Bavarian house construction

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Bayerische Hausbau GmbH & Co. KG

logo
legal form GmbH & Co. KG
founding 1954
Seat Munich , Germany
management Christian Balletshofer, Peter Müller
Number of employees around 200
sales 324.9 million euros
Branch property
Website www.hausbau.de

The Bayerische Hausbau GmbH & Co. KG is part of the Schörghuber Group and as a real estate portfolio manager with associated project development in Germany operates. The business fields include project development as well as asset and portfolio management .

history

The company was founded in 1954 by Josef Schörghuber . From his parents' small carpentry business, he made contacts with the players in the Munich real estate market. With his construction activities after the Second World War, the building contractor made a significant contribution to the reconstruction of the state capital. In the new federal states, too, Bayerische Hausbau received the first building permit from the GDR for a development in Klostergasse in Leipzig after the Wall came down . In 1958, the hobby pilot Josef Schörghuber saw a large, undeveloped area in northeast Munich, today's Arabellapark . The first building, the Arabellahaus , was built between 1966 and 1969. In 1978 Bayerische Hausbau bought the traditional prefabricated house manufacturer Hanse-Haus.

In 1979 Josef Schörghuber acquired the Hacker-Pschorr and Paulaner breweries with the associated properties, which were incorporated into Bayerische Hausbau.

In the Munich local election campaign in 1984, the Bavarian house building was the subject of the so-called building land affair. In 1981, the company bought around 60,000 m² of expected building land in the Zamdorf district for a square meter price of 230 DM from the state capital of Munich, which was then ruled by the CSU and FDP under Mayor Erich Kiesl (CSU) . The area bordering the Denninger Anger park and the upscale Bogenhausen district was not publicly advertised. A later expert opinion by the municipal valuation agency commissioned by the election winner Georg Kronawitter (SPD) determined a value of 840 DM / m². This corresponds to the share of the land in the sales price of the Zamilapark development on the site, which was between 800 and 930 DM / m² - but for the then fully developed building land. The government of Upper Bavaria determined in a first report a value of 530 DM / m². In 1992, however, the then government of Upper Bavaria decided that it was only a minor sale, which it subsequently approved in 1995. The city of Munich under the newly elected Mayor Christian Ude waived a lawsuit against the approval by the government of Upper Bavaria, while Schörghuber, on the occasion of his 75th birthday, set up the largest foundation of a living person to date, amounting to three million marks for the benefit of socially disadvantaged Munich children set up.

With a real estate portfolio valued at around EUR 2.7 billion and a turnover of EUR 324.9 million (2017), it is one of the largest integrated real estate companies in Germany. Around 200 people are employed. The fields of activity include project development, the property developer business with the construction and sale of commercial and residential properties, as well as asset and portfolio management for the company's own existing properties.

In 2005 the corporate divisions of the Schörghuber corporate group "Construction and Real Estate" were merged into the Bavarian Construction and Real Estate Group. On October 1, 2010, the division was bundled under the Bayerische Hausbau brand. The Bayerische Hausbau became the Bayerische Bau und Immobilien Gruppe.

The company sold the management of residential property from external owners to Bayerische Immobilien Management in July 2013 as part of a management buy-out. In 2014, the company separated from the prefabricated house division and the subsidiary Hanse-Haus. It was sold to Adcuram Prefabricated Technology Holding , which also includes Bien-Zenker .

Key figures

  • Real estate portfolio value: around 2.7 billion euros
  • Employees: around 200

Reference objects

Bikini Berlin
m.pire

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Management - Bayerische Hausbau GmbH . Retrieved May 19, 2011.
  2. a b www.hausbau.de .
  3. a b sug-munich.com: The Schörghuber Group can look back on a successful 2017 in all four business areas
  4. http://www.hausbau.de/unternehmen/firmenprofil.html
  5. www.bueroanzeiger.de ( Memento from August 21, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  6. www.sueddeutsche.de ( Memento from February 12, 2013 in the web archive archive.today )
  7. a b Adcuram: Beteiligungen - Hanse Haus ( Memento of the original from January 21, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.adcuram.de
  8. Der Spiegel: Savior or Redeemer , February 2, 1984
  9. a b Münchner Merkur: The feud began in 1981 , April 12, 1995, page 13
  10. Ekkehard Müller-Jentsch: OB is a lasting reminder of selling under value. In: Süddeutsche Zeitung. 17th June 1992.
  11. Münchner Merkur: Schörghuber wins the dispute over the building land gift , April 12, 1995, page 13
  12. http://www.hausbau.de/unternehmen/firmenprofil.html
  13. http://www.hausbau.de/unternehmen/firmenprofil.html
  14. Immopro24.eu ( Memento from February 13, 2013 in the web archive archive.today )
  15. hausbau.de, "Neue Bayerische Immobilien Management takes over WEG business". ( Memento from August 21, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  16. http://www.hausbau.de/unternehmen/firmenprofil.html
  17. ^ Real estate newspaper , "Bayerische Hausbau rented to Sodexo".
  18. ndr.de ( Memento from February 24, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) Esso houses: Tenants are not allowed on balconies
  19. sueddeutsche.de , "Movement in the pedestrian zone".
  20. https://www.milaneo.com/das-center/ueber-uns/ueber-uns/
  21. ^ Thomas Daily , "Stuttgart: Contract signed for Quartier am Mailänder Platz".
  22. Munich evening newspaper , "Welfenhöfe: Munich's largest construction site".