UNSERE WANDERWEGE
Es gibt viel zu Sehen: Entdecken Sie Bad Vilbel zu Fuß.
Einfach losgehen und entdecken, durch Stadt, Feld und Wald wandern und spazieren. Eben noch pulsierendes Leben, dann mit Stille und frischer Luft zur Ruhe kommen, Biotope bestaunen, idyllische Streuobstwiesen durchqueren. Alles liegt so nahe beieinander, wahrnehmen, entspannen, körperlich betätigen.
Immer dabei: Spannende Informationen, lauschige Plätzchen am Flussufer, herrliche Ausblicke über Bad Vilbel, den Taunus, die Wetterau bis zur Frankfurter Skyline, unberührte Tier- und Pflanzenwelten … sogar ein richtiges Schlachtfeld wartet auf seine Entdeckung!
Immer ganz in der Nähe: Aufenthaltsorte zum Luftholen, Picknicken, Treffen und Quatschen. Dazu vielfältige Gastronomie, Veranstaltungen und attraktiver Einzelhandel.
Einstiegsstellen: zu den acht Wegen existieren vor dem Bahnhof Bad Vilbel-Süd, auf dem Niddaplatz, am Kurhaus, am Marktplatz, an der Nidda hinter dem Schwimmbad, am Zugang von der Nidda zum Festplatzgelände, am Parkplatz am Friedhof, am Ritterweiher und am Waldparkplatz Vilbeler Wald (B 521).
Acht Wege laden ein:
Wählen Sie nach Ihren Wünschen und Tagesform die Länge, Schwierigkeitsgrad und Themenschwerpunkte - für jeden Geschmack und alle Altersstufen.
Münzenberg Castle is one of Germany’s most important Romanesque castle complexes. It dates back to the Hohenstaufen era. Even from afar, you can make out the two imposing keeps that gave it the nickname “the Wetterau inkwell”.
The monastery church and provost’s building are among the finest examples of Romanesque architecture in Hesse. These relics from the Staufen era tell the story of the former monastery, which reached its heyday in the late Middle Ages thanks to estates, lease income and donations from the nobility.
In the Wetterau region, traces of the Celts are numerous and still visible today in the form of spectacular finds, burial mounds and ring ramparts. The Glauberg is a cultural and historical landmark of European significance. Excavations uncovered three Celtic princely graves and a life-size statue of a Celtic prince. They can be admired at the Celtic World at Glauberg.
Guided city tours are offered on a wide range of topics. The varied programme includes history and current affairs, exciting and entertaining stories. From geology and city walks to tours for children. Or be surprised by tours with titles such as “Bloody Good Friday” or “Gold Rush: The Water Trade”.
Anyone walking through Bad Vilbel will discover a wide range of genres and styles. Numerous artworks are displayed in public spaces.
They can be discovered especially in the park areas, in the Spa and Castle Park, around the moated castle, as well as in the floodplain landscape of the Massenheim district, and in the Alte Mühle Gallery.
Read, listen, see – digitally or analog. And more than that, the City Library also offers events.
It never gets boring here; the City Library is known for innovative ideas related to reading and readings. Have you ever attended a gramophone reading? You can find something like that here!
From mid-July to early August, enjoy 15 blockbuster films under the open sky on a screen as big as a three-room apartment, with incomparable Dolby SR digital surround sound. Comfortable seats with armrests & backrests, or even more open-air vibes on the “Wiesen-Empore”.
The Alte Mühle is one of the city’s cultural hubs, located in and around the former grain mill on Lohstraße, directly on the banks of the Nidda.
With sophisticated and entertaining events ranging from cabaret and music (from pop to classical) to puppet theater for adults, children’s theater, cinema, and an art gallery, the Alte Mühle is a household name throughout the region for quality and variety.
The Bad Vilbel Town Hall, in conjunction with the renovated Kurhaus, is the new event location in the heart of the city. Modern and flexible, it’s the perfect host for large and small events, concerts, or conferences in the Rhine-Main region.

