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What's new in Germany and Austria for 2015

By Rick Steves, Tribune Content Agency on

Germany and Austria are a work in progress -- each country has great and innovative museums and galleries to share its culture with its many visitors. Here's the latest for 2015:

While trains are usually the easiest way for Americans to get around Germany, ultra-cheap buses are a new option worth considering. The main bus lines are MeinFernBus (with the most extensive network), FlixBus, Berlin Linien Bus, and City2City. Taking you across much of Germany for around 15 euros -- and using train stations as starting and ending points -- they can be a great value.

In Munich, the new Egyptian Museum (near the main train station) is well worth a visit; it's custom-built to evoke the feeling of being in an ancient tomb. The city's new Nazi Documentation Center will cover the rise and fall of Nazism, with a focus on Munich's role (located near Koenigsplatz, on the site of the former Nazi Party headquarters). It's slated to open on April 30 -- the 70th anniversary of Munich's liberation from Nazi rule. In other changes, both the Halls of the Nibelungen in the Residenz palace and the Frauenkirche's iconic twin towers are closed in 2015.

The town of Rothenburg has added informative plaques along the medieval town wall and hopes to follow up in 2015 with a matching English-language brochure (which I am happily helping edit).

In Frankfurt, the Museum Judengasse will be closed until at least the fall of 2015. Located next to the Jewish Cemetery and Holocaust Memorial, the museum includes a data-bank record on each Frankfurt Jew deported and murdered by the Nazis.

Koblenz -- the site of the Deutsches Eck (the patriotic spot where the Rhine and Mosel rivers converge) -- is home to the new Forum Confluentes, a modern cultural center/art museum that also houses a library and restaurants. On the Rhine near the town of St. Goar, the Loreley Visitors Center has closed and is not likely to reopen.

 

In Trier, a new hop-on, hop-off bus tour covers the amphitheater, basilica, and Karl Marx's house, before venturing to Petrisberg for great views over Trier and the Mosel Valley.

In Nuernberg, the Historic Art Bunker has opened to the public. It's a series of cellars deep inside the rock of Castle Hill, where precious artwork was carefully safeguarded from the WWII air raids that devastated the city. The only way to visit the now-nearly-empty bunker is on a once-daily tour (in German, but the good audio guide is in English).

Wittenberg's Castle Church (where Luther nailed his Ninety-Five Theses) is being renovated and should be open again in early 2017, in time for the 500th anniversary of the start of the Reformation.

Dresden's Royal Palace, destroyed during World War II, is currently being rebuilt, with galleries opening to the public as they are completed.

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(c)2015 RICK STEVES DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

 

 

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