Coal, steel
and heavy industry all featured prominently in Essen's past. But now the
reinvented Ruhr region hub is showing off its environmental credentials as
2017's European Green Capital. Samantha Early paid a visit.
Deutsche Welle, 2 January 2017
Stepping on
to the platform at Essen's central station on a clear winter's morning, the
first thing to catch my eye is a giant billboard proclaiming this "the
shopping city." Pondering the relative merits of retail therapy and
sustainable living, I have to navigate the new European Green Capital quickly
to make my first appointment.
At the
headquarters of the local project team for Essen, European Green Capital of
2017, team leader Ralph Kindel explains that the city of 590,000 people (in the
heart of the Ruhr metropolis of some 5.1 million) has a history of
transformation - from a rural region to an industrial one with the discovery of
coal, to the dark chapter of weapons manufacture under the Third Reich, then
later as a hub of the "economic miracle" as Germany rebuilt. With the
decline of the local steel and coal industries in the later 20th century, it
faced what locals call the "Strukturwandel" - structural change.
"From
green to gray to green again," is how Kindel describes it.
![]() |
Ralph Kindel leads the project team for Essen - European Green Capital 2017 |
He says the
groundwork of a green city was laid in the 1920s by a visionary planner named
Robert Schmidt. As the population exploded with industrialization, Schmidt
realized workers needed green spaces to recuperate.
Several
parks were set up and though that took a backseat for decades, new parks have
since been established and Kindel says by 2020, the people of Essen will only
need to travel 500 meters (a third of a mile) to access a network of green
spaces.
"This
ability to transform…makes Essen so exciting and also an example for Europe
because we have mastered problems, and are tackling problems, that other
regions in Europe will still be facing."
Green DNA
Essen was
awarded the annual title by the European Commission. It was established to
promote and reward cities' efforts to resolve environmental challenges. An
expert panel and jury weigh up how well applicant cities are doing in areas
including climate change mitigation and adaption, local transport, air quality
and wastewater.
Winners are
announced 18 months in advance. When Essen was made titleholder for 2017, the
judges praised its "admirable efforts" to overcome its challenging
industrial past and reinvent itself as a "green city."
![]() |
The Krupp-Park includes a lake fed by rainwater. In Essen's industrial heyday, clear blue sky was hard to spot |
Kindel
points to the more than 200 community projects planned as examples of ways the
organization wants to use this year's special status to change presumptions
about Essen as a city of coal, steel and smokestacks.
"No
one expects to find so much green here," he says. "We want to present
the reality."
The staff
here seems to walk the talk, or pedal it, to be precise. There's a bike at
reception which, project team member Christina Waimann tells me, is used to run
errands. But she needs more than two wheels to give me a whistle-stop tour of
Essen's green attractions. I'm relieved when she tells me her Smart car is very
economical.
An example
of water management
Our first
destination is the Krupp-Park named for Friedrich Krupp, founder of what became
ThyssenKrupp, the major global steel company which has its headquarters in
Essen. Waimann says it's an example of the city's structural change and
adaptation to climate change through sustainable architecture, landscaping and
water management. A lake is filled by rainwater from the roof of the steel
giant's headquarters and surrounding parkland.
The
"Radschnellweg Ruhr," an Autobahn for bicycles to link the Ruhr
cities, passes by the park, part of the 376 kilometers (234 miles) of city
cycleways. As we head to our next destination, Waimann explains traffic jams
are still a problem. The city is aiming for a quarter of trips to be made by
bike by 2035.
Essen's
greenest street
![]() |
Promoting local food is one of Essen's goals as a green city |
In 15
minutes we reach what Waimann tells me is Essen's greenest street - Schuirweg.
What makes it "green" is that it's home to farmers who are working
alongside community gardeners and small growers to promote regional produce,
one of the goals of Essen's Green Capital campaign. The argument goes that
eating from close to home cuts down on transport emissions and increases
awareness about food production.
Nikolas
Weber's family has been farming in this area longer than he can count. Today
they grow a wide variety of fruits, vegetables and grains as well as raising
animals, selling the produce on site. They also rent out fields for other
growers. For him, there's no better example of sustainability.
From filthy
river to swimming spot
Perhaps one
of the most concrete results of Essen's transformation is the fact that from
May, people will be able to swim in the Ruhr River for the first time in
generations. The Baldeneysee, a lake in the river, will become a certified
bathing spot under EU standards. Kindel says the Ruhr was once one of the
dirtiest industrial rivers in Europe, closed to swimmers since the early 1960s.
![]() |
Come May, people can finally enjoy swimming in the Baldeneysee again |
"It
shows that we are no marketing gag… we are harvesting the results of all the
work people have put in over in the past few decades and that makes us
proud," he said.
Friends
Stefan Booms, 25, and Simon Weber, 26 are enthusiastic about the city's new
claim to fame and looking forward to swimming in the Ruhr. "It's great, we
were in a canoe club for some months and we were on the river in that time but
it's great to be allowed to swim again," Booms said. "I think we will
try it!" added Weber.
Industrial
heritage meets green future
My final
stop is the Zeche Zollverein, a former coal mine which has been a UNESCO World
Heritage site since 2001. I'm told no other place symbolizes Essen's transformation
quite like this one. It's home to a museum and cultural centers as well as
plant species from all over the world which arrived with the coal lorries and
grow amidst the concrete, brick and steel structures. Kindel is looking forward
to an international congress this year, when researchers will catalog the
site's biodiversity.
![]() |
Spahn has experienced many of Essen's changes |
Heinz Spahn has witnessed these changes more closely than most. Born in 1940, he worked at
the Zollverein until closing day in 1986 and now shows visitors around. He
recalls the days when the air smelt like rotten eggs due to sulfur and you had
to check the wind direction before hanging washing out - lest the whites turn
gray or yellow due to the air pollution. He's glad Essen's now a green capital.
He hopes
the new title will bring more business and tourism to the city and says despite
favoring isolation in nature over city bustle, he's proud to be an Essener.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.