Traun

Traun
Traun panorama

Coat of arms
Traun
Location within Austria
Coordinates: 48°13′18″N 14°14′23″E / 48.22167°N 14.23972°E / 48.22167; 14.23972Coordinates: 48°13′18″N 14°14′23″E / 48.22167°N 14.23972°E / 48.22167; 14.23972
Country Austria
State Upper Austria
District Linz-Land
Government
  Mayor Rudolf Scharinger (SPÖ)
Area
  Total 15.49 km2 (5.98 sq mi)
Elevation 273 m (896 ft)
Population (14 June 2016)[1]
  Total 24,058
  Density 1,600/km2 (4,000/sq mi)
Time zone UTC+1 (CET)
  Summer (DST) UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code 4050
Area code 07229
Vehicle registration LL
Website www.traun.at

Traun [ˈtʀaʊ̯n] ( Pronunciation ) is an Austrian city located on the north bank of the river Traun and borders Linz, the capital of Upper Austria, to the east. The name Traun is derived from the Celtic word for river (dru). Traun is the fifth largest city in Upper Austria, located in the district of Linz-Land.

History

Neolithic: Excavation findings suggest that the first settlements date to when the Roman road led from Wels to Lorch (Enns).
6th century: Bavarii settle in the area of Traun.
about 790: The name dru appears on a document for the first time.
about 813 to 824: First mentioning as a place in a document.
1113: First evidence of the former moated castle.
1560: Reconstruction of the castle into a Renaissance building.
1725: Reconstruction of the castle into a Baroque building.
1784: First school in Traun opens.
1785: Fusion with the villages of St. Dionysen and Oedt.
about 1850: First industries: Enderlin, Berl and Graumann brothers (textiles), Dr. Feurstein (paper), Gabler (flat and braid products), Enenkel (vinegar factory).
1851: Inauguration of the first Protestant school.
1876: The St. Martin district transferred from the community of Kleinmünchen to Traun.
1882: Construction of the Catholic parish church.
1884: The owner of the castle (count Abensperg-Traun) moves back to the estates in Lower Austria.
1913: Inauguration of the Protestant church.
1915: Inauguration of the new Protestant school.
1965: Lake Oedter See begins to be used for bathing.
1973: Traun, the 'biggest village of Austria' is elevated to a city. The Bundesschulzentrum Traun (home of the 2 high schools Bundesrealgymnasium and Handelsakademie) opens. The building's modern design served as model for schools in the 70s.
1975: The bathing center (Badezentrum) opens with two indoor swimming pools with a sauna and restaurant. Later extended to include an open-air pool, a lawn for sunbathing and an ice-skating rink.
1979: The sports center and stadium (HAKA-Arena) opens.
1982: Firefighters and red cross-center as well as Telegraph office open.
1985: Opening of the New City Hall and the City Gallery.
1991: Introduction of the City Buses.
1997: The new B139 (bypass road) is finished and the Spinnerei (a cultural center for youths) opens.
1999: Redesign of the main square, new ice-skating rink and renovation of the bathing center.
2002: The high school HTL-Traun (Höhere technische Lehranstalt) opens, starting in a provisional building.
2005: Opening of the Traun District Court.
2012: The new building housing the HTL-Traun high school opens.

Population

Historical population
YearPop.±%
18691,781    
18802,378+33.5%
18903,308+39.1%
19004,271+29.1%
19105,026+17.7%
19234,830−3.9%
19345,512+14.1%
19395,985+8.6%
19519,655+61.3%
196116,026+66.0%
197121,215+32.4%
198121,464+1.2%
199122,260+3.7%
200123,470+5.4%
201123,810+1.4%

Educational Institutions

Traun is also known as school city for having almost all types of educational institutions.

  • 11 kindergartens: Oedt, St. Dionysen I, St. Dionysen II, St. Martin, Zentrum, Traun I, Traun II, Traun III, Traun IV, Caritas-Kindergarten St. Dionysen and St. Martin
  • 4 primary schools: Volksschule Oedt, Volksschule Traun, Volksschule St. Dionysen and Volksschule St. Martin.
  • 3 secondary schools: Hauptschule I (Computing), Hauptschule II (Music), Hauptschule St. Martin
  • 2 other primary/secondary schools: Integratives Schulzentrum, Polytechnische Schule
  • 3 high schools: Bundesrealgymnasium (700), Handelakademie/Handelsschule, Höhere technische Lehranstalt und Fachschule (300)
  • 2 institutions for adult education: BFI Traun, Volkshochschule Traun
  • 1 music school: Landesmusikschule

Economy

Traun is located in the economic center of Upper Austria. Notable national and international operating companies are based in Traun, like Internorm, Ed. Haas, Pez, Tannpapier (Trierenberg Holding), Feurstein (Delfort Group), Ing. Voith, C+C Pfeiffer, delfortgroup and Gabler Band.

There are more than 1200 companies in Traun having about 11,000 employees in total.[2]

Traffic

Airport

Linz Airport is just 3.9 km (2.4 mi) from Traun.

Railroad

The Phyrnbahn runs through Traun from northeast to south. Two railway stations are located in Traun along the Phyrnbahn: St. Martin and Traun.

Motorway (Autobahn) connections

  • A1 (West Autobahn): Exit Traun (1.8 km), Exit Ansfelden (4.6 km)
  • A7 (Mühlkreis Autobahn): Exit Franzosenhausweg (2.0 km), Exit Salzburger Straße (3.3 km)
  • A25: Exit Weißkirchen (8.6 km), Exit Marchtrenk (9.1 km)

Bundesstraßen

  • The B1 (Wiener Bundesstraße) runs along the north border of Traun.
  • The B139 (Kremstalbundesstraße) crosses Traun from North to East.

Landstraßen

  • L532: Neubauerstraße, Johann Roithner-Straße
  • L1386: Leondinger-Straße

Tramway

In spring 2016, line 3 of the Linz tramway system will be extended to Traun with 4 stops in Traun (Traun - Trauner Kreuzung, Traun - Friedhof, Traun - Hauptplatz and Traun - Schloss).[3]

Bus

  • The Wilhelm Welser Verkehrsbetriebe Traun operates buses on 14 routes in Traun that connect Traun with all neighboring cities and communities. Most routes are serviced by only one single bus and therefore have a frequency of only 1 bus per hour.
  • On behalf of Traun, Wilhelm Welser also operates four City-Bus routes within Traun at a frequency of 30 minutes.
  • Linz AG has only one route (line 43) that connects Traun with its network. This route has 5 stops along the north border of Traun and is operated at a frequency of 15 minutes most of the time.

Personality

Sons and daughters

  • Ignaz Hinterleithner (1898-1973), politician (SPÖ),
  • Josef Pühringer (born 1949), politician (ÖVP), governor of Upper Austria
  • Hans Dieter Pötsch (born 1951), auto executive and board member of Volkswagen AG
  • Harald Seidl (born 1955), mayor of Traun
  • Martina Salomon (born 1960), journalist and deputy editor of the newspaper Kurier
  • Jürgen Koch (born 1973), badminton player

References

  1. Statistik Austria - Bevölkerung zu Jahresbeginn 2002-2016 nach Gemeinden, Erstellt am 14.06.2016 (Last accessed 13.12.2016) for Traun.
  2. Stadt Traun: Informationsbroschüre der Stadt Traun. January 2012
  3. Oberösterreichische Nachrichten: 2016 fährt sie: Bim nach Traun ist auf Schiene, March 5th, 2013
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.