Worker Rooms in Germany – All States and Cities | zimmmer.de
Germany is the industrial backbone of Europe – and one of the world's most active assembly landscapes. Whether wind turbines on the North Sea coast, automotive plants in the south, or energy infrastructure in the Ruhr: Anyone working here needs accommodation that functions logistically. On zimmmer.de you'll find worker rooms directly from landlords – no commission, no detours, at Germany's most important industrial locations.
The most important transport corridors
North–South corridor (A7) · Hamburg – Munich
Hamburg · Hanover · Kassel · Nuremberg · Augsburg · Munich
Western corridor (A2/A3) · Ruhr – Berlin
Dortmund · Bielefeld · Hanover · Brunswick · Berlin
Rhine corridor (A3/A61) · Cologne – Frankfurt – Mannheim
Cologne · Bonn · Frankfurt · Mainz · Mannheim · Ludwigshafen
Berlin – Capital construction site and infrastructure
Berlin is permanently under transformation. From the BER airport surroundings to central station expansion and new commercial zones in the east: assembly crews from across Europe work here long-term. Accommodation in outlying areas (Potsdam, surrounding districts) often offers better connections than the city centre.
North Rhine-Westphalia – Industry, energy and logistics
Germany's most populous state is also its most important industrial region. The Ruhr combines energy, steel and logistics in a compact area. Workers based in the Essen–Dortmund–Duisburg corridor save considerably on time and cost with accommodation just outside the city axis.
Dortmund · Essen · Düsseldorf · Cologne · Duisburg · Bochum · Wuppertal · Bielefeld · Bonn · Münster · Aachen · Krefeld · Mönchengladbach · Gelsenkirchen · Hagen · Hamm · Solingen · Leverkusen · Oberhausen
Bavaria – Automotive, aerospace and precision engineering
Bavaria is Germany's economically strongest state. Greater Munich concentrates BMW, MAN and numerous suppliers in one location. Augsburg and Ingolstadt (Audi) round out the picture. Accommodation in the surrounding areas often provides direct motorway access without city traffic.
Munich · Nuremberg · Augsburg · Ingolstadt
Baden-Württemberg – Mechanical engineering and automotive industry
The southwest is the heart of German mechanical engineering. Stuttgart with Daimler and Bosch, Mannheim as a chemical and logistics hub, Karlsruhe as a technology centre: Teams with contracts here plan in weeks, not days. Early bookings secure the best locations along the A8 and A5.
Stuttgart · Mannheim · Karlsruhe · Freiburg · Ludwigshafen
Hesse – Logistics hub and financial centre
Frankfurt is Germany's main junction – airport, motorway interchange, financial infrastructure. Around the Rhine-Main area, assembly demand concentrates in industrial parks, data centres and energy plants. Wiesbaden and Mainz add pharmaceutical and administrative locations.
Frankfurt · Wiesbaden · Kassel
Lower Saxony – Automotive industry and offshore wind
Lower Saxony is Volkswagen country – and at the same time a key departure point for offshore wind projects in the North Sea. Hanover as a trade fair and logistics city, Brunswick as a research location, and Osnabrück as a hub west of the A1 are the central contact points.
Hanover · Brunswick · Osnabrück · Oldenburg · Cloppenburg
Hamburg and Schleswig-Holstein – Port, logistics and wind energy
Hamburg's port is Germany's largest and Europe's second most important transshipment hub. Assembly contracts in shipyards, port facilities and the wind energy supply chain around Kiel and Lübeck are typically season-independent – advance planning pays off.
Bremen – Defence, aerospace and maritime
Big industry on a small footprint: Airbus, Daimler Trucks and the shipyards make Bremen a permanent assembly location. Proximity to Bremerhaven creates additional demand for port and offshore projects.
Saxony – Semiconductors, automotive and mechanical engineering
Dresden is "Silicon Saxony" – TSMC, Infineon and Bosch are building the chip factories of the future here. Leipzig has established itself as a logistics hub (DHL, Amazon, BMW). Chemnitz remains a centre of traditional mechanical engineering.
Saxony-Anhalt, Thuringia and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern
Magdeburg is emerging as an industrial location with Intel's chip plant and chemical industry. Erfurt sits centrally on the A4 and serves as a hub for central Germany. Rostock and Halle complete the network for assembly crews along the former eastern industrial corridor.
Magdeburg · Halle · Erfurt · Rostock
Rhineland-Palatinate and Saarland
Mainz and Ludwigshafen (BASF) on the Rhine, Saarbrücken as a border location with France: both regions offer long-term assembly assignments in chemicals, automotive and energy. Teams working cross-border benefit from the strong A6 motorway connection.
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