Leverkusen

Leverkusen is an industrial city in the Cologne Lowland region of Western Germany.

Understand
Leverkusen is a relatively young city; its history is strongly linked to the growth of the Bayer chemical and pharmaceutical plants. Until the mid-19th century, there were some smaller settlements, including today's boroughs Opladen or Schlebusch, but no city of Leverkusen as such.

In 1861, the chemist Carl Leverkus (1804–1889) founded his synthetic ultramarine factory near the village of Wiesdorf. His workers' settlement was named Leverkusen after its founder. In 1891, the paint and pharmaceutical company Bayer AG, which was founded in Wuppertal-Barmen, moved their production to Leverkusen. In the 20th-century, there was a constant influx of workers and their families to Leverkusen and the surrounding settlements to work at the ever-growing Bayer plants.

In 1920, Wiesdorf was granted a city charter. Only in 1930, Schlebusch and other neighbouring settlements were incorporated into the city that now took the name of Leverkusen. The neighbouring towns Opladen and Bergisch Neukirchen were incorporated in 1975, pushing the number of inhabitants over 167,000. The city's dominant and connecting elements have always been Bayer's huge chemical and pharmaceutical plants; the Bayer AG is to date the city's prime employer and corporate tax payer.

Internationally, Leverkusen is mainly known for its football (soccer) club, Bayer 04 Leverkusen, founded as a team of Bayer factory workers and is a fully-owned subsidiary of the chemical company. It has finished second place in several national and international competitions but had to wait until the 2023–24 Bundesliga season to win the German championship; a team that was jokingly dubbed Vize-Kusen ("runner-up-Kusen") and Neverkusen by fans of other clubs has now become Neverlusen, having finished the 2023–24 season undefeated in the league. Their only loss that season was to Atalanta in the Europa League final.

Get in
Though it is a mid-sized city located in a dense urban area, Leverkusen is an oddball in terms of transportation. It is the largest German settlement without a proper central station (Hauptbahnhof).

By plane
The closest international airports are Cologne-Bonn (22 km south of Leverkusen) and Düsseldorf (DUS IATA; 40 km north of Leverkusen). Both can be reached by car in about 30 minutes. By train, Düsseldorf Airport can be reached by Regional trains.

Other airports within close proximity of Leverkusen are Dortmund and Weeze.

By rail
The closest stations with high-speed and intercity service are in Cologne, Düsseldorf and Solingen. From there, frequently running regional trains and urban rail (S-Bahn) take you to Leverkusen (15 minutes from Cologne or Düsseldorf, half an hour from Solingen).

Do

 * Football: Bayer 04 Leverkusen play soccer in Bundesliga, the top tier. Their home ground is BayArena, capacity 30,000; it's 500 m northeast of Leverkusen Mitte railway station. The women's team play in their top tier at Nachwuchsleistungszentrum Kurtekotten.

Go next

 * Cologne, 13 km south (15 minutes by train)
 * Düsseldorf, 32 km north (15 minutes by train)
 * Bergisch Gladbach, 13 km east (25 minutes by train)
 * Solingen, 20 km northeast (half an hour by train)