Buildings • The
Evangelical Bergkirche (“Mountain Church”) is believed to have stemmed from a chapel to
Saint Remigius built in the 6th century beside which grew into an estate fortified with a castle over the course of the ages. Today's church grew out of the castle and the chapel, with the churchtower, it is further believed, standing on the old
keep’s foundations. The castle was converted many times, acquiring its current shape after a fire in the 19th century. •
Saint John’s Catholic Church (
Johanniskirche) had its beginnings in a temple of the
Order of Saint John, and in 1713 it was transferred to the Catholic parish (the Order is
Protestant), which radically converted the building in 1792. The church’s
altar was originally to be found in the
Carmelite church in
Worms. • The Town Hall (
Rathaus) was built in 1902 as a financial office. • The Old Town Hall (
Altes Rathaus) was built in 1739 as the town’s second town hall. • Into the so-called “Little Church” (
Kleine Kirche), which directly neighbours the Old Town Hall, parts of the first town hall from 1581 have been incorporated. • The Waterworks (
Wasserwerk) from 1906 has a striking façade with
Art Nouveau and
Baroque Revival elements. • The Jewish graveyard on Mettenheimer Chaussee was laid out in 1832 and is a memorial to the town's
Jewish community. Image:Osthofen-altesrathaus.jpg|Old Town Hall Image:Osthofen-kleinekirche.jpg|
Kleine Kirche Regular events From 1949 to 2013, the
Wonnegauer Winzerfest (“Wonnegau Winemakers’ Festival”) was held yearly in Osthofen. Among this days-long event's highlights were a great parade, the crowning of the Wonnegau Wine Queen and the traditional Monday wine tasting. == Economy and infrastructure ==