Höchl-Schlössl

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View from the west

The Höchl-Schlössl is a listed building ( BLfD -ID: D-1-62-000-4935) former artist's villa in Munich 's Bogenhausen district . It was built in the 19th century as a residential property by the city ​​architect Joseph Höchl (March 6, 1777 - January 6, 1838) in what is now the Am Priel district and, after his death, by his son, the architectural painter Anton Höchl (February 6, 1818 - February 21 1897), who organized artist festivals here.

history

In 1808, Joseph Höchl acquired the former electoral brickworks on Priel from the financial clerk Hubertus von Steiner for 17,000 guilders, and a short time later another brickworks in Bogenhausen. These brick factories made him wealthy and, as the largest building contractor in the city at the time of King Ludwig I, made him an important Munich personality. In addition to his property at Rosental 15 in downtown Munich, Joseph Höchl had the property built at Spervogelstrasse 12 in St. Emmeram (today Munich- Oberföhring ) as well as the classicist villa known as Höchl-Schlössl, which his son Anton Höchl extended in 1852 . Anton Höchl used the villa as a meeting point for artists, where u. a. Duke Max, known as Zithermaxl , frequented Bavaria . After Anton Höchl's death, the property came to his niece, whose heirs sold it in 1926 with 45.7 hectares of land to the City of Munich, which still owns it today, and who had it divided into apartments in 1957. The villa has been a listed building since 1982 (file no. D-1-62-000-4935); After 1982 a complete renovation took place.

location

The Höchl-Schlössl is located at Odinstraße 29 (previously Am Priel 42, originally Am Priel 4, later 7) behind the Bogenhausen Clinic on the edge of the Wotanshain or Odinshain and not far from the Schlösselgarten allotment garden in Munich's 13th district of Bogenhausen. Civic use is being considered.

investment

View from the east side

The villa, located in a park, is a country house in the classical style with two simple floors. It has a projecting three-axis central projection with a further storey and a triangular gable with a small roof turret and two lower, symmetrical side wings, each with three axes. The list of monuments names an Immaculata figure and a relief . Before it was converted into a tenement house, the property had a library, a house chapel and others on the first floor. a. a salon. The utility rooms were arranged on the ground floor.

Individual evidence

  1. Fritz Lutz: From the past of the Priel ..., p. 101

literature

  • Fritz Lutz : From the past of the Priel near Munich-Bogenhausen . Krailling near Munich: self-published, 1992, without ISBN.
  • Fritz Lutz: A Munich architectural painter and patron: Anton Höchl (1818–1897), honorary member of the Historical Association of Upper Bavaria , in: Upper Bavarian Archive, 112th volume, Munich 1988.
  • Karin Bernst / Willibald Karl: Gallery of the "Loambarone", in: Erich Kasberger / Winfried Eckardt (eds.): LehmZiegelStadt. The raw material in Munich's city history. Volk Verlag Munich 2008, ISBN 978-3-937200-52-1 . P. 85 ff. (With elevation of the Schlössl 1926 from the building file of the local building commission Munich Am Priel 42a + b, Odinstraße 29/32).
  • Dieter Groß: The history of the Höchl-Schlössel . In: Kleingartenverein Schlösselgarten eV, short history of the facility. 1986.

Web links

Commons : Höchl-Schlössl  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Coordinates: 48 ° 9 ′ 27 ″  N , 11 ° 37 ′ 26 ″  E