Mandlstrasse
Mandlstrasse | |
---|---|
Street in Munich | |
Back of houses on Mandlstrasse to Schwabinger Bach | |
Basic data | |
State capital | Munich |
Borough | Schwabing-Freimann |
Name received | 1891 |
Connecting roads | Maria-Josepha-Strasse , Koeniginstrasse , Gunezrainerstrasse, Biedersteiner Strasse |
Cross streets | Seestrasse |
Numbering system | Orientation numbering |
use | |
User groups | Pedestrian traffic , bicycle traffic , individual traffic |
Road design | asphalt |
Technical specifications | |
Street length | 350 m |
The Mandlstraße is a street in the Munich district of Schwabing . It runs west of the English Garden from the corner of Maria-Josepha-Straße / Königinstraße to the corner Gunezrainerstraße / Biedersteiner Straße and forms the eastern edge of the protected building complex Alt-Schwabing . The street is named after Johann Freiherr von Mandl-Deutenhofer (* 1588; † August 12, 1666), Chancellor and Court Chamber President in the service of the Bavarian Elector Ferdinand Maria .
Prestel Verlag is located at Mandlstrasse 26 . At Mandlstrasse 14 the wedding room of the registry office in Munich. The Catholic Academy in Bavaria is at Mandlstrasse 23 . There is also a Munich Re office building completed in March 2013 , the construction of which was very controversial. A tree-like sculpture ( discrepancy ) made of stainless steel by the American artist Roxy Paine has stood in front of the building since 2011 .
Lujo Brentano lived in Mandlstrasse 5 . Albert Langen and Josephine Rensch lived in Mandlstrasse 8 and, from April 1905, Olaf Gulbransson , draftsman for the satirical magazine Simplicissimus . In 1902 the painter Max Nonnenbruch bought the house at Mandlstrasse 10. The graphic artist Alfred Kubin lived from 1904 to 1906 in today's Mandlstrasse 26 , while Alexander Eliasberg lived at number 24 . From the end of May to the end of November 1942, Sophie Scholl as well as Willi Graf and his sister Anneliese were also residents of Mandlstrasse . The Austrian conductor Felix Weingartner also lived in Mandlstrasse.
A total of fifteen listed buildings are located on the 350 m long street , and the street is also part of the Altschwabing ensemble protection (E-1-62-000-4).
In 1906/07 Friedrich von Thiersch built a hip-roof villa in Art Nouveau style at Mandlstrasse 1, in front of which there is a fountain designed in 1907 by Mathias Gasteiger with two Art Nouveau herms
2011 “Discrepancy” stainless steel sculpture designed by Roxy Paine in front of Mandlstrasse 3 ( Munich Re )
Block of two villas in Mandlstrasse 8/10, where Olaf Gulbransson lived from 1905
Two -storey hipped roof villa built by Theo Lechner and Fritz Norkauer in 1925
1922-23 by Ed. Hoffmann built a neo-classical portico villa at Mandlstrasse 14, the wedding room of the registry office in Munich
In 1901 the building in the style of the German Renaissance at Mandlstrasse 24 was occupied, at times the apartment of Alexander Eliasberg
Gothicized corner building built around 1900 at Mandlstrasse 28, the seat of the German Camping Club
Lion in front of the Catholic Academy in Mandlstrasse 23
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ Stefan Mühleisen: Ausgebremst In: Süddeutsche Zeitung December 11, 2015
- ^ Hans Dollinger: The Munich street names . 3rd edition 1997. Südwest Verlag GmbH & Co. KG, Munich, ISBN 3-517-01986-0 .
- ↑ http://www.lumen-pm.de/pdf/lumen_gmbh_maria_joseph_strasse.pdf
- ↑ Valentina Horchvv: Altschwabing: A "building block" excites the minds In: Münchner Merkur June 13, 2009
- ↑ Almut Ringleben: The ever bald tree In: Abendzeitung June 27, 2013
- ^ Horst Karl Marschall: Friedrich von Thiersch: a Munich architect of late historicism, 1852-1921 . Prestel Verlag , 1982, ISBN 978-3-7913-0548-6 ( limited preview ).
- ^ A b Rudolf Reiser: Old Houses - Big Names: Munich . Stiebner Verlag, Grünwald 2009, ISBN 978-3-8307-1049-3 ( limited preview ).
- ↑ Dirk Heißerer: Where ghosts wander: Literary walks through Schwabing . CHBeck, 2017, ISBN 978-3-406-70253-2 ( limited preview ).
- ↑ Dirk Heißerer: Where ghosts wander: Literary walks through Schwabing .
- ^ Willi Graf : Letters and Notes . Fischer Taschenbuch, 1994, ISBN 978-3-596-12367-4 ( limited preview ).
- ^ Christian Rost: Commemoration forbidden In: Süddeutsche Zeitung May 17, 2010
- ^ Felix Weingartner : Memoirs I. Autobiography . SEVERUS Verlag, 2013, ISBN 978-3-86347-645-8 ( limited preview ).
Coordinates: 48 ° 9 ′ 29.2 ″ N , 11 ° 35 ′ 17 ″ E