Eisenhüttenstadt


Eisenhüttenstadt is a town in the Oder-Spree district of the state of Brandenburg, Germany, on the border with Poland.

Geography

The municipal area stretches on a sandy terrace in the Berlin-Warsaw glacial valley. It is bounded by the Oder river in the east, which since 1945 has formed the German–Polish border. Eisenhüttenstadt is the eastern terminus of the Oder–Spree Canal. The town centre is located about south of Frankfurt and southeast of Berlin. Eisenhüttenstadt has access to the Berlin–Wrocław railway line.
The town comprises the districts of Diehlo, Fürstenberg, and Schönfließ.

History

The present-day township was founded as a socialist model city in 1950 upon decision of the East German Socialist Unity Party, alongside a new steel mill combine located west of the historic town of Fürstenberg. A few years before the new town arose, a bridge over the Oder river had been constructed, which had been destroyed by retreating Wehrmacht forces in February 1945, near the end of World War II.
The population grew rapidly in the 1950s and 1960s. In 1961, during De-Stalinization, the town was renamed Eisenhüttenstadt. After German reunification in 1990, the state-owned steel works were privatized, and most of its 12,000 employees lost their jobs. Thereafter the factory employed around 2,500 workers. The town experienced a steep decline in population, from just over 50,000 to under 30,000.

Demography

Architecture

The first design for the new residential quarter was developed by the modernist and Bauhaus architect, Franz Ehrlich, in August 1950. His modernist plan, which laid out a dispersed town landscape along functional lines, was rejected by the Ministry for Reconstruction. The same happened to the plan presented by the architects Kurt Junghanns and Otto Geiler. The plan that was ultimately realized was developed by Kurt Walter Leucht.

International relations

Eisenhüttenstadt is twinned with:
Eisenhüttenstadt was the birthplace of: