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Top Attractions in Bonn

Akademisches Kunstmuseum

Akademisches Kunstmuseum is an art museum in Bonn, Germany. It is the oldest museum in Bonn and houses the antique collection of the University of Bonn with more than 500 antique statues and reliefs, and over 2,000 originals. It is located in a neoclassical building at the southern end of the Hofgarten, near the Electoral Palace. The museum was founded in 1818 and has one of the largest collections of plaster casts of ancient Greek and Roman sculptures in the world. At this time collections of plaster casts were mainly used in the instruction of students at art academies. They were first used in the instruction of university students in 1763 by Christian Gottlob Heyne at University of Göttingen. The Akademisches Kunstmuseum in Bonn was the first of its kind, as at this time collections at other universities were scattered around universities libraries. The first director was Friedrich Gottlieb Welcker, who also held a professorship of archaeology. His tenure was from 1819 until his retirement in 1854. He was succeeded by Otto Jahn and Friedrich Wilhelm Ritschl, who shared the directorship. From 1870 to 1889 Reinhard Kekulé von Stradonitz, nephew of the famous organic chemist Friedrich August Kekulé von Stradonitz, was the director. In 1872 the museum moved to a new building that was formerly used by the department of anatomy. The building was constructed from 1823 to 1830 and designed by Karl Friedrich Schinkel and Hermann Friedrich Waesemann. Other directors of the museum were Georg Loeschcke, Franz Winter, Richard Delbrueck, Ernst Langlotz, Nikolaus Himmelmann and Harald Mielsch . All directors, with the exception of Friedrich Wilhelm Ritschl held a professorship of archaeology at the university.

Botanische Gärten der Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn

The Botanische Gärten der Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn, also known as the Botanischer Garten Bonn, is a botanical garden and arboretum maintained by the University of Bonn. It is located at Meckenheimer Allee 171, Bonn, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, and open except Saturdays in the warmer months; admission is free on weekdays. The gardens were originally castle grounds for the Archbishop of Cologne, dating to about 1340, which circa 1650 were fashioned into a renaissance garden. In 1720 the site was reworked as a baroque garden, setting the basic structure of todays garden, with the rococo Poppelsdorf Palace completed in 1746 by Archbishop Clemens August. When the University of Bonn was founded in 1818, its first garden director, Dr. Christian Gottfried Daniel Nees von Esenbeck, began to focus the garden on scientific botany. By 1900 the garden was second only to Berlins within Germany, but it was utterly destroyed in World War II. Reconstruction began after the war and was completed in 1979-1984 with the construction of two conservatories. Today the garden cultivates about 8,000 plant species, ranging from endangered local species from the Rhineland such as Ladys Slipper Orchids to protected species such as Sophora toromiro from Easter Island. Its outdoor gardens, containing about 3,000 species, are organized as follows: Arboretum 700 species of woody plants, including fine specimens of Araucaria araucana, Ginkgo biloba, Nyssa, Pinus bungeana, and Torreya, as well as old specimens of Taxodium distichum. Systematic section about 1,200 species arranged in beds reflecting their evolutionary relationships; notable specimens include Passiflora caerulea, Trachycarpus fortunei, and Umbellularia californica. Geographical section plants grouped by geographical origin. Biotope section the most important locally occurring plant communities, including endangered species from the Bonn region. The garden also contains about 0.5 hectares of greenhouse area, including a major conservatory completed in 1984. Roughly 3,000 species are cultivated in public areas as follows: Fern house tree ferns and other indigenous plants from cool cloud forests on tropical mountains. Mediterranean house winter shelter for subtropical plants from the Mediterranean, South Africa, California, and Australia. Palm house epiphytes and large rain forest plants such as bananas and bamboos. Succulent house Succulents including new world cacti and agaves, and old world Aloes and Euphorbias, including Welwitschia mirabilis. Victoria house giant water lily, Nymphaea, Aristolochia and Passiflora, tropical bog plants, and a fine specimen of Amorphophallus titanum. Smaller houses including a carnivorous plant house, geophyte house, and two orchid houses.

Hammerschmidt Villa

Villa Hammerschmidt is a villa located in the former West German capital of Bonn that served as the first official seat and primary official residence of the President of the Federal Republic of Germany from 1951 until the government offices were returned to the reunified Berlin in 1994. President Richard von Weizsäcker made Schloss Bellevue in Berlin his primary official residence in 1994; since that time the Hammerschmidt Villa has served as a secondary official seat and secondary official residence for the President. In German, the Villa is also called the "White House of Bonn", because of its vague resemblance to the official residence of the President of the United States. The villa is situated in the heart of the former government quarter of Bonn, bordering the river Rhine to the north and opposite the zoological Museum Koenig to the south. It is also adjacent to the secondary official seat and secondary official residence of the Chancellor, the Palais Schaumburg, to the west. The upper floor of the building houses a private apartment for the German President, while the ground floor consists of state rooms which are used for ceremonial purposes. Villa Hammerschmidt was built by August Dieckhoff in 1860 in Neo-classical style, as a stately home for a wealthy industrialist. It was redecorated in 1868 by the architect Otto Penner. Since its construction Villa Hammerschmidt has been owned by: 1860 – 1868: Albrecht Troost 1868 – 1899: Leopold Koenig 1899 – 1928: Rudolf Hammerschmidt 1928 – 1945: Sold at auction and broken up into several flats 1945 – 1949: Requisitioned by the British occupation forces in Germany following World War II since 1950: The German state

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