Neu-Isenburg Explained

Type:Stadt
Image Coa:DEU Neu-Isenburg COA.svg
Image Plan:Neu-Isenburg in OF.svg
State:Hessen
Region:Darmstadt
District:Offenbach
Coordinates:50.05°N 50°W
Elevation:130
Area:24.29
Postal Code:63263
Area Code:06102,(Zeppelinheim:069)
Licence:OF
Gemeindeschlüssel:06 4 38 009
Divisions:3 Stadtteile
Website:www.neu-isenburg.de
Mayor:Dirk Gene Hagelstein[1]
Leader Term:2021 - 27
Party:SPD

Neu-Isenburg is a town in Germany, located in the Offenbach district of Hesse. It is part of the Frankfurt Rhein-Main urban area and has a population of 38,204 (2020). The town is known nowadays mainly for its regionally used shopping centre, the Isenburg-Zentrum (IZ), the Hugenottenhalle, the Hotel Kempinski Frankfurt, the Autokino Gravenbruch (the oldest drive-in cinema in Europe), the Sportpark, the Waldschwimmbad (swimming pool) and its location near Frankfurt Airport.

Geography

Neighbouring communities

Neu-Isenburg borders in the west and north on the district-free city of Frankfurt am Main, in the east on the district-free city of Offenbach and in the south on the towns of Dreieich, Langen and Mörfelden-Walldorf (Groß-Gerau district).

Constituent communities

In 1959, building work began on the Wohnstadt im Grünen ("Living Town in the Green"), as it was marketed. This was Gravenbruch. Almost 7,000 people found a new home in this satellite town between the main town and Heusenstamm, lying in the woods. Owing to the great number of young families that moved there, this constituent community was known as the town with Europe's densest population of children. It is also well known for the Kempinski-Hotel and the drive-in cinema.

With the amalgamation of the formerly self-administering community of Zeppelinheim in the course of municipal reform in 1977, Neu-Isenburg also stretched farther westwards. Here is found the Zeppelinmuseum.

History

Neu-Isenburg was founded on 24 July 1699 as a town of exiles by Huguenots, French Protestants who had had to flee their homeland after the Edict of Nantes was revoked. Their new landlord, Count Johann Philipp von Isenburg-Offenbach, guaranteed them safety, the free use of the French language and religious freedom.

He gave them leave to settle in the Wildbann Dreieich, an old royal hunting forest, in the place where in the Middle Ages the pilgrimage chapel Zum Heiligen Kreuz ("To the Holy Cross") once stood. By way of thanks to the Count, the town was named Neu-Isenburg after him. The town plan was laid out by Andreas Loeber in a right-angled grid pattern. From corners ran diagonal streets to the marketplace. Also, the middles of the outer sides were linked by streets to the square marketplace. This township survives today in the streets of Kronengasse, Pfarrgasse, Löwengasse and Hirtengasse.

Neu-Isenburg was one of the planned towns of the 17th and 18th centuries. The settlers at first worked at farming, but later turned back to the handicraft trades that they had learnt, such as the stocking knitter's craft, thereby laying the groundwork for Neu-Isenburg's economic development. The surrounding communities eyed the French settlers with great mistrust and called the town welsches Dorf (the German word welsch refers to peoples who speak Romance languages, especially French; it is cognate with the English word Welsh, but does not have the same meaning).On 20 May 1700 – a Thursday – the clergyman Isaac Bermond held the first church services under an old oak in the middle of the church square.

About 1701, the Forsthaus was built (today an inn called Frankfurter Haus) by the city of Frankfurt am Main at the city limits with Neu-Isenburg. The first French Reformed church was built of wood between 1702 and 1706. The foundation stone was laid on Ascension Day 1702. Likewise in 1702, the Town Hall was built at the marketplace, and the Haus zum Löwen was mentioned for the first time. This was used until 1918 as an inn called Au Lion d'Or ("At the Golden Lion"), and today it houses the local history museum.

The first school followed in 1704, and in 1705 the Bansamühle (mill). The wooden church was replaced between 1773 and 1775 with a stone building. In 1781, the first German-language school was built.

After the Congress of Vienna in 1815, the County of Ysenburg, together with the Oberamt of Offenbach and its member municipalities, passed to the Grand Duchy of Hesse. In 1828, the Prussian-Hessian Customs Union built a customs house (Frankfurter Straße 10) as its main customs office on the border with what was then the Free City of Frankfurt.

Despite considerable reservations, German families, too, were moving into the town beginning in the 18th century, leading to the church's having to hold services alternately in German and French as of 1761, much to the French-speaking population's chagrin. In the end, German was confirmed as the town's official language in 1829.

In 1846, the Main-Neckar railway near Neu-Isenburg was completed, but the town did not get its own railway station until 1852.Other events in Neu-Isenburg's history, in brief, are as follows:

Population development

In 1834, Neu-Isenburg had only 1,762 inhabitants. By 1939, there were 15,081. After Zeppelinheim was amalgamated and Gravenbruch had been built, the population reached 35,000 by 1983.

Politics

Town council

The municipal elections held on 6 March 2016 yielded the following results,[2] compared to earlier municipal elections:[3] [4]

Parties and voter communities CDUSPDAfDGRÜNEFDPLINKEFWGDistribution of seats
2016Share of the votes36.8 23.5 12.5 11.9 7.2 4.8 3.2
Seats (out of 45)17 11 6 5 3 2 1
2011Share of the votes44.1 24.5 20.2 3.6 3.5 4.2
Seats (out of 45)20 11 9 2 1 2
2006Share of the votes52.0 23.3 14.0 5.4 5.2
Seats (out of 45)23 11 6 3 2
2001Share of the votes48.0 26.5 16.9 5.2 3.4
Seats (out of 45)22 12 8 2 1
1997Share of the votes41.8 29.9 16.1 5.7 6.5
Seats (out of 45)19 13 7 3 3

The CDU formed a coalition with Die Grünen (“The Greens”), the FDP and the Freie Wähler (“Free Voters”).

Mayors

Past mayoral elections have yielded the following results:

YearCandidatesParty%
Result
2015Herbert Hunkel[5] 77.4
Thilo SeipelFDP22.6
Voter turnout it %30.3
2010Herbert Hunkel[6] 58.9
Christian BeckSPD36.9
Susann GuberFDP4.2
Voter turnout in %38.4
2007Dirk-Oliver QuillingCDU83.3
Markus MunariSPD16.7
Voter turnout in %40.0
YearCandidatesParty%
Result
2001Dirk-Oliver QuillingCDU78.5
Wolfgang LamprechtSPD19.0
Edgar Schultheis2.4
Voter turnout in %41.1
1995[7] Dirk-Oliver QuillingCDU63.1
Berthold DepperFDP36.9
Voter turnout in %38.0
1995Dirk-Oliver QuillingCDU49.5
Günter TrützschlerSPD14.1
Maria MarxGrüne17.7
Berthold DepperFDP18.8
Voter turnout in %45.7
  1. Web site: Ergebnisse der letzten Direktwahl aller hessischen Landkreise und Gemeinden. de. 5 September 2022. Hessisches Statistisches Landesamt. XLS.
  2. http://www.statistik-hessen.de/k2016/html/EG438009.htm Statistical Office of Hesse: Results of the municipal election 2016
  3. http://www.statistik-hessen.de/K2011/EG438009.htm Statistical Office of Hesse: Results of the municipal elections 2011 and 2006
  4. http://www.statistik-hessen.de/themenauswahl/wahlen/daten/kw01/ergebnisse/gv438009/index.html Statistical Office of Hesse: Results of the municipal elections 2001 and 1997
  5. Herbert Hunkel was supported by the CDU
  6. Herbert Hunkel was supported by the CDU
  7. Runoff

At the last election on 27 September 2015, the independent candidate Herbert Hunkel, who was supported by the CDU, was reelected with 77.4% of the vote over Thilo Seipel (FDP, 22.6%). Voter turnout was 30.3%.

Twin towns – sister cities

See also: List of twin towns and sister cities in Germany. Neu-Isenburg is twinned with:[8]

Friendly cities

Neu-Isenburg also has friendly relations with:[8]

Economy and infrastructure

Economy

Given its proximity to the trade fair city of Frankfurt and to Frankfurt Airport, Neu-Isenburg is an attractive location for businesses of the most varied sectors. Among them are many hotels, which see more than 230,000 overnight stays every year, the highest figure in the Offenbach district.

Over time, the town has converted itself from a location for producing businesses to a service-industry-based location and is among the biggest high-technology locations in the Frankfurt Rhine Main Region.

Some of the businesses established here are:

Around the 1980s and 1990s the airline Condor was headquartered in Neu-Isenburg.[9] [10]

Transport

The town is close to several routes of the German Autobahn network (A 3, A 5, A 661).

Neu-Isenburg station is on the Main-Neckar Railway and is served by Rhine-Main S-Bahn lines and and regional train,[11] although the station is somewhat remote from the town centre. It is the only station in Hesse that has loading tracks for a motorail service, connecting to several destinations in Austria, Italy and southern France. This service was discontinued in 2014. However the terminal remains. runs over the Mannheim–Frankfurt railway, stopping at Zeppelinheim station.

The Frankfurt tram network has a terminal at Isenburger Schneise, just within the Frankfurt boundary for reasons of municipal identity, linking the northern margin of Neu-Isenburg with Frankfurt Central Station.

Frankfurt Airport lies at the town limits.

Culture and sightseeing

Hugenottenhalle

Neu-Isenburg is known far beyond its limits for the various events staged at the Hugenottenhalle. In this multipurpose hall with a variable capacity of up to 2,000 people, rock concerts are held, guest theatrical performances are given and dancing and music are performed. Citizens are offered a comprehensive cultural programme covering every genre.

Open-Doors-Festival

Neu-Isenburg is especially well known in the Frankfurt Rhine Main Region for its yearly summertime Open-Doors-Festival (formerly Musikspektakel). For three days, some 40 different bands and artists from all genres of music play. The free event is attended by some 15,000 guests and is held on several different stages throughout the town area.

Fastnacht

The parade through town on Shrove Monday (Rosenmontag) — sometimes called Lumpenmontag in Neu-Isenburg — enjoys great popularity.

Education

Media

Ärzte-Zeitung, a newspaper for physicians, has its headquarters in Neu-Isenburg.[12]

Notable people

Honorary citizens

External links