Maillingerstraße (Munich U-Bahn)

Metro Station Maillingerstraße is after the Infantry General and Bavarian war minister Joseph Maximilian Fridolin of Maillinger named subway station in Munich. It is served by the U1 and since December 12, 2011 by the gain line U7, which only runs in the morning rush hour.

The station is located near the Maillingerstraße and Nymphenburgerstraße on the border between Maxvorstadt and Neuhausen in a northwesterly direction. It was opened on 8 May 1983. The Maillingerstraße 1876 was the terminus of the first line of the Munich train horses, the precursor of the tram. They ran from the Promenade Square by Nymphenburgerstraße to stop truce - Maillingerstraße.

The metro station is designed similarly to the Red Cross Square and the Stiglmaierplatz. The rear track walls are made of brown and white slats which are getting fatter or thinner. The floor is paved with Isarkiesel motif. The ceiling is equipped with aluminum fins and two light bands. The pillars in the middle of the platform are covered with brown tiles. Mid-2008, the panel was removed to the columns in the middle of the platform, since the bonding of ceramic tiles after a good 25 years was porous and individual tiles were already dropped. The columns are to be re-clad with tiles.

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