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| Leipzig's location in Germany |
The road into old East Germany
Since time immemorial Leipzig has had good road connections. It was the crossing point of two major Roman roads: the Via Imperii, which ran from Venice to the Baltic coast, and the Via Regia, which led from the Rhine to Silesia.
More recently, as the second largest city of the former East Germany, it was somewhat cut off from the west. Now, however, it is well connected, with the A9 Autobahn in particular, running past Leipzig en route from Berlin to Munich.
Nevertheless being the only ground in the old East Germany (the stadium in Berlin is in what was West Berlin), Leipzig's Zentralstadion is indeed somewhat isolated from the other World Cup grounds, with only 3 of the other venues less than 200 miles away.
However, despite some of the distances involved, the German autobahn network provides good links to the other venues.
From Leipzig to other World Cup venues:
| World Cup City |
Distance in km |
Distance in miles |
Main motorways en route |
| Berlin |
182 |
114 |
A9 |
|
Cologne |
496 |
310 |
A9, A4, A7, A5, A45 |
|
Dortmund |
477 |
298 |
A9, A14, A2, A1, A45 |
|
Frankfurt |
390 |
244 |
A9, A5, A7, A5, A3 |
|
Gelsenkirchen |
490 |
306 |
A9, A14, A2 |
|
Hamburg |
398 |
249 |
A9, A14, A2, A7 |
|
Hanover |
261 |
163 |
A9, A14, A2 |
| Kaiserslautern |
488 |
305 |
A9, A4, A5, A60, A63 |
|
Munich |
408 |
255 |
A9 |
|
Nuremberg |
269 |
168 |
A9 |
|
Stuttgart |
466 |
291 |
A45, A5, A6, A81 |
Route planner with address details for all 12 stadia.
See also our pages on driving in Germany and car hire details.
See also Expedia.co.uk for Leipzig hotels, flights and rental cars
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