About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 28. Chapters: Dusseldorf International Airport, Museums in Dusseldorf, Railway stations in Dusseldorf, Lichtburg, Dusseldorf Hauptbahnhof, Esprit Arena, S11, Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, Messe Dusseldorf, Museum Kunst Palast, Landtag of North Rhine-Westphalia, Rheinturm Dusseldorf, Kunsthalle Dusseldorf, Breidenbacher Hof, NRW Forum, Dusseldorf Airport station, Paul-Janes-Stadion, Flehe Bridge, New Synagogue, ISS Dome, Rheinstadion, Opernhaus Dusseldorf, Theodor Heuss Bridge, Tausendfussler, Hotel Nikko Dusseldorf, Neuer Zollhof, Steigenberger Parkhotel Dusseldorf, Sheraton Dusseldorf Airport Hotel, Dusseldorf-Oberbilk station, Schloss Benrath, Dusseldorf-Bilk station, Dusseldorf-Benrath station, Wilhelm Marx House, Kunst im Tunnel, Stadttor, Tonhalle Dusseldorf, Arag-Tower, Dusseldorf Volklinger Strasse station, Dusseldorf-Derendorf station, Dusseldorf-Flingern station, Dusseldorf-Friedrichstadt station, Dusseldorf Airport Terminal station, Dusseldorf-Gerresheim station, Dusseldorf-Reisholz station, Dusseldorf-Garath station, Dusseldorf-Unterrath station, Dusseldorf-Hellerhof station, Philips Halle, Brehmstrasse, Reisholz Rhine Powerline Crossing, Dusseldorf-Angermund station, Dusseldorf-Rath Mitte station, Rheinufer Tunnel, Dusseldorf-Rath station, Dusseldorfer Schauspielhaus. Excerpt: Lichtburg (fortress of light or light castle) has been a popular name for cinemas in Germany. Those in Berlin, Essen and Dusseldorf have been particularly famous; the Lichtburg in Oberhausen is the site of the International Short Film Festival Oberhausen, and Quernheim is the smallest municipality in Germany with a cinema, also called Lichtburg. The Dusseldorf Lichtburg opened on 5 November 1910 as the "Lichtspiele Konigsallee" (Konigsallee Moving Pictures, for the name of the street). It was designed by Oskar Rosendahl, a local architect who