Kalk, Cologne

Kalk (German: Köln-Kalk [ˈkœln ˈkalk], Kölsch: Kallek [ˈkalək] or [kalːk]) is the Eighth city district or Stadtbezirk of Cologne, Germany. Kalk was merged into the city of Cologne in 1910, the district was formed in 1975.

Kalk
Kalker Hauptstraße
Location of Kalk shown in red
CountryGermany
Federal stateNorth Rhine-Westphalia
CityCologne (Köln)
Area
  Total38.2 km2 (14.7 sq mi)
Population
 (December 2009)
  Total109,045
  Density2,852/km2 (7,390/sq mi)
district town hall
Vingst Veedel

The district of Kalk borders with Mülheim to the North, Rheinisch-Bergischer Kreis to the East, the Cologne borough of Porz to the South and Deutz to the West.

Subdivisions

Kalk consists of nine Stadtteile (city parts):

# City part Population (2009) Area (km2) Pop. per km2 map
801Humboldt/Gremberg14,8352,825,258
802Kalk21,1922,977,128
803Vingst11,5581,1210,315
804Höhenberg11,9362,205,436
805Ostheim10,7203,752,862
806Merheim9,5403,812,507
807Brück9,7347,511,297
808Rath/Heumar10,95713,1837
809Neubrück8,5731,107,806
source: Die Kölner Stadtteile in Zahlen 2010 (in German)

Education

The Kaiserin-Theophanu-Schule is located in Kalk.[1]

The Japanische Schule Köln e.V. (ケルン日本語補習授業校 Kerun Nihongo Hoshū Jugyō Kō), a Japanese weekend school, holds its classes in the Kaiserin-Theophanu-Schule. It began holding classes there as of 20 August 2009.[2]

Transportation

Kalk is served by numerous railway stations and highways. Train stations include Köln-Trimbornstraße and numerous light rail stations of Cologne Stadtbahn line 1 and 9. The Bundesautobahn 3 and 4 connect Kalk with the Cologne Beltway.

References

  1. Home page. Kaiserin-Theophanu-Schule. Retrieved on 6 April 2015. "Kaiserin-Theophanu-Schule Kantstrasse 3 51103 Köln-Kalk"
  2. "Geschichte Archived 27 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine." Japanische Schule Köln. Retrieved on 14 February 2015. "Wir sind umgezogen. Ab 20.08.2009 findet der Unterricht in der Kaiserin-Theophanu-Schule, Kantstr. 3 in 51103 Köln-Kalk statt." Japanese version Archived 14 February 2015 at the Wayback Machine.


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