Kirchenweg 1 (Unterföhring)

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Kirchenweg 1 from the northeast
OSO facade

The Kirchenweg 1 building in Unterföhring is the former rectory of the Munich suburb. It was built as a villa in 1901 by the Unterföhringer innkeeper and brickworks owner Sebastian Beer in a harmonious mix of styles from Neo-Renaissance , Art Nouveau and Heimatstil .

history

Sebastian Beer, who had come to considerable wealth, had the villa built for himself and his wife Barbara (whose initials are attached to the facade) as a befitting residence. But already in 1904 it had to be auctioned and so came to the Munich entrepreneur Georg Brambichler. In 1916 his children, including the cathedral beneficiary Joseph Brambichler, inherited the building. When Unterföhring became an independent parish in 1923, the villa was acquired as a parsonage with the help of a special campaign by local farmers. At the end of 2000, the congregation bought the building and from 2003, after the pastor moved into the new parish center, had it extensively renovated for € 1,500,000 according to the plans from 1899. Today the villa is used by several institutions, including a crèche, a neighborhood help and the registry office for weddings.

description

The villa presents itself as a multi-part building with a protruding half-hipped and hipped roof, eastern loggia (balcony above) and southeast corner bay tower with onion dome. The window frame gables and the balcony parapets are in the neo-renaissance style, the roof design and the ornamental framework on the turret in the local style. The rest of the decoration on the building, especially the stucco reliefs on the gable (with the initials coat of arms), loggia and balcony rear wall are clearly influenced by Art Nouveau. Inside there is a wrought-iron staircase and in various rooms ceiling stucco and decorative paintings in the prevailing styles of late historicism and art nouveau.

literature

Web links

Commons : Pfarrhaus (Unterföhring)  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Georg Paula , Timm Weski: District of Munich (= Bavarian State Office for the Preservation of Monuments [Hrsg.]: Monuments in Bavaria . Volume I.17 ). Karl M. Lipp Verlag, Munich 1997, ISBN 3-87490-576-4 , p. 318 .

Coordinates: 48 ° 11 ′ 33.2 "  N , 11 ° 38 ′ 24.7"  E