Flemingsberg

Flemingsberg

Flemingsberg a southern suburb of Stockholm, Sweden, located in Huddinge Municipality in the south-western part of the contigous Stockholm urban area.

It is located approximately 15 minutes by Stockholm commuter rail from central Stockholm, or 30-45 minutes by car. Flemingsberg has 12,000 inhabitants, around 12,300 people work there, and there are about 13,000 students.

There is a railway station ("Flemingsberg", formerly "Stockholm Syd Flemingsberg"), a major hospital, a university college and there are also colourful high-rise residential buildings from the 1970s.

Flemingsberg has also evolved as a law enforcement center for the southern part of metropolitan Stockholm, with police station, court house, prosecutor's office and a jail, all in buildings built in the 1990s onwards.

History

Flemingsberg gets its name from the Flemingsberg manor. The village where the manor house was built in the 1600s was originally called Andersta but the name was changed when came in to the ownership of Henrik Fleming. The current manor house was built in 1790.

The current buildings in Flemingsberg (also called Flempan for short) was built during the Million_Programme and for a long time there was trouble renting out all the apartments and the area become known as a very bad suburb. The two halfs was renamed Visätra and Grantorp as the name Flemingsberg gave bad associations. Today the name Flemingsberg is again used for the area and the rail road station.

Facilities

*The former Huddinge University Hospital is now a part of Karolinska University Hospital at Huddinge in Flemingsberg and is associated with the medical university of Karolinska Institute ("Karolinska institutet").
*Södertörn University College, ("Södertörns högskola"), inaugurated in 1996.
*One campus of the Royal Institute of Technology ("Kungliga Tekniska Högskolan"), is located in southern StockholmFact|date=August 2007.
*Novum Research Park — Genomics and proteomics research and biological sciences park.

Railway station

Flemingsberg is the name of a railway station on the Stockholm commuter rail line between Södertälje and Märsta, via central Stockholm. Trains usually ride within 15 minute intervals both ways. Some of the long distance trains also stop at Flemingsberg, such as the trains to Malmö, Gothenburg and Eskilstuna. Flemingsberg is one of Sweden's bigger railway stations in terms of the amount of passengers.


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • IIHF European Women Champions Cup 2006 — Der IIHF European Women Champions Cup 2006 war die dritte Austragung des von der Internationalen Eishockey Föderation IIHF ausgetragenen Wettbewerbs. Am vom 6. Oktober bis 10. Dezember 2006 ausgetragenen Turnier nahmen 17 Mannschaften aus 16… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • X 2000 — The trains were initially used sparingly to avoid breakdowns. From 1995 the trains were used more intensively and second class was introduced.The train s designated top speed is 210 km/h (but during a trial in 1993 it reached 276 km/h), but the… …   Wikipedia

  • Pendeltåg (Stockholm) — Pendeltåg Spurweite: 1435 mm (Normalspur) …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • X2000 — Un X2000 entre les gares d Älvsjö et d Årstaberg …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Västra stambanan — Stockholm–Göteborg Streckennummer: 1 Streckenlänge: 455 km Spurweite: 1435 mm (Normalspur) Stromsystem: 15 kV 16⅔ Hz  Höchstgeschwindigkeit: 200[1] km/h Zwei …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • S-Bahn Stockholm — Pendeltåg der neuen Baureihe X60 Stockholms pendeltåg ist ein mit der S Bahn in Deutschland vergleichbarer Vorortzug in Stockholm in Schweden …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Stockholms Pendeltåg — Pendeltåg der neuen Baureihe X60 Stockholms pendeltåg ist ein mit der S Bahn in Deutschland vergleichbarer Vorortzug in Stockholm in Schweden …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Capitale de la Suède — Stockholm Wikipédia …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Commune d'Huddinge — Commune d Huddinge …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Commune de Stockholm — Stockholm Wikipédia …   Wikipédia en Français

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”