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CHF 124 - 210 Hotel Lenzburg (vormals Haller)
Hotel Lenzburg is centrally located at the foot of the Schlosshügel (castle hill) of the small town of Lenzburg and offers you a rich breakfast and t… MoreCHF 195 - 235 Hotel Krone
The Hotel Krone is situated below Lenzburg Castle, on the edge of the Old Town. It offers traditional yet creative cuisine, an indoor pool, a sauna an… MoreCHF 119 - 240 Hotel Aarehof
The colourful Aarehof Hotel offers you quiet rooms and refined seasonal cuisine opposite the Wildegg Train Station. Parking is available for free.
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Lenzburg lies 30 km west of Zurich. There is a fast public transport connection through Lenzburg from Zurich to Basel. Many people commute to Zurich or its airport at Zurich International Airport|Kloten each day.
In 1036, Schloss Lenzburg was used for the first time as seat for the count of Lenzburg, then an important lord. The house however died out in 1173, and the castle was then transferred to emperor Frederick I, Holy Roman Emperor|Frederick Barbarossa. In the following period, it was mainly used by the Kyburger house. The Habsburgs took over the castle in 1273. City rights were granted in 1306.
Lenzburg was conquered by Bern in 1415, along with the western part of current Aargau, though Bern did not take away its city rights. In 1433, the city of Bern bought the castle and used it to govern the region from 1444 to 1798. A major fire devastated the town in 1491, sparing only fifteen houses. The reformation was carried out simultanuously with the rest of the region in 1528, and the economy started to transform slowly from an agriculture|agrarian to a more industrial one in the 16th century. A textile factory was founded in 1732.
In 1798, the Helvetian Republic was proclaimed and the lords from Bern were ousted. The canton of Aargau was founded and Lenzburg became the capital of the district in 1803. The canton gained the castle in 1804. Lenzburg transformed into the economic centre of the region in the 19th century. Many people in the area worked for the "Wool lords" (German language|German: Baumwollherren). In 1875, Lenzburg was connected to the railway system, and bankruptcy followed only one year later: the competition was too much. The recovery followed relatively quickly in the following decade.
The castle changed hands several times in the 19th and 20th century. In 1860, it was bought by Frank Wedekind, a poet from Germany. In 1893, it was purchased by Americans and renovated. Finally, in 1956, it was bought by the canton and since been used to house a museum.
Town church, built 1667
Express trains of the Jurasüdfuss and Zürich-Aarau-Basel lines pass through Lenzburg, with urther lines leading to Brugg, Switzerland|Brugg, Lucerne, Zofingen and Zug Switzerland|Zug. Lenzburg also has a connection to the Zürcher S-Bahn.
Zurich International Airport is within close reach.
The local transit Regionalbus Lenzburg leads to Brunegg, Dintikon, Möriken-Wildegg, Schafisheim and Seengen. The town is also served by an urban bus route.
This "Travel Guide" section is drawn from the Wikipedia article "Lenzburg". We hope you will edit and improve it. It is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.
City hall at 31 Rathausgasse
Old Burghalde, built in 1628
New Burghalde, built in 1794: with symmetrical Early-Classical building with an outdoor staircase and a gate.
Library
The Museum Burghalde
Roman theatre, from the 1st century A.D.
AquatintaEconomics
Lenzburg is an important economic centre, containing over 800 enterprises, of which about 80% in the service sector. The majority of businesses are in the small and medium enterprise bracket, but a number of international companies are established in Lenzburg, such as the multinational Asea Brown Boveri|ABB and the meat processing plant Traitafina. Lenzburg has a total workforce of around 6,000.Transportation
Lenzburg is an important transportation hub and is only 25 km from Zurich, with close access to the N1 freeway, Switzerland|N1, Switzerland's most important east-west road connection. A partially underground road named "Kerntangente" is under construction, designed to draw through-traffic away from the city centre.Events
For over 400 years the youth celebration is the largest event in Lenzburg, taking place every year on the second Friday of July.
In August the Gauklerfestival takes place in the streets of the old part of town with international delicacies.People
Philipp Albert Stapfer, Minister of the Helvetic Republic 1766-1840. References
Fritz Stuber, Jürg Lang et al., Stadtbilduntersuchung Altstadt Lenzburg (Townscape Investigation of the Historic Part of Lenzburg), Urbanistics, Zurich, 1976, 168 p., 234 ill. External links