answersLogoWhite

0

What is the Speicherstadt?

Updated: 11/6/2022
User Avatar

Wiki User

14y ago

Best Answer

The Speicherstadt (lit. city of warehouses, meaning warehouse district) in Hamburg, Germany is the world-largest Timber-pile founded warehouse district in the world. It is located in the port of Hamburg-within the HafenCity quarter-and was built from 1883 to 1927. The district was built as a customs-free zone to transfer goods without paying having to pay customs

User Avatar

Wiki User

14y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What is the Speicherstadt?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

What actors and actresses appeared in LiverFuckTM - 2010?

The cast of LiverFuckTM - 2010 includes: Christian Heiner Wolf as Nils Speicherstadt Rupert Joerg as Liverslave Heidi Joerg as Mutter Stefan Rutz as Vater


What is the most famous museum in Europe?

the top 10 are 1. Madame Tussauds Wax Museum, London Madame Tussauds first opened its doors in London over 200 years ago on Baker Street, but moved to Marylebone Road in 1884. There are now a total of eight Madame Tussauds wax museums located around the world and despite its age, the London location still draws in the crowds and is the top museum on trivago. From royalty to rock stars, visitors can see a bit of everything and 2009 additions to the collection include, Barack Obama who was unveiled on the 15th January and racing superstar Lewis Hamilton. 2. Louvre, Paris The Louvre museum is located in the Louvre Palace which was originally a fortress in the 12th century. The Louvre is one of the largest museums in the world (210,000 square metres) and is the world's most visited art museum. It exemplifies traditional French architecture from the Renaissance, and has 35,000 works of art, displayed in over 60,000 square metres of exhibition space. 3. The British Museum, London The British Museum is famous around the world for its vast archeological and antiques collection. In 94 galleries there are more than seven million objects from every continent. Visitors can find treasures such as the Parthenon Marbles, the Rosetta Stone, as well as Egyptian mummies. Since the new millennium the museum also includes the Queen Elizabeth II Great Court, the largest covered square in Europe. 4. Museo Nacional del Prado, Madrid Museo del Prado is one of the oldest museums in Europe, built in 1819. The museum has one of the finest collections of European Art; highlights of the collections are the Spanish masters, Velázquez, Goya and El Greco, Italian artists such as Rafael or Titian, and the Flemish artist Rubens. It is one of the most frequented sites in Madrid. 5. The London Dungeon, London At the London Dungeon Museum you can see the dark site of London. The dungeon opened in 1976 and now more than 40 of the most horrific chapters in history are depicted. There are old classics, such as the recreation of the Jack the Ripper murders as well as a new Sweeney Todd attraction. 6. Miniature Wonderland, Hamburg The Miniature Wonderland in Hamburg is the largest model railway in the world. The museum is located in Hamburg's Speicherstadt (the historic warehouse district in the harbour) and is one of Germany's top tourist attractions. The museum is divided into seven different sections, which show - with great attention to detail - miniature versions of the German areas Harz, Hamburg and Knuffigen (a fictitious city), as well as, America, Scandinavia and Switzerland. 7. Anne Frank Museum, Amsterdam The Anne Frank museum is the former hiding place of probably the most famous Jewish family of the Second World War. During the war Anne Frank wrote a diary in the Secret Annex of the house which was later published. In 2008 almost 1 million people visited the old house, on the "Prinsengracht", to see where Anne Frank hid for over two years. 8. Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence The Uffizi Gallery has an average of 1.7 million visitors per year and has a collection of the most important masterpieces from the medieval age to the Italian Renaissance. 1,700 paintings, 300 sculptures and hundreds of other pieces are distributed in more than 45 rooms. The museum, located in Piazza della Signoria in Florence, was founded in the mid 1500s by the Medici family. Some of the most famous paintings include, "The Adoration of the Magi", "Primavera", and "The Birth of Venus" by Botticelli. 9. Sex Museum, Amsterdam Amsterdam's notorious sex museum is located on the Damrak, one of the main streets in the heart of the Dutch city. The "Venustempel" houses a collection of erotic paintings, sculptures and artifacts. The sex museum expresses the liberality in The Netherlands and takes its visitors on a journey through the history of sex from classical antiquity to this day. 10. Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris The idea for the Centre Pompidou was thought up by the French president Georges Pompidou and was only completed after his term in office in 1977. The design of the museum is influenced by 70s architects Piano and Rogers. In the Centre Pompidou visitors will find a collection of modern art from the 20th century, additionally there is a public library and the Institute of Music and Acoustic Research. Important temporary exhibitions from the last years include, "Dali" (1980), "Kandinsky" (1984), "Matisse" (1993), "Joseph Beuys" (1994) and "Francis Bacon" (1996