Arnulfstrasse (Munich)

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Arnulfstrasse
coat of arms
Street in Munich
Arnulfstrasse
Arnulfstrasse towards the old town
Basic data
State capital Munich
Townships Ludwigsvorstadt , Maxvorstadt , Neuhausen
Name received 1890
Connecting roads Prielmayerstrasse, Wotanstrasse
Cross streets Dachauer Strasse , Pfefferstrasse, Seidlstrasse, Hopfenstrasse, Herbststrasse, Zirkus-Krone-Strasse, Hackerbrücke , Wredestrasse, Bernhard-Wicki-Strasse, Grete-Monheim-Strasse, Deroystrasse, Helmholtzstrasse, Marsstrasse, Luise-Ullrich-Strasse, Birkerstrasse, Donnersbergerbrücke , Landshuter Allee , Richelstraße, Donnersbergerstraße , Safferlingstraße, Blücherstraße, Kelheimer Straße, Sedlmayrstraße, Burghausener Straße, Renatastraße, Schäringerstraße, Stupfstraße, Georg-Lindau-Straße, Gotelindenstraße, Wilhelm-Hale-Straße, Königbauerstraße, Kriemhildenstraße, Ferdienand-Maria-Straße Nibelungenstrasse, Guntherstrasse
Places Steubenplatz , Romanplatz
Numbering system Orientation numbering
Buildings Hotel Deutscher Kaiser, Children's and Youth Museum Munich , Central Bus Station Munich , main building of the Bavarian Broadcasting Corporation , Augustiner cellar
use
User groups Pedestrian traffic , bicycle traffic , individual traffic , public transport
Road design Sculpture X ( Isa Genzken ), Sculpture light signals ( Michael Friederichsen )
Technical specifications
Street length 3.8 km

The Arnulf Street is about 3.8 km long city road in Munich . It leads from Bahnhofplatz in Ludwigsvorstadt through Maxvorstadt (north of the railway body) west to Romanplatz in Neuhausen . Via the Hackerbrücke there is a connection with Landsberger Straße, which runs parallel to the south of the railway tracks . Tram line 3 ran through Arnulfstrasse until 1983 . It was first diverted as part of the construction of the S-Bahn and then shut down. In 1996 the tram service on Arnulfstraße was reopened with line number 17.

description

1916: Ministry of Transport with the gate building in the middle, on the left the preserved southern component (today the Federal Railway Authority)

Between 1906 and 1916 the buildings of the Royal Bavarian Ministry of Transport were erected at number 9 on both sides of the street . It was then the successor to the Federal Railway Central Office and today's local Federal Railway Office .

You can also find house no. 2 the Hotel Deutscher Kaiser, built in 1920, No. 3 the Munich Children's and Youth Museum , No. 21 the Central Bus Station Munich , No. 22 the Bavarian Association of the Blind and Visually Impaired , No. 42/44 the main building of the Bavarian Broadcasting Corporation and No. 52 the Augustiner cellar and No. 62 the Postpalast .

The houses with the house numbers 107–163 (the odd numbers) belong to the 1928–1929 postal experiment settlement of the Bavarian Post and Telegraph Association. Arnulfstraße 195 is the listed track hall of the parcel post office . The culture pavilion on Romanplatz , which burned down in 2017, stood at Arnulfstraße 294 .

The Arnulfpark and the Hirschgarten are in close proximity to the street .

Sculptures X by the artist Isa Genzken and Lichtzeichen by Michael Friederichsen are located on Arnulfstrasse .

history

The former salt road was named after Arnulf von Bayern in 1890 . The Ministry of Transport and the Marsfeld barracks used to be on Arnulfstrasse. On Neuhauser Flur, Arnulfstrasse was once called Leopoldstrasse, but had to cede this name after it was incorporated into Munich, as Leopoldstrasse already existed in Schwabing. At that time the street only reached as far as Renatastraße, later - after the Neuhausen settlement was built - to Steubenplatz. In the further course the street did not exist, the tram drove in the green towards Romanplatz. The Nibelungenstrasse had to take up part of the traffic until the Arnulfstrasse was extended to the Nibelungenstrasse in 1958 and thus reached its final length.

Web links

Commons : Arnulfstraße (Munich)  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Wolfgang Wellige: Chronicle 1964 - 1969. Tram Munich, archived from the original on November 7, 2015 ; accessed on November 7, 2015 .
  2. ^ Neuhausen-Nymphenburg. City of Munich, accessed on November 4, 2015 .
  3. Track hall of the parcel post office. City of Munich, accessed on November 7, 2015 .
  4. ^ Fire on Arnulfstrasse: Culture pavilion completely destroyed . March 13, 2017 ( muenchen.tv [accessed March 14, 2017]).
  5. Flames in the culture pavilion . In: sueddeutsche.de . ISSN  0174-4917 ( sueddeutsche.de [accessed on March 14, 2017]).
  6. ^ Arnulfstrasse in Munich. City of Munich, accessed on November 4, 2015 .

Coordinates: 48 ° 8 ′ 31 ″  N , 11 ° 33 ′ 27 ″  E