Innere Stadt

The Innere Stadt (German pronunciation: [ˈɪnərə ʃtat] (listen); Central Bavarian: Innare Stod) is the 1st municipal District of Vienna (German: 1. Bezirk) located in the center of the Austrian capital. The Innere Stadt is the old town of Vienna. Until the city boundaries were expanded in 1850, the Innere Stadt was congruent with the city of Vienna. Traditionally it was divided into four quarters, which were designated after important town gates: Stubenviertel (northeast), Kärntner Viertel (southeast), Widmerviertel (southwest), Schottenviertel (northwest).[2]

Innere Stadt
1st District of Vienna
Coat of arms
Location of the district within Vienna
CountryAustria
CityVienna
Government
  District DirectorMarkus Figl (ÖVP)
  First DeputyIsabelle Jungnickel (ÖVP)
  Second DeputyDaniela Ecker-Stepp (SPÖ)
  Representation
   (40 Members)
ÖVP 10, SPÖ 10, Greens 6,
FPÖ 8, WIR 2, NEOS 4
Area
  Total2.88 km2 (1.11 sq mi)
Population
 (2016-01-01)[1]
  Total16,409
  Density5,700/km2 (15,000/sq mi)
Postal code
A-1010
Address of
District Office
Wipplingerstraße 8
A-1011 Wien
Websitewww.wien.gv.at/bezirke/innerestadt/
Innere Stadt
UNESCO World Heritage Site
Part ofHistoric Centre of Vienna
CriteriaCultural: (ii)(iv)(vi)
Reference1033
Inscription2001 (25th session)
Endangered2017–...
Area371 ha (1.43 sq mi)
Buffer zone462 ha (1.78 sq mi)

The Ringstraße circles the Innere Stadt along the route of the former city walls.

The first district is, with a workforce of 100,745, the largest employment locale in Vienna. This is partially due to tourism, as well as the presence of many corporate headquarters due to the district's central location.

Geography

Innere Stadt is the central district of Vienna. It borders Leopoldstadt in the northeast, Landstraße in the east, Wieden and Mariahilf in the south, Neubau and Josefstadt in the west, and Alsergrund in the north. The district border, starting at Urania, follows Wienfluss, Lothringerstraße, Karlsplatz, Gedreidemarkt, Museumsplatz, Museumstraße, Auerspergstraße, Landesgerichtsstraße, Universitätsstraße, Maria-Theresien-Straße and the Donaukanal.

History

Before 1850, Innere Stadt was physically equivalent with the city of Vienna. See History of Vienna for details about the history of Vindobona and Vienna, as well as historical significance after 1850.

Places of interest

Population

Year Population[3]
186968,079
188072,688
189070,167
190058,736
191053,326
192343,045
193933,027
Year Population
195134,654
196132,243
197125,169
198119,537
199118,002
200117,056
200517,289

Over time

Population has been declining ever since its peak of 73,000 in 1880, until it hit the lowest recorded value of 17,000 in 2001. Although population has been increasing slightly since then, Innere Stadt continues to remain the least populated district in Vienna.

Structural

In 2001, 28.1% of the district's population was over 60 years of age, above the city average of 22.2%. The percentage of people under 15 years of age was 9.8%. The female population of 53.3% was also above city average.[4]

Origin and language

At 15.5%, the percentage of foreign residents in Innere Stadt was 2% under city average for the year 2001. 2.8% of the population had EU Citizenship (Germany excluded), 2.7% were citizens of Serbia and Montenegro, and 2.2% were German citizens. In total, 25.6% of the population were born in a foreign country. 79% of residents listed German as their language of choice. 4.0% spoke primarily Serbian, 1.8% Hungarian, and 1.4% Croatian. 14.3% spoke other languages.[4]

Religion

Roman Catholics made up 51.3% of the Innere Stadt population in 2001, followed by 6.6% Protestants, 5.1% Orthodox Christians, 3.3% Jews. 22.7% were listed as non-confessional.[4]

Politics

The Bezirksvorsteher (District Director) has been a member of the conservative ÖVP party since 1946. Former Bezirksvorsteher Ursula Stenzel has spoken out against holding events in the inner city, citing concerns regarding noise pollution. Her comments have drawn criticism from other parties, especially the social democratic SPÖ.

District Directors from 1945
Theodor Köpl (KPÖ)April 1945–August 1945
Fritz Schuckeld (SPÖ)August 1945–October 1945
Adolf Planek (SPÖ)October 1945–1946
August Altmutter (ÖVP)1946–1948
Franz Eichberger (ÖVP)1948–1951
Otto Friesinger (ÖVP)1951–1968
Heinrich Anton Heinz (ÖVP)1968–1987
Richard Schmitz (ÖVP)1987–2001
Franz Grundwalt (ÖVP)2001–2005
Ursula Stenzel (ÖVP)2005–2015
Markus Figl (ÖVP)2015–

Coat of arms

The first district's coat of arms is a white cross on a red background. It is also the coat of arms for the City of Vienna and the State of Vienna. The current coat of arms dates back to around 1270, when it first appeared on the minted "Wiener Pfennige" coins. It may have been based on the flag of the King of the Romans' forces during the Middle Ages, as the combat flag of Rudolph I of Germany featured a similar design.

Notes

  1. Statistik Austria - Bevölkerung zu Jahresbeginn 2002-2016 nach Gemeinden (Gebietsstand 1.1.2016), Statistik Austria.
  2. "Stadt Wien: Presseportal - Touristeninformation - Unternehmen - Hotel". Stadt-wien.at. Retrieved 26 July 2018.
  3. "Statistik Austria" (PDF). Statistik.at. Retrieved 26 July 2018.
  4. "Census for 2001" (PDF). Statistik.at. Retrieved 26 July 2018.

References

[Parts of this article were translated from German Wikipedia.]
  • "Wien - 1. Bezirk - Innere Stadt", Wien.gv.at, 2008, webpage (15 subpages): Wien.gv.at-innerestadt (in German).
  • Grabovszki, Ernst: Innere Stadt, Wien, 1. Bezirk. Verlag Sutton, Erfurt 2002, ISBN 3-89702-467-5

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