Bocholt

Bocholt is a town of 71,000 people (2019) in Münsterland in Germany, about 4 km from the Dutch border.

Understand
Bocholt is a manufacturing town. It was centred on the textile industry for most of the 19th and 20th centuries. The importance of the textile industry has greatly declined. The major employers today in Bocholt are Gigaset (Communications) and Mechanical Drives (Siemens), a leading manufacturer of transmissions, especially for wind energy plants. Most of Bocholt's industries are smaller and manufacture highly specialized products.

Climate
The climate in the region of Bocholt and West Münsterland is temperate with distinct maritime influences, with very mild winters in comparison to other German regions because of the proximity to the ocean and the low elevation. Summers are moderately warm. The average temperature in January is 2.7 °C and in July 18.4 °C.

By plane
Via Weeze Airport (, approx. 45 km away) or Düsseldorf Airport (, approx. 85 km away).

By train
Can be reached from Bocholt train station with the regional train "Der Bocholter" (Düsseldorf - Wesel - Bocholt), which runs every hour. In Wesel connection to the Rheinschiene trains, for example the Rheinexpress to Koblenz via Cologne and to  to Wuppertal via Oberhausen and Essen, both terminating here, is available.

Bocholt is the last stop on a 25-minute, 2-way-1-track train route starting in Wesel travelling north to Bocholt. In 2021 the railway line between Bocholt and Wesel was electrified, now offering one-seat service to Düsseldorf without transfer required. After arriving in Wesel from Düsseldorf, one part of the RE19 travels to Arnhem in the Netherlands, the other, usually the rear part, continues to Bocholt after a short stop. Make sure you board the correct part, announcements in German, English and Dutch will remind you of it.

By bus
The city can be reached from Münster: with the Flixbus line 056 (Dortmund, Recklinghausen, Dorsten, Borken, Bocholt, Amsterdam) The long-distance bus stop in Bocholt is in front of the train station (Hindenburgstrasse). One central transfer point of the city traffic is at Europaplatz.
 * with the "Sprinter" (express bus line S 75) via Borken and Rhede, stops in Bocholt at the train station and at the central bus stop in the city from Rees with the regional bus line 61 via Isselburg, from Wesel with the regional bus route 64 via Hamminkeln;
 * with the Flixbus line N11 (Bocholt, Hamminkeln, Wesel, Duisburg, Düsseldorf, Cologne, Bonn, Strasbourg, Freiburg, Basel, Zurich, Milan)

By car
From the Ruhr area via the motorway A3 (Holland line), from AS5 Hamminkeln via the B473.

From Münster over the B67.

From Arnhem (Netherlands) via the A3, depart AS4 Rees.

By bike
Cyclists on the 100-Schlösser-Route route come through Bocholt.

By bus
There is a city bus network with 12 bus routes that meet every half hour at the bus meeting point (Europaplatz) as a rendezvous. (Single ticket €2.00), information and tickets (multi-trip and group tickets) in the StadtBus-Center at the bus meeting point or on the bus. Shared call taxis (AST) operate in the evenings and outside of business hours. Registration min. 30 minutes before the journey via tel. 0800-2191920.

By car
The parking possibilities are limited, there are some parking garages in the city centre, in some cases shops replace part of the parking costs. Particular caution is required in areas reserved for residents only. Parking violations are particularly expensive there.

By bike
Bocholt is a designated bicycle city, and almost every citizen has one or more bikes, the bicycle network is vast and convenient. In the summer, foreign motorists need to take care because of the popularity of cycling in the city, and even in winter, many people travel only by bike.

See
The city was almost eighty percent destroyed at the end of World War II, so there are relatively few historical buildings. The reconstruction was carried out on the original plans.

In summer there are public city tours from the market square, mostly on Saturdays from 10:00 (appointments at the tourist information office).


 * St. Georg-Kirche (St. George Church). A late Gothic hall construction, built 1415-86.
 * Liebfrauenkirche (Church of Our Lady). Also in the city centre, arose from a former monastery church of the Minorites in late Baroque style 1785-92. It was expanded to its current size in 1912-13

Do

 * Bocholter Herbstkirmes, the annual folk festival held on the 3rd weekend in October, is known far beyond the city limits and is the largest folk festival on the Lower Rhine and in the western Münsterland.

Buy
Bocholt is also a regional centre for shopping in the West-Münsterland area and draws consumers from the neighbouring rural and small town areas of the Netherlands. The town features an attractive old town shopping area as well as a popular new shopping mall.