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The Ruhr Area has been once the largest industrial region in Europe. Here (hard) coal deposits have been exploited on a large scale, supporting a considerable steel production. In the 1980s the decline of these industries had become a fact and most of the workers ended up unemployed. With the international building exhibition IBA Emscherpark the local councils started a big conversion process from the heavy "dirty" industries towards environment friendly technologies.
Innovative and future orientated enterprises should be attracted by the new policy. Many of the extensive industrial installations of coal mines, cokes ovens and steel factories, nowadays house museums, education and science centers. The kilometer long infrastructures of pipelines, railway tracks, canals and conveyor belts form a new type of industrial inter-city landscape park.
The Zollverein mine is a good example of an industrial installation prevented from demolishing and being elected for the UNESCO world heritage list. Next to the Design Center (Norman Foster) and the Choreographic institute, the coking plant with its oven and chiminees is the most impressive building on the site. Currently the whole area is being remodified according to a masterplan worked out by OMA. As part of this new plan, the Japanese architects firm SANAA realised an exceptional design for the Zollvervein school for management and design.
In one of the Rhine harbours of Duisburg, the Innenhafen, old grain silos have been reused as offices and as a museum (Herzog + De Meuron). New residential architecture accomplishes the mix of functions. In the former coal bunkers of the steel works of Duisburg one can find now small pocket gardens or climbing walls, while other people dive in old gas holders.
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