List of architectural monuments in Sendling-Westpark
This page lists the monuments in the Sendling-Westpark district of Munich in district 7 of the same name. 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
- The Kriegersiedlung in Mittersendling is an ensemble as a socio-historical and urban development document of a building project that was expressly geared to the needs of war victims after the First World War . The small settlement, the low suburban development of which is embedded between a wider strip of kitchen gardens and a narrow strip of front gardens, was built in the 1920s along a private road that connects Albert-Roßhaupter-Strasse with Johann-Clanze-Strasse: This special urban situation is up to in the present vividly. The building and small settlements cooperative of the Munich War Disabled Association acted as the sponsor of the entire complex; planning began in 1919/20. In the symmetrical development of the straight street, single-family houses in row or group construction as well as two apartment blocks as head buildings on Albert-Roßhaupter-Straße were built for around 100 households. (E-1-62-000-72)
Individual structures
location | object | description | File no. | image |
---|---|---|---|---|
Albert-Roßhaupter-Straße 46 ( location ) |
Tenement house | New Renaissance, 1879 by Josef Kroneder. | D-1-62-000-150 |
more pictures |
Einhornallee 6–60 ( location ) |
Large housing complex Oberlandsiedlung | Planned by Franz Ruf , Sepp Ruf and Hans Holzbauer in 1938 , executed in 1941/42, damaged by war events soon after, but restored. The large residential complex was not only intended to provide housing, but also to provide access to the city via Olympiastrasse, which is why the planning was given a monumental character; a corresponding system opposite was no longer implemented. | D-1-62-000-1444 |
more pictures |
Ettalstraße 3 ( location ) |
Evangelical Lutheran Gethsemane Church (Munich) | Community center on the corner of Wessobrunner Strasse; with a sloping disc tower on Ettalstrasse and a rectory built on to the south in 1957/58 as a uniform group building in exposed brickwork by Gustav Gsaenger ; tapering to the altar, trapezoidal, two-aisled room with central pillars and louvred windows; Main entrance accentuated by a protruding wooden roof; with equipment; Installation of a community hall and a new organ gallery in 1994/95 by Eberhard Wimmer. | D-1-62-000-7922 |
more pictures |
Fernpaßstraße 41 ( location ) |
Former elementary school on Hinterbärenbadstrasse | now secondary school, elongated two-storey main building with a slightly S-shaped, curved floor plan, plastered masonry construction with flat sloping, protruding pent roof, disc clock tower and louvre windows; lower connecting tract to the gym in the north; Erected 1957 to 1959 by Gustav Gsaenger together with the building construction department of the city of Munich; with bear fountain, shell limestone, by Heinrich Faltermeier , 1959; in the school yard. | D-1-62-000-7944 |
more pictures |
Fuggerstrasse 1 ( location ) |
Tenement house | Baroque corner building, 1915–1918 by Wilhelm Borchert. | D-1-62-000-1995 |
more pictures |
Fuggerstrasse 2 ( location ) |
Tenement house | Neoclassical corner building, around 1910. | D-1-62-000-1996 |
more pictures |
Fürstenrieder Straße 159 / 159a ( location ) |
Neufriedenheim school complex | Consisting of three parts in a spacious, partly forest-like green area: former Ludwigs-Oberrealschule, now Erasmus-Grasser-Gymnasium , two-storey, flat-roofed brick building with two inner courtyards and two single-hipped wings as well as these connecting intermediate structures with a break hall and two gyms, one of which has a folding roof , in front of an elevated music pavilion with folding roof, by Fred Angerer , 1957–59;
Ludwigs-Gymnasium, three-storey, flat-roofed exposed brick building with a large inner courtyard and an open break hall that is glazed on both sides, by Adolf and Helga Schnierle , 1957–59; Gym and swimming pool building, two-storey exposed brick building with folding roofs, by Adolf and Helga Schnierle, 1957–59; Fish fountain in the inner courtyard of the Ludwigsgymnasium, by Joachim Berthold , 1958 |
D-1-62-000-9022 |
more pictures |
Fürstenrieder Straße 255 ( location ) |
Residential and commercial building | in corner position, with stepped gable, bay window, marked 1930, by J. Wymer. | D-1-62-000-1965 |
more pictures |
Fürstenrieder Straße 257 ( location ) |
Small residential and commercial building | antique, with set Doric columns, 1927 by Wilhelm Born. | D-1-62-000-1966 |
more pictures |
Fürstenrieder Straße 277 ( location ) |
Locanda Busento restaurant (formerly Waldfrieden restaurant) | Column arcades on the ground floor, corner bay, 1909 by Alois Ansprenger. | D-1-62-000-1967 |
more pictures |
Hansastraße 21 ( location ) |
Sander villa | Stately saddle roof building with little ridge and gate entrance with ancillary building, Art Nouveau, around 1910, today a museum and conference center of the ADAC | D-1-62-000-2392 |
more pictures |
Hansastraße 39/41 ( location ) |
Former company building of the Leonhard Moll construction company ; today part of the Feierwerk site | Erected in 1924 as a symmetrical complex of taller pavilion and lower wing structures for the camp site on Hansastrasse; No. 39 office building, to the northwest with magazine and assembly hall; No. 41 porter's building and canteen, to the south-east with binding hall and transformer station (wing simplified reconstruction). | D-1-62-000-7837 |
more pictures |
Hansastraße 44 ( location ) |
Villa Flora | two-storey, flat hipped roof house, 1874 by Josef Wolf. | D-1-62-000-2393 | |
Heckenstallerstrasse 104; Konrad-Celtis-Strasse 71 ( location ) |
Catholic parish church of St. Thomas More | Concrete skeleton construction with clinker brick infill over a bell-shaped floor plan, with a roof rising to the chancel, working day chapel attached to the side and ceiling-high glass painting on the access side; with equipment; Campanile, six-storey concrete skeleton building with clinker infill; Rectory and home, two-storey hipped roof building with clinker brick facades; by Karl Jantsch, 1965/66. | D-1-62-000-8678 |
more pictures |
Luise-Kiesselbach-Platz 2 ( location ) |
Municipal retirement home St. Josef | stately, Baroque-style complex with a mansard roof and a vestibule crowned with statues, in the middle an institutional church with two towers, 1925–1927 by Hans Grässel ; with equipment. | D-1-62-000-4130 |
more pictures |
Martin-Behaim-Strasse 1a ( location ) |
Former railroad keeper's house | around 1860, two-storey building with a tent roof, upper storey paneled. | D-1-62-000-4352 | |
Scharnitzstrasse 2 ( location ) |
Rectory of St. Heinrich | Saddle roof construction, 1935 by Hans Döllgast . For the church see Weilheimer Straße 6. | D-1-62-000-8043 associated (D-1-62-000-8044) |
more pictures |
Weilheimer Straße 6 ( location ) |
Parish Church of St. Heinrich | simple saddle roof building with ridge turret, 1934–1935 by Hans Döllgast , repaired by the same architect after partial war destruction 1949–1951; with Scharnitzstrasse 2 (rectory), see there. | D-1-62-000-8043 |
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 .
- Dennis A. Chevalley, Timm Weski: City of Munich . Southwest. In: Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation (Hrsg.): Monuments in Bavaria - independent cities and districts . Volume I.2 / 2, 2 half volumes. Karl M. Lipp Verlag, Munich 2004, ISBN 3-87490-584-5 .
Web links
- List of monuments for Munich (PDF) at the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation
- Architectural monuments in Sendling-Westpark in the Bavarian Monument Atlas