Regular events The greatest
folk festival in Königstein is the yearly , or Castle Festival, at the Königstein Castle ruins. Moreover, early in the year, and in the summer, further events also take place there: ("Knights' Tournament"), ("Theatre at the Castle"), as well as various musical and film events. Since 2005 also a series of concerts called ("Middle Ages rock the castle"). As a new open-air highlight, from 2006, the ("Königstein Castle Festival Games") will be held, bringing to the stage a multi-faceted cultural programme in the unique atmosphere of the ruins: ambitious concerts and
operatic and musical productions with large casts under the open sky. As well, business in the outlying communities is shaped by many festivals and activities.
Clubs The ("Knights of Königstein") have committed themselves to the
Middle Ages and since 1998 have been staging a yearly Knights' Tournament with a mediaeval market at Königstein's picturesque castle ruins. The local young people who do this are supported in this endeavour by the club ("Town Watch"). Furthermore, each of Königstein's constituent communities has its own sport or
football club. The biggest in the whole town is , offering
volleyball,
judo,
gymnastics,
athletics, (a kind of dancing popular in Germany involving dancers in old, often 18th-century, military uniforms), and football, and having more than 800 members. The most successful football club is the (a fusion of and ), whose first team has been plying for many years in the top of the Regional Upper League (). Moreover, the club has at its disposal 21 youth teams. Also, the SG ( or "playing community") Schneidhain and FC Mammolshain play Football (soccer) in Königstein, both, however, at lower levels. From 5 to 16 June 2006, on the occasion of the
2006 FIFA World Cup, the
Brazil national team made its home at the
Kempinski Hotel in Falkenstein, a
five-star hotel originally built as an officers' retreat for
Kaiser Wilhelm. The team trained at the "Altkönigblick" sport ground, usual facility. The Königstein Fanfare Corps () won the in Rödemis in 2005 and the
Solothurner Marching Parade, in which the Königstein Fanfare Corps was the first foreign club to participate. Königstein also has, from singing clubs to a
mandolin club, a
karate and
tennis club, and a volunteer
fire brigade in every constituent community, more than 100 clubs.
Buildings on its hill as it can be seen from a
Scenic viewpoint at the foot of the
Altkönig mountain. Besides the town's landmark, the Königstein Castle ruins, other buildings are worth seeing, such as the historic Old Town with its Old Town Hall (Rathaus), and
Falkenstein Castle, and the Old Town also found there. Nearby there is a viewpoint called
Dettweiler-Tempel, named after
physician Peter Dettweiler, specialised in
pulmonology, who helped establishing Falkenstein as a
spa town. The viewpoint allows a look over parts of Falkenstein as well as of
Frankfurt and its
surrounding area. Located at the top of a small wooded hill there is the . Built in 1891 by Frankfurt Banker Albert Andreae de Neufville, it was transformed into a
boarding school (Schülerheim) in the post-war years (1957–1987). Thoroughly restored, it became famous as
Jürgen Schneider's headquarters from 1987 until his multi-billion-Deutsche-Mark
bankruptcy in 1994.
Architecturally important in its time was the ("Meeting House") built in 1955 for the headquarter of Catholic aid organisation
Aid to the Church in Need. The health spa, built in 1977, was controversial at the time because of its blue-orange colour scheme. Former
Grand Duke of Luxembourg Adolph von Nassau's stately home is known as the and houses now the court (Amtsgericht Königstein). The
Villa Rothschild, built in 1888 as a summer residence for
Wilhelm Carl von Rothschild, was used in 1948 and 1949 as a conference venue by the
Conference of Ministers-President to resolve disputed questions between the allied military governors and the
Parlamentarischer Rat. Today it is used as a Hotel. At the foot of the ("Castle Mountain"), surrounded by a park through which flows the Woogbach and adjoining which is the Woogbach Valley is found Saint Angela's
Ursuline Convent (), founded in 1884, and owning a like-named state-recognized
private school. Königstein is likewise well known for its idyllic Old Town. Its exclusive residential areas (also in Falkenstein) are mainly marked by
Art Nouveau and its -influenced offshoots as well as 1960s Chic (
bungalows). Lot sizes, however, are not comparable to those in other towns owing to new town planning and the building plans following therefrom.
Museums The Castle and Town Museum () is found at the historic Old Town Hall () == Education ==