Oststadt (Karlsruhe)

At the end of the 19th century, the city of Karlsruhe opened up parts of today's Oststadt as a building area.

To this day, the district is characterized by its coexistence of trade, crafts and living.

[1] The area south of Durlacher Allee, the Gottesaue, has a much older history.

After its secularization during the Reformation in the 16th century, the Gottesaue Palace was built in its place, which was rebuilt between 1982 and 1989 and now serves as the home of the State University of Music.

[2] Sights in the eastern part of Karlsruhe include the Gottesaue Palace which is a music academy now, the old cemetery on Kapellenstrasse, the Hauptfriedhof as the oldest German rural cemetery, several Art Nouveau streets, the botanical garden of the University of Karlsruhe KIT, the Franz Lust Children's Clinic (formerly Victoria Pensionat and Girls' School; no longer a children's clinic since July 2003, since 2006 the headquarters of the academic international office of the University of Karlsruhe), the old Jewish cemetery on Kriegsstraße, the Alter Schlachthof and the Hoepfner castle.

Gottesaue Palace