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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › DüsseldorfDüsseldorf - Wikipedia

    Düsseldorf [a] is the capital city of North Rhine-Westphalia, the most populous state of Germany. It is the second-largest city in the state after Cologne and the sixth-largest city in Germany, [b], with a 2022 population of 629,047. [7]

  2. Things to Do in Düsseldorf, Germany: See Tripadvisor's 201,380 traveler reviews and photos of Düsseldorf tourist attractions. Find what to do today, this weekend, or in August. We have reviews of the best places to see in Düsseldorf. Visit top-rated & must-see attractions.

  3. www.visitduesseldorf.de › enVisit Düsseldorf

    Exploring the city. Explore its highlights on our guided tours between the Old Town, Königsallee and the "MedienHafen", by bus, on foot, by boat, carriage or bike. Our well-trained, knowledgeable city guides will make you familiar with Düsseldorf’s sights and landmarks.

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    • Rheinuferpromenade
    • Altstadt
    • Königsallee
    • Medienhafen
    • Rhine Tower
    • Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen
    • K21 Ständehaus
    • Schloss Benrath
    • Hofgarten
    • Burgplatz

    When the sun is out it might feel like the whole city has decided to come for a wander at this promenade on the right bank of the Rhine. The walkway is positioned so that it gets sunshine all day long, and bends from the Parliament down to the harbour. The first promenade appeared at the turn of the 20th century, but it’s only since 1993,when road ...

    The old town is by no means large, but if you’re planning a night out in Düsseldorf there are more nightspots than you could ever hope to visit. Packed into just a few streets are 300 brewpubs, bars and nightclubs, to the point where the area is referred to as the “Längste Theke der Welt”, “The longest bar in the world”. Although there’s no way to ...

    If Düsseldorf is a byword for luxury and high-end lifestyles it’s because of Königsallee, a plush shopping boulevard either side of a canal lined with plane trees. The name is usually contracted to “Kö” by locals, and the street runs for a kilometre north to south, with every premium brand under the sun on the way. For most people it’s a chance to ...

    At the southern end of the Rheinuferpromenade are Düsseldorf’s docks, which were built at the end of the 19th century and played a part in the city’s post-war boom. By the 1970s local industry was on the wane, especially after the closure of the local Mannesmann pipe factory. And since the 1990s the harbour has been transformed into a contemporary ...

    The tallest building in Düsseldorf is on the east side of the Medienhafen, climbing to 240 metres. This communications tower was unveiled in 1981 and has an observation deck and revolving restaurant at 170 metres. Unsurprisingly, the panoramas are glorious, and merit the €9 entry fee at peak times for adults. When the skies are clear you can easily...

    The North Rhine-Westphalia art collection is divided across two main venues, the K20 and K21. We’ll start with the “K20 am Grabbeplatz”, which is in a mesmerising building designed by Arne Jacobsen in the mid-1980s and clad with polished black granite. The galleries are for 20th century art and encompass all of its key movements: Expressionism, Fau...

    Under the same umbrella, the K21 Ständehaus is a separate museum space introduced in 2002.The venue is the Neo-Renaissance parliament building, which is magnificent from the outside but even more thrilling inside as its roof has been replaced with a glass canopy and the interior reconfigured into a “piazza”. This floods the interior with natural li...

    Benrath, just southeast of Düsseldorf is the scene of a lovely Rococo palace from the mid-18th century, surrounded by gardens. It was all created for Elector Palatine Charles Theodor and his wife Elisabeth Auguste of Sulzbach as a summer residence. The palace was carefully devised to correspond to its gardens, so the Elector’s private room opened o...

    Germany’s first public park was landscaped in 1769 on the back of devastation caused during the Seven Years’ War from 1756 to 1763. The oldest portion is on the east side, between Schloss Jägerhof and the graceful “Jröner Jong” fountain. Working under Charles Theodore again, Nicolas de Pigage was responsible for this section and the long grand aven...

    Named for the castle that stood beside the Rhine until the end of the 19th century, Burgplatz is somewhere to meet-up with friends and go for a coffee or beer next to the Rhine. The last vestige of the castle is the Schlossturm. The first three storeys of this tower are from the 1200s, the fourth dates to the 1500s while the fifth was added in 1845...

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    • Sink Altbiers in the Altstadt. Bars and pubs. Beer hall. price 2 of 4. Pay a visit to the traditional beer halls in the Altstadt (Old Town) and sample the local version of the highly celebrated Altbier.
    • Go sightseeing on the Rhine. Hop aboard a sightseeing cruise of the Rhine for one of the best views over Düsseldorf. Sure, it’s a bit touristy, but there’s no better way to see the city – especially the cool, post-modern architecture of the MedienHafen – than from the water.
    • Explore the gargantuan Museum Kunstpalast. Museums. Art and design. price 2 of 4. Among its five permanent collections are the Kunstpalast’s picture gallery, featuring European paintings from the 15th to 20th centuries – including Peter Paul Rubens’s magnificent ‘Venus and Adonis’ – and the modern gallery, with an impressive array of German Expressionist paintings.
    • Subterranean art gallery KIT. Museums. Art and design. price 2 of 4. This subterranean exhibition space is located beneath the Rhine promenade. Enter via the KIT café glass pavilion and head down the flight of stairs to the spare concrete-walled gallery, whose unique V-shape and slanted floors are the results of its being nestled between two major road tunnels.
  5. Germany, Europe. Düsseldorf impresses with boundary-pushing architecture, zinging nightlife and an art scene to rival many higher-profile cities. It’s a posh and modern city that seems all buttoned-up business at first glance: banking, advertising, fashion and telecommunications are among the fields that have made North Rhine–Westphalia's ...

  6. Düsseldorf Tourism: Tripadvisor has 2,01,350 reviews of Düsseldorf Hotels, Attractions, and Restaurants making it your best Düsseldorf Tourism resource.