Mandlstrasse

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Mandlstrasse
coat of arms
Street in Munich
Mandlstrasse
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).

Web links

Commons : Mandlstraße (Munich)  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Stefan Mühleisen: Ausgebremst In: Süddeutsche Zeitung December 11, 2015
  2. ^ Hans Dollinger: The Munich street names . 3rd edition 1997. Südwest Verlag GmbH & Co. KG, Munich, ISBN 3-517-01986-0 .
  3. http://www.lumen-pm.de/pdf/lumen_gmbh_maria_joseph_strasse.pdf
  4. Valentina Horchvv: Altschwabing: A "building block" excites the minds In: Münchner Merkur June 13, 2009
  5. Almut Ringleben: The ever bald tree In: Abendzeitung June 27, 2013
  6. ^ 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 ).
  7. ^ A b Rudolf Reiser: Old Houses - Big Names: Munich . Stiebner Verlag, Grünwald 2009, ISBN 978-3-8307-1049-3 ( limited preview ).
  8. Dirk Heißerer: Where ghosts wander: Literary walks through Schwabing . CHBeck, 2017, ISBN 978-3-406-70253-2 ( limited preview ).
  9. Dirk Heißerer: Where ghosts wander: Literary walks through Schwabing .
  10. ^ Willi Graf : Letters and Notes . Fischer Taschenbuch, 1994, ISBN 978-3-596-12367-4 ( limited preview ).
  11. ^ Christian Rost: Commemoration forbidden In: Süddeutsche Zeitung May 17, 2010
  12. ^ 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