Iberl restaurant

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Iberl restaurant in Munich Solln

The Iberl restaurant is a restaurant in the Solln district of Munich . The building is registered as an architectural monument in the Bavarian list of monuments. In the restaurant from 1966 to May 2014, Georg Maier's ensemble played traditional and modern folk theater as the Iberl stage . Since October 2014 Sibylla Abenteuer, who has been the tenant of the restaurant since 2005, has also been running the theater under the name Sollner Kultbühne .

history

Brickworks at Warnberg on a historical map from 1873/1875, on the road north of the grove at the lower edge of the map (now Waldfriedhof Solln ) the house with the bar (shaded gray)

The core of the building dates from around 1830. The founder of the inn was Josef Iberl (1835–1880), who came from the Upper Palatinate. He had acquired a large property on the Warnberg and had been running a brick factory there since 1862 . He poured beer in the house for the workers in his and neighboring brickworks.

When the clay deposits became scarce and the end of the brickworks was in sight , the Munich sculptor Josef Heppner , who was married to Josef Iberl's daughter Anna and continued the bar with her, obtained a general license as a bar. Heppner was a member of the Munich artists' association Die Raben , and thanks to their support the concession, which had initially been refused due to the proximity of the restaurants in Pullach and Großhesselohe, was granted in 1888. In 1889 Josef Heppner took over Anton Köck's inn in Pullach and named it Gasthof Rabenwirt after the artists' association .

The Iberl restaurant was continued by Katharina Iberl, the wife of the late Josef Iberl, and later by her son Josef (1873–1941), who was temporarily the second mayor of Solln. Since 1937 the restaurant has been owned by the Spaten-Franziskaner-Brauerei , which had been supplying the beer since 1910.

In 1966 Georg Maier leased the restaurant and founded the Iberl stage there . The theater opened in December 1966 with the performance of the play Die Meistersinger von Schwabing . Probably the best known dialect singing game, the "Grattleroper" by Gerhard Loew, who was also the author of all successful pieces until 1981, was performed more than 500 times.

From 2005 Sibylla and Klaus Abenteuer, who have also been running the Rabenwirt inn in Pullach since 2000, ran the Iberl restaurant. In the summer of 2006 the building was completely refurbished and renovated. In May 2014 Georg Maier moved out with his stage and into Munich city center. From October 2014 folk theater was staged again in the Iberl under the name Sollner Kultbühne . Theater director Sibylla Abenteuer mixed plays with a music and cabaret program. The restaurant and stage were closed again in summer 2019.

building

The building is a country house in the style of historicism . The component from the middle of the 19th century is a single-storey saddle roof building with a ridge perpendicular to the street. It extends over an area of ​​about 13 × 22 m. The extension from 1920 in the east facing the street is a two-story, three-axis hipped roof building with a ridge parallel to the street. It extends over an area of ​​about 13 × 5 m. The gable roof of the old building is very steep and almost reaches the ridge height of the extension. To the west, towards the courtyard, the old building has an extension of around 13 × 6 m covered with a flat pent roof, in which the theater hall with the stage is located.

literature

  • Denis A. Chevalley, Timm Weski: State Capital Munich - Southwest (= Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation [Hrsg.]: Monuments in Bavaria . Volume I.2 / 2 ). Karl M. Lipp Verlag, Munich 2004, ISBN 3-87490-584-5 , p. 682 .

Web links

Commons : Gaststätte Iberl  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Restaurant Iberl at the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation
  2. Chronicle. In: Iberl's Gasthaus. Accessed January 31, 2019 (German).
  3. "It was good, it was fine, it's over". Süddeutsche Zeitung, August 20, 2019, accessed on January 6, 2020 .

Coordinates: 48 ° 4 ′ 15.1 ″  N , 11 ° 30 ′ 52.8 ″  E