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For decades, workers risked their lives in Lens' coal mines, and then the mines closed
-- the last one in 1986 -- plunging the area into hardship. Lens' unemployment rate is about 14 percent, well above the national level of 9.5 percent. In the Ruhr region, one of the most famous landmarks is Zeche Zollverein in Essen, a United Nations World Heritage Memorial known for the 180-feet-tall (55-meter) towers that stand outside its disused coal mines. The former coal mine and coking plant now house several museums, contemporary dance and performance shows and, in 2012, will open a university campus for hundreds of design students. "Zeche Zollverein shows that culture is not only a luxury good for rich people, but also creates new jobs for all levels of societies," said Fritz Pleitgen, who is in charge of Ruhr 2010, the company that organizes the European Capital of Culture events and oversees a budget of about euro70 million. Almost 7,000 people used to work in the mine until it closed in 1986. They all lost their jobs, but the mine's transformation into a cultural venture has created almost 4,000 new jobs at Zollverein and attracted creative companies like filmmakers, fashion designers and advertisers on the 100-hectare (250-acre) compound, he said. Another highlight is a wooden, bridge-like structure by the Dutch artists' group Observatorium, which stands about 200 yards (meters) away from the Emscher on a barren field covered with left-over black coal dust, nettles and birch trees. Visitors who fully want to embrace the art, can even rent a room on the bridge for euro75 ($92) a night including dinner and breakfast
-- according to the organizers the unusual hotel is already sold out for most of the summer. It remains to be seen if the cultural renaissance of post-industrial European regions also brings new opportunities to those who suffered the most from the end of industrialization
-- blue collar workers and immigrants -- or whether they will be left out from the revival, especially in today's times of financial crisis. Elli Vogel-Gdanitz, who runs a newspaper stand in downtown Essen, enjoys the current artsy feel of her hometown. As part of a Capital of Culture project she is not only selling the usual chocolate bars, liquor and potato chips, but also small design items by local artists like pillow cases made out of old coal mining towels or silver pins in the shape of the Ruhr river. Vogel-Gdanitz, 54, said that she has visitors coming from all over Germany and abroad to check out her "design kiosk" and that profit was up. "All of the old industry is gone, so now they're trying to invest in tourism and culture, which is a great idea," Vogel-Gdanitz said. "But the big question is what will happen next year, when we no longer enjoy the spotlight of the European Capital of Culture." ___ Online:
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