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The Dreiseenplatte in the Munich district of Feldmoching-Hasenbergl , northwest of the Olympic Park consists of 1969/70 redesigned quarry ponds, which were created in the 1930s by removing gravel for construction work by the Deutsche Reichsbahn at a high-performance shunting yard in the north of Munich . All three bathing lakes are EU bathing waters and have extensive sunbathing lawns with various leisure options. Groundwater flows through them heavily at the bottom.

Lerchenauer See

The Lerchenauer See in the district of the same name , on Lassallestrasse , is the smallest lake in the Dreiseenplatte with an area of ​​around 7.9 hectares, a volume of 38,200 m 3 , an average depth of 4.6 m and a maximum depth of 7.9 m . It was redesigned from 1967 according to plans by the landscape architect Alfred Reich , and in 1974 the measures were completed. It takes 86 days to renew the water and provides relaxation for up to 8,000 people. The Lerchenau water rescue station on the south bank, built in 2016, is manned on weekends and public holidays during the bathing season from the beginning of May to the end of September. On the south bank there is an approx. 5 hectare green area with a playground and toboggan hill. North of the lake are four 15-story high-rise buildings built in the 1960s.

Fasaneriesee

The Fasaneriesee on Feldmochinger Straße in the Fasanerie-Nord district has an area of ​​14.7 hectares. The lake, which is otherwise an average of 5.7 meters and up to 8.5 meters deep, is also accessible to non-swimmers thanks to the shallow areas that have been piled up. On the west bank there are several volleyball and table tennis courts, a large lawn for soccer, badminton or frisbee, and a small skate park.

Feldmoching's first cemetery is on the northern edge of the lake. Here were about 600 1939-1941 Baiuvarii series tombs discovered, presumably from the period between 550 n. Chr. Originate to 700 n. Chr..

Feldmochinger See

The Feldmochinger See is located on Karlsfelder Straße in the Feldmoching district and has an area of ​​15.5 hectares and a max. The third largest lake in the Munich metropolitan area is 6.1 m deep. There is space for up to 12,000 bathers on the approximately 13 hectare sunbathing lawn. On the north side there is barrier-free access to the water and a sports facility that offers beach volleyball, among other things. In the south-east there is a biotope with an observation tower , in the south-west the nudist area. The lake is fed by three sources and flows into the Kalterbach , which leads to good water quality and average water temperatures between 18 and 23 ° C. The walk around the lake is 2.25 kilometers long.

photos

Traffic situation

Car

Parking with direct access can be found at Lerchenauer See at the parking lot on Lassallestrasse. Parking facilities at Fasaneriesee are on Feldmochinger Straße (approximately at the level of Schnepfenweg) and on Lerchenauer Straße opposite the Spielvereinigung Feldmoching clubhouse. The Feldmochinger See offers its visitors a large parking area on Karlsfelder Straße, which is chargeable in summer.

Public transportation

The Fasaneriesee is a few minutes' walk from the Fasanerie S-Bahn station . Lerchenauer See (bus stop Lerchenauer See or Max-Wönner-Straße, Metrobus line 60) and Feldmochinger See (bus stop Feldmochinger See, city bus route 172) can be reached. The closest train is the U3 underground station Olympia-shopping center in the south, underground station Oberwiesenfeld in the southeast and U2 Feldmoching in the northeast.

bicycle

On the corridor at the former train station Munich Olympic Stadium one is Highline -like Park bond towards Olympic Park planned and downtown. A bike path leads over the Olympic Park, Feldbahnstrasse and Heidelerchenstrasse to Lerchenauer See and further along Lerchenauer Strasse to Fasaneriesee.

See also

Web links

Commons : Lerchenauer See  - Collection of images, videos and audio files
Commons : Fasaneriesee  - Collection of images, videos and audio files
Commons : Feldmochinger See  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Ulrich Schneider, Susanne Hutter-v. Knorring: Municipal green planning in Munich , in: Stadt + Grün, May 2005, pp. 7–14 (p. 9) ( Memento from March 5, 2016 in the Internet Archive )
  2. a b c d e f O. Siebeck: The influence of lake depth and groundwater inflow on the stability of the density stratification in quarry ponds . In: Natural Sciences . tape 66 , 1979, pp. 361-362 , doi : 10.1007 / BF00368474 .
  3. ^ Swimming lakes Munich Lerchenauer See. In: muenchen.de . Portal München Betriebs-GmbH & Co. KG, accessed on February 27, 2020 .
  4. Lifeboat Station / Kunze Seeholzer Architects. In: ArchDaily.com . November 22, 2016, accessed February 27, 2020 .
  5. http://www.muenchen.de/freizeit/orte/119337.html
  6. https://www.merkur.de/bayern/badeseen-special-feldmochinger-see-835468.html
  7. http://www.abendzeitung-muenchen.de/inhalt.stadt-kauf-grundstuecke-radlweg-durch-den-alten-olympiabahnhof.4044f08b-0a46-4f18-8c9c-97c7b2488dbc.html
  8. http://www.muenchen.de/rathaus/dms/Home/Stadtverwaltung/Referat-fuer-Stadtplanung-und-Bauordnung/Projekte/Rahmenplanung-Olympiapark/rahmenplanung_olympiapark.pdf
  9. City of Munich Editors: Radlrouten in Munich. Retrieved August 29, 2019 .

Coordinates: 48 ° 12 '  N , 11 ° 32'  E