Frankfurt had a reputation as the most "Americanized" city in Germany even before the skyscraper boom. Now it looks even more American with its cluster of downtown skyscrapers (which are, unlike in US citys, not in the original town center, but a neighborhood just beyond).
The Rhine Main region is similar in some ways to southwest Ohio/Dayton/Cincinnati area as it crosses three state boundaries (Hesse, Bavaria, and Rhinland/Palatinate, sort of a German "Tri-State") and has a number of core cities of varying sizes, the dominant one being Frankfurt.
Unlike the "Tri State"/Miami Valley there are two state capitals here: Wiesbaden and Mainz. And one of the core cities, Aschaffenburg, was rated as one of the best places to live in Germany (the Germans apparently have their own "city list" or Places Rated thing going on).
To start we will look at three suburbs in this metropolitan region, Nordenstadt, Rosbach, and Rodheim.
Though the Europeans, Germans included, are known for having good public transit, freeways are just as important as in the US for getting around a metropolitan area. Germans use their cars to commute just like we do, with business and industry being disperesed throughout the region in office and industrial parks, as well as in the various center cities (which are, unlike the US, still economically viable places)

Different from a US interstate system, this regional freeway net does not pass through any of the core city centers, but instead provides spur freeways or quasi-freeways to connect into the respective city centers.
And given the high degree of car travel in a fairly dense ubran region, one can anticipate the inevitable traffic jams, which can be as massive as in the US, maybe even more so.
The slogan is "Jam-Free Hesse 2015" (they wish). But interesting to note the scale of the freeway system: six lanes in what looks like a semi-rural or suburban area, not too different from I-75 between Cincy and Dayton.
it was Kurt Vonnegut who said that Dresden reminded him of Dayton.
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