Mülheim an der Ruhr is in the Ruhr area. With more than 50% covered by greenery and forest, the city is an attractive place between Düsseldorf and the rest of the Ruhr.
Understand
[edit]Mülheim is between Duisburg, Essen, Oberhausen and Ratingen. It is home to many companies, especially the food industry, such as the Aldi Süd Company, the Harke Group and the Tengelmann Group. In 2020, it had approximately 170,000 residents.
Mülheim was the first city in the Ruhr Area to become completely free of coal mines, when its last coal mine "Rosenblumendelle" was closed. The former leather and coal city had made a complete transformation to a diversified economic centre. It is the home of two Max Planck Institutes and the Ruhr West technical college.
Get in
[edit]By train
[edit]- 1 Mülheim (Ruhr) Hauptbahnhof. This station built in the 1860s is served by IC, EC and regional trains. On the lower level there is Stadtbahn (underground tram) service (confusingly abbreviated with an U). Also beneath the ground, in a dodgy tunnel, there's a bus station for local buses. As of 2023, the station is being renovated.
By local public transport
[edit]Due to the Ruhr area being one sprawling, urbanised cluster of cities, the local public transport of buses, trams and light rail overlap seamlessly into other cities.
From Oberhausen, take Tram 112 which runs from Oberhausen-Sterkrade, past Centro shopping centre and Oberhausen station to and through the city centre of Mülheim and south to the central cemetery of Hauptfriedhof, near the airfield.
From Duisburg, take Tram 901 which starts in the blue collar and immigrant district of Duisburg-Marxloh, past steel plants and the port, crossing Duisburg city centre and their Zoo, before entering the city tunnel and terminating at Mülheim Hauptbahnhof. As of 2024, there's only limited disabled-friendly space onboard, but new trams are being put to service.
From Essen, take Stadtbahn (light rail) service U18 starting at the Limbecker Platz centre in central Essen, stopping at Essen station, before continuing west in the middle of Autobahn A40, passing Rhein-Ruhr-Zentrum shopping centre and diving into a set of bridges and tunnels before also terminating under Mülheim Hauptbahnhof. From Essen-Kettwig you can also hop onto Bus 151 Kettwig - Mülheim - Heißen - Rhein-Ruhr-Zentrum.
From Ratingen, take Bus 752 to Saarn and change to Bus 135, or take O16 to Lintorf and transfer to Bus 752 (which runs from Düsseldorf city) and take it to Mülheim.
By car
[edit]Mülheim is situated in the north of the triangle formed by Autobahn
A40 Venlo (NL) - Duisburg - Essen - Bochum - Dortmund, A52 Essen - Düsseldorf - (going through Düsseldorf on wide city avenues and crossing the Rhine) - Roermond (NL) and A3 Arnhem - Duisburg - Cologne - Frankfurt - Nuremberg - Austria. A52 brushes the far south of Mülheim and meets A40 at a 45° angle in Essen city centre to the east. A40 and A3 meet at nearby Duisburg interchange. A3 and A52 meet north of Ratingen centre.
By plane
[edit]The nearest international airport is Düsseldorf Airport, which sees flights across Europe and overseas.
Mülheim and Essen share a local airfield in the south of the city,
- 2 Essen/Mülheim Airport (Flughafen Essen/Mülheim), Brunshofstr. 3 (Bus 130, Stop Mülheim Flughafen), ☏ +49 208 992330, info@flughafen-essen-muelheim.com. A small local airfield for private aviation, no scheduled flights. Historic terminal building, blimp and hot air flights can be booked from here.
If you're rich enough and own a private plane you could land here, but probably wouldn't stay in Mülheim. Less fortunate people can book a blimp or hot-air balloon ride here though.
Get around
[edit]Local public transport is operated by the Ruhrbahn, the joint public transport agency for Essen and Mülheim and fares are according to VRR tariffs. Mülheim is served by buses and a shrinking tram network. The tram network lost several kilometres of service in the early 2020s, the latest being tram 104 losing the Kahlenberg branch line and being cut back to the city centre in August 2023. The local buses are also under threat of cuts. Despite this neglect by the city, you should be able to get most places in the city by public transport with reasonable ease. A single adult ticket across the city will set you back €3.30 in 2024.
See
[edit]- 1 Aquarius-Wassermuseum, Burgstr. 70 (from centre: Bus 122 to "Schloß Styrum" or S-Bahn to MH-Styrum station, then 1 km walk). Tu-Sa 10:00-18:00 (last admission 17:00), closed last two weeks of December (roughly). Built in 1893 by famous Thyssen steel company, it's now a museum about water management, part of the Industrial Heritage Route:. Adults €4, children €3, family (2 adults and children) €12.
- 2 Schloss Broich (Broich Castle), Am Schloß Broich 28 (Tram 102,901 Bus 120,131,135,752 Stop Schloß Broich). Daily 08:00-20:00. Broich Castle was erected to protect the town from invasion by the Normans 1100 years ago. It is regarded as Mülheim’s oldest building. It is also the oldest, still maintained Carolingian fortification in German-speaking Europe. The halls are now used for municipal receptions and civil ceremonies. In the attic is also the headquarters of the Mülheim City Marketing and Tourism. The Hochschloss is home to the Historical Museum of the Mülheim History Society (open Sa Su 11:00-17:00, as of Dec 2023, free), which provides excavation finds, models and a "Luisen room" insight into several centuries of Mülheim history. €13.00.
- Petrikirche, Pastor-Barnstein-Platz 1. Evangelical church. The oldest church building in Mülheim, it began as a major chapel in the 11th century, but was substantially rebuilt after being bombed in World War II. It is a venue for musical and other artistic events.
- 3 Bismarck Tower (Bismarckturm), Bismarckstr. 22 (Bus 130 to Stop Max-Planck-Institut). Observation tower and memorial to former chancellor Bismarck who unified Germany in 1871 tbat was built in 1908. It was scheduled to be demolished in the 1970s but was saved by protests of over 90% of citizens. Closed for visitors since 2018 due to bad condition, a renovation is planned.
- 4 Styrum Castle (Schloss Styrum).
- 5 Kunstmuseum an der Alten Post (Alte Post Art Museum), Synagogenplatz 1.
Do
[edit]- 1 Weisse Flotte, Alte Schleuse 1 (Bus 130, Stop Wilhelmstr.). From late April, every 2 hours. A boat ride on the Ruhr between Mülheim and Essen-Kettwig. Cash or Giro Card payment. €7.50 one way full trip adult.
- 2 Hallenbad Süd, An den Sportstätten 2 (Tram 112 Stop Sportzentrum Südstr.), ☏ +49 208 43967999. M W 06:00-10:00, F 14:00-19:00, Sa Su 08:00-13:00. Public indoor pool with heated water. Every first Saturday of the month, from 08:00-12:30, reserved for women-only swimming. Adult €4.00, child €2.00.
Buy
[edit]All the usual stores can be found either in the city centre or to the east at
- 1 Rhein-Ruhr-Zentrum (Subway U18 to Rhein-Ruhr-Zentrum stop). Large shopping centre with the usual large chains, has been struggling and is due for renovations, easy access and lots of parking. .
Eat
[edit]Drink
[edit]Sleep
[edit]- 1 Villa am Ruhrufer, Dohne 105 (STR 110, Bus 151/ NE4: Floraweg or Wilhelmstr), ☏ +49 208 9413970, fax: +49 208 94139750, info@villa-am-ruhrufer.com. One of the smallest 5-star hotels in Germany.
- 2 Best Western Hotel Forum Mülheim, Hans-Böckler-Platz 19 (FORUM Shopping Centre, opposite Hauptbahnhof), ☏ +49 0208 308630. 4 star Hotel, central location.
- 3 B&B Hotel Mülheim, Tourainer Ring 31, ☏ +49 0208 377800. Small modern Hotel near Hauptbahnhof station.
- 4 Holiday Inn Express Mülheim, Schloßstr. 44 (Bus, Tram, Subway station "Stadtmitte"). Modern large no-frills chain hotel.
- 5 Hotel zur Kastanie, Kölner Str. 397 (Bus 131, 752, 753 Stop Stooter Str.), ☏ +49 0208 488165. Small 7 room Hotel in the south, near the border with Ratingen.
Connect
[edit]Go next
[edit]- Essen, shopping capital of the Ruhr Area, industrial heritage
- Duesseldorf , capital of NRW and Germany's fashion capital, large Japanese community and international airport.