Gasthaus Spiegl

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Gasthaus Spiegl from the southwest

The Gasthaus Spiegl is a guest house in the district Moosach in Munich ; it is one of the oldest restaurants in Moosach and is a listed building .

Location and architecture

The inn at Feldmochinger Strasse 38 is on the northwest corner of Pelkovenstrasse on the eastern edge of the old Moosach village center.

It is an elongated, ground-floor building with a gable roof , eaves facing Pelkovenstraße, on which the entrance and a small garden in front are also located. On the gable side facing Feldmochinger Strasse, windows above the “Gasthaus Spiegl” logo let light into the two attic floors. All windows are equipped with folding shutters. A profiled ornamental cornice runs below the roof . The original function of the building as Sölde can still be seen today.

The interior of the inn is kept in a simple, home-style style and dates from the second half of the 20th century.

history

The Gasthaus Spiegl is one of the oldest preserved restaurants in Moosach. It was the fourth establishment to be licensed there .

The property became the property of Georg and Anna Kohlenberger in 1849; this is probably also the year of construction of the current building. Originally it served as a Söldenhaus. In 1876 Michael Hagenbucher bought the house and opened a restaurant there called "Karlwirt". Initially, the Spaten brewery delivered the beer. Hagenbucher later sold his inn to the Salvator brewery . Franz Xaver Spiegl, a Munich butcher, born in Moosach, bought the property from the Salvator brewery in 1898 and applied for the license to be transferred in June. In the same year he expanded the inn and built a summer bowling alley along Pelkovenstrasse. After Franz Xaver Spiegl's death, his children Franz Xaver junior, Babette and Amalie took over the business; In addition, as with its predecessors, agriculture was continued. At the end of October 1962, the Löwenbrauerei took over the inn. The bowling alley was demolished in 1971 to make way for a widening of Pelkovenstrasse for the 1972 Olympic Games . From 1987 until its closure at the end of December 2017, the restaurant was run by the Mutzhas family. In mid-2019, the Augustiner brewery bought the house in need of renovation in order to reopen it as an inn after a renovation.

literature

  • Volker D. Laturell : Moosach - origin and development history of a Munich district. Volume II: From 1800 to the present. Tins, Munich 1985, p. 278 f.
  • Volker D. Laturell, Georg Mooseder: Moosach - past and present. Hugendubel, Munich 1993, ISBN 3-88034-742-5 , p. 113.
  • Volker D. Laturell: Moosach - the district book for the 10th district with the districts Borstei, Hartmannshofen, Moosach, Nederling and Olympia-Pressestadt. Bavarica-Verlag, Munich 2001, ISBN 3-935440-02-2 , p. 119.

Web links

Commons : Gasthaus Spiegl  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Linda Jessen: 'After 31 years. Sad farewell to the Spiegl host ' . Evening newspaper digital from January 20, 2018
  2. One of the oldest restaurants in Munich is empty - that's the rescue plan. In: www.merkur.de. June 4, 2019, accessed January 8, 2020 .

Coordinates: 48 ° 10 ′ 55 ″  N , 11 ° 31 ′ 18 ″  E