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industrienahen

Industrienahen is a concept in urban planning and regional economics referring to the proximity of a location to industrial activity. In German-language planning literature it is used to describe the degree to which firms, suppliers, and infrastructure are located near one another to facilitate manufacturing and logistics. The term is often translated as industrial proximity or industrial-near positioning and may be applied at city, district, or site scales.

Indicators used to assess industrienahen include distance to major industrial zones, the density of manufacturing firms

Industrial proximity can yield benefits such as lower transportation costs, shorter supplier-customer lead times, stronger supply-chain

In policy and planning practice, strategies to foster industrienahen include developing industrial parks and business clusters,

Overall, industrienahen is a flexible, context-dependent concept without a single universal metric, and its operationalization varies

within
a
given
radius,
the
share
of
regional
employment
in
manufacturing,
and
access
to
transport
corridors
(roads,
rail,
ports)
as
well
as
logistics
nodes
such
as
warehouses
and
distribution
centers.
integration,
and
knowledge
spillovers
from
nearby
firms.
It
can
also
enhance
resilience
to
disruptions
through
diversified
but
nearby
capabilities.
On
the
downside,
high
industrienahen
can
coincide
with
land-use
conflicts,
environmental
pressures,
noise
and
emissions,
and
congestion.
It
may
also
reinforce
regional
inequalities
if
industrial
activity
concentrates
in
specific
areas.
improving
multimodal
infrastructure,
streamlining
permitting
near
industrial
districts,
and
coordinating
land-use
planning
with
economic
development
goals.
The
concept
is
often
used
alongside
related
ideas
such
as
industrial
clustering
and
agglomeration
economies
to
explain
performance
differences
between
regions.
across
languages
and
studies.