Member / Vendor Login

Nenzing

Country:
Austria
State:
Vorarlberg
City:
Nenzing
Type of Location:
Multiple
About Location

Advertisement



Places to Visit
How to Reach

By air

Nearest Airports to Nenzing are sorted by the distance to the airport from the city centre.
   Hohenems Airport (distanced approximately 22 km)
   Hohenems Dornbirn Airport (distanced approximately 22 km)
   Lauterach Airport (distanced approximately 33 km)
   Altenrhein Airport (distanced approximately 35 km)
   Bregenz Railway Station Airport (distanced approximately 36 km)

Key places to visit
Parish Church of St. Mauritius, Martin Church Beschling, Castle Ramschwag, City Hall (1958), Chapel bib

Advertisement



Places to Visit

Parish Church of St. Mauritius

This is a Baroque church with Carolingian and Gothic elements of its predecessors with a Baroque interior - in one of the oldest parishes in Vorarlberg. Below are the foundations of the choir of the oldest documented church in the country from the early 6th Century have been discovered.

Martin Church Beschling

A late Gothic, Baroque-style church expanded in 1484 with late Gothic altar and a wooden painted ceiling dating from the 17th Century. The coffered ceiling was partially designed by the artist Christian Nenzinger Lutz.

Castle Ramschwag

The castle Ramschwag (also Welsch-Ramschwag) is a ruined castle in Nenzing in Vorarlberg. Since then the population spoke Ladino, it was unlike the ordinary Swiss castles old and new Ramschwag in Haggenschwil "Welsch-Ramschwag" called.The castle-Welsch Ramschwag was in the years 1270-1290 by the Lords of Ramschwag, a noble family from the canton of St. Gall built.The plant should not be for long been in possession of the junk Wager. It is also not documented in writing, whether junk Wager lived here ever.

City Hall (1958)

At the site of the town hall once stood the inn sun, a former stagecoach station. This was demolished and a new town hall built in 1958. In the years 2000 to 2002 it was rebuilt and expanded.

Chapel bib

The Chapel of St. Valentine and St. Magnus was built around 1630 and restored during the plague in 2000.

Right Time to Visit

Information not available

Temperature

Information not available


Advertisement



View Map