Any suggestion for someone traveling to Frankfurt for a week?

Im going to be spending a week in Frankfurt within early August. Does anyone hold any tips, recommendations as to where on earth to stay, what to see, what to do?

In addition, how are the those towards the Americans? Hows the weather? And how expensive are things?



Answers:    Hello and greetings from Germany.
I have never be in Frankfurt, it's the financial capital of Germany, but no typical tourist place.
Where to stay depends on your age and money. Cheap but of polite quality are hostels:
http://www.jugendherberge-frankfurt.de/

Hotels are comparable cheap within Germany, you pay smaller quantity for a single room then for a double room. But you should label a reservation in the internet or within a travel agency before, never budge directly in a hotel, the prices are much greater.

for sightseeing in Frankfurt:
http://www.frankfurt.de/sixcms/detail.ph...

Most general public speak good English, at least possible in every hotel or representative place. The weather usually is good contained by August, is one of the most warm months. But it already cools down within the nights, you should nick a jacket with you.
Germany is comparable to USA surrounded by the costs. Supermarkets are cheap, so you can live cheap if you want. Petrol is quite expensive if you want a rental vehicle or take a minicab.
If you take the train you should look for special offer, public transport in cities is not deeply expensive.
Americans are sometimes seen to be superficial and loud, conceivably it's good to be for a moment reserved.
But you will have no problems near the people.
if you call for assistance in frankfurt - contact me thru "yahoo!answers". i'm a german, base in frankfurt... Yes, attain out of Frankfurt and travel to the smaller towns surrounding the big city: Mainz, Wiesbaden, etc. They have nice little Markt Platz areas and great little Hofbraus...and if you hold a day or two lacking your parents and little sister, try going to the Alps near Chiemsee and around Kufstein, Tirol. The weather and ancestors are friendlier and nicer down there and the geography is beautiful!
In Frankfurt they own many hotels. There is so much to see, the foremost River, also you can Cruise with the ship the total Rhein/ Main area. It is superb. Shopping, restaurants, cafes, Discos, botanic garden "Palmengarten", the zoo, Grueneburgpark (look close to central Park), big Airport, big train station, Sachsenhausen the south side from Frankfurt the celebrated Apfelwein restaurants. Down town Frankfurt look like for a while Manhattan with the skylines from the mound metropols.
The weather will be nice and warm within August. Frankfurt is multicultural city, there living adjectives kind a ancestors from all over the world. They are friendly to Americans also, US Military be there over 50 years. They closed adjectives the bases and shopping areas after the gulf period of war. The prices is Normal. Just remember the $ is low and Euro is strong right now. Moving within Frankfurt and round Frankfurt easy they hold S-Bahn and Subway (U-Bahn).
Have fun, I was living surrounded by Frankfurt over 24 years.
some people are a bit diliking of americans but allaround the food is nice the people are pretty powerfully manered for hotels go
to hotels.com its a severely inexpensive hotel site good hotels fare prices hope to enjoy been of service Well you'd judge that Americans do not enjoy the best reputation now in Germany. But permit me assure You that is in the main only for Mr George W B. Normal US citizens are still most response!! really!
not without a principle is Frankfurt the most american city in germany(thats what the germans think)

Anyway, besides that within is great things to do in and around frankfurt.
-If you want the opportunity to encounter near locals and their local food, try fichtekraenzi(www.fichtekraenzi.com)
or go to the kleinmarkthalle-little food board room (www.kleinmarkthalle.de) and ask for a warm graef voelsings rindswurst at one of the butchers. this is a must! its a sort of sticky boiled frankfurter with the piece of 100 frankfurters!
-If you like electronic music, try the cocoonclub (www.cocoonclub.net)
-or a bit arty and contemporary: frankfurter kunstverein (frankfurt arts club) a well brought-up destination to scout out the citys
Depending on your tastes--and whether you've been to Germany before--there's plenty to do within Frankfurt, or not much, the same as any considerable city. Frankfurt's the closest thing to an American city the Germans hold, in that most of the buildings are modern and the streets are comparably wider--a byproduct of the certainty that Frankfurt was leveled during WWII. Frankfurt itself is interesting, and a moral place to spend a day or two... the folks nearby are fairly friendly and approaching most German cities, plenty of them speak English. You'll find quite a few Americans, too, since not single do a lot of American and Brits come through Frankfurt, but copious of the resident American military families contained by the area stop by Frankfurt regularly--I did, when I was living within Wiesbaden. There's even an English-language movie theater, about a block away from the Hauptwache within the center of town.

If you're in Frankfurt for a week, I'd notably recommend visiting some other places within the vicinity, depending on how far you want to turn, your preferred mode of transportation, and the kinds of things you want to see. The prettiest stretch of the Rhein river is not far away--it starts by Rudesheim and Bingen, and go up to Koblenz--where the Mosel River meets the Rhein. That stretch of the Mosel is also worth seeing. You also own some well-known cities worth seeing, to hand Frankfurt... Wiesbaden, Mainz, Worms, Heidelberg, Rothenburg ob der Tauber, Wurzburg, Koln (Cologne), Trier, Koblenz, Limburg, Cochem, Nurnberg (Nuremberg), Karlsruhe, Stuttgart... and many others, masses many others. Like castle? There are practically hundreds of 'em within a day's drive from Frankfurt. If you enjoy an idea of what kind of things you'd like to see, I'd be smiling to give you some personal recommendation, or tell you of places I've be to myself. If nothing else, I'd recommend following indistinguishable practice I used while I lived in Germany: look at a driving atlas of the places/route that look interesting to you, look up information in the region of them online if they're a well-known destination to orientate yourself with what's here and how to navigate to/from/in those places, and go. It's really merely that simple... sightseeing in Germany's a breeze.
Frankfurt is ok as far as prices dance. Not cheap, but if you avoid the tourist areas, you can buy food etc at an ok price.

Things to see: I love the Schirn exhibition hall right within the city centre. They do amazing things next to art, lots of great ideas. From nearby, you can walk across the R"omer ( a square beside old buildings) to the Paulskirche, which is essentially where on earth democracy in Germany originate from.

Find a nice pub where you can sit outside and drink some apple wine. Walk up (or down) Berger Strasse, look at the small shops, possibly browse through the books at the Oxfam shop. Check out what is going on at the Mousonturm, lots ol live art perfromances in attendance. The opera have quite a perfect reputation.

Can't tell you much give or take a few accommodation as I usually stayed near friends. But I was at a youth hostel right on the river Main once and that be ok.

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