Gasthof Rabenwirt

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Gasthof Rabenwirt

The Rabenwirt is an inn in Pullach in the Isar Valley . The building is registered as an architectural monument in the Bavarian list of monuments.

location

The Gasthof Rabenwirt is located at Kirchplatz 1 in Pullach north of the Heilig Geist parish church . The terrace of the inn is located directly on the edge of the Isar high bank with a 500 m² terrace with a view of the Isar valley .

history

As early as the 18th century, beer was served at the site of today's inn on Sundays and public holidays following Holy Mass. It was not until 1852 that a full license was granted for a bar. However, the first parts of the building were erected before 1850. Because of the workers employed in the railway construction and the nearby quarries, most of whom had immigrated from abroad, the “Köck'sche Gastwirtschaft”, named after its owner at the time, soon became very popular. With the opening of the Großhesselohe train station , day-trippers also came to Pullach, so that the restaurant became a destination for excursions.

In 1889 the Munich sculptor Josef Heppner, who until then had run the Iberl restaurant together with his wife Anna Iberl, leased the inn from the then owner Anton Köck. Heppner was a member of the Munich artists' association "Die Raben", which often met in the Pullach restaurant Heppner and after which it was finally renamed the Rabenwirt .

Another influx of visitors, from which the inn profited, was the opening of the Isar Valley Railway's Pullach station in 1890 . In 1899 Josef Heppner was able to buy, renovate and expand the inn. In 1904, he had the architect Franz Rank build a villa building with halls, bowling alleys, pub rooms and cafés directly on the northernmost slope of the property . All in all, the inn offered space for around 5000 guests in the various rooms and halls as well as on the viewing terrace.

As a result of the First World War, the economic crisis and the death of the host family during this time, the excursion destinations not only changed due to the expansion and extension of the Isar Valley Railway to Kochel, but also the demands of this time. Josef Heppner's heirs sold the business in the 1930s as a family marriage. In 1985 the building began to be generously renovated after a long period of inactivity - this continued until 2015. In 2000 Klaus and Sibylla Abenteuer took over the inn and continued the renovations with the house owner. Since 2005 they have also managed the Iberl restaurant in Solln and since 2013 the Isartaler brewery formerly Isarbräu in the Grosshesselohe district.

description

The inn is a two-storey gable roof building in a rural style over an L-shaped floor plan. The long leg at the church square is about 50 m long, the shorter at its southern end about 17 m. Both wings are about 10 m wide. The facade on the church square has 22 window axes and optically closes this square off to the east.

The outbuilding at the north end of the viewing terrace, formerly also known as the hall building, is more of a villa style than the simple rural main building. The centerpiece is a two-storey mansard - hipped roof building with a polygonal bay window to the left of the central axis. Several lower wing buildings are attached to this villa building, including a building with several basement floors protruding into the Isar valley.

literature

Web links

Commons : Gasthof Rabenwirt  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Gasthof Rabenwirt at the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation

Coordinates: 48 ° 3 '23.3 "  N , 11 ° 31' 25"  E