Borlänge () is a locality in Dalarna County, Sweden, with 44,898 inhabitants as of 2020. In 1875 a railway between Falun and Ludvika, via Borlänge was inaugurated. Thanks to its railway station the village of Borlänge became highly important in servicing the ironworks.
In 1898, Borlänge was granted privileges by the national Swedish government as a market town (Swedish: köping) with about 1,300 inhabitants, but still today it belongs to the Church of Sweden's regionally historically dominant parish of Stora Tuna, centered on a large medieval church by that name (meaning great enclosed farmyards), now located in a rural district east of the city. In 1898, the Stora Kopparbergs Bergslag - the owner of the ironworks in Domnarvet at the time - built a papermill in an adjacent village to Borlänge called Kvarnsveden, upstream from Domnarvet.
From the 1940s onward, politics in the municipality has been dominated by the Social Democratic Party.
Between 1970 and 1974, the Tjärna Ängar Million Programme district was built.
In the 1990s, Borlänge had the highest crime rate per thousand inhabitants in Sweden, dominated by violence and theft.
Climate
Demographics
thumb|Interior of the Borlänge People's House (Folkets hus).
According to the Borlänge Municipality, as of 2017, Borlänge had a population of 51,604 inhabitants. 11,693 residents in the city are of foreign origin, comprising 22.7% of the total population. Of these individuals, 8,837 were born abroad and 2,856 were born in Sweden. Most of the residents of foreign background come from Asia, Africa, other Nordic countries, and other parts of Europe.
According to the Borlänge Municipality, in the 1990s, most foreign-born residents of Borlänge arrived from Southern Europe, due to the civil wars in Yugoslavia. During the 2000s, immigrants in the city primarily came from Somalia, Iraq and Turkey. The Somalia-born immigrants mainly arrived via family reunification. This migration had decreased by the following decade, with most newcomers in Borlänge now consisting of asylum immigrants from Syria and Eritrea. As of 2016, there are 472 refugees in the municipality, most of whom originate from Syria (218), Eritrea (121), and Somalia (56). The newer asylum immigrants in the city largely emigrated from Syria and Eritrea.).
An agreement between the Borlänge Municipality and the Swedish Migration Board to receive 30 refugees per year has contributed to the population growth, with many arriving via family reunification. Additionally, people have relocated to the city from other areas. Many are young, with few individuals older than 60 years of age. Over a five-year period, the number of inhabitants in Tjärna Ängar increased considerably, as 1,000 young persons relocated to the neighborhood. The new arrivals principally came from two or three foreign backgrounds, and included university students and people who had emigrated from abroad. In the summer of 2016, there was widespread vandalism, cars were torched and when firefighters arrived, they were attacked with stones and had to wait for police to escort them in order to complete their mission. The Dalarna University College has student accommodation in the area where female students are sexually harassed by the local male youth on a regular basis and avoid going outdoors after sunset.
In a 2018 interview, the local police commissioner Erik Gatu stated in an interview that clan leaders and religious leaders have taken over the leadership of the area, where 9 out of 10 are born abroad. Police has noted a change in 2017 when crime happens, nobody calls the police but the injured parties settle among themselves according to "an eye for an eye" in a parallel justice system. Although the official number of inhabitants are , unofficially the population may be as high as -, when water usage and the weight of generated household waste is analysed.
Other sports clubs located in Borlänge include:
- Forssa BK
- IF Tunabro
- Islingby IK
- Kvarnsvedens IK
- Stora Tuna OK
In 2013, a Somali national bandy team was formed in Borlänge with the goal of participating in the 2014 Bandy World Championship.
The 2008 Women's Bandy World Championship was also arranged with Borlänge as the main venue.
In 1999 the large orienteering competition O-Ringen was held around Borlänge, gathering 15 238 participants.
The 1993 World Gliding Championships were held at the Borlänge Airport, east of the town.
Music
As is the case with its twin city, Falun, music is an important part of Borlänge. It has been the hometown of many new young musicians in Sweden such as Mando Diao, Sugarplum Fairy and Miss Li and offers the possibility to get a degree in popular music at BoomTown Music Education, a branch of the School of Music at Luleå University of Technology.
The annual but now defunct Peace & Love music festival was hosted in Borlänge.
Notable musical groups
- Stonewall Noise Orchestra, rock band
- Mando Diao, rock band
- Twilight Force, power metal band
- Astral Doors, heavy metal band
- Dozer, stoner rock band
- Greenleaf, stoner rock band
- Sator, rock band (earlier Sator Codex)
- Rootvälta, reggae band
- Sugarplum Fairy, rock band
- Anekdoten, prog band
Notable people
- Simon Aspelin, tennis player
- Jens Bergenström, hockey player
- Jussi Björling, tenor
- Maja Dahlqvist, cross-country skier
- Mattias Ekholm, - NHL Hockey Player for Edmonton Oilers
- Erik Eriksson, Centre Party's first chairman
- Tomas Forslund, ice hockey player
- Per Fosshaug, bandy player
- Lars Frölander, swimmer
- Nils Patrik Johansson, heavy metal singer
- Lars Jonsson, ice hockey player
- Gabriel Karlsson, hockey player
- Miss Li, musician
- Lasse Nilsson, football player
- Gustaf Norén, musician
- Per Olov Qvist (born 1948), Swedish film critic
- Mattias Ritola, hockey player
- Johan Olof Wallin, archbishop, poet and psalmist
Education
- Dalarna University College
- Soltorgsgymnasiet
- Hagagymnasiet
- Rytmus musikgymnasium
- Erikslundgymnasiet
- NTI Gymnasiet
References
fi:Borlängen kunta
