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Garmisch-PartenkirchenTravel and Tourist Information
ABOVE: Garmisch-Partenkirchen's local brass make oompah in the Alps.
Where to stay
ABOVE: An atmospheric room at the historic
Atlas
Grand Hotel
in Partenkirchen.
Garmisch-Partenkirchen and its neighboring villages have nearly
10,000 guest beds in some 1,500 accommodation facilities.
Hotels and inns come in all price ranges, from luxury establishments to
one-star guesthouses. Many offer daily, weekend, or weekly rates with half- or
full board.
The
Atlas
Grand Hotel is an historic inn that oozes Bavarian atmosphere, and it's
conveniently located in downtown Partenkirchen.
The four-star hotel traces its roots to 1542, when a local monastery opened a
tavern for travelers. It became a postal station in the 1600s, and the
grandfather of the hotel's now-deceased senior chef, Otto Stahl, was the last
innkeeper in Bavaria to hold the title of "Royal Postmaster."
The Atlas Grand certainly looks the part of an historic inn: Its
fa�ade is adorned with arches, wrought-iron signs, shutters, flowerboxes, and a
row of Bavarian flags and banners.
Step inside, and you may feel that you're in
a hunting lodge. The ground floor is a meandering menage of rooms with heavy
archways, beamed ceilings, carved wood, iron chandeliers, grandfather clocks,
and framed pictures from the last two centuries.
The older guest rooms upstairs are delightful. A few years ago, I stayed in room
24, overlooking the Ludwigstrasse, and it was like being inside Great-Aunt
Waltraud's cedar chest. Every surface in the bedroom was covered with wood, from
the beamed ceiling to the pine walls to the planked floor. The antique bedstead
carried the wood theme through with an ornate carved headboard.
The Atlas Grand's sister property, the
Atlas
Posthotel (three stars) has a history dating back to 1512, but it includes
all the mod cons, including free Wi-Fi. The 44-room hotel also has four modern
apartments (each accommodating up to four guests) in an annex nearby.
Most rooms at the
Wittelsbacher Hof, a four-star
"Swiss Quality" hotel within walking distance of the
pedestrian zone, have private balconies with views of the Zugspitze. A heated
indoor pool, sauna, and wellness center are on the premises.
The moderately priced
Hotel K�nigshof
is also in downtown Garmisch, where it offers free parking in a private lot.
For more hotels and other accommodations, check the discounted rates from our booking partner:
Private homes:
Prices for
bed and breakfast typically start around €20 per person with shared bath. (Such
Privatzimmer
accommodations are popular with Germans, many of whom prefer staying with a
family to booking a room in a hotel.) The tourist office can help you find a
room.
Youth Hostel:
The Garmisch-Partenkirchen
JH Youth Hostel is in Burgrain, about 3 km from Garmisch on the No. 3 or 4
bus line.
Camping:
The Garmisch-Partenkirchen Tourist Office lists
seven campgrounds within commuting distance. The most convenient is Campingplatz
Zugspitze in Untergrainau,
at the foot of Germany's highest peak.
Transportation
ABOVE: A train of the Deutsche Bahn arrives in
Garmisch-Partenkirchen.
By train: From Munich Hauptbahnhof, the trip to
Garmisch's Post/Bahnhof takes about 1 hour 15 minutes to 1 hour 40 minutes,
depending on the type of train.
Direct trains leave at least once an hour from morning through early evening. If you're coming from Innsbruck, a direct train will take approxmately 1 hour 20 minutes. Plan your journey with the English-language Deutsche Bahn timetable. By air. Munich International Airport is 120 km (75 miles) distant, and you can travel by rail from the airport terminal to Garmisch-Partenkirchen in just over two hours with one train change. Innsbruck Airport is 60 km (38 miles) away. Plan your rail journey with the DB timetable, or get help from the DB service desk in the München Airport Center (which is connected to the airport terminals). By car. Garmisch-Partenkirchen is 88 km (55 miles) from Munich by Autobahn and local roads. For a map and directions, see ViaMichelin.com. Local transportation. The Garmisch-Partenkirchen area is well-equipped with bus lines, aerial cable cars, gondolas, and a cogwheel railway that runs from central Garmisch to Grainau, the Eibsee, and the Zugspitze (see our Zugspitze article). Request obtain information on public transportation at the Tourist Office during your visit, or visit these German-language bus sites:
Sports and recreation
ABOVE: Skiing is
Garmisch-Partenkirchen's main draw in winter. The town has six major ski areas
with 38 lifts and 73 km of marked trails.
Winter sports. Skiing and snowboarding pull in the crowds
during Garmisch-Partenkirchen's snow season, which normally runs from October until
early May on the Zugspitze and into March at low
elevations. Six ski areas have 38 lifts and 73 km (46 miles) of marked downhill trails, including the Kandahar Run of World Cup fame. You can expand your options even more with day trips to neighoring Austria, or with freestyle skiing and snowboarding at the Fun Park and Half-Pipe below the summit of the Zugspitze. Cross-country skiing is also popular, with nearly 100 km (69 miles) of prepared trails in the local valleys. Other winter activities include skating at the five-rink Olympic Ice Sports Center, curling, sledding, and walking on 100 km (63 miles) of winter hiking paths. Summer recreation. Nature and the outdoors are the main attractions during the warmer months. Some 300 km (188 miles) of marked trails connect Garmisch-Partenkirchen with forests, alms, mountain peaks, and attractions such as the Partnach Gorge or Partnachklamm and King Ludwig II's Schachen hunting lodge. Golf, tennis, mountain biking, white-water rafting, kayaking, windsurfing, a rope course, minigolf, archery, hot-air ballooning, bowling, paragliding, and swimming are some of the other summer activities on Garmisch-Partenkirchen's summer menu.
Spectator sports. World Cup ski races, the International New Year's Ski Jumping competition, the Bavarian Sleigh Ride Competition, and the International Ice Skating Gala take place during the winter months. Sightseeing
ABOVE: The
Partnach Gorge or Partnachklamm attracts hikers and
sightseers year-round. In winter, you can book a guided torchlight tour through
the gorge.
Although Garmisch-Partenkirchen is known more for outdoor
activities than for sightseeing, it does have a number of places to visit on a
rainy day.
The historic churches of Martinskirche (Garmisch) and
Pfarrkirche (Partenkirchen) are worth a peek.
The Werdenfelser Heimatmuseum, a regional history and
folk museum, occupies a 17th Century house on the Ludwigstrasse in
Partenkirchen.
The Richard
Strauss Institute has a musical museum, a library, and multimedia terminals
that celebrate the life of the late German composer. Performances of Strauss
works are scheduled throughout the year.
In June, the
Richard Strauss
Festival offers concerts, symposia, master classes, and
other events that are open to the public.
If your musical tastes run more toward zithers and accordions
than Till Eulenspiegel, ask the tourist office about Bavarian folklore
evenings during your visit.
There are many other attractions that you can easily visit from
Garmisch-Partenkirchen, either by car or by booking guided tours locally--among
them, the Glentleiten Open-Air Museum
in Grossweil, the
Schlossmuseum Murnau,
Linderhof Castle in Ettal, the
Oberammergau Museum in Bavaria's Passion Play town, and the
Violinmaking Museum in
Mittenwald. If you
have time for a day trip, head for the Neuschwanstein and Hohenschwangau castles
in Schwangau, near Füssen. More information
ABOVE: A residential street in Garmisch. (Many chalets like these have furnished apartments and rooms for tourists.) Tourist office:
Garmisch-Partenkirchen
Tourism Related articles and photos:Zugspitze
germanyforvisitors.com Partnach Gorge -
Partnachklamm germanyforvisitors.com
Garmisch-Partenkirchen Photos
germanyforvisitors.com
About the author:
After 4-1/2 years of covering European travel topics for About.com, Durant and Cheryl Imboden co-founded Europe for Visitors (now including Germany for Visitors) in 2001. The site has earned "Best of the Web" honors from Forbes and The Washington Post. For more information, see About Europe for Visitors, press clippings, and reader testimonials. Photos 1, 4 copyright © Kurverwaltung Garmisch-Partenkirchen.
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