Sander villa

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Sander Villa, back side 2012
Street front, picture taken in 1910

The Sander villa is under monument protection standing administration building in the Hansa street in Munich District Sendling-Westpark . The building was erected in 1909 and is assigned to Art Nouveau in the list of monuments , but still has significant elements of the Heimat style , which is probably due to the location at the time of construction well in front of the city with exclusively rural buildings in the neighborhood.

The house is characterized by a high, steep gable roof that extends down over the ground floor and extends over two further main floors and two attic floors. A very small crippled hip is attached to the gable end , which only has a decorative function. On both sides of the ridge, the gable roof is interrupted by two-story dwelling houses with hipped roofs. The roof landscape is also designed by smaller dormers and an attached bay window.

The house was built in 1909 as an administration building for the local branch of the iron and coal trading company Gebrüder Röchling based on a design by the architects Gebrüder Rank . It was created for the branch in Bavaria. At the end of July 1909, 54,980 m² of land along the railway line on Hansastraße was acquired. This building (ready for occupancy in 1910) was erected in the current year together with storage facilities for materials such as iron, pipes, coal products and the bridge crane systems required for loading. As early as 1917, the head office was moved from Hansastraße to Karolinenplatz 5a, in the Palais Freyberg . The branch with office and warehouse remained on Hansastrasse. In 1968 the area was sold to Sander GmbH , which manufactured chemicals and pharmaceutical preparations there. Because of the large-format inscriptions on the facades, the building became known as the Sander Villa or Sander House . During this time, several auxiliary buildings and extensions were erected, including a single-storey block building on the street front with a striking, wide archway. The property went to the ADAC in 2005 , which built its new 23-storey ADAC headquarters behind the administration building from 2006 to 2012 . The Sander Villa was completely renovated by mid-2012, and later additions were also removed so that the exterior, with the exception of modern entrance areas, is back to its original state.

The ADAC has set up its library and various collections on club history and automotive history in the building and uses other rooms for events and conferences.

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. 275 .

Web links

Commons : Sander-Villa  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation: D-1-62-000-2392 ( Memento of the original from January 12, 2014 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 / geodaten.bayern.de
  2. List of works by the Rank brothers (based on historical company brochures ) at www.industrie-kultur.de , accessed on June 27, 2013
  3. ^ The Röchling house in Ludwigshafen A. Rh. 1849-1929 . R. Nutzinger, Druckerei Waldkirch, 1929. (Munich section, pp. 171–177).
  4. muenchenarchitektur.com: ADAC headquarters
  5. ^ Münchner Wochenblatt: The old in the shadow of the new , August 6, 2012

Coordinates: 48 ° 7 ′ 57.9 ″  N , 11 ° 31 ′ 43.7 ″  E