A once-in-a-trip pilgrimage for design and architecture lovers: a single open campus just over the German border holding buildings by Frank Gehry, Zaha Hadid, Tadao Ando, SANAA, Herzog & de Meuron and Álvaro Siza, plus Carsten Höller's 30 m spiral-slide viewing tower. Nowhere else can you walk between this many architectural icons in one afternoon. Take the guided architecture tour to actually get inside the landmark structures.
What to expect
You'll take bus 55 from Claraplatz (roughly 20 minutes) across the German border to Weil am Rhein, stepping onto a single open campus where you walk between architectural masterworks by Gehry, Hadid, Ando, Herzog & de Meuron, and others—a sequence of landmark structures impossible to experience anywhere else in one afternoon. Inside the Design Museum and Schaudepot, you'll encounter the stories behind these iconic buildings, their materials and concepts revealed through curated collections. The optional 2-hour guided architecture tour gets you inside the landmark structures themselves, moving from one sculptural vision to the next. Between tours, you can ride Carsten Höller's 30-meter spiral-slide viewing tower for free, descending with a view of the entire campus below.
No river line runs this, so direct is the only way. Important: it's in GERMANY, so your free Basel transit pass does NOT cover the trip -- pay the bus 55 fare or taxi over. Genuinely niche; skip it unless design is your thing, in which case nothing on the ship's menu comes close.
Good to know
The trip requires 5–6 hours minimum to justify the journey; book the 2-hr architecture tour in advance to secure entry into buildings and avoid gaps in your schedule. Pay your own bus 55 fare from Claraplatz (roughly €2–3 each way)—your Basel transit pass doesn't cover German territory. Plan to leave the ship by early afternoon to allow a comfortable return by evening; aim to be back at the pier 45 minutes before all-aboard. Bring comfortable walking shoes, a light layer for the open campus in cool weather, and consider packing a small bag—the campus is spread out and there's limited shelter between buildings.