District House Heinsberg

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Heinsberg district building

The Heinsberger Kreishaus is an administrative building built in the 1980s, south-east of the Heinsberg city ​​center. The structurally distinctive building houses several offices (including the office for environmental and transport planning, health department, public order office, youth welfare office), distributed over five departments.

history

The current district of Heinsberg was created in 1972 in the course of the local reorganization at the time. A year later, on January 25, 1973, a vote was taken on the construction of the district building and the neighboring police building, and in 1974 the building site was acquired. On November 20, 1975, the Düsseldorf architects Schiel / Possekel was commissioned with the architectural design of the building. Construction began on June 5, 1978, the foundation stone was laid on August 16, 1979. On February 1, 1982 the building was ready for occupancy: the administrations from Erkelenz and Geilenkirchen moved to Heinsberg.

Technical

The 29.5 m high building is made of reinforced concrete with brick facing and has a green copper roof. The house has a usable area of ​​13,113 square meters, a traffic area of ​​4737 square meters and a functional area of ​​830 square meters.

Transport links

The district building has its own bus stop Heinsberg, district administration . This is currently served by lines 401, 402, 436 and 493 of WestVerkehr . Since December 15, 2013, the district house can also be reached by rail via the Heinsberg-Kreishaus stop ( Heinsberg-Lindern railway line ).

At Valkenburgerstr. there are free parking facilities.

line designation Train run
RB 33 Rhine-Niers Railway Heinsberg - Heinsberg-Kreishaus  - Lindern - Herzogenrath - Aachen Hbf.

See also

Web links

Coordinates: 51 ° 3 ′ 38.8 ″  N , 6 ° 6 ′ 27 ″  E