Troisdorf
coat of arms | Germany map | |
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Coordinates: 50 ° 49 ′ N , 7 ° 10 ′ E |
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Basic data | ||
State : | North Rhine-Westphalia | |
Administrative region : | Cologne | |
Circle : | Rhein-Sieg district | |
Height : | 55 m above sea level NHN | |
Area : | 62 km 2 | |
Residents: | 74,953 (Dec. 31, 2019) | |
Population density : | 1209 inhabitants per km 2 | |
Postcodes : | 53840, 53842, 53844 | |
Primaries : | 02203, 02241, 02246, 0228 | |
License plate : | SU | |
Community key : | 05 3 82 068 | |
LOCODE : | DE TRO | |
City structure: | 12 city districts or localities | |
City administration address : |
Kölner Strasse 176 53840 Troisdorf |
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Website : | ||
Mayor : | Klaus-Werner Jablonski ( CDU ) | |
Location of Troisdorf in the Rhein-Sieg district | ||
Troisdorf ( [ ˈtroːsdɔrf ] with Dehnungs -i ) is the most populous city in the Rhein-Sieg district in North Rhine-Westphalia and lies on the right bank of the Rhine between Cologne and the federal city of Bonn . The city lies in the southeast of the Cologne Bay between the southern foothills of the Bergisches Land in the north and the Siegauen in the south.
geography
Troisdorf lies on the Sieg , a tributary of the Rhine , and on the Agger , which in turn is a tributary of the Sieg and forms the city limits to the neighboring town of Siegburg . In Troisdorf the Agger flows into the Sieg. The Mühlengraben flows parallel to the course of the Sieg, which until the end of the 20th century served, among other things, to drive two grain mills in Troisdorf's urban area. The water is diverted from the Agger at the Agger weir and returned to the Sieg at Bergheim . The highest elevation in the urban area is 135.6 m above sea level. NHN the Telegraphenberg in the Wahner Heide , it reaches its lowest point at 46 m above sea level. NHN in the area of the Sieg estuary .
City structure
Troisdorf consists of twelve districts , which are also localities with a town councilor :
district | Residents |
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Altenrath | 2,274 |
Bergheim | 5,558 |
Eschmar | 3,186 |
Friedrich Wilhelms Hut | 7.160 |
War village | 3,189 |
Troisdorf center | 17.197 |
Dustbin | 1.965 |
Oberlar | 5,910 |
Rotterdam lake | 3,730 |
Sieglar | 8,831 |
Speak | 13,011 |
Troisdorf-West | 5,747 |
Another 7 residents without location information; Status of the stated number of inhabitants (including secondary residence ): December 31, 2018
Neighboring communities
In the north Troisdorf borders on Cologne and Rösrath , in the east on Lohmar and Siegburg , in the southeast on Sankt Augustin , in the south on Bonn and in the west on Niederkassel .
climate
history
Troisdorf is originally referred to as Truhtesdorf in a document from the Siegburg Benedictine Abbey Michaelsberg from 1064.
The oldest documented settlements in today's urban area are Eschmar and Sieglar , which were mentioned as early as 832. The former knight's seat Burg Wissem , which is now near the city center on the edge of the forest, speaks for an early settlement .
The community of Troisdorf belonged to the mayor's office of Siegburg from 1816 to 1899 .
After the First World War , the mayor's office was occupied by Allied soldiers. These remained until January 29, 1926.
industrialization
The real upswing of the city began with industrialization in the 19th century. In 1825, the former head of the mining office in Bonn, Windgassen, founded an iron smelter at Mühlengraben near the Agger - Sieg estuary. Emil Langen took over this in 1843 and named the settlement Friedrich-Wilhelms-Hütte , which in turn was taken over by Mannstaedt-Werke in 1913.
In the second half of the 19th century, Troisdorf's location on the railway line on the right bank of the Rhine , the Sieg line and the freight train route to Speldorf made it interesting for industrial companies. In 1887, the Rheinisch-Westfälische Sprengstoff-AG (RWS) under its general director Emil Müller started up the Troisdorf detonator factory for the production of primers and detonators, which later became a location of Dynamit Nobel AG.
From 1951 to 2002 there was a Belgian barracks in each of the districts of Spich and Altenrath .
City rights
On March 23, 1952, Troisdorf received city rights at a festive ceremony .
Incorporations
In the course of the municipality reform , the villages of the municipality of Sieglar (Bergheim, Eschmar, Kriegsdorf, Müllekoven, Oberlar, Sieglar and Spich) as well as the villages of Friedrich-Wilhelms-Hütte (previously Menden ) and Altenrath (previously Lohmar ) were replaced. new localities in the city of Troisdorf. Until then, both the RWS fuse factory and the Troisdorf train station were 7 and 6 tenths respectively (as of 1924) in the Sieglar community (in Oberlar). Multiple efforts from 1906 to incorporate the city of Troisdorf Oberlar (including tax revenue) remained unsuccessful until 1969. In 1999 the city districts Troisdorf-West and Rotter See were created through divisions .
Population development
Until the 19th century Troisdorf only had a few hundred inhabitants. Only with industrialization in the 20th century did population growth accelerate. In 1895 only 2,825 people lived in the town, in 1968 there were already 18,000. Due to numerous incorporations on August 1, 1969, the population rose to 48,837. On June 30, 2005, the official number of inhabitants for Troisdorf was 74,613 according to updates by the State Office for Data Processing and Statistics North Rhine-Westphalia (only main residences and after comparison with the other state offices).
The following overview shows the number of inhabitants according to the respective territorial status. These are census results or official updates from the State Statistical Office. From 1871, the information relates to the “local population”, from 1925 to the resident population and since 1987 to the “population at the location of the main residence”. Before 1871, the number of inhabitants was determined according to inconsistent survey procedures.
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The current population includes people who have their second place of residence in Troisdorf. With 8,652 foreign residents, Troisdorf has a migrant share of 11% of the total population. In Troisdorf there is still a surplus of women with 39,123 women compared to 37,864 men.
politics
City council
The local elections on May 25, 2014 had the following results:
Parties and constituencies | % 2014 |
Seats 2014 |
% 2009 |
Seats 2009 |
Election graph | |
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CDU | Christian Democratic Union of Germany | 41.4 | 22nd | 43.6 | 22nd |
City council election 2014
Turnout: 50.01% (2009: 48.07%)
% 50 40 30th 20th 10
0
41.36
32.68
8.01
3.39
5.04
1.49
3.61
1.64
2.77
Gains and losses
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SPD | Social Democratic Party of Germany | 32.7 | 17th | 30.9 | 15th | |
GREEN | Alliance 90 / The Greens | 8.0 | 4th | 10.8 | 5 | |
FDP | Free Democratic Party | 3.4 | 2 | 7.5 | 4th | |
LEFT | The left | 5.0 | 3 | 3.5 | 2 | |
UWG rainbow | Independent community of voters for civil rights Troisdorf RAINBOGEN | 1.5 | 1 | 2.2 | 1 | |
Referendum | From now on ... democracy through referendum , for democracy through referendum | 0.9 | 0 | 1.6 | 1 | |
TBU | Troisdorf Citizens' Union | 1.0 | 0 | - | - | |
AfD | Alternative for Germany | 3.6 | 2 | - | - | |
Hasselmann | Individual applicants | 0.2 | 0 | - | - | |
BIG | Alliance for Innovation and Justice | 0.7 | 0 | - | - | |
Pirates | Pirate party | 1.6 | 1 | - | - | |
total | 100.0 | 52 | 100.0 | 50 | ||
Voter turnout in% | 50.0 | 48.1 |
mayor
The mayor has been working full-time in Troisdorf since 1999. He heads the city administration and represents the city of Troisdorf externally. He is currently assisted by three full-time councilors (for management tasks in administration) and four honorary vice mayors (for representative tasks).
The following people have been mayors since 1948:
- 1948–1951: Wilhelm Hamacher (center)
- 1960–1969: Bruno Heimansberg (CDU)
- 1969–1975: Josef Ludwig (CDU)
- 1975–1993: Hans Jaax (SPD)
- 1993–1998: Uwe Göllner (SPD)
- 1998–1999: Walter Bieber (SPD)
full-time:
- 1999–2009: Manfred Uedelhoven (CDU)
- since October 21, 2009: Klaus-Werner Jablonski (CDU)
coat of arms
Blazon : "In silver, two floating black rods connected to one another in the form of the capital letter T, at each end of the cross rod a red ball, and the longitudinal rod a blue ball." | |
Justification of the coat of arms: The coat of arms was redesigned after the municipal reform. It represents the initial T of the city. The four spheres represent the communities from which today's Troisdorf emerged. The T is reminiscent of a molecule based on the city's chemical industry. |
logo
Troisdorf has a logo that partially replaces the coat of arms. It consists of several spheres that are supposed to symbolize the location of the districts and their size.
City partner and sponsorships
- Evry in France since 1972
- Genk in Belgium since 1990
- Heidenau in Saxony since 1990
- Redcar and Cleveland in the UK since 1990
- Kerkyra on Corfu in Greece since 1996
- Nantong in China since 1997
- Mushtisht in Kosovo since 2001
- Özdere in Turkey since 2004
Culture and sights
Museums
- Picture book museum in Wissem Castle . The only picture book museum in Europe.
- Fishing museum in Bergheim. A museum built in 2010 by the Bergheim an der Sieg Fisheries Brotherhood , which presents the history of the guild and the place.
- Troisdorf plastics museum on the HT site. History of the plastic region Troisdorf, in which the plastic windows and the first PVC floor coverings were developed.
- Museum for town and industrial history (Musit) Troisdorf at the castle Wissem .
- The portal to the Wahner Heide at Wissem Castle.
Buildings
- The picture book museum has been located at Wissem Castle since 1982 . After the renovation as part of the Regionale 2010, the facility is also home to the portal to Wahner Heide, the Museum of Urban and Industrial History Troisdorf (MUSIT), the learning project KennenLernenUmwelt (KLU), the registry office, the creative workshop, the local history association, the Heinz Müller Foundation and a tourist information office.
- Troisdorf city gates
- Two stainless steel constructions designed by Joachim Bandau and Victor Bonato in 1984 with transparent, reflective and water-overflowing glass surfaces, which are located at the beginning and end of the pedestrian zone .
- The event hall was opened in 2014.
Parks
The city has a number of protected or natural areas over its entire area, which are used by the citizens of Troisdorf and other cities in the area as local recreation areas.
- The Siegaue is located at the mouth of the Sieg. When the water floods, the floodplain becomes a water landscape of immense proportions. In dry times, the Siegaue is home to many species of birds that use them as breeding grounds. But local recreation is also provided. In addition to many cycling and hiking trails that invite you to explore the Siegaue and the nearby banks of the Rhine, the Zur Siegfähre restaurant and the eponymous ferry are located just before the mouth of the Sieg . This place is known far beyond the borders of Troisdorf.
- There is also a spacious park in the Spich district that borders directly on the Wahner Heide . The Broich House and the Spicher Bürgerhaus are located on the edge of the park .
- The forest park is located in Troisdorf-Mitte. There are hiking trails and animal enclosures around a pond that once housed magnificent goldfish.
- Another park is located in the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Hütte district. In addition to green areas, it includes various play facilities, a skate park and a fairground that is used for flea markets and circus tents. Adjacent is, on the one hand, the district house, in which the youth welfare office offers various advice options, and, on the other hand, an allotment garden for the residents and an educationally supervised adventure playground .
- In the nature reserve Wahner Heide was the Wahn shooting range , most recently a military training area for the Belgian armed forces, which were stationed in Troisdorf for many years. Partly it is still a training area for the Bundeswehr today , but most of it is free to use for hikers. The Wahner Heide can be explored wonderfully on the paved paths. However, it is forbidden to leave the paths due to the ammunition pollution and to protect the landscape. The heathland is home to a variety of rare plants and animals.
Natural monuments
- Yew tree in the Sieglar district (Larstrasse 120–130)
- Hohlstein in Hohlsteinstrasse in the Spich district
Memorials
In Troisdorf, the victims of the Nazi era are commemorated by a stele on Jahnplatz, by stumbling blocks and the Vietnamese refugees by a flight boat in Troisdorf-Mitte.
Former sights
- Boxhohn oak in Altenrath
- Kaiserbauruine : This unfinished hotel was an unwanted landmark of Troisdorf on the A 59 from 1973 until it was blown up on May 13, 2001 .
Culinary specialties
A culinary specialty is the Troilsch (based on Kölsch ), as well as the TroPi ( Pils ) and also a Troisdorf wheat beer. Originally, these types of beer were brewed in the “brewery” in what was then the community center. After moving and reopening in 2012, the restaurant now operates under the name "Bierhaus", and the beers are now brewed outside of Troisdorf.
Sports
There are numerous sports clubs in Troisdorf . The better known include:
- the American football club Troisdorf Jets , which plays in the Regionalliga NRW,
- Ice hockey regional league EHC Dynamite Troisdorf ,
- Sportfreunde Troisdorf 05 , whose A and B youth 2013/2014 play in the respective Middle Rhine League (second highest division of the juniors), the 1st team of the seniors was relegated from the state league in the 2014/2015 season and plays in the 2015/2016 District League,
- Soccer - national division 1. FC Spich ,
- TTC Rot-Weiß Oberlar 1938 e. V., first and oldest table tennis club in the Rhein-Sieg district,
- Table tennis club Troisdorf 1969 e. V. ,
Other sports clubs are:
- Karate School Troisdorf e. V.
- Karate Dojo Ochi Troisdorf e. V.
- the Box Club Troisdorf 48 e. V.
- the German Life Saving Society , Troisdorf local group e. V.
- the radio amateurs of the DARC e. V. Local association G27 Troisdorf.
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Guard dance clubs such as:
- TC Altenrather Sandhasen 1992 e. V
- TC Blau-Weiß Troisdorf 1971 e. V.
- TC Burggarde Spich e. V.
- TC Fidele Sandhasen Oberlar
- De Höppebeenche of KG Grün-Weiß Bergheim
- TSC Rhein-Sieg Guard 1994 e. V.
- the handball club HSV Troisdorf e. V.
- the hockey club HTC Schwarz Weiß Troisdorf e. V.
- the athletics clubs Troisdorf Athletics Community and LAZ Puma Troisdorf / Siegburg
- the jazz and modern dance ballet of the Jazz Devils Dance Company
- the cycling club RV Blitz Spich 1908 e. V.
- the 1st chess club Troisdorf
- the diving club Sub-Aqua-Club Troisdorf e. V.
- the tennis club TC-Spich and other tennis clubs
- the Troisdorf swimming club 1923 e. V. - Water lovers blue and white
- the Turnvereine Troisdorf Turnverein 1891 e. V., Sieglarer Turnverein 1897 e. V., Turnverein 1909 e. V. Bergheim / victory
Economy and Infrastructure
economy
Troisdorf has a total of ten industrial and commercial areas:
- Camp Spich Business Park
- Belgische Allee (Spich)
- Beaver Trail (Spich)
- Redcarstrasse / Langbaurghstrasse (Spich)
- Bergheim
- Josef-Kitz-Strasse / Speestrasse (Friedrich-Wilhelms-Hütte)
- Industrial city park
- Service axis Mülheimer Straße / Kaiserstraße
- Rotter Viehtrift / Luxemburger Strasse
- Junkersring Airport Business Park
Established businesses
Companies from the chemical industry such as Dynamit Nobel, HT Troplast , Evonik Degussa GmbH (formerly Hüls Troisdorf), Orica Mining Services and the deep-drawn plastic packaging manufacturer silver plastics, the steel industry such as the special profile manufacturer Mannstaedt-Werke and the field of mechanical engineering as the company Reifenhäuser . Due to the short distance to Cologne / Bonn Airport , several logistics companies have settled in Troisdorf; The airline Arcus-Air is based there and the mail center 53 of Deutsche Post AG is in the Troisdorf district of Spich. The Happy Digits “Service Center” was also located in Spich. The logistics group DHL has also set up its development center (DHL Innovation Center) in Troisdorf. Formel D is an international service provider for the automotive and supplier industry, which has its headquarters here. In 2006, Prämeta , manufacturer of special fittings and medical technology, moved its headquarters to Troisdorf.
traffic
Road traffic
Troisdorf is connected to the trunk road network via the federal highway 59 and via feeder to the federal highway 3 . The federal highway 8 runs through the urban area . The south-eastern border to Siegburg is federal highway 56 .
The extension of Landesstraße 332 , which had been planned for decades as a bypass for parts of Sieglar and Eschmar, only existed on plans for a long time. As early as the 1980s, shortly before its completion due to procedural errors, the plan approval procedure had been declared null and void, so that this procedure had to go through all stages again. When the procedure was reissued, the location of the route was also changed in order to take account of changed requirements for noise protection; Specifically, the route was moved significantly more north to the Eschmar Garden City . Since the route has been kept free for construction for decades, construction can begin immediately after the procedure has been completed and becomes legally binding; the necessary financial resources are available to the State Office for Road Construction NRW . In November 2010, the Cologne district government declared that the planning approval procedure for the first construction phase of the bypass between the old route from Landesstraße 332 to Kreisstraße 29n can be carried out immediately. Building law is thus given.
After decades of planning and partial completion, the route of the EL 332 can now be used between Troisdorf-Sieglar and Troisdorf-Eschmar; only the last construction phase up to the BAB 59 is missing.
On January 1, 2018, 50,020 motor vehicles were registered in the city, including 43,139 cars.
Rail transport
At Troisdorf station, the railway line coming from Cologne splits into the victory line to Siegen and the right Rhine line to Neuwied . In regional traffic, there is an hourly trip on the RE 9 line on the Victory Line. On the right Rhine route, the RE 8 and RB 27 lines offer two trips per hour to Koblenz, with the RB 27 running from Cologne / Bonn Airport to Troisdorf station connects. In addition to the Troisdorf train station and the station in Spich, there is another stop in the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Hütte district on the right-hand Rhine route.
The S-Bahn line S 12 runs three times an hour from Cologne to Hennef and beyond once further to Au (Sieg) in the municipality of Windeck . Line S 19 connects Cologne / Bonn Airport at the same time, also runs to Hennef and continues every hour to Au (Sieg). In the evening and at the weekend, the shorter line S 13 runs through the airport and ends in Troisdorf.
All S-Bahn trains stop at Troisdorf train station and at Spich stop in the city. For Troisdorf there is a ten-minute cycle in the direction of Cologne by superimposing the S 12 and S 13 / S 19 on weekdays. Regional traffic offers at least another three connections per hour during the day. All in all, Cologne and the airport can be reached around the clock on all weekdays at least every hour or half hour.
The extension of the S 13 line along the right Rhine route to Bonn-Beuel and Bonn-Oberkassel is under construction well into the 2020s .
The high-speed route Cologne – Rhine / Main runs through Troisdorf, but without the possibility of changing passengers. This is given at the neighboring Siegburg / Bonn train station . As part of the construction of the high-speed line, the platforms were renewed and raised, and the platform tunnel was equipped with elevators for barrier-free use. As a replacement for the old station building from 1969, a much larger, six-storey commercial building with a hotel was built between 2017 and 2019. With the new building, the mobility center , which is operated jointly by DB and RSVG employees, moved in.
Bus transport
The tariff of the Verkehrsverbund Rhein-Sieg (VRS) applies to public transport in Troisdorf . Since 2014, the city bus lines of the Rhein-Sieg-Verkehrs-Gesellschaft have been running every twenty minutes on weekdays, with a focus on connections to the S-Bahn in Troisdorf train station and at the Spich stop. The most important bus connections are line 501, Siegburg Bf - Troisdorf Bf - Niederkassel - Lülsdorf , and 551, Troisdorf Bf - Bonn Hbf.
In long-distance bus traffic , only in 2016 did Flixbus buses stop on a route between Amsterdam and Vienna in Troisdorf.
Air traffic
The Cologne / Bonn airport is partially in Troisdorf city. It can be reached by car in about 15 minutes via the A 59 and by train with the RB 27, S. 13 and S 19 lines, which take 8 to 10 minutes from Troisdorf train station to Cologne / Bonn Airport train station . Because of this proximity, parts of the city are exposed to aircraft noise . The pros and cons of a night flight ban have not only preoccupied the Troisdorf committees for several years.
The Airbus A320-200 of Deutsche Lufthansa with the registration D-AIPM bears the name Troisdorf .
education
In Troisdorf there are thirteen primary schools , a secondary school , a secondary school , two grammar schools , two municipal comprehensive schools , including the Troisdorf European school , and two special needs schools . The Gertrud-Koch-Gesamtschule and the Heinrich-Böll-Gymnasium form the secondary school center in Sieglar and are partly operated on a full-time basis. A cafeteria is integrated in the building of the comprehensive school. The Korcak Realschule and the Geschwister-Scholl-Hauptschule were closed after the 2016/2017 school year.
In the Georg-Kerschensteiner vocational college of the Rhein-Sieg district , which is also located in the Sieglar school center, vocational students from various branches of education are taught. Here you will find technical colleges and higher vocational schools for both technical and social subjects. In addition to social pedagogues, technicians specializing in mechanical engineering and plastics and rubber technology are trained full-time and part-time at the technical schools . Since 2007 the general higher education entrance qualification (AHR) can be obtained at the Fachschule für Sozialpädagogik.
Troisdorf runs a music school and, together with Niederkassel, an adult education center .
There is also a DB Training training center in Troisdorf .
Personalities
People born in today's urban area
To 1900
- Johann Lair (1476–1554), also called John Siberch (derived from his place of residence in Siegburg), founded the university print shop in Cambridge (England) in 1520
- Gerhard Romilian von Kalcheim , called Leuchtmar (1589–1644), lawyer and diplomat
- Wilhelm Mülhens (1762–1841), perfumer and company founder from 4711
- Eugen von Loë (1839–1911) Prussian district administrator
- Eduard Heinrich Knackfuss (1855–1945), priest and painter
- Walther August Langen (1857–1912), banker and industrialist
- Wilhelm von der Nahmer (1858–1938), engineer and businessman
- Wilhelm Hamacher (1883–1951), politician (Center Party), Member of the Bundestag, representative of the Rhineland in the Reichsrat, Minister of Culture of North Rhine-Westphalia, party chairman
- Josef Hoegen (1898–1973), Gestapo officer in Cologne
- Heinz Lohmar (1900–1976), painter and graphic artist
1901 to 1950
- Karl Johannes Heyer (1904–1995), Catholic priest and author
- Franz Ronig (1927–2019), Roman Catholic priest, theologian and art historian
- Günter Nöfer (1928–2000), politician and member of the state parliament (CDU); from 1964 to 1970 deputy constitutional judge of the state of North Rhine-Westphalia
- Paul Heuser (* 1929), musician, choir and orchestra conductor
- Hans Jaax (1933–2000), politician and member of the state parliament (SPD)
- Wilhelm G. Jacobs (* 1935), philosopher
- Siegfried Hinterkausen (* 1938 in Altenrath), writer
- Wilfried Kohlars (1939–2019), football player
- Hans-Dieter Ahlert (* 1941), painter and object artist
- Uwe Göllner (* 1945), Member of the Bundestag (SPD) (February 12, 1996 to September 18, 2005) and former (honorary) mayor of Troisdorf (1993 to 1998)
- Walter Bieber (1948–2017), SPD politician, last honorary mayor of the city
- Hermann-Josef Sausen (* 1950), diplomat and former ambassador to Iceland and Panama
1951 to 1975
- Rolf "Rocco" Klein (1951–2015), guitarist, composer and producer
- Günter Assenmacher (* 1952 in Sieglar), official of the Archdiocese of Cologne
- Norbert Stöbe (* 1953), translator and science fiction writer
- Jürgen Becker (* 1953), lawyer, 2009 - 2013 civil servant state secretary
- Robert Theodor Betz (* 1953), psychologist and author
- Uwe Friedl (* 1955), politician and mayor of Euskirchen
- Udo Hesse (* 1955), photographer
- Heinz-Peter Behr (* 1955), diplomat and ambassador to Hungary
- Manfred Krupp (* 1956), journalist and director of Hessischer Rundfunk since March 1, 2016
- Josef Esch (* 1956), operator of real estate funds in cooperation with the private bank Sal. Oppenheim
- Joachim Zünder (* 1956), writer
- Hans-Jürgen Petrauschke (* 1956), politician (CDU), since 2009 District Administrator of the Rhein-Kreis Neuss, previously District Director of the Rhein-Kreis Neuss
- Gabriele Heider (* 1956), visual artist
- Hermann-Josef Scheidgen (* 1957), theologian and historian
- Stefan Demary (1958–2010), concept artist
- Tom Buhrow (* 1958), journalist
- Reinhold Becker (* 1959), swimmer
- Michael Boddenberg (* 1959), Hessian Minister for Federal Affairs since February 5, 2009
- Achim Tüttenberg (* 1959), MP for the SPD in the state parliament of North Rhine-Westphalia
- Meinolf Hellmund (1960–2016), geologist and paleontologist
- Jörg Bendix (* 1961), physical geographer and professor at the University of Marburg
- Udo Kragl (* 1961), chemist and biotechnologist, professor of technical chemistry at the University of Rostock
- Robert Walterscheid-Müller (* 1962), former automobile racing driver
- Elisabeth Winkelmeier-Becker (* 1962), CDU politician and member of the German Bundestag since September 18, 2005
- Jürgen Peiffer (* 1963), jazz drummer and composer
- Frank Baquet (* 1964 in Troisdorf-Sieglar), contemporary, freelance photo artist
- Klaus Pipke (* 1964), Mayor of Hennef (Sieg)
- Christoph Brüske (* 1965), cabaret artist and presenter
- Michael Strempel (* 1965), journalist, head of foreign television for WDR
- Christiane Florin (* 1968), political scientist and journalist
- Michael Rathmann (* 1968), ancient historian
- Arnulf Quadt (* 1969) particle physicist and professor at the University of Göttingen
- Marylyn Addo (* 1970) infectiologist and professor at the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf
- Michael Dorth (* 1971), musician, producer and songwriter
- Cora Irsen (* 1974), pianist, presenter and organizer
- Rouven Costanza (* 1975), actor and theater director
From 1976
- Sebastian Pufpaff (* 1976), cabaret artist, presenter and entertainer
- Dennis Rödder (* 1979), biologist and head of the herpetological section of the Alexander Koenig Museum
- Benjamin Kugel (* 1979), fitness trainer
- Sven Lehmann (* 1979 in Sieglar), politician (Bündnis 90 / Die Grünen), member of the Bundestag, until 2003 resident in Troisdorf-Spich
- Şirvan-Latifah Çakici (* 1980), politician of Kurdish origin
- Jeannine Michaelsen (* 1981), TV and radio presenter
- Max Hoff (* 1982), canoeist who drives both white water and flat water
- Daniel Gottschlich (* 1982), star chef
- Saša Kekez (* 1983), actor
- Christian Seel (* 1983), chess player
- Sophie Moser (* 1984), violinist and actress
- Matthias Hummel (* 1984), soccer player
- Jessica Richter (* 1985), actress
- Anne Menden (* 1985), actress
- Martin Ulrich (* 1985), canoeist
- Lena Schöneborn (* 1986), 2008 Olympic champion in modern pentathlon
- Katharina Gebauer (* 1987), educator and politician (CDU)
- Sabine Lisicki (* 1989), tennis player
- Maik Blankart (* 1992), ice hockey player
- Karl-Richard Frey (* 1991), judoka
- Mario Engels (* 1993), soccer player
- Matthias Hamrol (* 1993), soccer goalkeeper
- Mitchell Weiser (* 1994), football player
- Sinan Bakış (* 1994), football player
- Malcolm Cacutalua (* 1994), football player
- Joel Abu Hanna (* 1998), football player
- Atakan Akkaynak (* 1999), football player
People associated with the city
- Emil Langen (* 1824 in Solingen ; † 1870 in Salzgitter), from 1846 to 1867 director of the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Hütte, today's Mannstaedt-Werke
- Johann Albert Sawinsky (* 1884 in Siegburg , † 1960 in Krekel ), entrepreneur
- Carl Niessen (* 1890 in Cologne , † 1969 in Troisdorf), theater scholar
- Lis Böhle (* 1901 in Cologne , † 1990 in Troisdorf), dialect author
- Wilhelm Stricker (* 1905 in Neuwied , † 1992 in Troisdorf), was a local politician (CDU), twice winner of the Federal Cross of Merit
- Hermann Richarz (* 1907 in Cologne-Poll , † 1985 in Troisdorf), opponent of National Socialism and pastor in Troisdorf after his release from the Dachau concentration camp
- Werner Hessenland (* 1909 in Höchst am Main, today Frankfurt-Höchst , † 1979 in Troisdorf), actor and radio play speaker
- Tonino Guerra (* 1920; † 2012), Italian poet and screenwriter. From 1944 until the end of the war he was a slave laborer at Dynamit AG.
- Paul Schäfer (* 1921 in Bonn; † 2010 in Santiago de Chile ), founder of the former Colonia Dignidad in Chile, worked in Troisdorf a. a. as YMCA youth leader
- Heinz Murmann (* 1928 in Bavaria ; † August 16, 2007 in Troisdorf), journalist
- Marie-Luise Salden (* 1939 in Elbing , West Prussia ) contemporary artist and museum educator
- Rupert Neudeck (* 1939 in Danzig ; † May 31, 2016) journalist , founder of Cap Anamur / Deutsche Not-Ärzte e. V. and chairman of the Peace Corps Grünhelme e. V.
- Hanno Rheineck (* 1942 in Trier ), five-time senior world champion in running
- Peter Haas (* 1940 in Schwarzrheindorf ), retired comprehensive school director D., author of dialect texts, essays and translations and historian
- Frieder Döring (* 1942 in Dattenfeld ), doctor and writer, lived and practiced as a dermatologist in Troisdorf since 1974 and has been a member of the Troisdorf literary café there since 1990.
- Lothar Ruschmeier (* 1945 in Minden ; † 2012 in Cologne ), City Director of the City of Cologne
- Josef Hawle (* 1948 in Munich ), artist, painter and graphic designer
- Günter Ollenschläger (* 1951 in Bonn- Beuel ), grew up in Troisdorf (lived 1951 to 1971), science journalist, university lecturer at Cologne University Hospital and from 1995 to 2014 head of the Medical Center for Quality in Medicine
- Robert Kloos (* 1958 in Dörrebach ), State Secretary in the Federal Ministry for Food, Agriculture and Consumer Protection, lives in Troisdorf.
- Andreas Fischer (* 1961 in Bonn ), filmmaker and photographer, grew up in Troisdorf
- Lusja Shatalova (* 1968 in Fergana , Uzbekistan ), Uzbek designer and illustrator for children's books
- Matthias Praxenthaler (* 1971), writer, grew up in Troisdorf
- Marcus Dahm (* 1977 in Trier ), composer, church musician and musicologist
- Sven Steinert (* 1983), musician
- Max Löffler (* 1988 in Halle (Saale) ), politician, former spokesman for the Green Youth, lived in Troisdorf in his youth.
- Roman Lob (* 1990 in Düsseldorf ), musician, participant in the Eurovision Song Contest in Baku 2012, works in Troisdorf.
- Harry Rowohlt (1945–2015), "the first person in the whole world who managed to get lost in Troisdorf"
Others
From 2011 to 2012 ZDF filmed the first season of the satirical science show Don't copy! in a demolished house in Troisdorf. Wigald Boning and Bernhard Hoëcker acted as moderators in six episodes .
literature
- Helmut Schulte: A short history of the city of Troisdorf. Facts and figures. City of Troisdorf, 1999.
- Peter Paul Trippen: Local history of Troisdorf. Cologne publishing house, Cologne 1940.
- Michael Werling and Marianne Vogt-Werling: Monument Preservation Plan for the City of Troisdorf (= series of publications from the Archives of the City of Troisdorf . Volume 31 ). Troisdorf 2010 (as PDF document on CD-ROM).
Web links
- Website of the city of Troisdorf
- Troisdorf town archive
- Local history and history association Troisdorf
- Bergheim Fisheries Museum
Individual evidence
- ↑ Population of the municipalities of North Rhine-Westphalia on December 31, 2019 - update of the population based on the census of May 9, 2011. State Office for Information and Technology North Rhine-Westphalia (IT.NRW), accessed on June 17, 2020 . ( Help on this )
- ↑ Information according to the digital terrain model (available in the TIM-online map service )
- ↑ Population figures and population statistics in Troisdorf. City of Troisdorf, December 31, 2018, accessed on September 25, 2019 .
- ↑ Stefan Villinger: 100 years later: This is how the Rhein-Sieg district experienced its occupiers in 1918. In: Rhein-Sieg Rundschau. December 12, 2018, accessed December 12, 2018 .
- ↑ Martin Bünermann: The communities of the first reorganization program in North Rhine-Westphalia . Deutscher Gemeindeverlag, Cologne 1970, p. 85 .
- ↑ Karlheinz Ossendorf: From the detonator to the modern detonator - 100 years of Troisdorf detonators 1886–1986, (approx. 78 pages) Troisdorf September 1986. P. 34 f. - PDF, Part 2: pp. 27–52 kunststoff-museum.de, accessed October 8, 2016.
- ↑ See the current report from the town hall. The number of Troisdorf residents has continued to rise. Rundblick Troisdorf, January 11, 2011, p. 17.
- ↑ http://wahlen.kdvz-frechen.de/civitec/kwew2014/05382068/index.htm
- ^ Organization of the Troisdorf city administration
- ↑ Vice Mayor , troisdorf.de
- ^ List of the Rhein-Sieg district ( Memento from August 6, 2011 in the Internet Archive )
- ↑ Troisdorf economic development and city marketing GmbH, www.trowista.de: industrial areas. Retrieved October 15, 2018 .
- ^ OVG decision on the Sieglar and Eschmar bypass. on Troisdorf.de
- ↑ Jablonski welcomed. The future connection of the L 332 and the K 29 is to take place via a roundabout. ( Memento from December 1, 2010 in the Internet Archive ) on Unserort.de
- ↑ Mobility in North Rhine-Westphalia - data and facts 2018/2019. In: Road traffic. Ministry of Building, Housing, Urban Development and Transport of the State of North Rhine-Westphalia, p. 66 (PDF; 14.2 MB, holdings on January 1, 2018).
- ↑ The S-Bahn line S 13 is expanded: Troisdorf - Bonn-Oberkassel. Deutsche Bahn AG, accessed on October 27, 2019 .
- ^ André Joost: Troisdorf Operational Office Archive. Retrieved August 16, 2017 .
- ↑ Bettina Plugge: Ferox Real Estate Group implements major project at Troisdorf train station. In: Press release 156th Press Office of the City of Troisdorf, April 5, 2016, accessed on August 16, 2017 .
- ↑ Project presentation. In: ferox-ig.de. Retrieved November 9, 2019 .
- ^ Stefan Hennigfeld: Mobility center opened in Troisdorf. In: zughalt.de. July 23, 2019, accessed November 9, 2019 .
- ^ Rhein-Sieg-Verkehrsgesellschaft: The bus network in Troisdorf will be revised with the timetable change on December 14, 2014. ( rsvg.de [accessed on August 15, 2017]).
- ↑ Dieter Krantz: long-distance bus stop, next stop Troisdorf - Flixbus starts on Thursday. In: Rhein-Sieg-Anzeiger . April 26, 2016. Retrieved April 28, 2016 .
- ↑ Hannah Schmitt: The long-distance bus stop will be canceled in November. In: General-Anzeiger Bonn. August 4, 2016. Retrieved August 13, 2016 .
- ↑ Dominik Pieper: Flixbus no longer drives to Troisdorf. In: General-Anzeiger Bonn. January 5, 2017, accessed October 27, 2019 .
- ↑ Stefanie Diemand: Constantly getting to know foreign cultures . In: Rhein-Sieg-Rundschau . October 11, 2016, p. 29 .
- ↑ Harry Rowohlt: And bye. Letters not Thrown Away III. Zurich 2016.
- ^ Boning and Hoëcker: Against any warning. Retrieved October 10, 2016 .