Schlossbergturm
The Schlossbergturm is a 35-meter steel lattice tower that's been crowning Freiburg's Schlossberg hill since 2002, designed by local architect Erwin Giselbrecht.
About Schlossbergturm
The Schlossbergturm is a 35-meter steel lattice tower that's been crowning Freiburg's Schlossberg hill since 2002, designed by local architect Erwin Giselbrecht. You'll climb 165 spiral steps to reach the viewing platform at 33 meters high, where you get unobstructed 360-degree views over the Black Forest, Rhine Valley, and on exceptionally clear days, the Swiss Alps. The 3 EUR entry fee is worth it for what's arguably the best panoramic viewpoint in the entire region.
The climb takes about 10 minutes up the narrow spiral staircase inside the tower's steel frame. It feels industrial and modern, quite different from climbing a historic castle tower. Once you reach the platform, the views are genuinely spectacular: Freiburg's red-tiled rooftops spread below, the Vosges Mountains rise to the west, and the Black Forest rolls endlessly eastward. The platform can fit about 15 people comfortably, and most visitors spend 15-20 minutes taking photos and identifying landmarks.
Honest truth: the tower itself isn't architecturally stunning, and some locals think it's an eyesore on the historic hill. But the views absolutely justify the modest cost and effort. Skip it on foggy days when you'll see nothing but clouds. The best light for photography comes in late afternoon when the sun illuminates the Rhine Valley from the west.
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