Reyðarfjörður

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Reyðarfjörður
—  Town  —
The city of Reyðarfjörður
Location of the Municipality of Fjarðabyggð
Reyðarfjörður is located in Iceland
Reyðarfjörður
Location in Iceland
Coordinates: 65°02′N 14°13′W / 65.033°N 14.217°W / 65.033; -14.217
Country  Iceland
Constituency[1] Map of the constituencies of Iceland Norðausturkjördæmi
Region[2] Map of the regions of Iceland Austurland
County Map of the counties of Iceland Suður-Múlasýsla
Municipality COA Fjardabyggd.png Fjarðabyggð
Population (2011)
 • Total 1,102
Time zone GMT (UTC+0)
Website Official website

Reyðarfjörður is a town in Iceland. It has a population of 1,102 and is one of the most populated villages that constitute the municipality of Fjarðabyggð.

Contents

[edit] History

The town is at the bottom of the eponymous largest fjord in the east coast of Iceland. Like most other towns in the East Fjords of Iceland, it is surrounded with beautiful mountains, of which the highest is about 972 metres (3,189 ft). Although the climate is particularly rainy and foggy, on clear summer days it often has the highest temperatures in Iceland.

From the early 20th century, Reyðarfjörður was a trading port, as well as a fishing port. Due to its strategic location and good harbour conditions, it became the second largest of the Allied bases in Iceland during World War II. There is a World War II museum located at the old camp above the town.

Reyðarfjörður joined Eskifjörður and Neskaupstaður in 1998 to form the new municipality of Fjarðabyggð ("fjords-settlement").

[edit] Geography

The other villages composing the municipality are: Eskifjörður (1,043 inh.), Fáskrúðsfjörður (662 inh.), Mjóifjörður (35 inh.), Neskaupstaður (1,437 inh.)[3] and Stöðvarfjörður (203 inh.).[4]

[edit] Fjardaál aluminium smelter

Having mostly been a quiet fishing town since the war, Reyðarfjörður (and neighbouring communities) saw a revival in the early 2000s when Alcoa decided to build an aluminium plant there. It was built between 2004 and 2007 by the contractor Bechtel, requiring thousands of workers from various countries, most notably from Poland. At one point, the town had the highest concentration of foreign residents of any community in the country, and the number of workers reached as high as 2800. By 2008, the construction workers had left, but townspeople have faith in the aluminium plant for the continuing prosperity of their old community, and surrounding communities.

The Fjardaál aluminium smelter reached full production capacity in April 2008. The facility contains a smelter, cast house, rod production and deep-water port. The smelter employs 450 people and produces 940 tons of aluminium a day, with capacity of 346,000 metric tons of aluminium per year. Fjardaál means "Aluminium of the Fjords" in Icelandic.[5]

[edit] Notes and References

  1. ^ Political division
  2. ^ Mainly statistical division
  3. ^ Located in the Norðfjörður
  4. ^ (Icelandic) Infos on Fjarðabyggð municipal website
  5. ^ Alcoa - Fjardaál smelter information

[edit] External links

Media related to Reyðarfjörður at Wikimedia Commons

Coordinates: 65°02′N 14°13′W / 65.033°N 14.217°W / 65.033; -14.217

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