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EUR 55 - 73 Akzent Congress Hotel
Our hotel is situated in the heart of Hoyerswerda ( new town district ) just behind the ”Lausitzhalle”. Hoyerswerda itself is situated hal… MoreEUR 34 - 99 ACHAT Comfort Hotel Lausitz
This 3-star hotel enjoys a quiet location on the edge of Hoyerswerda. It provides modern rooms, self-catering apartments and a free car park.
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At the end of the Second World War the city was declared a core center of German defence and was therefore heavily damaged. The invading Red Army set fire to the town.
During the time of the GDR Hoyerwerda became an important industrial town. The lignite processing enterprise of "Schwarze Pumpe" was established in 1955; today it is in the federal state of Brandenburg. Since 1957 the demand for new living space rose dramatically - in the next years 10 new big residentail areas with tens of thousands of apartments were built. In 1981 the city reached its maximum number of inhabitants with about 71.054 people living there. At that time there was nowhere in the GDR where more children per inhabitant were born than Hoyerswerda. Upon reunification in 1990 the people of the city decided to became part of the new federal state of Saxony.
With the end of the GDR and the reconstruction of the East German economy many enterprises in the industrial region of Hoyerswerda were endangered, closed or had to make some employees redundant. The social situation in the city became dangerous, in 1991 a xenophobic attack took place on a hostel containing refugees. It became necessary to develop an anti-violence programme for the city.
Between 1993 and 1998 several smaller villages became part of the city, but the number of inhabitants sank rapidly in the heavily hit region. From about 70,000 people in the 1980s only about 41,000 people remained by the end of 2000; the population is expected to shrink to about 20,000 or 30,000 by 2030. It became necessary to "rebuild" the city - many of the apartment blocks built in the time of the GDR were now demolished, financed with money from the EU and the Republik of Germany.
Its role as an independently ruled town in Saxony will disappear in 2007 with the reshaping of the regional administration of Saxony.
Being far way of from important motorways it is quite difficult to attract investors to come here. It seems like the future of the city can be found in the rural small town its been before 1945.
This "Travel Guide" section is drawn from the Wikipedia article "Hoyerswerda". We hope you will edit and improve it. It is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.