Schwandorf is in Upper Palatinate.
Despite the name ostensibly suggesting a connection to swans ("Schwan" in German), modern etymologists are all in agreement that this is not the origin of the town name and the predominating theory connects the name to a Slavic origin and indeed the town has sat on the crossroads between the Germanic and Slavic worlds since its foundation. Having been totally destroyed by war in the 16th century, most of the "old" buildings today date from the rebuilding after that disaster. In the 19th century, the railway reached Schwandorf which, in addition to nearby lignite deposits, gave a push to industrialization in the region. Indeed, Schwandorf to this day serves as a railroad hub and one can change from a train from Nuremberg to one heading on to Prague here. The lignite deposits ran out in the late 20th century and similarly to the Lusatian Lake District and the Central German Lake District a (much smaller) "Upper Paltinatian Lake District" ("Oberpfälzer Seenland") was the result of the conversion of former lignite pits to new uses.
Nearby Wackersdorf became a household name in the 1980s due to the drawn out fight about whether a nuclear waste processing facility should be built there. After tumultuous protests and police violence and despite Bavarian Prime Minister Franz Josef Strauß's claim that the planned facility "would not be more dangerous than a bicycle spoke factory" the project was ultimately canceled.
A93 passes to the east of town.
Most of these lakes are some ways off (or not even inside the town limits) but Schwandorf is as good a starting-off point as any.
2nd-order administrative division
Primary administrative division