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Kirchberg, Luxembourg

Kirchberg (Luxembourgish: Kierchbierg, meaning "church hill") is a quarter in north-eastern Luxembourg City, in southern Luxembourg. It consists of a plateau overlooking the north-east of the historical city center, Ville Haute, connected to the rest of the elevated city by the Grand Duchess Charlotte Bridge, which spans the Pfaffenthal valley. It is often referred to, in reference to the geographical feature it inhabits, as the Kirchberg plateau by Luxembourgish residents. Kirchberg is the predominant location of the European Union institutions and bodies based within Luxembourg, and is sometimes used as a metonym for the EU's judiciary, which occupies the quarter. It is thus the central business district of Luxembourg.

Kirchberg
Kierchbierg (Luxembourgish)
Kirchberg is one of 24 quarters in Luxembourg City
Coordinates: 49°37′40″N 6°09′12″E / 49.627869°N 6.153422°E / 49.627869; 6.153422
CountryLuxembourg
CommuneLuxembourg City
Area
 • Total3.3684 km2 (1.3005 sq mi)
Population
 (31 December 2019)[2]
 • Total6,238
 • Density1,900/km2 (4,800/sq mi)
Nationality
 • Luxembourgish25.23%
 • Other74.77%
WebsiteKirchberg Plateau

History Edit

Although Kirchberg is first mentioned in historical records in 1222, one may assume there was an earlier settlement there, due to its useful location close to the Roman road from Reims to Trier. Little now remains of this Kiemwee (Roman road), but around 1900 it was still a popular walking destination for the city's inhabitants. In that year, the historian Nicolas van Werveke declared in a speech: "Who among us does not know the Kiem of Grünewald, [...] it is so well preserved on the whole stretch of the plateau, to the point where it leaves the forest, that one may boldly consider this part of the road one of the best-preserved of Gaul." Kirchberg, as well as Neudorf, belonged to the parish of Weimerskirch. As Neudorf did not have its own church for a long time, on Sundays its inhabitants had to climb the hill between them and Weimerskirch to get to the church there. So the "Berg zur Kirche" ("hill to the church") became the "Kirchberg", the church hill.[3]

The isolated elevated position of the plateau made it an important defensive position and led to the 1732 construction of Forts Thüngen and Olizy in southeastern Kirchberg, as part of Luxembourg's impressive fortifications. Its strategic importance was reaffirmed with several expansions to their battlements. However, much of Luxembourg's fortifications were destroyed following the 1867 Treaty of London. In 1875, the Parish Church of Our Lady, Refuge of the Sick[nb 1], was built to serve a small farming community that had established themselves in central Kirchberg.

Kirchberg remained largely undeveloped until the post-war period in the latter half of the 20th century, when its cheap land, and proximity to the city provided an attractive locality as the seat of various institutions of the European Communities - the forerunner to today's European Union.[5] The failure of the six founding states of the European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC) to agree on a single basis for its institutions' location, had led to Luxembourg becoming its provisional seat upon the ECSC's creation in 1952. However, with the development of the European Economic Community and the European Atomic Energy Community, other cities had successfully bid for their institutions - noticeably Brussels and Strasbourg. Discussions leading up to the 1965 Merger Treaty, which merged the governing institutions of the three communities, focused on resolving the deadlock in finding a single basis for the three communities' institutions. The Luxembourg government, seeking to retain and further attract the communities' institutions, commissioned the construction of the Grand Duchess Charlotte Bridge, spanning the Pffafenthal valley, to connect the Kirchberg plateau directly with Limpertsberg, and the rest of the elevated city, opening up its cheap land for development for the communities. The Luxembourg government's efforts were successful and today Luxembourg is considered one of the EU's three de facto capitals,[5] retaining several institutions, most importantly, the Court of Justice of the European Union.

Contemporary developments Edit

The development of the European district acted as a catalyst for the urbanisation of Kirchberg, promoted by the government initiative, the Fonds Kirchberg. The architecture of the Kirchberg plateau is notably modern.

The major components of Kirchberg's urbanisation were drawn up by French architect Pierre Vago, with its central axis being the 3.5 km long Avenue John Fitzgerald Kennedy stretching from the Grand Duchess Charlotte Bridge in southwest Kirchberg to the edge of the Grünewald forest on the north-eastern border.[6] The avenue was beautified from its original inception as an expressway into a tree-lined pedestrian-and-cycle-friendly thoroughfare, with separated tram and bus lanes. The Kirchberg campus of the University of Luxembourg is located midway along this avenue, in proximity to, since September 2019, the National Library of Luxembourg. A number of glass and steel edifices of commercial, and financial institutions spans from central to north eastern Kirchberg, where the Kirchberg Hospital is located.

Kirchberg has developed into an important cultural hub. The partially reconstructed Fort Thüngen, listed along with the rest of the former Fortress of Luxembourg, as a UNESCO World Heritage Site, hosts the Mudam, a museum of modern art opened in 2006. Designed by I. M. Pei, it displays works by some of the world's most notable modern artists. In close proximity, adjacent to one of the European Parliament's original plenary chambers, is the Philharmonie, Luxembourg's national concert hall. The grand auditorium seats over 1,500 people. On the eastern edge of the European district, Luxembourg's National Sports and Culture Centre, d'Coque arena contains an Olympic-sized swimming pool and the country's largest indoor arena with seating for 8,300 spectators.

In north-eastern Kirchberg, the mixed-use complex of the Kirchberg District Centre contains both the offices of the European Commission's statistics body[nb 2], Eurostat, and an Auchan hypermarket and shopping mall. Bordering the complex are the cinema multiplex, Kinepolis Kirchberg, and Luxembourg's national exposition centre, LuxExpo The Box.

Today, south-western Kirchberg is dominated by the EU institutions and agencies that were the key to its development. This includes the Court of Justice of the European Union, the Court of Auditors, parts of the European Commission, the Secretariat of the European Parliament, and the European Investment Bank. Additionally, the European School, Luxembourg I provides an education to the children of staff working within the EU bodies. Kirchberg's association with the Court of Justice of the European Union, in particular, has led to it becoming a metonym for the institution.[nb 3]

As of 31 December 2019, Kirchberg has a population of 6,238 inhabitants, with just over a quarter possessing Luxembourgish nationality.[2]

Public transport Edit

Plans to provide Kirchberg with a more direct connection to national and international heavy rail links were realized in December 2017, with the opening of a funicular, on the southern edge of the plateau, in proximity to the European district, which provides access to a newly constructed station located in the bordering Pfaffenthal valley below.[10] Connecting the funicular station, a new tram line was opened which, since September 2022, runs from its depot in northern Kirchberg, down Avenue J.F.K, across the Grand Duchess Charlotte Bridge, on to the old town in Ville Haute, before terminating in Bonnevoie via, the central station.[11] When all stages are completed it will eventually run from Luxembourg Airport, to the new business district in Cloche d'Or in the south of the city.

In northern Kirchberg, between Luxexpo and the new tram depot, a major new transport hub with 10 bus quays, a tram stop and a five-storey car park was completed in May 2022.[12]

The National Mobility Plan 2035 details a possible further tram exension in Kirchberg that would split from the existing line at Luxexpo, serving the Kiem and upcoming Laangfur urban development, as well as the CJEU, before rejoining the existing line via Boulevard Konrad Adenauer.[13]

Microclimate Edit

Like Luxembourg City, Kirchberg has a general oceanic climate (Köppen: Cfb), marked by high precipitation, particularly in late spring. However, the slope and height of the area accounts for occasional lower temperatures (up to 1° below Luxembourg City), more frequent fog and enhanced precipitation of both rain and snow.

See also Edit

Gallery Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ The Parish Church of Our Lady, Refuge of the Sick is now grouped with other parishes in the pastoral community of Weimerskirch. It was the location of the only regular celebration authorised by the Archdiocese of Mass of the Roman Rite in its 1962 version (Tridentine Mass) until October 2014 when it was moved to the Church of St. Cunegonde`s in the nearby Luxembourg City quarter of Clausen.[4]
  2. ^ The office space of the complex is referred to collectively as the "Joseph Bech building"
  3. ^ See:[7][8][9] Used interchangeably with "Luxembourg", referring to the city.

References Edit

  1. ^ "Kirchberg / Kiem". www.vdl.lu (in French). Ville de Luxembourg. Retrieved 27 January 2019.
  2. ^ a b c "Statisiques sur la Ville de Luxembourg: Etat de Population - 2019" (PDF). www.vdl.lu (in French). Ville de Luxembourg. Retrieved 23 January 2020.
  3. ^ Sinner, Joseph (1998). "Den ale Kiirchbierg" (PDF). Ons Stad (in German). 59.
  4. ^ "Messe Traditionnelle (Tridentin) en Latin - History". messe-latin-luxembourg.blogspot.co.uk. Retrieved 24 May 2018.
  5. ^ a b Hein, Carola (1 May 2000). "Choosing a site for the capital of Europe". GeoJournal. 51 (1–2): 83–97. doi:10.1023/A:1010846605894. ISSN 0343-2521. S2CID 150431356.
  6. ^ Hesse, Markus (2016). "On borrowed size, flawed urbanisation and emerging enclave spaces: The exceptional urbanism of Luxembourg, Luxembourg". European Urban and Regional Studies. 23 (4): 612–627. doi:10.1177/0969776414528723. S2CID 145623947.
  7. ^ Cohen, Antonin; Vauchez, Antoine (28 October 2011). "The Social Construction of Law: The European Court of Justice and Its Legal Revolution Revisited". Annual Review of Law and Social Science. 7 (1): 417–431. doi:10.1146/annurev-lawsocsci-102510-105503. ISSN 1550-3585.
  8. ^ de Waele, Henri (2010). "The Role of the European Court of Justice in the Integration Process: A Contemporary and Normative Assessment" (PDF). Hanse Law Review. 6 (1).
  9. ^ Mańko, Rafał (1 October 2016). "Roman Roots at Plateau du Kirchberg: Recent Examples of Explicit References to Roman Law in the Case-Law of the Court of Justice of the EU". Journal of Juristic Papirology - Supplement No. XXIX. Social Science Research Network. SSRN 2851473.
  10. ^ Barrow, Keith (11 December 2017). "First section of Luxembourg tramway opens". International Railway Journal. Retrieved 27 January 2019.
  11. ^ Hansen, Yannick (12 September 2022). "Travellers can now take tram to Bonnevoie". Luxembourg Times. Retrieved 1 February 2023.
  12. ^ "Deux magasins pour le parking" [Two shops for the parking lot] (in French). 8 March 2022. Retrieved 1 February 2023.
  13. ^ Carette, Julien (2 May 2022). "Tram network to grow to four lines by 2035". delano.lu. Retrieved 1 February 2023.

External links Edit

  • Kirchberg Urbanisation Fund's Official Website

kirchberg, luxembourg, kirchberg, luxembourgish, kierchbierg, meaning, church, hill, quarter, north, eastern, luxembourg, city, southern, luxembourg, consists, plateau, overlooking, north, east, historical, city, center, ville, haute, connected, rest, elevated. Kirchberg Luxembourgish Kierchbierg meaning church hill is a quarter in north eastern Luxembourg City in southern Luxembourg It consists of a plateau overlooking the north east of the historical city center Ville Haute connected to the rest of the elevated city by the Grand Duchess Charlotte Bridge which spans the Pfaffenthal valley It is often referred to in reference to the geographical feature it inhabits as the Kirchberg plateau by Luxembourgish residents Kirchberg is the predominant location of the European Union institutions and bodies based within Luxembourg and is sometimes used as a metonym for the EU s judiciary which occupies the quarter It is thus the central business district of Luxembourg Kirchberg Kierchbierg Luxembourgish QuarterKirchberg is one of 24 quarters in Luxembourg CityCoordinates 49 37 40 N 6 09 12 E 49 627869 N 6 153422 E 49 627869 6 153422CountryLuxembourgCommuneLuxembourg CityArea 1 Total3 3684 km2 1 3005 sq mi Population 31 December 2019 2 Total6 238 Density1 900 km2 4 800 sq mi Nationality 2 Luxembourgish25 23 Other74 77 WebsiteKirchberg Plateau Contents 1 History 1 1 Contemporary developments 2 Public transport 3 Microclimate 4 See also 5 Gallery 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditAlthough Kirchberg is first mentioned in historical records in 1222 one may assume there was an earlier settlement there due to its useful location close to the Roman road from Reims to Trier Little now remains of this Kiemwee Roman road but around 1900 it was still a popular walking destination for the city s inhabitants In that year the historian Nicolas van Werveke declared in a speech Who among us does not know the Kiem of Grunewald it is so well preserved on the whole stretch of the plateau to the point where it leaves the forest that one may boldly consider this part of the road one of the best preserved of Gaul Kirchberg as well as Neudorf belonged to the parish of Weimerskirch As Neudorf did not have its own church for a long time on Sundays its inhabitants had to climb the hill between them and Weimerskirch to get to the church there So the Berg zur Kirche hill to the church became the Kirchberg the church hill 3 The isolated elevated position of the plateau made it an important defensive position and led to the 1732 construction of Forts Thungen and Olizy in southeastern Kirchberg as part of Luxembourg s impressive fortifications Its strategic importance was reaffirmed with several expansions to their battlements However much of Luxembourg s fortifications were destroyed following the 1867 Treaty of London In 1875 the Parish Church of Our Lady Refuge of the Sick nb 1 was built to serve a small farming community that had established themselves in central Kirchberg Kirchberg remained largely undeveloped until the post war period in the latter half of the 20th century when its cheap land and proximity to the city provided an attractive locality as the seat of various institutions of the European Communities the forerunner to today s European Union 5 The failure of the six founding states of the European Coal and Steel Community ECSC to agree on a single basis for its institutions location had led to Luxembourg becoming its provisional seat upon the ECSC s creation in 1952 However with the development of the European Economic Community and the European Atomic Energy Community other cities had successfully bid for their institutions noticeably Brussels and Strasbourg Discussions leading up to the 1965 Merger Treaty which merged the governing institutions of the three communities focused on resolving the deadlock in finding a single basis for the three communities institutions The Luxembourg government seeking to retain and further attract the communities institutions commissioned the construction of the Grand Duchess Charlotte Bridge spanning the Pffafenthal valley to connect the Kirchberg plateau directly with Limpertsberg and the rest of the elevated city opening up its cheap land for development for the communities The Luxembourg government s efforts were successful and today Luxembourg is considered one of the EU s three de facto capitals 5 retaining several institutions most importantly the Court of Justice of the European Union Contemporary developments Edit The development of the European district acted as a catalyst for the urbanisation of Kirchberg promoted by the government initiative the Fonds Kirchberg The architecture of the Kirchberg plateau is notably modern The major components of Kirchberg s urbanisation were drawn up by French architect Pierre Vago with its central axis being the 3 5 km long Avenue John Fitzgerald Kennedy stretching from the Grand Duchess Charlotte Bridge in southwest Kirchberg to the edge of the Grunewald forest on the north eastern border 6 The avenue was beautified from its original inception as an expressway into a tree lined pedestrian and cycle friendly thoroughfare with separated tram and bus lanes The Kirchberg campus of the University of Luxembourg is located midway along this avenue in proximity to since September 2019 the National Library of Luxembourg A number of glass and steel edifices of commercial and financial institutions spans from central to north eastern Kirchberg where the Kirchberg Hospital is located Kirchberg has developed into an important cultural hub The partially reconstructed Fort Thungen listed along with the rest of the former Fortress of Luxembourg as a UNESCO World Heritage Site hosts the Mudam a museum of modern art opened in 2006 Designed by I M Pei it displays works by some of the world s most notable modern artists In close proximity adjacent to one of the European Parliament s original plenary chambers is the Philharmonie Luxembourg s national concert hall The grand auditorium seats over 1 500 people On the eastern edge of the European district Luxembourg s National Sports and Culture Centre d Coque arena contains an Olympic sized swimming pool and the country s largest indoor arena with seating for 8 300 spectators In north eastern Kirchberg the mixed use complex of the Kirchberg District Centre contains both the offices of the European Commission s statistics body nb 2 Eurostat and an Auchan hypermarket and shopping mall Bordering the complex are the cinema multiplex Kinepolis Kirchberg and Luxembourg s national exposition centre LuxExpo The Box Today south western Kirchberg is dominated by the EU institutions and agencies that were the key to its development This includes the Court of Justice of the European Union the Court of Auditors parts of the European Commission the Secretariat of the European Parliament and the European Investment Bank Additionally the European School Luxembourg I provides an education to the children of staff working within the EU bodies Kirchberg s association with the Court of Justice of the European Union in particular has led to it becoming a metonym for the institution nb 3 As of 31 December 2019 update Kirchberg has a population of 6 238 inhabitants with just over a quarter possessing Luxembourgish nationality 2 Public transport EditPlans to provide Kirchberg with a more direct connection to national and international heavy rail links were realized in December 2017 with the opening of a funicular on the southern edge of the plateau in proximity to the European district which provides access to a newly constructed station located in the bordering Pfaffenthal valley below 10 Connecting the funicular station a new tram line was opened which since September 2022 runs from its depot in northern Kirchberg down Avenue J F K across the Grand Duchess Charlotte Bridge on to the old town in Ville Haute before terminating in Bonnevoie via the central station 11 When all stages are completed it will eventually run from Luxembourg Airport to the new business district in Cloche d Or in the south of the city In northern Kirchberg between Luxexpo and the new tram depot a major new transport hub with 10 bus quays a tram stop and a five storey car park was completed in May 2022 12 The National Mobility Plan 2035 details a possible further tram exension in Kirchberg that would split from the existing line at Luxexpo serving the Kiem and upcoming Laangfur urban development as well as the CJEU before rejoining the existing line via Boulevard Konrad Adenauer 13 Microclimate EditLike Luxembourg City Kirchberg has a general oceanic climate Koppen Cfb marked by high precipitation particularly in late spring However the slope and height of the area accounts for occasional lower temperatures up to 1 below Luxembourg City more frequent fog and enhanced precipitation of both rain and snow See also EditEuropean Parliament in Luxembourg Institutional seats of the European Union Quarters of Luxembourg CityGallery Edit nbsp Kirchberg s European district with Fort Thungen and the Mudam in the foreground nbsp South facing view from the since demolished footbridge over Avenue John F Kennedy circa 2015 nbsp Aerial view of southern Kirchberg circa 2011 nbsp Kirchberg s Chapel of Notre Dame Salut des Infirmes on rue des Maraichers nbsp National Library of Luxembourg nbsp Kirchberg District Centre nbsp The Palais de la Cour de Justice the seat of the Court of Justice of the European Union Notes Edit The Parish Church of Our Lady Refuge of the Sick is now grouped with other parishes in the pastoral community of Weimerskirch It was the location of the only regular celebration authorised by the Archdiocese of Mass of the Roman Rite in its 1962 version Tridentine Mass until October 2014 when it was moved to the Church of St Cunegonde s in the nearby Luxembourg City quarter of Clausen 4 The office space of the complex is referred to collectively as the Joseph Bech building See 7 8 9 Used interchangeably with Luxembourg referring to the city References Edit Kirchberg Kiem www vdl lu in French Ville de Luxembourg Retrieved 27 January 2019 a b c Statisiques sur la Ville de Luxembourg Etat de Population 2019 PDF www vdl lu in French Ville de Luxembourg Retrieved 23 January 2020 Sinner Joseph 1998 Den ale Kiirchbierg PDF Ons Stad in German 59 Messe Traditionnelle Tridentin en Latin History messe latin luxembourg blogspot co uk Retrieved 24 May 2018 a b Hein Carola 1 May 2000 Choosing a site for the capital of Europe GeoJournal 51 1 2 83 97 doi 10 1023 A 1010846605894 ISSN 0343 2521 S2CID 150431356 Hesse Markus 2016 On borrowed size flawed urbanisation and emerging enclave spaces The exceptional urbanism of Luxembourg Luxembourg European Urban and Regional Studies 23 4 612 627 doi 10 1177 0969776414528723 S2CID 145623947 Cohen Antonin Vauchez Antoine 28 October 2011 The Social Construction of Law The European Court of Justice and Its Legal Revolution Revisited Annual Review of Law and Social Science 7 1 417 431 doi 10 1146 annurev lawsocsci 102510 105503 ISSN 1550 3585 de Waele Henri 2010 The Role of the European Court of Justice in the Integration Process A Contemporary and Normative Assessment PDF Hanse Law Review 6 1 Manko Rafal 1 October 2016 Roman Roots at Plateau du Kirchberg Recent Examples of Explicit References to Roman Law in the Case Law of the Court of Justice of the EU Journal of Juristic Papirology Supplement No XXIX Social Science Research Network SSRN 2851473 Barrow Keith 11 December 2017 First section of Luxembourg tramway opens International Railway Journal Retrieved 27 January 2019 Hansen Yannick 12 September 2022 Travellers can now take tram to Bonnevoie Luxembourg Times Retrieved 1 February 2023 Deux magasins pour le parking Two shops for the parking lot in French 8 March 2022 Retrieved 1 February 2023 Carette Julien 2 May 2022 Tram network to grow to four lines by 2035 delano lu Retrieved 1 February 2023 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kirchberg Luxembourg City Kirchberg Urbanisation Fund s Official Website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kirchberg Luxembourg amp oldid 1179463836, 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