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© Travus ( talk ) 11:04, 10 June 2012 (UTC) · CC BY-SA 3.0

Faulbach (Rhine)

A Cologne stream formed by the confluence of the Flehbach and Bruchbach; its name alludes to the sluggish flow of its waters.

The Faulbach is a stream section within the city of Cologne, beginning where the Flehbach and Bruchbach converge near the BAB 4 motorway interchange — close to the tram depot of Kölner Verkehrsbetriebe in the Merheim district.

At a Glance

Type
Stream section in Cologne
Origin
BAB 4 interchange near Köln-Merheim
Mouth
Flows into the Rhine north of the Mülheimer Brücke
Location
Mülheim district and borough
Name origin
"faul" — sluggish current, or boggy water quality
Did you know?

To tame the flood-prone Faulbach, engineers dug it a deeper channel and then routed it literally beneath the river Strunde – an underground river crossing with a 1–2 metre height difference between the two waterways.

Name and Meaning

The name derives from the stream's slow, lazy flow — water so still it was described as "faul" (idle or rotten). A second interpretation holds that "faul" refers to the brackish, marshy character of the water itself.

© Travus ( talk ) 11:04, 10 June 2012 (UTC) · CC BY-SA 3.0

History

The Faulbach once fed the fish-rich Merheimer Bruch wetland. After repeated flood damage, engineers dug a deeper channel for the stream — which, paradoxically, drained the wetland entirely, leaving it dry today.

© Travus ( talk ) 11:04, 10 June 2012 (UTC) · CC BY-SA 3.0

Course

Near Köln-Holweide, at a spot known as the Erk close to Gut Schlagbaum, the stream was routed beneath the Strunde river. From there it continues partly culverted until it reaches the Rhine north of the Mülheimer Brücke. At the crossing with the Strunde, the two watercourses differ in elevation by one to two metres.

Map

Blue dots: other places nearby — tap to explore.

You might also like

Flehbach

A right-bank Rhine tributary with highly variable flow — swollen after rain, yet sometimes bone-dry in summer.

Strunde

Stream in the Bergisches Land that once powered the region's industry — today partly restored to daylight, partly still flowing through underground pipes.

Aachener Weiher

4.5(451)· Google

A 1920s artificial lake in Cologne's Inner Green Belt, framed by a beer garden, East Asian art, and the Hiroshima-Nagasaki Park.

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