Germany – Stuttgart Street Scene – Travel – Jim Rogers World Adventure

Germany – Stuttgart Street Scene – Travel – Jim Rogers World Adventure

Leading economic expert Jim Rogers traveled to 150 countries over 150,000 miles in three years – follow his adventures here on FentonReport.

In this video Jim and Paige checks out the Street Scene in Stuttgart, Germany.

Copyright Jim Rogers – provided as a special contribution to The Fenton Report. http://www.fentonreport.com

Stuttgart is the capital of the state of Baden-Württemberg in southern Germany. The sixth-largest city in Germany, Stuttgart has a population of 590,429 (February 2008) while the metropolitan area referred to as Stuttgart Region has a population of 2.7 million (2007).

The city lies at the centre of a heavily populated area, circled by a ring of smaller towns. The inner urban area has a population of 2.7 million making ‘greater Stuttgart’ the fifth biggest city region in Germany after the Ruhr Area, Berlin, Hamburg and Frankfurt.

Stuttgart is spread across a variety of hills, valleys and parks – unusual for German cities and often a cause of surprise to visitors who primarily associate the city with its industrial reputation as the “Cradle of the automobile”.

Stuttgart has the status of Stadtkreis, a type of self-administrating urban county. It is also the seat of the regional parliament, local council and the Protestant State Church of Württemberg as well as one of the two co-seats of the bishop of the Roman Catholic diocese of Rottenburg-Stuttgart.

The city’s motto is “Stuttgart is more” (to tourists; to business it describes itself as “Standort Zukunft”, translated by town hall marketing as “Where business meets the future”). In 2007 the Bürgermeister marketed Stuttgart to foreign investors as “The creative power of Germany”. Under current plans to improve transport links to the international infrastructure (as part of the Stuttgart 21 project), in March 2008 the city unveiled a new logo and slogan, describing itself as “Das neue Herz Europas” (“The new heart of Europe”).

Stuttgart is nicknamed the Schwabenmetropole (Swabian metropolis), a reference to the Swabian dialect spoken by the locals.

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