Schwechat | ||
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The central square in 2007
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Location within Austria | ||
Coordinates: 48°08′28″N 16°28′43″E / 48.14111°N 16.47861°ECoordinates: 48°08′28″N 16°28′43″E / 48.14111°N 16.47861°E | ||
Country | Austria | |
State | Lower Austria | |
District | Bruck an der Leitha | |
Government | ||
• Mayor | Karin Baier (SPÖ) | |
Area | ||
• Total | 44.7 km2 (17.3 sq mi) | |
Elevation | 162 m (531 ft) | |
Population (1 January 2016) | ||
• Total | 17,409 | |
• Density | 390/km2 (1,000/sq mi) | |
Time zone | CET (UTC+1) | |
• Summer (DST) | CEST (UTC+2) | |
Postal code | 2320 | |
Area code | 01 | |
Vehicle registration | SW | |
Website | www.schwechat.gv.at |
Schwechat (German pronunciation: [ˈʃvɛçaːt]) is a town southeast of Vienna known for the Vienna International Airport and Schwechater beer. The city is home to the refineries of the Austrian national oil company OMV.
Schwechat is named after the river Schwechat, which flows through the centre of town. The city subdivisions called Katastralgemeinde (Cadastre) are Kledering, Mannswörth, Rannersdorf and Schwechat.
Home to the settlement Ala Nova of the Roman Empire, the city was first mentioned in a document in 1334. The meeting at Schwechat of Emperor Leopold I with Jan Sobieski in 1683, after the liberation of Vienna, is commemorated by an obelisk. The imperial troops defeated the Hungarian insurgents in a battle fought here in October 1848.
In 1724, a textile factory was established in Schwechat. Schwechat profited massively from the Austrian industrialisation wave of the 19th century, many of the companies established then still existing today (like the famous Dreher Brewery, founded in 1796 by Franz Anton Dreher the Younger). Schwechat became a city in 1924 and was incorporated into Vienna in 1938. The city's oil refinery was a bombing target of the Allied Oil Campaign of World War II, with the southern aviation plant complex of the Heinkel firm (Germany-based at -Schmarl as Heinkel-Nord, the Schwechat offices/facility was called Heinkel-Süd) also targeted in late 1943 and lasting through the spring of 1944.