6 Best Sights in Frankfurt, Germany

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We've compiled the best of the best in Frankfurt - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Fressgass

Altstadt Fodor's Choice
FRANKFURT, GERMANY - OCT 1: famous Victoria Pharmacy at the Grosse Bockenheimer Strasse on OCT 1, 2011 in Frankfurt, Germany. The pharmacy was built in 1950 architecture style.
Jorg Hackemann / Shutterstock

Grosse Bockenheimer Strasse is the proper name of this pedestrian street, nicknamed \"Pig-Out Alley\" because of its amazing choice of restaurants and cafés, wine merchants and late night music clubs, offering everything from crumbly cheeses and smoked fish to vintage wines and chocolate creams. Check the side streets for additional cafés and restaurants, between Börsenstraße and Opernplatz.

Römer

Altstadt Fodor's Choice
FRANKFURT AM MAIN, GERMANY, MAY The 3rd 2014: The Romer Square, one of the oldest and most historic sections of Frankfurt am Main, featuring Roman bath ruins and gabled, gothic row houses.
srdjan draskovic / Shutterstock

Three individual patrician buildings make up the Römer, Frankfurt's town hall. The mercantile-minded Frankfurt burghers used the complex for political and ceremonial purposes and for trade fairs and other commercial ventures. Its gabled facade with an ornate balcony is widely recognized as the city's official emblem. The most important events to take place here were the festivities celebrating the coronations of the Holy Roman emperors. The first was in 1562 in the glittering Kaisersaal (Imperial Hall), the last in 1792 to celebrate the election of the emperor Francis II, who would later be forced by Napoléon to abdicate. Unless official business is being conducted, you can see the impressive, full-length 19th-century portraits of the 52 emperors of the Holy Roman Empire, which line the walls of the reconstructed banquet hall, but you have to arrange a tour through a private local operator.

Römerberg 27, Frankfurt, 60311, Germany
069-2123–34920
Sight Details
€3
Closed weekends and during events

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Deutsches Filmmuseum

Sachsenhausen Fodor's Choice

Germany's first museum of cinematography, set in a historic villa on \"museum row,\" offers visitors a glimpse at the history of film, with artifacts that include \"magic lanterns\" from the 1880s, costume drawings from Hollywood and German films, and multiple screens playing film clips. Interactive exhibits show how films are photographed, given sound, and edited, and let visitors play with lighting and animation. A theater in the basement screens every imaginable type of film, from historical to avant-garde to Star Wars.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Kurpark

Fodor's Choice

Bad Homburg's greatest attraction has long been the Kurpark, a 116-acre park in the heart of the Old Town, with more than 30 mineral springs and fountains, golf, tennis courts, restaurants, and playgrounds. Romans first used the springs, which were rediscovered and made famous in the 19th century. In addition to the popular (and highly salty) Elisabethenbrunnen spring, look for a Thai temple and a Russian chapel, mementos left by royal guests—King Chulalongkorn of Siam and Czar Nicholas II.

Senckenberg Naturmuseum Frankfurt

Westend Fodor's Choice

The important collection of fossils, animals, plants, and geological exhibits here is upstaged by the permanent dinosaur exhibit: it's the most extensive of its kind in all of Germany. The diplodocus dinosaur, imported from New York, is the only complete specimen of its kind in Europe. Many of the exhibits of prehistoric animals, including a series of dioramas, have been designed with children in mind, and there's a new section on biodiversity.

Städelsches Kunstinstitut und Städtische Galerie

Sachsenhausen Fodor's Choice

This is one of Germany's most important art collections, covering 700 years of paintings and sculpture, with a vast collection of paintings by Dürer, Vermeer, Rembrandt, Rubens, Monet, Renoir, and other masters. The downstairs annex features a large collection of works from contemporary artists, including a huge portrait of Goethe by Andy Warhol. The section on German expressionism is particularly strong, with representative works by the Frankfurt artist Max Beckmann and Ernst Ludwig Kirchner. A free smartphone app with a built-in audio guide enhances the experience. There is also an excellent café-restaurant, Holbein's.