and
Neustadt. The western Wallring starts at the Elbe near
Stintfang and runs along the inside of the Wallanlagen parks. At Lombard Bridge, the ring road crosses the
Alster River. The eastern Wallring continues on the inside of the
railway tracks, before terminating at the Elbe's shore at Oberhafen. The Wallring consists of the western and eastern Wallring, separated from each other by Lombard Bridge. The park continues along the bridge's feeders, while the bridge also marks the border between Neustadt and Altstadt.
Western Wallring at Gorch-Fock-Wall Geographically, the Wallring starts at
Stintfang on the Elbe shore. Traffic-wise, the Wallring starts at Millerntordamm, off Millerntorplatz. ;Holstenwall Holstenwall, the Wallring's first section, runs up to Johannes-Brahms-Platz, named after Hamburg-born composer
Johannes Brahms, and location of the
Laeiszhalle. Holstenwall is flanked by Große Wallanlagen. ;Gorch-Fock-Wall After passing Johannes-Brahms-Platz, the ring continues as Gorch-Fock-Wall, named after Hamburg-born poet
Gorch Fock. It runs up to
Stephansplatz, an important junction with Dammtorstraße. It is flanked by the Kleine Wallanlagen and the
Old Botanical Garden (
Alter Botanischer Garten).
Esplanade s at Esplanade The Esplanade () is only long, yet at rather wide. It runs from Stephansplatz to the north-western corner of Binnenalster and was developed between 1827 and 1830 according to plans by
Carl Ludwig Wimmel (1786–1845). The neoclassical facades were inspired by London's
Portland Place, the avenue's four lines of linden trees were modeled after Berlin's
Unter den Linden. The shopping street of
Colonnaden, leading to
Jungfernstieg boulevard, ends here.
Lombardsbrücke from Lombardsbrücke Lombardsbrücke (
Lombard Bridge) is the name of the bridge crossing the
Alster River at the location of the former Alster
glacis, and also the name of the two feeders, built on the former glacis. The feeders are landscaped parks, transitioning between the two Alster lakes. The current Renaissance Revival bridge was designed by (1809–1868) as a three-bay
stone arch bridge and completed between 1864 and 1868. A first bridge at this location dated from the mid 17th century. On the bridge, the view opens up wide onto the
Binnenalster, historically the Hanseatic city's "
state parlour".
Eastern Wallring The eastern Wallring is part of Hamburg's "Museum Mile" (
Museumsmeile), being home to some of the city's largest art museums. Despite this concentration of art, its outer perimeter is lacking the ring road's overriding underlying concept of a unified spatial perception and subject to redevelopment. Since the 1960s, most of the traffic on the eastern Wallring is diverted through the Wallringtunnel. ;Glockengießerwall '' at Glockengießerwall The outer perimeter of Glockengießerwall is home of the Renaissance Revival
Kunsthalle, completed in 1869, and the Postmodern
Galerie der Gegenwart, completed in 1997. ;Steintorwall At Steintorwall, the Walling passes Hamburg Hauptbahnhof on the outer perimeter and shopping streets
Spitalerstraße and
Mönckebergstraße on the inner perimeter. ;Klosterwall Klosterwall is the Wallring's last section before terminating at Zollkanal. Klosterwall passes Georgsplatz and Deichtorplatz. == Landmarks ==