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Westend-Süd (Frankfurt am Main)

Westend-Nord
Westend-Süd
Stadtteil of Frankfurt am Main
Westend-NordWestend-Süd  is located in Germany
Westend-NordWestend-Süd
Westend-Nord
Westend-Süd
Location of the Westend (red) and the Ortsbezirk Innenstadt II (light red) within Frankfurt am Main
Frankfurt Stadtteil Westend.svg
Coordinates: 50°07′05″N 08°39′48″E / 50.11806°N 8.66333°E / 50.11806; 8.66333Coordinates: 50°07′05″N 08°39′48″E / 50.11806°N 8.66333°E / 50.11806; 8.66333
Country Germany
State Hesse
Admin. region Darmstadt
District Urban district
Town Frankfurt am Main
Area
 • Total 4.092 km2 (1.580 sq mi)
Population (2007-12-31)
 • Total 25,550
 • Density 6,200/km2 (16,000/sq mi)
Time zone CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2)
Postal codes 60308, 60320, 60323, 60325, 60327, 60486
Dialling codes 069
Vehicle registration F

Westend-Nord and Westend-Süd are two city districts of Frankfurt am Main, Germany. The division into a northern and a southern part is mostly for administrative purposes as the Westend is generally considered an entity. Both city districts are part of the Ortsbezirk Innenstadt II.

The Westend with its Wilhelminian style buildings is a beloved residential quarter and has the highest real estate prices in Frankfurt. Many old villas serve as offices for law firms and companies of the financial community. Along with the Bahnhofsviertel, the Nordend and the Ostend, it is part of Frankfurt's dense inner city districts.

Like the other districts constructed in the Wilhelminian period the Westend has been within the town walls of Frankfurt since the building of the Frankfurter Landwehr . Largely consisting of fields and heathland, it was area made up of isolated farming estates. Streets in the area still carry the names of these estates which were called Hellerhof, Hynsperghof and Kettenhof.

At the beginning of the nineteenth century the old Frankfurt fortifications were razed. Soon numerous classic suburban villas with generous gardens sprang up along the Bockenheimer Landstraße, the arterial road in the neighbouring town of Bockenheim. Among them were the Gontardsche garden house and the Villa Leonhardi designed by the architect Nicolas Alexandre Salins de Montfort, as well as the Rothschildpalais of Friedrich Rumpf. Around the middle of the nineteenth century the area through the town was divided up and the streets and Squares were laid out. The narrow, built-up Frankfurter Neustadt was bursting at the seams and so people were continuously moving to the outer western town. Paris became an archetype for street construction, therefore wide boulevards as well as squares with radial streets leading outwards began to appear.


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