The building complex has been continuously extended over the years, with eventually eleven houses connected to each other, resulting in a rather confusing interior. At the beginning of the 19th century, Frankfurt historian remarked that the Frankfurt city hall had "stairs, yards, halls and rooms in a labyrinthian mixture". In 1424, the city bought the
Frauenrode house, in 1510 the
Viole house and in 1542 the
Schwarzenfels house, which were all architecturally connected to the main complex. Then, in 1596 the city council bought the
Wanebach house, which stood next to the
Goldener Schwan, as well as the building to the left of the
Haus Römer, the
Haus Löwenstein, and had both of them connected to the
Römer. These construction projects were very complicated, since the floor heights of
Löwenstein and
Römer were radically different. '' In 1843, the
Frauenstein house and the
Salzhaus for 32,000
Guilders were added. Finally, in 1878 the city bought the
Alt-Limpurg house to the right of the
Haus Römer. The current
neogothic front with a balcony was built from 1896 more imposing, but mayor
Franz Adickes decided against
Kaiser Wilhelm's suggestion and had the front designed in a more welcoming manner. At the same time, the houses
Frauenrode and
Viole were demolished to make way for streets through the city centre. They were replaced by a newly erected building to the east. This new building is divided into two wings by the
Braubachstrasse. These two wings (the north wing and south wing) are connected by a bridge. The Frankfurt citizens, who paid their taxes in the north wing, named the covered bridge the
Seufzerbrücke (the "Bridge of Sighs") in reference to the other
Bridge of Sighs in Venice. The two towers in the south wing attracted nicknames as well: the larger one was called
Langer Franz (Tall Franz) in homage to the city's tall mayor and the smaller one the
Kleiner Cohen (Small Cohen) after a popular song of the time. On the night of 22 March 1944, the
Römer, along with the rest of the centre of Frankfurt, was largely destroyed in one of the
heaviest Allied bombing attacks of the
Second World War. When the building was rebuilt after the war, the
Alt-Limpurg, the
Römer, and the
Löwenstein houses, whose roof structure had in part withstood the attack, were restored in a simplified form. The completely destroyed houses
Frauenstein and
Salzhaus were rebuilt in a simplified style. The
Löwenstein house has an open stairwell. The
Römer was re-inaugurated in 1955 by president
Theodor Heuss. In the following decades the façade was restored two additional times, in the years 1974 and 2005, and the houses on the
Römerberg regained the neogothic look of 1900. The interior has also been redesigned. In 1988 the renovated city council meeting hall was completed. ==Architecture==