Theater, stages, and ensembles The city of Cottbus has a wide variety of theaters, stages, and ensembles. The most famous is probably the State Theater Cottbus, built to designs by the architect Bernhard Sehring. It is the only state theater in Brandenburg and presents drama, musical theater, and ballet. In addition, the Cottbus City Hall can accommodate around 2,000 people. This venue regularly hosts international ensembles such as the Chinese National Circus, the Russian State Ballet, as well as stars from pop, folk, and
schlager music, including
Harry Belafonte,
Rosenstolz, and
Gitte Hænning. The small private theater TheaterNative C, founded in 1989, has become a major presence in the Cottbus arts scene. It offers plays, cabaret, boulevard theater, as well as children's theater and experimental productions. Since 1991, the piccolo Theater has been a theater for children and young people. The audience of the Puppenbühne Regenbogen puppet stage consists mainly of children between the ages of four and ten, for whom the visit is often their first theater experience, leaving lasting impressions. Musically, the city is home to the Philharmonic Orchestra Cottbus, the Singakademie Cottbus, the Cottbus Children's Musical, and, among ensembles, the children's and youth ensemble Pfiffikus, the student theater Bühne 8, as well as the Theater an der Wendeschleife in the Gladhouse.
Cinemas With the Filmtheater Weltspiegel, Cottbus has the second-oldest purpose-built cinema in Germany after the Burg Theater in Burg (near Magdeburg). It was built in the Art Nouveau style. The "Obenkino" in the Gladhouse and the "KinOh Stadthalle" are other small cinemas in the city center. In addition, there is a UCI Kinowelt in the district of Groß Gaglow, near the Lausitz Park shopping center. Every autumn since 1991, the Cottbus Film Festival has been held, focusing on Eastern European cinema. The festival center is located in Cottbus City Hall. Other venues include the State Theater, the Chamber Stage, the Filmtheater Weltspiegel, the Obenkino, and the Zelig.
Museums and galleries The
Wendish Museum (
Serbski muzej) offers insights into the culture and history of the Wends of Lower Lusatia. Numerous exhibits on traditional costumes, literature, art, music, customs, and ways of life document the unique culture of this Slavic population. The Cottbus City Museum and City Archive serve as the historical memory of the city, acting as contact points for history enthusiasts, local researchers, and historians. Both institutions are dedicated to the history of the city. Special exhibitions in the town hall and other municipal facilities also present interesting individual topics. The Brandenburg Pharmacy Museum on Altmarkt is the only pharmacy museum in the state of Brandenburg. It displays complete pharmacy interiors from around 1830 and the first half of the 20th century. The Dieselkraftwerk Art Museum houses works of painting, sculpture, graphics, photography, and posters, focusing mainly on the thematic complex of landscape, space, nature, and the environment. The Galerie Haus 23, Galerie Fango, and Galerie auf Zeit offer sculptors, painters, photographers, and filmmakers from Cottbus and the region the opportunity to exhibit their works. Opened in 1994 on the site of the former Cottbus-Nord airfield, the Airfield Museum showcases the history of Cottbus airfields and aviation in
Lusatia. Other museums include the Water Museum in the Cottbus Waterworks and the technical monuments Spreewehrmühle and Parkschmiede Cottbus-Branitz. The Fürst-Pückler Museum Park and
Branitz Palace Foundation introduces visitors to the history of the park and its creator, Prince
Hermann von Pückler-Muskau, both in the palace itself and in a multimedia exhibition in the manor house.
Planetarium The Cottbus
Raumflugplanetarium "Juri Gagarin", located in the Sachsendorf district, was opened on 26 April 1974 at what is now Lindenplatz. Until the end of 2012, it still operated with the original "Spacemaster – Raumflugplanetarium" star projector from
Carl Zeiss Jena. Its dome, with a diameter of 12.5 meters, offers space for 91 visitors. Since 19 June 2013, the planetarium has been equipped with a modern hybrid projection system of the type
Chronos II – InSpace, allowing for a combination of optical-mechanical and digital projections. Today, the planetarium serves both as an educational institution and as a cultural venue, offering astronomy shows, lectures, and special programs for school groups. Equipped with advanced projection and sound technology, it presents not only astronomical topics but also music and multimedia events under its dome, making it a popular destination for both children and adults interested in science and space exploration.
Buildings Individual buildings The State Theatre on Schillerplatz was built in Art Nouveau style in 1907/1908 by
Bernhard Sehring and inaugurated on 1 October 1908. During World War II, it was used as a munitions depot. In 1966, the theatre was placed under monument protection and underwent extensive restoration between 1981 and 1986. Between 1934 and 1936, the New Town Hall was built on Neumarkt. Previously, the site had included, among other things, the birthplace of
Carl Blechen, commemorated by a plaque. The columned colonnades on Berliner Strasse feature reliefs of traditional Cottbus craftsmanship. During World War II, the building burned down after a bombing raid. In 1966 and 1967, the Town Hall was expanded by two additional floors due to space requirements. Diagonally opposite the Town Hall, the Cottbus Stadthalle was built on 3 October 1975. In the 10th century, the
Wends built a
Slavic fortification on the sand island on the west bank of the Spree — the largest Slavic castle of Lower Lusatia and now known as Schlossberg. The Castle Tower is the oldest surviving building in Cottbus. On the site of the burned-down castle, the Regional Court was built between 1874 and 1878, during which the tower received a crenellated crown and a neo-Gothic spire. The Cottbus District Court building was erected between 1905 and 1907. On the opposite side of the street, along the Spree's mill canal, the Electricity Works was built from 1901 to 1903 in neo-Gothic style, powered by two water turbines, steam engines, and boilers to supply the city's tramway. The nearby Wilhelmsmühle was a fulling mill that ceased operation in 1941. File:Schlossturm (Cottbus)-01.jpg|Castle Tower File:Cottbus, Schlossberg.jpg|Regional Court File:Cottbus 07-2017 img28 Amtsgericht.jpg|District Court File:Cottbus Altes Elektrizitaetswerk 22.jpg|Old power station The Diesel Power Plant Cottbus was designed by architect Werner Issel and began operation on 1 April 1928. It comprised a machine house, a converter house and a switch house for a 1,500 hp diesel generator that was switched on during peak demand in the Cottbus power grid. The clinker bricks used in the façade came from the Ilse Bergbau AG works in Großräschen. The expressionistic triad of fire-red (window frames), dove-blue (steel doors) and turquoise (tile panels in Ullersdorf split quarters) is striking. The deliberate use of colours as structuring architectural elements is typical of the 1920s. Power plant operations ended in 1959. In 2008, after a long period of vacancy and extensive renovation by the city of Cottbus at the initiative of the Friends' Association, the building was reopened as the Brandenburg State Museum of Modern Art. The house-in-a-house construction for the exhibition rooms in the former machine hall made it possible to preserve the interior façade with the original clinker bricks. In the switch house there is a café and the administration offices. Here, too, furnishings recall the former use. In the
Weimar Republic, the housing shortage was addressed with state programmes. In addition to affordable housing, a more powerful fire brigade was needed. The construction of the new fire station met these requirements in the simple, functional style of modernism. Its inauguration in 1930 was celebrated during the 31st Brandenburg Association Day. The building complex is dominated by the striking tower with two clocks, which forms a counterpoint to the tower of the Upper Church at the other end of the street. In its structure, the main fire station follows the ideals of New Building: cubic forms determine the height and depth gradation, and the windows and doors are arranged in bands. The complex includes the adjoining residential building on the right with flats for the firefighters. As the requirements for the fire brigade increased after the Second World War, vehicle storage spaces and accommodation rooms were added to the left main building in 1967/68. After 1990, a flat in the neighbouring residential building was used to house a control centre. Since the new fire brigade control centre on Dresdener Straße was inaugurated in 1999, the historic fire station has been home to the professional fire brigade, the emergency services and, since 2000, the Sandow Volunteer Fire Brigade. Since February 2005, the architecturally exceptional Information, Communication and Media Centre and the Panta Rhei Hall of the
Brandenburg University of Technology campus have been among the nationally recognised sights of Cottbus. The building, designed by
Herzog & de Meuron, was awarded the German Architecture Prize in 2007, among others.
Branitz Castle in Branitz Park was built between 1770 and 1772 in the late Baroque style. After Prince Hermann von Pückler-Muskau moved the family's main residence to Branitz in 1845, the castle was remodelled and extended by the construction managers of the Berlin
Building Academy. In addition, Pückler had a landscape park created. In 1934, the castle park was incorporated into the city of Cottbus from the municipality of Branitz. The buildings in the park include, in addition to the castle, the stables and the cavalier's house, the park smithy and the former inspector's residence, which today houses the visitor centre.
City fortifications File:CB-SprembergerTurm-4.jpg|Spremberg Tower with bastion (circa 1875) File:Cottbus, Stadtmauer.jpg|Linden Gate File:Töpferstraße Cottbus.jpg|City wall in Töpferstraße File:Münzturm, Stadtmauer.jpg|Mint Tower The old town is surrounded by a defensive wall about 1,200 meters long. The 31-meter-high Spremberger Tower was built in the 13th century as part of the fortifications and, together with the bastion and gatehouse, formed the southern city gate. It received its crenellated crown between 1823 and 1825. The bastion was demolished in 1878. The Mint Tower is the oldest tower in the city. The "Lords of Cottbus" are believed to have minted the Cottbus heller here as early as 1483, bearing the city's heraldic animal, the crayfish. Towers, gates, and wall houses along the medieval city wall reveal the layout of the old town. The Linden Gate was created to provide faster access from the old town to the market in the new town. For this purpose, in 1879, the wall tower in Mauerstraße was breached.
Building ensembles The Altmarkt (German for 'Old Market';
Lower Sorbian:
Stare wiki) was probably laid out as early as the 13th century and was once an important trading place. The original timber-framed buildings were destroyed in the city fire of 1671; towards the end of the 18th and early 19th centuries, bourgeois houses in the Baroque style were built around the market. The old town hall on the market was destroyed in the Second World War and demolished without replacement in 1948. Southwest of the Altmarkt lies the newly designed, pedestrian-only Spremberger Straße (
Lower Sorbian:
Grodkojska droga), 300 meters long, characterized by residential and commercial buildings from the 19th century as well as from the 1950s. At Schlosskirchplatz, in the middle of Spremberger Straße, four architectural eras come together. The house at the eastern end of the square was the residence of the mayor, the pastor, and the French judge. In the south stands a work by architect
Erich Mendelsohn in the style of
New Objectivity. At the Mühlengraben are the oldest preserved buildings in Cottbus, the bark-tanning and white-tanning houses. These illustrate the three developmental stages of the tanning trade. The small house from 1727 served as both workshop and dwelling. The middle house, built around 1760, was already a pure wall house. Around 1860, the brick building was erected. The
Wendish Quarter was built between 1984 and 1989 on historic urban land between Berliner Platz and Oberkirchplatz, mostly in prefabricated concrete slab construction with old-town-style facades. Artistic works came from Sorbian and German artists.
Religious buildings The main church in Cottbus is the Protestant Upper Church (
Lower Sorbian:
Wuša cerkwja) of St. Nicholas, a late Gothic three-aisled brick building from the 14th century. It is the largest church in Lower Lusatia and was formerly the place of worship for the Germans and the upper urban bourgeoisie. Inside, the star vaults and the high altar built in 1664 with magnificent
alabaster carvings are worth seeing. The nave and chapel annexes contain several important tomb monuments from the 16th and 17th centuries. The 55-meter-high church tower offers a good view over Cottbus. The Protestant Monastery Church is also called the "Wendish Church" (
Lower Sorbian:
Serbska cerkwja) because it was formerly responsible for the Wendish rural population and the serving class. It is the remaining part of the former Franciscan monastery from the 13th and 14th centuries. The oldest church in Cottbus contains, with the tomb slab of the city's founder showing the still-valid heraldic animal, an important testimony to the city's history. The former Protestant Castle Church was built in 1419 as St. Catherine's Church and was later destroyed several times by fire. On its foundations, after the arrival of the Huguenots in 1714, the present church was erected as a single-nave plastered building with a hipped roof and sacristy. In 1870, it received the neo-Gothic tower. On September 18, 2014, the church was handed over to the Jewish community for conversion into a synagogue. The
Lutherkirche ('Luther Church') in the Spremberger suburb was built between 1911 and 1912 under the direction of Robert Leibnitz in simple Art Nouveau forms as a free-standing hall church with a side tower. The
Kreuzkirche of the
Independent Evangelical-Lutheran Church was built in 1878/79 as a towerless neo-Gothic brick building for the Evangelical-Lutheran (Old Lutheran) Church. Another Protestant church is St. Martin's Church in the district of Madlow. The first Catholic church after the Reformation was the
Christuskirche (Christ Church), erected in 1850 as a neo-Gothic brick building. Between 1934 and 1935, near the old town, the provost and parish church of St. Mary Queen of Peace was built as a twin-towered clinker brick building. In the district of Sachsendorf, the Catholic Edith-Stein Church was built in 1989.
Memorials File:Denkmal gegen Kapp Putsch Cottbus.jpg|Memorial plaque commemorating the resistance against the Kapp Putsch at the Spremberg Tower File:206 Ehrenhain 021211.jpg|Memorial to the victims of the anti-fascist resistance struggle on Pushkin Promenade File:Stolpersteine Cottbus 2013.jpg|Stolpersteine at Lessingstraße 4 • Commemorative plaque to the resistance against the
Kapp Putsch at the Spremberger Tower. • Commemorative plaque at the site of the old Jewish cemetery in Straße der Jugend No. 54, destroyed by the
National Socialists, bearing the symbol of the Star of David. • Memorial stone for persecuted and murdered Jewish citizens of Cottbus at the mourning hall of the new Jewish cemetery in Dresdener Straße, extension of Straße der Jugend. • A total of 77 "
stumbling stones" embedded in pavements for former Jewish fellow citizens. • Memorial and grove of honor for the victims of National Socialism in the southern cemetery. • Monument with sculpture at the Soviet grove of honor in the southern cemetery for 400 fallen soldiers of the spring offensive of 1945. • Soviet grove of honor in the Ströbitz cemetery for dead prisoners of war and forced laborers. • Memorial to the victims of the anti-fascist resistance struggle at Pushkin Promenade (
Lower Sorbian:
Puškinowa promenada). • Cottbus Prison Memorial on the site of the former penitentiary.
Architectural trail Architecturally or historically valuable buildings in the city are marked with the Cottbus Architectural Trail. Signage on buildings points this out and shows the history of the buildings. The trail is divided according to periods of origin, and at each location there are signposts showing which buildings can be found nearby.
Natural monuments Saretz Oak in the district of Saspow with a circumference at breast height of 7.50 meters (2016)
Parks and green spaces Branitz Park Branitz Park is the most important and well-known park in Cottbus. Branitz came into the possession of the Counts of Pückler in 1696. In 1845, Hermann von Pückler-Muskau began the construction of the new park. The landscape park he created, which was completed by his successor, is a work of garden art of international significance. The renowned writer and world traveler Prince Pückler was, alongside
Peter Joseph Lenné and
Friedrich Ludwig Sckell, one of the most famous German landscape designers of the 19th century. Branitz Park was laid out as a zoned landscape park with stylistically differentiated areas. At the center of the complex is the castle, built between 1770 and 1772. The castle is surrounded by the
pleasure ground, richly decorated with flower beds, sculptures, other decorative elements, and ornamental shrubs. Here Pückler also used exotic trees, while in the other areas of the park he planted only native species. The adjoining "inner park", with an area of about 100 hectares, includes the estate's farm buildings, the nursery, the park forge, the Cottbus and Branitz gatehouses, as well as the pyramid area. Prince Pückler also designed the surrounding farmland, the "outer park", as an ornamental farm on a total area of about 600 hectares. For the design of the park, Prince Pückler used the high groundwater level and the nearby Spree River to create an artificial water system in his park. Using the excavated material from the lakes and canals, he had the perfectly shaped terrain relief of the park created. The reed lake section is particularly beautifully designed. The pyramid area impresses with its two unique earth pyramids: the land pyramid, formerly built in stepped form (constructed 1860–1863), and the lake pyramid, the tumulus (constructed 1856). Prince Pückler was buried in the
tumulus in 1871. In 1884, his wife and life companion, Lucie von Pückler-Muskau, who had died in 1854, was also reburied there. Through masterful grouping of trees, artistically successful shaping of the relief, and skillful routing of paths, the prince created with Branitz Park a kind of picture gallery in which the walker encounters a sequence of three-dimensional landscape images.
Goethe Park and Carl Blechen Park In 1898, on the damp lowlands of Mühleninsel, the first Cottbus park, Goethe Park, was created through the initiative of Mayor Paul Werner and the Beautification Society. The pond within the park was created as early as 1600 for fish farming. From 1914 to 1935, further development of the once swampy area took place. The design of the banks with perennial plantings along the streams near the diesel power plant was carried out in 1954 for the exhibition Green and Blooming on the Spree. Carl Blechen Park, with rare trees and flowering perennials on the east bank of the Spree, was created in the 1930s. Its promenade, built in 1934 and 1935, was extended southwards as the "Rosenufer", today's
Ludwig-Leichhardt-Allee.
Elias Park and Spreeauen Park Elias Park was created in 1902 through a donation from the commercial councilor Elias. This three-and-a-half-hectare park was redesigned as part of the first Federal Garden Show in the new states in 1995. The much larger Spreeauen Park, covering 55 hectares, was only created in the run-up to the Federal Garden Show 1995. Amid meadows and under shady trees, new paths, play and sports facilities, a water playground, and the playhouse as a meeting place for children and young people were built. Since the BUGA, the Spreeauen Park has delighted millions of visitors. Around the 1.2-hectare park pond, there is a rose garden, a rhododendron grove, meadow landscapes with changing plantings, and an apothecary and farm garden. For connoisseurs, the Tertiary Forest, with plants and trees from various geological epochs, boulders from the Ice Age, and a fossilized mammoth tree stump, is a special attraction.
Zoo Opened in 1954,
Cottbus Zoo today borders Spreeauen Park and Branitz Park. With more than 1,200 animals in over 170 species from all continents, it is the largest zoological garden in Brandenburg, known in particular for breeding waterfowl. With support from the city of Cottbus, various companies, and the Zoo Friends Association (founded in 1994), the zoo is constantly being modernized and expanded. In summer 2014, construction was completed on a new predator enclosure, intended as the home for
Sumatran tigers.
Sport Clubs By far the best-known club in the city is
Energie Cottbus (football). The FCE, active in the
3rd division from the
2024/25 season, achieved promotion to the
Bundesliga in the
1999/2000 season and managed to stay up twice, but was relegated to the
2nd Bundesliga in the
2002/03 season. In the 2005/06 season, the club was again promoted to the Bundesliga, from which it was relegated again in the
2008/09 season. The
LEAG Energie Stadium (until the end of 2023 Stadium of Friendship; German:
Stadion der Freundschaft) currently has a capacity of 22,528 spectators. It offers 10,949 covered seats, 7,795 covered and 3,630 uncovered standing places, as well as 154 places in the wheelchair-accessible section. After the Cottbus team had in the meantime been relegated to the fourth-tier
Regionalliga Nordost, promotion to the 3rd division in 2024 marked their return to professional football. Other larger clubs include HSV Cottbus (volleyball, karate – Brandenburg state performance center, judo, health sports, strength sports, lacrosse), which emerged from a new foundation in 2004 from the former USV university sports club, the handball club LHC Cottbus, which played in the
2nd Handball Bundesliga in the 2007/2008 season, the White Devils (basketball), the Cottbus Crayfish (American football), the
Crabettes (cheerleading), as well as the 1st women's team of SV Energie Cottbus (volleyball), which played in the
2nd Bundesliga North in the 2023/24 season. The cycling club RSC Cottbus has produced numerous world champions and Olympic champions. In total, there are more than 145 sports clubs in Cottbus, offering around 70 different sports. The four umbrella organizations in the city are
PSV Cottbus 90 e. V.,
SCC Breitensport e. V.,
Stadtsportbund Cottbus e. V., and
Versehrtensportgemeinschaft Cottbus e. V. On the Walk of Fame in front of the New Town Hall, the medal winners of the Olympic and Paralympic Games are honored. After the Games in Paris, there are now 76 honorary plaques embedded in the ground there.
Sports facilities Cottbus is an Olympic training center for the sports of cycling, gymnastics, men's football, athletics, men's handball, and women's volleyball. For active recreational sports, there are 50 sports halls, 49 sports fields and stadiums, 20 tennis courts, 70 bowling lanes, five shooting ranges, four bathing lakes, an equestrian facility, a swimming hall with an outdoor pool, and a boathouse available to all interested parties. Since 2013, a Paralympic training center for athletics with disabled-accessible training facilities has also been established. The sports center, managed by the city's sports facilities department, is one of the largest and most modern sports complexes in the South Brandenburg region. It is used for children's and youth sports, junior and elite sports, as well as recreational and disabled sports. The complex includes the Max-Reimann Stadium, an athletics stadium that meets all international requirements, and the Cottbus Velodrome, with its covered cycle track, where national and international competitions have been held to great acclaim, for example, the Track Cycling World Cup in 1995 and 1996. In addition, there is an athletics hall, two gymnasiums, two football pitches, and a boxing hall on the site. The Lausitz Arena is also part of the complex, a multi-purpose sports hall for around 2,000 spectators.
One-time sporting events • 2010:
DFB Futsal Cup, final city in the Mission Olympic city competition • 2011: 7th World Championship in Firefighting Sports • 2013: 64th National Cycling Meeting, Women's Football World Cup Qualifying Match (Germany – Russia)
Regular sporting events Start and finish of the Lausitz City Run 2006 At the "Tournament of Masters" – the highest-quality sporting event in the state of Brandenburg – around 200 gymnasts from about 40 nations compete annually in artistic gymnastics for the coveted titles at the FIG World Cup. In summer, from 1991 to 2011, the Cottbus Sports Center hosted the International Lausitz Athletics Meeting, at which new records in athletics disciplines were regularly set. The men's meeting record in the 100-meter run is 10.00 seconds, for women it is 11.14 seconds. Since 2003, the International Springer Meeting has been held annually at the end of January, featuring the women's high jump (meeting record 2.01 m) and men's pole vault (meeting record 5.90 m). Other athletics events in Cottbus include the Lausitz City Run (2017 AOK City Run@Bike) and the Spreewald Marathon. Since 1999, the 24-hour swimming event has been a permanent fixture in the city's sports calendar. It is traditionally held in November by the
German Life Saving Association Cottbus. With 2,143 participants in 2019, it is one of the largest mass sports events in water sports nationwide. During the 2018 event, a total of almost 5,500 kilometers were swum. With the dragon boat regatta on the Spree, the DAK Company Run, the Beach Volleyball Cup at BTU, and the spring cycling event, other popular sports events have also been established in Cottbus.
Regular events Fairs and exhibitions The fairs and exhibitions take place at Messe Cottbus, with multifunctional exhibition areas of 6,500 m2. The exhibition center is conveniently located on the city ring road and in the immediate vicinity of the Spreeauenpark. Every year in January, the "Cottbus Travel Market" takes place. This fair offers products and services related to vacations, tourism, leisure, caravans, camping, and boats. With up to 250 exhibitors and 15,000 visitors, this exhibition is among the largest in Cottbus. Parallel to it, the "Fit+Healthy" exhibition is held every year, dedicated to topics related to wellness, spa treatments, and health. At the end of January, the exhibition center annually hosts a craft exhibition. This is the only exhibition dedicated to crafts in southern Brandenburg. The "Impuls" fair, held every year in February, deals with education, further training, business start-ups, business security, and employment. In March, the "Cars & Bikes" exhibition takes place in the exhibition halls. This is the largest automobile and two-wheeler exhibition in the state of Brandenburg. With 27,000 visitors in 2005, this exhibition was the most visited since the
Federal Garden Show in 1995. At the Tattoo Convention, international artists showcase their skills. The "CottbusBau" exhibition is also held regularly in March; it is the largest construction trade fair in the state of Brandenburg. In October, Cottbus hosts the Autumn Fair. With more than 330 exhibitors, this is the most visited consumer exhibition in the state of Brandenburg. Other events at the exhibition center include the Vital & Co. exhibition and the Erotic Fair.
Major events and carnival The major events held annually include, among others, the student satire festival Ei(n)fälle (January), the Old Town Night (April), the Cottbus Environmental Week (May/June), the Night of Open Churches (Pentecost), the City Festival (June), the Spreeauen Night (August), the Day of Associations (August/September), the Pottery Festival (September), the Lusatian Farmers' Market (September/October), the Night of Creative Minds (October), the FilmFestival Cottbus – Festival of Eastern European Film (November), as well as the Christmas Market (December). Every Tulip Sunday (February/March), the
Zug der fröhlichen Leute (Parade of Cheerful People) — the largest carnival parade in eastern Germany — takes place. Numerous themed floats, bands, and dance groups from carnival clubs in Cottbus and the surrounding area attract around 100,000 visitors each year. The annual carnival gala
Heut steppt der Adler (Today the Eagle Dances) recorded by Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg, also takes place in the city hall.
Education and research General education schools In the 2013/2014 school year, the city had twelve primary schools, two secondary schools, two comprehensive schools, five grammar schools, three special needs schools, and one upper secondary center, all under municipal sponsorship, attended by 9,835 students. In addition, there are other private schools, including a
Waldorf school and the Evangelical Gymnasium. Furthermore, the Pückler Gymnasium and the Upper Secondary Center II Spree-Neiße are two additional public schools in the urban area, under the sponsorship of the Spree-Neiße district.
Brandenburg University of Technology Cottbus–Senftenberg In Cottbus, following the merger of the Brandenburg University of Technology Cottbus and the Lausitz University of Applied Sciences on 1 July 2013, the Brandenburg University of Technology Cottbus–Senftenberg (BTU) was established as a public university. Birger Hendriks, a higher education expert, was appointed as the commissioner for the founding. One problem is the overall decline in student numbers, which is not compensated by more international students. In 2020, Gesine Grande was elected by the senate as the new president of BTU Cottbus–Senftenberg. In the coalition agreement of the "traffic light" coalition in 2021, the establishment of a medical faculty in Cottbus was stipulated as compensation for the phase-out of coal mining.
Other educational institutions For teacher training, the Kingdom of Prussia founded a preparatory institution with a teacher training seminar in 1907. The city constructed a school building and director's villas based on designs by Arno Pasig. On 25 June 1910, the teacher training seminar was inaugurated, operating until 1925. After renovations, a Pedagogical Academy opened in 1930, renamed the College for Teacher Education in 1933, and downgraded to a Teacher Training Institute in 1941. After the war-damaged school building was restored, the Pedagogical Institute, a training facility for new teachers in the GDR, was located there for a few years. As the center of the bilingual region in Lower Lusatia, Cottbus was also to receive a Sorbian secondary school, which opened on 1 September 1952, with 46 students in the building. In 1960, this became the Sorbian
Extended Secondary School, and after 1990, it finally became the
Lower Sorbian Gymnasium. In addition, there is a technical school for business, an adult education center, and the School for Lower Sorbian Language and Culture. A medical school at the Carl-Thiem Clinic, which was initially a teaching hospital of the
Berlin Charité, also existed and became part of the newly established Medical University of Lusatia in 2024.
Libraries Public libraries in the city include the City and Regional Library on Berliner Straße (
Lower Sorbian:
Barlinska droga), with a media collection of over 250,000 items as of June 2005, and the Sandow Library Association with around 7,500 items. In addition, the BTU maintains its own university libraries through the Information, Communication, and Media Center (IKMZ) with over 890,000 media items, around 80,000 items at the Sachsendorf campus, and approximately 100,000 items at the Senftenberg campus. There are also other specialized and government libraries, such as those of the Carl-Thiem Clinic, the State Office for Occupational Safety, and the Finance Court of Berlin-Brandenburg. Other notable libraries include the Pückler Library at Branitz Castle, a reference-only library focusing on literature by and about Pückler, garden and travel literature, art and cultural history of the 19th and 20th centuries, German history of the 19th century, and regional history, as well as the Lower Sorbian Library, with collections focusing on the history, language, art, and culture of the Sorbs. ==Economy and transportation==