Favoriten


Favoriten, the 10th district of Vienna, Austria, is located south of the central districts. It is south of Innere Stadt, Wieden and Margareten. Favoriten is a heavily populated urban area with many residential buildings, but also large recreational areas and parks.
The name comes from Favorita, a semi-baroque palace complex that once served as a hunting castle but today is the Theresianum a gymnasium in the 4th district. The customs facilities at the original southern border of Vienna were known as the Favoriten-Linie while nearby houses were known as the Siedlung vor der Favoriten-Linie.

District sections

The Favoriten District includes 6 sections: Katastralgemeinden Favoriten, Inzersdorf-Stadt, Rothneusiedl, Unterlaa, Oberlaa-Stadt and Oberlaa-Land, as well as small parts of the 2 sections Katastralgemeinden Kaiserebersdorf and Simmering.
The northern part of the district is the historical Favoriten, a grid-patterned residential area with many houses over 100 years old, plus intermediate industries. On the western edge of the district are two contrasting developments, opposite each other: during the inter-war period, George Washington Court was built ; and during 1990-2000, Business Park Vienna was built, including Vienna Twin Towers, bounded on the south, by the forty-years-older Philipshaus on Trieste Street, in the architecture of classical Modernism.

Geography

The district is bordered by the districts Meidling to the west, Liesing to the southwest, Margareten and Wieden to the north, and Simmering to the east. The Südbahn serves Favoriten in the north and Vienna Main Station, which lies in the northeast of the district. The rail line forms the northern border of the district running by the foot of the Wienerberg before turning southwards past Laaer Berg to Liesingtal, where the Lower Austrian towns of Hennersdorf, Leopoldsdorf and Schwechat are.

History

In 1874, the former settlement of Favoriten was annexed by Vienna as the 10th district. The first district director was the well-known Johann Steudel, who ran a tavern in the former settlement. The district expanded its borders quickly as industries and the associated housing grew in the area. After World War II, Vienna was divided into quarters and split among the Allies, and Favoriten belonged to the Soviet-occupied sector. Favoriten was last expanded in 1954, when the former villages of Rothneusiedl, Oberlaa and Unterlaa were annexed to the district.

Population

Population development

In 1869, the current area covered by the Favoriten District included only 22,340 inhabitants. Due to the huge influx of workers in the district area up to the beginning of the First World War, the district population increased 7-fold up to 1910 as 159,241 inhabitants. Thereafter, the district's population declined until the 30s, fell during the Second World War, but for the next 40 years gradually increased. Unlike many downtown districts, the population numbers grew in the 50s and 60s again, as the district had sufficient land area for new buildings, which expanded due to the housing demand. From the '70s, the population began to stagnate; however, since 2001, the number of inhabitants has increased significantly and, at the beginning of 2007, amounted to 169,578 people.

Population structure

The age of the population in Favoriten from 2001 is average for Vienna. The number of children under 15 years was 14.6%, against the Vienna area average of 14.7%. The proportion of the population 15 to 59 years was 62.6%, only slightly below average. This showed particularly in the younger population deficits, while the number of people aged 60 or more years with 22.8%, was above the value of Vienna. The gender distribution in the district area was 47.7% men and 52.8% women, the number of Favoriten marriages had a share of 42.9% compared to 41.2%, above the average of Vienna.

Origin and language

The proportion of foreign-district residents in 2016 was 32,8 %, an increase over 2001 as in the entire State, as a rising trend. The highest proportion of foreigners, in 2005, was represented with a 5.5% share of the district population, as nationals from Serbia and Montenegro. Another 3.9% were Turkish, Bosnian 1.6%, Polish 1.3%, Croatian 1.2% and 0.6% German citizens. In total, for 2001, 23.7% of the population of Favoriten were not born in Austria. Nearly 6.8% expressed as a colloquial language Serbian, but Turkish 7.4% and 2.6% Croatian.

Religious preferences

The religion of the population in the Favoriten District, in the 2001 census, had a proportion of Muslim population higher than the average of Vienna. In 2001, 47.0% of the inhabitants had membership to the Roman Catholic Church. There were 15 Roman Catholic parishes, the City Deanery had 10 images. Nearly 11.2% of residents were Islamic faith, 6.4% belonged to the Orthodox Church, and 4.1% were Protestant. Nearly 26.5% of the district population, however, belonged to no religious group, and 4.9% had no religion or other preference given.

Infrastructure

Favoriten is the most populous of the districts of Vienna. Most of Favoriten's residential area is composed of a variety of houses, that are over 100 years old, as well as community housing developments. The district also has numerous industries. There are recreational areas in the southern part of the district, such as the Kurpark Laaer Berg, which, in 1974, joined the Kurzentrum Oberlaa, a sulphur springs, and the recreational centre at Wienerberg. On the north side of Laaer Berg, a small theme park, the Böhmischer Prater, was built in 1882. Furthermore, the Ernst Kirchweger Haus, a squatted social centre, is situated in Favoriten.
Wien Hauptbahnhof, the main railway station of Vienna, is also located in Favoriten.

Gothic stone tower:
Spinnerin am Kreuz.

The Kurpark Oberlaa is one of Vienna's large
Naherholungsgebiete.

Landmarks

  1. Spinnerin am Kreuz - Gothic stone tower built in 1375
  2. Wasserturm - Water tower

    Sports

Favoriten is home to the stadium of one of the most successful Austrian Bundesliga teams FK Austria Wien, who play at the Generali Arena. Favoriten is also home to a smaller club which came to prominence in the 80's Favoritner AC.

Politics

District Government

As a labour district Favoriten is traditional political stamped Social Democratic so that the Socialists are represented with the District Director since 1946 all the time.
Commonly the SPÖ reached the absolute majority, which was only in danger after the rise of the FPÖ at the end of the eighties under Jörg Haider.
1996 the FPÖ increased 8.6% and the absolute majority of the SPÖ was broken the first time.
Through the downfall of the FPÖ the revanche came in 2001 and the Socialists regained the absolute majority.
2010 the SPÖ lost nearly 10% the FPÖ took most advantage of this and also increased by 14%. The ÖVP makes no odds here and reached in average not more than 12%.
Also the Greens are under their average percent of voters here.
At the district election 2010 all parliament parties lost except for FPÖ and BZÖ.
JahrSPÖÖVPFPÖGrüneLIF since 205 NEOSBZÖSonstige
199156.812.322.36.3n.k-2.3
199645.510.630.85.65.6-1.9
200155.610.822.67.92.2-0.9
200556.712.319.58.50.41.11.6
201047.49.133.37.10.51.11.4
201540.46.738.27.13.5-4.2

Coat of arms

The coat of arms of the 10th district is a shield divided into six parts: