The Marschnerstraße, named after the composer Heinrich Marschner (1795-1861), is a street founded in 1897, in the Munich district of Pasing and Obermenzing.

History edit

Marschnerstraße, originally named Riemerschmidstraße, is alongside the Alte Allee, the second main connecting street in the Villenkolonie Pasing II, which was created to reflect the model of a garden city. The Marschnerstraße begins at the Alte Allee, where the Himmelfahrtskirche stands as a monumental construction, and leads to the Peter-Kreuder-Straße.

The Allee runs parallel to the Munich-Augsburg train route. In the first decade a sporadic construction of villas occurred there.

Historical buildings on Marschnerstraße edit

Pasing:
  • Marschnerstraße 2: Himmelfahrtskirche
  • Marschnerstraße 3/3a (Semidetached house)
  • Marschnerstraße 12 (Villa)
  • Marschnerstraße 16 (Villa)
  • Marschnerstraße 21 (Villa)
  • Marschnerstraße 22 (Villa)
  • Marschnerstraße 23 (residential building)
  • Marschnerstraße 24 (Villa)
  • Marschnerstraße 26 (Villa)
  • Marschnerstraße 27a (Villa)
  • Marschnerstraße 29 (Dwelling house), Semidetached house with no. 31
  • Marschnerstraße 30 (Villa)
  • Marschnerstraße 31 (Villa), Semidetached house with no. 29
  • Marschnerstraße 33 (Villa)
  • Marschnerstraße 35–41g (Row house group)
Obermenzing:
  • Marschnerstraße 42 (Villa)
  • Marschnerstraße 43 (Villa)
  • Marschnerstraße 44 (Villa)
  • Marschnerstraße 55 (Villa)
  • Marschnerstraße 59 (Villa)

Literature edit

  • Dennis A. Chevalley, Timm Weski: Landeshauptstadt München – Südwest (= Bavarian State Office for Monument Protection [ed.]: Denkmäler in Bayern. Vol. I.2/2). Karl M. Lipp Verlag, Munich 2004, ISBN 3-87490-584-5, p. 430–431.