Discover Frankfurt by way of this highly interesting audiovisual city tour via iPod Touch or iPhone. Your tour guide, Pauline, the Frankfurt dialect poet, Friedrich Stoltze, and Johann Wolfgang von Goethe team up in offering pertinent information as well as various stories and anecdotes, making this trip through Frankfurt a most memorable experience. The real-life images provided are accompanied by historical pictures, engravings and portraits, together telling the story of Frankfurt am Main and its many colourful personalities. The many amusing and interesting tales and quotes from Goethe’s and Stoltze’s era help to place the spotlight on Frankfurt’s time-honoured old town, bringing the city’s rich traditions and centuries-old history back to life.
Rental stations:
The iPod touch devices are available for hire at the Tourist Information Offices.Please note that hireres arerequired to deposit a valid photo ID.
Tourist Information Hauptbahnhof
Main Train Station, Reception Hall
60329 Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Tourist Information Römer
Römerberg 27
60311 Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Rental fee for 4 hours: € 7.50
Full-day rental: € 10.00
2nd set of headphones: € 2.50
Price per additional hour: € 1.00
Download from iTunes Store € 3.99
Stops include, amongst others::
Römer City Hall, Emperor’s Cathedral St. Bartholomew, St Paul’s Church, Carmelite Monastery, Goethe-House, Frankfurt Stock Exchange, Banking District, Frankfurt Museum Embankment, Old Sachsenhausen

We would like to thank the following institutions for the material provided:
Archaeological Museum, House of Bible, German Architecture Museum, German Film Museum, Fraport AG, Goethe-House Frankfurt, Harald Welt, Hessian Broadcasting Company_Kurt Bethke, Hessian Broadcasting Company_Alexander Englert, Historical Museum Frankfurt, Holger Ullmann, Icon Museum, Institute of City History, Jewish Museum, Liebieghaus Sculpture Collection, Michael Wicander, Museum of World Cultures, Museum Giersch, Stephan Becker, Stoltze Museum of Frankfurter Sparkasse, Shock-Haired Peter Museum, Uwe Dettmar