Strasbourg
From World travel guide
Capital of Alsace, France, Strasbourg (German: Straßburg) is mostly known for hosting European institutions. However, it is also a very nice place to visit, especially for its old town. The city itself is one of the 9 biggest cities in France, with a population of about 450,000 people if you include the surroundings. Part of the conurbation is located on the eastern bank of the Rhine, in Kehl, Germany.
Strasbourg is the seat of the Council of Europe and the European Court of Human Rights and is one of the seats of the European Parliament.
Contents |
Understand
The city is one of the 9 largest in France with nearly half a million inhabitants in a metopolitan area spanning across the river into Germany.
Get in
By plane
Strasbourg International Airport (SXB) is located south-west of the city at Entzheim, with domestic as well as international flights (but not as many as a real European capital should have...). There are several flights a day to and from Paris. http://www.strasbourg.aeroport.fr
Buses take travellers to the southern hub of the urban transport network (Baggersee station), which is connected to the A-line tramway (direct line to the town center). A tram-train line running directly from the airport to the town center is planned to open in 2008.
By train
The railway station is located in the western town center, with connections to the tram system and with buses and many taxis waiting outside (to the left of the station forecourt).
The trip from paris currently takes a little less than 4 hours, usually on the German train to or from Munich. From Lyon the travel time is around 5 hours.
Locally in Alsace, the TER network is quick and efficient. It takes about 50 minutes to arrive from Mulhouse, or about an hour from Basel.
By car
You can reach Strasbourg by various highways:
- from the west (Paris, Benelux) taking the A4 highway (E25). About 4 hours from Paris
- from the south (Switzerland, Lyon), taking the A35 highway (E25). About 5 hours from Lyon
- from the north and east (Germany), taking the A5 highway (E35).
By bus
- Eurolines provides bus services to the city.
- Lufthansa operates a bus shuttle between Strasbourg and Frankfurt, Germany
Get around
General information on transport in Strasbourg: http://www.strasbourg.fr/Strasbourgfr/GB/SeDeplacer/
Bike rental
Strasbourg is ideal for cycling - the city center is flat and there are plenty of bike lanes and bike paths. You can rent bikes at:
- rue du Maire Kuss, in front of the train station
- rue des Bouchers, on the south bank of the Ill river, near the rue d'Austerlitz and the Porte de l'Hôpital tramway station.
Bikes are allowed on trams except in peak hours.
More information on cycling in Strasbourg: http://www.strasbourg.fr/strasbourgfr/fr/sedeplacer/avelo/
By bus
By tram
40 kilometers of tramway lines run through the city.
See
The tourist office recommends a variety of walking tours through the town (Middle Ages, Renaissance, Modern and Contemporary) and bike tours through the faubourgs (Neudorf and Neuhof).
Water-bus tours are available near the Palais des Rohans (south of the cathedral). Those tours (about 45 min.) run around the town center and the European district.
- Gothic cathedral, built between 1176 and 1439, with a 142 meter tower (the highest cathedral tower in France)
- Maison Kammerzell (XVth century) (to the left of the front of the cathedral)
- Petite France district (XIIth - XVIth century)
- Palais des Rohans, french style palace, built after the acquisition of the town by the French (1681)
- Stockfeld, garden city built in the early XXth century in the south-east of the Neuhof (southern part of the town) (bus line 24)
- European district (bus lines 6, 30, 72) :
- Council of Europe's seat (Le Palais de l'Europe) (1977), built by Henry Bernard
- European Court of Human Rights (1995), built by Richard Rogers
- European Parliament (1999), built by Architecture Studio
- B-line tramway terminus at Hoenheim (northern conurbation) (2001), built by the contemporary achitect Zaha Hadid.
Do
The Christmas market. Many places, but the most important and beautiful are place Broglie and place de la cathédrale, although they are crowded... The best place to drink hot wine (vin chaud) and to eat Christmas cookies (Brédalas).
Learn
Work
Buy
Eat
Alsacian specialities are numerous and can be eaten in many traditional restaurants, in the city or in the neighbourhood. Particularly you oughtn't visit Alsace without having the sauerkraut (choucroute in French). Other specialities include the Alsacian pork-butcher's meat, Flamenküche or flams (tartes flambées in French) which is a sort of wafer thin pizza made with onion-cream sauce, Baekehof, beef and pork stew cooked, with potatoes and carrots, usually served for two or more persons and Fleischnackas, mixed beef meat presented like spirals and served with salads.
Traditional restaurants
- Au petit bois vert, in the Petite France district : well cooked flams and alsacian specialities in a small room with smiling waiters. The cooker usually comes at the end of the evening. Great terrace during the summer under a big tree on the bank of the river. No reservation, mid-range prices. 1, Quai de la Bruche.
- Le Sanglier (The boar), in the Carré d'Or district, near the cathedral. A small restaurant with a traditional setting. If you want a Baekehof, you must inform the restaurant 24h before. Mid-range prices. Rue du Sanglier.
- A l'ancienne douane (To the old customs house), near the cathedral, next to the Ill river. A big restaurant for tourist groups. You are almost sure to find a place here even if you have no reservation. Mid-range prices. Rue de la Douane.
Modern restaurants
- Mooze, near Place Kleber : sushi restaurant. The sushis are moving on a conveyor belt in front of you. Rue de la demi-lune.
- Tiger wok Oriental food. They cook your dish in front of you. Rue du faisan.
Budget
- La Gallia, the oldest university restaurant of France, in a 19th century building, built by the Germans (this explains the ceiling's decoration, with the 2nd Reich armoiries). It is the last university restaurant of France that is managed by students. Not a culinary triumph, but really cheaper prices. Quai du Maire Dietrich, near the Gallia tramway station (C-line).
- Zorba. Rue de Zurich. A little Greek restaurant in the Krutenau area. Sandwichs,souvlaki, kabaab.
- Al Boustane. Rue de la Krutenau. A Lebanese restaurant. Sandwichs, kabaab.
- Flam's. Rue des Frères (near the Cathédrale). [1] Restaurant with a flam theme, you can get any sort you might imagine. The winelist is amazing for a budget joint.
Mid range
- Chez Yvonne, in the Carré d'Or district, near the cathedral. Usually frequented by Jacques Chirac, when he comes to Strasbourg, because of it's well known tête de veau (cooked veal head). More expensive.
- Rue du Sanglier. Consider by some to not be very good.
- La petite Mairie
- Chez Tante Lisele, in the Grand Rue. Very friendly.
Drink
- Beer : Alsace is the first beer-producing region of France and Strasbourg has many breweries. Best known are Kronenbourg and Fischer, whose factories can be visited for free, with free drinks at the end of the tour.
- Alsacian white wine : usually drunk with alsacian food, but also with fish.
Sleep
There are many hotels around the station, especially in the place de la Gare and in the rue du Maire Kuss. Most of Strasbourg's hotels are fully booked during the Christmas Market period (December) and when the EU parliament is in session.
Contact
Phone
Local cellphone service is mainly provided by Orange, SFR and Bouygues Télécoms.
Internet
There are many cyber-cafés on the quai des Pêcheurs, that stay open fairly late (B-line tramway, Gallia station).
Stay safe
Get out
- Haut-Koenigsbourg castle
- Alsacian wine road
- Colmar
- Kaysersberg
- Riquewihr
- Obernai
External links
WikiPedia:Strasbourg
fr:Strasbourg
de:Straßburg
ro:Strasbourg
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