Goldachhof (Ismaning)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Goldachhof (2014)

The Goldachhof is a listed manor in Erdinger Moos (file number D-1-84-130-12).

history

At the beginning of the 19th century , work began to dry up the moss area between Erding and Ismaning . The land belonging to Ismaning was divided among the existing properties. In addition, new farms were built in the moss, including the “Klitschner Hof” in 1853, which later became the Goldachhof estate.

In its current form, it was erected in 1896 about three kilometers east of Ismaning (Upper Bavaria) on the left (eastern) bank of the Große Goldach . At that time it was still on the ground of the community of Aschheim , the reorganization to the more accessible Ismaning did not take place until 1914.

court

The facility is a three-sided courtyard . The buildings belonging to the property are spread out around a fenced-in courtyard. A large two-story manor house stands on the west side of the courtyard. The masonry of the ground floor and the corners are rusticated .

The establishment of the Goldachhof is closely linked to the cultivation of the Erdinger Moos in the 19th century. In the 1870s, the settler Andreas Mayerbacher acquired a 700-day-work piece of land and converted it into arable land. His originally built farm burned down completely in 1896. As a result, today's spacious facility was built. During the construction of the new courtyard, Mayerbacher went into debt. Eventually he had to give up his property. In 1906 the farm was auctioned.

Therese Randlkofer from Munich, the owner of the royal Bavarian purveyor, Dallmayr , became the new mistress . She successfully expanded the estate into a supplier for her delicatessen business. After the end of the Second World War , the Randlkofer family had to give up the Goldachhof in order to finance the reconstruction of the destroyed parent company in Munich.

The Goldachhof was acquired by the municipality of Ismaning in 2010 after several changes of ownership, a fire in the stables in 1998 and vacancy since 2002 with further damage caused by vandalism; the listed buildings, manor house, staff house and hydropower plant are currently being renovated.

Court chapel

Court chapel

Mayerbacher built his own chapel opposite the manor house around 1900 . A small sacred building was built over a square floor plan in the neo-baroque style . In the north-facing apse of the chapel there is also a neo-baroque wooden figure of St. Sebastian . The tent roof is closed with a small onion hood . In 1999 parts of the manor burned down. The decay was very advanced by 2012, but renovation of the yard began in 2013. The chapel has since been renovated.

Outbuildings

The building complex also includes the single-storey saddle roof building east of the chapel. The roof of the elongated wing of the T-shaped house is adorned with numerous standing dormers .

In the southwest corner of the property is a hydroelectric power station that supplied the yard with electricity. The power plant, which fell into disrepair more and more over the past four decades, has been restored in accordance with a listed building and is now producing electricity again.

Gutsallee

Gutsallee

Another listed avenue of maple trees leads to the Goldachhof . It is about 700 meters long and leads from the Nudelgraben in a north-easterly direction to the estate. The group of trees was created in 1912 by Therese Randlkofer in memory of her deceased husband Adolf and today forms the eastern part of Mayerbacherstraße. Gaps caused by environmental influences have been closed in recent years through targeted reforestation .

Individual evidence

  1. Between Goldach and Seebach ( Memento of the original from January 18, 2014 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.ismaninger.de
  2. Klitschner on original position sheet 669 Ismaning
  3. Cornelia Oelwein: Between Goldach and Seebach. The history of the Goldachhof and moss cultivation in Ismaning, Munich: Franz Schiermeier Verlag 2013, page 79, ISBN 978-3-943866-22-3 .

literature

  • Cornelia Oelwein: Between Goldach and Seebach . The history of the Goldachhof and moss cultivation in Ismaning. Verlag Franz Schiermeier, Munich 2013, ISBN 978-3-943866-22-3 .

Web links

Commons : Goldachhof  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Coordinates: 48 ° 13 ′ 52 ″  N , 11 ° 44 ′ 3 ″  E