Neukölln (locality)
Neukölln, until 1920 an independent city, is an inner-city district of Berlin in the homonymous borough of Neukölln, including the historic village of Alt-Rixdorf and numerous Gründerzeit apartment blocks. With 166,714 inhabitants the Ortsteil is the most densely populated of Berlin. It was originally characterized by mostly working-class inhabitants and later a relatively high percentage of immigrants, especially of Turkish and Russian descent, but since the turn of the millennium an influx of students, creatives, and western immigrants has led to gentrification.
Geography
Neukölln lies on the geological border between the shallow Berliner Urstromtal glacial valley and the Tempelhofer Berge, which are situated in the northernmost region of the Teltow ground moraine plateau, rising to the south of Hermannplatz, in what is mostly the typical low-lying marshy woodlands with a mainly flat topography of the North European Plain.Location
The district is situated south-east of the Berlin city center, in the north of the Neukölln borough, adjacent to the district of Kreuzberg at the Landwehrkanal, and the streets ' and Kottbusser Damm. It also borders with the districts Alt-Treptow, Plänterwald and Baumschulenweg in the east, and Tempelhof in the west, separated by the parks ' and Tempelhofer Feld, the vast field of the former Tempelhof Airport, now a popular recreation area. In the south, the Stadtring motorway and the Neukölln Ship and Britz canals form the border with the Britz and Baumschulenweg districts.Subdivisions
Neighborhoods
Neukölln is divided into nine official neighborhoods, among them the historical sites of Neukölln's foundation south-east of the districts's geographical center, Richardplatz-Süd to the north-west, and Böhmisch-Rixdorf to the south-east, which together are commonly referred to as Rixdorf or Alt-Rixdorf. The other official neighborhoods are :- Reuterkiez,
- Flughafenstraße,
- Schillerpromenade,
- Rollberg,
- Weiße Siedlung,
- Körnerpark, and
- High-Deck-Siedlung.
Other quarters
Urban planning
In urban planning, the divisions of Berlin's boroughs and districts are more precise. Here Neukölln, district 01 in borough 08, is divided into five regions, each of them further compartmentalized into a total of 18 so-called Lebensweltlich orientierte Räume :- Schillerpromenade in the west, comprising Hasenheide, Wissmannstraße, Schillerpromenade, and Silbersteinstraße ;
- Neuköllner Mitte in the center, comprising Flughafenstraße, Rollberg, Körnerpark, and Glasower Straße ;
- Reuterstraße in the north, comprising Reuterkiez, Bouchéstraße, and Donaustraße ;
- Rixdorf in the center to the north-east, comprising Böhmisch-Rixdorf and Richardplatz-Süd as Rixdorf, Hertzbergplatz, Treptower Straße Nord, and the industrial park Ederstraße ; and
- Köllnische Heide in the east, comprising Weiße Siedlung, Schulenburgpark including the High-Deck-Siedlung, and the industrial park Köllnische Heide.
History
Early history
The place later known as Rixdorf was founded around 1200 as a stronghold by the Knights Templar from neighbouring Tempelhove, Merghenvelde and Mergendorp. The Templar functioned as a neutral institution, and when the conflicts had ended, the stronghold was abandoned and eventually converted into a Templar access yard. After Pope Clement V had dissolved the order in 1312, the estate was held by Waldemar the Great for six years, and then transferred to the Protestant Order of Saint John in 1318, still represented today by Neukölln's coat of arms bearing the Maltese cross.Rixdorf
When first mentioned in a charter of June 26, 1360, the angerdorf south-east of Berlin around the present-day Richardplatz was called Richarsdorp. The original Rixdorf charter has been lost since World War II, but its contents have been preserved, and the year 1360 is regarded as the official year of Neukölln's foundation. The village was mentioned again in 1375 as Richardstorpp in the Landbuch der Mark Brandenburg. At the beginning of the 15th century, Richarsdorp erected its first chapel. In 1435 the Johannite Order sold their possessions to the cities of Alt-Berlin and Cölln, including Richarsdorp, which was mentioned again in 1525 as Ricksdorf. In 1543 Ricksdorf became the sole possession of Cölln. During the Thirty Years' War Ricksdorf was mostly depopulated, with buildings and the church destroyed by fire. After the city of Cölln merged with Berlin in 1709, the village, then already called Rixdorf, became the possession of Berlin.Deutsch-Rixdorf and Böhmisch-Rixdorf
In 1737 King Frederick William I of Prussia allowed about 350 Moravian Protestants expelled from Bohemia to settle near the village, where they built their own church and houses off the village centre along the road to Berlin, today called Richardstraße. The original village of Rixdorf was subsequently called Deutsch-Rixdorf. The new Bohemian village Böhmisch-Rixdorf was granted its own constitution in 1797.The overall population in 1809 was 695. In the course of industrialization in the 19th century, a network of new streets was laid out as part of the Hobrecht-Plan in an area that came to be known architecturally as the Wilhelmine Ring. On 28 April 1849, more than a quarter of the buildings in both Rixdorf villages were destroyed in a firestorm, and reconstruction lasted until 1853. In 1863 a Turkish cemetery was laid out north of Rixdorf, the successor of a smaller burial ground in Kreuzberg established in 1798 for the Turkish members of the Prussian Army. It contains the mortal remains of the Ottoman ambassador Giritli Ali Aziz Efendi, the exiled Grand Vizier Mehmed Talat and Bahattin Şakir.
In 1867 Deutsch-Rixdorf had a population of 5,000, and Böhmisch-Rixdorf of 1,500. When both villages were united as Rixdorf on January 1, 1874, the new town had 8,000 inhabitants, growing to 15,000 the next year. On April 1, 1899, Rixdorf, then the largest town of Prussia, received the status of an independent city.
Neukölln
Rixdorf had become notorious for its taverns and amusement sites, and in 1912 the local authorities tried to get rid of this reputation by assuming the name Neukölln, derived from the Neucöllner Siedlungen north of Rixdorf, which themselves referenced Neu-Cölln, a historical district south of the medieval part of Berlin and Cölln proper. The renaming was eventually granted by Emperor William I on January 27, 1912. It was during this time that the architect Reinhold Kiehl was called on by the local council to upgrade the city's infrastructure. This has led to some of the area's most iconic buildings being erected, such as the Rathaus Neukölln or the Stadtbad Neukölln.Neukölln's independence ended in 1920 when it was incorporated into Berlin as part of the Greater Berlin Act and, together with the districts Britz, Rudow and Buckow, formed the new borough of Neukölln, Berlin's 14th administrative district. Rixdorf continued to exist, and is today represented by two neighborhoods in the center of Neukölln, Böhmisch-Rixdorf and Richardplatz-Süd. Many of the old landmarks are still intact, and several areas and streets like the Bohemian Kirchgasse have retained their idyllic and rural character.
Berlin-Neukölln
In the Weimar Republic Neukölln remained a working-class district and communist stronghold. This led to increasing tensions between left-wing radicals like the KPD and the Berlin police, culminating in the Bloody May riots of 1929. The Nazis viewed the district as "Red Neukölln", and tensions with the rivaling socialist and communist groups ensued as early as November 1926, when Joseph Goebbels sent over 300 men of the Sturmabteilung on a propaganda march through Neukölln, ending in clashes on the Hermannplatz. The conflict intensified until the end of the republic, leading to occasional armed engagements like the Rixdorf shootout of October 1931, when communists attacked the Richardsburg, a Sturmlokal of the SA. After the National Socialists' rise to power in 1933, the SA extended their campaigns and also targeted rallies and events by moderate parties like the SPD.From 1945 to 1990, Neukölln was part of the American sector of West Berlin. The Sonnenallee, connecting Neukölln at Hermannplatz with Baumschulenweg in former East Berlin, was the site of a border crossing of the Berlin Wall. During the Cold War Neukölln retained its status as a traditional working-class area and one of Berlin's red-light districts. Many gastarbeiter, especially from Turkey and Greece, settled in Kreuzberg and Neukölln since the 1950s, later followed by Palestinian and Arabic refugees from the Lebanese Civil War. Since the 1970s and 80s, Neukölln, like the neighboring Kreuzberg, has embraced alternative forms of living and an often anti-establishment culture that is still vibrant to this day. In the 1990s late repatriates from formerly Soviet states like Ukraine and Russia resettled in Germany, many of them in Berlin, and in Neukölln specifically.
Following a decade as a typical inner-city hot spot, 21st century Neukölln has experienced an influx of students, creatives and other young professionals of mostly Western origin avoiding higher rents charged in other parts of Berlin. The trend increased after the 2008 financial and 2010 European debt crises, when many young EU citizens left their home countries for Germany in search of work, leading to rapid cultural shifts in certain neighborhoods within Neukölln, especially the neighborhoods to the north and west from Reuter- to Schillerkiez. Coupled with increasing domestic and foreign real estate investments, this has caused gentrification and a knock-on effect of rents to rise in many parts of Neukölln. Conversely, this cosmopolitan evolution has made Neukölln into one of the world's most sought-after neighborhoods to visit and live.
The latest influx of new arrivals began with the abolishment of several Schengen restrictions, followed by immigrants after the onset of the Syrian Civil War in 2011, which intensified in 2015 during the so-called European migrant crisis, leading to an increase of residents with a migration background by 2.6 percentage points to a total of 20.6 percent in Greater Neukölln.
Public transport
The district is served by three operational sections of urban rail.U-Bahn:
- U7: Rathaus Spandau ↔ Rudow
- U8: Wittenau ↔ Hermannstraße
- S41/S42: Südkreuz → Gesundbrunnen → Südkreuz
- S45: Südkreuz ↔ Berlin Schönefeld Flughafen. An extension of the S45 is projected to run beyond the current terminus at Schönefeld Airport to the under construction Berlin Brandenburg Airport.
- S46: Westend ↔ Königs Wusterhausen
- S47: Spindlersfeld ↔ Hermannstraße
- Hermannplatz – U7 / U8
- Hermannstraße – U8 / S-Bahn
- Berlin-Neukölln – U7 / S-bahn
Main sights
- Rixdorf village church, consecrated in 1481, adopted by the Moravian Protestants in 1737, officially called Bethlehem Church since 1912.
- Şehitlik Mosque, on the Turkish cemetery, finished in 2005 by the Turkish-Islamic Union for Religious Affairs.
- Neuköllner Oper: Opera house that hosts a wide range of performances including musicals, baroque opera, operetta, or experimental music theatre. Famous for its aim to bring elitist culture to a wider audience.
- Brückenbunker at Elsensteg : an exercise in urban communal resistance, realized by two young Argentinian architects, and , who have made Berlin their chosen home. Brückenbunker was conceptualized as a metaphor against the ongoing "rent war" in the German capital by providing ungoverned space for radical inclusion, open community, and latent being.The project was co-curated by the Berlin-based intercultural consultant Johanna Roegele.
People who live or lived in Neukölln
- Sebastian Blomberg, actor
- Ursula Goetze, resistance fighter
- Heinz Chapel, politician and resistance fighter
- Kurt Krömer, presenter, actor and entertainer
- Will Meisel, composer and publisher
- Werner Seelenbinder, wrestler, politician and resistance fighter
- Katharina Szelinski-Singer, sculptor
- Emil Wutzky, trade unionist and local politician
- Engelbert Zaschka, inventor and helicopter pioneer
- Margarete Stokowski, feminist writer and essayist
Photo gallery
International relations
- Berlin Neukölln is a pilot city of the Council of Europe and the European Commission Intercultural Cities programme.