Lustenau

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
market community
Lustenau
coat of arms Austria map
Coat of arms of Lustenau
Lustenau (Austria)
Lustenau
Basic data
Country: Austria
State : Vorarlberg
Political District : Dornbirn
License plate : DO
Surface: 22.25 km²
Coordinates : 47 ° 26 '  N , 9 ° 40'  E Coordinates: 47 ° 25 '38 "  N , 9 ° 40' 16"  E
Height : 404  m above sea level A.
Residents : 23,309 (January 1, 2020)
Postcodes : 6890, 6893
Area code : 05577
Community code : 8 03 03
Address of the
municipal administration:
Rathausstrasse 1
6890 Lustenau
Website: www.lustenau.at
politics
Mayor : Kurt Fischer ( ÖVP )
Municipal council : (Election year: 2015)
(36 members)
20th
9
5
1
1
20th 
A total of 36 seats
Location of Lustenau in the Dornbirn district
Dornbirn Hohenems Lustenau VorarlbergLocation of the municipality of Lustenau in the Dornbirn district (clickable map)
About this picture
Template: Infobox municipality in Austria / maintenance / site plan image map
View of Lustenau from the northeast
View of Lustenau from the northeast
Source: Municipal data from Statistics Austria

With 23,309 inhabitants (as of January 1, 2020), Lustenau is the most populous market town in Austria and is located in the west of the state of Vorarlberg .

Until 1806 Lustenau was a free imperial court of the Holy Roman Empire and after its dissolution became an independent state for a short time. Lustenau finally came to Austria only in 1830 . The municipality, which was dominated by agriculture until the 19th century, became a center of the Vorarlberg embroidery industry in the 20th century and is now an important border municipality to Switzerland and an industrial location. In the rest of Vorarlberg, the place is particularly known for the distinctive dialect of its residents and the large parish fair , the "Kilbi". In the sporting sector, the name Lustenau is primarily associated with successful soccer and ice hockey teams.

geography

In the west, Lustenau is bounded by the Alpine Rhine .

Geographical location

Lustenau is located on the eastern bank of the Alpine Rhine , in the lower Vorarlberg Rhine Valley , 4 km south of the shores of Lake Constance . The center of the village is at 404  m above sea level. A. The community area lies entirely on the plain west of the Bregenzerwald Mountains , there are no significant natural elevations.

Expansion of the municipal area

The municipality extends from north to south for about 8.5 km, from west to east for about 4 km. In the west Lustenau is bounded by the Rhine , in the northeast by the Dornbirner Ach and in the east by the Vorarlberg Rheintalbinnenkanal and the Dornbirner Landgraben.

Neighboring communities

Maximum Fußach Lauterach
St. Margrethen (CH)

Au (CH)
Neighboring communities Dornbirn
Widnau (CH) Diepoldsau (CH); Hohenems

Structure of the community

Originally the Reichshof Lustenau consisted of the seven villages of Stalden , Holz , Wiesenrain , Grindel , Weiler , Rheindorf and Hag , which, however, grew together in the 20th century due to increasing urban sprawl and are no longer clearly delineated. Today Lustenau is mostly divided into Rheindorf, Kirchdorf and Hasenfeld , analogous to the parishes . These are neither cadastral municipalities nor municipal districts in the legal sense.

geology

The Alpine Rhine Valley is an atypical for the Alps, filled with young loose rock, which is 600 meters deep in the area of ​​the Lustenau municipality.

4000 years ago, Lake Constance reached as far as Lustenau. Deposits from the Rhine and its tributaries silted up the area initially mainly in the area of ​​the river channel, while shallow, extensive lakes were created to the side. In them, fine-grain suspended matter from the Rhine formed a subsoil of water-retaining clay. Due to intensely growing swamp vegetation, these residual lakes eventually developed into peat bogs . Some of the lakes are still marked on maps from the 19th century, and field names such as “Seelache” or “Vorsee” are reminiscent of this landscape, which has since disappeared.

The silting body in Lustenau consists of loamy fine sand along the Rhine, loam in the center of the community and peat on the eastern municipal boundaries.

Nature reserves and natural monuments

The Natura 2000 area Gsieg - Obere Mähder in the south of the municipality comprises one of the largest and botanically richest litter meadow complexes in the entire Rhine Valley. The 73 hectare area is home to 502 species of butterflies, 429 beetles and 42 dragonflies, a third of all orchid species in Vorarlberg, 350 different flowering plants and grasses as well as 6 species of birds that are endangered throughout Austria and several other animals and plants threatened with extinction.

Part of the Swiss Ried in the north of Lustenau is combined with the nearby areas of the neighboring communities to form the Natura 2000 area Soren, Gleggen - Köblern, Schweizer Ried and Birken - Schwarzes Zeug . The moor landscape is of particular importance for meadow breeders .

A white willow , a winter linden and a pedunculate oak in the municipality of Lustenau are designated as natural monuments due to their old age and are therefore under special protection.

history

The royal and imperial court of Lustenau

Lustenau was first mentioned in a document

A from the Carolingian Emperor Karl III. (the fat) in "Lustenoua" on July 24th, 887 signed document is the oldest surviving documentary mention of the name "Lustenau".

The royal court came to the Counts of Bregenz via the Udalrichinger , after their extinction it was returned to the Reich and later to the Counts of Werdenberg via Pfandweg . In 1334, Emperor Ludwig IV (the Bavarian) confirmed the status of the Lustenau people as free imperial people and thus secured the imperial immediacy of the court.

In 1395 the Werdenbergers pledged the Zwingenstein fortress and the Lustenau farm to the Knights of Ems for 5300 pounds of Heller, and in 1526 the pledge was converted into a final purchase.

In 1593, the Widnau-Haslach on the left bank of the Rhine (the area of ​​today's communities Widnau , Schmitter and Au ) was separated from Lustenau, but due to the uneven distribution of land, it was also granted property on the right bank of the Rhine, the so-called Swiss Ried .

After the male line of the Hohenems family died out in 1759, a decade-long dispute over ownership of Lustenau developed between Maria Theresa of Austria on the one hand and the Hohenemsian heiress Maria Rebekka on the other. In 1790 the independence of the Reichshof was restored by a state treaty between Austria and Lustenau.

Lustenau as part of the Austrian monarchy

After the collapse of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806, Lustenau was a completely independent state under Hohenemsi rule for a few days. When Bavaria, which ruled almost all of the rest of Vorarlberg, also claimed sovereignty in Lustenau, the Hohenemsian heiress Maria Walburga was able to keep the lower jurisdiction in her hands. Even after Vorarlberg fell back to Austria in 1814, the special status of this patrimonial court remained . Only with the resignation of the Hohenems family and the ceremonial handover of the court files on March 22, 1830, Lustenau finally became Austrian.

The distribution of the parish grounds ( common land ) to the residents of Lustenau, which was finally fixed in 1837 , formed the basis for later strong growth. The actual starting point of the economic upswing, however, marked the construction of an extensive network of drainage canals and the improvement of the flood dams on the Rhine in the years 1843 to 1848 under the direction of district engineer Martin Kink .

The first bridge over the Rhine was opened in 1867 between the village of Rheindorf and the Swiss municipality of Au . The railway bridge followed in 1872, the second road bridge in 1875 and the Wiesenrain bridge in 1914 .

Flood at Gasthaus Engel in Lustenau, 1890

The brothers Johann and Josef Hofer set up the first flat stitch hand embroidery machines in Vorarlberg in 1869 . This was the starting signal for the over 100 years of dominance of the embroidery industry in Lustenau. The still massive danger from the Rhine - most recently with three devastating flood disasters in 1888 and 1890 - was averted at the turn of the 20th century by the Rhine regulation .

On June 13, 1902, at a time when Lustenau was the third largest municipality in Vorarlberg after Dornbirn and Bregenz, Emperor Franz Joseph elevated the town to a market town. The boom in the embroidery industry and the tamed Rhine led to massive population and economic growth in Lustenau, which, however, was suddenly stopped by the outbreak of the First World War .

First republic and corporate state

Result of the referendum on the connection of Vorarlberg to Switzerland

After the fall of the Austrian monarchy, Lustenau became the center of the initiative for the connection of Vorarlberg to Switzerland, which culminated in the referendum on May 11, 1919 , but ultimately failed due to political reality.

The economic crisis in the 1930s brought the Communists and especially the National Socialists to Lustenau, too . The Austria-wide ban of the KPÖ and the NSDAP in May and June 1933 prevented - at least for the time being - a further rise of these organizations, but Lustenau remained a center of the National Socialist underground.

The precarious financial situation of a large part of the population was also reflected in an increase in insurance fraud. After a noticeable accumulation of fires in well-insured, old, dilapidated houses, the state fire insurance institute offered a reward for identifying deliberate arsonists.

National Socialism and World War II

After Austria was annexed to the German Reich in 1938, Lustenau was given strong preference for public investments - for example in drainage projects - and government grants. The embroidery industry, which was important for the community, came to a virtual standstill due to Germany's political isolation. The Munich company CA Steinheil & Söhne set up a branch in Lustenau, which between 1939 and 1945 mainly dealt with armaments orders and became one of the largest employers in the area.

Memorial for the victims of the National Socialist dictatorship in Lustenau

There is no evidence of organized resistance against National Socialism in Lustenau. However, a large number of cases of individual opposition are documented, which were punished with arrests, with the delivery to a concentration camp or even with the death penalty. The actors of this individual resistance were representatives of the Catholic Church and exponents of the former corporate state as well as social democratic and communist workers. At that time, Jewish life in Vorarlberg was concentrated in Hohenems and the cities, so there was no targeted persecution or expulsion of Jews in Lustenau.

Lustenau was largely spared from destruction in the Second World War . The invasion of the French troops in Lustenau also took place without resistance and therefore without fighting.

Lustenau in the Second Republic

Embroidery gave Lustenau an economic boom even after the Second World War. Especially under the long-time mayor Robert Bösch (1960–1982), the community changed its face significantly. Among other things, the construction of three elementary schools, a secondary school, a commercial academy, three kindergartens, an old people's home and a sports and recreation center with a park pool, ice rink and tennis courts took place during this period.

When the entire Austrian embroidery industry collapsed in the 1980s, a realignment of economic policy became necessary for Lustenau, which was implemented through the targeted establishment of technology companies in two newly created industrial areas.

Like Robert Bösch, his successors as mayors, Dieter Alge and Hans-Dieter Grabher , were clearly part of the liberal camp of the FPÖ . Especially after the rise of Jörg Haider , the Lustenauer FPÖ increasingly distanced itself from the line of the federal party. In the 2010 mayoral elections, Kurt Fischer was the first ÖVP candidate to win the mayor's office in 50 years. Fischer, who emphasizes a cooperative working style across party lines, achieved a two-thirds majority in the direct mayor elections in 2015.

population

Population development

The first census took place in 1750 and showed 1073 inhabitants. During large periods of its history, the community of Lustenau recorded a significantly higher population growth than the average in Vorarlberg. In particular, the strong economic growth that began with the flourishing embroidery industry and the elimination of the flood problem at the end of the 19th century led to a strong movement of migrants to Lustenau, both from other communities in Vorarlberg and from the rest of Austria and southern Germany. A second wave of immigration in the 1950s and 1960s was triggered by the renewed strong economic upturn after the Second World War.

The following graphic shows the development of the population of Lustenau based on the data from Statistics Austria:


Population structure

There are significant demographic deviations from the Vorarlberg average with a higher proportion of under 15-year-olds and a greater excess of women. The proportion of single people is lower and of married people higher than in the rest of Vorarlberg.

At almost 40%, the number of people over 15 who only attended compulsory school is noticeably high. The proportion of academics is far below the Vorarlberg average.

feature Lustenau Vorarlberg
Age
under 15 years 17.4% 16.6%
15–64 years 67.0% 67.8%
65 years and older 15.6% 15.7%
gender
male 48.9% 49.2%
Female 51.1% 50.8%
marital status
single 43.1% 45.0%
married 43.6% 41.8%
widowed 5.3% 5.3%
divorced 8.0% 7.9%
  
feature Lustenau Vorarlberg
citizenship
Austria 85.6% 86.8%
Rest of the EU 3.6% 4.1%
Turkey and successor states of Yugoslavia 9.0% 6.5%
other states 1.8% 2.6%
Educational level of those over 15 years of age
mandatory school 39.6% 33.2%
Teaching 26.2% 31.0%
BMS 16.3% 15.9%
AHS 3.7% 4.1%
Bras 6.9% 6.9%
University 7.3% 8.9%

The flourishing embroidery industry in the 1960s and 1970s resulted in a large immigration of guest workers from Turkey and - to a much lesser extent - from Yugoslavia . The declining proportion of foreign citizens from 16.1% in 2001 to 14.4% in 2011 is due to naturalizations, the proportion of Lustenauers born abroad rose from 16.2% to 18.5% in the same period. It is also noteworthy that in the 2001 census of 2000 Turkish citizens and 1533 people born in Turkey, 2789 inhabitants, i.e. significantly more, stated Turkish as the colloquial language.

particularities

Due to its special political position, the Reichshof Lustenau was relatively isolated from its surroundings for centuries. It was not until 1837 that strange men were accepted as citizens. Because of this, a distinctive dialect has developed and maintained in Lustenau , which is clearly different from the other Alemannic dialects in the area. Essential distinguishing features are above all frequent triphthongs ("Brouöt" for bread, "Lauöb" for loaf), inserted n and m in numerous words ("Muns" for mouse, "Schumfl" for shovel), a replacement of ss by ch (" lach mi "for let me," dach "for that," i muöch "for I have to), a multitude of own dialect words and a striking speech melody. Since the middle of the 20th century, the Lustenau dialect has increasingly mixed with the local dialects.

Another consequence of Lustenau's centuries of independence is the dominance of a few family names. The 1998 inhabitants counted in 1806 were distributed over only 19 family names, which in 1950 were still carried by 60% of the population. It is thanks to this fact that the use of house or vulgar names from the 17th century to the late 20th century was even more pronounced in Lustenau than in the rest of Vorarlberg.

politics

Community representation

Municipal council election 2015
 %
60
50
40
30th
20th
10
0
53.83
(+2.72)
24.19
(-6.80)
15.02
(+2.61)
2.98
(-2.51)
3.98
(none)
Otherwise.
 
1
5
20th
9
1
20th 
A total of 36 seats

The 36 members of the community council are re-elected every five years. The mayor presides over the monthly community council meetings in which community issues are discussed and appropriate resolutions are made. The involvement of the population in the decision-making process is ensured by the fact that the meetings are generally public and that a question time takes place at the beginning of each meeting.

Parish council

Surname Political party Department
Kurt Fischer ÖVP mayor
Daniel Steinhofer ÖVP Vice Mayor, Culture
Markus Schlachter ÖVP Building construction
Martin Fitz FPÖ Civil engineering
Mathias Blaser ÖVP mobility
Christine Boesch-Vetter Green Environment and energy
Susanne Andexlinger ÖVP Social, health, seniors
Doris Dobros FPÖ education
Julia Hagen ÖVP Children, youth and family
Patrick Wiedl ÖVP Economy, agriculture

mayor

Kurt Fischer (2010)

Ammann Hans Benst, who was in office in 1395, is the first documented head of the community of Lustenau. Until 1806, i.e. as long as Lustenau was a free imperial court, the ammen were appointed by the sovereign on the basis of suggestions from the community citizens. In the course of the 19th century, democratic suffrage gradually developed, and the term “Ammann” was replaced by the term “local chief” over time. After Lustenau's market survey in 1902, the official title of “mayor” prevailed.

Since the year 2000, the mayor of Lustenau has been elected in a direct election at the same time as, but independently of, the municipal council.

The following graphic shows the mayors since the market survey in 1902.

Kurt Fischer (Politiker, 1963) Hans-Dieter Grabher Robert Bösch (Politiker) Ferdinand Jussel Josef Peintner Karl Bösch Josef Hollenstein

coat of arms

AUT Lustenau COA.png
Seal of the court master Hans Hagen from the 17th century; the shield with the heraldic lion can be seen in the lower third

The coat of arms of the market town of Lustenau shows a crowned lion standing on its hind legs, holding a silver shield between its front paws, on which three ears of wheat are tied together with a red ribbon.

On January 14, 1902, the state of Austria granted the municipality the right to use the traditional Lustenau coat of arms, which is a modification of the imperial court seal. The lion in the center should originally come from the coat of arms of court manager Magnus Hagen, which was awarded to him in 1599. The crown that the lion wears also points back to the time of the Imperial Court. The three ears of wheat on the shield are a reminder of the former importance of grain cultivation in Lustenau.

Infrastructure

traffic

Lustenau lies off the main traffic axis through the Rhine Valley ( Bregenz - Dornbirn - Feldkirch ), but is an important border town with Switzerland .

Road traffic

The Rheinstraße (L 203) runs through Lustenau from south to north and provides the connection to Hohenems and Hard . The Lustenauer Straße (L 204) coming from Dornbirn , which has four lanes outside the local area, joins the L 203 in the south of the municipality and branches off about 1.7 km to the federal border with Switzerland. The transit route Munich - Zurich runs on these two roads through the middle of the municipality of Lustenau. The transit traffic, but also the shopping traffic from Switzerland to the lower Rhine valley, is a steadily growing problem for the affected districts.

The intended construction of an IKEA store in the south of Lustenau was controversial due to the impact it would have on traffic, and a referendum on the subject was supported by all parties in the municipal council. Although IKEA announced in April 2018 that the project would not have been realized, the announced referendum on IKEA should originally have been carried out anyway. On May 9, 2018, the Vorarlberg state parliament decided to change the law so that a referendum that has become obsolete does not have to be carried out.

The four bridges over the Rhine lead (from north to south) to Höchst , Au (CH), Widnau (CH) and Diepoldsau (CH). There are other important road connections (clockwise) to Hard , Wolfurt , Dornbirn and Hohenems .

Rail transport

Lustenau station before the renovation

The unoccupied Lustenau station is located on the St. Margrethen – Lauterach railway line that is currently being expanded . While all of the half-hourly to hourly trains on S-Bahn line 3 between Bregenz or Lindau and St. Margrethen stop at Lustenau station, the EuroCity trains on the Munich  - Zurich connection pass without stopping. Until June 11, 2011, the Lustenau Markt stop existed at a distance of about 800 meters , which was closed due to construction work on the line.

Since spring 2016, Lustenau station has been completely renewed as a sub-project of the St. Margrethen – Lustenau route expansion. Part of the costs (2 million euros) will be financed by the market town of Lustenau. Bernard Ingenieure ZT GmbH was commissioned with the static and constructive processing, and the Viennese office Ostertag Architects ZT GmbH with the architectural processing. The new train station is scheduled to open in 2019.

Local public transport

Nine Landbus Unterland bus routes run through Lustenau and allow you to travel without changing trains to Gaißau , Höchst , Fußach , Hard , Bregenz , Dornbirn , Hohenems , Götzis , Heerbrugg and Widnau . There is also a local bus line that only runs within Lustenau. The most important junction for local public transport is the Lustenau train station, where there are timed connections between various bus lines and the S-Bahn.

From 1902 to 1938 Vorarlberg had the only tram connection from Lustenau to Dornbirn, popularly known as the “tram”. Plans for a ring tram in the lower Vorarlberg Rhine Valley , which would connect Lustenau with the surrounding communities, presented by the Vorarlberg Greens in August 2004 , were examined by the Rhomberg Group and found to be feasible, but in March 2011 they were dismissed by the regional forum entrusted with transport planning.

Since November 2018, a dial- a- bus has been serving around 100 stops at individual departure times.

Water supply and sewerage

The over 5,000 households in Lustenau are supplied with drinking water from their own production via a 235 km pipeline system. Lustenau is also a member of the Rheintal drinking water association , which ensures an adequate water supply even in times of crisis and peak.

Every year Lustenau produces around 1.2 million m³ of wastewater. The expansion of the sewer system turned out to be particularly complex for several reasons: unfavorable soil conditions require the support of almost every single pipe by pilots , the slight gradient in the local area made the construction of five main pumping stations, 60 small pumping stations and one vacuum pumping station necessary, and the highly sprawled structure the community led to a total canal network of 240 km in length.

Waste management

A total of 250 containers are available at 36 public collection points for the collection of packaging made of glass, paper and metal. Plastic packaging and residual waste are collected in garbage bags in every household and picked up every two weeks, organic waste weekly. The collection of bulky waste, which is subject to a fee, as well as the free disposal of problematic substances is handled by the Häusle waste collection center on the northern edge of the municipality . This waste collection center hit the headlines in spring 2017 when illegally buried garbage was found on the company's premises.

education

Lustenau-Kirchdorf elementary school

In Lustenau there are one private and eleven public kindergartens, five elementary schools (Hasenfeld, Kirchdorf, Rheindorf, Rotkreuz and Private Elementary School Elia), three new middle schools (Hasenfeld, Kirchdorf and Rheindorf) and a special education center as well as a federal high school and a federal commercial academy and commercial school .

The Rheintalische Musikschule with a seminar for jazz and pop music (jazz seminar) as well as regular events of the Volkshochschule Bregenz complete the educational offer.

Health and social

Medical care in Lustenau is ensured by over 50 doctors and therapists and three pharmacies. The closest hospital is in Dornbirn .

The community maintains two senior citizens' homes, one of which forms the social center in the Schützengarten together with other social institutions .

economy

Business location Lustenau

Millennium Park industrial area

The market town of Lustenau aggressively advertises itself as a “top location for companies”. In the later 1980s - not by chance immediately after the decline of the embroidery industry, which had dominated up to that point - the Northern operating area was created, followed later by the Millennium Park industrial area . A third operating area in the south of Lustenau is currently being developed.

An interest group of over 210 Lustenau companies, Lustenau Marketing , was created to further strengthen the Lustenau location through network events and cross-company initiatives.

Workplaces and employees

As of October 31, 2011, there were a total of 1,525 workplaces in the municipality, 80% of which had fewer than five and 95% fewer than 20 employees. The number of jobs in Lustenau rose between the register counts in 2001 and 2011 from 7,525 to 10,443 and thus by 39%. Well more than half of the people employed in the village commute to Lustenau, the most important communities of origin are naturally the neighbors Dornbirn , Höchst and Hohenems as well as the state capital Bregenz . It is noteworthy that the number of inbound commuters from other Austrian federal states increased sixteen-fold between 2001 and 2011 and now comprises over a third of all inbound commuters.

In the last census in 2011, 10,097 employed and 611 unemployed people residing in Lustenau were recorded. Only 40% of the employed Lustenauers work in their home municipality, almost 9% commute abroad. Other important commuting destinations are Dornbirn, Bregenz and Höchst.

Culture and sights

Buildings

Parish churches

Parish Church of St. Peter and Paul

The parish church of St. Peter and Paul goes back to a three-aisled church with a domed tower, which was built in 1830 on the foundations of an older church according to plans by Alois Negrelli . At the inauguration in 1832, the residents were already very dissatisfied with the cumbersome, gloomy building. From 1872 to 1875 it was converted into a hall church with flat ceilings, and the tower was also raised. Both a fundamental renovation from 1951 to 1960 according to plans by Otto Linder and a further renovation in 1990/91 by the architectural association Kaufmann-Lenz-Dietrich from Schwarzach were highly controversial among the population, as both times the face of the Church was radically changed. In 1998 a new organ was consecrated.

With the Church of the Redeemer , which was built between 1933 and 1935 according to plans by Willibald Braun and Emanuel Thurnher , the northern part of Lustenau (“ Rheindorf ”) received its own church. It was consecrated on October 22, 1939, and on October 1, 1940, it was elevated to the position of vicariate of the parish of St. Peter and Paul. Since July 1, 1951, the Redeemer Parish has been its own parish. A controversial renovation in 1986 changed the interior of the building significantly. In 1995 the organ was renewed.

1969 to 1975 in the southern part of Lustenau, " Hasenfeld ", the parish church of the Good Shepherd was built according to plans by Heinrich Tritthart . It is a hexagonal concrete building that deliberately has no windows. Instead of a church tower, there is a mighty wooden cross on the also hexagonal church square. The three-part altarpiece, the stations of the cross and the stained glass windows in the side chapel were made by the Polish artist Jan January Janczak . The Hasenfeld parish vicariate was set up on January 1, 1977, and on August 31, 1988, it was raised to the status of an independent parish.

From 1924 on, the Lustenau community made a room in the Rheindorf elementary school available for the Protestant Christians. When this was terminated in 1950 due to lack of space, an emergency church was built with financial support from Switzerland and consecrated on March 11, 1951. In the building on the basis of a prefabricated house, which was originally intended as a provisional facility, the services of the Lustenau evangelical community are celebrated to this day, initially assigned to the parish of Bregenz and, from 1986, to the parish of Dornbirn.

There is also a Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's Witnesses and several Muslim mosques in Lustenau .

Chapels

Loretto Chapel

The oldest preserved sacred building in Lustenau is the baroque Loretto Chapel , which was donated in 1645 by the family of Hofammann Hans Hagen. In the center of the central baroque altar is a Gothic statue of the Virgin Mary, which was created around 1470. Also noteworthy is the picture of the founder, on which Hans Hagen is shown kneeling and praying with his 13 children. The chapel has been restored and renovated several times in its history, most recently in 1988/89.

The St. Anthony Chapel was from 1898 to 1901 mainly through its own forced labor built the inhabitants of the plot Wiesenrain. Even then it was an expression of the wish that the southernmost part of Lustenau should have its own parish, which was only fulfilled 78 years later with the consecration of the church as the Good Shepherd.

The rosary chapel on the Neunerkanal was built by the Lustenau master carpenter Sigurd Grabher on the basis of a vow and inaugurated in 1989. It is privately owned by the Grabher family.

Secular buildings

Church park with the partially covered Blauer Platz

On the church square in the center of Lustenau, popularly known as Blauer Platz because of its blue color , markets and other events take place regularly. From the Kirchpark shopping center in the center of Lustenau, a canopy construction made of 2.5 m high glued laminated beams and a shell made of polycarbonate panels protrudes 20 m unsupported over the square.

Also noteworthy are a number of industrial buildings for embroidery and a considerable number of single-family houses with a villa-like character, both scattered over large parts of the community.

The Rheintalhaus at Staldenstrasse 4 dates from the second half of the 18th century. The residential part is a shingle block building with a three-axis gable front on a brick basement plinth.

Museums

The Rhein-Schauen museum shows the history of the Rhine and its regulation and enables a trip on the international Rhine regulation railway .

Around 550 objects from the period from 1920 to 1970 are on display in Rauch's radio museum.

The Stephanie Hollenstein Gallery houses over 1200 exhibits from the estate of the expressionist artist Stephanie Hollenstein and 79 works by the Lustenau artist Karl Schwärzler . In addition, constantly changing exhibitions as well as various lectures and presentations take place on the premises.

The great importance of the embroidery industry in Lustenau was taken into account by the embroidery museum with an attached museum shop . At the beginning of 2015, the Lustenau embroidery industry dissolved the museum and bequeathed the collection to the market town of Lustenau, which would like to reopen the exhibition at a suitable location.

music

The Lustenau Jazz Club has been hosting regular jazz concerts since 1975. World stars such as Dexter Gordon , Michel Petrucciani and Chet Baker have already performed in Lustenau.

Every Friday from the beginning of June to the end of August, open-air concerts of various musical styles take place on the church square with free admission under the title Sommer.Lust am Platz .

The culture and youth association "Szene Lustenau" organizes every summer with the Szene Openair, the largest open-air festival in western Austria.

During the Long Night of Music , Lustenau gastronomy invites you to a mixed program of live concerts with free admission every November. A free shuttle bus takes visitors from one restaurant to the next.

Regular events

Lustenauer Kilbi

The Luschnouar market (spelling after the dialect pronunciation of the place name) on Thursday and Saturday mornings often serves as a framework for various events.

Every year on the last Sunday in September, the Lustenau Games Festival in children's hands and the hour run for the benefit of Lebenshilfe Vorarlberg take place.

The Kilbi , the parish festival of St. Peter and Paul, is the largest festival in Vorarlberg. Every year on the 2nd Sunday in October around 160 traders around the church square offer their goods.

The three-day Lustenau Christmas market and New Year's Eve on the square traditionally end the Lustenau event year.

Culinary specialties

As part of the Alt Luschtnouar Koscht campaign , various inns and cafés offer traditional Lustenau dishes in March, most of which come from classic Vorarlberg cuisine .

Käsdönnala , a yeast dough cake that is topped with a cheese and onion mixture, is inseparable from Lustenau and, in particular, from Kilbi .

Lustenau mustard is produced in numerous variations in a traditional family business and sold in delicatessen stores around the world. The fruit brandies from Freihof are also internationally known.

Sports

Sports facilities

The park stadium

A large part of the sports facilities is concentrated in the sports park . In addition to the Park Stadium , an athletics stadium with a 400 m circular track, and the Parkbad , an outdoor pool with 50 m sports pool, there is also the Rheinhalle , a tennis facility with eight clay courts, a tennis hall, an archery court, a sports hall with a capacity of around 1000 visitors and the Habedere youth site on the site. The sports park is also the starting and ending point for three marked running circuits through the Lustenauer Ried with a length of 5, 10 and 20 km.

The Planet Pure Stadium is a football stadium with a capacity of 8800 spectators. It has been the home of SC Austria Lustenau since it opened in 1951, and from 2006 to 2013 the professional team of FC Lustenau 07 also played their home games in the first division there . In the immediate vicinity of the Planet Pure Stadium, there are several grass pitches in the foreland for training and competitions for the youth teams.

In addition to a smaller football stadium on Holzstrasse and two other football fields on Wiesenrain, the range of sports facilities is rounded off by two gymnasiums for athletics clubs, the cycling hall , a shooting range, a two-lane bocce court and two dog sports fields.

sports clubs

The FC Lustenau 07 is the oldest football club in Vorarlberg. After seven seasons in the first division , the club withdrew from professional football in 2013 and had to file for bankruptcy, but was able to remain in existence thanks to a compulsory settlement.

The SC Austria Lustenau maintains a professional team that can hold since then in the top two divisions of Austrian football since 1994th

Since the football clubs were clearly assigned to different political camps until well after the Second World War - the FC to the Liberals and Austria to the Conservatives - the rivalry between the two was far more pronounced from the outset than it was among local competitors. Although the political allocation has now been watered down, the rivalry has remained.

The ice hockey club Lustenau ( EHC Lustenau ) has played in one of the two highest Austrian leagues since it was founded. He plays his home games in the Rheinhalle.

A total of more than 30 sports clubs for a wide variety of sports are based in Lustenau.

Sporting events

As part of the World Gymnaestrada 2007 , the large group performances were held in the Reichshof Stadium. Lustenau also served as the National Village for the Swiss athletes.

Every year in June the Luschnouar Ironmännli has been held in Lustenau since 1989 - a sprint triathlon (500 m swimming, 19.2 km cycling and 5.2 km running).

Personalities

Honorary citizen

Date of award Surname Merit
December 14, 1888 Eugen Hillmann (1855-1936) Merits during the floods of 1888
March 19, 1905 Philipp Krapf (1854–1939) Rhine construction manager 1890–1905
July 20, 1962 Josef Bösch (1889–1969) Mayor 1946–1960
January 18, 1983 (posthumous) Robert Bösch (1922–1983) Mayor 1960–1982
October 26, 1998 Dieter Alge (* 1940) Mayor 1982–1993
October 26, 2011 Hans-Dieter Grabher (* 1947) Mayor 1993–2010

Sons and daughters of the church

Fredmund Malik

literature

  • Elmar Vonbank , Josef Grabherr, First Scheffknecht, Ludwig Welti : Lustenauer Heimatbuch . I. Volume. Market town of Lustenau, Lustenau 1965.
  • Alfred Bösch (editor); Culture department of the market town of Lustenau (ed.): Lustenau and its history, Vol. 1–4, culture department of the market town of Lustenau, Lustenau 1988-1996.
    • Volume 1 .: Alfred Bösch: Lustenau and his schools 1988.
    • Volume 2 .: Erich Schneider: Music and Theater in Lustenau 1989, ISBN 3-900954-01-1 .
    • Volume 3 .: Adolf Bösch: Our community archive, church history in Lustenau, the field names of Lustenau . 1992, ISBN 3-900954-02-X .
    • Volume 4 .: Adolf Bösch: Tales from the old Lustenau 1996, ISBN 3-900954-04-6 .
  • Hannes Grabher : Customs, legends and chronicles . Ed .: Cultural department of the market town of Lustenau. Second edition. Marktgemeinde Lustenau, Lustenau 2002, ISBN 3-900954-05-4 .
  • Ludwig Welti: History of the imperial county Hohenems and the imperial court Lustenau . Ed .: Historical Commission for Vorarlberg and Liechtenstein (=  research on the history of Vorarlberg and Liechtenstein . Volume 4). University publishing house Wagner, Innsbruck 1930.
  • Wolfgang Scheffknecht: 100 years of the market town of Lustenau . Marktgemeinde Lustenau, Lustenau 2003, ISBN 3-900954-06-2 .
  • Annemarie Bösch-Niederer: Lustenau. In: Oesterreichisches Musiklexikon . Online edition, Vienna 2002 ff., ISBN 3-7001-3077-5 ; Print edition: Volume 3, Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Vienna 2004, ISBN 3-7001-3045-7 .
  • Franz Stetter, Siegfried König: Lustenauer family book . 3 volumes. Federsee-Verlag, Bad Buchau 2012, ISBN 978-3-925171-96-3 ( online in a continuously updated version ).

Web links

Commons : Lustenau  - album with pictures, videos and audio files
Wiktionary: Lustenau  - explanations of meanings, word origins, synonyms, translations
Wikivoyage: Lustenau  - travel guide

Individual evidence

  1. ^ J. Georg Friebe: Landscape history and landscape change in the Vorarlberg Rhine Valley . In: R. Alge (Hrsg.): Nature monograph Gsieg - Obere Mähder (=  Vorarlberger Naturschau - research and discovery ). No. 6 . Dornbirn 1999, p. 29–34 ( PDF on ZOBODAT [accessed October 22, 2013]).
  2. ^ Markus Staudinger: Update of the Vorarlberg biotope inventory, Lustenau community. (PDF) Arge Vegetation Ecology and Landscape Planning, November 2008, p. 9 , accessed on December 4, 2014 .
  3. Max Albrecht: Gsieg-Obere Mähder. (No longer available online.) State of Vorarlberg, archived from the original on August 25, 2013 ; Retrieved September 29, 2014 .
  4. Rudolf Alge, Markus Grabher, Ingrid Loacker, Maria Aschauer: 20 years of the nature reserve Gsieg - Obere Mähder Lustenau. (No longer available online.) Lustenau market town, archived from the original on June 28, 2015 ; Retrieved September 29, 2014 .
  5. ^ Max Albrecht: Soren, Gleggen - Köblern, Schweizer Ried and Birken - black stuff. (No longer available online.) State of Vorarlberg, archived from the original on August 26, 2013 ; Retrieved September 29, 2014 .
  6. ^ Markus Staudinger: Update of the Vorarlberg biotope inventory, Lustenau community. (PDF) Arge Vegetationsökologie und Landschaftsplanung, November 2008, p. 40 , accessed on September 29, 2014 (The fourth designated natural monument, the pedunculate oak in the stalden, has since gone.).
  7. Josef Grabherr, Ernst Scheffknecht: Kaiser Karl III. in Lustenau . In: Marktgemeinde Lustenau (ed.): Lustenauer Heimatbuch . I. Volume. Lustenau 1965, p. 60 .
  8. ^ Ludwig Welti : From the Carolingian royal court to the largest Austrian market town . In: Marktgemeinde Lustenau (ed.): Lustenauer Heimatbuch . I. Volume. Lustenau 1965, p. 84 f .
  9. Ludwig Welti: History of the Reichsgrafschaft Hohenems and the Reichshof Lustenau . Ed .: Historical Commission for Vorarlberg and Liechtenstein (=  research on the history of Vorarlberg and Liechtenstein . Volume 4). University publishing house Wagner, Innsbruck 1930, p. 24, 63 ff .
  10. ^ Ludwig Welti: From the Carolingian royal court to the largest Austrian market town . In: Marktgemeinde Lustenau (ed.): Lustenauer Heimatbuch . I. Volume. Lustenau 1965, p. 86 f .
  11. Ludwig Welti: History of the Reichsgrafschaft Hohenems and the Reichshof Lustenau . Ed .: Historical Commission for Vorarlberg and Liechtenstein (=  research on the history of Vorarlberg and Liechtenstein . Volume 4). University publishing house Wagner, Innsbruck 1930, p. 155-232 .
  12. ^ Ludwig Welti: From the Carolingian royal court to the largest Austrian market town . In: Marktgemeinde Lustenau (ed.): Lustenauer Heimatbuch . I. Volume. Lustenau 1965, p. 311 .
  13. Ludwig Welti: History of the Reichsgrafschaft Hohenems and the Reichshof Lustenau . Ed .: Historical Commission for Vorarlberg and Liechtenstein (=  research on the history of Vorarlberg and Liechtenstein . Volume 4). University publishing house Wagner, Innsbruck 1930, p. 264-267 .
  14. Ludwig Welti: History of the Reichsgrafschaft Hohenems and the Reichshof Lustenau . Ed .: Historical Commission for Vorarlberg and Liechtenstein (=  research on the history of Vorarlberg and Liechtenstein . Volume 4). University publishing house Wagner, Innsbruck 1930, p. 269-300 .
  15. ^ Ludwig Welti: From the Carolingian royal court to the largest Austrian market town . In: Marktgemeinde Lustenau (ed.): Lustenauer Heimatbuch . I. Volume. Lustenau 1965, p. 427-442, 455-473 .
  16. ^ Ludwig Welti: From the Carolingian royal court to the largest Austrian market town . In: Marktgemeinde Lustenau (ed.): Lustenauer Heimatbuch . I. Volume. Lustenau 1965, p. 326-341 .
  17. ^ Ludwig Welti: From the Carolingian royal court to the largest Austrian market town . In: Marktgemeinde Lustenau (ed.): Lustenauer Heimatbuch . I. Volume. Lustenau 1965, p. 364 .
  18. Hannes Grabher: Customs, sagas and chronicles . Ed .: Cultural department of the market town of Lustenau. Second edition. Lustenau 2002, ISBN 3-900954-05-4 , p. 285, 289 .
  19. Wolfgang Scheffknecht: 100 years market town Lustenau . Lustenau 2003, ISBN 3-900954-06-2 , pp. 35-50 .
  20. Hannes Grabher: Customs, sagas and chronicles . Ed .: Cultural department of the market town of Lustenau. Second edition. Lustenau 2002, ISBN 3-900954-05-4 , p. 292 ff .
  21. ^ Ludwig Welti: From the Carolingian royal court to the largest Austrian market town . In: Marktgemeinde Lustenau (ed.): Lustenauer Heimatbuch . I. Volume. Lustenau 1965, p. 484 f .
  22. Wolfgang Scheffknecht: 100 years market town Lustenau . Lustenau 2003, ISBN 3-900954-06-2 , pp. 98-100 .
  23. Wolfgang Scheffknecht: 100 years market town Lustenau . Lustenau 2003, ISBN 3-900954-06-2 , pp. 128-145, 194 ff .
  24. Wolfgang Scheffknecht: 100 years market town Lustenau . Lustenau 2003, ISBN 3-900954-06-2 , pp. 169 ff., 198, 200-204, 214 .
  25. ^ Robert Bösch: 75 years market town Lustenau . Südwest-Presseverlag, Innsbruck 1978, p. 28 .
  26. Wolfgang Scheffknecht: 100 years market town Lustenau . Lustenau 2003, ISBN 3-900954-06-2 , pp. 236-243 .
  27. Wolfgang Scheffknecht: 100 years market town Lustenau . Lustenau 2003, ISBN 3-900954-06-2 , pp. 245-251 .
  28. Wolfgang Scheffknecht: 100 years market town Lustenau . Lustenau 2003, ISBN 3-900954-06-2 , pp. 272 f .
  29. Wolfgang Scheffknecht: 100 years market town Lustenau . Lustenau 2003, ISBN 3-900954-06-2 , pp. 330-334 .
  30. Wolfgang Scheffknecht: 100 years market town Lustenau . Lustenau 2003, ISBN 3-900954-06-2 , pp. 335-342 .
  31. Wolfgang Scheffknecht: 100 years market town Lustenau . Lustenau 2003, ISBN 3-900954-06-2 , pp. 318 .
  32. Wolfgang Scheffknecht: 100 years market town Lustenau . Lustenau 2003, ISBN 3-900954-06-2 , pp. 343-351 .
  33. ^ Ludwig Welti: From the Carolingian royal court to the largest Austrian market town . In: Marktgemeinde Lustenau (ed.): Lustenauer Heimatbuch . I. Volume. Lustenau 1965, p. 486-495 .
  34. ^ Wolfgang Scheffknecht: Modernization and bourgeoisie. Lustenau 1860 to 1914 . In: City and bourgeoisie in the Lake Constance area. Research reports - technical discussions; Documentation for the international conference “City and Citizenship in the Lake Constance Region”, 6th Dornbirn History Days, November 19-21, 2003 . Office of the City of Dornbirn, City Archives, Dornbirn 2008, p. 185-209 .
  35. Register census from October 31, 2011 - final resident population and number of citizens (with population development since 1869). (PDF) Statistics Austria, June 21, 2013, accessed on October 15, 2014 .
  36. a b Register census from October 31, 2011 - Demographic data, migration. (PDF) Statistics Austria, December 10, 2013, accessed on August 12, 2014 .
  37. a b Census 2011 Vorarlberg - results on the population from the register census. (PDF) (No longer available online.) Statistics Austria, 2013, archived from the original on November 13, 2013 ; Retrieved August 12, 2014 .
  38. ^ Register census from October 31, 2011 - level of education and ongoing training. (PDF) Statistics Austria, January 24, 2014, accessed on August 12, 2014 .
  39. a b Census of May 15, 2001 - Demographic Data. (PDF) Statistics Austria, July 28, 2009, accessed on August 13, 2014 .
  40. Hannes Grabher: Customs, sagas and chronicles . Ed .: Cultural department of the market town of Lustenau. Second edition. Lustenau 2002, ISBN 3-900954-05-4 , p. 275 .
  41. Lustenau dialect (Vorarlberg). Retrieved August 13, 2014 .
  42. Luschnouarisch: Distinctive Alemannic dialect. (No longer available online.) Lustenau market town, archived from the original on July 11, 2014 ; accessed on August 13, 2014 .
  43. ^ Ludwig Welti: From the Carolingian royal court to the largest Austrian market town . In: Marktgemeinde Lustenau (ed.): Lustenauer Heimatbuch . I. Volume. Lustenau 1965, p. 486-491 .
  44. community council. Market town of Lustenau, accessed on August 15, 2014 .
  45. ^ Franz Stetter , Siegfried König: Lustenauer family book . tape I . Federsee-Verlag, Konstanz 2012, ISBN 978-3-925171-96-3 , p. 35 .
  46. Wolfgang Scheffknecht: 100 years market town Lustenau . Lustenau 2003, ISBN 3-900954-06-2 .
  47. ^ Kk Ministry of the Interior: Letter of arms of the municipality of Lustenau . Vienna 1902 ( Landesarchiv Vorarlberg [PDF]). Landesarchiv Vorarlberg ( Memento from September 6, 2018 in the Internet Archive )
  48. Wolfgang Scheffknecht: 100 years market town Lustenau . Lustenau 2003, ISBN 3-900954-06-2 , pp. 27 .
  49. Ikea referendum: Issue unclear orf.at, December 15, 2017, accessed December 15, 2017.
  50. Referendum despite IKEA rejection . orf.at, April 10, 2018, accessed April 10, 2018.
  51. derStandard.at: Pointless referendum can now be canceled . Article dated May 9, 2018, accessed May 9, 2018.
  52. ↑ The Lustenau-Markt stop will be closed. ORF Vorarlberg, June 10, 2011, accessed on September 9, 2014 .
  53. Modern hub for mobility. In: lustenau.at. Marktgemeinde Lustenau, March 27, 2015, accessed on August 29, 2016 .
  54. Florian Frey: The new Lustenau station - planning status July 2016. In: vimeo.com. Geoconsult Wien ZT GmbH, July 9, 2016, accessed on August 29, 2016 (ÖBB Infrastructure Video, see time 3:12).
  55. ^ Rauch / Grüne Vlbg .: Ring tram would relieve the Lower Rhine Valley. APA-OTS, August 27, 2004, accessed September 9, 2014 .
  56. Construction of a ring tram examined. Vorarlberg Online , June 30, 2005, accessed on September 9, 2014 .
  57. "Ring tram is not a pipe dream". ORF Vorarlberg, September 26, 2008, accessed on September 9, 2014 .
  58. Rhine Valley: Two variants have been eliminated. Vorarlberg Online , March 2, 2011, accessed on September 9, 2014 .
  59. ^ State of Vorarlberg: Alternative train / ring tram / bus. (PDF) (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on September 10, 2014 ; Retrieved September 9, 2014 .
  60. Starting shot for the Postbus-Shuttle as ANRUFBUS . In: Marktgemeinde Lustenau (Ed.): Lustenauer Gemeindeblatt . No. 46 , 2018, p. 6-7 ( online [accessed November 3, 2018]).
  61. Waterworks. Market town of Lustenau, accessed on September 9, 2014 .
  62. ↑ Project of the century before successful completion! In: Marktgemeinde Lustenau (Ed.): Lustenauer Gemeindeblatt . No. 07 , 2015, p. 6-9 ( online [accessed February 15, 2015]).
  63. Lustenau Waste Guide. (No longer available online.) Marktgemeinde Lustenau, January 23, 2014, archived from the original on September 10, 2014 ; Retrieved September 9, 2014 .
  64. Häusle could lose license. orf.at, March 30, 2016, accessed March 30, 2016. - With 4 cited articles from March 25, 24, 21 and 19, 2016.
  65. s'Spatzonasscht
  66. Service and childcare - Lustenau Kindergarten
  67. ^ Elementary schools - market town Lustenau
  68. Middle Schools - Lustenau market town
  69. ^ Special Education Center - Lustenau market town
  70. Bundesgymnasium - Marktgemeinde Lustenau
  71. Commercial Academy - Lustenau market town
  72. Lustenau Music School
  73. Seminar for Jazz and Pop Music - Lustenau Music School
  74. ^ Doctors and therapists - Lustenau market town
  75. ^ Pharmacies - Lustenau market town
  76. ^ Retirement homes - social services Lustenau
  77. Lustenau's meeting point for social affairs and health - Lustenau market town
  78. Information on the Lustenau location - Lustenau market town
  79. ^ Industry North - Lustenau market town
  80. Millennium Park: Companies welcome - Lustenau market town
  81. Operating area Hehre - market town Lustenau
  82. Lustenau Marketing
  83. Register census from October 31, 2011 - Workplaces and employees according to sections of ÖNACE 2008 and rough employee size groups. (PDF) Statistics Austria, January 23, 2014, accessed on September 10, 2014 .
  84. Workplace census from May 15, 2001 - workplaces and employees according to sections of ÖNACE 1995 and rough employee size groups. (PDF) Statistics Austria, July 10, 2009, accessed on September 10, 2014 .
  85. a b Register census from October 31, 2011 - commuters by commuting destination. (PDF) Statistics Austria, December 10, 2013, accessed on September 10, 2014 .
  86. Census of May 15, 2001 - commuters by commuting destination. (PDF) Statistics Austria, February 5, 2013, accessed on September 10, 2014 .
  87. register census from October 31, 2011 - population by employment status; Employed persons by position in their job and economic affiliation. (PDF) Statistics Austria, December 12, 2013, accessed on September 10, 2014 .
  88. Hannes Grabher: Customs, sagas and chronicles . Ed .: Cultural department of the market town of Lustenau. Second edition. Lustenau 2002, ISBN 3-900954-05-4 , p. 243 f., 268-270, 288 .
  89. Wolfgang Scheffknecht: 100 years market town Lustenau . Lustenau 2003, ISBN 3-900954-06-2 , pp. 359-363 .
  90. Wolfgang Scheffknecht: History of the Redeemer Parish. Erlöserpfarre Lustenau, accessed on November 13, 2016 .
  91. Wolfgang Scheffknecht: 100 years market town Lustenau . Lustenau 2003, ISBN 3-900954-06-2 , pp. 305, 354-356 .
  92. architecture. (No longer available online.) Parish Hasenfeld, archived from the original on October 20, 2014 ; Retrieved September 17, 2014 .
  93. a b Wolfgang Scheffknecht: 100 years of the market town of Lustenau . Lustenau 2003, ISBN 3-900954-06-2 , pp. 357 f .
  94. Wolfgang Scheffknecht: 100 years market town Lustenau . Lustenau 2003, ISBN 3-900954-06-2 , pp. 304, 365 .
  95. Wolfgang Scheffknecht: 100 years market town Lustenau . Lustenau 2003, ISBN 3-900954-06-2 , pp. 365 .
  96. ^ Ferdinand Ortner: Historical gem: Loreto chapel. Vorarlberg Online , November 4, 2010, accessed on September 17, 2014 .
  97. 25 years of the Rosary Chapel - Lustenau market town
  98. ^ Otto Kapfinger : Architecture in Vorarlberg since 1980 . 2nd Edition. Hatje Cantz Verlag, 2003, ISBN 3-7757-1150-3 , p. 3/15 .
  99. Bundesdenkmalamt (Ed.): Dehio-Handbuch Vorarlberg . Anton Schroll & Co, Vienna 1983, ISBN 3-7031-0585-2 , p. 302 .
  100. Rhein Schauen - Museum and Rheinbähnle - Lustenau market town
  101. Rauch's Radio Museum - Lustenau market town
  102. The art collections of the community - Galerie Hollenstein ( Memento from October 17, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  103. ^ Art exhibitions and opening times - Galerie Hollenstein
  104. ^ Lustenau Embroidery Museum - Lustenau market town
  105. Renovation work in the embroidery center . In: Marktgemeinde Lustenau (Ed.): Lustenauer Gemeindeblatt . No. 12 , 2015, p. 14 ( online [accessed March 23, 2015]).
  106. Archive overview. Jazzclub Lustenau, accessed on June 29, 2015 .
  107. Sommer.Lust am Platz - Lustenau market town
  108. ^ Scene Openair Lustenau - Lustenau market town
  109. Lustenau Live - Long Night of Music - Lustenau Marketing ( Memento from October 17, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  110. The Luschnouar market - market town Lustenau
  111. Events - Marktgemeinde Lustenau ( Memento from September 20, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  112. Lustenau in children's hands - Lustenau market town
  113. The largest festival in the country - Lustenau Marketing ( Memento from August 25, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  114. Lustenauer Christkindlemarkt Lustenau Marketing ( Memento from August 25, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  115. New Year's Eve on the square - Lustenau Marketing ( Memento from August 25, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  116. Silke Ritter: 30 years Luschnouar Koscht. Vorarlberg Online , February 26, 2010, accessed on September 20, 2014 .
  117. The recipe always remains a secret. Vorarlberg Online , October 13, 2007, accessed on September 20, 2014 .
  118. ^ History. Lustenauer Senf, accessed on September 20, 2014 .
  119. ^ Schlumberger sale Freihof. Österreichischer Wirtschaftsverlag, July 10, 2007, accessed on September 20, 2014 .
  120. A unique facility for all those who enjoy being active - Lustenau market town
  121. Riedlaufstrecken - Lustenau market town
  122. ^ Reichshofstadion - Lustenau market town
  123. Other sports facilities - Lustenau market town
  124. ^ Mission 1907. (No longer available online.) FC Lustenau, archived from the original on October 20, 2014 ; accessed on September 23, 2014 .
  125. Oliver Heinzle, Wolfgang Scheffknecht (Ed.): Lustenau reading book . First edition. unartproduktion, Dornbirn 2011, ISBN 978-3-901325-51-9 , p. 197 f .
  126. Lustenau sports clubs - Lustenau market town
  127. Ursina Kohler: Where guests become friends. Tagblatt Online, July 13, 2007, accessed on September 23, 2014 .
  128. Wolfgang Scheffknecht: 100 years market town Lustenau . Lustenau 2003, ISBN 3-900954-06-2 , pp. 218 f .
  129. Communications . In: Marktgemeinde Lustenau (Ed.): Lustenauer Gemeindeblatt . No. 13 , 1905, pp. 100 f .
  130. Wolfgang Scheffknecht: 100 years market town Lustenau . Lustenau 2003, ISBN 3-900954-06-2 , pp. 334 .
  131. Wolfgang Scheffknecht: 100 years market town Lustenau . Lustenau 2003, ISBN 3-900954-06-2 , pp. 342 .
  132. Wolfgang Scheffknecht: 100 years market town Lustenau . Lustenau 2003, ISBN 3-900954-06-2 , pp. 346 .
  133. Lustenau has a new honorary citizen and three other dignitaries . In: Marktgemeinde Lustenau (Ed.): Lustenauer Gemeindeblatt . No. 44 , 2011, p. 5-8 .
This article was added to the list of excellent articles on November 4, 2014 in this version .