One of the landmarks of Neustadt is the Nuremberg Gate[34], which has a gatehouse (formerly also known as the "Upper Gate" at the beginning of the "Upper Gasse"). The single-track gateway was built in the 14th century. A gatehouse was added in 1523 and a southern porch was added in 1660 (the second floor of the gatehouse may have been added between 1703 and 1708). Equipping the city with these final gate wings lasted until 1656 after the Thirty Years' War. Under the ceiling of the porch from 1660 there is a billy goat relief. The gate received a roof in 1689, a clock and a bell in 1695. In 1938 the gate opening was increased.[35][2]:p. 241, note 37, pp. 261, 263 and 271 f.
By 1825, after larger parts had been drained in 1698, the part of the city moat still filled with water from the Nuremberg Gate to the Windsheim Gate (aborted 1871[2]: p. 271) and up to the New Castle and the Castle Square at the beginning of the Diespecker Tor, former "Dispecker Gasse", has been converted into a garden area. In the middle of the 19th century, a professional gardening business developed, especially south-west of the city wall, whose plants and greenhouses later also grew on the Herrenbergen (where, like on the Pfalzbach, vines originally from Kitzingen were also grown from the late Middle Ages to 1882) and above the Strahlbach up to the Catholic Church consecrated in 1883.[2]:S. 59, 428 and 431 f. The Windsheimer Tor was located on the "Plärrer" or at the beginning of the former "Windsheimer Gasse" and was built in anticipation of a larger volume of traffic, as was the Riedfelder Tor and the Langenfelder Tor, which was redesigned in 1788 (demolished in 1871[2] : p. 271) at the beginning of the "Unteren Gasse" broken off in 1871 (between Windsheimer Tor and Pulverturm a rope hut with a cable car was set up in 1820.[2]: p. 494). The Diespecker Tor (demolished in 1872) and Riedfelder Tor were housing for the poor, and their dilapidated condition and cost were also reasons for demolishing these gates
Source: Wikipedia