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  1. Comme toutes les villes bordant le Rhin, Ludwigshafen est devenue une destination attractive, urbaine et verte à la fois, dotée d’un certain intérêt sur le plan historique et d’un charme particulier. Située dans le Rhénanie-Palatinat, Ludwigshafen n’a acquis le statut de ville qu’en 1859.

  2. Site web. www.ludwigshafen.de. modifier. Ludwigshafen ( prononcé [ ˈlutvɪçsˌhafn̩ ], nom officiel en allemand Ludwigshafen am Rhein - littéralement « Port-Louis-sur-le-Rhin ») est une ville allemande et un arrondissement, située près du Rhin, dans le Land de Rhénanie-Palatinat .

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  4. www.wikiwand.com › fr › LudwigshafenLudwigshafen - Wikiwand

    Ludwigshafen est une ville allemande et un arrondissement, située près du Rhin, dans le Land de Rhénanie-Palatinat.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › LudwigshafenLudwigshafen - Wikipedia

    Ludwigshafen, officially Ludwigshafen am Rhein ( German pronunciation: [ˈluːtvɪçsˌhaːfn̩ ʔam ˈʁaɪn] ⓘ; meaning " Ludwig 's Port upon Rhine"), is a city in the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate, on the river Rhine, opposite Mannheim. With Mannheim, Heidelberg, and the surrounding region, it forms the Rhine Neckar Area .

  6. L'usine BASF de Ludwigshafen, en allemand Verbund BASF-Ludwigshafen, est la principale usine de l'entreprise chimique allemande BASF, et la plus grosse usine chimique du monde. Fondée en 1865 par Frédéric Engelhorn, le complexe a initialement pour productions principales l'aniline et la soude, en vue de produire des colorants textiles.

    • Wilhelm-Hack-Museum
    • BASF Visitor Centre
    • Parkinsel
    • Wallfahrtskirche Mariä Himmelfahrt
    • Rhein Riverside
    • Wildpark Rheingönheim
    • Schillerhaus Oggersheim
    • Ebertpark
    • Ernst-Bloch Zentrum
    • Endlose Treppe

    Rhineland-Palatinate’s premier modern and contemporary art museum almost leaps out at you in the centre of the city. That’s because on the southeast facade is a vibrant 55 x 10-metre mosaic by none other than Joan Miró. The Miró Wall was is from 1979 and is made with 7,200 tiles fired in the village of Gallifa near Barcelona and transported by mule...

    More than 150 years after the first BASF factory sprang up in Ludwigshafen, the chemical company is by far the largest single company in the city, employing 35,000 people. And if you want to know what BASF stands for, it’s Badische Anilin- und Soda-Fabrik (Baden Aniline and Soda Factory). If you’re pressed for time there’s an interactive visitor ce...

    In the Rhine, some way south of the city is a semi-circular river island that has recently become the most sought-after residential address in Ludwigshafen. Now, Parkinsel isn’t actually man-made as it broke away from the land in the 1890s when the harbour was dredged. Curving with a bend in the river, the eastern half of Parkinsel is a large cresc...

    In the Oggersheim district is an imposing church erected in 1775 in a style combining Baroque and Neoclassicism. The church also incorporates an earlier chapel from 1729, which is based on the Santa Casa in the Italian pilgrimage town of Loreto. Inside that chapel is an image of Mary, Mother of God flanked by two angels by the 18th-century Mannheim...

    Recent residential developments along the left bank of the Rhine and the new riverside Rhein-Galerie mall have shifted the city closer to the water. In response the city has installed a series of new information boards with facts and anecdotes about Ludwigshafen’s relationship with the famous river. Special attention is paid to industry along the R...

    In 30 hectares of deep woodland south of Ludwigshafen is an animal park that has European species living in huge paddocks. The park has semi-wild, humane environments for species like bison, aurochs, red deer, wild boars, lynxes and wild cats. Outside these enclosures, you can make your way through an open space where moufflons, peacocks, roe and s...

    The literary giant Friedrich Schiller stayed at this house in Oggersheim from 13 October to 30 November 1782. At that time the building was the Zum Viehhof Inn, and when Schiller was here he was actually travelling incognito as “Dr Schmidt” as he had come to Mannheim to watch the premiere of his play the Robbers against the orders of the Duchy of W...

    On the west side of the city is a park created in 1925 for the Süddeutschen Gartenbau-Ausstellung (South German Horticulture Exhibition). The Ebertpark is named after Friedrich Ebert, who was President of Germany at the time. The best way to visit is to take the entrance at Erzbergerstraße, where you’re met by an elegant formal garden with geometri...

    Ludwigshafen’s most famous son was the influential 20th-century Marxist philosopher Ernst Bloch. His enduring work is the Principle of Hope, about mankind’s natural orientation towards a socially and technologically improved future. This was written while he was living in America and was published in three volumes in the 1950s. The Ernst-Bloch Zent...

    Right in front of the Wilhelm-Hack-Museum is a much-lauded sculpture by Swiss architect and artist Max Bill. Endlose Treppe was completed in 1985 to celebrate Ernst Bloch’s 100th anniversary, and the winding stairway of 19 granite steps was intended to symbolise Bloch’s Principle of Hope. One of the compelling things about the sculpture is that all...

  7. Today, art and culture have given the city a new identity. Like all towns and cities on the Rhine, Ludwigshafen is an attractive destination, with an urban face and green lungs, a fascinating history and its own particular charm. Situated in the federal state of Rhineland-Palatinate, Ludwigshafen first gained city status in 1859.

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