Zurich is a cozy, elegant and a magnificent city for visitors to elegant streets and the beautiful natural surroundings all around the city. The center of Zurich is good starting point with its many sights, monuments, squares and the lovely maze of medieval streets.
Zurich has several interesting churches with the Großmünster Cathedral, St. Peter with the large clock and Fraumünster with Marc Chagall’s glass works at the forefront. There are also a large number of museums to enjoy, with everything from Swiss watches to toys and international art.
There is plenty of shopping in Zurich. The Bahnhofstraße main street and the many narrow streets and alleys in the neighborhoods around the central Limmat River are excellent places to hunt for good finds. You also find a nice choice of cafés and restaurants in this part of town.
When it comes to nature, Lake Zurich is an obvious excursion destination. From Bürkli Platz there are many choices of boat trips, all of which give a good view of the city skyline with the church towers as well as to the surrounding hills and mountains. The Alps stand as a backdrop on the horizon to the south with the many beautiful peaks.
Both the Alps and Zurich can also be admired in clear weather from the tower at Uetliberg or after a cable car ride to the top of Felsenegg; both at a short distance from the center of Zurich. A day trip can also go to equally beautifully located cities like Lucerne and to Winterthur with nice museums and architecture.
Großmünster is a Protestant cathedral in the Romanesque style. It replaced an earlier church built under the French Carolingians. According to legend, Charlemagne discovered the tombs of Felix and Regula, the city’s martyrs, on this site, and on that occasion he founded the Großmünster monastery.
Today’s church building was built from around the year 1100, and it was consecrated around 1220. In 1520, Großmünster became the hotbed of the Swiss German Reformation led by Huldrych Zwingli and Heinrich Bullinger, who preached from here.
Großmünster’s distinctive rounded tower finials were built on top of the existing 15th-century towers in the period 1781-1787, and they now form one of the best-known motifs in Zurich’s skyline. Among the sights, you can see the interesting Romanesque crypt, the Reformation Museum/Reformation Museum, which is housed in the associated monastery, and the choir’s glass mosaics, which were executed in 1932 by the Swiss artist Augusto Giacometti.
The Swiss National Museum is beautifully situated next to Zurich’s main train station between the two rivers Sihl and Limmat. The museum was built in 1898 in historicist style by the architect Gustav Gull. The distinctive tower is a copy of the city gate in Baden and is one of Zurich’s landmarks. Overall, the museum complex almost looks like a castle, and the inspiration also comes from French Renaissance castles.
The Landesmuseum houses the country’s largest collection of Swiss cultural history. Here is everything from archaeological finds from Roman times to objects from today’s Switzerland. North of the museum there is also a lovely park area that offers the opportunity for a lovely stroll along the river Limmat.
The Polybahn funicular is a means of transport that, since 1889, has connected the central area by the river Limmat and Zurich’s main railway station with the higher-lying streets to the east. A trip with the Polybahn is 176 meters long and takes about 100 seconds. You are transported 41 meters up in height in the cable-drawn carriages.
The name Polybahn comes from the polytechnic college, which today is called ETH Zurich. It is located at the top of the track and was formerly called the Eidgenössisches Polytechnikum. For the first eight years of the track’s life, it was powered by water. A ballast tank was filled at the top of the track and emptied at the bottom. In this way, the two connected wagons could pull each other back and forth.
Since 1897, the Polybahn has been electrified. Until 1996, the original carriages ran, and when they were replaced, the new ones were built in a look that has clear historical inspiration.
Museum Rietberg exhibits a distinguished collection of primarily African, American and Asian art objects. The exhibition is an experience in non-European art, and the many fine effects stretch in time from defunct cultures to close to our time.
The museum is located in the green area Rieterpark, where first the Wesendonck and then the Rieter family made their mark with the construction of villas. The main building is called Villa Wesendonck, and it dates from 1857. Richard Wagner lived here for a time as a guest, and his love for the lady of the house provided inspiration for his works Wesendonck-Lieder and Tristan & Isolde. Since 1945, the site has been owned by the city of Zurich, and the modern main building, Smaragd, was built in 2007.
The world-famous architect Le Corbusier was one of the most influential Swiss architects of the 20th century. His last work and the only one in his home country is the Heidi Weber Haus, which was completed in 1967, which was two years after the architect’s death. The entire facility is from the hand of Le Corbusier, and it can therefore be seen as a great work of art.
The Heidi Weber Haus was built in concrete, glass and steel, and Le Corbusier used external, colored surfaces as an essential part of the design. The name Heidi Weber comes from the art collector and patron who took the initiative to build the exhibition building. Today, the house remains a museum, Center Le Corbusier, where the focus is on the architect’s thoughts and work.
The street Bahnhofstraße is Zurich’s most prestigious shopping street. It connects the squares Bahnhofplatz to the north and Bürkli Platz to the south. The entire street, which is more than a kilometer long, is filled with shops, many of which are represented by the world’s exclusive brands and businesses.
Bahnhofstraße was laid out after 1864, when Zurich’s then defense ring with moat was looped. The outer moat of the wall was filled, and then there was room for the wide street.
The Wasserkirche is a church that was built in the middle of the 13th century. However, the first church on the site is believed to date from the 9th century. For many centuries, the church was located on a small island in the river Limmat, until the island was built together with the eastern part of the town in 1839, when Limmatquai was laid out.
The church was significantly rebuilt in the latter half of the 15th century, and although it functions as a church building today, it has not always been this way. In 1634, the church was secularized, and the city’s first public library was set up in the large room. In 1917, the library moved, and instead the building was used as a warehouse until 1940, until it could reopen as a church after a reconstruction.
To the north is the Helmhaus building combined with the Wasserkirche. The Helmhaus stood for many years as a wooden building, while the current stone house dates from 1791.
Zurich’s stately town hall building was literally built out of the Limmat River itself, and it is possible to sail under the house. The style is German Renaissance, and construction took place in the years 1694-1698. Until the end of the city-state of Zurich in 1798, the town hall was the seat of government in the city.
Since 1803, the town hall has been owned by the canton of Zurich and used by both the cantonal government and the cantonal council for various meetings and gatherings. The city council of the city of Zurich also uses the site as a meeting hall, while the city is governed from the nearby Stadthaus (Stadthausquai 17).
In 1252, the first building was erected here. It was expanded in 1397 into a representative meeting place for the city’s government. The old town hall was a symbol of Zurich’s growth and consequent increased importance in the Confederation of Swiss States.
The city council decided in 1693 that a new town hall should be built, which became the current one. It had to be both representative of Zurich’s position and contain a Zwinglian modesty. The result was inaugurated with fireworks on 15 June 1698. One of the exterior details of the decoration are Zurich’s two gilded lions, which can be seen at the main entrance to the east. You can also see a number of busts of historical heroes from ancient Greece and Rome as well as from Switzerland.
This art museum houses one of Switzerland’s and Europe’s finest art collections. The collection was established by the local art association, the Zürcher Kunstgesellschaft, and the museum building was opened in 1910.
The art museum’s permanent exhibition contains a number of fine works and collections of European paintings. On the walls you can see, among other things, Dutch and Italian baroque works, the largest Edvard Munch collection outside Norway, works by Picasso, Monet and a number of works by, for example, Alberto Giacometti and Marc Chagall. Changing exhibitions of paintings and other art forms are also organized at the Kunsthaus Zürich.
Kirche Sankt Peter is Zurich’s oldest parish church with a history dating back to the 7th and 8th centuries. The current church building was built over several centuries on the site where a temple to Jupiter had previously been located. The oldest is the choir from the 13th century, where the city’s first independent mayor, Rudolf Brun, was buried in 1360.
The church was previously without a tower, but around the year 1200 the first tower was built. It was not high, but in the middle of the 15th century it was made higher. The special thing about this tower is that it is not formally owned by the church, but by the city. However, the access stairs to the tower and the bells belong to the church.
Previously, the tower was used as a lookout tower for the fire brigade, as it was centrally located with a good view over the entire old town. On the tower, you can see the church’s trademark, which is the very large clock face, which measures 8.7 meters in diameter. The size can be sensed from a distance, but also on the way up the tower you can see for yourself the large dimensions by, for example, looking at the size of the hands.
The neighborhood of Schipfe is located along the west bank of the river Limmat below Lindenhof. It is one of the oldest neighborhoods in Zurich and is believed to have been inhabited since the Bronze Age. In the early Middle Ages, many fishermen built houses here, and from the 15th century it became a berth for much of the traffic on the river. In the following centuries, the silk industry and steamship traffic left their mark on Schipfe.
Today, the neighborhood has an appearance that broadly dates back to the 1600s and 1800s. Most of the buildings are owned by the city of Zurich, which renovated the neighborhood in the first half of the 20th century. In the atmospheric streets, there are a number of shops and workshops at street level, while the rest are apartments.
Polyterrasse is a viewing terrace located above the city at the foot of the Technical University/ETH Zurich’s large main building. From the place there is a lovely view of Zurich’s old town. Polyterrasse is best reached from the center with the Polybahn cable car, which is an exciting experience in itself.
Zurich’s first observatory was located on top of a house by the river Limmat as early as 1759, and not far from there the 51-metre-high Urania-Sternwarte opened in 1907. The observatory has, among other things, a telescope with 600 times magnification, which was produced in its time by Carl Zeiss in Jena, Germany.
There are public viewings of the observatory, from which you can see the Moon, planets and other objects in the universe, as well as enjoy the view of the old town of Zurich.
In 1993, the Chinagarten garden opened in the Zürichhorn area. It was a gift from the Chinese city of Kunming, which is twinned with Zurich. The gift was a thank you for Swiss assistance in developing Kunming’s drinking water system.
The garden is behind a wall where Chinese gates form entrances. Inside, the garden has a pond and as the central element. There are also a number of buildings such as the Chinese pavilion, the Vandpalæet/Wasserpalais, and you can also experience built-up rocks and traditional planting in the fine garden.
From Bürkli Platz in central Zürich, you can go on various excursions on Zürichsee, which is a beautiful extension of the river Limmat’s course through the city. There are round trip sailings of varying length; among other things, the relaxing, beautiful and long trip to Rapperswil at the opposite end of the lake. On the trip, there are a number of stops at places on both sides of the lake, and you can also choose to just go on a short trip.
From the lake, there is a very nice view of the cities and the green areas around the water, and to the south the Alps dominate the horizon. That view can also be experienced on the car ferry between Meilen in the east and Horgen in the west, which combined with the S-train from Zurich is another option for a sailing trip. On both sides of the lake, the S-train runs all the way, so you can also combine quite a few different train and boat trips from central Zurich. Sailing between Horgen and Meilen also started with Schwan as the first ferry in 1933.
Felsenegg is an 804 meter high mountain southwest of Zurich. From the town of Adliswil on the shores of Lake Zurich, you can reach the top with the Luftseilbahn Adliswil-Felsenegg cable car. From the top there is a fine view of the Sihltal valley and Lake Zurich to the east, and to the south lie the white peaks of the Alps.
At Felsenegg there are many opportunities for recreation. By the forests and meadows in the area, there is a restaurant at the very top, from which several hiking routes go. One of the popular ones is the Planetvejen/Planetenweg, which connects Felsenegg with Üetliberg to the north. On the route, you meet the planets of the Solar System in a scale model of 1:1,000,000,000, through which the colossal distances in the universe can be sensed.
Üetliberg is an 873 meter high mountain located immediately southwest of Zurich. From the top there is a fine view of both the Swiss metropolis and the countryside around Üetliberg. Lake Zurich lies below the mountain, and on the horizon the snow-capped Alps rise.
On Üetliberg there is a lookout tower from which there is a panoramic view of the landscapes in all directions. Access to the mountain top is quite easy. From the main train station in Zurich, the Üetlibergbahn runs to the terminus, which is located on the mountain. From here, it’s only a short stroll all the way to the top, where you also pass the 132-metre-high TV tower from 1968.
With around 100,000 inhabitants, the city of Winterthur is one of Switzerland’s largest cities. Its history dates back to 1175, when it was founded by the Count of Kyburg. The Habsburgs inherited the city in 1264, and in 1467 it was sold to the city government of Zurich.
Winterthur’s cozy center is dominated by long streets and the neighborhood around the church Stadtkirche Winterthur (Kirchplatz). In addition, you can see the beautiful Stadthaus (Stadthausstraße) and the many fine museums that the city is so famous for. Here you can especially see painting.
Many large European works from the late Middle Ages to the present hang in the museums. The most famous museums are Kunstmuseum Winterthur, Museum Oskar Reinhart am Römerholz, Museum Oskar Reinhart am Stadtgarten and Sammlung Hahnloser Villa Flora.
The city of Schaffhausen is located on the river Rhine and was founded as a transshipment point for transport that had to pass the nearby waterfall, Rheinfall. Today, the city has a particularly well-preserved old quarter, where you can take many good walks in the romantic streets. Of particular interest is the church Münsterkirche (Münsterplatz) from the 11th century, which belongs among Switzerland’s most beautiful churches. Raised above Schaffhausen is the city’s landmark, the round castle, Festung Munot (Munotstieg), which was built from the 16th century.
You can also visit the Rheinfall, which is one of Europe’s most impressive waterfalls. In the gushing river Rhine, 700 m3 of water per second passes over the 23-metre-high and 150-metre-wide waterfall. From the town of Neuhausen, which lies on the northern side of the fall, there is a beautiful panoramic view, and from the beautifully situated castle, Schloß Laufen, the power of the Rheinfall can really be seen and felt. There is a path down to the river, from which you can get across the water masses or to the island in the middle of the fall, from which there is of course an exciting view.
Over the past 2000 years, the town of Baden has been known for the hot thermal baths that the Romans started building in their time. The water in the city’s terms is 47 degrees warm, and the health-giving water springs in 19 places in the city.
For other experiences, the city’s museums can be visited with advantage. Museum Langmatt (Römerstraße 30) houses a collection of paintings by French Impressionists, and at the same time you can see exciting interior design from the 18th and 19th centuries.
The city itself is pleasant to walk around, and by crossing the river Limmat on the covered wooden bridge, Holzbrücke, you get a good view of the old part of the city. At the eastern end of the bridge is the small defensive castle Landvogteischloß, where the city museum Historisches Museum Baden is located. Here you can see, among other things, the development of the thermal baths and bathing culture from Roman times to the present day.
Schweizergasse 11/Theaterstraße 12
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Seidengasse 1
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Bahnhofstraße 75
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Bahnhofstraße, Langstrasse, Löwenstraße, Storchengasse, Strehlgasse
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Gwattstraße 12, Pfäffikon
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Zürichsee-Schifffahrtsgesellschaft
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Wildpark Langenberg
Albisstraße 4
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Zürich Zoo
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Zurich Spielzeug Museum
Fortunagasse 15
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Remains of habitation have been found around Lake Zurich from the younger Stone Age and the Bronze Age. La Tène culture was also represented before the Celtic Hellies came into being. The Helvetias had settled most of the present Swiss territory, and at the northern tip of Lake Zurich, their settlement lay on the Lindenhof.
The Romans came to the place where they established the Turicum customs station for goods to and from Italy. The area belonged to the province of Germania Superior from the year 90, and after Emperor Constantine’s reform of the empire’s borders in 318, the border between Gaul and Italy was laid immediately east of Turicum, where the garrison was located and where, among other things, there was a Jupiter temple.
Christianity came to Turicum in the 20th century with the later martyrs of the city, Felix and Regula, who deserted from the Roman army and, according to legend, were executed in 286 at the site of the church of Wasserkirche.
The West Germanic Alemane tribe settled in the region from the 400s, while the castle of Turicum remained in place until the 600s. In the 600s, the settlement was also mentioned for the first time with a Germanic name, Ziurichi, which was reproduced by a geographer from Ravenna. The general manager of the time Uotila, by the way, gave his name to today’s Üetliberg.
From 746 the Alemans in Zurich came to the French Empire as the province of Alemannia. A new castle later replaced the old defenses of the Romans, and the city was expanded; among others with the Abbey of Fraumünster in 835. In the year 870, the Frankish kings placed the exercise of their power in Zurich with a bailiff. The city was further strengthened by the establishment of a city wall in the 9th century.
The oldest known coins of the city date from 972, and in 1045 the German-Roman emperor Henrik III Fraumünster granted the rights to hold markets, strike coins and levy taxes. With it, the monastery became an important factor for the development of the city.
In the 1000-1100s, the merchants, primarily dealing in textile products based on wool and silk, created a particularly thriving economy. Wealth meant a beginning of progress for the urban development itself, and when the form of government with a bailiff disappeared with the last of the family of von Zähringen’s death in 1218, it meant that Zurich became a sanctuary in the German-Roman Empire in 1218.
The city expanded, and in the 1230s a city wall was built around the city’s then 38 hectare area. The moat was along the later Bahnhofstraße.
In 1234, Emperor Friedrich II made Fraumüster’s abbess into the duchess with the right to appoint the mayor of Zurich, thus topping the power of the monastery. After this time, the various layers of the city gained greater power through their economic development of the city, and in 1336 the mayor of Zurich, Rudolf Brun, decided that the layers should take over the city. They partially retained power until the 19th century, and with the abolition of monasteries in connection with the Reformation in the 16th century, this power factor was gone.
With the new form of government, Rudolf Brun became the first mayor who was not appointed by the monastery. Later, he was appointed by the new city council as mayor for life, which brought the city into opposition to parts of the Austrian Habsburgs. As a consequence, in 1351 Zurich became the fifth member of the Swiss Federation. The membership formed the backdrop of Zurich’s status as a cultural and intellectual center for a larger area rather than simply developing as an urban state.
In the mid-1400s, Zurich fought with the other states in the Confederation over the territory of Toggenburg, which caused the city to be thrown out in 1440 to be re-elected as a member ten years later. In the latter part of the 15th century, however, Zurich increased its land considerably, as victories over or purchases of Thurgau, Winterthur, Stein am Rhein and Eglisau between 1460 and 1496 meant an increased status in the Confederacy.
As a city, Mayor Hans Waldmann’s ambition was to make Zurich a significant center, and his reforms also provided growth and a position as the leading state in the Swiss Confederation.
Zurich’s cultural role for the whole country became evident in the 16th century, where it became the main city of the Swiss movement during the Reformation. The central figure in the country was Zurich’s religious leader, Huldrych Zwingli, who preached at the Großmünster Cathedral from 1519 until his death on the battlefield in 1531.
With the cessation of Catholic services of 1525, Zurich became the meeting place for many intellectuals, and during that time in Großmünster Zwingli also enjoyed considerable political power. The Reformation had brought an international flow to the city. Dissidents from all over Europe now left their cultural mark on the city’s development.
In 1549, Calvinist doctrine was introduced instead of Huldrych’s Zwinglis, and it was the beginning of the recession for the city, which no longer had the same international appeal as before.
In the 16th to 1600s, the city’s self-understanding changed through the government’s more closed politics than before. The extended fortification around the city from 1642 was a manifest example of this, and in 1648 Zurich changed its status from state to republic with Genoa and Venice as role models. At that time, there were about 9,000 residents with privileges and about 170,000 in total in the Republic.
The silk was important to the economy of Zurich in the 18th century, and the rival Winthertur was subject to heavy taxes. It came to various revolts, which were forcibly struck down. With the French Revolution, currents came to Switzerland for the introduction of a more liberal form of government.
The new Swiss constitution in 1798 became a turning point. In the new republic, Zurich lost both power and territory; the regions of Aargau, Thurgau and Linth were lost.
During the French Revolutionary Wars, two military battles took place around Zurich in June and September 1799, respectively. Now it was France’s turn to attack and defeat a Russian-Austrian army.
In the years 1803-1814, Zurich, along with five other regions, were cantons, with the federal leadership intervening between the cantons.
In 1814 a new constitution was adopted in the canton. It placed the power of the 10,000 citizens of the city of Zurich at the expense of the roughly 200,000 in rural areas. In the cantonal parliament, city representatives had an absolute majority. In the 1830s this lopsided representation was rectified, and the balance of power tipped in favor of the inhabitants outside Zurich itself.
The 19th century marked the beginning of Zurich’s boom, which was the first massive growth since the 16th century. The old defenses around the city were demolished in the 1830s, and many new streets and neighborhoods were constructed. The time was also the railway as the new mode of transport, and the first railway in Switzerland opened in 1847 and connected Zurich and Baden.
1839-1840 and again in 1845-1846, Zurich enjoyed a federal capital status. Shortly after, in 1848, Bern was chosen as the country’s permanent capital. Bern became the country’s political center, but initiatives by not least the railway magnate and administrator Alfred Escher made Zurich the country’s economic locomotive.
Escher implemented laws and measures that led to strong growth in the financial sector, tourism and production. This was the basis for Zurich’s future and continued status as an international center for banking and other economic activities. In 1877, the Zurich Stock Exchange was established as the most important in Switzerland.
Zurich grew, and in 1893 and again in 1934, part of the area around Zurich was incorporated into the official urban area. In total, these were 19 municipalities that had gradually developed into suburbs.
With Switzerland’s neutrality during the First World War, Zurich became an intellectual sanctuary for refugees and different thinkers; For example, Lenin lived here for a time in 1916 during his preparations for the Russian Revolution.
James Joyce came to the city where he wrote his main work Ulysses, and in 1916 a number of new artists formed the movement “Dada”, which later established the famous Cabaret Voltaire.
The 1920s saw a great period of growth in Zurich, where the city and its suburbs were greatly expanded. During this time, many buildings were erected in modernist architecture. However, the decade ended in economic crisis like so many other places in the world, and Zurich as an industrial city was severely affected by production and the resultant increase in unemployment.
Fascism in Italy and Nazism in Germany, through the 1930s, led many to move from these countries to Switzerland, and many came to Zurich, whose cultural life with new powers became one of the leaders in the German-speaking world. In Zurich itself, there were also Nazis and Communists during this time, but the parties did not get support as in neighboring countries and partly their activities were stopped by legislation.
Immediately after World War II, through which Zurich and Switzerland were physically graciously escaped, began, among other large public building programs, which initiated a new economic growth. Housing construction and the adoption of the investment in a large airport in the suburb of Kloten were among the most significant investments.
In 1946, the city came on the big political world map as English Winston Churchill held his famous European speech in the University of Zurich’s auditorium. The speech was a vision of a united Europe.
In the following years, Zurich quickly developed into one of the world’s leading financial centers, and today the Zurich Stock Exchange is one of the world’s largest, and the city is among the most important marketplaces for the world’s gold trade. It was several decades of growth that the Swiss metropolis experienced and continues to prosper.
In 1962, the city’s population peaked at 445,000; however, significantly more people live in the metropolitan area, where more than the municipality of Zurich is counted. During this time, plans were made for a fully developed subway, but this was wrecked by the population, and one of only a few built stations is Tierspital, which instead is a stop on the tram network that has been continuously invested in.
Today, the city is very well maintained, and a lot of investment has been invested in maintaining a broad cultural offering. Geographically, the urban area has spread along Lake Zurich and also towards other cantons.
Zürich Zurich City Hall[/caption]
Overview of Zurich
Zurich is a cozy, elegant and a magnificent city for visitors to elegant streets and the beautiful natural surroundings all around the city. The center of Zurich is good starting point with its many sights, monuments, squares and the lovely maze of medieval streets.
Zurich has several interesting churches with the Großmünster Cathedral, St. Peter with the large clock and Fraumünster with Marc Chagall’s glass works at the forefront. There are also a large number of museums to enjoy, with everything from Swiss watches to toys and international art.
There is plenty of shopping in Zurich. The Bahnhofstraße main street and the many narrow streets and alleys in the neighborhoods around the central Limmat River are excellent places to hunt for good finds. You also find a nice choice of cafés and restaurants in this part of town.
About the Whitehorse travel guide
Contents: Tours in the city + tours in the surrounding area
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Language: English
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The street Bahnhofstraße is Zurich’s most prestigious shopping street. It connects the squares Bahnhofplatz to the north and Bürkli Platz to the south. The entire street, which is more than a kilometer long, is filled with shops, many of which are represented by the world’s exclusive brands and businesses.
Bahnhofstraße was laid out after 1864, when Zurich’s then defense ring with moat was looped. The outer moat of the wall was filled, and then there was room for the wide street.
The Wasserkirche is a church that was built in the middle of the 13th century. However, the first church on the site is believed to date from the 9th century. For many centuries, the church was located on a small island in the river Limmat, until the island was built together with the eastern part of the town in 1839, when Limmatquai was laid out.
The church was significantly rebuilt in the latter half of the 15th century, and although it functions as a church building today, it has not always been this way. In 1634, the church was secularized, and the city’s first public library was set up in the large room. In 1917, the library moved, and instead the building was used as a warehouse until 1940, until it could reopen as a church after a reconstruction.
To the north is the Helmhaus building combined with the Wasserkirche. The Helmhaus stood for many years as a wooden building, while the current stone house dates from 1791.
Zurich’s stately town hall building was literally built out of the Limmat River itself, and it is possible to sail under the house. The style is German Renaissance, and construction took place in the years 1694-1698. Until the end of the city-state of Zurich in 1798, the town hall was the seat of government in the city.
Since 1803, the town hall has been owned by the canton of Zurich and used by both the cantonal government and the cantonal council for various meetings and gatherings. The city council of the city of Zurich also uses the site as a meeting hall, while the city is governed from the nearby Stadthaus (Stadthausquai 17).
In 1252, the first building was erected here. It was expanded in 1397 into a representative meeting place for the city’s government. The old town hall was a symbol of Zurich’s growth and consequent increased importance in the Confederation of Swiss States.
The city council decided in 1693 that a new town hall should be built, which became the current one. It had to be both representative of Zurich’s position and contain a Zwinglian modesty. The result was inaugurated with fireworks on 15 June 1698. One of the exterior details of the decoration are Zurich’s two gilded lions, which can be seen at the main entrance to the east. You can also see a number of busts of historical heroes from ancient Greece and Rome as well as from Switzerland.
This art museum houses one of Switzerland’s and Europe’s finest art collections. The collection was established by the local art association, the Zürcher Kunstgesellschaft, and the museum building was opened in 1910.
The art museum’s permanent exhibition contains a number of fine works and collections of European paintings. On the walls you can see, among other things, Dutch and Italian baroque works, the largest Edvard Munch collection outside Norway, works by Picasso, Monet and a number of works by, for example, Alberto Giacometti and Marc Chagall. Changing exhibitions of paintings and other art forms are also organized at the Kunsthaus Zürich.
Kirche Sankt Peter is Zurich’s oldest parish church with a history dating back to the 7th and 8th centuries. The current church building was built over several centuries on the site where a temple to Jupiter had previously been located. The oldest is the choir from the 13th century, where the city’s first independent mayor, Rudolf Brun, was buried in 1360.
The church was previously without a tower, but around the year 1200 the first tower was built. It was not high, but in the middle of the 15th century it was made higher. The special thing about this tower is that it is not formally owned by the church, but by the city. However, the access stairs to the tower and the bells belong to the church.
Previously, the tower was used as a lookout tower for the fire brigade, as it was centrally located with a good view over the entire old town. On the tower, you can see the church’s trademark, which is the very large clock face, which measures 8.7 meters in diameter. The size can be sensed from a distance, but also on the way up the tower you can see for yourself the large dimensions by, for example, looking at the size of the hands.
The neighborhood of Schipfe is located along the west bank of the river Limmat below Lindenhof. It is one of the oldest neighborhoods in Zurich and is believed to have been inhabited since the Bronze Age. In the early Middle Ages, many fishermen built houses here, and from the 15th century it became a berth for much of the traffic on the river. In the following centuries, the silk industry and steamship traffic left their mark on Schipfe.
Today, the neighborhood has an appearance that broadly dates back to the 1600s and 1800s. Most of the buildings are owned by the city of Zurich, which renovated the neighborhood in the first half of the 20th century. In the atmospheric streets, there are a number of shops and workshops at street level, while the rest are apartments.
Polyterrasse is a viewing terrace located above the city at the foot of the Technical University/ETH Zurich’s large main building. From the place there is a lovely view of Zurich’s old town. Polyterrasse is best reached from the center with the Polybahn cable car, which is an exciting experience in itself.
Zurich’s first observatory was located on top of a house by the river Limmat as early as 1759, and not far from there the 51-metre-high Urania-Sternwarte opened in 1907. The observatory has, among other things, a telescope with 600 times magnification, which was produced in its time by Carl Zeiss in Jena, Germany.
There are public viewings of the observatory, from which you can see the Moon, planets and other objects in the universe, as well as enjoy the view of the old town of Zurich.
In 1993, the Chinagarten garden opened in the Zürichhorn area. It was a gift from the Chinese city of Kunming, which is twinned with Zurich. The gift was a thank you for Swiss assistance in developing Kunming’s drinking water system.
The garden is behind a wall where Chinese gates form entrances. Inside, the garden has a pond and as the central element. There are also a number of buildings such as the Chinese pavilion, the Vandpalæet/Wasserpalais, and you can also experience built-up rocks and traditional planting in the fine garden.
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