Schleißheimer Straße (Munich)

The Schleißheimerstraße with 8.14 km length after Dachauerstraße ( 11.2 km ), the longest street in Munich.

Course

It begins in the district Maxvorstadt little north of Stiglmaierplatzes in the center as a branch of the Dachau Street and runs approximately linearly from south to north through Schwabing, Milbertshofen and Harthof up in the district Hasenbergl. From the city center to the Frankfurter Ring the road is mostly single carriageway, an exception is only a portion of Petuelring. Then she leads throughout at least two lanes to the end on the road Aschenbrenner. At the Schleißheimerstraße in Schwabing the Nordbad, in Milbertshofen district of the research and innovation center of the car manufacturer BMW and the Powder Tower - ( closed since 1 January 2007 and now demolished) a notorious former meeting place of the " black scene ".

History

The road originally followed the course of today's Lerchenauerstraße direction Feldmoching / Schleißheim. Since the 14th century it was called Rennweg ( bridle path ). From the 17th century combined the Schleißheimerstraße Munich with the summer residence of the rulers of Bavaria in Schleißheim castle. With the construction of the airfield Oberschleißheim 1912, the road crossed the airfield and in 1917 permanently interrupted after several near misses. Between Nordbad and Petuelring runs to her the line 27 of the Munich tram, which runs 7 on a part of the 1980 set with the opening of the subway line U2 line between Görresstraße and Petuelring. By 1993, also went on the section between Rathenaustraße and its end in Hasenbergl the tram line 13 This line was closed on 21 November 1993, because it was replaced by the largely parallel underground line U2. The former terminus Hasenbergl has been transformed into a sports and play equipment.

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