Buildings The following are listed buildings or sites in
Rhineland-Palatinate’s Directory of Cultural Monuments: • Village core (monumental zone) – oval of the village centre enclosed from about 1349 by the former town fortifications (Upper Gate [
Obertor], town wall remnants near Bahnhofstraße, former moat in the west) with many buildings, especially from the 16th and 17th centuries, but also the 18th and 19th, among them
timber-frame buildings •
Protestant parish
church, Hintergasse 9 –
Baroque hewn-stone building, marked 1738 • Bahnhofstraße – warriors’ memorial 1870-1871,
obelisk, last fourth of the 19th century • Bahnhofstraße 6 – Late
Gründerzeit estate complex, marked 1901 • Bahnhofstraße 11 – former
railway station; two-and-a-half-floor
Historicist sandstone-block building, marked 1895, goods shed,
signal box 1891 • Gigertsgasse 1 – former
Schloss of the
Dukes of Palatinate-Zweibrücken;
Renaissance quarrystone building with
staircase tower, 1567;
spire light with
loggia possibly from the 1920s • Gigertsgasse 7 – Renaissance building, about 1600, altered in the 19th century • Hauptstraße 6 – Renaissance building, about 1600 • Hauptstraße 17 – town hall;
Late Gothic building with half-hip roof, quarrystone, 1540/1541, destroyed in 1689, reconstructed in 1768, 1774, 1776;
ridge turret with bell, 1370 • At Hauptstraße 28 – hearth heating plate, Baroque, 18th century • At Hauptstraße 30 – building inscription, marked 1801 • Hauptstraße 34 – Renaissance quarrystone building, partly timber-frame, marked 1564 • Hauptstraße 42/43 –
Obertor (“Upper Gate”), building with hip roof, quarrystone and timber-frame, after 1349, today's appearance Late Baroque, marked 1763, 1924 and 1977/84; Wappenstein • Hauptstraße 44 – timber-frame house, partly solid, marked 1821, essentially older (timber framing 18th century, Renaissance windows about 1600) • At Hauptstraße 51 – front-door
keystone, marked 1754 • Hintergasse (no number) – former
school;
Late Classicist building with half-hip roof, possibly from about 1830, extra floor built in later 19th century • Hintergasse 11/12 – former teacher's dwelling; small-block building, third fourth of the 19th century, barn • Hintergasse 29 – Baroque timber-frame house, marked 1710 • Hinterruthen 1 – Late Historicist villa with hip roof, marked 1904 • Lettweiler Straße, graveyard – A. Schmidt tomb, Late Classicist grave column, about 1877; F. Welsch tomb,
Gothic Revival stele, Gründerzeit gravestones, about 1885 • Ransengasse 2/3 – estate complex, 18th and 19th centuries; timber-frame house, essentially possibly Baroque, 18th century • Ransengasse 12 – Renaissance house, about 1600 • Raumgarten 2 – Late Baroque building with half-hip roof,
Rococo portal, marked 1793 • Raumgarten 3 – house with single roof ridge, partly timber-frame, 18th century • Rehborner Straße 1 – former
tannery; Late Classicist house, marked 1853; side building, tanning house possibly from about 1800 • Staudernheimer Straße 1 – former estate mill • Staudernheimer Straße 2 – villa; two-and-a-half-floor sandstone-block building,
Art Nouveau, 1905/1910, architect Zimmermann,
Kreuznach • Turnhallstraße 3 –
Disibodenberg-Schule (
school); long building with hip roof, quarrystone, about 1900 • Turnhallstraße 6 –
gymnasium; group of buildings, hewn-stone, Heimatstil, about 1910 • Untergasse 1 – Baroque timber-frame house, partly solid, 18th century, front door marked 1847 • Untergasse 2 – timber-frame house, partly solid, 17th century •
Disibodenberger Hof, north of the village – three estate locations with well preserved commercial buildings arranged around a yard (
cobblestones), 18th/19th century, Late Classicist house with gateway arch, about 185x?; barn with half-hip roof and gateway arch; on another commercial building an inscription stone marked 1608 •
Disibodenberg Abbey ruin, Disibodenberger Hof 1, north of the village (monumental zone) – 12th to 16th centuries; remnants of the
Romanesque church and convent building; so-called hospice, Late Gothic gabled building, 16th century • Staudernheimer Straße 19 – villa; building with pyramid roof, 1920s • Vineyard house, Am Disibodenberg, north of the village – timber-frame, possibly from the 18th century or early 19th century
Disibodenberg Abbey Odernheim's history was from days of yore tightly bound with
Disibodenberg’s. It was here that
Saint Hildegard of Bingen lived for more than 40 years, having devoted her life to God's service at this monastery, and later at a convent that she founded at
Bingen am Rhein. The abbey ruin's old walls bear witness to a bygone time when religious belief was foremost. The
Romans and even the
Celts before them had recognized the site's mystical qualities in antiquity and
prehistory and had sought the Disibodenberg out as a place of worship. Even today, this religious site's spirit and mystique can be sensed. On show at the abbey
museum are interesting
archaeological finds, treasures and documentation. The
Scivias-Stiftung (foundation), whose goal is the maintenance and care of the ruin, the museum and the new
chapel, was founded in 1989.
Regular events Yearly events in Odernheim am Glan include the
kermis (church consecration festival, locally known as the
Kerb) in the autumn and the Christmas Market during
Advent.
Clubs The following clubs are active in Odernheim am Glan: •
Disibodenberg Blasorchester Odernheim 1969 e.V. — wind orchestra •
Leben und Lernen in Solidariät und Gemeinschaft e.V. —
Catholic youth volunteer group •
Turnverein Odernheim 1890 e.V. —
gymnastic club •
Förderverein Kindertagesstätte Lilliput e.V. —
kindergarten promotional association •
Odernheimer Geschichte(n) — history club •
Landfrauen — countrywomen's club •
Arabaska Tanzgruppe — dance group •
Die Glantaler — music group •
FNVO — fishing and conservation club •
Feuerwehr Förderverein —
fire brigade promotional association •
Feuerwehr — fire brigade •
CDU —
Christian Democratic Union of Germany •
Närrischen Kicker —
Shrovetide Carnival (
Fastnacht) club •
Sport-Club Odernheim •
Begegnungsstätte Bannmühle e.V. — social club •
KinO — cultural initiative club •
Schützenverein Odernheim —
shooting club
Sport and leisure Hiking Many
hiking trails lead along brooks that are close to nature, flower-rich glades, fallow
vineyards with exotic
orchids, through dales and over hilltops with outstanding views, and all furnished with benches for resting.
Cycling The
Nahe-Radweg, a 120 km-long cycle path, opens to the cyclist the
Naheland from the river's source in
Nohfelden down to the mouth at
Bingen am Rhein. Twenty side routes offer many other possibilities, and a total length of 500 km. The Glan to Blies Cycleway, with a length of 125 km, leads from the
Glan's mouth, where it empties into the
Nahe, through Odernheim and onwards to
Sarreguemines in
France.
Draisine touring One popular way of exploring the Glan valley is by pedalled
draisine. One can travel up to 40 km on the disused
railway from
Altenglan near
Kusel by way of
Lauterecken,
Meisenheim and Odernheim all the way to
Staudernheim. At many points, halts have been set up where riders may lift the draisine off the track and have a rest, stop to eat or have a look at a point of interest.
Canoeing on the Glan On offer are half-day or full-day tours from
Medard (17 km) or
Meisenheim (8.5 km) going downstream in three-man open canoes to Odernheim.
Other Also found locally are
paragliding,
tennis,
riding,
angling on the Glan,
Nordic walking and many other sport and leisure pursuits. ==Economy and infrastructure==