The thousand-year-old city of Leipzig, Germany is known for its famed university and various historic churches and monuments, but it also has a green side that's worth exploring. The Auenwald Floodplain Forest stretches in a wide band from north to south through the city, offering hiking, biking, and horseback riding opportunities through this unique natural setting. Guided tours are available that point out the unique flora and fauna, or else you can grab a map and a compass and hit the trail on your own. The green belt is crisscrossed with several water channels that feed picturesque Auensee Lake, where you can go boating or fishing. Don't forget your camera! Even Leipzig's industrial side has been getting greener in recent years. Karl Heine Canal, for example, was once choked with pollution, but a major cleanup effort in the nineties has restored it to its original beauty, and it's now a great waterway to enjoy a boat tour of the city's Plagwitz neighborhood, which features a collection of 19th century factories that are nothing short of architectural treasures. Guests at the Hotel Fuerstenhof (a member of Starwood's Luxury Collection) will enjoy the greener side of this charming German city.
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The Green Wonders of Leipzig
Wednesday July 2, 2008A Museum of Print and Type in Leipzig
Tuesday January 29, 2008The bright red letters of the Westin Leipzig Hotel glow over the city like a beacon, guiding guests back to their beds with elegant serifs. What a font! And how fitting that when you look out onto the spectacular view from your window, and lead your eye down Kathe-Kollowitz-Strasse, jutting off the north-west side of Leipzig's medieval center, you might be able to discern a historic building trimmed in mustard. Four floors house the Museum of the Printing Arts, where a dazzling display of presses, plates, punches, and metal blocks called matrices, each adorned with a single letter, tell a fascinating tale of typesetting.
Our exploration began on the first level. Antique tools for book printing, and ancient matrices dating from the 16th century were laid out lovingly. A veritable printing timeline composed of massive machinery, covered the vast second floor. The Columbia press, the first press made of iron instead of wood, stood beside an early Platen press, the Liberty press, which utilized inked rollers. On the top floor a friendly staff member lead us to his matrice making machine and demonstrated the production of the Latin letter he was working on, an 8 point ash, which is a and e together. I couldn't keep my eyes off the silvery liquid mixture of antimony, lead, and tin, heated to 380 degrees celsius, and pumped into the mold to create the matrice. But the prize moment of the day was when he handed us each one of the tiny objects. I put mine in my pocket. The perfect souvenir.
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