Between the rivers Ruhr and Lippe lies the largest
conurbation of Germany: das Ruhrgebiet or the Ruhr Area in English. Located in
the Federal State of North Rhine-Westphalia this agglomeration of several large
and medium sized cities is home to eight and a half million people. In contrast
to Greater London, which is -of 2014- of equal size, there is no separate
regional authority, all the municipalities (Gemeinden) are independent entities
within a Kreis (district) or are so-called Kreisfreie Stadte (literally:
district-free cities, the better translation is incorporated cities). The
larger cities have grown through incorporation of neighbouring towns and
villages. These often have a form of local representation within a so-called
Stadtbezirk (similar to a London Borough,
a Dutch Stadsdeel or a Belgian Deelgemeente). In Germany Stadtbezirke (literally
city district) are to be found in cities with more than 150.000 inhabitants.
The Ruhr Area includes the cities of Duisburg,
Oberhausen, Bottrop, Mülheim an der Ruhr, Essen, Gelsenkirchen, Bochum, Herne,
Hagen, Dortmund and Hamm as well as sections of the non-urban district
(Landkreis) Wesel, Reckllinghausen, Unna and the Ennepe-Ruhr-Kreis. There is no
central settlement or an administrative centre for the whole of the Ruhr Area.
As such it is a perfect example of a true urban landscape! The independent
local authorities cooperate in the supracommunal Regionalverbandt Ruhr (RVR).
The RVR started in 1920 as the Siedlungsverbandt
Ruhrkohlenbezirk (SVR). This SVR was founded to raise the money needed to pay
the settlement forced on Germany in the Treaty of Versailles after WW1 and
included al the rural and urban district of the industrial and mining heartland
of the country. The development of the region into an urbanized industrial
landscape had started in the late eighteenth century with the early
industrialisation in the Wupper Valley (Wuppertal) in the County of Berg
(Bergisches Land). By 1820 hundreds of water-powered mills were producing
textiles, wood, shingles and iron. The iron was used for crafting knives, tools
and harnesses in large workshops.
The Ruhr Area (Rhineland) in 1830 before the rapid
industrialisation with the Rhine on the left en the Rurhr meandering at the
bottom of the map. The small towns and cities are spread over a large
undulating landscape that had been largely deforested for agriculture by this
time.
As the decades went on the factories became bigger and
more automated. This called for more power, so the industrialists started using
steam power. For this they needed large quantities of coal. The few coal
deposits around the Wupper Valley and Dusseldorf were quickly being depleted,
so a railway was constructed to link the area with the Ruhr Valley some 30
kilometres further north. By 1850 there were almost 300 coal mines in operation
in the Ruhr Valley. This rapid growth of the mining industry also meant an
unprecedented change to the landscape. Spoil heaps were being raised at some
distance of the collieries. Train tracks were laid. Rivers were bridges and on
occasion culverted, diverted or dammed. Forests were cleared. Castles and
hamlets were replaced by vast industrial complexes. The land of many a farm was
developed for housing. As a result the area quickly urbanised in a totally
uncontrolled manner. The local village and city councils were no match for the
industrialists and often had no clue what this "economic development"
would mean for the existing residents. The need for a large workforce also
attracted many young men from nearby rural areas in the Rhineland and the
Palatine, but also further afield from Silesia, Bohemia, Poland, Pomerania,
Posen and Moravia. These men later started families end needed sufficient
housing. This lead to a building boom of often substandard housing. This in
turn lead to the construction of designated housing for miners and other
workers in so-called colonies.
A century on this map from 1930 shows a vast
conurbation with shipping canals, docks, railways, collieries, spoil heaps,
miners colonies, housing, factories and so on. Only some small pockets of rural
land remain as islands in a (sub)urban sea. After 1950 most of these areas were
developed for housing en industrial estates as most of the new motorways
avoided the existing built-up areas.
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