Location:
Pirmasens is located in the southwest of Rhineland-Palatinate and borders on the Palatinate Forest. The urban area covers 61 km². The independent city is the urban center of the Southwest Palatinate. This house is located in an infrastructurally good location in Pirmasens. Pirmasens is a district-free city in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. It is the administrative seat of the Südwestpfalz district, of which it is also surrounded, and is located on the western edge of the Palatinate Forest. Its name goes back to St. Priminius, who founded the monastery in Hornbach. Pirmasens has long been considered the German shoe metropolis.
Railroad station:
The city of Pirmasens is connected to the regional rail network via the 6.97 km² long branch line Pirmasens Nord – Pirmasens Main Station. From the Pirmasens-Nord distribution station, the Queichtalbahn (route 675) runs eastwards to Landau, and the Schwarzbachtalbahn (route 672) runs westwards to Kaiserslautern. All connections belong to DB local transport.
Airports:
Zweibrücken, Saarbrücken, Frankfurt, Hahn.
Distance:
Pirmasens lies on the southwestern edge of the Palatinate Forest. The city lies to the west
Zweibrücken and the Saar-Palatinate district, in the north the districts of Kusel and Kaiserslautern, in the northeast the district of Bad Dürkheim, in the east the district of southern Weinstrasse and in the sins the state border with France with the “Pays de Bitche” (Bitscher Land).
City structure: The core city is divided into eight parts. The historical core is the Horeb, followed by the Kirchberg, the Winzler Quarter, the Schaden and the Husterhöhe. On the periphery of the core city are the summer forest (formerly the Maler-Bürkel settlement) in the north, the Ruhbank in the southeast and the Erlenteich in the west.
Traffic: The A 8 connects to Saarland, and the single-lane section of the A 62 ensures connections to Kaiserlautern and Trier. The B 10 is the connection to the Rhine rail.