This statistic shows the biggest cities in Luxembourg in 2023. In 2024, approximately **** million people lived in the administrative area of Luxembourg, making it the biggest city in Luxembourg.
In 1800, the population of Luxembourg was estimated to be 127,000, a figure which would rise steadily through the early 19 th century as the country would become an increasingly prominent city in the region. Luxembourg’s population would see its first major period of growth following the defeat of Napoleon in 1815, which would result in the previously-French occupied Luxembourg being granted formal autonomy in the subsequent Congress of Vienna. As a largely agrarian state at this time, the population of Luxembourg would see several periods of growth and decline throughout the remainder of the 20th century, as many residents emigrated abroad to countries such as the United States in search of work. Nevertheless, the population of Luxembourg would rise to over 235,000 by the turn of the century, as Dutch modernization and the removal of the city’s fortifications in the 1867 Treaty of London would allow for a greater expansion of the city proper.
The first half of the 20 th century would largely be a period of stagnation for the country, as the country would see large periods of stagnation in the 1910s and throughout the 1930s and 1940s, as occupation in both World Wars and the 1918 Spanish Flu epidemic) would see massive damage to the city in both human and economic terms. Luxembourg’s population would see significant growth in the country’s population, particularly so following the creation of the European Union in 1958 (Luxembourg was one of the six founding members of the union). Growth would accelerate even further following the 1980s, as increases in industrialization and accompanying economic growth would lead to an increasingly growing immigrant population from other EU nations in Luxembourg, which by 2015 would account for nearly half the citizens in Luxembourg. As a result of this growth, in 2020, Luxembourg is estimated to have a population of 626,000.
3D buildings with LOD 2.2 classification on the municipal territory of Luxembourg City in 2019.
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countries capital city Luxembourg. name, long name, population (source), population, constitutional form, drives on, head of state authority, Main continent, number of airports, Airports - with paved runways, Airports - with unpaved runways, Area, Birth rate, calling code, Children under the age of 5 years underweight, Current Account Balance, Death rate, Debt - external, Economic aid donor, Electricity consumption, Electricity consumption per capita, Electricity exports, Electricity imports, Electricity production, Exports, GDP - per capita (PPP), GDP (purchasing power parity), GDP real growth rate, Gross national income, Human Development Index, Health expenditures, Heliports, HIV AIDS adult prevalence rate, HIV AIDS deaths, HIV AIDS people living with HIV AIDS, Hospital bed density, capital city, Currency, Imports, Industrial production growth rate, Infant mortality rate, Inflation rate consumer prices, Internet hosts, internet tld, Internet users, Investment (gross fixed), iso 3166 code, ISO CODE, Labor force, Life expectancy at birth, Literacy, Manpower available for military service, Manpower fit for military service, Manpower reaching militarily age annually, is democracy, Market value of publicly traded shares, Maternal mortality rate, Merchant marine, Military expenditures percent of GDP, Natural gas consumption, Natural gas consumption per capita, Natural gas exports, Natural gas imports, Natural gas production, Natural gas proved reserves, Net migration rate, Obesity adult prevalence rate, Oil consumption, Oil consumption per capita, Oil exports, Oil imports, Oil production, Oil proved reserves, Physicians density, Population below poverty line, Population census, Population density, Population estimate, Population growth rate, Public debt, Railways, Reserves of foreign exchange and gold, Roadways, Stock of direct foreign investment abroad, Stock of direct foreign investment at home, Telephones main lines in use, Telephones main lines in use per capita, Telephones mobile cellular, Telephones mobile cellular per capita, Total fertility rate, Unemployment rate, Unemployment, youth ages 15-24, Waterways, valley, helicopter, canyon, artillery, crater, religion, continent, border, Plateau, marsh, Demonym
Based on the asking price from one of Luxembourg's real estate agencies, there were large differences in residential property prices in the different neighborhoods of Luxembourg City. The average price (which includes both houses as well as apartments) was highest in the city district of Limpertsberg: more than ****** euros per square meter. The district of Weimerskirch was nearly twice as cheap with an average price of ***** euros per square meter. Nearly one third of the population in the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg lived in the canton of Luxembourg (Luxembourg City and its surroundings in 2019).
Persons aged 18 and over resident in the city of Luxembourg
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UNESCO recognized Luxembourg City's fortifications and historical quarter as a World Heritage Site in 1994. Even if you only have an hour or two to spare, explore the city on foot or by bike and take in some remarkable attractions. The bike trail is about 9,5 km. "The old quarters and fortifications of Luxembourg City feature impressive remains of the old town in an attractive natural environment. Founded around 963, Luxembourg has played an important role in European history in subsequent centuries," was the assessment of UNESCO's 18th World Heritage Committee, which met in Phuket from 12th-17th December 1994. According to UNESCO criteria, Luxembourg is a prominent example of an architectural or technological urban landscape that illustrates significant periods of human history.
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Urban sprawl has resulted in the permanent presence of large mammal species in urban areas, leading to human–wildlife conflicts. Wild boar Sus scrofa are establishing a permanent presence in many cities in Europe, with the largest German urban population occurring in Berlin. Despite their relatively long-term presence, there is little knowledge of colonization processes, dispersal patterns or connectivity of Berlin's populations, hampering the development of effective management plans. We used 13 microsatellite loci to genotype 387 adult and subadult wild boar from four urban forests, adjacent built-up areas and the surrounding rural forests. We applied genetic clustering algorithms to analyse the population genetic structure of the urban boar. We used approximate Bayesian computation to infer the boar's colonization history of the city. Finally, we used assignment tests to determine the origin of wild boar hunted in the urban built-up areas. The animals in three urban forests formed distinct genetic clusters, with the remaining samples all being assigned to one rural population. One urban cluster was founded by individuals from another urban cluster rather than by rural immigrants. The wild boar that had been harvested within urban built-up areas was predominantly assigned to the rural cluster surrounding the urban area, rather than to one of the urban clusters. Synthesis and applications. Our results are likely to have an immediate impact on management strategies for urban wild board populations in Berlin, because they show that there are not only distinct urban clusters, but also ongoing source–sink dynamics between urban and rural areas. It is therefore essential that the neighbouring Federal States of Berlin and Brandenburg develop common hunting plans to control the wild boar population and reduce conflicts in urban areas.
La campagne de mesure fut suggérée et initiée par Schroeder&Associés dans le cadre du Projet « Silent Cities », un programme de monitoring environnemental participatif à large échelle, ayant pour but de documenter une modification exceptionnelle du paysage sonore urbain due au ralentissement économique causé par les restrictions dues à la pandémie COVID19.
L’Administration de l’Environnement a mandaté Schroeder&Associés, en tant que bureau spécialisé et agréé, pour la réalisation des mesures de niveaux sonores en 10 points d’immission préalablement choisis.
Ont finalement été choisis 13 points d’immission, dénommés dorénavant « IP (Immission Point) », localisés sur le territoire de la Ville de Luxembourg (Millebaach, Cessange, Gasperich, blvd. Royal, Glacis), de la Commune de Esch-sur-Alzette (Gare), de la Commune de Dudelange (rte de Luxembourg), de la Commune de Sanem (Belvaux), de la Commune de Mondercange (Pontpierre), de la Commune de Diekirch (Sauerwiss), de la Commune de Mersch (Lankheck), de la Commune d’Ettelbrück (rue Pierre Wiser) et de la Commune de Walferdange (Heisdorf).
Les mesures du confinement ont conduit à une forte diminution de la présence humaine dans l’espace public. Les moyens de transports (privés et publics), ainsi que les activités professionnelles et de loisir, ont été réduits de manière considérable. Les sons produits par ces activités ont baissé en intensité. La mission avait pour but de mesurer les niveaux de pression acoustique afin de collecter un nombre suffisant et représentatif de données permettant, par traitement statistique, de produire des indicateurs de bruit représentatifs de l’environnement sonore au point d’immission dans le contexte du déconfinement progressif après le lock-down décrété à partir du 15 mars.
Pour 8 des 13 points d’immissions existent des données de niveaux sonores recueillies lors d’une campagne de mesure datant de 2019. Ceci permet donc de comparer les valeurs établies en 2019 avec les valeurs actuelles, respectivement d’observer l’évolution du paysage sonore durant la phase du déconfinement progressif vis-à-vis de ces valeurs de référence.
During 2018, Paris was the most expensive European city to rent an Apartment, at 2.85 thousand U.S. dollars per month. London had an average rental cost of over 300 U.S. dollars less than the Capital of France. Cities within Western Europe have a higher rental price than their Eastern counterparts with Moscow seeing the average cost of rent over one thousand U.S. dollars per month lower than Paris.
Supply and demand
One of the main factors driving high rents across European cities is the same as any other consumer driven business. If demand outweighs supply, prices will inflate. The drive for high paid professionals to be located centrally in prime locations, mixed with the low levels of available space, high land and, construction costs all help keep rental prices increasing.
Renters now outweigh home owners
In London, the number of private renters has increased dramatically from 2008. Increasing house prices as well as standard costs of living have seen more and more people unable to get on to the property ladder, and are therefore forced onto the rental markets for longer. This being said 2019 has become a great time for first-time buyers as interest rates remained historically low.
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This statistic shows the biggest cities in Luxembourg in 2023. In 2024, approximately **** million people lived in the administrative area of Luxembourg, making it the biggest city in Luxembourg.