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The Munich underground line 3 has the stops Olympiazentrum in the east and Oberwiesenfeld in the north of the residential area. In the east-west direction is the city bus line 50 from the northern end of the student district, in the north-south direction is the city bus line 173 and the city bus line 180 running on the eastern side of the ...
The builder and contractor, Ludwig Deiglmeier, acquired the area towards the end of the 19th century. He continued to add onto the building in 1889 and rebuilt the wing to the right of the entrance axis. He also built adjacent to the corner building Angertorstraße 1 (1888-1889) and its adjacent building Angertorstraße 3 (1888-1890).
On 1 January 1891 the independent municipality Nymphenburg was incorporated to the city of Munich. It is named after the Nymphenburg Palace, former summer residence of the Bavarian kings. Today the castle along with the Nymphenburg Palace Park is one of the most popular sights of Munich. The in 1747 by Elector Max III.
The quarter, having been one of Munich's surrounding poor houses in times of old, began to turn into today's much sought-after and very expensive residential area beginning with the construction of the first Wilhelminian style apartment houses at the turn of the 20th century and latest after the start of heavy gentrification during the 1980s.
Photo from 1900 with a view from the south on today's Schwere-Reiter-Straße, which runs from left to right through the picture and crosses Winzererstraße on the right. To the north, the buildings of the Prinz-Leopold-Kaserne. The Oberwiesenfeld has been used since 1796 as a parade ground, artillery practice area and gunpowder depot. With the ...
Area: 27,700 km 2 (40% of the state of Bavaria) Population: 5,991,144 [3] GDP: 210 billion euro (53% of the Bavarian GDP) In comparison to the other ten German Metropolitan Regions, the Munich Metropolitan Region had: the highest population growth (about 5% from 1997 to 2004) the largest increase in employment (over 5% from 1997 to 2004)
On the western side opposite the Bundeswehrverwaltungszentrum München (Army Administrative Center Munich), the Association for the Improvement of Housing in Munich built a small residential complex in the Ebenau district even before the First World War, which was used as one of the early examples of non-profit housing construction in Munich.
2011 before the demolition of the Schwabinger 7 bar and redevelopment of the area shown in the photograph. Schwabing was a village, with a church documented in the 14th century. Schwabing used to be famous as Munich's bohemian quarter, but has lost much of this reputation due to strong gentrification in the last decades. [2]