18 Sights in Solingen, Germany (with Map and Images)
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Welcome to your journey through the most beautiful sights in Solingen, Germany! Whether you want to discover the city's historical treasures or experience its modern highlights, you'll find everything your heart desires here. Be inspired by our selection and plan your unforgettable adventure in Solingen. Dive into the diversity of this fascinating city and discover everything it has to offer.
Sightseeing Tours in Solingen1. Planetarium Galileum Solingen
The Galileum Solingen is a planetarium with observatory opened on July 5, 2019 in the Solingen district of Ohligs. It is the first and only planetarium to be built into a disused spherical gas container. The project was planned and carried out by the Walter-Horn-Gesellschaft e. V., the sponsoring association of the Solingen Observatory. It is a lighthouse project within the Integrated District Development Concept Ohligs, which was supported by the urban development funding of the state of North Rhine-Westphalia. It is one of three regionally important extracurricular learning locations within the Bergisch city triangle and is also intended to be a meeting and event venue for the residents of the district. Since June 2014, the patron of the Galileum has been the science cabaret artist and presenter Vince Ebert.
2. Deutsches Klingenmuseum
The German Blade Museum in the Solingen district of Gräfrath shows cutlery, blank weapons and cutlery. Exhibits are on display that illustrate the blade and its use throughout history, explaining the importance of cutting in human history.
3. Walder Kirche
The Evangelical Church of Solingen-Wald, or Walder Church for short, is a neoclassical church building with a Romanesque west tower in Solingen, Germany. It is located in the centre of the Wald district on the Walder Kirchplatz and is the central place of worship of the Protestant parish of Wald, which belongs to the Solingen church district of the Evangelical Church in the Rhineland. The tower of the Walder Church is the oldest surviving building in Solingen, built around 1150.
4. Obus Museum
The Solingen Trolleybus Museum is a registered association that refurbishes discarded vehicles of Stadtwerke Solingen and makes them accessible to posterity. In addition, materials such as writings and pictures about the trolleybus are collected. The museum's holdings range from trolleybuses and decommissioned diesel buses to a trolleybus trailer and a tower car.
5. Müngstener Brücke
Müngsten Bridge is the highest railway bridge in Germany. The bridge is 107 metres (351 ft) high and spans the valley of the river Wupper, connecting the cities of Remscheid and Solingen. This stretch is part of the Wuppertal-Oberbarmen–Solingen railway. It is used exclusively by the Rhine-Ruhr S-Bahn line S 7. On 1 April 2013, the Müngsten Bridge was closed for extensive renovation work. It reopened on 27 July 2015, but a further lengthy closure for a comprehensive corrosion treatment is planned for 2018. During the works, the train from Solingen Hbf to Remscheid Hbf terminated at Solingen Mitte and a bus continued to Remscheid.
6. Schloß Hackhausen
Hackhausen Castle is a moated castle of reform architecture in the Bergisch city of Solingen. The history of the aristocratic residence dates back to the Middle Ages. However, large parts of the castle that still exist today date from 1907, as it was rebuilt after a fire.
7. Burg Hohenscheid
Hohenscheid Castle, also known as Haus Hohenscheid, is located in the Bergisches Land about 100 metres above the Wupper in the south of the North Rhine-Westphalian city of Solingen. It goes back to a high medieval hilltop castle, which was the ancestral seat of the lower aristocratic von Hunscheid family.
8. Tierpark Fauna
The Fauna Zoo is a three-hectare zoo in Solingen-Gräfrath that is open all year round. It lies northeast of the centre of Gräfrath in the Gräfrather Heide on Lützowstraße. It is organized as the Nature and Bird Protection Association Tierpark Fauna e. V.
9. Sankt Reinoldi Kapelle Rupelrath
The chapel of the Protestant parish of St. Reinoldi Rupelrath is the second oldest surviving building in Solingen. It is located in the district of Rupelrath near the city limits of Langenfeld and Leichlingen.
10. Sankt Martinus
St. Martinus is the Roman Catholic parish church of Burg an der Wupper, a district of the North Rhine-Westphalian city of Solingen. The building has been a listed building since 5 March 1986. The parish belongs to the Solingen-Süd pastoral care area in the Archdiocese of Cologne.
11. Schloss Caspersbroich
Caspersbroich Castle is a castle in the Ohligs district of Solingen, Germany. The lords of the castle also owned the fiefdoms in Buschenhaus, Hagscheid, Sombers, Hülsberg and Zwengenberg. Until 1808, Caspersbroich belonged to the parish of Wald.
12. Solinger Vogel- und Tierpark
The Solingen Bird and Animal Park is a 1.5-hectare zoo in Solingen-Ohligs that is open all year round. It lies northwest of the Ohligser Heide on Hermann-Löns-Weg. It is organized as a registered association. The zoo is the namesake for the Solingen Vogelpark S-Bahn station, which is a few hundred meters away.
13. Lutherkirche
The Protestant Martin Luther Church in the centre of Solingen was built between 1898 and 1901 according to plans by the architects Adolf Cornehls and Arno Eugen Fritsche on Kölner Straße. It was the only one of the three large churches in the centre of Solingen to survive the Second World War largely unscathed.
14. Balkhauser Kotten
The Balkhauser Kotten is one of two largely original Schleifkotten on the Wupper in the Bergisch city of Solingen. The Kotten is used as an industrial and grinding museum and is one of the city's most famous landmarks.
15. Evangelische Kirche Unterburg
The Evangelical Church of Solingen-Burg is a listed church building in the Solingen district of Burg an der Wupper. It belongs to the Protestant parish of Wermelskirchen in the Lennep church district of the Evangelical Church in the Rhineland.
16. Wipperkotten – Außenkotten
The Wipperkotten is one of two largely original Schleifkotten on the Wupper in the Bergisch city of Solingen. The Kotten is used as an industrial and grinding museum and is one of the city's most famous landmarks.
17. Gräfrather Lichtturm
The light tower in Solingen, North Rhine-Westphalia, is a converted former water tower. It is located in the district of Gräfrath near the highest point of the city of Solingen at approximately 276 meters above sea level. Due to its former function, it continues to bear the unofficial name Gräfrath Water Tower. The tower was built in 1904, decommissioned in 1983 and rebuilt in the mid-1990s.
18. Mahnmal Solinger Bürger und Bürgerinnen
The murder attempt in Solingen was a crime committed in Solingen, North Rhine-Westphalia, in which five people fell victim in the early morning of May 29, 1993. The act, also known as the arson attack in Solingen, had a right-wing extremist background.
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Disclaimer Please be aware of your surroundings and do not enter private property. We are not liable for any damages that occur during the tours.