Europe’s largest port hosted millions of emigrants at the turn of the century and weclomes millions more to visit today.
Hamburg, Germany’s largest port and one of Europe’s key trans-shipment centers, has long shown visitors from around the world a good time. Said to be the city with Germany’s youngest and most creative population, it lures more and more sophisticated travelers each year. Low cost carriers from throughout Europe bring in weekend party-goers, so the city’s Red Light district and clubs on the famed Reeperbahn (the main nightlife thoroughfare) are throbbing with a multi-cultural throng.
However, a summer visit convinced us that families with school-age children will also find Hamburg a great weekend destination.
Hamburg, Hipper & More Multi-National
Adults who recall Hamburg prior to the fall of the Berlin Wall may concur with Ian Fleming’s description from his 1959 collection of travel essays, Thrilling Cities: “the last bastion in Europe of ‘anything goes.'” A new generation comes to admire the Indra, the club where the Beatles first performed in 1961, and other sites related to the Fab Four’s early days in this wild city. In fact, you can check out Dr. Mark A. Schneegurt’s cool Beatle Fan Walking Tour for more info about this aspect of the city.
Past visitors to Hamburg won’t forget the Reeperbahn, the city’s funky multi-lane artery of shops, restaurants and clubs in the St. Pauli district. To explore, catch the U-Bahn subway to St. Pauli, then walk from there; it’s a very long boulevard with lots to see and many over-scale buildings typical of this larger-than-life city.
On the eastern side of Elbpark, one of Hamburg’s 1,400 parks and gardens, are many historic highlights. The steepled Grosse Michaeliskirche (St. Michaelis Church) dominating the skyline is considered the most important Baroque Protestant church in northern Germany. Dating to 1751, it is especially known for the sound of its three huge organs. The Michel’s Tower can be toured day or night for great city views. St. Nikolaikirche is worth a stop; it was gutted by bombing during WWII, but its burnt neogothic façade remains standing as a reminder of all those who died.
The impressive architecture housing the Hamburg History Museum, Brahms Museum and other vast collections comprise the area known as Museum Mile. The enormous Rathaus or City Hall is a huge sandstone building dating from 1886. It’s a bit larger than Buckingham Palace with its 647 rooms and still houses the city parliament and senate. Plan on paying a visit to its lavishly decorated rooms any day of the week. English language tours are given regularly, though visitors are not allowed in during official events.
The Hamburger Bahnhof is a fantastic converted train station that houses the city’s modern art collection. From the Max Liebermann paintings to the Andy Warhol portraits, kids will have a lot of fun here. If the weather is fair (Hamburg can get extremely hot and extremely cold), consider joining one of the many walking tours of Alt-Hamburg, the old city center, that depart from the Rathaus.
Harbor City Welcomes the World
The stalwart shipping industry has embraced the aeronautics (the Airbus-A380 is produced here) and high tech industries. For a fascinating view of the region’s shipping history, pay a visit to the Stiftung Hamburg Maritim maritime museum (+49 40 78 10 48 48; Geschäftsstelle Australiastrasse Schuppen 50B, 20457 Hamburg); it’s open daily except Monday from April to October.
Speicherstadt, the 19th century Warehouse District by the Elbe River and near passenger cruise piers, boasts glass and steel condos next to canals next to renovated red brick warehouses where sugar and spices once were stored. You don’t have to be an architecture buff to appreciate the stunning white glass vertical Opera House installed above a former banana warehouse.
Recent immigrants from Asia and the Middle East hang the woven rugs they’ve brought to sell from warehouse windows and loading docks, lending it the air of Istanbul’s colorful Grand Bazaar.
Immigrants fueled the economic growth of the former West Germany after it developed a program to welcome gastarbeiter or guest workers in the 1960’s. Hamburg’s noted Afghan Art & Culture Museum (+49 40 – 37 82 36; Am Sandtorkai 32/1, D-20457 Hamburg) celebrates just one of the many cultures that have assimilated here; the influence of Turkey’s cuisine and arts is even more pronounced.
Nearby, apartments and a state-of-the-art aquarium are under construction in the futuristic waterfront development of Hafencity, a family-oriented housing project due in 2012. Visitors of all ages will enjoy learning more about it at the HafenCity Info Centre (+49 40 36 90 17 99) located at Am Sandtorkai 30 and the corner of Kesselhaus. Even better, join a Hamburg harbor cruise; the tourist office or your hotel concierge can help you select the best itinerary (of historic areas, contemporary shipping terminals, even daytrips to Sweden) to suit your interests.
An alternative way to tour Hamburg by water is the slow boat that plies the Binnenalster (Inner Alster) and Aussenalster (Outer Alster) Lakes. This picturesque, low-rise, high-rent area benefits from strict preservation laws. Starting from the Jungfernstieg Jetty, riverboats circle the shore as narrators serve drinks, pointing out celebrity homes and other architectural highlights. Families can choose between bi-lingual guided Aalster Cruises or the cheaper hop on/hop off ferries. At the Fahrdamm stop is a public park with a large café and walking paths, and there are other quiet docks along the shore where paddleboats are available for rent.
Honoring Those Who Left: Emigration
One of this maritime city’s newer attractions is the Ballinstadt Museum, commemorating Hamburg’s legacy of emigration. More than five million Europeans from as far as Russia and the Baltic states sailed to a better future from this port between 1890 and 1920, largely via what would become HAPAG Lloyd Shipping Lines and mostly to the United States. The Museum is located on Veddell Island in the Elbe River (easily reached from downtown by ferry or the S-Bahn train) within the original brick buildings where emigrants might have waited weeks to get the outbound processing and medical exams required by receiving countries.
Three of the 30 large Emigrant Halls are exhibit spaces: one is full of computer stations where eager visitors trace their own family genealogy by studying passenger records from HAPAG ships between 1850 and 1934, like Ellis Island in reverse. Another building houses costumed mannequins who are brought to life in tableaus of home, work and leisure activity with props, multimedia screens, videos and recordings; and the third is devoted to the historic memorabilia of the era. Newspaper clippings of world events, graphs, charts, historic film clips and the voices of elderly emigrants tell the fascinating and poignant stories of why so many people chose to leave their home countries in search of a new life.
The museum is named after Alfred Ballin, HAPAG’s managing director who insisted in 1898 that housing be built for his passengers at a cost of 3 million reichmarks. The comforts he made available to emigrants waiting in 22-bed dorms are surprising. Bilingual displays explain his largesse: from the years 1901-1934, more than 5 million people arrived at the “Port of Dreams” awaiting passage, and the astute Mr. Ballinn wanted to make sure they filled berths on his Hamburg-Amerika Linie instead of sailing with a competitor. Families can learn how women and children were segregated from the men, and how separate Kosher and regular kitchens were available to emigrants of different faiths. Facilities were kept very clean and all potential passengers had to have their clothes disinfected regularly. Mr. Ballin can also be called the father of modern day cruising, because after transporting passengers so profitably, he assigned a HAPAG vessel to sail the first pleasure cruise for other Europeans.
Details, Details
Hamburg has excellent public transportation, and English is widely spoken. One sightseeing option if you’re limited to a brief stay is the Hamburg Stadt Rundfahrt double-decker bus tour.
Alternatively, the Hamburg Tourist Board (+49 40 30 05 13 00) offers a Hamburg Card enabling families interested in lots of sightseeing to ride all public transport free, get 15%-30% discounts on many admission prices, and 10% off in many shops.
In this multi-cultural city are several shopping districts; keep in mind that style-setters such as Jil Sander and Karl Lagerfeld hail from this creative city.
Our favorite is the exclusive Neuer Wall, nicknamed “Chic, Sheik, Shock” from the story of a stylish woman who bought the latest fashions, asked her Arab sheik to pay, then watched him go into shock from the bill! The fun and walkable Monckebergstrasse is considered the shopping mile, Spitalerstarasse is a pedestrian mall, and Colonnaden is another small street of designer boutiques… but the soaring euro may diminish your interest in purchasing anything.
On the other hand, the Hamburg Tourist Board works with dozens of local hotels and international chains to create value packages and posts them on its website. At our visit, the Best Western Hotel St. Raphael (+49 40 24 82 00), conveniently located at Adenauerallee 41, Hamburg 20097, was offering a special tied in to “The Lion King” musical that has been playing in Hamburg for seven years (to great acclaim). It’s a short walk from here to the Hauptbahnhof (main train station), museums and shopping, and standard rooms sleep three.
If you want to stay in Ian Fleming’s favorite hotel, the Fairmont Hotel Vier Jahreszeiten (+49 40 34 94 0) on the shore of the Inner Alster Lake at Neuer Jungfernstieg 9-14, 20354 Hamburg, it’s still there. This famed European landmark has been serving royalty and celebrities its special brand of hospitality for over 100 years. Among the 157 beautifully finished rooms and suites are some with two beds and room for a rollaway, but you’ll pay at least double the rate of many other choices.
Dear Reader: This page may contain affiliate links which may earn a commission if you click through and make a purchase. Our independent journalism is not influenced by any advertiser or commercial initiative unless it is clearly marked as sponsored content. As travel products change, please be sure to reconfirm all details and stay up to date with current events to ensure a safe and successful trip.
Great advise and said in very simple language in order for a range of readers to process. I must add that the symptoms and solutions are equally as important in adults who suffer from abdominal illness.
the family market is indeed very important and very lucrative. Focosing on the Family market is what Wal-Mart made big.
Thank you for posting this comparison. I've been looking for something like this but so far I've found only comparisons of individual plans not family ones. This will help me a lot while I'm budgeting for next year's gap holidays.
This place is awesome. We have delivered baby equipment rentals there a couple times and love it. It seems to work great for families traveling with young kids because the age range is usually between 2-8 years old when we deliver. Great beach and location. Thumbs up!
I am planning for a visit of Columbia …. Lets see When i wills be able to visit the same scene..
Orlando, is a perfect place for the kids to explore about Disneyland. A good feature post.
Love your brother in law! Would love to drive cross country with him and his brood!
Another great travel search engine is http://www.travelmarket.com/ it gives you a list of the cheapest flights and hotels. Try it and see what you think.
Good tips all – they sure beat my brother-in-laws advice for dealing with kids on long haul drives, which was, "Tie em to the roof!"
I too would be interested in viewing a list of apartments for the budget traveler.
Great article. I always, and still believe, if you feed a cold you will starve the fever.
I through my own experience, would advise against air travel with any ear, throat or nose infections. It is difficult to move through the change of air pressure, without adding a cold to it.
I have been deeply admired by your blog and its posts. I am really glad to read it and being able to share my thoughts on it. I want to use this opportunity to say that I really love this blog. It is an amazing resource of information for my working. Thank you so much.
It's a shame more airports don't take steps to make travel for families more convenient and fun. I'm sure they are focused on the core income stream of business travelers, which makes sense. Still, why not try and appeal to both?
really a great info which much more useful to lot of them
I would like to visit every day, thanks for your sharing.
Nice Site You Got Here!Very Informative. Highly Recommended!
hey this article was really nice. i got many information from ur site. so my great full thanks for posting it………..
really a great info which much more useful to lot of them
Germaine's Luau gives you a one of a kind experience which is sure to be the highlight of your Hawaii vacation! Make your reservations now to get your best Hawaiian vacation! Visit http://germainesluaus.com/driving-directions/ for driving directions.
That place totally awesome. A perfect place for family vacation. That waterfall really make me jealous. It shall be refreshing to soak up under that waterfall. The beach also really charming, I wonder how much it cost to go there?
I want to go their. Really that is a great place.
The post is very nicely written and it contains many useful facts. I am happy to find your distinguished way of writing the post. Now you make it easy for me to understand and implement. Thanks for sharing with us.
I like the way of your writing.!
You are so right Banfos, thanks for the heads up. Mystic CT is quite remarkable and has much to see besides the aquarium. We have made the change.
Thank you for such a fantastic blog. Where else could anyone get that kind of info written in such a perfect way? I have a presentation that I am presently working on, and I have been on the look out for such information.
Mystic Seaport is a world-renowned maritime history museum. It is not an aquarium as stated in your article.
Jennifer:
There are enough fun activities for the whole family to spend either as a day trip or overnight.
I wish I could have went to the play lab – sounds like Fisher Price is really doing a great job of keeping up with today's trends – and of course smart kids! Great update!
Wow…cannot wait to have a visit there!
Well, I think kids can enjoy some special joys there….
hey this is a great source for my cousin…..
How long would you allow for this excursion? It sounds like a fun side trip while visiting San Diego.
thanks for the <a href="http://ecoblublog.com/2011/02/10/ecotourism-green-vacations">eco vacation</a> ideas. don't know if i'll be able to afford overseas yet but always good to know the options 🙂
Gosh, I’ve been looking about this specific topic for about an hour, glad i found it in your website!
It is bound to be more scenic than the A1,
Nice post,
Well, I love your post. Thanks to create this article.
Really? That idea sounds pretty amazing….
Wow..I really cannot wait to make a trip to Italy…sounds very great!
hey thanx for the top 10 resorts…I will Surely look forward during my last visit.
When you mentioned "flashes" that people were starting to see, I first thought that you were gonna say that you were experiencing the northern lights! But what amazing "flashes" you did see! The whales are one of my favorite parts of Alaska.
Nice points but my baby is too much stubborn.
You gave great points here. I found nearly all people agree with your blog.
Just wanted to drop a comment and say I am new to your blog and really like what I am reading. Thanks for the great content. Look forward to coming back for more.
Holidays are managed mostly for kids. They get know new places with different weather and cultural attractions. It is good.
wow, this would be a great journey..
I liked the whole post and bookmarked the blog. Hopefully, I will get more helpful information from this blog. Thanks.
That's interesting. I just got it very informative..
It is admirable that this hotel employs locals and also promoting the local culture. This is something that is lacking in many big name hotels today.
Sounds very romantic. I was thinking about a trip with family for a long time but when I landed here my problem is solved.