But it has also suffered extensively from the decline of the coal and steel industry and a lack of government investment.
In a park close to Marxloh's remaining steelworks, five young men in their early 20s explained why they all planned to vote AfD.
"We're young, we need work and they don't give us a chance to find training," one man complained.
"We've no money; everything's more expensive; there aren't many jobs any more and there's so much dirt here."
The AfD is not known for its social
policies, but its message on security cuts through, and this group does
not see the anti-immigration party as extreme.
"No, they're just normal people."
In
the east, it is in the rural areas where the AfD does best, but in the
west it is growing in cities that have lost their industrial base, says
Prof Conrad Ziller of the University of Duisburg-Essen.
"Voices
of people in favour of the AfD have become so loud, so if you're in a
doctor's waiting room it's really common to hear people chat about
getting angry about the established politicians and government."
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