Good evening,

Jacqueline Vogt

Department head of the Rhein-Main editorial team of the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung.

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the Radberger Group gives up the Binding brewery in Frankfurt, the FAZ shows moving pictures and cities where the lights are turned off, not everyone likes them.

Names, news and news from the Rhine-Main region, again today with a tip for the weekend.

Frankfurt without binding:

Everyone who lives and lives in Frankfurt has certainly seen the tall copper brew kettles behind the glass panes as high as a house on the Sachsenhäuser Berg, even foreigners know them.

The Binding brewery, which celebrated its 150th anniversary in 2020, will be closed.

A piece of city history comes to an end.

The end was announced on Thursday afternoon, in a message from the Radeberger Group, to which Binding belongs today.

Cost explosions and long-term market developments are the reason, it said.

The production and bottling operation is scheduled to be completed by October 2023.

Binding beer should continue to exist and the Radeberger headquarters want to keep their headquarters in Frankfurt.

Manfred Koehler reports.

Printed and moved:

How do we want to live and how not: Asking yourself this question and being able to ask this question is an obligation and a privilege;

It's also fun, so how do we want to live?

And how not?

The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung looks into this in its Friday edition.

It has a special feature: some of the texts include visual elements that come to life when you scan a QR code with your smartphone, follow the instructions that appear on the screen and hold your cell phone over a photo.

Moving pictures and animated graphics can then be seen and contributions can also be heard, including reports from the Rhine-Main region, about the changing church, for example, and about the future of the forest.

Have fun reading and experiencing!

Light shows and the energy crisis:

Many save, most have to, others do it voluntarily, cities and communities are also reducing consumption.

The winter will be quite cold in public buildings and, under the impression of imminent energy shortages, municipalities are switching off the lights on monuments and public buildings.

What does someone like Helmut Bien, the inventor of the Luminale light festival, have to say about this?

Matthias Trautsch interviewed him.

You can read the interview in the Rhein-Main edition of the Frankfurter Allgemeine Sunday newspaper.

And in addition

, there are five buildings on four continents in the final round of the International High-Rise Award 2022/23 and the nominated Frankfurt projects "One" and "Senckenberg Quartier" did not make it +++ nursing staff and other non-medical employees of the Frankfurt University Hospital said on Thursday started a two-day warning strike +++ After 170 years, the Roman-Germanic Central Museum in Mainz will be called the Leibniz Center for Archeology from 2023, a new building will be occupied next week.

And a special service starting today: We will be collecting all posts on the vote-out procedure against Frankfurt's Mayor Peter Feldmann on a collection page at www.faz.net/abwahlverfahren until November 6th

Warm greetings from the editorial team

Jacqueline Vogt

You can also read current reports from the region in Skyline-Blick, our live news blog for the Rhine-Main region, and on the Rhein-Main-Zeitung website.

The tip for the weekend

It is one of the most beautiful terraces in Frankfurt, the view of the skyline is magnificent and few other places are as impressive.

But even if the weather isn't as nice as in the past few months, the "Occhio d'Oro" restaurant on the seventh floor of the Flemings Hotel at the Eschenheimer Turm is worth a visit.

Because the view is also good from the long dining room and from the bar – and so is the Italian regional cuisine with a Tuscan-Florentine touch.

"Occhio d'Oro", Flemings Hotel, Eschenheimer Tor 2, Frankfurt, telephone 0 69/9 89 72 85 00, Internet www.occhio-doro.com

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