillerstrasse Were Goethestrasse and ugly. The extension of the Neue Mainzer Straße was finished in 1874 with a bridge named Untermainbrücke. The newly built home of the stock exchange was opened in 1879 close to Hauptwache. The Opera House was Inaugurated in 1880, established and donations of the Following Frankfurt's Citizens. The new law courts in Heiligkreuzstrasse Were opened in 1889 and Followed by the theater in Untermainanlage in 1902.
The process of rapid growth in the new city led to the formation of a town center. The previous residential districts Developed into a commercial and business center and the residents Were soon ejected from the area.
The trams Were changed to electrical operation from 1899, whereby the city had a modern and efficient traffic service. The central node of the tram traffic was situated at Hauptwache Numerous lines lead through the Zeil, Which Developed into a broad road of department stores.
In the years Effective the first world war the emphasis of the development town Regarding building more Shifted Towards the outside quarters. The share of the medieval city center fell victim, as in the Gothic Those Altstadt did, to the allied air raids Numerous of 1943-44.
Above all regarded the reconstruction of the urban traffic needs and accepted modern town planning. Malthus, completely new traffic axles Were ugly, for instance, Konrad-Adenauer-Strasse and the Zeil Were considerably widened falling on Their reconstruction. The redevelopment of the city center the Innenstadt Brought into the 1960s. The building of the underground system and changed from 1963 Effective intense building measures, a wide underground rapid-transit station was built underneath Hauptwache and Konstablerwache. The Zeil and the Fressgas Were turned into pedestrian zones and tram lines Until 1986 MOST Were shut down. The western portion of the banking quarter Innenstadt Formed around the model of the American Central Business Districts. Since the 1970s this share western Has Seen Numerous new skyscrapers, the best known of the BfG Which include at Willy-Brandt-Platz and the Commerzbank Tower at Kaiserplatz.

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