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Krefeld — Regional Market

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Rank 5 European Regional Market — suburb of Düsseldorf, 19.4 km; composite score 12.0.

Updated 2026-06-16 · History
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Krefeld is an independent city (kreisfreie Stadt) in North Rhine-Westphalia, 19.4 km northwest of Düsseldorf within the Rhine-Ruhr polycentric metropolitan area of over ten million people. Founded on a silk-and-textile tradition dating to the eighteenth century, the city retains a diversified industrial base — Nirosta steel, Canon, Hitachi, Evonik — alongside substantial civic infrastructure: two Helios hospital campuses, Krankenhaus Maria-Hilf, and Hochschule Niederrhein with roughly 11,000 students enrolled. Two Tier 1 co-location clusters, each combining hypermarket, hardware, and consumer-electronics anchors, place Krefeld 5th among the 400 European Regional Markets, with a composite co-location score of 12.0.

[edit]Overview

According to Wikipedia (accessed 2026-05-30), Krefeld had a population of 231,406 as of 31 December 2024. The city is administratively independent under North Rhine-Westphalia's two-tier structure — a kreisfreie Stadt rather than a constituent of a surrounding rural district — and sits on the left bank of the Rhine northwest of Düsseldorf. The borough of Uerdingen, in the city's east, lies directly on the Rhine. Major motorway connections include the A57 and A44, which integrate Krefeld into the wider Rhine-Ruhr corridor.

Krefeld's historical economic identity is built on textiles. By 1763 the Von der Leyen silk merchant families employed roughly half of Krefeld's then 6,082 residents in their workshops, establishing a textile tradition that gave the city its enduring nickname, the "Velvet and Silk City." Industrial diversification followed: the Nirosta steelworks — historically associated with ThyssenKrupp and Outokumpu-owned since 2012 — remains a material employer, and corporate offices for Hitachi, Canon, Evonik Industries, and Fressnapf are located in the city. The municipal population peaked at 244,020 in 1990 and has since stabilised near 230,000.

Geographically, Krefeld functions as a component municipality of the Rhine-Ruhr metropolitan region — a polycentric agglomeration of more than ten million inhabitants spanning Düsseldorf, Cologne, Essen, Dortmund, and their neighbours. The market is therefore measured against the centroid of Düsseldorf at a distance of 19.4 km, classifying it as suburban-regional rather than free-standing.

[edit]Co-location Profile

Krefeld contains two Tier 1 co-locations. Both combine the three German big-box retail formats — hypermarket, hardware, and consumer electronics — producing the highest composition score available in the European dataset.

Table 1. Krefeld co-locations.

Cluster Tier Anchor Composition Representative Members
Krefeld-1 T1 Hypermarket + Hardware + Electronics Kaufland, Hornbach, Bauhaus, MediaMarkt, Helios Klinikum Krefeld, Helios Cäcilien-Hospital Hüls, Hochschule Niederrhein (Krefeld-West), Hochschule Niederrhein (Krefeld-Süd), Krankenhaus Maria-Hilf
Krefeld-2 T1 Hypermarket + Hardware + Electronics Globus, Bauhaus, Saturn, Helios Klinikum Krefeld, Hochschule Niederrhein (Krefeld-West), Hochschule Niederrhein (Krefeld-Süd), Krankenhaus Maria-Hilf

The German Tier 1 anchor profile differs in brand identity from its North American equivalent but mirrors it functionally. Hornbach and Bauhaus occupy the hardware role held by Home Depot and Lowe's in the United States; Kaufland (a Schwarz Group hypermarket, the same parent that operates Lidl) and Globus (a German family-owned hypermarket chain) replace Walmart and Target. In consumer electronics, MediaMarkt and Saturn — both operated by Ceconomy AG under separate banners — substitute for Best Buy. The presence of MediaMarkt in one cluster and Saturn in the other is characteristic of the Rhine-Ruhr retail-park pattern: Ceconomy frequently positions its two brands in the same catchment area but in physically distinct retail parks, treating them as complementary rather than competing tenancies.

Bauhaus appears in both clusters, reflecting the chain's dual-store configuration across the city. The Helios Klinikum Krefeld and the two Hochschule Niederrhein campuses likewise appear in both clusters: they fall within both retail-park catchment radii under the spatial model.

[edit]Civic Infrastructure

Krefeld's civic anchor profile is dense for a city of its size. The Helios network — Germany's largest private hospital operator — runs two campuses in the city. Helios Klinikum Krefeld is the principal tertiary facility and the city's largest medical employer. Helios Cäcilien-Hospital Hüls operates as a secondary campus in the northern Hüls borough. Alongside the Helios facilities, Krankenhaus Maria-Hilf — a Catholic hospital under independent ownership — serves the western catchment of the city. The three hospitals collectively give Krefeld redundant secondary and tertiary acute-care coverage uncommon among European cities in the 200,000–250,000 population band.

Higher education is anchored by Hochschule Niederrhein, a University of Applied Sciences with approximately 11,000 students enrolled across its Krefeld facilities. The institution maintains two physically separated campuses in the city — Krefeld-West and Krefeld-Süd — and a further campus in neighbouring Mönchengladbach. The geographic separation of the West and Süd campuses places one or both within the catchment radius of each Tier 1 retail cluster, which is why both campuses appear as members of both clusters in the data.

The combined hospital and university footprint produces the 1.5× civic multiplier applied to Krefeld's composite score.

[edit]AEC Data

Table 2. Architecture, Engineering, and Construction climate parameters.

Parameter Value
Köppen-Geiger Climate Cfb (Oceanic / Marine West Coast)
EU Regulatory Climate Zone II (Atlantic)
WWF Ecoregion European Atlantic mixed forests
WWF Biome Temperate Broadleaf & Mixed Forests

Cfb is the dominant climate regime across the Rhine-Ruhr region: mild summers, cool but rarely severe winters, and rainfall distributed across the year. For building design, this implies moderate heating demand and minimal mechanical cooling demand relative to continental European zones further east. The Atlantic-Oceanic regime contrasts with the Dfb continental profile that prevails in Bavaria and the eastern German states.

[edit]Composite Score

Table 3. Composite score derivation for Krefeld.

Component Value Notes
Tier score 8 (2 × 4) + (0 × 2) + (0 × 1)
Civic multiplier 1.5 Medical and academic anchors present
Confidence factor 1.0 High confidence
Composite score 12.0 tier_score × civic_multiplier × confidence_factor
Regional Market type suburban-regional 19.4 km from Düsseldorf metro centroid

A composite score of 12.0 is representative of the upper European suburban-regional tier. The European dataset exhibits lower maximum scores than the North American dataset because European municipalities are geographically smaller units, so even economically significant centres tend to span fewer Tier 1 compositions than their suburban North American counterparts. The composite score formula does not apply a metro-distance multiplier; suburban-regional classification is recorded as a categorical descriptor rather than a scoring penalty.

[edit]See Also

[edit]The bottom line

Krefeld is a suburban-regional market 19.4 km from Düsseldorf, ranking 5th among the 400 European Regional Markets with a composite score of 12.0. Its strength comes from two Tier 1 co-locations that each combine hypermarket, hardware, and consumer-electronics formats, paired with a civic anchor base — three hospitals and a University of Applied Sciences — that is unusually dense for a city of roughly 230,000 and earns the 1.5× civic multiplier. For site and building planning, the Atlantic-Oceanic (Cfb) climate implies moderate heating demand and minimal mechanical cooling relative to continental zones further east.

[edit]References

  • Krefeld — Wikipedia, accessed 2026-05-30

Wikipedia content reproduced under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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