Win a Family Pack for two shows – iRRooTTaa & Que Tun!
provided by Rotondes
Join our Advent Calendar competition for a chance to win amazing prizes, generously provided by our partners across the 24 districts of Luxembourg City.
🎁 Simply fill out the online form below!
🗓️Participation in the daily prize draws is only possible on the relevant day.
🎉 The winner will be contacted by email in the following days.
Rotondes
Rotondes is a unique venue behind Luxembourg City’s station, housed in two historic railway roundhouses built in 1875. This cultural centre hosts a diverse range of events, from performing arts shows and concerts to exhibitions, conferences, and workshops for people of all ages. Rotondes aims to create shared experiences, and to foster creativity from a young age.
The Rotondes invite you to start the year with energy and offer you the chance to win tickets for two shows designed for young children (from age 4). It’s a wonderful opportunity to introduce them to the joys of contemporary circus and theatre.
IRRooTTaa is a circus performance built around small white balls… lots of small white balls! The duo may try to keep them under control, but the balls roll noisily in every direction, stick to the ceiling, and even burst out of their mouths. They’re completely uncontrollable! Yet it’s precisely when the balls slip through their fingers that the most delightful accidents occur.
The play Que Tun?, the latest creation by the Luxembourgish company Kopla Bunz, features three characters who want to organise a party for a mutual friend. However, they don’t know each other at all. They’ll have to learn how to agree, disagree, argue and make peace again so the celebration becomes a success… all accompanied by music, of course!
About Bonnevoie-Nord / Verlorenkost district
Bonnevoie-Nord/Verlorenkost has a surface area of 67.76 hectares and is in the east of the capital.
For centuries, the city's fortifications were a major feature of the Verlorenkost neighbourhood. In 1807, Verlorenkost was rattled by a deadly gunpowder explosion that devastated a large part of the city.
Bonnevoie-Nord expanded as its population rapidly increased at the beginning of the 20th century, leading to the construction of a series of social housing projects. In 1925, a new primary school was built on Rue du Verger to accommodate this influx, along with a number of sports fields. In 2003, the old Gendarmerie buildings from the 1970s were expanded and converted into the present-day police station complex.