"The Best Sugar Daddy Fishing Hole" - The New York Times

There is a reason they call us the#1 Sugar Daddy Dating Site

Featured in the NY Times, 20/20, CNN, Dr. Phil and Dr. Drew, SeekingArrangement is the leading sugar daddy dating and sugar baby personals in Wuppertal, Nordrhein-Westfalen. Always FREE for Sugar Babies, we are the number one website for those seeking mutually beneficial relationships.

Signup Now It's 100% Free »

Date Beautiful Sugar Babies

Goal Seeking Sugar Babies in Wuppertal, Nordrhein-Westfalen

Attractive, intelligent, ambitious and goal oriented. Sugar Babies in Wuppertal, Nordrhein-Westfalen are students, actresses, models or girls & guys next door. You know you deserve to date someone who will pamper you, empower you, and help you mentally, emotionally and financially.

Learn More About Sugar Babies »

Date Beautiful Sugar Daddies

The Modern Sugar Daddy in Wuppertal, Nordrhein-Westfalen

You are always respectful and generous. You only live once, and you want to date the best. Some call you a mentor, sponsor or benefactor. But no matter what your desires may be, you are brutally honest about who you are, what you expect and what you offer.

Learn More About Sugar Daddies »

Where can I find the best Sugar Baby in Wuppertal, Nordrhein-Westfalen?

A Sugar Baby is someone who both delights and attracts. Attraction to her Sugar Daddy may help some women remain charming. However, with the correct perspective, for the right person, at the right time, it is not a necessity; it is simply a bonus. Women are emotional creatures, seldom do they separate their hearts from their heads, Sugar Babies are no different. There is the rare girl who totally compartmentalizes her head and heart within a Sugar Daddy/Sugar Baby relationship. Therefore, easing the transition from business to personal attraction for the Sugar Baby. Attraction is not always a physical thing; emotions play a large part in attraction to another person. Sugar Babies, need not feel physical attraction toward their Sugar Daddy, nor must there be an emotional connection, however, more often than not, it does develop. Attraction is not necessary to make the relationship work; it simply makes it more comfortable for the Sugar Baby to reconcile her relationship choices.

The women in Wuppertal, Nordrhein-Westfalen are the best

There's no nice way to put this: some of the sugar babies in Wuppertal, Nordrhein-Westfalen on other sugar daddy sites look a bit rough. Our sugar daddy site offers you nothing but the best of the best. All of our women are absolutely gorgeous and looking for a special sugar daddy just like you. The best part? The women in Wuppertal, Nordrhein-Westfalen outnumber the men 5 to 1, greatly increasing your odds of meeting a sugar baby that you click with. What other sugar daddy site has impressive numbers like that?

More Sugar Babies in Wuppertal, Nordrhein-Westfalen than other Sugar daddy sites.

The average sugar baby is a beautiful, ambitious college student, aspiring actress or model, or single mom. She works hard to get where she wants to be in life, but doesn't have a lot of extra spending money. That's why our basic services are 100% free for all sugar babies. We even offer free premium upgrades for all women with an official .edu school email address. Our affordable prices and membership options are one of many reasons that hundreds of thousands of people find what they're looking for on Seeking Arrangement.

Addl.

One of the city’s greatest attractions is the suspended monorail (“Wuppertaler Schwebebahn”), which was established in 1901. The tracks are 8 m above the streets and 12 m above the Wupper river.

Description

Coordinates: 51°16′0″N 07°11′0″E / 51.26667°N 7.18333°E / 51.26667; 7.18333 Wuppertal (German pronunciation: [ˈvÊŠpɐtaːl]) is a city in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. It is located on the Wupper river south of the Ruhr area. Population 361,333 (2005). Two thirds of the total municipal area is green belt: woods, meadows, gardens and fields. From any part of the city it is only a ten-minute walk to one of the public parks or shady woodland path. At the same time it is a major industrial centre including such industries as: textiles, metallurgy, chemicals, medicine (Bayer), electric, rubber, vehicles and printing equipment. One of the most famous pain-killers, Aspirin, was invented in Wuppertal by Bayer. The prestigious Wuppertal Institute for Climate, Environment and Energy is located in this city.

History

The city was formed in 1929 by merging Barmen, Elberfeld, Vohwinkel, Ronsdorf, Cronenberg, Langerfeld, and Beyenburg. The name was initially Barmen-Elberfeld, and after 1930 Wuppertal (“Wupper Valley”). The new city was administered within the Prussian Rhine Province. Uniquely for Germany it is a linear city, owing to the steep hillsides along the river Wupper. The dominating city-centres Elberfeld (historic commercial centre) and Barmen (more industrial) form a united built-up area since 1850. In the following decades, this “Wupper-Town” became the dominating industrial agglomeration of the territories in northwestern Germany. Before the 19th century ended, this conurbation had been surpassed by Cologne, Düsseldorf and the Ruhr area, all with much more favourable topography. During World War II, it was destroyed to about 40% by the Allies as were many other industrial centres at the time. However, a large number of historic sites have been preserved, such as * Ölberg (“Oil mountain”), Germany’s largest working class district, protected as a historic monument. The name came about in the 1920s as the surrounding bourgeois residential quarters already had electric light, while this district still used oil lamps. * Brill, one of Germany’s largest districts of Gründerzeit villas, i. e. bourgeois mansions, built in the second half of the 19th century. After the war, Wuppertal became a part of the British Occupancy Zone, and subsequently a part of the new state North Rhine-Westphalia in West Germany.

Main sights

In total, Wuppertal possesses over 4,500 buildings classified as national monuments, most dating from styles as Neoclassicism, Eclecticism, Historicism, Art Nouveau/Jugendstil and Bauhaus. Main sights include: * Concert hall, a fine masterpiece[citation needed] of turn-of-the-century architecture (Stadthalle), * Wuppertal Dance Theatre (Tanztheater Wuppertal), headed by Pina Bausch, is world-famous[citation needed], * Engels house (Engelshaus), architecturally typical of the region. It houses a permanent display of materials associated with Friedrich Engels and other famous citizens of Wuppertal, * Wuppertal Zoo, one of the largest[citation needed], most nicely landscaped[citation needed] zoos in Germany with many rare animals, * Botanischer Garten Wuppertal, a municipal botanical garden, * Arboretum Burgholz, an extensive arboretum, * Von der Heydt Museum, one of the most important galleries[citation needed] in Germany, with works by 19th and 20th century artists. The first of Picasso’s works that ever appeared in public was displayed here.

Noted Wuppertal people

* Pina Bausch, choreographer * Friedrich Bayer, founder of the Friedrich Bayer paint factory that later became Bayer AG * Arno Breker, sculptor * Rudolf Carnap, philosopher of science * Julius Plücker, physicist * Udo Dirkschneider, singer in heavy-metal band Accept * Friedrich Engels, philosopher, historian, co-author of the Communist Manifesto (with Karl Marx) * Hans Knappertsbusch, orchestra conductor * Else Lasker-Schüler, expressionist poet * Harald Leipnitz, actor * Ulrich Leyendecker, composer * Reimar Lüst, astrophysicist * Steffen Möller, satirist, soap-opera star and TV celebrity in Poland; the most popular German[citation needed] in Poland * Tyron Montgomery, Oscar-winning film director * Simone Osygus, swimmer * Siegfried Palm, cellist * Johannes Rau, former Federal President of Germany * Alice Schwarzer, one of the leaders of the German feminist movement * Sir Hans Wolfgang Singer, economist * Rita Süssmuth, former President of the German Parliament * Horst Tappert, actor * Helmut Thielicke, theologian * Tom Tykwer, film director (“Run Lola, Run”, “The Princess and the Warrior”), co-founder of X-Filme syndicate * Günter Wand, orchestra conductor * Sulamith Wülfing, artist and illustrator * Peter Brötzmann and Peter Kowald, noted innovators in modern improvised music * Christoph Maria Herbst, actor * Hermann Ebbinghaus, psychologist who studied memory

Twin towns — Sister cities

Wuppertal is twinned with: * Beersheba, Israel * Berlin-Tempelhof-Schöneberg, Germany * KoÅ¡ice, Slovakia (since 1980)[2] * Legnica, Poland * Matagalpa, Nicaragua * Saint-Étienne, France * Schwerin, Germany * Yekaterinburg, Russia * South Tyneside, United Kingdom Aachen Â· Augsburg Â· Bielefeld Â· Bochum Â· Bonn Â· Braunschweig Â· Chemnitz Â· Duisburg Â· Erfurt Â· Freiburg im Breisgau Â· Gelsenkirchen Â· Halle an der Saale Â· Karlsruhe Â· Kiel Â· Krefeld Â· Lübeck Â· Magdeburg Â· Mannheim Â· Münster Â· Mönchengladbach Â· Oberhausen Â· Rostock Â· Wiesbaden Â· Wuppertal Bergisch Gladbach Â· Bottrop Â· Bremerhaven Â· Cottbus Â· Darmstadt Â· Erlangen Â· Fürth Â· Gera Â· Göttingen Â· Hagen Â· Hamm Â· Heidelberg Â· Heilbronn Â· Herne Â· Hildesheim Â· Ingolstadt Â· Jena Â· Kassel Â· Koblenz Â· Leverkusen Â· Ludwigshafen Â· Mainz Â· Moers Â· Mülheim an der Ruhr Â· Neuss Â· Offenbach am Main Â· Oldenburg Â· Osnabrück Â· Paderborn Â· Pforzheim Â· Potsdam Â· Recklinghausen Â· Regensburg Â· Remscheid Â· Reutlingen Â· Saarbrücken Â· Salzgitter Â· Siegen Â· Solingen Â· Trier Â· Ulm Â· Witten Â· Wolfsburg Â· Würzburg

Wuppertal in the arts

* The play, Die Wupper, by Else Lasker-Schüler takes places in Elberfeld. * The 2000 movie, The Princess and the Warrior by Tom Tykwer, was filmed in Wuppertal. * In the 1974 Wim Wenders film Alice in the Cities, the main characters visit Wuppertal.