Arzl (Innsbruck)

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Arzl ( district )
locality
cadastral municipality Arzl
Austria map, position of Arzl highlighted
Template: Infobox community part in Austria / maintenance / map
Basic data
Pole. District , state Innsbruck city  (I), Tyrol
Pole. local community innsbruck
Coordinates 47 ° 17 '5 "  N , 11 ° 25' 54"  E Coordinates: 47 ° 17 '5 "  N , 11 ° 25' 54"  Ef1
height 642  m above sea level A.
Residents of the village 11,226 (January 1, 2020)
Area  d. KG 21 km²
Post Code 6020 Innsbruck
prefix + 43/0512 (Innsbruck)
Statistical identification
Locality code 16400
Cadastral parish number 81103
Counting district / district Arzl-Dorf, Arzl-West, Arzl-Süd, Arzl-Olympisches Dorf (70101 X [60,61,62,63])
image
View of the old town center of Arzl
Source: STAT : index of places ; BEV : GEONAM ; TIRIS
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11,226

Arzl Statistical districtf1
Basic data
Pole. District , state Innsbruck city  (I), Tyrol
Pole. local community Innsbruck   ( KG  Arzl)
Locality Arzl
Coordinates 47 ° 17 ′ 5 "  N , 11 ° 25 ′ 54"  Ef1
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Residents of the stat. An H. 3941 (2014)
Building status 1004 (2014)
surface 20.29 km²
Statistical identification
Statistical district 15 Arzl
Counting district / district Arzl-Dorf, Arzl-West (70101 X [60,61])
Map of Arzl Template: Infobox community part in Austria / maintenance / site plan
Arzl - Statistical District in Innsbruck - Lagekarte.png
Source: STAT : index of places ; BEV : GEONAM ; TIRIS ; City of Innsbruck: Statistics - Numbers
Template: Infobox community part in Austria / maintenance / side box
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BW

Arzl is a cadastral community , a fraction ( locality ) and a statistical district in the northeast of Innsbruck . In 1940 Arzl, until then an agricultural village, was incorporated into Innsbruck . The name is probably derived from arcella , which means something like "small castle".

geography

The old town center is 642  m above sea level. A. on the southern slope of the Nordkette as one of the MARTHA villages on the old village road from Innsbruck to Hall in Tirol and was able to retain its rural-village character.

South of it in the valley, the settlement is New Arzl with a commercial area and the occasion of the 1964 Winter Olympics and 1976 built Olympic Village , which was passed after the Games of the population. The district has had this name ever since. There has been a lot of construction activity there since the 1960s, and the Olympic Village today borders directly on the Neu-Rum district of the surrounding municipality of Rum , which experienced a similar population development in the vicinity of Innsbruck. To the west of the old town center are suburban settlements made up of single-family houses and, in some cases, luxurious residential complexes.

Outline and statistical data

The area of ​​the cadastral municipality and locality corresponds to the municipality of Arzl, which was independent until 1940. In addition to the village of Arzl, these include parts of what is now the Olympic village and industrial area Mühlau / Arzl as well as the Rotte Finkenberg , the desert Hernstein , and the mountain and guest houses Arzler Alm, Guflhütte, Rechenhof and the Pfeishütte shelter . The cadastral community borders in the west on the cadastral community Mühlau , in the south, separated by the Inn, on the cadastral community Amras and in the north and east on the communities Scharnitz , Thaur  and Rum .

The statistical district of Arzl consists of the statistical districts ( counting districts ) Arzl-Dorf (1972.8 ha, 1757 inhabitants, 610 buildings) and Arzl-West (55.8 ha, 2317 inhabitants, 498 buildings, as of April 2016). 13.5% of the population are younger than 15 years, 20.3% older than 65. The proportion of foreigners is 15.2% (as of 2016).

history

Arzl was first mentioned in 1173 in a document from the Dießen monastery as " Arcella ". The name is probably derived from the Latin arcella (= castle) and is of late Roman or Alpine Roman origin. Originally, Mühlau also belonged to Arzl, which emerged as a mill settlement on the Mühlauer Bach and became independent in 1740. In the course of the formation of large communities under the Nazi regime, Arzl was incorporated into Innsbruck in 1940, which was confirmed in a referendum in 1946.

The hll. Churches consecrated to John the Baptist and John the Evangelist have been documented since 1237. It was originally a branch of Thaur and became a curate in 1786 and a parish in 1891. The original church was replaced by a new Gothic building in 1480 and redesigned in Baroque style from 1735–1737 according to plans by Franz de Paula Penz .

If the connection from Innsbruck to Hall was originally via today's Dörferstraße, then between 1585 and 1589 the new road to Hall was laid on the valley floor through the Arzler Au, next to it the Rosenkranzweg to Loretto . In 1893 the state main shooting range was moved from Mariahilf to the Arzler Au, around it the shooting range developed, later called Neu-Arzl. The shooting range was later relocated to the Eggenwald above Arzl and the Olympic Village was created on its premises.

coat of arms

Unlike Wilten , Hötting or Mühlau, Arzl did not have a coat of arms when it was incorporated. Therefore, in 1993 it received a newly created district coat of arms, which was accepted by the representatives of the Arzler associations. In a red and white split shield on a green mountain, it shows the view of the Arzler Kalvarienbergkirche, seen from the center, in light gray wall and with black roofs. The coat of arms shows the widely visible landmark of Arzl and reminds with the red and white city colors of belonging to Innsbruck.

Culture and sights

The symbol of Arzl is the Arzler Kalvarienberg with the chapel built around 1665. In the course of renovation work on the Kalvarienberg, finds from pre-Roman times and from the early Middle Ages emerged. The wet meadow area at the southern foot of the slope is a protected part of the landscape .

See also:  List of listed objects in the cadastral municipality of Arzl

Infrastructure and traffic

The district is served by the bus lines A of the Innsbrucker Verkehrsbetriebe and 501, 502, 502N and 503 of the Verkehrsverbund Tirol , other lines run in Neu-Arzl.

literature

  • G. Auer: Innsbruck-Arzl - a village becomes a district. The rural settlement area and its structural change in the 19th and 20th centuries Century. Dissertation, Innsbruck 1984.
  • D. Feil: History of the development of Arzl. In: M. Putz (ed.): 200 Years of the Innsbruck-Arzl Town Music Band , 2003, pp. 91-102.
  • FH Hye: History of the City of Innsbruck. Collected articles and contributions, CD-ROM, Innsbruck 2001.
  • Parish of Arzl (Ed.): 500 years of St. Johanneskirche Innsbruck - Arzl . 1980.

Bibliography:

Web links

Commons : Arzl  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. City of Innsbruck: cadastral communities of Innsbruck (PDF; 1.3 MB)
  2. City of Innsbruck: area, inhabitants and number of buildings of the individual census districts and statistical districts of the city of Innsbruck (as of April 2016) (PDF; 143 kB)
  3. City of Innsbruck: District mirror 2017 (PDF; 410 kB)
  4. Martin Bitschnau , Hannes Obermair : Tiroler Urkundenbuch, II. Department: The documents on the history of the Inn, Eisack and Pustertal valleys. Vol. 2: 1140-1200 . Universitätsverlag Wagner, Innsbruck 2012, ISBN 978-3-7030-0469-8 , p. 218-219, no. 674 .
  5. a b c d Franz-Heinz Hye : The district coat of arms of Arzl. In: Innsbrucker Stadtnachrichten, June 1993, p. 27 ( digitized version )
  6. Parish Innsbruck-Arzl: Chronicle ( Memento from February 19, 2016 in the Internet Archive )
  7. ^ Protected part of the landscape Arzler Kalvarienberg , protected areas in Tyrol