Ludwigstrasse (Garmisch-Partenkirchen)

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The Ludwig Street in Partenkirchen is a street in the historic district in the Upper Bavarian market Garmisch-Partenkirchen . The eastern part of Ludwigstrasse is an ensemble on the basis of the Monument Protection Act of October 1, 1973, the file number is E-1-80-117-1.

description

The upper Ludwigstrasse

Ludwigstrasse runs from Rathausplatz in a north-easterly direction to Sebastianskircherl and then bends at right angles to the south-east with the historic Ludwigstrasse to Mittenwalder Strasse.

The ensemble includes the relatively narrow Marktstrasse from Partenkirchen, which runs along the old trunk road from Murnau to Mittenwald and which follows the course of the Roman road from Brenner to Augsburg . As early as the 13th century, the place gained importance as a market and court venue for the Freising county of Werdenfels . Its picturesque Alt- Werdenfels street scene was wiped out by large fires in 1811 and 1865, only the old house (Ludwigstrasse 8) and the Wackerlehaus (Ludwigstrasse 47) are evidence of the older development. The ensemble is thus a monument to the reconstruction efforts of the 19th century.

In the north-western so-called Lower Market, which is bordered by the free-standing Sebastian Chapel rising above the Roman castrum Parthanum, a number of relatively similar farmhouses built after 1811 determine the street scene. These are massive plastered gable buildings with a gable-sided central threshing floor, which for fire protection reasons on federal works and z. Sometimes even foregoing roof overhangs in favor of masonry advance gables.

The facades of the mostly sober farm and craftsman's houses and inns in the central part of Ludwigstrasse and in the so-called Upper Market, mostly two to three-story plastered gabled houses with medium-pitched roofs, were originally built in the Maximilian style and were originally built in the early 20th century. Century was mostly designed in the sense of the home style with wall paintings, bay windows, brackets, stuccoing, so that the streetscape of the Maximilian era has already been replaced by an "alpine" image, as the tourism expects. The murals by Heinrich Bickel made remarkable contributions to this. Inadequately designed new buildings, however, also affect this homeland-style character.

Only the neo-Gothic parish church of the Assumption of Mary by Matthias Berger, towering on a terrace and dominating the street, manifests the style will of the period after 1865.

See also

literature

  • Wilhelm Neu, Volker Liedke: Upper Bavaria . Ed .: Michael Petzet , Bavarian State Office for the Preservation of Monuments (=  Monuments in Bavaria . Volume I.2 ). Oldenbourg, Munich 1986, ISBN 3-486-52392-9 .
  • Martin Schöll: Houses that no longer stand ... 2nd edition. ADAM Verlag, Garmisch-Partenkirchen 1981.

Web links

Coordinates: 47 ° 29 ′ 39.7 ″  N , 11 ° 6 ′ 37.9 ″  E