Floridsdorf
Floridsdorf
Fluridsduaf (Bavarian) | |
---|---|
21st District of Vienna | |
![]() Location of the district within Vienna | |
Country | Austria |
City | Vienna |
Government | |
• District Director | Georg Papai (SPÖ) |
• First Deputy | Ilse Fitzbauer (SPÖ) |
• Second Deputy | Karl Mareda (FPÖ) |
• Representation (60 Members) | SPÖ 24, FPÖ 23, ÖVP 4, Green 4, WIFF 2, NEOS 2 |
Area | |
• Total | 44.46 km2 (17.17 sq mi) |
Population (2016-01-01)[1] | |
• Total | 155,998 |
• Density | 3,500/km2 (9,100/sq mi) |
Postal code | A-1210 |
Address of District Office | Am Spitz 1 A-1211 Wien |
Website | www |
Floridsdorf (Austrian German: [ˈfloːrɪdsdɔrf] ⓘ; Viennese: Fluridsduaf) is the 21st district of Vienna, Austria (21. Bezirk). Located north of the Danube, it comprises former villages such as Floridsdorf, Donaufeld, Jedlesee, Leopoldau, Stammersdorf, Strebersdorf, and Groß-Jedlersdorf. With a population of over 189,000 in 2025, it is Vienna’s third most populous district and one of the fastest growing. Floridsdorf is known for its blend of urban infrastructure and green spaces, including vineyards, parks, and historical architecture
Geography
[edit]Floridsdorf lies in the northeastern part of Vienna, on the left bank of the Danube. It is bordered to the south and west by the Danube River (across which lie the districts of Brigittenau and Döbling), to the east by the 22nd District (Donaustadt), and to the north by Lower Austria. The terrain is diverse: the northwest includes the gentle foothills of the Bisamberg (a hill of which 320 m lies within the district), while the southeast is a flat plain formed by the Danube’s old floodplain. The Danube itself, along with the parallel New Danube channel and part of the Danube Island, forms Floridsdorf’s southern boundary. The northern segment of the Old Danube (an oxbow lake of the Danube) also flows through the district, providing popular waterfront recreation. In 1870–1875, the Danube Regulation tamed the river’s floods and created new land for settlement in Floridsdorf’s southern plains.
The district contains abundant green areas and parks. Vineyards and agricultural fields still characterize the northern localities of Stammersdorf and Strebersdorf, where the slopes of the Bisamberg are covered with vineyards and protected meadows (the Alte Schanzen, former 1866 military earthworks, now a nature reserve). Remnants of riparian forest survive in the Schwarze Lackenau wetlands and the Floridsdorfer Aupark, recalling the Danube’s original floodplain ecosystem. The Marchfeldkanal – a canal completed in 1992 – cuts across Floridsdorf, its banks forming a green corridor and feeding ponds that host rare flora and fauna. Despite urbanization, pockets of vegetable farms and garden allotments remain in areas like Donaufeld, though these open spaces have been steadily receding with new housing projects.
Subdivisions
[edit]Administratively, Floridsdorf is divided into localities corresponding to the former villages and cadastral communities. The seven core subdivisions are Floridsdorf (central area around Am Spitz), Donaufeld, Großjedlersdorf (often further split into Groß-Jedlersdorf I & II), Jedlesee, Leopoldau, Stammersdorf, and Strebersdorf. In addition, Floridsdorf includes small parts of Kagran and Kaisermühlen that border the 22nd District. Each quarter has a distinct character: for example, Floridsdorf center (Am Spitz) is a busy urban node and district administrative center, whereas Stammersdorf retains a village atmosphere famous for its Heuriger wine taverns and vineyards.
For statistical purposes, the district is further divided into 28 Zählbezirke (census tracts). These carry names often derived from local neighborhoods or landmarks – e.g., Großfeldsiedlung (a large post-war housing estate), Siemensstraße, Jedlersdorf, or Autokader (named after a historic Imperial automobile factory). The census districts largely align with the traditional sub-districts but with some differences in borders. They reflect Floridsdorf’s development, from the old village cores (like Schwarzlackenau or Mühlschüttel) to 20th-century settlements (Nordrandsiedlung, Donaufelder Gartenstadt) and industrial zones (Industriegelände Bahndreieck).
Parks and Natural Areas
[edit]Floridsdorf offers extensive green and recreational spaces. The Danube Island (Donauinsel), a long artificial island created as part of flood control, spans the district’s southern edge and provides parks, beaches, and cycling paths. On the island, the Japanese Cherry Tree Park (Kirschenhain) near the Jedleseer Brücke footbridge is notable for its annual cherry blossom festival. The Old Danube’s shores host lidos and boating areas popular in summer. In the north, the slopes of the Bisamberg and the adjacent nature reserve (including the Alte Schanzen) are crisscrossed with hiking trails and dotted with heuriger wine gardens, blending nature with Vienna’s wine culture. A new central park, the Gaswerk-Park, is being created as part of the “Neu Leopoldau” development on the site of the old gas works, adding 8,500 m² of green space in the heart of a new residential quarter.
History
[edit]Prehistory and Antiquity
[edit]Human presence in what is now Floridsdorf dates back to the Neolithic period. Archaeological finds, including stone axes and potsherds from 4000–2000 BC, indicate that prehistoric hunters and early farmers settled in the area. During the Bronze Age, as evidenced by weapons and jewelry unearthed near Leopoldau, the region continued to be inhabited; several of these artifacts are displayed in the Floridsdorf District Museum. By around 500 BC, Celtic tribes arrived, later encountering the expanding Roman Empire. In the Roman era, the Floridsdorf territory lay just outside the fortified city of Vindobona (located on the opposite bank of the Danube) and served as a borderland between Roman and Germanic influence. There is no evidence of a permanent Roman settlement in Floridsdorf; rather, it likely functioned as a buffer zone north of the empire’s frontier. After the fall of Rome, the area saw migrations of Lombards, Avars, and Slavs in the early medieval period.
Early and High Middle Ages
[edit]By the 9th century, the Magyars had conquered the Pannonian Basin and made incursions into the region. Their westward raids were halted in 955 at the Battle of Lechfeld, after which the area became part of the evolving Holy Roman Empire. The Babenberg rulers (Margraves of Austria) controlled the Vienna region around 1000 AD. The first recorded mention of a settlement in Floridsdorf dates to 1014 AD, when Jedlesee was noted as Outcinesse (“Uz’s lake”). Throughout the Middle Ages, the Danube’s branches made this area marshy and difficult to traverse. A ferry was long the only way to cross the main river. In 1500, the first wooden bridge (Taborbrücke) was built linking what would become Floridsdorf to the other bank. This bridge, and a smaller span called the Kuhbrückl over a side arm, established Floridsdorf as a crossroads at the Spitz (the point where roads to Bohemia and Moravia diverged). A small settlement grew around this strategic junction, laying the groundwork for the village of Floridsdorf.
During the Ottoman wars (16th–17th centuries), the area north of Vienna was often a mustering ground for troops and witnessed troop movements, though Floridsdorf itself was not yet a town of note. In 1694, a Loretto chapel was built in Jedlesee, signaling resettlement after the Second Turkish Siege of Vienna.
Formation of Floridsdorf and 19th-Century Growth
[edit]Floridsdorf remained a primarily rural, agricultural village into the 18th century. Its modern name comes from Abbot Floridus Leeb of Klosterneuburg Monastery, who in 1786 arranged for 26 plots of monastery land at “Am Spitz” to be given to new settler families. In his honor, the growing village was named Floridus Dorf (later Floridsdorf). By the early 19th century, Floridsdorf was developing into a market town. The first permanent Danube bridge in the area, a chain bridge, opened in 1848, improving connections to Vienna.
The Industrial Revolution transformed Floridsdorf dramatically. With its flat land and rail access, the area attracted factories and workers. In 1837, the Emperor Ferdinand Northern Railway opened its first section from Vienna north to Floridsdorf (Deutsch-Wagram line), marking the birth of railway travel in Austria. Floridsdorf became a rail hub: the Nordbahn (Northern Railway) and Nordwestbahn (Northwestern Railway, 1841) both ran lines through here, each with its own Danube bridge. In 1869, the Lokomotivfabrik Floridsdorf (Floridsdorf Locomotive Factory) was founded, which grew into one of Europe’s leading locomotive and machinery works. This industrialization rapidly turned Floridsdorf from a farming village into a working-class town. A steam tramway line opened, and numerous factories (producing locomotives, boilers, metals, and later automobiles) established the district’s reputation as an industrial center.
On May 8, 1894, Floridsdorf was officially elevated to a market town, and it absorbed the neighboring villages of Donaufeld, Jedlesee, and Neu-Jedlersdorf, creating a larger municipality. By 1900, the “Greater Floridsdorf” (Groß-Floridsdorf) also included outlying villages such as Kagran, Stadlau, Hirschstetten, and Aspern, extending all the way to the Marchfeld plain in the east. These areas together had grown to over 60,000 inhabitants by 1910.
Incorporation into Vienna and 20th Century
[edit]In 1904–1905, the city of Vienna expanded its boundaries beyond the Danube. Floridsdorf, with its amalgamated communities, was annexed to Vienna on 1 January 1905 as the 21st municipal district. (At the same time, the 22nd District – Donaustadt – was not yet separate; Floridsdorf initially encompassed all the annexed areas north of the Danube.) Floridsdorf’s incorporation brought urban infrastructure and investment. In 1910, the village of Strebersdorf, which lay just outside, was also incorporated into Vienna and added to Floridsdorf district.
During World War I and the interwar period, Floridsdorf continued to grow but at a slower pace. After the fall of the monarchy in 1918, Vienna became a separate province, and Floridsdorf was firmly part of “Red Vienna,” known for its working-class population. The city built several Gemeindebauten (municipal tenements) in the district during the 1920s–30s, such as Karl-Seitz-Hof and Schlingerhof, to improve housing conditions.
In 1938, the Nazi administration undertook a major redistricting in their creation of “Greater Vienna.” They separated the eastern portions (Kagran, Stadlau, Hirschstetten, Aspern, and the Lobau area) from Floridsdorf to form the new 22nd District (Donaustadt). Floridsdorf thus lost roughly half its territory and population in 1938, retaining the more urbanized western part. During World War II, Floridsdorf’s industrial targets suffered heavy bombings. An oil refinery and storage site in Floridsdorf (part of the Oil Campaign) was repeatedly bombed by Allied air raids. The Floridsdorfer Refinery and facilities of the Heinkel aircraft works were destroyed in 1944–45. In April 1945, as Soviet troops approached Vienna, the Floridsdorf Bridge was blown up by retreating German forces, and the district saw fighting in the final Battle of Vienna.
After the war, Floridsdorf was in the Soviet-occupied sector of Vienna until 1955. In 1954, a treaty adjustment between Vienna and Lower Austria finalized the city boundaries: Floridsdorf gained the remaining parts of Stammersdorf (including hillsides of Bisamberg that had still belonged to Lower Austria). This set the modern district borders. Post-war Floridsdorf underwent reconstruction and renewed expansion. In the 1960s and 1970s, large residential projects like Großfeldsiedlung (over 5,000 apartments) were built to address housing shortages, transforming former fields north of Leopoldau into dense housing estates. The district’s population, which had dipped during and after WWII, rose again with these new developments.
From the late 20th century into the 21st, Floridsdorf has balanced preserving its village heritage with ongoing urbanization. The Danube floodplain areas have been protected or turned into recreational zones, even as new housing estates (such as Neu Leopoldau, a redevelopment of the old gasworks, and planned projects in Donaufeld) add thousands of residents. The district’s historic core around Am Spitz retains landmarks like the Floridsdorf Parish Church (St. Jacob) and old village centers (Stammersdorf’s Kellergasse wine cellars, Jedlesee’s Baroque church), providing a sense of continuity amid rapid growth.
Demographics
[edit]Population growth
[edit]Floridsdorf’s population has shown steady long-term growth with periods of rapid increase. In 1869, the area (then still outside Vienna) had just over 12,000 inhabitants. Industrialization and the 1905 incorporation into Vienna spurred a population boom: by 1910 Floridsdorf reached 62,154 residents – more than five times the 1869 figure. After World War I, growth slowed as the district remained less densely built-up than inner-city districts. The Nazi-era split in 1938 reduced Floridsdorf’s population, and WWII caused a temporary decline. By 1951, the district (in its reduced borders) was home to around 85,000 people. Thereafter, new housing projects led to continuous increases. Floridsdorf’s population crossed 100,000 in the 1960s and 130,000 by the late 20th century.
Since the 1990s, Floridsdorf has experienced another surge of construction and influx of residents. Between 2001 and 2011, the population jumped from about 128,000 to 144,000. This trend accelerated in the 2010s with large developments (Citygate, Neu Leopoldau, Donaufeld etc.). As of 1 January 2025, Floridsdorf’s population is 189,580, making it the third most populous Vienna district. The district grew by 50% in the first 25 years of the 21st century, an increase of over 63,000 people – one of the highest growth rates in the city. City forecasts project Floridsdorf will exceed 200,000 inhabitants before 2030. Despite this growth, population density (around 4,264 per km² in 2025) remains moderate by Vienna standards due to the district’s large open areas.
Population structure
[edit]Floridsdorf’s age distribution is broadly similar to Vienna’s average, with a slight tilt toward families and older residents. The district traditionally had a somewhat higher proportion of children and senior citizens than the city core. In 2005, for example, 16.2% of Floridsdorf’s population was under 15 (vs 14.6% Vienna-wide), and 22.5% was over 60 (vs 22.0% citywide). The working-age group (15–59) was about 61%. More recently, with new housing attracting young families, the share of children and young adults has been rising. As of 2024, out of ~186,000 residents, roughly 19,900 (11%) were ages 10–19 and 21,131 (11.4%) were under age 10. Around 16% of residents are 65 or older. The gender ratio is about 48% male to 52% female, reflecting women’s longer life expectancy (similar to the city overall).
Nationality and migration
[edit]Traditionally a working-class Austrian district, Floridsdorf had a lower share of foreign-born residents than inner districts. In 2001, about 15.4% of residents were born outside Austria. The largest immigrant groups at that time were from former Yugoslavia (especially Serbia and Montenegro, 2.3% of the population) and Turkey (1.2%). Only 11% of residents in 2006 were foreign nationals (vs ~19% for Vienna overall). However, the 21st-century population growth has come partly from immigration and newcomers from other districts. By 2024, approximately 30.7% of Floridsdorf inhabitants were not Austrian citizens (this includes 11.7% from other EU countries and ~19% from non-EU countries). Major communities include Serbian, Turkish, German, and Polish Austrians, alongside increasing numbers of EU migrants (e.g. from Romania, Slovakia, etc.). The remaining ~69% are Austrian citizens.
In terms of language and ethnicity, German is the predominant language, but Floridsdorf’s streets reflect diverse cultures. Serbian, Turkish, and Croatian are among the most common mother tongues after German (as recorded in the 2001 census). The district’s rapid expansion has also attracted many internal migrants from other parts of Vienna and Austria, contributing to a dynamic population mix.
Religion
[edit]Floridsdorf has historically been a predominantly Catholic district. Around the turn of the millennium, it had one of the highest proportions of Roman Catholics in Vienna: 53.9% in the 2001 census, compared to the city average of 49.2%. The district is served by numerous Catholic parishes and is organized as the City Deanery 21 of the Archdiocese of Vienna. Since 1979, Floridsdorf has also been home to Vienna’s largest mosque (the Islamic Centre), reflecting the growing Muslim community. As of 2001, about 4.9% of residents were Muslims and 3.0% Orthodox Christians. Protestants made up roughly 4.4%. Notably, Floridsdorf had the highest share of people stating no religious affiliation in Vienna: 28.9% in 2001, a figure that likely increased in subsequent years. Today, the religious landscape is diverse – alongside Catholic churches (such as St. Leopold in Donaufeld and the baroque church of Stammersdorf), there are several Orthodox congregations, a Buddhist center, and the Islamic Centre with its prominent minaret.
Geography
[edit]
Topography
[edit]North Floridsdorf is dominated by the southern foothills of Bisamberg. Since the summit of the Bisamberg hill, at 358 metres (1,175 ft), is today in Lower Austria, Floridsdorf's highest elevation is the Falkenberg, at 320 metres (1,050 ft).
The Danube marks Floridsdorf's southwestern border. Part of the New Danube and a section of the Danube Island fall within the district, while the wetlands immediately beyond form part of Döbling. Bridges spanning the Danube to Floridsdorf (listed by the Danube's direction of flow) include the Jedlesee bridge, the Vienna North Bridge, the Floridsdorf Bridge, the U6-Danube Bridge and the Brigittenauer Bridge. The northern section of the Old Danube flows through Floridsdorf. In 1992, the Marchfeld Canal, which crosses the district, was put into operation.
Sub-districts
[edit]
Floridsdorf comprises seven formerly independent communities: Floridsdorf, Donaufeld, Greater Jedlersdorf, Jedlesee, Leopoldau, Stammersdorf, and Strebersdorf, plus portions of two others.
The eponymous Floridsdorf sub-district is also the smallest in area. The largest is Stammersdorf, to the north. Stammersdorf borders Strebersdorf and Großjedlersdorf, consisting of the two communities Großjedlersdorf I and II. To the east, on the border of the 22nd district, are Leopoldau and Donaufeld. Jedlesee in the west is composed of Jedlesee and Schwarze Lackenau. In addition to these full sub-districts, Floridsdorf also contains parts of Kagran and Kaisermühlen, the greater portions of which lie in the district of Donaustadt.
Census districts
[edit]Floridsdorf is also divided into 28 census districts. Although their names are identical or nearly identical to the corresponding sub-districts, the census districts of Donaufeld, Greater Jedlersdorf, Old Jedlesee, New Jedlesee, Leopoldau, Schwarzlackenau, Stammersdorf and Strebersdorf have distinct borders. Settlements and parcels of land have given their names to the census districts of Hirschfeld, Nordrandsiedlung, Großfeldsiedlung, Schottenfeld, Siemensstrasse, Jochberg, Donaufelder Gartnergebiet, Mühlschüttel, Bruckhaufen and Industriegelande Bahndreieck. The district of Autokader takes its name from the largest auto plant of the Habsburg monarchy (Austro-Fiat), while Gaswerk Leopoldau is named for the city gas works, opened in 1911. The remaining Floridsdorf census districts are named after streets: Stammersdorf-Brünner Straße, Leopoldauer Straße-Siemensstraße, Strebersdorf-Pragerstraße, Koloniestraße, Shuttleworthstraße, Floridsdorf-Brünnerstraße, Floridsdorf-Am Spitz und Donaufeld-Leopoldauer Straße.
Population
[edit]
Population Growth
Data from Statistik Austria [2] ![]() |
Population development
[edit]Today's 21st district includes that area of Floridsdorf which, in 1869, along with its villages, had only 12,022 inhabitants. With the city limits located near Vienna, the population increased rapidly and showed, up to the First World War, very high growth rates. In 1910, Floridsdorf already had 62,154 inhabitants, its population since 1869 having more than quintupled. Since Floridsdorf after the First World War had a comparatively low population density compared to other districts, the local population rose more gradually. Apart from a brief decline around the Second World War, Floridsdorf's population has grown continuously, but with a significant fall from the 1990s on. At the beginning of 2007, there were 137,186 inhabitants - the third largest population among the Vienna districts. In terms of population density, Floridsdorf ranks only in the bottom quarter of the 23 Vienna municipalities, with 3,086 inhabitants per km2.
Population structure
[edit]The population of Floridsdorf comprised, as of 2005, significantly more children, but also a slightly higher proportion of adults over 60, than the Vienna average. The number of children under 15 was 16.2% higher than for Vienna overall (14.6%). The proportion of the population aged 15 to 59 was 61.4% (Vienna: 63.4%), well below the mean, while the 20 to 34 age group showed a decrease. The proportion of inhabitants aged 60 or older was 22.5% (Vienna: 22.0%) slightly above the Vienna average. The gender distribution as of 2001 was 47.3% men and 52.7% women, the number of married people making up 43.0% compared to 41.2% in Vienna as a whole.[3][4]
Language and nationality
[edit]The proportion of foreign residents in Floridsdorf as of 2006 was 11% (Vienna citywide: 19.1%),[5] ranking fourth among the Vienna municipalities. In line with the country as a whole, growth of the foreign population in 2001 was 7.8%. The highest proportion of foreign residents in the district as of 2005, at 2.3%, was represented by Serbian and Montenegrin nationals. Another 1.2% were Turkish, 0.9% Polish and 0.6% German citizens. In 2001, a total of 15.4% of the district population was Austrian-born. Nearly 3.0% gave as their native language Serbian, 2.3% Turkish and 1.1% Croatian. [3][6]
Religion
[edit]Floridsdorf has, with 53.9%, one of the highest populations of Roman Catholics in Vienna (Vienna citywide: 49.2%). There are 16 districts with Roman Catholic parishes, forming the City Deanery 21 (Archdiocese of Vienna). By contrast, the proportion of Muslims is 4.9% and Orthodox 3.0%. The proportion of Protestant residents stood at 4.4% in Vienna overall. 28.9% of the district's population as of 2001 professed no membership of a religious community, this being the highest such value within the Vienna municipality. A Further 4.9% of the population gave no religion or other confession.[3]
Population centers
[edit]The District Office and the centre of Floridsdorf are located round Am Spitz, at the junction of Prager Straße (Prague Street) and Brünner Straße (Brno Street).
Parts of Floridsdorf were formerly villages, among which, for example, number Stammersdorf, Strebersdorf, and Leopoldau. Because of these sub-districts' origin as villages, Floridsdorf is characteristically rural, with most Heuriger taverns selling homegrown wine.
Politics
[edit]Bezirksvorsteher (political district heads), from 1945 | |
---|---|
Franz Koch (SPÖ) | 1945–1946 |
Franz Jonas (SPÖ) | 1946–1948 |
Ernst Theumer (SPÖ) | 1948–1959 |
Rudolf Hitzinger (SPÖ) | 1959–1964 |
Otmar Emerling (SPÖ) | 1964–1980 |
Kurt Landsmann (SPÖ) | 1980–1994 |
Heinz Lehner (SPÖ) | 1994–2014 |
Georg Papai (SPÖ) | 2014- |
Crest (coat of arms)
[edit]The six panels of the Floridsdorf coat of arms comprise the crests of the previously independent municipalities Floridsdorf, Greater Jedlersdorf, Jedlesee, Leopoldau, Stammer, and Strebersdorf.

These six divisions of the Floridsdorf crest may be described as follows:
- Floridsdorf: The coat of arms (center panel) shows a vase with three red flowers on green stalks between eight green leaves on a silver background.
- Leopoldau: The upper-left coat of arms is a brown-clad right arm, five golden ears of grain, on a blue background.
- Stammersdorf: The top-right coat of arms shows a deciduous tree and three coniferous trees on a green lawn, silver background.
- Jedlesee: The bottom-left coat of arms is the haloed image of the Virgin Mary of Loretto, dressed in gold, laced with pearls and precious stones, shown with the child Jesus and flanked by the red letters M and L, for "Maria Loretto" on a silver background.
- Strebersdorf: The bottom-right coat of arms shows a red-roofed guard tower with two round window openings and two red flags with a golden knob on the ridge in a green field with a blue background.
- Greater Jedlersdorf: The bottom-middle coat of arms shows two crossed white sacks on a red background.
Notable residents
[edit]- Anna Maria Erdődy
- Hannes Androsch
- Marko Arnautović
- Louis Black
- Andy Borg
- Franz Jonas
- Karl Markovics
- Hermann Nitsch
- Peter Pacult
- Erika Pluhar
- Hermann Reschny
Important buildings
[edit]- Many suburban settlements with gardens
- Numerous large settlements
- Großfeldsiedlung
- Nordrandsiedlung
- Siedlung Jedlesee
- Bruckhaufen
- Neu-Stammersdorf
- Schlingerhof
- Karl-Seitz-Hof
- Rosa-Weber-Hof
- Paul-Speiser-Hof
- Franz-Koch-Hof (ugs. Klein-Manhattan)
- Schools and other educational institutions
- Religious School of Education campus in Vienna Vienna - Strebersdorf (including practice and practice Volksschule Hauptschule - Cooperative Middle School)
- Vocational school for automotive technology, plumbing and Karosseure
- Special school for severely handicapped children
- Higher College for Tourism
- Higher College for Economic Occupations
- School of Animal Care Fund for the Promotion of Animal Training
- School brothers Strebersdorf
- Federal High School and Franklin Street Bundesrealgymnasium 21
- Federal and Federal School Gymnasium Franklin Straße 26
- Federal and Federal School Gymnasium Ödenburgerstraße
- Federal and Federal School Gymnasium "Bertha von Suttner", training ship
- Federal and Federal School Gymnasium "Ella Lingens Gymnasium" (formerly: Gerasdorf Street)
- University of Vienna - Business Center (BWZ)
- University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna
- Volkshochschule Floridsdorf
- Churches
- Church of the Order of Friars School Strebersdorf (Jean Baptiste de La Salle)
- Pfarrkirche Queen Mary (Strebersdorf)
- Donaufeld parish church
- Floridsdorfer St. Jakob
- Großjedlersdorfer Parish Church of St. Charles Borromeo (small pilgrimage church Maria Taferl)
- San Marco Polo Square
- Pastoral station of St. Michael
- Maria Loretto Church (Jedlesee)
- Pfarrkirche Gartenstadt
- Social Floridsdorf Medical Center - Hospital and Geriatric Center
Arts and Culture
[edit]Sights
[edit]
- Beethoven Memorial and Erdödy Mansion, Jedlesee
- The Beethoven Way (Beethovenweg)
- Pfarrkirche Donaufeld (The bulky neo-early brick is the third highest church in Vienna and was, before the incorporation of Floridsdorf, planned to be the "Dom Niederösterreichs", the Cathedral of Lower Austria.)
- The Vienna Danube Island
- The Old Danube
Museums
[edit]
The Museum of Local History, now known as the District Museum, founded in 1960 in the Floridsdorf Mautner Schlössl (Prague Street) building, is devoted principally to the emergence of the Danube landscape, the beginning of steam navigation, railway history, and the history of some of the more ancient places in the area. The Museum of Harness and Saddlery, Horseshoes and Veterinary Orthopedics, closed in 2014, but pertaining to everything equine, housed a collection of bone specimens, saddles, horse and beef dishes and an exhibit on the development of horseshoeing from the Romans to the present day. The Vienna Fisheries Museum presents its visitors with information on local fishing through the ages, featuring an exhibition of rare specimens of native fish, aquariums, ancient writings and exhibits, fishing gear and fish-eating animals. In Jedlesee, at the former estate of Countess Anna Maria Erdődy, a memorial to Ludwig van Beethoven was established.
Choirs
[edit]The choral group Harmony (exact name: Floridsdorfer Chorvereinigung "Harmony 1865"; founded: 1865) is a mixed choir, consisting of an average of 40 members. It gives regular performances, for example during Festival-week and Christmas, always with a program appropriate to the season. The choir makes occasional concert tours: to Kraków most recently, also to Rome and Tuscany.
Twin municipalities
[edit]Sports clubs
[edit]- Floridsdorfer AC
- Austrian gymnastics and sports Union Donaufeld
- Leopoldau Sports Union
See also
[edit]- Lokomotivfabrik Floridsdorf - locomotive works in Floridsdorf
References
[edit]- ^ Statistik Austria Archived 2008-05-30 at archive.today
- ^ http://www.statistik.at/blickgem/vz1/g92101.pdf [bare URL PDF]
- ^ a b c Statistics Austria (2001 census) [1] [2]
- ^ MA 5 resident population by age groups and districts 2005 Archived March 5, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ population update after district 2004 by 2006 (based on Census 2001) Archived 2009-03-05 at the Wayback Machine, wien.gv.at
- ^ MA 5 resident population by nationality and districts 2001-2005 Archived 2009-06-17 at the Wayback Machine
Sources
[edit]- "Wien - 21. Bezirk/Floridsdorf", Wien.gv.at, 2008, webpage (15 subpages): Wien.gv.at-floridsdorf.
- Felix Czeike: Wiener Bezirkskulturführer: XXI. Floridsdorf ("Vienna District Cultural Leader: XXI. Floridsdorf"). Jugend and Volk, Vienna 1979, ISBN 3-7141-6221-6.
- Raimund Hinkel, Kurt Landsmann, Robert Vrtala: Floridsdorf von A-Z. Der 21. Bezirk in 1.000 Stichworten ("Floridsdorf from A-Z: the 21st District in 1,000 words"). Brandstätter, Vienna 1997, ISBN 3-85447-724-4.
- Kurt Landsmann: Floridsdorf 1945: das Kriegsende. Ein Beitrag zur Zeitgeschichte ("Floridsdorf 1945: The War's End: A View of Time History"). Brandstätter Verlag, Vienna 1995, ISBN 3-85447-622-1.
- Carola Leitner (Hg.): Floridsdorf: Wiens 21. Bezirk in alten Fotografien ("Floridsdorf: Vienna's 21st District in Old Photographs"). Ueberreuter, Vienna 2006, ISBN 3-8000-7206-8.
- Peter Schubert: Jugendstil & Co: Hausschmuck in Floridsdorf 1880–1930 ("Houses in Floridsdorf 1880–1930"). Mayer, Klosterneuburg 2001, ISBN 3-901025-93-6.
External links
[edit]- District community Floridsdorf (in German)
- Official Website on Archive.org (in German)
- District Museum of Floridsdorf (in German)
- SCN official Website (Shopping Center Nord) (in German)
48°17′00″N 16°24′44″E / 48.28333°N 16.41222°E