Skip navigation

World-class Germany hosts the World Cup

Leading attractions for quick visits in Berlin, Cologne, Munich and more!

Allianz Arena
Diether Endlicher / AP
The new soccer stadium Allianz Arena is illuminated after dusk in Munich, southern Germany, May 19, 2005. The stadium with a total seating capacity of 59,416 is hosting six matches - including the opening match and one semifinal - of the Soccer World Cup 2006 in Germany.
Slide show
  European escapes
There’s endless adventure around every corner — food, wine, shopping, art and more.

more photos

  Top slideshows
Koya-san World Heritage Site
EPA
  World Heritage Sites
From amazing to mysterious, view the natural, cultural, archaeological and architectural wonders of the world.
Image: Waimea Canyon, Kauai
Lonely Planet Images
  Polynesian paradise
The Hawaiian Islands are the perfect vacation destination for travelers of all types.
Image: The Pitons seen from Anse Chastanet
  Caribbean way of life
From chic to rustic, expensive to affordable, tourists looking for some sun and sand can find what they're looking for in the Caribbean.
By DAVID McHUGH
updated 6:06 p.m. ET May 24, 2006

BERLIN - Next month in Germany, more than a million visitors will marvel at world-class play during the World Cup soccer championship. They can also admire great art, stroll medieval town squares and savor some of the world's best beer.

The World Cup offers great tourism as well as sport, with the 12 host cities including perennial travel favorites Berlin, Cologne, Munich, Nuremberg and Hamburg. With as little as two or three spare hours before a game, visitors can take in Albrecht Duerer's "Self-Portrait" in Munich's Alte Pinakothek art museum - or try a crisp-roasted schweinshaxe, or ham hock, with sauerkraut and a cold pilsner from a centuries-old local brewery.

Visitors during the June 9-July 9 tournament won't even need tickets to plug into the soccer excitement. Games will be shown live on big screens in public places such as Berlin's Potsdamer Platz and Munich's Olympic Park, and thousands of people are expected to take part in fan festivals around the country.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

Berlin alone is expecting 300,000 overnight guests, but tourism authorities say there will be room. "Whoever comes will always find a hotel bed," promised Hanns Peter Nerger, head of Berlin's tourism marketing operation.

Of course, one can even forget the soccer. As with Athens and the 2004 Olympics, the week after the event ends might be a good time to visit, since some hotels are raising hotel prices on game days.

Here are leading attractions for quick visits in the top cities:

  • BERLIN: The museums clustered on the Museum Island in the Mitte district are superb, led by the Pergamon Museum with its 2nd century B.C. altar from the Greek city of Pergamon, and the blue-tiled Ishtar Gate built during the reign of Nebuchadnezzar II around 575 B.C. in ancient Babylon, now in Iraq. In the nearby Altes Museum, you can see the exquisite, 3,300-year-old bust of Egypt's Queen Nefertiti.

For more recent history, the Museum at Checkpoint Charlie recalls Berlin's four decades as a divided city. A replica of the guard shack from Checkpoint Charlie, the East-West crossing point, stands on Friedrichstrasse; the real shack, hauled away after the Berlin Wall fell in 1989, can be found in the Allied Museum in the Zehlendorf district, which focuses on the Berlin Airlift and the U.S. occupation after World War II, and is free of charge.

In the city center, one can climb the glass dome of the historic Reichstag, home of the Bundestag lower house of parliament - also free, but go early or late to beat the lines.

Related Stories on MSNBC.com Travel

Between museums, stop for Berlin's trademark fast food: currywurst, or succulent chunks of pork sausage with curry-spiced ketchup, available all over at snack stands but especially well done at Bier's Curry and Spiesse, on Friedrichstrasse underneath the train station overpass of the same name.

You can ask for yours without sausage casing if you like: "Ohne Darm, bitte" - literally, "without intestine, please."

Berlin will host the World Cup final on July 9.

  • MUNICH: The World Cup begins here June 9 with Germany's match against Costa Rica.

Cy Twombly
Diether Endlicher / AP
A visitor, right, watched by a musuem's guard, left, looks at the sculptures of American artist Cy Twombly at the Alte Pinakothek Museum in Munich, southern Germany, April 4, 2006. Twombly's works, created between 1992 and 2005 representing the American Abstract Expressionism, are shown in Europe for the first time and will be exhibited for public from April 5 to July 30, 2006.

For non-soccer sightseeing, duck into the Alte Pinakothek museum, stuffed with works by Duerer, Van Dyck, Rubens and Rembrandt. Or stroll the English Garden (warning: nude sunbathers); visit the Deutsches Museum technology exhibits, or watch the Glockenspiel statues - animated figures on the Rathaus, or city hall, ring the hour at 11:00 a.m., noon and 5 p.m.

The Hofbraeuhaus, dating to 1589, is the epitome of a Munich beer hall, with long benches and big mugs of suds. Locals like hefeweizen, or wheat beer, naturally cloudy with yeast, just slightly sweet and perfect on a hot day.

Touring the Dachau concentration camp, about 20 minutes from the central station by S-Bahn, or local train, is a very worthwhile break from mere tourism.

  • NUREMBERG: Stroll the old town, restored after World War II to near its medieval splendor, and head up to the Kaiserburg fortress atop the hill, residence of German rulers from 1050 to 1571.

The city has sobering reminders of the Nazi past; the Nazi parade grounds remain, with a documentation center. At the Nuremberg Palace of Justice, in the north part of town, you can tour Room 600, where the Nuremberg war crimes tribunal tried Nazi leaders.

The U.S. team plays Ghana here on June 22.


Resource guide