Bankenviertel Explained

Bankenviertel (pronounced as /de/; banking quarter) is the name of the central business district in Frankfurt, Germany where many banks, insurance companies, and other financial institutions are located. It is the most important German financial hub, if not one of the largest in Europe along with La Défense in the Paris aire urbaine and London's City and Canary Wharf.

Having no official or strict borders, it is commonly defined as the western part of the Innenstadt, the southern part of the Westend and the eastern part of the Bahnhofsviertel. Its most central square is the Opernplatz.

Location

The Bankenviertel is not an official city district and has no officially or strictly defined borders. It stretches across three city districts: the western part of the Innenstadt, the southern part of the Westend and the eastern part of the Bahnhofsviertel. Many of the largest banks in Germany, e.g. Deutsche Bank, DZ Bank, Commerzbank and Helaba, have their corporate headquarters here, as well as many representation offices of foreign banks. It is also the place where most of Frankfurts high-rises and skyscrapers are located, which gave it also the nicknames Bankfurt and Mainhattan.

The heart of the Bankenviertel is located on both sides of the Taunus- and Gallusanlage, an inner-city parkway, and the surrounding streets (Neue Mainzer Straße, Junghofstraße, Kaiserstraße), and the central square of the Bankenviertel is the Opernplatz. Furthermore, the area on both sides of the Mainzer Landstraße from Taunusanlage to Platz der Republik and the Bockenheimer Landstraße, beginning at the Opernplatz, are part of the area. The Bankenviertel also includes the areas near the Opernplatz on its eastern side, notably the Frankfurt Stock Exchange 300m (1,000feet) east of the Opernplatz, as well as a number of banks in its immediate vicinity.

Financial institutions

Financial Institution Building Street City district
Neue Mainzer Straße 52–58 Innenstadt
Westend Duo Bockenheimer Landstraße 24 Westend-Süd
Bürohaus an der Alten Oper Neue Mainzer Straße 69–75 Innenstadt
Taunustor 2 Innenstadt
BoLa 25 Bockenheimer Landstraße 25 Westend-Süd
BHF-Bank-Hochhaus Bockenheimer Landstraße 10 Westend-Süd
Große Gallusstraße 17–19
Gallusanlage 7
Innenstadt
Bahnhofsviertel
Main Building Taunusanlage 14–19 Westend-Süd
Junghofstraße 16 Innenstadt
Mainzer Landstraße 16–24
Taunusanlage 1
Westend-Süd
Bahnhofsviertel
Deutsche Bank Twin Towers
Deutsche Bank IBCF
Taunusanlage 12
Große Gallusstraße 10–14
Westend-Süd
Innenstadt
Westendstraße 1
Platz der Republik 6
Westend-Süd
Westend-Süd
Eurotower
Bürohaus Neue Mainzer Straße 32–36
Willy-Brandt-Platz 2
Neue Mainzer Straße 66–68
Neue Mainzer Straße 32–36
Innenstadt
Innenstadt
Innenstadt
Neue Mainzer Straße 52–58 Innenstadt
Taunusanlage 1 Bahnhofsviertel
Taunusanlage 1 Bahnhofsviertel
Mainzer Landstraße 69 Bahnhofsviertel
Junghof Plaza Junghofstraße 14 Innenstadt
Neue Mainzer Straße 52–58 Innenstadt
Metzler-Haus Große Gallusstraße 18 Innenstadt
Taunustor 2 Innenstadt
Omniturm Große Gallusstraße 18 Innenstadt
Westend Windows Bockenheimer Landstraße 33–35 Westend-Süd
Junghofstraße 22 Innenstadt
Ulmenstraße 30 Westend-Süd
Neue Mainzer Straße 46–50 Innenstadt
Neue Mainzer Straße 52–58 Innenstadt
Junghofstraße 24 Innenstadt
Bockenheimer Landstraße 2–4 Westend-Süd
Mainzer Landstraße 23 Bahnhofsviertel

Public transport

The Bankenviertel is very well accessible with the public transport system. Eight of nine suburban S-Bahn lines (S1-S6, S8, S9) serve the stations Hauptwache, Taunusanlage and Frankfurt Central Station. All inner-city U-Bahn lines have stops within the area: U1-U3 at Willy-Brandt-Platz and Hauptwache, U4 and U5 at Willy-Brandt-Platz and Frankfurt Central Station, U6 and U7 at Hauptwache and Alte Oper. The tram lines 11 and 12 stop at Frankfurt Central Station and Willy-Brandt-Platz, and the lines 16 and 17 link the central station and the Frankfurt Trade Fair area.