Cologne

Cologne — Belgian Quarter, Romanesque Churches, Gastronomy, Nightlife & Day Trips
Cologne's depth extends from the fashionable Belgian Quarter and the world's greatest Romanesque church ensemble to the Kölsch brewery culture, the Ehrenfeld club scene, and the Charlemagne capital at nearby Aachen.

Cologne — Ehrenfeld, Deutz Panorama, Perfume Heritage, Cathedral Interior & Romanesque
Cologne's creative Ehrenfeld quarter, the iconic Rhine panorama from Deutz, the 4711 perfume heritage, the cathedral's medieval art treasures, and the 12 Romanesque churches complete the city's essential portrait.
Cologne — Museum Ludwig, Wallraf-Richartz, Food Markets, Jewish Heritage & Kölsch Culture
Cologne's world-leading Pop Art collection at the Museum Ludwig, the oldest German public art museum at the Wallraf-Richartz, the Kölsch beer culture, the vibrant food markets, and the NS documentation at the EL-DE Haus complete the Cologne portrait.

Cologne — Philharmonie, Neustadt, Contemporary Art Galleries, Parks & Transport Hub
Cologne's world-class Philharmonie, the 19th-century Neustadt ring, the most important art market in Germany, the Botanical Garden and city forest, and the central European ICE rail hub make Cologne the most practically connected city in western Germany.

Cologne — Medieval History, Media Industry, Karneval, Südstadt & LGBTQ+ Culture
Cologne's 2,000-year history, its role as Germany's most important media city, the deeply embedded Karneval tradition, the residential Südstadt neighbourhood, and the most attended Christopher Street Day in Germany make Cologne uniquely multifaceted.

Cologne — the Cathedral, Rhine, Roman History, Chocolate Museum, Museum Ludwig & Karneval
Cologne is Germany's most historically layered city — the UNESCO Gothic cathedral, the most important Roman heritage north of the Alps, the world's most visited chocolate museum, and the most exuberant city carnival in Germany.