Heilmannstrasse 27

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Heilmannstrasse 27

The house at Heilmannstrasse 27 in Munich is a villa . It is located in the Prinz-Ludwigs-Höhe villa colony in the Thalkirchen district of Munich . The building is registered as an architectural monument in the Bavarian list of monuments.

history

In essence, the villa goes back to the "Waldrestauration Prinz Ludwigshöhe" built in the late 19th century, an excursion inn with a beer garden surrounded by forest, which at that time was the only building in the area of ​​the later villa colony. In 1893, diagonally opposite the inn, a station for the Isar Valley Railway, which went into operation in 1891, was built .

After purchasing the land for the villa colony, Jakob Heilmann also bought the inn in 1894. From 1901 to 1902 it was rebuilt and expanded by Jakob Heilmann and Max Littmann . After the renovation, the building became the seat of the Daughter Institute Prinz-Ludwigshöhe in 1903 , a boarding school for girls from middle-class families that also took in external students.

In 1915 Josephine Oberhummer, a daughter of Jakob Heilmann, who together with her husband Roman Oberhummer already owned the neighboring property at Heilmannstrasse 25 , acquired the property. After the death of her husband in 1944 and the seizure of the neighboring villa by the Americans after the Second World War , she and her daughter lived here. After the daughter's death in 1998, the house was sold by the heirs and then heavily rebuilt. A modern cube building was erected south of the main building, where the outbuildings with stable, coach house and coachman's apartment used to be.

architecture

The house is about 30 m long and 15 m wide and its broad side faces west to the street. It is two stories high and has a clapboard knee stick facing the street . The Western Bauhälfte carries a two-storey traufständiges gable roof , to the eastward, a hipped roof connects.

The entrance to the west has a covered porch. The garden facade in the east is accentuated by a high gable with large windows. The property is closed to the street with a garden wall in the form of a pergola , which is also a listed building.

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. 287 .
  • Dorle Gribl : Josephine Oberhummer - Heilmannstrasse 27 . In: Solln and the Prince Ludwigs-Höhe: Villas and their residents . Volk Verlag, Munich 2012, ISBN 978-3-86222-043-4 , pp. 191-192 .

Web links

Commons : Heilmannstraße 27  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. List of monuments for Munich (PDF) at the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation. Retrieved November 11, 2018 (monument number D-1-62-000-2465 )

Coordinates: 48 ° 4 ′ 51.7 ″  N , 11 ° 32 ′ 11.1 ″  E