| Dusseltal does not have its coat of arms or emblem | |
| Geographic coordinates : | 51 ° 14 'c. w; 6 ° 48 'in. d. |
| Height : | 40-46 m above sea level m |
| Surface area : | 2.91 km² |
| Number of inhabitants: | 25 907 people (Comp. December 31, 2010) |
| Population density : | 8 903 people per km² [1] |
| City District : | District 02 |
| City District Number: | 023 |
Dusseltal ( German: Düsseltal ), is one of the 50 administrative districts of Dusseldorf ( North Rhine-Westphalia , Germany ), located in the central part of the city ( District 2 ).
Content
- 1 Position
- 2 History
- 3 notes
- 4 References
Regulation
The economic and geographical position of Dusseltal is very favorable. It is located in the junction of road and rail transport links connecting the district not only with the rest of Düsseldorf, but also with all neighboring areas of North Rhine-Westphalia. The situation is somewhat worsened by the lack of direct access to the Rhine River and the absence of a large passenger railway station.
Other administrative areas of Düsseldorf border Düsseltal: Derendorf , Pempelfort , Stadtmitte , Flingern-Nord , Grafenberg , Mörsenbroich (Mörs.
Almost all the borders of the district are clearly expressed on the city map. From the west there is the main railway Cologne - Berlin , from the north-east - the main street of Heinrich (Heinrichstraße), and in the south the lively alley Grafenbergerallee. Thanks to the presence of three railway suburban platforms (Derendorf), Zoo (Zoo), Wehrhahn, tram and bus lines, residents of the district have quick access to all other areas of Dusseldorf and the surrounding area, as well as to the neighboring cities of Neuss , Duisburg , Ratingen et al.
History
The area between old Düsseldorf and the city of Gerresheim , until the industrialization of the beginning of the 20th century, is barely populated. It was owned by local knight Hayk von Flingern. Düsseltal's oldest buildings include two Speckerhöfe estates and a Buscher Mühle mill named after its owner Johannes de Buscho. The mill was mentioned at the beginning of the XIV century . Today it is one of the few mills preserved along the Düssel River and the only one within the city of Düsseldorf [2] .
Notes
- ↑ Official statistics of Dusseltal
- ↑ Die Buscher Mühle ( Archived September 10, 2009 on Wayback Machine