The Anlagenring in Frankfurt consists of two largely parallel streets, which are separated from each other by the former city fortifications. The two streets of the belt are one-way streets – each for one of the two directions of travel. The Anlagenring carries different street names in its course. Anlagenring literally means “garden ring” in German.
The inner of the two ring roads follows the course of the 14th-century city wall relatively evenly. Traffic here runs clockwise. This inner ring consists of the following streets: Untermainbrücke, Neue Mainzer Straße, Opernplatz, Hochstraße, Eschenheimer Tor, Bleichstraße, Friedberger Tor, Seilerstraße, Lange Straße and Ignatz-Bubis-Brücke.
The outer ring road traces the jagged course of the baroque fortress ramparts. Traffic here runs counterclockwise. This outer ring consists of the streets Flößerbrücke, Obermainanlage, Hanauer Landstrasse, Friedberger Anlage, Friedberger Landstrasse, Eschenheimer Anlage, Eschersheimer Landstrasse, Bockenheimer Anlage, Opernplatz, Taunusanlage, Taunustor, Gallusanlage, Willy-Brandt-Platz and Untermainanlage.









