Neuhofener Berg

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View from Neuhofener Berg on Sendling-Unterfeld towards Munich city center
Round pavilion with fountain at the highest point of the Neuhofener Berg

The Neuhofener mountain is part of the left Isar bank in Munich district Sendling and the name of a built there park. Neuhofen was first mentioned on October 9, 1698. The etymological meaning is Neuer Hof, whose origins go back as a castle and seat in the so-called Distelhof in Mittersendling. This was sold in 1697 to the Privy Councilor Matheus Joner, who built a country palace outside the village. "According to the decision of the secret council of October 9, 1698, Elector Max Emanuel raised the castle with the Distelhof" under the name of Neuhofen to an aristocratic siz "." In the early modern period, part of it was owned by the Zech family on Neuhofen . With the acquisition of the privy seat Neuhofen in Sendling in 1737, it remained in the family's possession until 1840 as the future eponymous residence of the family. The noble seat of Neuhofen with its baroque gardens has gone, as a ground monument it is registered in the Bavarian Monument Atlas of the Bavarian State Institute for Monument Preservation under the monument number with file number D-1-7835-0589.

In addition to Oberwiesenfeld and Luitpoldhügel, one of the three large rubble dumping areas for the rubble of the houses in Munich that was destroyed in World War II was located here. 2.5 million m³ of rubble were heaped up along the slope, pushing the plateau forward. The rubble heap only towers above the original slope edge by a few meters. At the highest point at the north end of the park on Brudermühlstrasse there is an open circular pavilion with a fountain. Next to it, a metal base plate reminds of the aerial warfare victims of World War II and the fact that this hill was formed from the rubble of houses destroyed by bombs.

On the Neuhofener Berg there is a 7.5 hectare park with well-tended green areas and trees. The park extends from Greinerbergstraße to Brudermühlstraße and is bordered on the west side by Plinganserstraße. The Neuhofener Berg is part of a chain of green spaces on the edge of the Isar slope, which stretches almost continuously from Hinterbrühl over the Gierlinger Park to below the Harras .

At the foot of the Neuhofener Berg are the Old Israelite Cemetery , the allotment gardens of the Süd West 25 Neuhofen-Tal eV association and the recycling center on Thalkirchener Straße .

See also

literature

Web links

Commons : Neuhofener Berg  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Sendling. In: muenchen.de . Portal München Betriebs-GmbH & Co. KG, 2015, accessed on May 20, 2019 .
  2. ^ Noble seat in Neuhofen
  3. Geoportal Bayern-Bayernatlas
  4. kleingartenverein-sw25-muenchen.de ( Memento of the original from October 8, 2007 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.kleingartenverein-sw25-muenchen.de

Coordinates: 48 ° 6 ′ 30.8 ″  N , 11 ° 32 ′ 32.9 ″  E