• Gina Steiner
  • Gina Steiner

Oldenburg

A short but fine adventure by Gina Read more
  • Trip start
    July 5, 2024

    Weekeeeeeeend!

    July 5, 2024 in Germany ⋅ ⛅ 15 °C

    I have been enjoying my 4-day week for 25 years now. How lucky I am! ☺️

    This is particularly timely as I have taken over a new, fairly large team at work and this team has not only been reorganized, but has also changed departments and a huge number of procedures and processes are now being changed. Poor things, poor us - it's sluggish, but progress is being made. So it seems to work 😍. In short, I can really use the long weekend! 🤪

    Now I am just leaving to visit Heidrun in Oldenburg over the long weekend. I don't know Oldenburg and am very excited. And of course I am really looking forward to spending time with Heidrun. ♥️
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  • Hamburg Central Railway Station

    July 5, 2024 in Germany ⋅ ⛅ 16 °C

    I rarely have time to stroll through Hamburg Central Station, but today I not only had the time to drink a coffee, but also to take a few photos.

    Hamburg Hauptbahnhof (or Hamburg Central Railway Station), is our main railway station. It opened in 1906 to replace four separate terminal stations.

    The smaller stations were located around the city centre. The old stations were located only a few hundred metres away from the others:

    - Berliner Bahnhof (1846), on the site of today's Deichtorhallen, to got to Berlin
    - Lübecker Bahnhof (1865), to go to Lübeck
    - Klosterthor Bahnhof (1866), to go to Hamburg-Altona
    - Venloer Bahnhof (1872), since 1892 named "Hannoverscher Bahnhof", to cross the river Elbe

    Temporary railway lines connecting the stations were built partly on squares and streets. When it was decided to erect a common station for all lines, a competition was arranged in 1900. Built between 1902 and 1906, the Hamburg Hauptbahnhof was designed by the architects Heinrich Reinhardt and Georg Süßenguth, modeled after the Galerie des machines of the World's Fair of 1889 in Paris, by Louis Béroud.

    With an average of 550 000 passengers a day, it is Germany's busiest railway station and the second-busiest in Europe after the Gare du Nord in Paris.

    The station is a through station with island platforms and is one of Germany's major transportation hubs, connecting long-distance Intercity Express routes to the city's U-Bahn and S-Bahn rapid transit networks.

    The Wandelhalle shopping centre occupies the north side of the station building. At the moment they are renovating the upper floor of the Wandelhalle, it will take 1, 5 years and the first construction phase will be completed in August.

    I like Hamburg Central Station, but only when I'm not in a hurry. 🤣
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  • Bremen Main Railway Station

    July 5, 2024 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 17 °C

    Everything went very smoothly and I had a bit of a layover in Bremen. The connecting train was 10 minutes "delayed".

    It's really interesting how people react to that: "That was obvious!", "Always the same!". That's really very German behaviour. Yes, funny... 10 minutes is considered punctual in the rest of the world, but here it's considered late.

    The bus in Sicily was also callled punctual at +/- 10 minutes. Here, people would have put up a notice if the train had left 5 minutes earlier than scheduled. When I was in Portugal recently, the bus was always already gone 🤣. Oh, the Germans 🤪.

    But now some information: Bremen station is no comparison to Hamburg, but have a look yourself.

    Bremen's first train station was opened in 1847 on the site of today's station. It connected to direction Hanover.

    In 1870, the Köln-Mindener Eisenbahn built another station some hundred metres north of the old station, since the old station could not cope with the additional Rollbahn traffic.

    Eventually, it was decided that a single station would be better, and so today's station was built from 1886 to 1891 after plans by Hubert Stier, with sculptures by Diedrich Samuel Kropp and Carl Dopmeyer.

    The station hall was thoroughly renovated in the late 1990s and early 2000s.

    But the Cappuccino was good! ☕😋
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  • Arrived

    July 5, 2024 in Germany ⋅ ☁️ 18 °C

    Heidrun picked me up from the train station ❤️ and after a hearty breakfast ☕🍳🥐 and a long chat 🗨️ we went to the garden. I would spend the summer 🌞 here. 😍

  • Oldenburg

    July 6, 2024 in Germany ⋅ 🌬 24 °C

    This morning we cycled through Oldenburg looking for breakfast or brunch. It became clear that Oldenburg is a small town, although it is one of the big cities in terms of numbers.

    Most things seem very similar, so the range in diversity doesn't seem very big. But we ate a delicious kumpir and a very tasty alternative café.

    It's great for spending a nice weekend with a friend ❤️, especially because Heidrun has a guest bike 🚲. But I can't imagine living here.

    Here some facts: Oldenburg (Northern Low Saxon: Ollnborg) is an independent city in the state of Lower Saxony.

    During the French annexation (1811–1813) in the wake of the Napoleonic war against Britain, it was also known as Le Vieux-Bourg in French. The city is at the rivers Hunte and Haaren, in the northwestern region between the cities of Bremen in the east and Groningen (Netherlands) in the west. It has a population of 170 000 (November 2019).
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  • Alte Brennerei Hilbers

    July 7, 2024 in Germany ⋅ ⛅ 19 °C

    The "alte Brennerei Hilbers" is an old distillery and yeast factory and was founded around 1849. It was a distillery until 2005 and was then rebuilt until 2006.

    Nowadays it is a center for art, culture and communication. Over 20 different artists' studios and workshops as well as a space for movement and dance have been created there. On the first Sunday of every month, most of the studios are open to visitors from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m.

    We went there today, ate a delicious homemade cake in the café and strolled through the studios. The area really has a nice atmosphere, there were quite a few members of the "educated middle class" there, but art is also meant to be bought 🤪.
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  • Trip end
    July 7, 2024