Exactly in the middle – between the cities of Hanover and Bremen – lies the city of Nienburg directly on the Weser, the economic and cultural center on the Middle Weser. The heart of the historic town with a 1000-year history is the old town with its half-timbered facades, Renaissance fronts and brickwork. Here you can also find the Nienburg Town Hall, a magnificent building from the Weser Renaissance period. Nienburg’s main church, a three-nave hall church in the style of North German brick Gothic, was consecrated in 1441. The 72 m high church tower, a neo-Gothic building, is the town’s landmark and was built in 1896/97. Probably the oldest building in the town is the Stockturm. It is the remnant of the former moated castle of the Counts of Hoya. The tower was used as a prison; prisoners lay here “on the floor”.
Look forward to a quietly located pitch directly on the banks of the Weser with a view of the river and the historic old town of Nienburg. A footpath leads to the Weser pedestrian bridge, via which the center and the old town can be reached within a very short time.