Town Hall (Pasing)

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Coordinates: 48 ° 8 ′ 50 ″  N , 11 ° 27 ′ 44 ″  E

Pasing town hall

The Pasing town hall is the town hall of the formerly independent town of Pasing . Pasing has been a district of Munich since 1938 . Since then, the Pasing town hall has served as a branch of the Munich city administration. The building is registered as an architectural monument in the Bavarian list of monuments.

location

The Pasinger city hall is located at the corner of Landsberger Straße / Bäckerstraße about 250 meters south of the Pasinger station and about 150 meters north of the Old Town Hall .

history

From 1872 the municipal administration of Pasing was housed in the parish hall on Bäckerstraße, to which an extension was built from 1899–1901, which also housed the fire station . After the city ​​elevation , this became Pasing's first town hall. In 1905 it was initially planned to build a new town hall at Pasinger Marienplatz .

For space and cost reasons, however, the building was erected on what was then Münchener Strasse (today Landsberger Strasse). After a construction period of fifteen months, the town hall was handed over to the mayor of Pasing, Alois Wunder, on November 15, 1937 . Just six months later, the city of Pasing lost its independence and was incorporated into Munich on April 1, 1938 by order of the National Socialist Gauleitung .

During the Second World War , the west wing was destroyed by a bomb in 1944 and the east wing by an air mine in 1945 . After the war, the building was rebuilt in its original form during the tenure of Munich Mayor Thomas Wimmer .

building

Civic center town hall Pasing

The Pasing town hall with 75 rooms, a meeting room and ancillary rooms was built according to plans by the architects Volbehr and Rettig for 450,000 Reichsmarks .

A tapestry by Nazi artist Bruno Goldschmitt from 1938 still hangs in the council chamber .

The new building was opened on October 7, 2002, for 12.5 million euros, according to the plans of the architects Landau and Kindlbacher , with 49 rooms and a new wedding hall.

The wedding fountain created by the Pasing sculptor Hans Osel was built in front of the town hall in 1963 .

Todays use

Today's town hall, Rathaus Pasing, was the only branch of the Munich city administration that was directly subordinate to the Munich mayor. This status was secured by the incorporation contract of January 8, 1938 until March 31, 2005. At the request of Lord Mayor Christian Ude , this contract was terminated by the city council and responsibility was transferred to the directorate, social affairs and district administration departments.

Currently, the district inspection, a citizens' office, the registry office, the social welfare office and the district committee 21 are housed here.

The Pasing town hall was equipped with ISDN in 1986 as the world's first municipal facility.

literature

  • Denis A. Chevalley, Timm Weski: State Capital Munich - Southwest (= Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation [Hrsg.]: Monuments in Bavaria . Volume I.2 / 2 ). Karl M. Lipp Verlag, Munich 2004, ISBN 3-87490-584-5 , p. 85 .

Web links

Commons : Pasinger Rathaus  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

supporting documents

  1. List of monuments for Munich (PDF) at the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation. Retrieved July 1, 2020 (monument number D-1-62-000-540 )
  2. Where politicians meet under a Nazi tapestry. In: sueddeutsche.de. January 21, 2016, accessed July 16, 2018 .