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Hohe Straße in 2013. Hohe Straße is a shopping street in the old town of Cologne, Germany, and one of the city's both oldest and busiest streets. [1] Together with many of its adjacent side streets, Hohe Straße is part of a designated pedestrian zone and spans about 680 metres from Cologne Cathedral on its Northern end to Schildergasse on its Southern end.
3 m (9 ft 10 in) Basel, Canton of Ruthe 16 Fuss 4.864 m (15 ft 11.5 in) Bern, Canton of Ruthe 10 Fuss 2.932 m (9 ft 7.4 in) Braunschweig (Brunswick) Ruthe 16 Fuß 4.565 m (14 ft 11.7 in) Bremen Ruthe 8 Ellen or 16 Fuß 4.626 m (15 ft 2.1 in) Calenberg Ruthe 16 Fuß 4.677 m (15 ft 4.1 in) Cassel, Hessen Ruthe 14 Fuß
The Cologne High Military and Escort Road (German: Cölnische Hohe Heer- und Geleitstraße, also called the Hohe Straße) is a historical trading route that ran from the city of Cologne via the imperial cities of Wetzlar and Friedberg to Frankfurt within the Holy Roman Empire.
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[1] [2] The Schildergasse is a designated pedestrian zone and stretches for about 500 meters from the Hohe Straße at its eastern end to the Neumarkt at the western end. The street dates back to Roman times, when it was the city's Decumanus Maximus .
The Cologne Beltway (German: Kölner Autobahnring) is the generic term for the Autobahns encircling Cologne. It consists of the Bundesautobahn 3 , the Bundesautobahn 4 and the Bundesautobahn 1 . With an average of 160,000 cars per day on the BAB 3 and 100,000 on A4 and A1, the beltway handles one of the highest traffic volumes in Germany.
This list of tallest buildings in Cologne ranks high-rise buildings and free standing structures that reach a height of 50 meters (164 feet) without superstructures. When it was completed in 1925, the Hansahochhaus was the tallest skyscraper in Europe for a short time.
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