List of architectural monuments in Milbertshofen
This page lists the monuments in the Milbertshofen district of Munich in the 11 Milbertshofen-Am Hart district . There is also a picture collection and a photo album with selected pictures for these monuments . This list is part of the list of architectural monuments in Munich . The basis is the Bavarian Monument List , which was first created on the basis of the Bavarian Monument Protection Act of October 1, 1973 and has since been maintained and updated by the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation . The following information does not replace the legally binding information from the monument protection authority.
Ensembles
- Olympic Park . - Boundary: The area delimited by Landshuter Allee in the west, Triebstrasse and Moosacher Strasse in the north, Lerchenauer Strasse in the east and the foot line of the Olympiaberg and the course of the Nymphenburg-Biederstein Canal in the south describes an ensemble of historical, artistic and urban significance. It contains in an artificially designed landscape park, under the landmark of the Olympic Tower , which is used to host the XX. Sports facilities laid out for the 1972 Olympic Games along with the associated ancillary facilities and traffic facilities, as well as the Olympic Village . The BMW high-rise building with the BMW Museum , which wasbuilt at the same time as the Olympic buildings and related to them,is just as little included in the boundary as the former press town west of Landshuter Allee. In the overall structure of the Olympic Park, which was completed by 1972, two large complexes are clearly differentiated from each other andsharply separatedby the wide, east-west running, the area bisecting the traffic belt of the Middle Ring : in the south the main sports facilities ( stadium , sports hall , swimming pool ), which is the heart of the facility form, and in the north the Olympic Village. Ancillary facilities are added to these large complexes:apartfrom the pre-Olympic buildings of the ice rink and the telecommunications tower, it is above all the university sports facility west of the Olympic village and the bike stadium in the southwest corner of the site in the gusset between Landshuter Allee and the canal. In addition, there are a number of ground-level facilities, such as the various playing, sports and training fields as well as the large, sickle-shaped parking bays around the west side of the stadium. (E-1-62-000-70)
Individual structures
location | object | description | File no. | image |
---|---|---|---|---|
Alter St.-Georgs-Platz 4 ( location ) |
Residential building | Two-storey free-standing saddle roof building, probably first half of the 19th century | D-1-62-000-222 |
more pictures |
Alter St.-Georgs-Platz 5 ( location ) |
Residential building | Two-storey free-standing saddle roof building, around 1850 | D-1-62-000-223 |
more pictures |
Alter St.-Georgs-Platz 6 ( location ) |
Old Catholic Church of St. George | Late Gothic building around 1510 with a saddle tower, converted into a chapel after being destroyed in the war; with equipment; Surrounded by a former cemetery. In the center of Milbertshofen | D-1-62-000-224 |
more pictures |
Am Olympiapark 2 ( location ) |
Administration building of Bayerische Motorenwerke AG (BMW) | Assembly of a flat company building, high-rise office building (99 m high) and museum , by Karl Schwanzer , 1970–1972; High-rise, so-called four-cylinder, heavily articulated, 18-storey building on a clover-leaf floor plan, suspended construction around four-section reinforced concrete posts, ventilated facade made of cast aluminum elements, horizontal separation above the eleventh floor; Museum, concrete bowl in the shape of a pressed spherical cap, painted silver-gray | D-1-62-000-7929 |
more pictures |
Anhalter Platz 3 ( location ) |
High bunker | Five-storey tower with an octagonal floor plan with a horizontal roof and flak construction, built in 1941 as air raid shelter No. 3 according to plans by the municipal building department (Stadtbaurat Karl Meitinger ); freestanding | D-1-62-000-7809 |
more pictures |
Coubertinplatz 1 ( location ) |
Olympic swimming pool | Framed by steel and glass walls over an irregular floor plan and covered by a tent roof, four-basin system with a one-sided stand made of reinforced concrete modules based on the artificial embankment of Coubertin-Platz in the west, by Günter Behnisch and partners , 1967–1972; The tent roof in the form of a rope net construction with an acrylic glass plate cover that is tensioned over a pylon, based on a design by Behnisch and Partner, Frei Otto as well as Fritz Leonhard and Wolf Andrä; Attached technical walkways; Visually connected to the Olympic Hall by spanning the access from Lilian-Board- and Lutz-Long-Weg | D-1-62-000-7893 |
more pictures |
Dewetstrasse 18 ( location ) |
Tenement house | Two-storey mansard roof building with raised floor bay and Art Nouveau stucco decor, around 1900 | D-1-62-000-1268 | |
Dewetstrasse 19 ( location ) |
villa | Two-story neo-baroque mansard roof building with floor bay window and curved gable, around 1900 | D-1-62-000-1269 | |
Georgenschwaigstrasse 15 ( location ) |
villa | Two-storey historicizing pitched roof building with transversely attached mansard roof wing and arbor, 1905 | D-1-62-000-2078 | |
Georgenschwaigstraße 17 ( location ) |
Tenement house | Three-storey mansard roof building with corner tower and plaster structure, simplified by J. Koll, 1913 | D-1-62-000-2079 | |
Georgenschwaigstraße 23 ( location ) |
Tenement house | Simply baroque, by Hans Koll in 1899, in 1908 mansard roof with extension | D-1-62-000-2080 | |
Georgenschwaigstraße 25 ( location ) |
Tenement house | Three-storey mansard roof building with gable and historicizing facade structure, around 1900 | D-1-62-000-2081 |
more pictures |
Georgenschwaigstraße 28 ( location ) |
Tenement house | Three-storey hipped mansard roof building in a corner position with a gable and facade structure in neo-renaissance forms, end of the 19th century | D-1-62-000-2082 | |
Georgenschwaigstraße 31 ( location ) |
Small corner house | Two-storey hipped mansard roof with facade structure in neo-renaissance forms, end of the 19th century | D-1-62-000-2083 | |
Georgenschwaigstraße 42 ( location ) |
Tenement house | Three-storey, plastered, hipped mansard roof corner building in neo-renaissance forms with tower-like corner projections and stucco decoration, around 1900 | D-1-62-000-2084 | |
Helene-Mayer-Ring 23/25 ( location ) |
Olympic Village Ecumenical Church Center | Consisting of the Catholic parish church Peace Christ and the Evangelical Lutheran Olympic Church with community rooms, reinforced concrete construction with tubular steel framework as ceiling construction over a massive basement, in structural form, by Bernhard Christ and Josef Karg, 1970–1974; with equipment; Bordered by green on both long sides | D-1-62-000-8458 |
more pictures |
Kantstrasse 20 ( location ) |
Picturesque villa | Two-storey historicizing mansard hipped roof building in a corner position with a crooked hipped roof projection, corner bay tower and plaster structure, around 1900 | D-1-62-000-3213 | |
Knorrstrasse 12 ( location ) |
Picturesque small villa | Two-storey hipped roof building in historicizing forms with partially boarded gable, staircase tower with dome roof and plaster structure, by Josef Rank, 1898 | D-1-62-000-3518 | |
Knorrstrasse 53 ( location ) |
villa | Two-storey hipped roof building in neo-renaissance forms with a curved gable, rusticated facade and stucco decoration, by Josef Thaler, 1898 | D-1-62-000-3519 |
more pictures |
Lerchenauer Straße 53 ( location ) |
High bunker | Five-storey round tower with horizontal closure, built in 1941 as air raid shelter No. 2 according to plans by the municipal building department, free-standing | D-1-62-000-7810 | |
Milbertshofener Platz 1 ( location ) |
Catholic parish church of St. George | Baroque building, 1910–1912 by Eduard Herbert and Otho Orlando Kurz ; with equipment; Assembly in the middle of the square with No. 2 | D-1-62-000-4550 |
more pictures |
Milbertshofener Platz 2 ( location ) |
Catholic rectory of St. George | 1928 by Friedrich Haindl; Assembly in the middle of the square with No. 1 | D-1-62-000-4551 |
more pictures |
Moosacher Straße 80 ( location ) |
Knorr Bremse AG | Former South German brakes AG and originally Bayerische Motoren or Rapp Motoren Werke, the since World War extensive plants built main gate (building E and F) and administrative building (building B), both in neoclassical style by the architect Edward Herbert and short Otho Orlando built ; Main gate along the street with two long flanking wings, 1917/18; northwest of that handsome Walmdachbau with entrance portal site built as a storage and office building four wings around courtyard 1918/19 | D-1-62-000-7840 |
more pictures |
Olympic Center ( location ) |
Olympiazentrum underground station | U-Bahn stations of the Olympia U-Bahn line , a series of five stations, by the U-Bahn department of the City of Munich under the direction of Garabede Chabasian, 1968–72
Olympiazentrum underground station, underground stop with two platforms and four tracks, rear track wall design by Waki Zöllner |
D-1-62-000-10051 |
more pictures |
Riesenfeldstrasse 2 ( location ) |
High bunker | Five-storey round tower with horizontal roof termination and flak terrace, clad in exposed brickwork, entrances with natural stone walls, built in 1941 according to plans of the municipal building authority (Stadtbaurat Karl Meitinger ) as air raid shelter No. 1, free-standing | D-1-62-000-7811 | |
Schleißheimer Straße 263 ( location ) |
Tenement house | Neo-Renaissance corner building, with two bay windows, by Philipp Sturm, 1899 | D-1-62-000-6214 | |
Schleißheimer Straße 271/273 ( location ) |
City block | Art Nouveau, with floor bay and stucco decoration, early 20th century; Madonna relief | D-1-62-000-6215 | |
Schleißheimer Straße 299 ( location ) |
villa | Baroque style, with stucco decor, built in 1911 by Hans Denzinger as his own house | D-1-62-000-6217 | |
Spiridon-Louis-Ring 7 ( location ) |
Television tower | So-called Olympic Tower, built from 1965–1968 as a reinforced concrete structure by the building department of the City of Munich based on a design by Sebastian Rosenthal in cooperation with the Bundespost ; Two groups of platforms above a tapered parabolic shaft; in the lower transmission and telecommunications technology, in the upper revolving restaurant and viewing platforms; Cylindrical stepped mast tip; Total height 290 meters; Cash desk and restaurant building on the east side | D-1-62-000-7890 |
more pictures |
Spiridon-Louis-Ring 21 ( location ) |
Olympia Hall | An amphitheater made of reinforced concrete modules, arranged around the sports arena, facing the artificial embankment of Coubertin-Platz, framed by curved steel-glass walls and covered by a tent roof, 1967–1972 by Günter Behnisch and partners ; the tent roof based on a design by Fritz Leonhard , Wolf Andrä and partners in the form of a rope net construction with pylons with an acrylic sheet cover; suspended technical bridges; Center piece of the group of three of the large Olympic sports facilities consisting of the stadium, Olympic hall and swimming pool, visually bound by the roof shapes | D-1-62-000-7892 |
more pictures |
Spiridon-Louis-Ring 25 ( location ) |
Olympic Stadium | Ovaloid amphitheater made of reinforced concrete modules, arranged around the football field and running track, in the east based on the artificial embankment of Coubertin-Platz, 1967–1972 by Günter Behnisch and partners ; over the grandstand bowl towering in the west, tent roof designed by Fritz Leonhard , Wolf Andrä and partners, in the form of a rope network with pylons and an acrylic sheet cover; Visually connected to the Olympic Hall by the canvas-like accentuation of the Hanns-Braun-Brücke | D-1-62-000-7891 |
more pictures |
Remarks
- ↑ This list may not correspond to the current status of the official list of monuments. The latter can be viewed on the Internet as a PDF using the link given under web links and is also mapped in the Bavarian Monument Atlas . Even these representations, although they are updated daily by the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation , do not always and everywhere reflect the current status. Therefore, the presence or absence of an object in this list or in the Bavarian Monument Atlas does not guarantee that it is currently a registered monument or not. The Bavarian List of Monuments is also an information directory. The monument property - and thus the legal protection - is defined in Art. 1 of the Bavarian Monument Protection Act (BayDSchG) and does not depend on the mapping in the monument atlas or the entry in the Bavarian monument list. Objects that are not listed in the Bavarian Monument List can also be monuments if they meet the criteria according to Art. 1 BayDSchG. Early involvement of the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation according to Art. 6 BayDSchG is therefore necessary in all projects.
literature
- Heinrich Habel, Helga Hiemen: Munich . In: Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation (ed.): Monuments in Bavaria - administrative districts . 3rd improved and enlarged edition. tape I.1 . R. Oldenbourg Verlag, Munich 1991, ISBN 3-486-52399-6 .
Web links
- List of monuments for Munich (PDF) at the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation
- Architectural monuments in Milbertshofen in the Bavarian Monument Atlas