Gratwein-Straßengel


Since 2015 Gratwein-Straßengel is a market town in the Graz-Umgebung District of Styria, Austria. The town took effect as part of the Styria municipal structural reform,
from the end of 2014 with the merging of the former municipalities Gratwein, Judendorf-Straßengel, Eisbach and Gschnaidt. The merger made the market town population to be the 6th-largest in Styria.
A petition by the mayor of Eisbach, to the constitutional court, against the merger was not successful.
Likewise a petition from the town Gschnaidt was not successful.

Geography

Municipality layout

The town lies to the west bank of the Mur River, about northwest of the Styrian capital Graz.
The section Rein, with its famous Stift, is the seat of a Bundesgymnasium.

Municipality arrangement

The town contains 11 sections with a total of 12,803 residents :
The municipal area is divided into six Katastralgemeinden :
The area lies in the Gratkorn Basin, which opens to the West Styria region and forms an expanded part of the Mur valley.

Surveys

In the communal area, there are some related peaks within the Grazer Bergland, including the "four Thousander", along which form a popular trail in the area of Stift Rein.
The local communities as autonomous entities came into existence after the abolition of the landlords in 1850.
; Judendorf Straßengel
.
Around 860, in one of the oldest documents of Austria, the churchhill of Straßengel is called "ad Strazinolun". Probably the name derives from the Slavic "straza", which could refer to a watchtower located here.
On June 11, 1147 Margrave Otakar III dedicated the monastery Rein to several towns Rotz, Straßengel and Judendorf. These areas were managed by monks from the Rein abbey.
Settlements with the label "Judendorf" are usually located along old trade routes crossing the Alps. In their neighborhood, the city and market foundations were established later. It is assumed that these Jewish villages are the settlements of Jewish merchants who were intensively involved in the merchandise trade in the early Middle Ages.
After the abolition of the landlords, Judendorf, Straßengel, Rötz, Hundsdorf and Kugelberg were included in the market town of Gratwein, established in 1849.
With the opening of the section Mürzzuschlag-Graz of the k.k. privileged Southern Railway on October 21, 1844, the Gratwein/Gratkorn Basin also joined the "industrial revolution". As a result, Jewish businesses settled in Judendorf, including a cement factory.
The Judendorf and Straßengel people, however, owed their economic boom to the fact that the upper class of Graz had seized this area already in the year 1850. Especially based on economic activity was the development of a hotel, a cold-water sanatorium, and the "Styrian Park Sanatorium Dr. Feiler". At the time, as one of the most famous spa resorts of the monarchy, Judendorf-Straßengel finally obtained the separation from Gratwein, and in 1909 constituted itself as an independent local community.
The upswing came to an abrupt end with the collapse of the monarchy and the associated loss of the economic backlands. The congregation would soon have sunk into insignificance, if the health insurance of the Austrian federal railway would not have taken over the former Feiler Park Sanatorium.
After the Second World War, Judendorf-Straßengel developed more and more into a residential community, and in 1981, 86% of the workforce worked in the home-community. After the insurance company of Austria railways in 1989 abolished parts of its special hospital. Through intensive efforts, the tradition of Judendorf-Straßengel as a health resort and as a place of rest and recreation also continued. Consequently, in the first special department of the Psychiatric Hospital "Park Residence", a retirement home, and on the site of the last disused part, a modern rehabilitation center was built with a focus on neurology, orthopedics, oncology and children's rehabilitation.
In 2009 the main square was completely redesigned around the former community center and inaugurated on the occasion of the 100th anniversary.
; Eisbach
North of the village Rein was in the Neolithic Age in Lasinja-Culture, a mining site for silex. From there, tools were won. Workpieces of this mining site were spread to a distance of away.
Since the 12th century, the Stift Rein has been a characteristic feature of the community. In Eisbach and in its surroundings, there were a number of mining operations, as for mercury and lignite.

Demographics


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Culture and sights

Buildings

Transportation

The proximity to the town of Graz is very well connected. It is not located directly on one of the main roads, but on the regional road from Gratkorn to Eisbach. Through this connection, the Grazerstraße B 67 achieve. The nearest interchanges to the Pyhrn motorway A 9 are Deutschfeistritz at about northbound and Gratkorn six km southbound.
In the municipality area lies the Bahnhof Gratwein-Gratkorn and the stop Judendorf-Straßengel of the Austrian Southern Railway, with half-hourly to hourly train connections to Graz and Bruck an der Mur.
The Graz Airport is about away.

Politics

Municipal council

The municipal council consists of 31 members and is composed from the following parties since the 2015 municipal elections:
The mayor is Harald Mulle since 2015.

Coat of arms

All four predecessor towns had a town crest. Because of the merger, they lost their official validity on January 1, 2015. The new municipal coat of arms for the merged community took effect on 15 October 2016.

Blazon :
The crosier point points to the old, important Rein Cistercian monastery.

Twin cities